Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Investors’ dilemma - 2

In my post yesterday (see here) I mentioned that most of the sectors popular with small investors (…and also fund managers) are witnessing growth challenges. Though a majority of market analysts are expecting an earnings recovery from FY27 that should further accelerate in FY28, after two years of stagnation, uncertainties still persist with regard to (a) the resumption of a sustained uptrend in the Indian equities; and (b) likely leadership in the expected up move. Regardless, it is a good idea to prepare the ground and sow the seed well in advance.



 In my view, resumption of the up move in the Indian equities may be led by a combination of domestic factors like easy liquidity, stable rates, improvement in rural income and higher urban household cash surplus, stable macro environment, acceleration in earnings growth, etc.; and improved external environment, e.g., settlement of trade issues with major trading partners, easing geopolitical concerns, improvement in trade balance, and reversal of investment flows, etc.

Therefore, in my view, the investors’ positioning ought to be based on domestic growth drivers which are adequately supported by a favorable global environment. I have shortlisted the following areas for finding future leaders.

a)    Industrial companies with market and technology leadership, strong brand equity and access to global markets. Product companies rather than services companies are more preferable. Select companies with substantial operating leverage.

b)    Technology companies (product and services) that may benefit from fiscal incentives.

c)     Consumer companies both in staple and discretionary space which may benefit from higher disposable income, stable global economy, favorable tariffs, and stable prices. In particular, healthcare companies (product and services) are more preferred.

d)    Local units of global corporations that may see larger participation through more investment, hike in stake or transfer of manufacturing operations for regional exports, as the tariffs lower.

e)     Financials will inevitably participate in any bull market. Better asset quality, better yielding bond portfolio, higher credit demand, geographical spread due to deeper financial inclusion efforts, and improved capital adequacy recapitalization are some of the factors that support financials. Focus on large banks and NBFCs.

f)      Stable prices is one of my core investment premises. I would therefore avoid pure commodity plays. However, there are several companies that are transforming from a pure commodity company to a (value added) product company. Such companies offer interesting investment opportunities.

g)     I shall be size agnostic in selection of companies. In fact, the growth could be much higher in several small and midcap companies that have a technology edge.

 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Investors’ dilemma


Over the last couple of years, more and more analysts have started questioning India’s economic growth. Many reports now point out that some of the strongest areas of India's economy, like private consumption and services exports, are starting to face serious challenges.

As a small investor, the biggest concern that stands out for me is the cycle we seem stuck in: poor wage growth leads to low savings, which in turn lowers investments, reduces income, cuts consumption, and hampers overall growth. Breaking this cycle is not going to be easy, and it feels like the government is also finding it challenging to break this cycle.

Indian equity markets have also been underperforming compared to global markets. And within Indian equities, some sectors that were once considered safe bets have been struggling, while others are showing signs of slowing down. Here’s what I am noticing:

The Consumption Sector: This sector, which I have always believed to be one of the safest, has yielded a return of less than 5% CAGR over the past three years (including dividends). That’s a lot slower than I would have expected, especially with the Indian market’s population size and increasing spending power.

The IT Services Sector: IT services sector has been a leader for over two decades. But the Nifty IT index has dropped by ~22% in the last year, and with concerns about the future of legacy IT services companies, it’s making me rethink my exposure to this sector.

The Power Sector: This sector seemed like it was on the rise with its focus on manufacturing, data centers, and rural electrification. While there is still long-term potential, there’s now an oversupply in the short term. If demand doesn’t catch up soon, it’s likely that the stocks of power producers will underperform.

The Real Estate Sector: Real estate has been performing really well, with the Nifty Realty index showing a solid 27% annual return over the past three years. But I am hearing that we might have already seen the peak in this cycle. Even though the weight of real estate companies in the stock market is relatively small, a downturn in the sector could impact household investors, especially since many of them are heavily invested in physical real estate.

The Financial Services Sector: This sector is the largest in India’s equity market, but things aren’t looking great for household balance sheets. Savings are down, and debt is up. Comparing India’s household debt with the developed countries’ levels is inappropriate due to various factors (like lower wages, higher unemployment, and poverty). The fact remains that many households are struggling to stay afloat. The latest bank credit data shows that while credit growth is picking up, deposit growth is lagging behind. This makes me nervous about the widening credit-deposit gap, which could lead to a systemic risk in the financial sector.

