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Middle of the pack: India’s market performance slips post-Trump

Analysts attribute this situation to the high valuations of the Indian stock markets, significant selling by foreign investors, and economic challenges

November 14, 2024 / 16:15 IST
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Over the past five trading sessions since November 5, India’s benchmark indices have fallen around two percent each even as global indices like the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Index rose by around five percent
Over the past five trading sessions since November 5, India’s benchmark indices have fallen around two percent each even as global indices like the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Index rose by around five percent

Following the recent US Presidential elections that saw the return of Donald Trump, some developed markets, led by the US, China, and Japan, have surged significantly, while emerging markets like Korea and the Philippines have seen sharp declines in dollar terms. India sits in the middle, almost flat since November 5.

Analysts attribute this to the high valuations of the Indian stock markets, significant selling by foreign investors, and economic challenges, including sticky inflation, high interest rates, and a weakening rupee.

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Over the past five trading sessions since November 5, India’s benchmark indices -- Nifty 50 and Sensex – have fallen around two percent each even as global indices like the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Index rose by around five percent each in the same period. The same period saw leading Asian indices like Hang Seng and Kospi fall 5.5 percent and 7 percent, respectively.

The fall in the Indian market, as per experts, was primarily due to lower domestic corporate earnings. India Inc saw net profit growth of 3.6 percent during the September quarter, which was the slowest growth in 17 quarters, driven by sluggish revenue growth and rising interest and depreciation costs. Total expenses and other income also edged up only slightly.