No Result
View All Result
  • Login
Saturday, November 29, 2025
FeeOnlyNews.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
No Result
View All Result
FeeOnlyNews.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

Market to find clear direction by 2025-end as earnings rebound: Motilal Oswal’s Siddhartha Khemka

by FeeOnlyNews.com
2 months ago
in Business
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
0
Market to find clear direction by 2025-end as earnings rebound: Motilal Oswal’s Siddhartha Khemka
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LInkedIn


After a year-long consolidation, Indian equities are poised to regain momentum by the end of 2025, says Siddhartha Khemka, Head of Research (Wealth Management) at Motilal Oswal Financial Services. With valuations normalising and earnings expected to rebound sharply from FY27, he believes the market is setting up for its next leg of rally.

Edited excerpts from a chat:

Now that we have seen time corrections for more than a year, do you think by the end of 2025 calendar year, the market would have found a clear direction?

Indian equities delivered a strong run in FY20–24, with Nifty earnings compounding at ~20% and the index outperforming global peers. Since late FY24, however, the narrative has shifted to time correction. Nifty earnings grew just ~5% in FY25, and FY26 is expected to remain in mid-single digit with Nifty EPS at ~₹1,096. From FY27, we see a sharp rebound with Nifty EPS projected at ~₹1,274, translating into ~16% growth, led by Financials, Autos, Capital Goods and Consumption.

Valuations, too, have normalized. Nifty’s one-year forward P/E now stands at ~20.6x, almost in line with its long-period average of 20.7x. On a trailing basis, the P/E has cooled to ~23.2x versus ~27x a year ago, allowing earnings to catch up with prices. With earnings bottoming in FY26 and recovery visibility into FY27, coupled with normalized valuations, we believe the consolidation phase is setting the stage for the next leg of the rally. By end-CY25, markets should have found clearer direction, backed by earnings acceleration, supportive macros and policy continuity.

How are you tweaking your portfolios ahead of the Q3 earnings season? Which sectors do you think can surprise on the upside and which ones are likely to disappoint?

Live Events

As we closed on Q2FY26, earnings are expected to remain modest, with MOFSL Universe PAT projected to rise ~9% YoY, while Nifty earnings are expected to grow around 6% YOY in 3QFY26. The key drivers are Oil & Gas (+25% YoY), NBFC Lending (+21%), Telecom (moving to profit), Metals (+10%), Cement (+62%), Capital Goods (+14%), and Healthcare (+10%). These sectors are likely to account for the bulk of incremental earnings. On the weaker side, Banks—both private and PSU—are expected to decline ~7% YoY, extending the softness seen in H1. Insurance growth is likely to remain muted at ~6% YoY, while Autos are set for only ~5% growth. Consumer and Chemicals too will likely post subdued results. Portfolio positioning remains overweight on Autos, Industrials, Healthcare, BFSI, and Consumer Discretionary, and underweight on Oil & Gas, Cement, and Metals, balancing near-term volatility with long-term visibility.

FII flows are largely dependent on earnings and valuations. Once earnings growth starts coming in, valuations will also begin to look more reasonable. Given the expectations of earnings rebound from Q3, do you think 2026 would be the year of FII flow revival?

FII flows have been weak over the past year as earnings slowed, valuations stayed elevated, and global sentiment remained cautious. Since the Sep ’24 market peak, FIIs have sold about USD 27 billion, including USD 15.3 billion in CY25 YTD, even as DIIs infused a record USD 67 billion in 9MCY25, cushioning markets. Historically, flows have tracked earnings and valuations: in CY20–21, when Nifty earnings surged, FIIs invested USD 21–23 billion, while muted earnings in later years kept inflows subdued.

With FY26 earnings likely to post mid-single growth (~₹1,096 EPS), valuations have now normalized, with one-year forward P/E at ~20.6x, near its long-period average. From Q3FY26, earnings recovery should gain traction, with FY27 EPS forecast at ~₹1,274 (~16% growth). With earnings bottoming and valuations turning more reasonable, we expect that FII flows are likely to revive.

Auto sector has been the best performing one in the last few months given the positive outlook around GST, rate cuts, etc. Are valuations still reasonable or you would be a bit more cautious?

The auto sector has been one of the best-performing segments in recent months, supported by GST rate cuts, a 100bp reduction in interest rates, and improving rural demand. In Q2FY26, OEMs delivered ~13% YoY volume growth, led by two-wheelers, commercial vehicles, and tractors, while passenger vehicles rose just ~3% amid higher discounts and supply constraints. This is expected to translate into ~11–14% earnings growth for OEMs in the quarter, whereas ancillaries saw only ~3% profit growth.

On valuations, the sector now trades close to or slightly below its 10-year average, unlike several sectors still above long-term levels. Current multiples look reasonable given the earnings recovery and festive-season momentum. Medium term autos are expected to remain at the forefront of earnings growth into FY27. That said, selectivity is key — constructive on OEMs, cautious on passenger vehicles, and more measured on ancillaries where delivery is lagging.

