The boom in Indian equities, which has increased the market’s total valuation by $775 billion in less than five months, has coincided with a dramatic shift in investor preference towards smaller businesses.
Smaller businesses are expected to gain more from India’s ongoing capital expenditure rebound. Larger equities, on the other hand, have been constrained by concerns about the impact of a probable global recession on the country’s leading IT firms, as well as the aftermath of a short-seller campaign against the sprawling group run by billionaire Gautam Adani.
The pattern is the polar reverse of what has been witnessed in the US stock market, which has been driven by a handful of technological megacaps riding the AI boom, leaving small caps in the dust.
The blue-chip NSE Nifty 50 Index has increased by 16% from its March low, while the Nifty Midcap 100 Index has increased by 37%, pushing the ratio between the two to an all-time high. According to statistics gathered by Bloomberg, the midcap gauge had a loss of nearly 25% over the next nine months from the last peak in early 2018.
Investors continue to place bets on one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, propelling the Southeast Asian nation’s share indexes to new highs during the last two decades. And the trend away from the greatest names in leadership has been fueled by a surge of capital from regular investors.
Nonetheless, the pace of growth in smaller equities relative to large caps has sparked concerns about the near-term outlook for India’s stock market boom.
Technical signs also point to some consolidation in the rise. Momentum for the Nifty Smallcap 100 Index, which has risen 46% since its March low, has reached its highest level in nine years. The 14-week relative strength index of the gauge has increased to roughly 86, much over the level of 70 considered overbought.
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