Current
Global & Indian equity market outlook – dealing with manic depressive markets
Benjamin Graham’s , father of value investing and teacher/ Guru of famous investor Warren Buffet introduced a metaphor called "Market “in his famous book name “The Intelligent Investor “ in 1949. He depicted the stock market(Mr Market) as a manic-depressive partner offering to buy or sell at wildly irrational prices daily, showing extreme mood swings between Euphoria and depression. Graham advised investors to take advantage of Mr. Market's emotional mood swings—buying when he is depressed and selling when euphoric—rather than being guided by them.
Great
example is how the markets have behaved in last month(4-5 weeks) of the current
war situation(US/ Israel war versus Iran) , when major markets have gone crazy
and have over-reacted by 5 to 10%. Nifty 50 and KOSPI(Korean index) have
corrected by as much as 10-11 % as If there is no tomorrow .
As depicted above , Over the
last four decades, six major geopolitical events created uncertainty, each
forming a significant market bottom. History shows that investing during such
periods with a long-term view has been highly rewarding. We see the current
scenario as a similar opportunity. Investors can consider buying the dip to
build a quality portfolio or reshuffle their portfolio ( replacing the weak
& consistent losers with quality and growth stocks available at attractive
prices). India is expected to deliver a 12–15% PAT CAGR over FY25 to FY28 and
is sitting at 1 year forward valuation
of 17.5(versus 5 year average of 19.5) and sitting at 20 current PE when compared
to 5 year average of 22.3 , making this an attractive window for disciplined
long-term investing. For this Financial year , analysts have kept a target of
29000 to 30000, which will give an attractive return of 26-30%, in a year (by
end of FY27) from current levels .
Global & Indian Equity Market Outlook: FY27 & Beyond
As we navigate through 2026, the global equity landscape is
defined by a "great decoupling." While the U.S. remains an expensive
but high-growth AI powerhouse, Europe is seeking a growth floor, China is
showing tentative signs of a structural bottom, and India is solidifying its
position as the world's most resilient growth engine.
Here is a comprehensive outlook for the global and Indian
equity markets for the coming year and beyond.
The global financial landscape in early 2026 is dominated by
a complex interplay of a dramatic energy crisis, fractured geopolitics, and a
pivotal shift in trade policy. Investors are forced to navigate a
"Risk-Off" environment while simultaneously identifying
"Structural Growth" opportunities that can withstand these shocks.
This blog provides a detailed outlook on major global markets (US, Europe,
China) and a deep dive into the Indian equity market, offering projections and
recommended investment sectors for the medium to long term (2 to 5 years).
GDP outlook for key markets
|
Economy / Region |
FY27 / Next 1y |
2–5y Trend View |
Comment |
|
United States |
~1.5–2.0% |
~1.5–2.0% |
Slowing, but not recessionary base |
|
Euro Area |
~1.0–1.5% |
~1.0–1.5% |
Subdued, energy/geopolitics drag |
|
China |
~3.5–4.5% |
~3.0–4.0% |
Lower than pre‑2015, policy‑driven |
|
India |
~6.5–7.5% |
~6.5–7.5% |
Fastest major economy |
Part 1: Current Global Equity Market Outlook
The world is experiencing the most severe global supply
disruption since at least the 1970s, primarily due to the 2026 Middle East
War (US-Israel war against Iran). This conflict has led to the effective
closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint handling 20% of
global oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) supply. The consequence has been a
systemic energy shock that is reshaping global economic growth and inflation
trajectories.
Major Region Dynamics
1. United States (US): Resilient but Correcting
The US market is in a tactical correction phase. The S&P
500 has experienced multiple consecutive weeks of declines (down roughly
5-7% from recent peaks) but remains relatively more resilient than its global
peers due to its lower direct exposure to the Middle East and the
"safe-haven" status of the US Dollar.
- Positive
Tailwinds: The US Supreme Court recently rejected the sweeping
global tariffs initiated by the Trump administration. This landmark
ruling—voiding existing tariffs on the basis that only Congress has taxing
authority—is expected to lower effective tariff rates to ~11% (from a peak
of ~16%), providing significant relief to consumer goods sectors importing
from countries like Vietnam and India. Corporate earnings for the
S&P 500 are still expected to show growth (~16% YoY) driven by massive
AI-related capex.
