India growth story largely priced in: CLSA

At a time when foreign investors are on a selling spree in India, global brokerage firm CLSA said on Monday that foreign investors may not be able to own India cheap since its growth story is almost fully priced in, with valuations and fundamentals currently capped at the high end 

“Right now, India’ growth story is pretty fully priced…and India has probably capped at its fundamentals,” Shaun Cochran, head of research at CLSA said in a media briefing on Monday. “Do not presume that India cannot perform, just because it’s expensive, because expensive can remain expensive for decades…but you can say with a reasonably high degree of conviction that India is unlikely to outperform its nominal GDP growth rate,” he said. 

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Alternatively, if markets globally were to come down, which will draw India down with the rest of the world, it can exceed its fundamentals. With a 10% correction in Indian equities, 10% more people get interested to invest, he said. 

Cochran explained that despite the fundamental conundrum for international investors–of wanting fair valuations for India’s apparent growth story–investors need to understand that they will have to pay for this story that the market understands and values.

The market understands that in the next cycle, India is likely to be a dominant market offering not just growth, but scale and liquidity, he said. “What’s attractive to investors right now is many have looked on with hope that India will correct to provide them the opportunity to actually reconsider India. And the other dynamic potentially is that India has such a vibrant domestic investment community that has conviction in India’s story.”

Alexander Redman, Chief Equity Strategist at CLSA also pointed out that India’s equity momentum has been driven by domestic investors with FII ownership at 17% being one of the lowest compared to other emerging markets. This he believes makes India the most-insulated in case of any tariff-related announcement by the incoming Trump administration. 

Cochran further said that the market is highly competitive and that foreign investors are not going to easily get prices that are obvious to buy because if they were, everyone would have bought it before. “If you want to own India cheap, understand that you will probably either always be underweight or may never own it,” Cochran added,

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