scorecardresearchIT stocks no longer frothy, tactical upside ahead: CLSA's Vikash Jain

IT stocks no longer frothy, tactical upside ahead: CLSA's Vikash Jain

Updated: 29 Jul 2022, 11:20 AM IST
TL;DR.

Froth in the Indian IT sector is gone and there is a strong probability of tactical upside, Vikash Kumar Jain, investment analyst, CLSA told CNBC-TV18 in an interview. This is mainly on the back of strong numbers in the quarter ended June, he added.

Froth in the Indian IT sector is gone and there is a strong probability of tactical upside, Vikash Kumar Jain, investment analyst, CLSA told CNBC-TV18 in an interview. This is mainly on the back of strong numbers in the quarter ended June, he added.

Froth in the Indian IT sector is gone and there is a strong probability of tactical upside, Vikash Kumar Jain, investment analyst, CLSA told CNBC-TV18 in an interview. This is mainly on the back of strong numbers in the quarter ended June, he added.

Froth in the Indian IT sector is gone and there is a strong probability of tactical upside, Vikash Kumar Jain, investment analyst, CLSA told CNBC-TV18 in an interview. This is mainly on the back of strong numbers in the quarter ended June, he added.

Jain said that CLSA was on banks over IT stocks at the start of the year.

"Historically, if we look at rising rate cycles, banks have outperformed IT. There is some consensus that we have already seen the bigger part of the intensity of hikes. And IT stocks have also corrected significantly. We are still underweight on IT but a lot of froth has gone from the sector. There is room for a tactical upmove given the correction," Jain told CNBC-TV18.

Commenting of foreign investor outflows, he noted that rthe Indian markets have absorbed $33 billion of selling by FIIs in the last 8-9 months. FIIs' percentage ownership of Indian markets is the lowest in the last ten years. However, he added that mutual fund ownership is at a record high.

"The star performing sector in the quarter ended June was the auto sector. Currently, both FIIs and domestic mutual funds own more autos in their portfolio relative to anytime in the last five to seven years. The auto sector is now getting in the over-ownership zone," Jain pointed out.

Jain further added that FIIs will stop selling when redemption stops.

"As per my conjecture, fund managers booked profits in Indian stocks to pay for redemptions in China as shares were highly expensive. To prove this point, when we look at EM funds, we have reached a point that nearly 60-65% of them are now underweight in India, that's the highest proportion of underweight that we have seen in EM funds. Given the valuation differentials, FIIs may not change their positioning from underweight to overweight very quickly," he stated.

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First Published: 29 Jul 2022, 11:20 AM IST