HomeNewsBusinessMarketsShould you buy this market fall? One reason to be fearful, many not to be greedy

Should you buy this market fall? One reason to be fearful, many not to be greedy

The Sensex and Nifty have dropped over 1.5% today, driven by a mix of factors, with fears surrounding the spread of the HMPV virus taking the lead.

January 06, 2025 / 15:35 IST
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Should you seize this dip as a buying opportunity or retreat to the sidelines?
Should you seize this dip as a buying opportunity or retreat to the sidelines?

The markets have taken a nosedive today, courtesy of a potent mix of factors, with the HMPV virus scare leading the charge. The Sensex is down by 1,200 points, and the Nifty isn’t far behind, but the real carnage lies in the mid- and small-cap space. This steep fall—reminiscent of January 2020, when whispers of the coronavirus started sending shockwaves—raises the eternal investor dilemma: Should you seize this dip as a buying opportunity or retreat to the sidelines?

Let’s break it down using a sensible lens: there’s one solid reason to stay fearful (cautious) and plenty of reasons not to get carried away with greed. The golden rule? Don’t rush—stagger your buys, and keep your wits about you.

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The one reason to be fearful
Earnings growth:
Down, but not out?
Brace yourself—earnings growth this fiscal is on shaky ground. Analysts expect a mere 5% rise for the fiscal, with Q2 delivering a barrage of downgrades. Q3 could be déjà vu, or worse. The real kicker? Disappointment isn’t just about companies missing their marks—it’s also about analysts consistently overestimating. Either way, markets are brutal, and earnings disappointments tend to trigger outsized sell-offs.

Three reasons not to be greedy

1. The HMPV Virus: The joker in the pack
Sure, the virus is the headline grabber today, but let’s not jump the gun. Nobody can predict how this will unfold, and making knee-jerk decisions isn’t the wisest play. Markets hate uncertainty, and if things escalate, investors will likely hit pause, withdraw funds, or avoid deploying new money. The downside risk? Considerable.