Insights

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Asset Management | Market Outlook

Market commentary by Alternate Strategies

October 2022

Global

In our last newsletter we stated that our focus over the next few months would be Europe/UK due to our belief that if there is a negative event then it would likely emerge from here. Since then, the UK govt and Chancellor of the Exchequer have made several missteps in their mini budget (the higher rate of tax reduction has already been rolled back) which sent sterling spiralling down and as bond yields rose the Bank of England had to step in to buy bonds to protect pension funds from collapsing. All eyes are on Europe where rumours continue to circulate around a major investment bank being in trouble. Maybe this is just the trailer to further problems ahead as European and UK central banks raise interest rates further over the next few months.

Federal Reserve officials continue their hawkish rhetoric with respect to bringing down inflation through further rate hikes. The one change is that they will also look at the jobs data to confirm that their measures are working. We are concerned on this as jobs data will likely be a lagging indicator and therefore the FED runs the risk of keeping rates higher for longer than required. They also mentioned that they need compelling evidence of disinflation before changing course.

Our overall view is that inflation will likely tick down from here but would still be far away from the FED’s target of 2%, maybe getting to 4-4.5% over the next 6 months. Maybe this will lead to a less hawkish stance from the FED (other central banks will follow suit) and lead to a rally in equity and bond markets. In the short-term though the risk of unintended consequences of raising interest rates will keep the markets volatile. The fact that the global economy is heading towards recession is known but a financial problem is not.

Such hawkish Fed amid slowing global growth is causing turbulence in global asset markets with unprecedented volatility in global currency, bond and equity markets. This may continue for some time.

Domestic

Unlike western world India is relatively better placed both on growth as well as inflation.  This is reflected in relative outperformance across asset classes be it bonds, currency and equity. Coming quarter also augurs well for domestic growth driven by private consumption and government spending.

RBI hiked by another 50bps, which was on expected lines. It noted that growth impulses are broadening and hence it has upgraded its H2FY23 real GDP growth forecast. Interestingly, this monetary policy acknowledges the risk from global central banks action. This raises terminal policy rate consensus assumptions.  On the inflation front, it retained its FY23 forecast of 6.7% with risks being largely balanced.

Divergence between domestic and external recovery are now visible. Domestic high frequency data remains very strong as seen in car sales (>20% YoY in Q2FY23), credit growth (9 year high), GST collections up 26% YoY, record home registrations. However, exports are slowing down, which in turn is weighing on industrial trade and activity. Global slowdown could weigh on some segments of growth in Indian economy and could increase external vulnerabilities.

Concerns on the macro-stability front started inching up in India. CPI inflation has started to moderate, but still remains elevated at 6%+ for fourth consecutive month in August. Trade deficit is consistently high and this along with hawkish Fed is resulting in pressure on INR. Higher credit growth, RBI defending currency is draining banking sector liquidity – which has slowed from Rs 8tn in April to ~Rs 0.5tn in September. This led to significant rise in short term rates impacting funding cost.

On the flows front, FIIs became net sellers again in September to the tune of USD1.4bn, after being net buyers in previous two months. DII flows turned positive to USD1.8bn in September, after outflows in August.

Deployment strategy

The bullish market sentiments of July and August has reversed in September with Nifty correcting by 3-4%. The month was a very eventful one with central bank actions, both global and domestic and growth datapoints.

Going ahead, outlook is mixed. On the positive side, domestic growth is finally perking up and getting more broad-based. Further, commodity prices are now easing, which should lower the inflationary pressures and potential RBI tightening. Also, bank balance sheets are now strong and banks are finally focussing on growth rather conserving capital. However, global growth has slowed down decisively and unlike past, central banks still remain hawkish. This could weigh on growth outlook and valuations multiple going ahead. Valuations too are still on the expensive side, despite the de-rating seen over the last year. We stay selective in our deployment levels as we expect global volatility to remain very high.

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