Global investors are deserting India’s stock market, selling shares at a record pace to buy Chinese stocks instead, in a dramatic reversal of fortunes for the Asian giants over the last six months.
A hit to earnings from high inflation and interest rates have chipped 13 per cent off Indian stocks from September’s record high, wiping out $1 trillion in market value, while China’s promise of stimulative policies lures investor interest.
“When China gets flows, India doesn’t,” said Jitania Kandhari, deputy chief investment officer of the solutions and multi-asset group at Morgan Stanley Investment Management.
Foreigners have pulled nearly $29 billion out of Indian stocks since October, the most in any six-month period, as they turn their backs on a market most investors had embraced for a couple of years.
That money has fled to China, where Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index, home to many major Chinese companies, is up 36pc since late September, drawn by bets on artificial intelligence spurred by Chinese startup DeepSeek.
For the first time in two years, China has a larger weight than India in the portfolio of Britain’s Aubrey Capital Management, which focuses on consumer companies.
Profits have been locked in from the last couple of years of strong performance by Indian stocks, said its portfolio manager, Rob Brewis, adding, “Some of that has gone to China, some to Southeast Asia and elsewhere.”
While asset managers such as Morgan Stanley and Fidelity International remain overweight on India, they have trimmed exposure over the last few months to add to bets in China.
Nitin Mathur, associate investment director at Fidelity International, said the firm has been more cautious on India than in the past, reducing its exposure “a little bit”.
China’s stock market has proved an unlikely sanctuary from the trade war unleashed by U.S. President Donald Trump, as it is relatively cheap and seen poised on the cusp of an economic recovery.
Before the steep selloff in Indian stocks over the past six months, investors had scrambling to keep up with the strong performance that carried its valuation to eye-watering levels.
But slowing corporate earnings and an economy seen growing in the current financial year at the slowest pace in four have hurt sentiment, investors say.