The real challenge for small investors right now is deciding how to structure our portfolios. How can we make sure we’re getting good returns without overexposing ourselves to momentum assets like crypto, gold, and silver, or putting too much in global markets that may be outperforming India but come with their own set of risks?

So, what should a small Investor do?

…to continue tomorrow (suggestions are welcome)


Thursday, February 12, 2026

RBI surveys find overall stability in the economy

The latest round of the professional forecasters’ surveys shows that there is overall stability in the economy. The economic growth is expected to remain strong in FY27, despite a higher base of FY26, with both investments and consumption rates expected to improve marginally yoy. Current account is expected to remain stable. Prices are expected to stay stable. Industries have reported some improvement in capacity utilization, and new orders in the recent quarters. Banks expect the loan demand to improve and lending terms & conditions to stay easy in FY27. Rural consumers have shown improvement in confidence, though urban consumers are slightly less confident about FY27 spending.

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Let the water find its own path

A real estate developer takes 25% of the basic selling price of an apartment from prospective buyers, even when construction hasn't even started. The buyers, many times, borrow this money from banks paying 8-9% p.a. interest. The developer starts construction with the money received from the buyers, and keeps asking for more payments as construction progresses. The developer takes the full price of the apartment before possession is handed over to the buyer. Developers in India, on an average, usually earn a gross profit margin of 25-30%. This implies the buyers are borrowing money to fund the builder's profits. And this is an illustration of an ethical developer who is complying with all rules and regulations and ensuring timely delivery.

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Making sense of randomness

Global markets have felt wildly unpredictable for months now, particularly since January 2025, when Donald J. Trump assumed the U.S. presidency for a second time. His return to the White House appears to have added fresh layers of uncertainty to a world already reeling from multiple crisis points—ongoing conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, economic stagnation across Western Europe, Asia and Latin America, and intensifying climate challenges. As a result, market movements today often feel so erratic that making credible forecasts about future trajectories has become nearly impossible.

It’s no wonder that forecasts for commodities, equities, cryptocurrencies, currencies and bonds are so scattered that many sound like wishful thinking rather than grounded analysis. This resembles a room full of blind men trying to understand the universe by touching whatever object lies closest to them—a method with a painfully low probability of success.

Recently, diverse events like political developments in Japan and Korea, nomination of the next Chairman of the US Federal Reserve, civil unrest in Iran, declassification of Epstein files, coup in Venezuela, ceasefire in Gaza, and speculations about some rift in GCC, etc. have had material impact on the prices of precious metals, energy, base metals, currencies, equities, and bonds.

What makes this moment even more precarious is the apparent weaponization of the U.S. dollar. The United States has increasingly used its economic might to pressure geopolitical rivals (such as Russia, Iran and Venezuela) and strategic competitors like China. Meanwhile, China’s dominance in rare earth minerals further complicates global supply chains and economic leverage. In response, several central banks have accelerated efforts to reduce their holdings of U.S. dollars, increasing gold reserves and exploring alternative settlement mechanisms for cross-border trade. This trend is reshaping the global financial architecture in real time—adding new volatility vectors for investors to navigate

On top of geopolitics and macroeconomic policy, the breathtaking pace of technological evolution—particularly in artificial intelligence, renewable energy, and supply chain digitization—is another major factor influencing markets. These developments not only create new winners and losers across sectors but also introduce uncertainty about future earnings, labor markets, productivity, and long-term economic growth dynamics..

Some of the best-performing equity markets over the past year seem to defy economic fundamentals. For instance:

·         South Korea’s KOSPI has surged strongly,

·         Japan’s Nikkei has likewise posted impressive gains, and

·         Brazil’s market has also shown remarkable strength

Yet economic growth forecasts for these countries remain muted and demographics are deteriorating. Even markets like Pakistan’s have climbed despite chronic economic headwinds and weak GDP growth prospects. These divergences highlight a growing disconnect between market exuberance and underlying economic reality.

