logo
Good news getting priced in faster, narrow range consolidation likely in medium term: Siddharth Vora

Good news getting priced in faster, narrow range consolidation likely in medium term: Siddharth Vora

Economic Times6 days ago

Siddharth Vora, Executive Director, PL Asset Management, says after a sharp three-month rally, the Indian market may experience profit booking or consolidation due to priced-in good news and limited valuation headroom. While cautious in the near term, medium-term prospects remain healthy with favorable market conditions. IT and metals sectors are performing well, and capital markets offer long-term growth potential.
ADVERTISEMENT
How should one look at the market? Should one look at the positive side that yes, India GDP is doing good, the rate cuts are easing off, even the CPI number is quite favourable or look at the other side which is geopolitical uncertainty still persist and add to that is the recent move in the crude oil prices. How do you see the markets?
Siddharth Vora: The right perspective to look at the market is that there are multiple positives from the macro front whether it is rate cuts, inflation, strong growth, we need to look at it from the perspective that we are coming out of a sharp rally over the last three months. So, in my opinion, a lot of good news is already priced in and one needs to be a little cautious from here on given we do not have too much valuation headroom in India anyways.
Rs 13 lakh crore boom, but Q4 sends a wake-up call to smallcap investors
We were always an expensive market. We corrected a bit and now we are back to an expensive market. So, all the good news is actually known by everyone, bulk of it is also priced in. In the near term, we could see some sort of profit booking or consolidation coming out of the strong rally and the lack of fresh upside triggers in the near term.
So, in the near term, we could see a marginally corrective market, but again that is a very short-term view. From a medium-term, we do believe that quantitatively we are in very healthy, favourable, and stable market conditions. All other sentiment indicators have been positive. We flagged off a market recovery outlook early like first week March, last week Feb, and that has played out really fast. We thought it would play out over 6-12 months, but it has played out over two-three months itself. So, yes, the good news is getting priced in faster and that is a good sign from the market, could see some narrow range consolidation in the medium term.
ADVERTISEMENT Earlier, you had mentioned that you had exited from the consumer discretionary pack. You had exited travel and tourism and were looking at themes like alcohol. Now, there is news about an increase in excise duty. The entire space is subjected to government policies. How are you looking at it right now? The other pack is IT, which is seeing a rerating. That is the only sector that is holding the fort in a market like this.
Siddharth Vora: From an IT perspective, even in my last chat with you, I had said that it is a tail risk play in our portfolio. We have had a 12-13% allocation for the last two-three months, despite all the globally negative cues, US risks, we still had IT because of its free cash generating nature and comfortable valuations on the largecap side, traditionally giving a low volatility defensive exposure to the portfolio. From a volatility, quality, and valuation perspective, IT was fitting right in the quant strategy and therefore we have maintained our allocation and it is doing really well now. Where the rest of the market is seeing some sort of profit booking and correction, it is playing out the tail risk play, global play. So, both IT and metals are playing out well for us. They were contra positions at some point, but now they are turning favourable in the current markets cycle.
ADVERTISEMENT Coming to alcohol, we have only had one name in our portfolio for the last five-six months now – Radico. It has done really well for us so far and despite everything, we continue to maintain a 2-2.5% allocation to Radico and we will stick to our position till we see any major development from a quantitative perspective. Fundamental triggers can keep changing, but quantitatively from a factor standpoint, Radico continues to hold strong across multiple factors.
What is your view on some of the capital market plays because last month specifically, there has been no stopping in most of these counters. How long can this run-up continue and what factors do you believe are at play for this?
Siddharth Vora: In our portfolio, we have a significant allocation to the entire capital markets play. It has contributed to our alpha for the month of May and June as well so far across the board right whether it is asset management companies, broking companies, some other platform companies, exchanges, or other capital market ancillaries, most of them have done well and we continue to hold this story.
ADVERTISEMENT Within our financial allocation, it is lenders, capital markets, and insurance, these are the three broad pockets we have allocated and within this capital markets holds the relatively higher allocation and from a quantitative perspective, we believe we are well positioned to ride the wave in capital markets. It is a structural story, but we are not structural participants. We will stay in the story till quantitative triggers stay intact. The moment that changes, we will be out of the story. I can give you a fundamental view that for three-five years, this is a great area with visible growth, valuations are rich, cash generation is very good, but I know for a fact that if the market structure were to change, if there was excessive volatility, we would be the first ones to be out of the sector as well.The right perspective to look at the market is that there are multiple positives from the macro front whether it is rate cuts, inflation, strong growth, we need to look at it from the perspective that we are coming out of a sharp rally over the last three months. So, in my opinion, a lot of good news is already priced in and one needs to be a little cautious from here on given we do not have too much valuation headroom in India anyways.
ADVERTISEMENT We were always an expensive market. We corrected a bit and now we are back to an expensive market. So, all the good news is actually known by everyone, bulk of it is also priced in. In the near term, we could see some sort of profit booking or consolidation coming out of the strong rally and the lack of fresh upside triggers in the near term. So, in the near term, we could see a marginally corrective market, but again that is a very short-term view. From a medium-term, we do believe that quantitatively we are in very healthy, favourable, and stable market conditions. All other sentiment indicators have been positive. We flagged off a market recovery outlook early like first week March, last week Feb, and that has played out really fast. We thought it would play out over 6-12 months, but it has played out over two-three months itself. So, yes, the good news is getting priced in faster and that is a good sign from the market, could see some narrow range consolidation in the medium term.Both IT and metals are playing out well for us. They were contra positions at some point, but now they are turning favourable in the current markets cycle.
From a fundamental view, for three-five years, capital market play is a great area with visible growth, valuations are rich, cash generation is very good, but I know for a fact that if the market structure were to change, if there was excessive volatility, we would be the first ones to be out of the sector as well.
(You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