+2
- Negative
Headwinds: Skyrocketing oil prices (Brent crude touching
$120/barrel) are adding inflationary pressure, which has caused the
Federal Reserve to pause its previously anticipated path of interest rate
cuts.
- Return
Outlook: While a full recession may be avoided, the near-term outlook
for the S&P 500 is cautious, with analysts suggesting a gradual grind
toward a target of 7800 (assuming current earnings growth holds).
2. Europe: On the Brink of Stagflation
Europe is facing a severe energy and economic crisis, with
the International Energy Agency (IEA) characterizing it as the "greatest
global energy challenge in history." European indices (DAX, FR40) have
fallen 1–2% initially and are under sustained pressure.
- Negative
Headwinds: The dual shock of suspended Russian gas and now restricted
Qatari LNG transit is forcing energy-intensive industries (Chemicals,
Steel) to impose surcharges of up to 30%, risking permanent
deindustrialization. The ECB has warned of a prolonged period of stagflation,
and major energy-dependent economies like Germany and Italy are at risk of
technical recession.
+1
- Return
Outlook: Highly negative near-term. Europe is underperforming global
peers and requires structural energy solutions to recover.
3. China: A Tale of Two Cities
The Chinese economy presents a mixed picture.
- Negative
Headwinds: China remains an energy importer and is affected by the
crude price spike.
- Positive
Tailwinds: Markets like Shanghai and CSI 300 have seen tactical
"risk-on" bounces (+0.6% daily) as valuations remain low and the
government continues to provide monetary and fiscal stimulus to prop up
the real estate sector and domestic consumption.
- Return
Outlook: Chinese markets offer deep value but require a significant
turnaround in domestic consumer confidence and structural reforms to
sustain a long-term bull market.
Part 2: Indian Equity Market Outlook
India finds itself in a paradoxical position: possessing
some of the strongest economic fundamentals globally while simultaneously being
exceptionally vulnerable to the current global energy shock. India imports over
80% of its crude oil requirements. The surge in oil toward $110/barrel is
the dominant transmission channel of risk to the Indian economy and markets.
Key Metrics & Behavioral Factors
- FII
Inflows/Outflows: A massive "flight to quality" has
occurred. Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) are currently heavy
net sellers of Indian equities. They have sold 1.5 lac crore of Indian
equity in secondary markers in FY26 , including about 1 lac cr this month(March)
itself after Iran war broke out .This selling pressure is driven by
concerns that higher oil will widen India's trade deficit and compress
corporate margins.
- INR
Devaluation: Heavy FII selling, coupled with increased dollar demand
for oil imports, has triggered a sharp INR devaluation. The Indian
Rupee crossed the key psychological mark of ₹94/$ for the first
time. This makes imports more expensive, adding to inflationary pressure.
- Economy
& GDP Growth: India remains the fastest-growing major economy.
Real GDP grew 7.8% YoY in Q3 FY26. S&P Global recently upgraded
India's FY27 growth forecast to 7.1%. This strong domestic growth
story is the main argument for India’s long-term resilience.
- Monetary
& Fiscal Policy:
- RBI: The Reserve Bank of India maintains a neutral stance with the benchmark repo rate at 5.25%. While rate cuts were expected, the RBI is now monitoring the oil-driven inflation spike and may be forced into monetary tightening in H2 FY27 if inflation persists.
- Fiscal
Policy: The recent Union Budget stays focused on fiscal
sustainability, reducing the fiscal deficit to 4.9% while maintaining a
strong commitment to infrastructure capex. This provides a stable
macroeconomic backbone. The recent GST rationalization/ reduction has
also given a big push for consumption
- Corporate
Growth: India is witnessing an acyclic capex cycle. Continued growth
in business capital , spending on AI, Infra capex , renewable energy, and
defence is expected to offset higher energy prices. Corporate earnings
estimates remain strong but face downward revisions in consumer0-sensitive
sectors due to input cost pressure.
Indian Market Projection & Behavioural Trend
Indian markets have entered a necessary, though painful,
consolidation/correction phase from their recent highs. Investors have rotated
away from Emerging Markets (EME) and small-caps into the "safe-haven"
of the US Dollar. A technical correction (10% dip from peaks) has already been
touched in some segments like the small-cap oriented Russell 2000 in the US,
and similar "panic" selling bouts are being seen in India. The
current market sentiment is defined by high volatility and a complete lack of a
diplomatic resolution in the Middle East.
