IMPACT
OF COVID 19 ON THE INDIAN STOCK MARKETS
Stock market is a place
where shares of public listed companies are traded. The primary market is where
companies float shares to the general public in an Initial Public Offering (IPO)
to raise capital.
Before COVID-19 (Pre
COVID-19), market capitalisation on each major exchange in India was about
$2.16 trillion. The 2019 stock market rally was limited to 8-10 stocks within
the large caps. The Sensex returned around 14% (excluding dividends) for the
year 2019 but prominently featured blue-chip companies such as HDFC Bank, HDFC,
TCS, Infosys, Reliance, Hindustan Unilever, ICICI Bank and Kotak Bank, without
which Sensex returns would have been negative.
However, in the start
of 2020, there was overall recovery which led to both NSE and BSE traded at
their highest levels ever, hitting peaks of 12,362 and 42,273 respectively. At
the starting of the year 2020, there were close to 30 companies that were
expected to file IPO’s. The market conditions were generally favourable as they
witnessed record highs in mid-January.
A Comparison of
Pre and Post COVID View of Indian Stock Markets:
Bourses |
Indexes-14 Jan 20 |
Indexes-23 Mar 20 |
Indexes-24 Apr 20 |
Nifty 50 |
12,362 |
7,610 |
9,154 |
Sensex |
41,952 |
25,981 |
31,327 |
When COVID 19 strike,
markets loom under fear as uncertainty prevails. lt has sent markets around the
world crashing to levels not witnessed since the Global Financial Crisis of
2008. Following the strong correlation with the trends and indices of the
global market as BSE Sensex and Nifty 50 fell by 38 per cent. The total market
cap lost a staggering 27.31% from the start of the year. The stock market has
reflected the sentiments this pandemic unleashed upon investors, foreign and
domestic alike. Companies have scaled back; layoffs have multiplied and
employee compensations have been affected resulting in negligible growth in the
last couple of months. Some of the sectors such as hospitality, tourism and
entertainment have been impacted adversely and stocks of such companies have
plummeted by more than 40%.
While the world has
witnessed many financial crises in the past, the last one being the global
recession of 2008, the current coronavirus (COVID-19) crisis is different from
the past fallouts.
In response to current
turmoil, RBI and the Government of India has come up with a slew of reforms
such as reductions of repo rate, regulatory relaxation by extending moratorium
and several measures to boost liquidity in the system howsoever the pandemic has
impacted the premise of the corporate sector. Payments deferrals, subdued loan
growth, rising cases of bad loans and sluggish business conditions have
impaired the growth and the health of the economic activity. Deceleration of
GDP growth, demand-supply chain, cut in discretionary expenses and CAPEX has
been the observed during the lockdown, which has led to falling in household
incomes, marketing spends, reduced travel cost and hiring freeze.
Companies with
innovative products, increasing distribution reach, technology-driven processes
and healthy balance sheet would revive the growth momentum post lockdown. Lower
oil prices and high capital expenditure by the government in turn creating
capital which will provide a platform to flourish when we overcome COVID 19
pandemic.
As far the outlook for
the market, we only need to look back at its history. Drops in BSE sensitive
index is temporary, and each dip provides investors with the opportunity to
enter the market and earn a higher return especially for those with long term
horizon. Moreover, the higher the fluctuations, the higher chances of getting
better returns. While these crises are real and it impacts the world economy,
but historically, such crisis has not lasted long, as the world is competent
enough to come up with answers to combat these challenges.
Despite the fact, that it’s
hard to predict the magnitude and impact of Coronavirus on the economy, but it
is certain that the markets will bounce back soon the crisis gets over. With an
average annual return (CAGR) of around 15 percent, by growing from 100 points
in 1979 to over 41,000 points in 2019, Sensex has proven time and again that
corrections are temporary, but growth is permanent as always.
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