Several PSUs trade at extremely high market caps relative to their profits, net worth or assets: Kotak report | Stock Market News
Source: Live Mint
The Indian equity markets have experienced a recent pullback following a record-breaking rally. In a recent note, analysts at Kotak Institutional Equities highlighted that investors seem to be overlooking concerns about high valuations. They believe that the pursuit of returns has outweighed the fear of risks, whether apparent or hidden.
The brokerage noted that institutional investors have concentrated on identifying potential risk factors but have strangely overlooked the possibility that the greatest risk may lie in the significant disparity between current stock prices and their fair values across the market.
“Greed of returns has overwhelmed fear of risks (visible or invisible). The fact that the investors have made high returns will mean little in the event of an eventual alignment of stock prices with fair values,” the brokerage firm said in the report.
The market is overlooking the significant embedded risks in the current high valuations, even though investors are concerned about potential factors that could disrupt the ongoing rally, it stated.
Greed prevailing in Indian stock market
Kotak noted that the significant inflows into domestic equity mutual funds from retail investors, as well as the investments from mutual funds into the markets, indicate a strong sense of greed prevailing in the market.
“As we have argued before, high conviction at all price points among retail investors with limited investment experience due to high returns over the past 3-4 years has led to the high levels of confidence (greed) among investors of all kinds,” the report added.
Kotak stated that it can only hope for a sufficient time interval between now and a correction, which could help narrow the gap between current stock prices and their fair values by rolling forward earnings.
“The impact for investors will depend on the ownership of the shares at various points in time in the upcycle (and eventual downcycle)—two extreme cases will help appreciate this better. If the share price of a company was to go from ₹100 to ₹500 and correct to ₹200 eventually, the outcome is still a great one for an investor if he or she was to hold the stock through the ride but will be very painful for the investor who would have bought it at ₹500 ( ₹300 loss) and very joyous for the investor who would have sold it at ₹500 ( ₹400 gain),” it said.