Financial Year 2024-25 (FY25), may be recorded in the annals of history as a watershed year for global politics, geopolitics, markets and the financial system. The events that occurred during the past twelve months have opened up significant possibilities for emergence of a new global order. Although the contours of the likely new global order are yet to begin taking a shape, it appears that fight for dominance over technology; endeavor to gain fiscal strength; interventionist democracy where the state exercises intensive control over citizens; and top priority to energy security would be four key characteristics of the new order.
The markets began to take cognizance of the broader developments and oscillated wildly between the extremes of greed and fear during the year. However, thankfully, markets managed to close the year on a rather satisfactory note. Most asset classes – equity, bonds, precious metals, base metals and real estate yielded decent returns for the year. Moreover, as we begin the new financial year (FY26), some of the key concerns, e.g., wider trade conflicts, geopolitical escalations, and fiscal implosions have peaked and showing some early signs of easing.
In India, the economic growth returned to the normal pre-Covid trajectory, as the base effect of FY20 and FY21 low growth tapered off, and external challenges mounted. Equity markets settled close to their long-term average valuations, after witnessing one round each of euphoria and despondency. Bond markets and INR have also managed to end the year on a rather optimistic note.
The following are some of the highlights of the performance during FY25.
Equity Markets
The Indian equity market managed to end the year in positive territory, despite showing negative in six out of twelve months. Indian equities underperformed the global peers. The benchmark Nifty yielded a return of ~5% (3% in USD terms), which was in line with the US markets (S&P500 +8%), and Europe (Stoxx600 +5%, DAX +21%) but much lower than China (Hang Seng +38%, Shanghai Composite +9%). Asian markets, ex China, were mostly negative, with Japan (Nikkei225 -10%), Indonesia (IDX-10%), Korea (KOSPI -10%) and Singapore (SET -15%) ending the year with decent cuts. The valuation premium of Indian markets to the other emerging markets therefore remained elevated.
Banks saved the day for Indian benchmark indices
The benchmark Nifty (+5.3%) performed in line with broader markets (NSE500 +5.4%, Smallcap 100 +5.4%); though midcap stock did somewhat better (Midcap100 +7.5%). The gains in benchmark indices were mostly led by banks (Nifty Bank +9.3%). Overall market cap of NSE was higher by 6.9%, explained by many new listings and outperformance of midcap stocks.
Sector-wise, Financials, Services, Private Banks, Pharma and Metals were top outperformers. Media, IT Services, PSU Banks, Realty, FMCG, Auto, Infra and Commodities were notable underperformers. Micro-sector-wise, Ship builders and EMS were outstanding. Renewable energy and real estate builders were notable losers.
2HFY25 witnessed 5/6 negative months
The benchmark Nifty50 yielded negative month-on-month (MoM) returns for five out of six months in FY25. The second half of the year was worst with five out of six months resulting in negative MoM return. However, the market breadth was negative in nine out of twelve months implying much higher volatility in the broader markets.
Institutional flows positive
Over institutional flows were materially positive for FY25. Net domestic and foreign flows in the secondary equity market amounted to Rs3591bn. Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) were however net sellers of Rs2480bn in the secondary market, while domestic institutions pumped in a record Rs6071bn. FPIs were net sellers in eight out of the twelve months. The nifty-institutional flow correlation (73%) was decent in FY25.
Debt and Currency Markets
Indian debt and currency markets were volatile in tandem with the global trend. However, both bonds and INR managed to close the year on a buoyant note.
RBI cut the policy rates by 25bps and Cash Reserve Ratio for commercial banks by 50bps. The benchmark 10-year treasury bond yields eased to 6.58% from 7.11% a year earlier. USDINR weakened 2.6% to 85.59 from 83.35 a year earlier. Lending and term deposit rates were higher by up to 10-20bps. The yield curve shifted lower and flattened completely.
The RBI changed its policy stance to “neutral” from “withdrawal of accommodation” in FY24. The liquidity position however continued to remain tight, with banking system liquidity remaining in deficit for most part of the 2HFY25. The credit growth outstripped the deposit growth. Overnight and call money rates cooled 25bps in 4QFY25, due to aggressive open market operations carried out by the RBI.
Economic conditions
Overall FY25E GDP growth slowed down to ~6.2% as the effects of the low base of FY21 and FY22 tapered off and fiscal correction progressed further. The consensus estimates for FY26E GDP growth is slightly better at ~6.5%. Nominal GDP growth for FY25E has been materially lower at ~9.1%, and is expected to pick up to ~10.5% in FY26E.
· CPI Inflation mostly remained within the RBI’s tolerance band of 4-6% (except for a short spike in October 2024). Core inflation eased below 4% in August and then February 2024.
· Real rates have mostly remained in positive territory during FY24.
· Fiscal deficit remained high despite moderation over the past few years.
· The private sector investments failed to gather the desired pace, despite several government incentives. The government capex also slowed down in FY25. 9MFY25 investment to GDP ratio dropped to 32.6%. Private consumption recovered in FY25E from the sharp dip in FY24.
· External conditions worsened during FY25. Merchandise trade balance deteriorated to USD292bn. Exports were lower yoy, while imports were higher by 6% yoy. External debt was higher by 10%. Net FDI flows continued to slow for the third consecutive year.
Commodities
FY25 was a mixed year for commodities. Precious metals (Gold +40%, Silver 39%) and Industrial metals (Zinc +17%, Copper +10%) recorded good gains, while energy (Brent Crude -17%, Coal -20%) and agri commodities (Wheat -16%, Soy -14%) ended the year with strong losses.
Crypto shine
Cryptocurrencies further strengthened their position with material rise in trading volumes and market capitalization. Bitcoin ended the year FY25 with a strong 21% yoy gain. More jurisdiction accepted cryptocurrencies as a valid medium of exchange, financial asset and/or tradeable asset.
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