Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Exercise caution in the peace trade

Markets are growing complacent

With each passing day, global markets appear to be becoming increasingly sanguine about the situation in West Asia. A growing chorus of analysts and business leaders are expressing confidence that the conflict will wind down soon, and that energy markets will revert to their pre-war equilibrium within a matter of months. Some have gone further, predicting that energy prices could settle at materially lower levels than those that prevailed before hostilities began — a scenario premised on the easing of American sanctions on Iranian and Russian crude, alongside a ramping up of production by Venezuela and the UAE, which now operates outside its OPEC quota constraint.

I would suggest investors approach this “peace trade” with considerably more caution than current sentiment suggests. The probability is high that markets have already largely discounted the peace dividend — including the normalization of commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. Positioning for a windfall that is already in the price is not a trade; it is a hope.

Energy prices will not snap back instantly

Even if the Strait of Hormuz were to reopen tomorrow, a return to pre-conflict energy price levels is far from assured. The physical infrastructure damaged during the conflict may take several months to restore to operational pre-war capacity. Beyond the supply mechanics, the fiscal break-even levels for crude oil in several Gulf states — notably Saudi Arabia and Bahrain — may have risen materially during the conflict period, driven by expanded defence and welfare commitments. Producers at elevated break-evens have little incentive to flood the market.

For the world’s major energy importers — concentrated in Asia and Europe — a sustained period of higher energy costs leaves a lasting imprint on the terms of trade, keeping inflationary pressures elevated long after a formal truce is announced. The inflationary overhang, compounded by the fiscal pressures that governments have taken on to cushion the economic blows of war, has pushed the timeline for meaningful policy rate cuts further into the future.

Bond markets are, accordingly, struggling. A truce in West Asia is unlikely to offer them immediate relief. For India in particular, the case for near-term rate hikes — rather than cuts — may in fact strengthen in the months following any ceasefire, as the rupee finds its new level and imported inflation feeds through domestic price indices.

Equities: Resilience has limited the upside

The behavior of risk assets throughout the conflict has been, in a word, surprising. Equity investors’ appetite for risk has held up with a tenacity that few would have predicted when hostilities began. That resilience is admirable from a behavioral standpoint, but it carries a practical cost: it has substantially compressed the room available for a dramatic post-truce rebound in equities and other higher-risk instruments.

In my view, returns in the post-truce environment will be primarily a function of earnings growth rather than multiple expansion. A broad macro trade — the kind of re-rating that follows a genuine risk-off episode — is unlikely to materialize in the near term. The case for an immediate PE re-rating is simply not there.

The more productive tactical opportunity is likely to emerge from sector rotation rather than from an index-level trade. Sectors that have been beaten down during the conflict — IT services and FMCG chief among them — may outperform the currently favored themes: power infrastructure, data centers, and defence. However, this rotation trade is not without risk: IT services faces a structural headwind from AI-driven efficiency pressures on technology budgets, while FMCG grapples with volume growth in a consumer environment compressed by negative real wages.

India’s problems run deeper than the war

This brings me to the more uncomfortable argument. A meaningful segment of investors appears to believe that India’s market difficulties are substantially, if not primarily, a product of the West Asia conflict, and that resolution of that conflict will provide a correspondingly powerful tailwind. I think that view is mistaken, and potentially costly.

India is contending with a multitude of structural problems that will not dissolve with a ceasefire. On the macroeconomic front: the current account deficit has widened under the weight of elevated energy import costs; net FDI has turned negative; FII outflows have been persistent and large over multiple years; the rupee has been among the worst-performing major currencies; and the government’s fiscal space is contracting simultaneously from multiple directions — expanded defence spending, subsidy commitments, and weakening tax revenue in a slowing economy.

The demographic picture adds a longer-horizon concern. India’s Total Fertility Rate has remained below the replacement threshold of 2.1 for five consecutive years, standing at 1.9 in 2024. The urban TFR has fallen to 1.5 — a level comparable to ageing Western European societies. The window for harvesting a demographic dividend, in the economically dominant urban half of the country, has effectively already closed. This is not a cyclical problem that a peace settlement will address.

The climate emergency compounds these pressures. In April and May 2026, all fifty of the world’s hottest cities were located within India on multiple days. Agricultural output is under threat. Power grids are strained. Water scarcity has intensified. These are not episodic shocks; they are structural forces that will weigh on productivity, public finances, and social stability for the foreseeable future — independent of what happens in the Strait of Hormuz.

There are governance and institutional dimensions as well. Investor confidence in the consistency of regulatory enforcement, the independence of the judiciary, and the quality of economic policymaking has been eroding. Corporate India, despite tripling net profits between FY21 and FY25, has cut private investment as a share of GDP to a twenty-year low, with promoters opting to accumulate cash, establish family offices, and increase overseas allocations rather than deploy capital productively at home. This is not the behavior of a business community that is broadly optimistic about the domestic investment environment.

Conclusion: Price in the complexity

The peace trade is a legitimate market theme, and a ceasefire in West Asia would unquestionably remove a source of uncertainty that has weighed on global sentiment. But investors who expect that outcome to resolve India’s investment challenges are, in my view, underestimating the complexity of what lies underneath.

The macro headwinds are structural, not cyclical. The demographic dividend is narrowing. The climate crisis is intensifying. Institutional confidence is fragile. Corporate investment remains suppressed. A truce will not, by itself, resolve any of these. Position size your peace trade accordingly.

