Indian Stocks Face Permanent De-Rating Risk Amid Disruption: Kotak

A report by Kotak Institutional Equities warns that the recent underperformance of Indian stocks may signal a permanent structural de-rating, not a temporary blip. It highlights that Indian companies face growing disruption threats but have not invested sufficiently to counter them. The de-rating has been delayed by retail investors' price-agnostic buying, but this may not sustain high valuations long-term. If a permanent reset occurs, several sectors and stocks could see a sharper correction, aligning valuations with business fundamentals and a changing competitive landscape.

Key Points: Indian Stocks Risk Permanent De-Rating, Says Kotak Report

  • Structural de-rating risk for Indian equities
  • Disruption threats across sectors
  • Lack of meaningful corporate investment
  • Price-agnostic retail buying delaying correction
  • Absence of high-tech firms in market
3 min read

Indian stocks face risk of structural de-rating amid disruption concerns: Kotak Report

Kotak report warns of a structural decline in Indian market multiples due to disruption threats and lack of corporate investment, signaling a potential permanent reset.

"the start of a 'permanent' reset in multiples to their 'correct' levels - Kotak Institutional Equities Report"

New Delhi, January 30

The recent correction and sustained underperformance of the domestic stock market relative to other global markets may not be a temporary phase but could indicate a deeper, more permanent reset in market valuations, according to a report by Kotak Institutional Equities.

The report highlighted that Indian equities are facing growing disruption threats across sectors, while Indian companies have not made meaningful investments to counter these challenges.

As a result, the report believes this could eventually lead to a structural decline in market multiples, bringing them down to what it terms "correct" levels.

It stated "the recent correction in and continued large underperformance of the Indian market versus other markets simply reflects a 'temporary' blip in the market or the start of a 'permanent' reset in multiples to their 'correct' levels. Several sectors and stocks would see an even larger correction in multiples (price and/or time) if the latter were to be true".

These levels would be better aligned with current business models and the emerging economic reality than with historically high valuation multiples.

The report noted that the de-rating of Indian equities has so far been delayed due to price-agnostic buying by retail investors. However, this factor alone may not be sufficient to sustain elevated valuations over the long term if structural issues persist.

Investors, according to the report, generally attribute the weakness in the Indian market to three key factors. These include the high valuation multiples of Indian equities, comparatively lower valuation multiples in other markets, and the lack of high-technology companies in India.

This absence stands in contrast to the presence of several established and emerging high-tech firms in other emerging markets.

However, the report cautioned that investors may be overlooking a more concerning issue. The report questioned whether the ongoing correction and the continued large underperformance of the Indian market relative to global peers represent a temporary disruption or the beginning of a permanent valuation reset.

The distinction between these two possibilities is critical, the report said. If the current trend reflects a permanent reset, several sectors and individual stocks could face an even sharper correction in valuation multiples. This correction could occur through further price declines or through extended periods during which prices remain subdued.

The report suggested that such a scenario would align valuations more closely with the underlying business fundamentals and the evolving competitive landscape, particularly in light of technological disruption and changing sector dynamics.

Overall, the report noted that while market participants may continue to debate near-term triggers, the longer-term concern is whether Indian equities are entering a phase of structural revaluation that could redefine return expectations across sectors.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As an NRI investor, I've been concerned about the lack of high-tech innovation in the Indian market compared to other EMs. The report is right to point this out. We need more homegrown tech giants, not just IT services firms.
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Ananya R
While the analysis seems sound, I respectfully disagree that this is a permanent reset. The Indian economy's fundamentals are strong - demographic dividend, digital push, infrastructure growth. This is a correction, not a derating. Have faith! 🙏
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Vikram M
The point about "price-agnostic buying by retail investors" is spot on. So many new investors just follow tips from YouTube and Telegram without understanding P/E ratios. This bubble had to burst eventually. Time for sensible investing.
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Karthik V
This is worrying for middle-class investors like me who put our savings in SIPs. If this is a structural change, our long-term financial planning gets disrupted. Regulators and companies need to address this disruption threat seriously.
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Priya S
Maybe this correction will force our corporates to finally innovate and invest in technology. We can't just be a market for global tech; we need to build our own. Jio showed it's possible. Others need to step up.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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