Home / News / Stock market / Bernstein stays cautious on India exposure, prefers low volatility, large-caps

Stock market

Bernstein stays cautious on India exposure, prefers low volatility, large-caps

Investing | Sat, Mar 22 2025 05:03 AM AEDT

stock

Image Source:

Bernstein stays cautious on India exposure, prefers low volatility, large-caps

Investing.com -- Bernstein maintained a cautious stance on India exposure despite early signs of market inflection, advising against chasing small/mid-caps and high-volatility stocks.

The firm reiterated its preference for large-cap and low-volatility stocks, which it views as the “cheapest” styles relative to the market and beneficiaries of strong earnings tailwinds.

Large-caps and low-volatility stocks have outperformed the market by 4%-6% YTD, while high-volatility and small/mid-caps (SMIDs) have lagged, down 12%-14%.

“We still don’t find reasons to add risk to India exposure and recommend to not chase small/mid-caps or high vol stocks,” analyst at Bernstein said.

Although valuations across most sectors have normalized, the firm said that small/mid-caps and high-volatility stocks remain expensive, trading above +1 standard deviation levels.

Bernstein observed early signs of the earnings downgrade cycle bottoming out, particularly in materials, energy, and staples.

Only large-caps, low-volatility, and quality stocks are in a clear earnings recovery cycle, the note added, highlighting that these segments show strong tactical earnings support.

While Foreign Institutional Investor (FII) outflows have stabilized after pulling out $16.3 billion YTD, slowing domestic SIP flows remain a concern.

While, FII outflow seem to have bottomed-out, the slowing SIP flow remains a concern as that has typically aligned with market drawdowns

Bernstein emphasized that despite the recent market rebound, style positioning remains a relative valuation call, favoring large-cap and low-volatility stocks over high-risk segments.

“We maintain our preference toward large-caps and low vol stocks as they remain the ‘cheapest’ styles relative to market and are seeing the strongest earnings tailwind,” analyst said.

This article first appeared in Investing.com

More For You

Stock Market

TSX Composite set for biggest turnover since 2022 as trade tensions reshape index

Investing | Tue, May 13 2025 05:57 AM AEST

stock

Investing.com -- Canada’s S&P/TSX Composite Index is on track to see...

Stock Market

Citi upgrades PDD: Says tariff reductions positive for China cross-border sellers

Investing | Tue, May 13 2025 03:33 AM AEST

stock

Investing.com -- Citi upgraded PDD Holdings to Buy with a price target...

Stock Market

FTSE 100 today: Index gains as U.S., China agree to temporarily reduce tariffs

Investing | Tue, May 13 2025 02:37 AM AEST

stock

Investing.com -- British stocks traded higher on Monday, starting the ...