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From back-to-back, celestial successes to a commanding role in pulling off a consensus declaration as host of the world’s highest profile global economic assembly—the G20—India has been on quite a roll this year.

The world’s most populous nation celebrated a milestone in space exploration, engineering and technology when it became the first country to land an unmanned robotic spacecraft near the moon’s south pole in late August. The historic lunar mission—which made India just the fourth country to touch down on the moon after the United States, the Soviet Union and China—was designed to search for signs of frozen water and other elements. Mere days later, India’s triumphant mission to study the sun’s outer atmosphere for a better understanding of space weather fortified its assertiveness on the world stage.

It added an exclamation point to these wins recently by flaunting diplomatic clout with a G20 summit agreement over such areas as debt resolution, overhauling institutions like the World Bank and formally welcoming the African Union to the bloc for better representation. India also helped steer the leaders in overcoming deep divisions over the war in Ukraine to produce a consensus document.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi took the opportunity to further promote several measures aimed at better integrating the “Global South’s” developmental needs and ambitions with that of the G20. He announced a new multilateral rail and sea corridor project to connect India with the Middle East and the European Union, describing it as a beacon of partnership and innovation. In such an environment of shifting global political alliances, the trade pact stands to be a compelling counterweight to China’s vast Belt-and-Road infrastructure corridor. Modi also met with US President Joe Biden, and the two leaders issued a 29-point joint statement which outlined areas of cooperation toward mutually beneficial goals, including resilient global supply chains and scientific and technological research.

Diversifying away from China has also meant a surge of new investment for India, where companies like Amazon, Apple, Boeing, Samsung and Nokia are banking on the country as a formidable manufacturing alternative. China’s weaker-than-expected economic recovery furthermore appears to be lending positive momentum to Indian equities, especially among international investors who have favored smaller, domestically focused companies.

Last year, India’s equity market experienced significant outflows, but the tide seems to be turning. At the end of the first quarter, overseas investors saw renewed appeal in Indian midcap stocks—the S&P BSE MidCap Index rose more than 20%, compared to a 7.4% gain in the S&P BSE Sensex Index, which is India’s most tracked bellwether index, designed to measure the performance of its 30 largest blue chips.1 Bloomberg data revealed that India’s equity market received about US$15.5 billion in net foreign inflows year-to-date through August, roughly US$1.5 billion short of cancelling last year’s record outflow.2

S&P Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) MidCap Index and S&P BSE SENSEX Index Performance

December 30, 2002–September 12, 2023

Sources: Bloomberg, S&P Indices. The S&P BSE MidCap Index is designed to represent the mid-cap segment of India's stock market. The BSE SENSEX is a free-float market-weighted stock market index of 30 well-established and financially sound companies listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange. Indexes are unmanaged and one cannot directly invest in them. They do not include fees, expenses or sales charges. Past performance is not an indicator or guarantee of future results. Important data provider notices and terms available at www.franklintempletondatasources.com.

India’s gross domestic product (GDP) expanded 7.8% on an annual basis in the June quarter—picking up pace from the prior quarter when it grew 6.1%. We believe this bodes well for smaller, more domestically focused companies. Improving infrastructure in the fast-growing economy should continue to attract more multinationals to set up shop, further advancing India’s overall economy and potentially benefiting small-and mid-capitalization firms. For investors seeking more exposure to India’s growing segment of mid-cap stocks, in our view, it’s worth paying attention to deviations in index construction.

As a measure of the broader Indian market, nearly 32% of the 210 constituents of the FTSE India Capped Index were smaller-cap holdings (under US$5 billion market cap) as of the end of August 2023, while the MSCI India Index, which has 115 companies, held less than a 21% concentration to smaller companies.3 In terms of performance, the FTSE India Capped Index has returned 13.5% year-to-date, compared to 10.7% for the MSCI India Index.4

Contributors to performance include mid-cap firms not represented within the more mega-cap focused MSCI India Index. These included health care firms Zydus Life Sciences and Glenmark Pharmaceuticals as well as Exide Industries, which makes batteries for railways and automotives.

In our view, India’s structural trends, rising affluence, expanding manufacturing prowess, government reforms and burgeoning influence on the world stage, are compelling growth drivers that investors should be watching closely.



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