scorecardresearchMarket correction insufficient, more downside seen: Nomura

Market correction insufficient, more downside seen: Nomura

Updated: 10 Jun 2022, 10:11 AM IST
TL;DR.

Saion Mukherjee, head of India equity research, Nomura said that there are significant downside risks, given the way macroeconomic data is shaping up.

Saion Mukherjee, head of India equity research, Nomura said that there are significant downside risks, given the way macroeconomic data is shaping up

Saion Mukherjee, head of India equity research, Nomura said that there are significant downside risks, given the way macroeconomic data is shaping up

Indian markets have lost over 6 percent in 2022 year-to-date (YTD), however, global brokerage house Nomura believes that the correction so far is insufficient and sees more pressure on the Indian equities going ahead, a report by Business Standard stated.

As per the report, Saion Mukherjee, head of India equity research, Nomura said that there are significant downside risks, given the way macroeconomic data is shaping up, speaking at the Nomura Investment Forum Asia 2022.

“The markets are trying to look through the current stress we see in the macros. There are potential risks to the market. Our estimates assume no major impact on growth and earnings. The market should have been at least 5 percent lower than it is now. And if we factor in the concerns on growth and earnings, we will expect much more correction,” Mukherjee pointed out.

He added that the markets could correct another 5-15 percent, depending on the outlook one has on growth. Though Indian corporate earnings have been satisfactory, there are concerns over economic growth and interest rates, explained Nomura, adding that the global events since the beginning of the year have aggravated these concerns.

BS further noted that the domestic markets have come off 10 percent from their October 2021 peak, India has still been an outperformer since the Covid-19 outbreak.

Mukherjee stated that the consensus view is not that pessimistic as there are expectations that inflation will be controlled over time. “And the spread between earnings and bond yield also indicates some level of overvaluation at the aggregate market levels,” he said.

The consensus expectation for the financial year 2022-23 (FY23) and FY24 is around 14 percent earnings growth, aided by financials, BS quoted Mukherjee.

Apart from financials, BS noted that the brokerage is bullish on industrials and infrastructure as the concerns on commodity price rise have been factored in and valuations are not expensive; telecom because of the high earnings visibility and valuation comfort; and, pharmaceutical stocks as the sector’s revenue growth is less dependent on broader growth.

However, Nomura is bearish on automotive stocks as volumes could disappoint in light of the economic slowdown, and steel firms because of the weakness in local and global demand.

Mukherjee added that though foreign portfolio investor (FPI) flows have been volatile, they were counterbalanced by solid domestic inflows.

As per the BS report, Nomura’s December 2022 Nifty50 target is 16,900, which is 17 times the one-year forward earnings, leaving very little room for gains from the benchmark’s close on Thursday of 16,478.

 

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First Published: 10 Jun 2022, 10:11 AM IST