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Nifty dominance by top stocks at a record, four sectors grab lion's share

Top-5 and 10 stocks account for 42% and 62% respectively; up from 37% and 56% two year ago

Markets
HDFC Bank and Reliance Industries have surged 44 per cent and 105 per cent, respectively since March 23, significantly outperforming the Nifty which gained 41 per cent
Ashley Coutinho Mumbai
4 min read Last Updated : Jul 10 2020 | 1:35 AM IST
The dominance of top stocks on the Nifty50 index touched an all-time high, with the top five stocks comprising nearly 42 per cent of the index weighting and the top 10 accounting for more than 62 per cent.

The respective weighting stood at 37.1 per cent and 56.4 per cent two years ago when polarisation — a phenomenon where money chases select stocks — began to gain ground.  

The weighting for the Nifty50 components are computed using free-float market capitalisation.

Sector concentration has inched up too, with four sectors — financial services, oil and gas, information technology, and consumer goods — comprising nearly 77 per cent of the weighting on Nifty50, shows the exchange data.

“Given the risk aversion among investors, polarisation may continue till such time the economic recovery gains visibility and investors become confident enough to bet on other names. Lower interest can be a positive catalyst for this change,” said Sailesh Raj Bhan, deputy chief information officer (CIO)-equity, Nippon India Mutual Fund.
Stocks like Reliance Industries (RIL) and HDFC Bank, in fact, have a weighting of more than 10 per cent each. While the latter had a weighting in excess of 10 per cent for more than a year, RIL had a weight of 8.77 per cent as of March 23 this year and 7.4 per cent two years ago. The only time a stock had a weighting in excess of 10 per cent was in early 2008, when RIL had breached the threshold, according to experts. HDFC Bank and RIL have surged 44 per cent and 105 per cent, respectively, since March 23, significantly outperforming the Nifty, which gained 41 per cent. The companies contributed 7.3 per cent and 8.6 per cent of the total profit after tax of Nifty500 companies.

 

 
RIL has been in the news due to an investment spree in its digital subsidiary Jio Platforms over the past few weeks, which has helped it pare debt. The company also hit the market with a rights issue of Rs 53,000 crore.

Fund managers can lose out if both these stocks continue their upward trajectory as they cannot buy more than 10 per cent in a single stock, according to current regulations. In addition, individual fund houses could have softer limits that prevent buying a stock above certain thresholds, say 5 per cent or 7.5 per cent of the overall scheme holding. An equity scheme typically invests in 45-60 stocks. 

“Stocks that have a weighting higher than 10 per cent on the Nifty50 index could pose a challenge to fund managers owing to existing regulatory as well as softer limits on exposure to a single stock. For now, this is not a significant set of companies, but some cap on single-stock weightings will be helpful, so that it does not impact the performance of large-cap schemes,” said Neelesh Surana, CIO, Mirae Asset Global Investment.
Experts believe large-cap schemes can be impacted unless the market breadth improves and there are enough number of stocks that can compensate for the underperformance.

The pandemic is expected to tip the scales further in favour of companies with higher market share and well-entrenched businesses. This may exacerbate the problem of polarisation further.

According to Surana, stocks can be bucketed into three categories. The first set comprises large companies that have seen significant inflows and high investor interest. These stocks are still reasonably valued and are unlikely to see price correction.

The second bucket comprises stocks that are expensive and includes consumer-facing businesses which are currently trading at high price-to-earnings multiples. These may time correct.

The third bucket is made up of beaten-down stocks and includes several public sector companies, utilities, and metals. Some of these are sound businesses and sector leaders.
 
“For a market to see a more broad-based rally, the third bucket has to garner more interest. 

This has already happened with the pharma sector, which was beaten down and saw a smart rally in the past few months,” adds Surana.

Topics :Nifty stocksNifty50

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