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Showing posts with the label Equity valuation

Point of view

Some famous finfluencers of social media have recently commented that some large-cap stocks have underperformed the benchmark Nifty50 in the past couple of years, while the earnings and balance sheets of these companies have improved decently. These stocks are trading well below their peak valuations. Many of these stocks are trading well below their 5-year median valuations. The finfluencers are arguing that valuations of these stocks shall witness a “mean reversion” soon and these could give 30 to 40% return without any further improvement in earnings or balance sheet matrices. The most popular example cited by these finfluencers is the share price behavior of ITC Limited in 2022-2023. I have no issues with these social media stars. I will be happy if large-cap stocks like HDFC Bank, Kotak Bank, Hindustan Lever, etc., outperform the benchmark indices and yield a 35-40% return. I am happy to ignore the fact that ITC has yielded a negative return in the past year. My small inquisitio...

Budget FY24: Views and strategy of various market participants

  Largely as expected; capex sustainability core focus (Phillips capital) Budget fared well across categories – prudent fiscal position, steep rise in capex allocations, continued focus on sustainability, Atmanirbhar Bharat, and social upliftment. Capex budgetary allocations have risen sharply in FY24 (up 37% vs. 23% in FY23); including IEBR, growth stands at 32%/10% in FY24/23. Incremental capex allocation in FY24 is highest for railways, roads, infra spending by states, and energy; defence and housing are muted; additional allocation of Rs 550bn has been made towards OMCs and BSNL capital infusion. Sharp drop in food and fertiliser subsidy (Rs 1.6tn) is in the expected lines. MNREGA allocations have also see a sharp decline to Rs 600bn vs. Rs 894bn in FY23RE. Fiscal deficit for FY24/23 is in line with our expectation – at 5.9%/6.4% of GDP; gross/net borrowing expectedly remains elevated at Rs 15.4tn/11.8tn, marginally higher vs. FY23. We expect this to keep yields elevated in the...

Dilemma : Stay with TINA or run towards hills?

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The September 2020 Global Fund Managers' survey conducted by the Bank of America research team found that 58% of the global fund managers believe that global equities are now in a bull market. This percentage is materially higher than the 46% in August 2020. The proportion of fund manager who believe it to be a bear market rally has reduced in September 2020 to 29% from 35% in August 2020. An overwhelming proportion of fund managers believe that "Long US Tech Stocks" is the most crowded trade. Though, the fund managers believing gold to be a crowded trade has reduced materially in September, as compared to August. "Short USD" trade is also seen gaining some popularity . Continuing with the theme, JP Morgan Research (as quoted by Niels Jensen of Absolute Partners), finds that S&P500 is now pricing in almost 0% probability of a recession in US; while 5yr US Treasuries are pricing in almost 100% probability of a recession. In his latest communicat...