Indian Equities Face Valuation Headwinds, BofA Analyst Warns
Indian equity markets are grappling with expensive valuations and have underperformed most emerging market indices for over a year, according to Amish Shah, Head of India Research at Bank of America (BofA) Global Research. Shah explained that despite limited returns over the past year, the market has not seen significant price correction due to stagnant earnings growth. He forecasts Nifty earnings growth at a modest 5.5% for FY2025 and 7% for FY2026, suggesting that current valuations are not justified by such growth rates.
Valuation Concerns Mount
The long-term average valuation for the Nifty index is around 16 times earnings. However, Shah notes that using a 20-year weighted average of current Nifty constituents suggests a fairer long-term average of 19.2 times. With Nifty currently trading at 21 times, close to one standard deviation above its average (21.5 times), it is considered slightly expensive. The situation is more pronounced in small and mid-cap stocks, which have seen some correction but still trade at valuations significantly above historical averages. This leads BofA Research to anticipate continued underperformance from these segments into FY2026.
Earnings Growth Outlook
While earnings downgrades are slowing, Shah expects earnings growth to accelerate from a low base. He points out that BofA's initial FY26 forecast of 7% earnings growth has aligned with the consensus, which has revised its own expectations downwards significantly from 22%. For FY27, earnings growth is projected to pick up to 14%, a notable acceleration from the preceding two fiscal years. Despite this expected acceleration, BofA suggests that the benchmark Nifty may only offer around 12% market returns over the next 12 months, based on forward earnings growth.
Sectoral Performance and Capex Revival Skepticism
Meaningful earnings acceleration is expected from sectors like consumer discretionary, financials (banks and NBFCs), and passenger vehicles. Conversely, Shah expressed scepticism about a strong private sector capital expenditure (capex) revival in the near term. He noted that government spending has been the primary driver of capex growth in recent years, with private sector interest waning due to past financial difficulties with build-operate-transfer projects. Consequently, BofA maintains a cautious stance on capex-linked sectors such as steel, cement, and industrials, viewing them as potentially overvalued given the subdued outlook.
Newer segments like renewables, hotels, data centres, electric vehicle charging, green hydrogen, and biofuels are seeing renewed capex interest. However, Shah cautioned investors against unrealistic expectations for capex-linked stocks, suggesting that industrial, cement, and steel stocks might need to correct lower from a market perspective.
India-US Trade Deal and Macro Risks
The market appears to have priced in a reduction in India-US trade tariffs, likely to around 25%. Shah indicated that a status quo at the current 50% tariff level would lead to a selloff. While services exports remain robust and outside tariff discussions, goods exports to the US could face challenges. This could lead to job losses and impact consumption growth, alongside potential rupee depreciation that might deter interest rate cuts by the Reserve Bank of India. Such factors could dampen GDP growth projections.
BofA forecasts the US Federal Reserve will cut rates by 75 basis points in 2026. Historically, this environment favours emerging markets, potentially reversing the FII outflows seen in India this year as investors seek higher yields. However, significant risks remain, including potential surges in crude oil prices, continued rupee depreciation, failure or delay in the India-US trade deal, and a correction in US markets driven by AI valuation concerns, given the high correlation between Indian and US equities.
India's Attractiveness in Emerging Markets
While India was previously viewed cautiously due to expensive valuations and low earnings visibility, its attractiveness is improving relative to other emerging markets. Despite the absence of prominent AI-related stocks, a moderation in earnings cuts and expected growth acceleration position India more favourably. However, the confluence of external factors like crude prices and US market movements, alongside domestic concerns about fiscal stimulus reduction, poses significant risks to Indian market returns.
Impact
This analysis from BofA Global Research directly impacts investor sentiment and strategic allocation towards Indian equities. The warning on expensive valuations, particularly in small and mid-caps, coupled with scepticism over private capex, could lead to sector rotation and reduced market upside potential. Conversely, expected FII inflows and potential earnings acceleration offer some positive catalysts, albeit tempered by significant risks. The assessment suggests a cautious approach for investors, focusing on sectors with stronger fundamentals and realistic valuations.
Impact Rating: 8/10
Difficult Terms Explained
Valuations: The perceived worth of a company or asset, often measured by metrics like Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio.
Emerging Market Indices: Stock market indices representing the performance of stock markets in developing economies.
Nifty: A benchmark index representing the average performance of the top 50 largest and most liquid Indian companies listed on the National Stock Exchange.
Earnings Growth: The increase in a company's net profit over a specific period.
FY (Fiscal Year): A 12-month period used for accounting and financial reporting, which may not coincide with the calendar year (e.g., FY2025 runs from April 1, 2024, to March 31, 2025).
Standard Deviation (SD): A statistical measure that quantifies the amount of variation or dispersion of a set of data values relative to their average.
Small-caps and Mid-caps: Classifications of companies based on their market capitalization (total value of a company's outstanding shares), with small-caps having the lowest and mid-caps falling between small and large-caps.
Capital Expenditure (Capex): Funds used by a company to acquire, upgrade, and maintain physical assets like property, buildings, and equipment.
Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT): A project delivery model where a private entity builds and operates a public infrastructure project for a specified period before transferring ownership to the government.
NBFCs (Non-Banking Financial Companies): Financial institutions that provide banking-like services but do not hold a full banking license.
Current Account: A record of a country's transactions with the rest of the world, including trade in goods and services, income, and current transfers.
Rupee Depreciation: A decrease in the value of the Indian Rupee relative to another currency, meaning it takes more rupees to buy one unit of the foreign currency.
Federal Reserve (Fed): The central banking system of the United States.
Basis Points (bps): A common unit of measure for interest rates and other financial percentages. One basis point is equal to 0.01%.
Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs): Overseas institutions that invest in a country's financial markets.
AI (Artificial Intelligence): Technology that enables machines to perform tasks that typically require human intelligence, such as learning, problem-solving, and decision-making.