With the surge of IPOs hitting the street, what’s your take on valuations and the sustainability of post-listing performance?

The primary market has remained active in 2025, with nearly 50 IPOs raising about USD 11.4 billion so far. This reflects abundant domestic liquidity and robust retail participation. Sectorally, Electronics and Power dominate the announced pipeline, alongside several large consumer and manufacturing names.

Post-listing performance, however, has been uneven. Companies with strong fundamentals, earnings visibility, and scalable models have managed to sustain gains, while those priced aggressively relative to listed peers or carrying weaker financials have underperformed. Many IPOs are still being launched at a discount to secondary market valuations, underscoring the importance of selectivity.

Looking ahead, the pipeline remains healthy with large issues expected across financials, consumption, and industrials. While fundraising momentum should continue, sustainability of post-listing returns will hinge on fundamentals and earnings delivery rather than initial demand.

Given how Motilal Oswal is gradually expanding its coverage base to cover a larger number of mid and smallcaps, what is your outlook on the opportunity size in the broader market in the current scheme of things? Which parts of the broader market are you most excited about?

Investor interest is gradually returning to the broader market, supported by improving earnings visibility and strong domestic flows. In Q1FY26, the Nifty Midcap-150 delivered 17% earnings growth against 8% for largecaps, underlining the relative strength of midcaps. While valuations in mid and smallcaps remain above historical averages, select themes stand out.

Within this space, EMS continues to benefit from rising electronics manufacturing demand and policy support. Healthcare offers steady compounding potential through hospitals and niche pharma. On the consumption side, discretionary midcaps in areas like travel, leisure, alco-beverages, and value retail are gaining from premiumisation and the shift from unorganised to organised players.

We like the Capital market theme like depositories participants, registrar, asset management companies as they are well placed, benefitting from strong retail participation and structural deepening of equity markets.

The broader market opportunity is sizeable, but sustainability will depend on disciplined selection and earnings delivery, making these structural mid and smallcap themes the most compelling.

Which themes within India’s consumption story do you believe are underappreciated by the market right now?

India’s consumption recovery is gathering pace, aided by GST2.0 rate cuts, easing inflation, and improving rural sentiment. Consumer discretionary is likely to outperform consumer staples. We like the consumer discretionary space as higher income levels and aspiration to consume would lead to higher growth for the sector.

Themes such as travel and hospitality are benefiting from robust domestic tourism and sustained occupancies, yet the durability of this cycle is not fully priced in. Mass-market retail in tier-2 and tier-3 towns is also expanding as consumers shift from unorganised to organised players.

Other areas including alco-beverages and premium apparel are supported by rising disposable incomes and premiumisation trends. While staples recovery is more visible, the market continues to underappreciate the long-term durability of these discretionary segments, which could emerge as key drivers of India’s consumption story going forward.

Looking ahead, what sectors or themes do you believe will drive alpha generation over the next 12–18 months?Alpha generation over the next 12–18 months is likely to come from domestic cyclicals and structural growth themes. Our portfolio positioning remains overweight on Autos, Industrials, Healthcare, BFSI, and Consumer Discretionary, while underweight on Oil & Gas, Cement, and Metals.

Autos are supported by GST cuts, lower interest rates, and a rural demand recovery, making them one of the strongest earnings drivers. Industrials and EMS benefit from robust order books, policy-led capex, and manufacturing incentives, keeping growth momentum intact. Healthcare offers steady compounding, with strong demand in pharmaceuticals, diagnostics, and hospitals.

On the consumption side, discretionary themes such as travel, leisure, and quick commerce continue to expand, supported by premiumisation and formalisation. In contrast, global cyclicals like IT services and Metals face external headwinds. Selectivity will remain crucial, but domestically driven sectors are best positioned to deliver superior alpha in this cycle.

Add ET Logo as a Reliable and Trusted News Source



Source link

Tags: 2025endClearDirectionearningsFindKhemkamarketMotilalOswalsReboundSiddhartha
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

Interview With Retirement Lifestyle Advocates

Next Post

8 Tax Basics Every Ecommerce Entrepreneur Should Master Before Day One

Related Posts

If You Invested K In Exxon Mobil Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?

If You Invested $10K In Exxon Mobil Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?

by FeeOnlyNews.com
November 29, 2025
0

Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below. Exxon Mobil Corp....

20 years across Google, Maersk, and Diageo taught me that the biggest barrier to change isn’t ideas — it’s the gap between inside reality and outside expectations

20 years across Google, Maersk, and Diageo taught me that the biggest barrier to change isn’t ideas — it’s the gap between inside reality and outside expectations

by FeeOnlyNews.com
November 29, 2025
0

After 20 years inside some of the world’s most iconic companies, the moment I stepped out, what both sides were...

FIIs net sellers of Rs 3,765 crore till November 29, but flows may shift as sentiment turns

FIIs net sellers of Rs 3,765 crore till November 29, but flows may shift as sentiment turns

by FeeOnlyNews.com
November 29, 2025
0

Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) have remained net sellers in the Indian equity markets so far in November, offloading shares worth...

