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Global investors are betting that the worst of India’s catastrophic second coronavirus wave has passed, helping to push the country’s stocks to record highs.
The Nifty 50 index, which tracks India’s largest 50 companies, hit an all-time peak this week and is up 9 per cent from its low in late April when Covid-19 infections were surging.
The enthusiasm has spread to other Indian assets, with the rupee rising 4 per cent against the dollar over the same period.
The demand for Indian stocks highlights relief among investors that the devastating second wave of infections appears to have peaked. But it also underscores how traders see little to upset bumper profits for India’s largest companies, despite the country still reporting more than 100,000 Covid-19 cases per day.
“To value India from the equity investment perspective, investors will look beyond the current human catastrophe,” said Brijesh Ved, an equities portfolio manager at BNP Paribas Asset Management India.
He added that the country would probably emerge from the pandemic as the fastest-growing economy in the world and that “long-term fundamental investors like ourselves continue to look at India as a growth market”. BNP Paribas “would look at any large correction [as an opportunity] to increase weightage to India equities”, he said.
Some Indian companies have thrived during the pandemic, in part thanks to cost cuts including lay-offs. Profit margins as of the end of 2020 were at an eight-year high, according to Edelweiss Financial Services, a brokerage.
“The pie may have shrunk but the allocation of profitability has shifted very sharply to . . . top-end businesses, which is what is reflected in the market indices,” said Aditya Narain, head of research at Edelweiss. “To some extent this is a global phenomenon but it has been much sharper in India.”
The second Covid-19 wave overwhelmed health systems and caused acute shortages of oxygen and drugs. The economy, while not subject to a nationwide lockdown like last year, has been shaken by tough restrictions imposed at a local level, including some of the country’s biggest cities.
Infections are now falling in much of the country, including in the capital New Delhi and financial hub Mumbai.
Authorities on Wednesday reported 133,000 new infections and 3,200 deaths for the previous day, down from daily highs in May of more than 400,000 and 4,500, respectively. Official figures are believed to be vast undercounts.
Indian companies’ first-quarter earnings did not reflect the worst of the latest wave, which picked up in April. However, investors suspect any earnings hit will be brief.
“You get a sense that it’ll be a one or two month impact and there’ll be normalcy, then earnings growth is going to bounce back very sharply,” said Hemang Jani, an equity strategist at brokerage Motilal Oswal Financial Services.
Yet some caution that the second wave could have a more lasting impact than the first, especially in areas such as consumer demand.
There “could be a little bit of a reality check for the markets, where people are extrapolating [from] what happened last time around. This time, it’s deeper and it plays with people’s psyche,” said Narain, adding that “there isn’t a family that has been left unimpacted”.
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