In this environment, traditional approaches to asset allocation—balancing debt, equity, precious metals, cash and alternative assets—feel inadequate. Diversification strategies across regions, sectors and currencies are no longer guarantees of risk reduction. Correlations between asset classes can shift quickly and unexpectedly, leaving even sophisticated portfolios exposed to abrupt repricing.

Under such circumstances, the most rational response may not be confident prediction but humble adaptability. Recognizing that random, chaotic forces are increasingly influencing markets might help investors design strategies that are more resilient and flexible—ones that emphasize risk management, scenario planning, and tactical rebalancing over rigid forecasting.


Thursday, February 5, 2026

Higher STT on Derivatives – Will it Curb Speculation

In the Union Budget for FY27, presented on February 1, the finance minister announced a significant hike in Securities Transaction Tax (STT) on futures and options (F&O) trades on recognized stock exchanges. Specifically, the STT on options was increased from 0.10% to 0.15%, and on futures from 0.02% to 0.05%. As per the Minister and senior officials, this move aims to curb excessive speculation in the markets and safeguard retail investors from potential losses.

While the intent appears well-meaning on the surface, a closer examination raises questions about its effectiveness and underlying rationale. In my view, this could be a case where policymakers are either overlooking key dynamics of securities markets or using a public-good narrative to justify a straightforward revenue booster. Below, I critically assess the proposal, drawing on market realities, and offer an enhanced perspective on its implications.

Understanding Derivative Trading Objectives

Derivative trading serves multiple legitimate purposes beyond mere speculation. Broadly, participants engage for one or more of the following reasons:

Hedging: Institutional investors, high-net-worth individuals (HNIs), and family offices often use derivatives to protect their portfolios against adverse price movements. This might involve taking short positions in futures or buying put options as insurance, without needing to liquidate underlying securities due to tax, legal, or regulatory constraints.

Speculation: Traders, including HNIs, brokers with proprietary books, and Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs), act on informed predictions about future events that could impact security prices. These positions—long or short—are typically backed by research, data, or experience, and they contribute to market efficiency by incorporating new information.

Arbitrage: Professional traders exploit temporary price discrepancies between spot and derivative markets through offsetting positions. This activity is crucial, as it enhances liquidity and ensures price alignment across markets.

Gambling: A smaller but vocal segment involves retail traders placing instinctive bets with little analytical basis. SEBI studies indicate that over 90% of such participants incur losses, and the volume of these trades has been rising despite the risks. It's important not to conflate these "gamblers" with genuine investors or traders, as doing so can distort regulatory approaches.

Hedgers, speculators (in the informed sense), and arbitrageurs are vital for providing depth and liquidity to both spot and derivative markets. Imposing higher costs on them to address losses among gamblers seems counterproductive—it's like penalizing all drivers for the recklessness of a few.

Critical Assessment: Accuracy and Effectiveness

The government's framing of the STT hike as a tool to "protect retail investors" assumes that speculation is inherently harmful and that higher transaction costs will deter it without collateral damage. However, this overlooks the nuanced roles outlined above. Empirical data from SEBI underscores the losses in retail F&O trading, but punishing the entire ecosystem may not address the root issue.

On the claim that higher costs won't curb gambling instincts: History shows that in aspirational societies like India's, the desire for quick wealth persists, often manifesting in gambling, smuggling, or other risky pursuits. With most traditional gambling avenues restricted or banned in India, regulated derivatives markets offer a safer, monitored alternative. Elevating STT could indeed push participants toward unregulated, opaque platforms—like illegal betting apps or offshore brokers—increasing risks rather than reducing them.

The STT hike might moderately discourage casual gambling but could disproportionately burden legitimate traders, potentially reducing overall market liquidity.

Grammar and flow in public discourse on this topic often suffer from oversimplification; for example, lumping all "speculation" as negative ignores its role in price discovery. Professionally, the budget's communication could be more transparent about revenue projections from this hike, estimated to add several thousand crores to the exchequer, rather than solely emphasizing investor protection.

We need a balanced approach

While I appreciate the budget's shift toward pragmatism in other areas (see here), this STT measure feels like a blunt instrument. Instead of broad tax increases, the government could, for example:

·         Target education and awareness campaigns for retail investors, perhaps mandating risk disclosures or demo trading before live F&O access .