र भी दुख हैं ज़माने में मोहब्बत के सिवा
राहतें और भी हैं वस्ल की राहत के सिवा

— Faiz Ahmed Faiz


Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Hope could drive you insane

In a striking illustration of India's deepening climate emergency, on multiple days in April and May 2026, all fifty of the world's hottest cities were located within Indian borders — a record corroborated by real-time temperature tracking platform AQI.in. Uttar Pradesh accounted for more than half of those cities, with temperatures hovering between 43°C and 44°C across scores of districts, while parts of Maharashtra's Vidarbha region breached 46°C.

Yet searing temperatures are only one dimension of a multi-front crisis. Large swaths of the country are simultaneously contending with devastating heatwaves, violent sandstorms, acute water shortages, and frequent power outages. A severe wildfire has raged through Uttarakhand. Crops are withering under abnormally high temperatures. Livestock are succumbing to heat and drought. Ordinary citizens are suffering heat-related illnesses alongside water and electricity shortfalls. And the broader economy is straining under high inflation, widening fiscal and trade deficits, a depreciating currency, and rising bond yields.

Compounding the material hardship is a crisis of reputation and governance. Avoidable foreign policy missteps, unpredictable economic decisions, a chronic accountability deficit, and systemic mismanagement have eroded India's standing both at home and abroad.

Warnings Ignored

None of this should have come as a surprise. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) issued advance warnings of above-normal summer temperatures months before the season began. Global climate agencies had been signaling the likelihood of a strong El Niño event — and potentially a super El Niño — since at least February of this year. Heatwaves, water scarcity, wildfires, and grid overload are precisely the contingencies that governments and disaster-management authorities should have anticipated and prepared for in advance.

War clouds had been gathering over West Asia for several years. Energy-price shocks, inflationary pressures, and supply-chain disruptions were the very minimum that any forward-looking administration should have modelled and mitigated against.

None of this preparatory work appears to have been done. Rather than acknowledging the gathering risks, the government remained in denial — and, according to multiple reports, actively disseminated reassuring but misleading information to the public until state elections had concluded.

An existential threat demanding existential urgency

The stakes extend far beyond any single political cycle. Some credible research published recently projects that heat-related mortality in India could escalate several-fold under high-emissions scenarios in the coming decades. One study estimates that annual heat deaths across South Asia could exceed 400,000 by 2045, with India bearing the heaviest burden. Since 1990, one quarter of all heat-related excess deaths globally have occurred in India.

Meanwhile, India's Himalayan glaciers are retreating at an alarming rate. Studies by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) indicate that approximately 75% of Himalayan glaciers are in retreat, and research from the University of Leeds found that Himalayan ice loss over recent decades has occurred at a rate ten times higher than the long-run historical average. Major river systems — the Ganga, Yamuna, Indus, and Brahmaputra — face long-term threats to their base flows, imperiling agriculture, drinking water, and hydroelectric power for hundreds of millions of people.

A government genuinely alive to these existential stakes would be mobilizing resources, reforming institutions, and communicating urgently with citizens. Instead, the policy agenda has featured landmark statue construction and road-building projects of questionable strategic priority.

The youth crisis: Anxiety, aspiration, and despair

The mismanagement of competitive and school examinations has added yet another dimension to the crisis. The cumulative effect on young people is measurable. According to data from the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), over 40 per cent of all suicides in India are committed by those below the age of 30 — a share that represents roughly double the global average for that age cohort, according to experts at AIIMS. In 2022, 1.71 lakh suicides were recorded in India; among the young, this figure marked a 27 per cent rise compared to 2018.

The broader social picture is equally sobering. Affluent Indians are increasingly seeking to emigrate or to secure foreign residency for their children. Those without such options face a system that offers diminishing returns on effort and aspiration.

Investor confidence is wavering. Entrepreneurs are deferring capital allocation. The economic dynamism that India's demographic dividend was supposed to generate remains frustratingly latent.

The danger of hope deferred

An overwhelming majority of Indians appear to be sustaining themselves on hope — the expectation that conditions will improve, that governance will strengthen, that the arc of the country's trajectory bends, eventually, toward better days.

That hope is neither irrational nor unwarranted. India possesses extraordinary reserves of talent, entrepreneurship, and resilience. But hope, unaccompanied by accountability and action, is a fragile vessel.

As the character Red — played by Morgan Freeman in The Shawshank Redemption — observed with characteristic economy: “Hope is a dangerous thing. It can drive you insane.” The line resonates differently when the hope in question is that of a nation waiting for its institutions to deliver on their most basic obligations.

India's crises — climatic, institutional, and social — are not destiny. They are the cumulative product of choices: choices about what to prioritize, what to acknowledge, and whom to hold accountable. Different choices remain possible. But they require, first, an honest reckoning with the scale of what is already unfolding. 



Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Demographic Dividend on Borrowed Time

The 2024 Sample Registration System (SRS) Statistical Report, released by the Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner of India, confirms with little ambiguity what we have been anticipating for some years: India is no longer a young, fast-multiplying nation racing toward a demographic windfall. It is a country in the middle of a structural demographic pivot, one that carries serious implications for growth, fiscal policy, and market valuations. The data covers the calendar year 2024 and was published in May 2026.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Why are markets in a state of disbelief?

Last week I raised a question that I believe lies at the heart of India’s current economic anxiety: why, despite the government and the RBI signaling growing concern — which, by historical precedent, should calm markets — are investors, particularly foreign investors, refusing to be reassured? (see here)

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Markets in a state of disbelief

“Markets stop panicking when the authorities begin to panic.”

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Small is not necessarily beautiful

Continuing from yesterday…(see here)