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Bull market in 2008 and now: Top five companies, valuation, and more

In 10 years, the composition of the market has undergone a sea change

bull market, sensex, nifty, share
Samie Modak
Last Updated : Jan 14 2018 | 10:56 PM IST
It has been a decade since the 2004-08 bull market peaked. The benchmark BSE Sensex touched a record of 20,873 on January 8, 2008, before the meltdown triggered by the US subprime crisis, which led to the global financial crisis. Ten years on, a new bull market is underway for the Indian market. The Sensex has nearly doubled since its 2013 lows and is currently inching towards 35,000. 

The market currently trades above its long-term average and it compares favourably to the 2008 period. In terms of price-to-earnings (P/E), price-to-book value (P/B), market capitalisation-to-GDP (gross domestic product) and dividend yield, the market is currently cheaper than 2008. On P/B and m-cap-to-GDP terms in particular, the Indian market has a long way to go, to achieve the previous peak. 

In 10 years, the composition of the market has also undergone a sea change. Back then, the market was dominated by oil and gas companies such as Reliance Industries (RIL) and Oil and Natural Gas Corporation. Currently, financials by far dominate the scene. Interestingly barring RIL, not even a single company is common between 2008 and now in the list of top five companies by market value.



















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