·         Differentiate taxes based on holding periods or trade volumes to spare hedgers and arbitrageurs.

·         Monitor and regulate unregulated alternatives more aggressively to prevent migration.

Ultimately, markets thrive on balance—curbing excesses without stifling innovation. If the goal is sustainable growth, rewarding long-term investing (as the budget does elsewhere with capital gains tweaks) is positive, but let's ensure short-term tools don't undermine it.



Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Gold and Silver – Raging rivers, stay safe

Heightened volatility in the prices of gold and silver in recent days has tempered the rampant euphoria to some extent. Silver traders, in particular, have grown more cautious following such extreme volatility, with trillions wiped from market caps in a single session.

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

The morning after

The Union Budget for FY27 has been presented, dissected, and digested.

The stock market has apparently not liked the budget, primarily because the finance minister proposed to hike the Securities Transactions tax (STT) on derivative trades.

Bond market also appears unhappy. One, it does not like the proposed high gross borrowing for FY27 (Rs17.1trn). Two, there are several voices raising questioning the credibility of this number also. It is felt that the actual number could be materially higher, if (i) disinvestment target (~RS800bn) is not met, as has been the case in past many years; (ii) 8th pay commission payout is made within FY27 (no provision made in the budget); (iii) gold prices volatility continues and more tranches of Sovereign Gold Bonds are prematurely redeemed; (iv) revenue falls short even from the modest growth estimates.

Businesses are generally satisfied. They find the continued efforts to promote trust-based taxation; duty concessions for several capital goods, chemicals and medicines; 20 year tax concession for certain data centers; and proposal to initiate several new mega infra projects (East-West freight corridor, 7 high speed rail corridors; waterways) and tax incentives/clarity for data centers, GCC etc. positive for sustained growth.

Economists have given mixed reactions. They have commended the fiscal discipline, lower subsidies, and higher capex; but criticized poor execution by several departments and ministries (FY26RE capex much lower than FY26BE) and poor allocation growth for critical areas like education etc.

Politicians are expectedly divided on political lines. NDA supporters have commended the budget proposal as visionary, progressive, growth oriented and good for all sections of the society. Those in opposition have criticized the budget as a wasted opportunity, uninspiring for investors, unfriendly for middle classes, farmers and poor.

Common people have criticized the budget as harsh, as has been the case always. They are disappointed that their “reasonable” expectations of lower taxes, more subsidies/cash payout, better civic amenities, lower lending rates, higher deposit rates, etc. were not addressed by the finance minister.

Insofar as I am concerned, I liked the budget for its business-like approach, without much political rhetoric. It gives comfort that at least the government is aware of the serious challenges faced by the country (skill shortage, poor employment velocity of growth, changing globalization dynamics, need to attract FDI, low risk appetite of private entrepreneurs, trust deficit, counterproductive populism, etc.); and the areas where the real opportunities lie.

However, it does not take away the concerns arising from persistent and extremely poor execution, obdurate denial to admit mistakes; exponentially rising corruption and inefficiencies, and criminal waste of scarce resources on wasteful expenditure like political promotions.

While the attention of markets was focused on budget presentation, a mini crisis of sorts has developed in the precious metal markets. The prices of gold and silver have turned highly volatile and fallen *% and 30% respectively in the past three trading sessions.

Several readers have asked my views on the recent trends in the precious metal prices, persistent FII selling and the likely impact of STT hike on stock market volumes. I will address these questions tomorrow.



Sunday, February 1, 2026

Union Budget FY27 – Business like

 Today, the finance minister presented what, in my view, is one of the most business-like and forward-thinking budgets of the past decade. The focus is not on short-term populism but on the long-term health of the Indian economy. This budget comes at a critical juncture, as India faces both emerging global challenges and the demand for sustainable growth.

A Pragmatic Approach: Focused on the Long-Term

The 2026-2027 budget continues with prudent fiscal policies and sustainable growth. However, unlike previous years, where political considerations often shaped budget proposals, this year’s speech was strikingly business-like and direct. The finance minister effectively communicated that the government recognizes the challenges India faces—from a volatile global economy to infrastructure bottlenecks. Importantly, the proposals focus on addressing these challenges through reforms rather than quick fixes.

