In the past three months, a quiet but consequential story has been playing out in the Indian equity markets. While the benchmark Nifty 50 has ground along with minimal enthusiasm, the broader market has put on a spectacular show. The Nifty Midcap 100 has outperformed the Nifty 50 by ~10% in this period, and the Nifty Smallcap 100 has done even better, outperforming Nifty 50 by ~15%. This material outperformance of the broader markets implies that “greed” has been a dominating sentiment in the past three months, decisively beating fear.
This dominance of greed, against a backdrop of elevated geopolitical tensions — an ongoing conflict in West Asia and persistent uncertainty around US trade policy — is noteworthy. The question worth asking, carefully and honestly, is whether the market is reading the future correctly or simply repricing hope.
What has been driving the broader market outperformance?
The outperformance of mid and smallcap indices is not entirely irrational. There are identifiable, structural reasons behind it — even if the magnitude of the move warrants some scrutiny.
To begin with, Foreign Portfolio Investor (FPI) selling has been persistent and, critically, concentrated in large cap stocks. FPIs sold over Rs2trn worth of Indian equities in the past three months, and a disproportionate share of that selling was absorbed by Nifty 50 constituents. When the biggest sellers in the room target the biggest names, the smaller names benefit from neglect — and sometimes, from active rotation by domestic investors seeking alternatives.
The second factor is sectoral de-rating at the index heavyweight level. IT services and private sector banking together account for close to 40% of the Nifty 50’s weight. Both have faced meaningful valuation compression. IT has struggled with demand visibility in a slowing global environment, while private banking has grappled with margin compression and asset quality concerns in select pockets. When the two most influential sectors in a benchmark underperform, the benchmark itself cannot outperform, regardless of what else is happening elsewhere.
Third, and perhaps most interesting from a structural standpoint, is the massive valuation re-rating of stocks connected to what markets have come to call “sunrise themes” — Data Centers, energy transition (renewables, green hydrogen, EV infrastructure), and defense indigenization. These sectors are populated almost entirely by mid and smallcap companies. A defense electronics company that was trading at 25x earnings two years ago may now trade at 60-80x on the back of record order books and a government policy tailwind that shows no signs of reversing. The same logic applies to several renewable energy plays and select data center infrastructure names. Domestic institutions and retail investors have piled into these themes, and the resulting re-rating has been dramatic.
Finally, there is an earnings growth divergence that has provided at least partial fundamental justification for the rally. Aggregate earnings growth for Nifty Midcap 100 constituents has tracked in the 18-22% range over recent quarters, while Nifty 50 earnings growth has been closer to 10-12%. When earnings diverge, price divergence follows. The question is whether the divergence in price has now exceeded the divergence in earnings — and that is where the story gets uncomfortable.
The valuation question that cannot be deferred
Let us look at where valuations actually stand. The Nifty Midcap 100 is currently trading at approximately 35-38x trailing twelve-month earnings, a significant premium to its own historical average of around 26-28x. The Nifty Smallcap 100 presents an even starker picture, with the price-to-earnings multiple in the 40-45x range for several constituents, well above any sensible reading of long-run sustainable earnings multiples for companies of this scale and quality.
In the “sunrise theme” stocks, the valuation conversation becomes even more challenging. Several defense stocks now trade at price-to-earnings multiples north of 80-100x on the back of order book-driven earnings projections that extend three to five years into the future. Data center plays have been accorded valuations that imply an almost frictionless execution of extremely ambitious capacity expansion plans. The market is not merely pricing in optimism — it is pricing in perfection.
This is not to say that the underlying businesses are unworthy of investor attention. India’s defense order pipeline is real. The energy transition is real. The data center buildout is real. But markets have a long and well-documented history of taking genuine structural stories and extrapolating them to valuations that assume everything goes right and nothing goes wrong. The honest investor’s job is to separate the story from the price.
The sharp correction this week: A warning shot, not a blip
The sharp correction witnessed this week — the Nifty Midcap 100 fell approximately 3.5-4% in a matter of two sessions, with several momentum favorites dropping 7-10% from recent highs — deserves to be read not as a buying opportunity in isolation, but as a revelation of the fragility that had been building beneath the surface.
When markets correct sharply on relatively modest triggers — in this case, a combination of slightly disappointing earnings from one sector, a modest uptick in geopolitical risk premium, and a political gesture by the prime minister — it typically signals that positioning has become crowded and valuations have left little room for disappointment. The high-beta, high-momentum trade in mid and smallcaps had attracted significant participation from retail investors through SIP flows into sectoral and thematic funds, many of which had concentrated exposure to exactly the names that corrected the hardest.
The data on retail participation is instructive here. Monthly SIP contributions have crossed ₹25,000 crore, with a meaningful and growing share directed into midcap, smallcap, and thematic funds rather than diversified large cap or flexi-cap vehicles. This is not inherently bad — systematic investing in the broader market has a sound long-term logic. But when that flow becomes heavily concentrated in momentum themes and elevated valuations, the market structure becomes vulnerable. A correction feeds on itself as stop-losses are triggered and sentiment sours quickly.
The rally since February 2026, which took the Nifty Midcap 100 up approximately 18% from its lows, was built on a narrowing base of momentum names. Breadth — the proportion of stocks participating in the rally — had been declining even as the headline index climbed. This is a classic warning sign that a rally is running on borrowed time rather than broad fundamental support.
Is it time to rebalance?
The correction this week is a useful reminder that markets do not move in straight lines, and that the fragility of a rally built on multiple expansion rather than earnings delivery is always greater than it appears while the momentum is intact. Geopolitical uncertainty has not been resolved. Earnings growth in momentum sectors still needs to be delivered, not just projected. And the global environment — with US monetary policy, dollar strength, and West Asia risk all unresolved — provides ample triggers for further volatility.
For investors who have ridden the midcap and smallcap rally well, this is a moment for honest portfolio review rather than celebration. The question is not whether India’s broader market will outperform over the next decade — it very likely will, on the back of genuine structural growth drivers. The question is whether one’s current portfolio is positioned to capture that outperformance at an acceptable price, or whether the enthusiasm of the past three months has led to concentration risks that deserve attention.
The rebalancing question is one that every serious investor should be asking at this point, and answering honestly rather than in the hope that momentum themes will rescue a concentrated portfolio from a correction.