World's biggest banks increased fossil fuel financing by $162 billion in 2024: Report
World's biggest banks increased fossil fuel financing by $162 billion in 2024: Report

Indian Express

time25 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

World's biggest banks increased fossil fuel financing by $162 billion in 2024: Report

The world's largest 65 banks committed $869 billion in 2024 to companies in the fossil fuels sector, up from $707 billion in 2023, with State Bank of India (SBI) one of nearly 50 large banks that increased their financing for the same compared to the previous year. 'This growth in fossil fuel finance is troubling because new fossil fuel infrastructure locks in more decades of fossil fuel dependence. As the IEA's (International Energy Agency) 2024 Energy Investment Outlook report states, '(a)chieving net zero emissions globally by 2050 would mean annual investment in oil, gas, and coal falls by more than half' by 2030,' said the Fossil Fuel Finance Report 2025 by a group of eight environment organisations together called Banking on Climate Chaos Coalition. To be sure, SBI accounted for only a fraction of the total fossil fuel financing in 2024 and only saw a small increase last year compared to other lenders. As per the report, SBI was the only Indian bank in the top 65 with a $65 million increase in fossil fuel financing in 2024 from 2023 to $2.62 billion, putting it at the 47th spot out of the 65 banks, up from 49 in 2023. In comparison, JPMorgan Chase retained its top spot in the list as it gave $53.5 billion to fossil fuel companies last year, $15 billion more than it did in 2023. This is more than SBI's total fossil fuel financing of $10.6 billion from 2021 to 2024. Earlier this year in February, SBI Chairman CS Setty said the bank is targeting to be net zero in terms of emissions by 2055. Before that, the bank is aiming to have at least 7.5 per cent of its domestic gross advances to be green advances by 2030. As at the end of the quarter ended March, SBI's domestic advances stood at Rs 36.02 lakh crore. It had sanctioned a combined fund and non-fund-based limit of Rs 20,558 crore for sustainable finance activities. According to Bengaluru-based think-tank Climate Risk Horizons, coal financing is a 'huge blind spot' for Indian banks. 'Among the top 1000 BSE-listed banks as of March 2024, only Federal Bank and RBL Bank have adopted explicit coal exclusion or phase-out policies… The economics are clear: coal is no longer the cheap energy source it once was. Renewable energy and storage can now provide electricity at or below the cost of coal, with continued cost declines likely,' the think-tank's analysts said in a post in March 2025 warning that Indian banks were falling behind in the sustainable finance race. The report found that fossil fuel financing by the world's largest banks rose in 2024 after declining in 2023 came amid watering down of exclusion policies and policy rollbacks. '…what was once largely a North American trend is now going global. European banks –often seen as more progressive on climate due to the quality of their sector policies – also began backtracking,' it said. In March, American lender Wells Fargo scrapped plans to become net zero by 2050, weeks after US President Donald Trump signed an executive order announcing the country's withdrawal from the Paris Agreement. The US' withdrawal — which will take effect in early 2026 and see the world's largest economy join Iran, Libya, and Yemen as those not party to the Paris Agreement — has been part of a series of steps taken by the Trump administration to promote fossil fuels even in the face of 2024 being the hottest year ever recorded. In January, the US Treasury Department withdrew its membership of the Network of Central Banks and Supervisors for Greening the Financial System —a voluntary global coalition that looks to mobilise green finance and develop recommendations for climate-risk management in the financial sector — as part of the aforementioned executive order signed by Trump. And ahead of Trump's inauguration, the US' six largest banks left the UN-sponsored