The US Federal Reserve (US Fed) decided not to alter its key interest rates on Wednesday night (India time). This sent a wave of cheer to the Dalal Street with the BSE Sensex opening higher by 300 points on Thursday. But, the opening highs could not be sustained and the index ended the day with a gain of 266 points. With a couple of weeks to go for the September quarter earnings season, experts say liquidity alone won’t keep the market momentum on and the current rally won’t sustain if India Inc’s earnings don’t improve.
“Any investor loading up on India is doing so primarily because of liquidity. If earnings don’t improve, money may not be available easily,” Saurabh Mukherjea, CEO (institutional equities) at Ambit Capital, warns. “Consumption itself is not adequate to lift earnings, which is why I believe the market is fairly valued,” he adds. Gautam Chhaochharia, head of India research at UBS, agrees with Mukherjea. “Earnings have to improve reasonably because valuations aren’t cheap anymore.”
Since the start of the June quarter results season, data indicate that foreign institutional investors (FIIs) have started looking at pastures outside India. Since June, they have increased their allocations to markets such as Thailand and South Korea, where they were largely sellers in 2015. Also, India’s FII inflows ($3.8 billion) from June-till-date trail that of South Korea ($6 billion) and Thailand ($7.7 billion). Thailand was a close competitor with $2.8 billion FII money flowing into the country.
And, if the Fed raises rates in December, it will also possibly signal an end to cheap money and impact earnings of companies with huge forex exposure.