Return Projections (Estimates based on current
parameters)
|
Horizon |
Projection (FY27) |
Expected Behaviour / Drivers |
|
Next 1 Year / FY27 |
25% plus (NIFTY analysts Target – 29000 to 30000) |
Highly volatile. A "tale of two halves." Initial weakness/sideways grind as markets digest the energy shock and FII selling. Recovery soon after an oil price correction & diplomatic resolution. Time to build long term quality positions. |
|
Medium Term (2 to 5 Yrs) |
+14% to +18% CAGR |
India’s structural demographic and digitalization
dividends assert dominance. Earnings growth broadening. Benefits of
"Make in India," PLI, and trade deals materialize. FIIs likely to
return as a stable macro story. |
|
Long Term (>5 Yrs) |
+15%+ CAGR |
Dominated by "Atmanirbhar" themes. India on the
path to becoming the world's third-largest economy. |
Part 3: Attractive Investment Sectors in India (2 to 5
Yrs Perspective)
|
Rank |
Sector |
Main Tailwinds (2–5y) |
Key Macro Risks |
|
1 |
Financials (banks, NBFCs, insurers) |
Credit growth, formalisation, capex &
consumption |
RBI policy, NPA cycle, FII risk‑off |
|
2 |
Capital Goods / Industrials / Engineering & EPC |
Budget capex, private capex, China+1 manufacturing |
Commodity/oil costs, project execution |
|
3 |
Infra, Logistics, Building Materials |
Transport & urban infra, housing, freight
corridors |
Fiscal constraints, rate hikes, oil prices |
|
4 |
Electronics & Semiconductor Ecosystem |
PLI incentives, US–India tech deals, supply chain
diversification |
Capex intensity, technology & policy risk |
|
5 |
Renewable Energy, Grid & Storage |
Energy transition, energy security, large national
targets of 500 MW for non fossil energy by 2030 |
Tariff/regulatory risk, financing costs |
|
6 |
Pharma & Specialty Chemicals |
Generics/APIs, China+1 in chemicals, move up value
chain |
US/EU pricing, regulatory actions, FX/oil |
|
7 |
Consumer Discretionary & Organised Retail |
Income growth, urbanisation, premiumisation &
formalisation |
Inflation, job growth, oil‑linked cost surges |
How to
position portfolio (portfolio implications, 2–5 years)
- Global core:
- Maintain selective & diversified
exposure to US and Europe for quality, depth, and innovation.
- Treat China as a tactical,
higher‑risk satellite unless your mandate supports high
volatility.
- India overweight (for investors with EM
flexibility):
- Make India a key growth
allocation given:
- Above‑average GDP and EPS
growth,
- Investment‑heavy Budget and
structural reforms,
- Strong domestic flows,
improving trade positioning, and moderated tariff tail risk.
- Tilt within India toward:
- Financials, Capital
Goods/Industrials, Infra/Logistics, select electronics/semis, pharma , renewable
energy, consumer discretionary (including auto, retail etc)
- Invest in gold ETF and REIT(Real
Estate Investment Trusts) to diversify into other asset classes and
improve returns/ volatality
- Risk controls:
- Limit mid/small cap exposure for
better risk management in this volatile market
- Maintain 5–10% cash or
short-duration fixed income to buy into oil‑ and FII‑driven
corrections.
- Monitor:
- Oil price ranges and war
escalation risk,
- Fed/ECB/RBI policy signals,
- FII net flows and INR
behaviour,
- Execution of Indian public
capex and reform milestones
Conclusion
The current global market outlook is one of defined panic,
driven by the worst energy crisis in decades. European markets are particularly
vulnerable, while the US remains relatively more resilient. India presents the
most compelling long-term domestic growth story but is facing a severe
near-term penalty as an energy importer. We believe current corrections in the
Indian market should be viewed as opportunities to accumulate positions for the
2-5 year horizon, specifically in export-oriented/currency-resistant sectors
(Pharma, electronics ) and policy-driven domestic growth engines
(Defence, Renewables, Infrastructure, consumer discretionary etc).
Valuable insights
ReplyDeleteThanks bhaiya
Delete