2025 Market Performance: A Stark Contrast
As the year 2025 draws to a close, the Indian stock market presents a puzzling picture for many investors. While the benchmark Sensex registered a respectable 8.8 per cent gain, a staggering majority of actively traded stocks on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) failed to deliver returns superior to a simple fixed deposit offered by the State Bank of India. The SBI fixed deposit, offering 6.25 per cent for a one-year to under two-year duration, emerged as a formidable benchmark that nearly four out of every five BSE-listed stocks could not surpass.
This performance starkly contrasts with recent years. In 2023, 63 per cent of stocks beat the same benchmark, and in 2024, 70 per cent did. Even more remarkably, in 2021, an impressive 85 per cent of stocks outperformed the 6.25 per cent hurdle. The year 2025 reversed this trend, reminding investors of market dynamics seen in years like 2018 and 2019, where bull markets were selective and often unforgiving, concentrating gains among a few heavyweight counters.
Financial Flows and Equity Allocation
This performance comes at a critical juncture for household financial planning. Data from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) indicates a shift away from bank deposits towards equities. In the fiscal year 2025, household investment in bank deposits saw a decrease to ₹11.86-lakh crore from ₹14.22-lakh crore in FY24. Concurrently, household investments in equities nearly tripled, surging from ₹29,080 crore to ₹73,566 crore over the same period. While this shift in confidence towards equities was not punished by the overall index, the individual stock performance certainly failed to validate the move for many.
Market Capitalization and Sectoral Divide
The narrowness of market gains is best illustrated by market capitalization data. Among the large-cap stocks, defined as the top 100 companies by market value, 55 companies, including prominent names like Reliance Industries Limited, HDFC Bank, Bharti Airtel, and State Bank of India, managed to beat the fixed deposit hurdle. The performance dipped in the mid-cap segment (companies ranked 101 to 250), where 45 per cent, or 68 stocks, outperformed the FD. This segment included companies such as Ashok Leyland, Mazagon Dock, Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited, Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited, Marico Limited, and SRF Limited.
However, beyond the top 250 companies, the success rate plummeted dramatically. Among companies ranked 251 and below by market capitalization, a mere 18.5 per cent (610 out of 3,297 stocks) managed to beat the fixed deposit return, while a substantial 81.5 per cent fell short. This segmentation underscores that the year's rally was not a broad-based democratic movement but a leadership display by the market's heaviest constituents.
Sectors presented a mixed bag. Banks, generally performing better with approximately 58.5 per cent of banking stocks beating the FD hurdle, were among the stronger pockets. This resilience is often attributed to investors gravitating towards familiar large financial names during uncertain times. Sectors like steel, electronics, and auto ancillaries showed varied outcomes, with pockets of success but not enough to define the overall sector sentiment positively. Conversely, sectors such as sugar, hotels, and entertainment exhibited very low hit rates, with only 3 per cent and 8 per cent of stocks, respectively, outperforming the FD. The transport sector served as a potent metaphor for the year, with only 10 per cent of its stocks beating the FD, despite 85 per cent of the sector's market value being represented by its outperformers, highlighting concentrated gains within a few names like Blackbuck and Interglobe Aviation.
Winners and the Year's Lesson
Quantitatively, only 97 stocks managed to double their value, and 130 delivered returns between 51 per cent and 100 per cent. The larger group of 'winners' achieved more modest gains, with 352 stocks returning between 15 per cent and 50 per cent. The FD yardstick serves not as an argument against equity investments but as a crucial reality check on the dispersion of outcomes within the equity market, even during positive index performance. The year 2025 did not reject equities; instead, it challenged casual optimism, making the risk-free fixed deposit uncomfortably competitive.
Impact Rating: 7/10
Difficult Terms Explained
- Sensex: A stock market index representing the weighted average of 30 well-established and financially sound companies listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), considered a benchmark for the Indian equity market.
- BSE: The Bombay Stock Exchange, one of Asia's oldest stock exchanges, located in Mumbai, India.
- Fixed Deposit (FD): A financial instrument offered by banks where individuals can deposit money for a fixed period at a predetermined interest rate, considered a low-risk investment.
- Market Capitalization (Market Cap): The total market value of a company's outstanding shares of stock, calculated by multiplying the current market price of one share by the total number of outstanding shares.
- Large-cap: Refers to companies with a high market capitalization, typically among the top 100 companies listed on a stock exchange.
- Mid-cap: Refers to companies with a medium market capitalization, generally ranked between 101 and 250 by market value on a stock exchange.
- Equity: Represents ownership in a company, usually in the form of common stock. Investing in equities means buying shares of a company.
- Reserve Bank of India (RBI): India's central bank, responsible for regulating the country's monetary policy and financial system.
- Fiscal Year (FY): A 12-month period that companies and governments use for accounting purposes, which may not necessarily coincide with the calendar year. India's fiscal year runs from April 1 to March 31.