Union Budget's Capex & AI Push to Fuel FY27 Earnings: Morgan Stanley

Morgan Stanley's report states the Union Budget's emphasis on capital expenditure, services sector growth, and artificial intelligence will likely support earnings in FY27. The brokerage maintains a constructive view on Indian equities, with an overweight stance on Financials, Consumer Discretionary, and Industrials. The Budget balances debt reduction with growth support through cyclical and structural measures, targeting a fiscal deficit of 4.3% of GDP. It aims to strengthen manufacturing and services, including a tax holiday for data centers and a goal to capture 10% of global services exports by 2047.

Key Points: Budget Capex, AI to Support FY27 Earnings: Morgan Stanley

  • Capex boost with 11.5% YoY rise
  • Services sector focus for global exports
  • AI and manufacturing competitiveness
  • Shallow fiscal consolidation path
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Boost to capex, services sector growth and AI to support FY27 earnings: Report

Morgan Stanley report says Budget's focus on capex, services, and AI will support FY27 earnings, with an overweight stance on key sectors.

"We remain constructive on Indian equities - Overweight Financials, Consumer Discretionary and Industrials. - Morgan Stanley"

New Delhi, Feb 2

A likely boost to capex, services sector growth and AI in the Union Budget, along with slightly slower than expected fiscal consolidation, will likely support FY27 earnings, further helped by increased demand for equities through buybacks, Morgan Stanley has said.

The Budget balances debt-to-GDP reduction with slow fiscal consolidation and support for growth through both cyclical and structural measures.

"We remain constructive on Indian equities - Overweight Financials, Consumer Discretionary and Industrials," the global brokerage said in its note.

The Budget balances debt to GDP reduction with slow paced fiscal consolidation and support for growth through cyclical and structural measures.

It targets a fiscal deficit of 4.3 per cent of GDP for F27, in line with a central government debt to GDP ratio of 55.6 per cent in F27.

The Budget supports growth through three main segments. First, a continued emphasis on manufacturing, with measures that build on past steps such as support for semiconductors (ISM 2.0), rare earth magnets and legacy industrial clusters.

"The Budget focuses on the services sector through steps such as higher safe harbour thresholds, a tax holiday for data centres and a target to reach a 10 per cent share of global exports by 2047; and renewed focus on capex, with total capex rising 11.5 per cent YoY and defence capex up 18 per cent," said the note.

The Budget maintains the fiscal consolidation path, albeit at the shallowest pace since the pandemic.

"We expect the Budget to support cyclical growth recovery through its emphasis on capex (central government capex stays at 3.1 per cent of GDP in F27, similar to F26 RE) and to strengthen India's structural growth trend through steps that improve manufacturing competitiveness and services sector attractiveness," said the global brokerage.

The fiscal math remains realistic, in our view, with nominal GDP growth assumed at 10 per cent for F27 and direct tax revenue growth at 11.4 per cent, it added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The emphasis on AI and data centers is very forward-looking. A tax holiday for data centers can make India a real hub. But I wish there was more for the common man's pocket - inflation is still a worry.
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Vikram M
Fiscal deficit at 4.3% is slightly higher than expected, but if it's fueling growth-oriented capex, it's acceptable. The 18% jump in defence capex is crucial for our security. Jai Hind!
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Sarah B
As someone investing in Indian markets, Morgan Stanley's overweight on Financials, Consumer Discretionary, and Industrials makes sense. The budget seems to be laying a foundation for sustained earnings growth.
R
Rohit P
The target of 10% share in global services exports by 2047 is ambitious but achievable if we skill our youth properly. Focus on semiconductors and rare earths is also a strategic move for self-reliance.
K
Karthik V
With respect, the 'slowest pace of fiscal consolidation since the pandemic' is a concern. Debt-to-GDP is still high. Growth is good, but fiscal prudence cannot take a complete backseat. Hope the nominal GDP growth of 10% is realized.
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Nisha Z
Good for long-term investors! The budget seems balanced

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