IANS | 23 Oct, 2023
Small and mid-cap stocks have been the driver of the post-Covid
recovery in the markets. Some froth may recede in the coming quarters,
but the medium-term outlook remains robust.
Earnings growth has
been democratised in India with broader participation across companies,
which is reflecting in SMIDs enjoying their time in the sun. Fragmented
industrial sectors, with no clear leaders, reinforce the momentum, Emkay
Global Financial Services said in a note.
“We see broader markets
moving sideways with a negative bias for the rest of FY24. The longer
term top-down narrative remains attractive, with small and mid caps
leading the markets for the next 2-3 years”, the report said.
The report pointed to three key themes on stocks:
Manufacturing:
A multi-year growth trend that is yet to fully play out. This includes
capital goods, auto ancillaries, chemicals, metals, and pharmaceuticals.
The focus of this theme will be SMIDs, as there are few large caps
available.
Premiumization: B2C companies will generally remain
laggards, but we see a pocket of opportunity in premiumization. As
India’s per-capita income breaks new levels, premium segment growth
should get an impetus and companies catering to this segment should
outperform.
The technology wave, which has allowed mass-market
companies (mainly consumer and BFSI) a non-linear footprint expansion.
Internet companies and digital transformers benefit and are the third
bucket of outperformers, the report said.
The drivers of growth in
Indian stocks are cutting across Financials (ROE normalisation),
capital goods and urban consumption, Tata Mutual Fund said in a report.
The
recovery in the investment cycle led by healthy cash flows in the
corporate sector and the government’s counter-cyclical fiscal policy
makes us incrementally positive on the industrial/capital goods sector
leading us to progressively increase the exposure to this segment, it
said.
Recovery in power demand, capex in generation (renewable +
thermal) and transmission implies an overweight stance on the associated
sectors/stocks.
In Financials, after a period of margin expansion and lowering credit costs, growth will normalise.
Mid/small
caps re-rating has been significant in the last 6-12 months, future
upside likely to be more bottom-up based on execution. Large cap banks
still reasonably priced.
The report said the corporate earnings
downgrade risk has reduced. Banks and capital goods lead the positive
earning upgrade cycle.
Urban consumption after significant growth
in 2022 is slowing due to the impact of inflation and interest rates. In
contrast, rural consumption is picking up, albeit gradually, it said.
Pharma downside seems limited as US pricing normalizes.
Sectors
with topline risk (e.g IT, FMCG) have stabilized; margins to be
supported by lower input costs or easing attrition and wage pressure.
The
biggest risk to the market comes from the behaviour of crude prices if
there is further deterioration in the conflict in the Middle East. This
could lead to reduction in India’s valuation Premium, the report said.
For
the year ending September 23, PSU Banks (+76%) and Realty (+36%) made
the highest gains while Energy (7%) was the lowest performer. Large cap
made marginal gains for the month of September 2023. However, Mid and
Small caps continue to deliver alpha, the report said.
A strong
momentum in the small cap segment supported by broadening of economic
growth and large domestic flows in dedicated funds.
For FY23 the
FIIs were net sellers with outflows of close to USD 10 bn while the DII
inflows were robust at USD 33 bn. For FY24TD, the FII flows add up to
USD 17.4 bn and the DII flows to USD 5.5 bn.
As per Bandhan MF’s
Equity Market Outlook, prefer domestic plays to global – however, with
valuations/election risk this needs to be calibrated.
Energy transition globally is a theme which can produce some healthy optionality in utilities, capital goods, cables etc.
Sectors
exposed to rural/low-end consumption look attractive due to prospects
of election spending and waning of COVID/inflation-related balance sheet
shocks, the report said.
As nominal growth slows down, niche small caps may provide healthy returns, the report said.
V
K Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Financial
Services, said "Ideal buy on dip sectors are capital goods, automobiles
and financials. Capital goods and automobiles are in a cyclical uptrend
and the cycle will last for a few years."
"There is robust demand
for capital goods and the automobiles sector will benefit from demand
recovery plus margin improvement arising from fall in commodity prices.
Financials, particularly banking, are doing well and valuations are
lower than historical averages."
The Anand Rathi Research Team
said in a note that margin expansion will continue amid rising
agri-commodity prices. The IMF has raised its forecast of India’s FY24
GDP by 20bps, to 6.3%. In line with this, we believe Q2 volume growth is
expected to come in high single digits despite the festival season
falling in Q3.
Although costs of certain commodities have inched
up, the likely benefit of low-cost stocks would have boosted margin
expansion, driving healthy earnings-growth momentum. Large and small
caps are likely to have outshone mid-caps’ earnings-growth momentum.