Morgan Stanley: Sensex 95,000 Target by Dec 2026
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- Morgan Stanley set its base-case Sensex target at 95,000 for December 2026, implying ~22% upside from the April 8 close of 77,563 and valuing the index at 23.5x trailing earnings versus a 25-year average of 22x.
- The base case (50% probability) assumes 17% annual Sensex earnings growth through FY28, fiscal discipline, a pickup in private capex, and a positive gap between real growth and real interest rates.
- In the bull case (30% probability), the Sensex reaches 107,000 on oil below $70/barrel, stronger terms of trade, and 19% annual earnings growth between FY25 and FY28.
- The bear case (20% probability) sees the Sensex slip to 76,000 if crude averages above $100/barrel, the RBI is forced to tighten, and the US enters recession.
- Ridham Desai flagged India's lack of a direct AI play as the "most persistent challenge," warning AI disruption to Indian services exports could aggravate matters, while a productivity boost from AI would be a key upside catalyst.
- Morgan Stanley is overweight financials, consumer discretionary and industrials, and underweight energy, materials, utilities and healthcare, citing robust government capex, a private capex pickup, and an expected recovery in urban consumption.
- The report notes India's trailing 12-month performance is nearly the worst in history, the Sensex is "nearly the cheapest ever in gold terms," and India's share of global profits exceeds its index weight by the widest margin on record.
Why it matters: If Morgan Stanley's base case plays out, Sensex investors gain 22% by December 2026, with the report overweighting domestic cyclicals (financials, consumer discretionary, industrials). The call is contrarian — India is near the bottom of emerging-market performance rankings — but Desai concedes the lack of a direct AI play is a structural drag on the multiple expansion needed.