India's world-beating stock market run is over: Goldman Sachs

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
By Adam Haigh and Abhishek VishnoiGoldman Sachs Group Inc
has called time on the world-beating surge in Indian stocks. The nation’s equity market looks less favorable amid elevated valuations, a
potential slowdown in economic growth and upcoming elections, according to Goldman Sachs analysts, who cut India to the equivalent of a hold
rating from buy
The firm has been bullish on Indian stocks since March 2014 and the market has nearly doubled since then, returning more than twice that of
global equities. “The risk reward for Indian equities is less favorable,” the analysts, including Sunil Koul, wrote in a report dated
Sept
16
“The key reasons for our less optimistic view include, among others, stretched valuations, multiple macro headwinds in the near term and
election event risk.” India’s world-beating economic expansion that now faces tests from higher oil prices and a tumbling rupee has
accompanied the stellar run for equities, confounding non-believers in recent years
The lack of breadth among rising stocks and uncertainty going into key elections next year are now becoming common refrains for those
positioning for less rosy future returns. Valuations have also gotten stretched and history points to negative absolute and relative returns
when multiples get so far above average, according to Goldman Sachs