The budget makes significant strides in cutting down subsidies, ensuring fiscal discipline, and maintaining a neutral stance on tax buoyancy. It avoids populist rhetoric and lays a clear path for growth, leveraging India’s key strengths, such as labor-intensive legacy manufacturing and the untapped potential of sectors like tourism and electronics manufacturing.

Key Highlights

Fiscal Discipline Meets Growth

The government demonstrates clear awareness of current challenges while charting a path to sustainable growth. By cutting subsidies and maintaining strict fiscal discipline, the budget keeps tax buoyancy neutral - a refreshing change from previous years.

Despite the challenges posed by global uncertainties, the government has maintained the fiscal deficit target at 4.3% of GDP for 2026-27

Playing to India's Strengths

The budget strategically focuses on:

·         Labor-intensive manufacturing - India's traditional strength

·         Tourism potential - an underutilized asset

·         Legacy manufacturing sectors - areas where India has proven capabilities

Addressing Critical Challenges

Strategic allocations for:

·         Rare earth minerals development

·         Data centers and cloud services infrastructure

·         Electronics manufacturing ecosystem

·         Simplified regulatory framework for services sector

Market Reforms, Trust-Based Taxation and Clarity

The budget introduces several progressive measures:

·         Curbing securities market speculation by increasing STT on derivatives (options: 0.10% → 0.15%; futures: 0.02% → 0.05%)

·         Tax Decriminalization: Multiple offenses decriminalized or downgraded from rigorous to simple imprisonment. Monetary thresholds introduced (10 lakh, 50 lakh) for criminal prosecution. Focus shifts from punishment to compliance.

·         TCS burden eased: TCS provisions rationalized (uniform 2% rate for most categories).

·         Buyback tax relief for minority shareholders: Removed from dividend definition. Minority shareholders to pay LTCG/STCG and Promoters to pay full tax.

·         Dividend harvesting rules tightened: Exemption for interest paid on money borrowed to acquire mutual fund units or earn dividend income removed.

·         IT services classification clarified

Infrastructure & Development Push

Urban Development: Material budget enhancement with municipal bond provisions giving fiscal autonomy to local governments

Logistics Revolution

·         High-speed rail corridors

·         Enhanced inland waterways development

·         Tonnage tax benefits extended to inland vessels

Defense

Significant allocation increase recognizing security imperatives

Financial Sector Reforms

The budget proposes fundamental restructuring:

·         REC and PFC reorganization

·         High-level committee for comprehensive banking reforms

·         Signal for next-generation financial sector architecture

Political Optics: The Gandhi Gambit

Introduction of a Mahatma Gandhi-named scheme demonstrates political acumen - addressing opposition concerns while maintaining fiscal discipline.

Market Reaction & Long-term Implications

Initial Negative Response:

STT hike on derivatives

Dividend harvesting rule changes (Section 93 amendment removing interest deduction)

Short-term trader concerns

Long-term Positives:

·         Encourages genuine long-term investing

·         Addresses FII concerns about policy clarity

·         Improves FDI sentiment through regulatory simplification

·         Strengthens India's investment case

Taxation: The New Regime

Income Tax:

·         No rate changes - stability emphasized

·         Enhanced compliance deadlines (revised returns: 9→12 months)

·         Updated return provisions clarified

·         Fee structure rationalized

International Taxation:

Co-operative society definition expanded

IFSC benefits extended (10→20 years)

Federal co-operative dividend taxation clarified

Sovereign Gold Bond exemption refined (LTCG benefit only on redemption not on market sale)

MAT Overhaul:

Rate reduced: 15% → 14%

MAT becomes final tax in old regime

Credit carry-forward: 15 years, 25% annual limit

Conclusion

This budget represents a paradigm shift from populism to pragmatism. While markets may react negatively to anti-speculation measures in the short term, the long-term foundations are remarkably solid.

For investors: Stay the course. This budget rewards patience and punishes speculation - exactly what India needs for sustainable growth.