Share Markets Under Pressure: Crude, FII Outflows & AI Risks Concern Axis Direct

Rajesh Palviya of Axis Direct warns Indian share markets may remain under pressure for the next few quarters due to rising crude oil prices, geopolitical tensions, and FII outflows. He notes the market is in an 18-20 month correction phase, the longest post-COVID, with global factors dominating sentiment. Continuous foreign investor selling and rupee weakness are key concerns, though metals and quality mid-caps show resilience. A recovery would require de-escalation of geopolitical conflicts, while AI disruption adds risk for IT companies.

Key Points: Markets Under Pressure for Quarters: Axis Direct

  • Rising crude oil prices and geopolitical tensions create inflationary pressure
  • Continuous FII selling over past years impacts market performance
  • Indian markets in longest correction phase post-COVID (18-20 months)
  • AI disruption poses concern for IT sector adaptation
  • De-escalation of geopolitical tensions could trigger recovery
3 min read

Share markets may remain in pressure for next few quarters amid crude and AI risks: Axis Direct's Rajesh Palviya

Axis Direct's Rajesh Palviya says share markets may stay under pressure for 2-3 quarters due to crude oil, geopolitical tensions, FII outflows, and AI disruption risks.

"Global factors are always supreme because we are linked economy to the global market and until and unless we don't have stability in the global triggers I think our market may remain under pressure. - Rajesh Palviya"

By Nikhil Dedha, Mumbai, May 13

The share markets in the country are likely to remain under pressure for the next couple of quarters due to rising crude oil prices, geopolitical tensions, foreign institutional investor outflows and concerns around currency weakness, according to Rajesh Palviya, Head of Research at Axis Direct.

In an exclusive conversation with ANI on Wednesday, Palviya said Indian markets may not quickly return to their previous all-time high trajectory as multiple global headwinds continue to weigh on investor sentiment.

"I think it will remain for next couple of quarter we will not be able to move very fast to again all time high trajectory," he said.

According to him, supply disruptions in crude oil due to geopolitical tensions have already started impacting the economy and could add inflationary pressure in the coming quarters.

"This crude oil supply disruption is already taking place and I think it will take time to settle down and this is going to give inflationary pressure to our economy also in coming quarter," he said.

Palviya noted that Indian markets have already been witnessing a prolonged correction phase for nearly 18 to 20 months, which he described as one of the longest correction periods seen after the COVID-19 pandemic.

"We are already seeing almost 18-20 month of correction phase. This is the highest time period post COVID," he stated.

He attributed the weakness in markets to multiple factors including US tariffs, geopolitical tensions and concerns around the global economy.

While acknowledging that the government has introduced several proactive reforms and measures to support the domestic economy, he said global developments continue to dominate market sentiment.

"Global factors are always supreme because we are linked economy to the global market and until and unless we don't have stability in the global triggers I think our market may remain under pressure," he said.

Palviya also pointed to continuous FII selling over the past few years as a major reason behind the underperformance of Indian equities compared to global peers.

"The major concern is from the FII flows also and since last couple of years we are seeing negative flows from the FII continuously withdrawing the money from our market," he said.

He further said the rupee has also struggled to stabilise despite measures taken by the Reserve Bank of India.

However, he noted that certain sectors such as metals and quality mid-cap stocks have continued to perform well due to better earnings visibility.

Discussing factors that could trigger a market recovery, Palviya said de-escalation of geopolitical tensions would be the biggest positive trigger for equities.

"Once we see de-escalation at any given point of time of this war, then our market will start recovering," he said.

At the same time, he highlighted concerns regarding the impact of artificial intelligence on the IT sector.

"How IT companies are going to cope up with all this AI disruption which is taking place, that's another concern," he stated, adding that investors are closely watching how quickly Indian IT companies adapt their business models to AI-led changes.

On the government's recent decision to raise import duty on gold, Palviya said the move is aimed at containing gold imports and protecting India's foreign exchange reserves amid rising crude prices and rupee weakness.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
My father is a small investor and he's really worried after reading this news. The article mentions a correction of 18-20 months—that's quite long. I hope RBI and the government manage rupee stability better. Gold import duty hike might help but won't solve the core issues. 📉
J
James A
As someone who follows global markets closely, I think Palviya's analysis is spot on. The AI disruption in IT sector is a real concern that many overlook. Indian IT companies need to innovate fast or risk losing ground to more agile competitors. But I'm cautiously optimistic about long-term recovery. 🔍
M
Michael C
Interesting perspective from Axis Direct. However, I feel the article could have discussed more about how retail investors can protect themselves during this volatility. The focus on global factors is right, but individual strategies matter too. Any tips on safe havens? 🛡️
V
Vikram M
Very informative article. I agree that geopolitical tensions are the main culprit here. But I think the government's proactive reforms like PLI schemes and infrastructure spending will help cushion the blow. Metals sector doing well is a good sign for manufacturing growth. Let's stay patient and invest systematically. 💪
S
Sarah B
I'm a bit skeptical about the "proactive reforms" line always used by analysts. While some measures are good, the ground reality for many MSMEs and small investors is tough. The rupee weakness and inflation are real pain points for common citizens. Need more concrete action than just optimistic statements. 🤷

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50