Speed bumps ahead for Indian markets
Rising oil prices, interest rates and a weakening currency may spell trouble for smaller companies, which have enjoyed a good run so far


“Interest rates and oil costs are a variable but I expect both to settle down after the US mid-term elections in November,” says Sanjiv Bhasin, executive vice president at brokerage IIFL.
For now the consensus is that earnings for large firms on aggregate are unlikely to be affected as a third of the Nifty’s earnings are linked to companies that export, and are likely to gain with the 11.2 percent rupee depreciation in September. But dig deeper and it is apparent that as consumers cut spending, on account of higher oil and loan rates, there could be earnings downgrades in consumer-related businesses that have contributed to a majority of the Nifty’s gains in this bull run.
Tightening liquidity (in India and globally) and a looming national election in 2019 have made the road ahead for smaller companies bumpier. They benefited disproportionately from lower interest rates and leaner balance sheets.
So far foreign investors have pulled out ₹47,000 crore in equities this year. This has been partially offset by money from systematic investment plans (SIPs), albeit at a declining run rate. Last year SIPs peaked at ₹16,000 crore a month. They are down to about ₹7,000 crore a month at present. It remains to be seen what an extended market downturn does to this number. A reduction here could open the floodgates for a more broad-based sell off.
First Published: Oct 06, 2018, 09:26
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