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HomeNewsBusinessMarketsMyth of stock market eating into bank deposits, foreign investors’ FOMO, MGL, Star Health, Prestige in focus, bears gun for Ujjivan Small Fin

Myth of stock market eating into bank deposits, foreign investors’ FOMO, MGL, Star Health, Prestige in focus, bears gun for Ujjivan Small Fin

"Sell a stock because the company’s fundamentals deteriorate, not because the sky is falling." - Peter Lynch

June 25, 2024 / 07:37 IST
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The market is rallying, but foreign investors don’t seem to be giving in to the fear of missing out (FOMO) for now.

A popular theory in the market is that the main reason for banks’ inability to garner low-cost deposits fast enough to match loan growth is that more savers are diverting their money to the stock market. This has led to mutual fund managers blaming the banking lobby for some of the rule changes in recent times. But the theory of stock market hurting banking deposit growth may be flawed, argue Nomura analysts Param Subramanian, Ankit Bihani, Ajit Kumar, and Parth Desai.

From their note:

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“There is a misplaced narrative among many investors that money moving into capital markets (stocks and mutual funds) is affecting system deposit growth. This is incorrect, as flows into capital markets stay with the banking system (money flows from the buyer’s deposit account to the seller). In fact, money in capital markets finds no mention in RBI’s broad money statistics – as this is already accounted for in system deposit data.”

Still cautious
The market is rallying, but foreign investors don’t seem to be giving in to the fear of missing out (FOMO) for now.

From Emkay strategist Seshadri Sen’s note:
“Long-only investors have largely missed the post-election rally, both on absolute allocations to India and sector positioning in high-beta SMIDs. They are reluctant, however, to jump in at this stage due to expensive valuations.”

The contra indicator here possibly could be that too many fund managers are getting optimistic about the economy and earnings outlook. Also, political concerns have all but vanished.