Net Zero Banking Alliance. A committee of the US Senate also approved draft legislation this week that would hit key tax incentives for clean energy. The increase in fossil fuel financing by banks in 2024 marked a reversal of decreasing lending to the segment. While nearly $3.3 trillion has been made available to fossil fuel businesses since 2021, the 65 banks in the 2025 report have committed $7.9 trillion in fossil fuel financing since the Paris Agreement came into force in 2016. In 2024, financing for acquisitions increased by $19.2 billion to $82.9 billion. While mergers and acquisitions don't directly create new infrastructure, 'this consolidation — for which bank financing is critical — is often an attempt to grow the power and competitiveness of fossil fuel companies, at a time when the world actually needs to phase out fossil fuels', the report said. Siddharth Upasani is a Deputy Associate Editor with The Indian Express. He reports primarily on data and the economy, looking for trends and changes in the former which paint a picture of the latter. Before The Indian Express, he worked at Moneycontrol and financial newswire Informist (previously called Cogencis). Outside of work, sports, fantasy football, and graphic novels keep him busy. ... Read More

Brigade Group launches housing project with potential of ₹2,100 crore in South Chennai
Brigade Group launches housing project with potential of ₹2,100 crore in South Chennai

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

Brigade Group launches housing project with potential of ₹2,100 crore in South Chennai

Bengaluru-based listed real estate developer Brigade Group announced on June 21 a residential project in South Chennai with a gross development value (GDV) of ₹ 2,100 crore. Bengaluru-based listed real estate developer Brigade Group announced on June 21 a residential project in South Chennai with a gross development value (GDV) of ₹ 2,100 crore ( Picture for representational purposes only) (Pixabay) The company said the project is located on the Sholinganallur–Medavakkam corridor in South Chennai. It is spread across 14.7 acres and has a potential for 2.2 million sq ft of premium apartments. The company said that it will develop 1,250 units, with the largest units spanning up to 2,599 sq ft, in 2,3—and 4-BHK sizes. According to the company, the project named Brigade Morgan Heights is strategically positioned just 150 meters from the upcoming Classical Tamil Institute Metro Station and ensures smooth connectivity to key IT parks—including ELCOT, Wipro, and Cognizant—each reachable within a mere 10-minute drive, significantly enhancing its appeal for working professionals. Also Read: Brigade Group's flexible workspace arm BuzzWorks signs 24,000 sq ft workspace with Infor India in Hyderabad The company said that the project will be executed via a Joint Development Agreement (JDA), and will be equipped with rooftop solar panels covering one-third of the terrace space to power common areas, rainwater harvesting systems, groundwater recharge, and an organic waste converter. The centrepiece is a 40,000 sq ft clubhouse offering over 30 curated amenities. Also Read: Brigade Group to add 8 million sq ft of office space, plans to double flex space portfolio Brigade Enterprises MD Pavitra Shankar said, 'Chennai continues to be a vital market for Brigade Group, and this expansion aligns with our vision of delivering high‑quality residential developments in upcoming urban corridors. With its prime location, proximity to IT hubs, and a serene green backdrop, Brigade Morgan Heights will offer an unparalleled living experience integrating comfort, sustainability and modern living." Also Read: Less than 1% of Indian developers' topline is invested in technology, says Nirupa Shankar of Brigade Group Meanwhile, the company said that this launch not only reinforces Brigade Group's commitment to Chennai—a city where it plans nearly ₹ 8,000 crore worth of developments by 2030—but also marks a significant milestone in its portfolio of landmark projects, which includes flagship properties like the World Trade Centre and Orion Mall.

