BofA Cuts Nifty Earnings Forecast, Warns Market Not Yet in Value Zone

BofA Securities has significantly cut its Nifty earnings growth estimate for FY27 to 8.5%, down from previous projections. The downgrade is attributed to geopolitical tensions and rising commodity prices, which threaten corporate margins and economic growth. The report states that despite recent corrections, Indian markets are still not cheap and trade at a premium to other emerging markets. It advises a selective, defensive investment approach, favoring sectors like defence and healthcare while avoiding rate-sensitive and mass consumption stocks.

Key Points: BofA Cuts Nifty FY27 Earnings Growth to 8.5%

  • Downgrade due to geopolitical tensions
  • Warns of margin and growth shock
  • Markets not in "value zone" yet
  • Advises defensive sector positioning
  • Sees 15% upside if conflicts resolve
2 min read

BofA cuts Nifty FY27 earnings growth to 8.5%, says markets not in value zone

BofA Securities downgrades Nifty earnings growth for FY27 to 8.5%, citing geopolitical risks and high valuations. See key sectors to watch.

"We proactively cut our FY27 Nifty earnings growth further to 8.5% YoY - BofA Securities Report"

New Delhi, April 11

BofA Securities has cut its earnings growth estimate for the Nifty for FY27 and said markets are "not in a value zone" yet, even as the risk-reward is turning favourable, according to its latest report titled 'Equity Strategy - India: Reasonable or a bargain?'.

"We proactively cut our FY27 Nifty earnings growth further to 8.5% YoY vs 11% in early March and 14% pre conflict," the report said.

The brokerage attributed the downgrade to ongoing geopolitical tensions and rising commodity prices, warning of pressure on both growth and corporate profitability.

"We see potential of a two-fold impact... a) Margin Shock... and b) Growth Shock," it said.

It explained that higher energy and commodity prices could push inflation higher and hurt margins, while delays in government and private investments, along with weaker demand, could weigh on growth.

On valuations, the report said markets are still not cheap despite recent corrections.

"Even on our conservative earnings, Nifty now trades close to LTA valuations... we hence believe markets are still not in a value zone," it noted.

At the same time, it indicated that the risk-reward is improving.

"Risk reward turning favorable; not in deep value yet," the report said.

BofA added that Indian equities continue to trade at a premium compared to other emerging markets.

"On a relative basis, Nifty is still expensive vs EMs," it said.

Looking ahead, the brokerage sees limited upside if global conditions improve.

"A potential resolution of conflict could take valuations beyond LTA providing 15% upside," it said.

However, it cautioned that risks remain if the situation worsens.

"In a bear case... posing a further 8% downside," the report noted, adding that in a worst-case scenario, earnings growth could fall to zero.

On strategy, BofA suggested a selective approach to investing.

"We now see select opportunities within Large caps... & SMID caps (select themes)," it said.

It added that it prefers sectors linked to energy security, banking and premium consumption, while remaining cautious on rate-sensitive sectors and mass consumption.

"We downgrade rate sensitive sectors... and continue to stay cautious on Mass consumption and Capex," the report said.

In the near term, the brokerage advised a defensive positioning amid volatility.

"Near-term, we suggest a portfolio skew" towards sectors like defence, telecom, healthcare and upstream energy, while avoiding areas such as real estate and airlines, it added.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
"Not in a value zone" is the key takeaway. My SIPs will continue, but I'm definitely not putting any lump sum money in right now. The geopolitical risk is just too high. Better to wait for a clearer picture. 🧐
R
Rohit P
Foreign brokerages always do this. When markets are high, they say "buy". When there's a correction, they downgrade and say "be cautious". By the time retail investors react, the smart money has already moved. Their "defensive" sectors like healthcare and telecom look solid for the current environment though.
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see the focus on energy security and premium consumption. It reflects the two Indias - one struggling with inflation and the other still spending on luxuries. As an investor, aligning with the premium theme might be the safer bet for now.
K
Karthik V
Cutting growth from 14% to 8.5% is a massive revision. It shows how vulnerable our "growth story" is to external shocks. We need stronger domestic demand insulation. The caution on mass consumption is worrying for the broader economy.
M
Michael C
A balanced report, to be fair. They're not screaming doom, just advising caution and selectivity. The 15% upside potential if conflicts resolve is the silver lining. For long-term investors, this volatility is a time to accumulate quality names slowly, not panic.

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