Enthusiastic buying by domestic institutions and foreign institutional investors has driven India’s stock market capitalisation to a record $2 trillion and taken the equity indices to new highs. In terms of valuation, India is now the world’s most expensive equity market. The bears suspect the current valuations are unsustainable. But they are outnumbered by the bulls, who present a compelling case: Improving macro-economic fundamentals and continuing reforms are triggers for higher corporate earnings growth even as higher liquidity pushes up stock prices. Low inflation, a controlled fiscal deficit, low commodity prices, and a strong monsoon are cited as the other positives. In addition, there’s the introduction of the goods and services tax (GST) and an apparent willingness to tackle bad loans in public-sector banks. The bulls are also betting on political stability and many are assuming long-term political and policy continuity even beyond the 2019 general elections. Global growth is also expected to improve, despite geopolitical tensions and US policy uncertainty. Pessimists, however, claim valuations have run far ahead of projected earnings gains. While conceding that the economy is emerging from a prolonged slump, the bears say that it is not capable of sustaining the growth required to justify present valuations.