Meet Indian genius Pranjali Awasthi, built Rs 100 crore company at just 16, she is now making....
Meet Indian genius Pranjali Awasthi, built Rs 100 crore company at just 16, she is now making....

India.com

timean hour ago

  • India.com

Meet Indian genius Pranjali Awasthi, built Rs 100 crore company at just 16, she is now making....

Meet Indian genius Pranjali Awasthi, built Rs 100 crore company at just 16, she is now making.... Women are breaking shackles and redefining success in every space around the world. And, Pranjali Awasthi is one of those changemakers. She is proof that young women are not only dreaming big, but they are doing it with tenacity, talent, and a vision for their futures. Born in India and based in the US, she began coding at the age of seven, landed research lab internships by 13, and launched her own AI startup, at just 16. Meet Indian genius Pranjali Awasthi, built Rs 100 crore company at just 16, she is now making…. According to her LinkedIn profile, Pranjali attended Doral Academy Charter High School from 2019 to September 2021, where she pursued a STEM-focused curriculum and completed her education up to the 10th grade. She is currently pursuing a Bachelor of Science (BS) in Computer Science at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Pranjali's journey is an amazing combination of passion and opportunity. She was born in India and at the age of 11, she moved to Florida. Her father, a computer engineer, encouraged and embraced her growing interest in coding. In a little more than a year, her startup was valued at approximately Rs 100 crore (almost $12 million), reported IndiaToday. This showcases her determination, talent, and vision at such a young age. She immersed herself in computer science and competitive mathematics during her school years, resulting in an internship at the Neural Dynamics of Control Lab at Florida International University. It was there that she was introduced to machine learning projects at a young age (before realizing she was working on research that aimed at identifying the different varieties of ADHD based on EEG data), reported IndiaToday. Pranjali created in Miami in January 2022 with the main goal of making research easy for everyone. The AI-driven platform is intended for end-users to extract and summarize information from academic content, PDFs, and other documents. The platform can search through many files at once, connect to cloud drives, and users can export their results into a CSV file. They have a free plan, and paid plans that include more advanced features and functionality to accommodate the user's advanced research needs. As per India Today, has garnered popularity and quickly raised approximately $450,000 (₹3.89 crore) in financing from investors including Backend Capital and Village Global. As of October 2023, it's valued at approximately ₹100 crore. Researchers are praising platform for reducing a substantial amount of repetitive R&D work by 75%, drastically saving time and energy in academic or technical efforts. Previously, she worked as Workshop lead at Upsilon Pi Epsilon, research intern at Swartz Center for Computational Neuroscience, Florida International University. She is also the co-founder of Dash. Pranjali is already onto her next big thing — Dash. She calls it, 'ChatGPT with hands.' Dash differs from previous AI chatbots in its ability to not just chat, but to also do things, bringing the element of automation to the conversation. Just last month, Dash reached the number one product on Product Hunt, which definitely be signified a positive signal from the tech community. Pranjali celebrated this milestone by sharing a LinkedIn post to announce the launch of Dash's official Discord server.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store