Subramaniam: Consumer Discretionary Tops Summer Watchlist
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- Subramaniam says DIIs are holding back from decisive buying, with net positive flows dropping to Rs 2,400 crore on Friday and just Rs 1,000 crore on Thursday as institutions wait for the earnings season
- Nifty EPS growth expectations will likely come down from the earlier 14% projection to 12% or 11%, per Subramaniam, and the final number will determine how the market re-rates from current sub-5-10-year-average PE multiples
- Consumer discretionary tops Subramaniam's watchlist, with summer demand data for durables and paints—not the current oil-and-steel-pressured quarter's earnings—serving as the real forward signal
- Banking faces NIM pressure if retail lending slows in a higher-rate environment, with private sector banks and NBFCs most exposed given their retail-heavy loan books, partially cushioned by the GST cut
- Capital goods is Subramaniam's third watchlist pick; any sign of private sector capacity expansion in upcoming earnings calls could make the current weakness an attractive entry point
- Subramaniam warns against portfolio repositioning, noting that gold and banking—both widely expected to be war-insulated—have counterintuitively taken hits, and advises holding a diversified portfolio close to pre-conflict positioning
Why it matters: Subramaniam's call lands at a moment when Indian retail investors poured Rs 32,000 crore into SIPs and Rs 40,000 crore into mutual funds—yet he expects Nifty EPS growth to fall from 14% to 11-12%, a downgrade that would directly reshape forward PE multiples currently sitting below 5-10 year averages. Investors tempted to reposition into 'safe' sectors like gold or banking have already seen those hedges fail, making his 'stay quiet' advice a contrarian test of discipline against the headline oil shock.

