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Budget 2024 done and dusted. What now?

FM’s reiteration of commitment to focus areas such as rooftop solars, affordable housing, green energy, EV transition, metros, railways did not cause an upswing in these stocks only meant that capex spending has already been priced in.

February 02, 2024 / 17:51 IST
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In this crucial election year, the government has resisted populist temptations

The Finance Minister walked away with kudos for not taking the populist route despite this being an election year and, perhaps more impressively, for prioritising fiscal consolidation with realistic assumption. A nominal GDP growth of 10.5 percent for FY25, with a 5.1 percent fiscal deficit, a net borrowings of Rs 11.73 crore with a modest 11 percent increase in capex spend sounds prudent and achievable.

On the face of it, stock markets did not seem to cheer the move with the Nifty ending the session with a mild loss, but the fact that the market held up in the face a 2 percent fall in US markets on January 31 after negative cues from the Federal Reserve and weak Asian markets was proof that investors were not too disappointed after all.

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Equally, that FM’s reiteration of commitment to focus areas such as rooftop solars, affordable housing, green energy, EV transition, metros, railways did not cause an upswing in these stocks only meant that capex spending has already been priced in. Consumption stocks were not delivered any big surprises either. In fact, the other way round. Baring rural housing, the budget did not have any triggered to lift rural demand. The only exceptional gainers were the public sector bank stocks, which along with other banking stocks, were on a tear thanks to fall in yields after the pleasant surprise on the lower than expected net market borrowing number.