The world’s youngest self-made billionaire hasn’t taken a day off in 3 years and can’t stop thinking about work—here’s how he keeps from burnout

The world’s youngest self-made billionaire hasn’t taken a day off in 3 years and can’t stop thinking about work—here’s how he keeps from burnout

by FeeOnlyNews.com
November 29, 2025
0

Step aside, Mark Zuckerberg, Silicon Valley has a new muscle to flex in its rolodex of young founders. Billionaire Brendan...

National debt: UBS’s Paul Donovan warns governements will leverage private wealth

National debt: UBS’s Paul Donovan warns governements will leverage private wealth

by FeeOnlyNews.com
November 29, 2025
0

When examining the flow of wealth in the coming decades, privately wealthy individuals rest in a very healthy position. Their...

Ashish Kacholia’s portfolio shines in FY26: 3 stocks turn multibaggers, 5 fresh Q2 picks – Portfolio Rally

Ashish Kacholia’s portfolio shines in FY26: 3 stocks turn multibaggers, 5 fresh Q2 picks – Portfolio Rally

by FeeOnlyNews.com
November 29, 2025
0

Investors on Dalal Street often track the portfolios of prominent market participants to gauge potential market trends. In this vein,...

Next Post
8 Tax Basics Every Ecommerce Entrepreneur Should Master Before Day One

8 Tax Basics Every Ecommerce Entrepreneur Should Master Before Day One

How Tether’s 7B in US Treasuries will hit top-5 foreign holders by 2033

How Tether’s $127B in US Treasuries will hit top-5 foreign holders by 2033

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Newsom, DeSantis join forces to blast ‘idiotic’ push to allow oil drilling off coasts of California, Florida

Newsom, DeSantis join forces to blast ‘idiotic’ push to allow oil drilling off coasts of California, Florida

November 23, 2025
Israeli housing rental platform Venn raises m

Israeli housing rental platform Venn raises $52m

November 18, 2025
LPL looks beyond Commonwealth for more growth

LPL looks beyond Commonwealth for more growth

November 3, 2025
Why Black Friday Is the Best Time to Join AARP

Why Black Friday Is the Best Time to Join AARP

November 25, 2025
401(k) employer contributions mandated under new bill

401(k) employer contributions mandated under new bill

November 13, 2025
UBS team returns to Morgan Stanley after 12 years

UBS team returns to Morgan Stanley after 12 years

November 10, 2025
20 years across Google, Maersk, and Diageo taught me that the biggest barrier to change isn’t ideas — it’s the gap between inside reality and outside expectations

20 years across Google, Maersk, and Diageo taught me that the biggest barrier to change isn’t ideas — it’s the gap between inside reality and outside expectations

0
‘Untold story’ of Charlie Munger’s last years

‘Untold story’ of Charlie Munger’s last years

0
The Transportation Gap Trapping Thousands of Seniors Indoors

The Transportation Gap Trapping Thousands of Seniors Indoors

0
If You Invested K In Exxon Mobil Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?

If You Invested $10K In Exxon Mobil Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?

0
Contagion | Mises Institute

Contagion | Mises Institute

0
SUI Climbs Into High-Risk Territory As Wave 4 Nears Its Exhaustion Point

SUI Climbs Into High-Risk Territory As Wave 4 Nears Its Exhaustion Point

0
Contagion | Mises Institute

Contagion | Mises Institute

November 29, 2025
If You Invested K In Exxon Mobil Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?

If You Invested $10K In Exxon Mobil Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?

November 29, 2025
20 years across Google, Maersk, and Diageo taught me that the biggest barrier to change isn’t ideas — it’s the gap between inside reality and outside expectations

20 years across Google, Maersk, and Diageo taught me that the biggest barrier to change isn’t ideas — it’s the gap between inside reality and outside expectations

November 29, 2025
SUI Climbs Into High-Risk Territory As Wave 4 Nears Its Exhaustion Point

SUI Climbs Into High-Risk Territory As Wave 4 Nears Its Exhaustion Point

November 29, 2025
‘Untold story’ of Charlie Munger’s last years

‘Untold story’ of Charlie Munger’s last years

November 29, 2025
FIIs net sellers of Rs 3,765 crore till November 29, but flows may shift as sentiment turns

FIIs net sellers of Rs 3,765 crore till November 29, but flows may shift as sentiment turns

November 29, 2025
FeeOnlyNews.com

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Business & Financial News, Stock Market Updates, Analysis, and more from the trusted sources.

CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economy
  • Financial Planning
  • Investing
  • Market Analysis
  • Markets
  • Money
  • Personal Finance
  • Startups
  • Stock Market
  • Trading

LATEST UPDATES

  • Contagion | Mises Institute
  • If You Invested $10K In Exxon Mobil Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?
  • 20 years across Google, Maersk, and Diageo taught me that the biggest barrier to change isn’t ideas — it’s the gap between inside reality and outside expectations
  • Our Great Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use, Legal Notices & Disclaimers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Facebook
Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.