The Indian equity market was a star performer and beat most peers in 2020 and 2021. However, it appears to be losing its edge over other emerging and developed markets after the recent correction.
The benchmark Nifty50 has declined 7 per cent from its October high of 18,339, against around 4 per cent decline each in the United States’ Dow Jones Industrial Average and MSCI Emerging Markets Index, while the MSCI World Index has declined around 5 per cent. China’s Shanghai Composite Index, seems to have bucked this trend, having risen around one per cent.
However, the Nifty50 remains the top performer on a one- and two-year basis. It has risen 31 per cent since the beginning of CY20, against a 17 per cent rally in the Dow Jones and just 3 per cent rise in the MSCI EM index. All indices in our analysis are priced in respective local currencies, while the MSCI World and EM indices are priced in US dollars.
Volatility
Additionally, analysts say Indian markets have also become more volatile in recent months. “There has been a sharp rise in volatility in the Indian equity market in the last six months or so, leading to a sharp rally when sentiments are positive and an equally sharp sell-off when sentiment turns sour,” says Dhananjay Sinha, managing director and chief strategist at J M Finance Institutional Equity.
The Nifty50’s recent movements capture this volatility well. For instance, it corrected by 10 per cent between the second half of October and December, followed by 10 per cent of rally. However, the index has given up nearly two-thirds of those recent gains in just the last five sessions. In contrast, the correction has been more orderly in the US and other EMs.
The benchmark Nifty50 has declined 7 per cent from its October high of 18,339, against around 4 per cent decline each in the United States’ Dow Jones Industrial Average and MSCI Emerging Markets Index, while the MSCI World Index has declined around 5 per cent. China’s Shanghai Composite Index, seems to have bucked this trend, having risen around one per cent.
However, the Nifty50 remains the top performer on a one- and two-year basis. It has risen 31 per cent since the beginning of CY20, against a 17 per cent rally in the Dow Jones and just 3 per cent rise in the MSCI EM index. All indices in our analysis are priced in respective local currencies, while the MSCI World and EM indices are priced in US dollars.
Volatility
Additionally, analysts say Indian markets have also become more volatile in recent months. “There has been a sharp rise in volatility in the Indian equity market in the last six months or so, leading to a sharp rally when sentiments are positive and an equally sharp sell-off when sentiment turns sour,” says Dhananjay Sinha, managing director and chief strategist at J M Finance Institutional Equity.
The Nifty50’s recent movements capture this volatility well. For instance, it corrected by 10 per cent between the second half of October and December, followed by 10 per cent of rally. However, the index has given up nearly two-thirds of those recent gains in just the last five sessions. In contrast, the correction has been more orderly in the US and other EMs.

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