In FY25, bears bared fangs but bulls managed to hold ground 

The last six months have kept stock market investors, especially newbies, on tenterhooks. After a great run of over four years, many would not have been prepared for the steep correction. However, there is good news for them. Despite the sharp fall in the second half, returns from the stock market are still in the positive territory in FY25, which is ending on Monday. Better still, real returns (returns minus consumer price index) of benchmark indices are also at par with the consumer price index (CPI) with broader markets doing slightly better. While the average CPI was at 4.75% (till February), both the Sensex and Nifty have returned over 5% each.

In fact, over the past decade, the benchmark indices have given average real returns of over 8.2%, which is slightly lower than gold at 8.4%, but higher than silver’s 7.5%. The broader indices, however, have scored with the BSE mid-cap and BSE small-cap giving handsome returns of over 14% and 16%, respectively. In FY25, investors saw two completely different sides of the market. While the 30-share Sensex returns of 14.46%% in the first half gave hopes to investors that they could be staring at another blockbuster year like FY24 – when returns were 24.85% – the correction in the last six months forced them to pare down expectations.

ALSO READNo, this is not the return of FII buying. Here’s what analysts are saying…

The decline began around end-September when a spate of bad news hit at the same time. For starters, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) started looking at the lower-valued Chinese market favourably due to the government’s attempts to pump prime the economy through higher expenditure. The Indian economy also faltered in the second quarter, with the growth rate hitting 5.6%. Though things have improved significantly in the third quarter (6.2%), the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had to reduce the GDP forecast from an impressive 7.2% for FY25 to a more conservative 6.6%.

At the same time, India Inc’s disappointing second and third quarter earnings growth brought the focus back on the already-high valuations. Add to this heady cocktail the beginning of US Federal Reserve’s rate cut cycle and President Donald Trump’s re-election, along with tariff tantrums, and the bears were able to deliver a knockout punch to the bulls that saw benchmark indices falling over 8% and broader markets over 15% in the past six months.

 » Read More

Related Articles

Why now is an opportune time to invest in bank FDs for the stability of your portfolio

The Indian equity market has been rather volatile in the last couple of months, with the benchmark indices experiencing steep declines. While the market has finally staged a remarkable rebound in March 2025 (gaining nearly 6%), it would be imprudent to be complacent and think that markets have bottomed out. The U.S. President Donald Trump’s

US stock markets slump as Trump unveils steeper-than-expected tariffs

President Donald Trump announced tariffs on Wednesday against major U.S. trading partners that were more aggressive than anticipated, sending shockwaves through global markets as investors worried the duties would stall the global economy, hit corporate earnings and stoke inflation. The market reaction was sweeping as Trump said he would impose a 10% baseline tariff on

Budget cuts by US firms to hit IT revenues in FY26

The Indian IT services sector is likely to face challenges in FY26 due to increasing regulatory and economic uncertainties linked to the policies of the US administration under the presidency of Donald Trump. Analysts believe that pauses in IT budgets by corporate clients, combined with these uncertainties, could delay the industry’s recovery. The proposed tariffs

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe
- Advertisement -

Latest Articles

Why now is an opportune time to invest in bank FDs for the stability of your portfolio

The Indian equity market has been rather volatile in the last couple of months, with the benchmark indices experiencing steep declines. While the market has finally staged a remarkable rebound in March 2025 (gaining nearly 6%), it would be imprudent to be complacent and think that markets have bottomed out. The U.S. President Donald Trump’s

US stock markets slump as Trump unveils steeper-than-expected tariffs

President Donald Trump announced tariffs on Wednesday against major U.S. trading partners that were more aggressive than anticipated, sending shockwaves through global markets as investors worried the duties would stall the global economy, hit corporate earnings and stoke inflation. The market reaction was sweeping as Trump said he would impose a 10% baseline tariff on

Budget cuts by US firms to hit IT revenues in FY26

The Indian IT services sector is likely to face challenges in FY26 due to increasing regulatory and economic uncertainties linked to the policies of the US administration under the presidency of Donald Trump. Analysts believe that pauses in IT budgets by corporate clients, combined with these uncertainties, could delay the industry’s recovery. The proposed tariffs

Flipkart’s marketplace arm gets Rs 3,200 crore from parent

Flipkart Internet, the marketplace arm of Walmart-owned e-commerce major Flipkart, has received Rs 3,249 crore from its parent entity based in Singapore. The board at Flipkart has issued 470,773 equity shares at an issue price of Rs 69,014.7 each on a right issue basis to raise Rs 3,249 crore from Flipkart Marketplace Private Limited (Singapore)

Value creation: From cost centres to innovation hubs

By Amit Chadha For decades, India was the nerve centre of IT services, revolutionising how businesses worldwide operate. But over the past few years, a new wave of transformation has been underway — one that redefines India’s position on the global innovation map. Engineering R&D (ER&D) is becoming the backbone of India’s growth story, driving