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For Beaten Indian Small Caps, Patience Is Virtue, ICICI Says

Battered small-cap stocks will eventually make a comeback for those investors willing to wait, according to ICICI Prudential AMC.

For Beaten Indian Small Caps, Patience Is Virtue, ICICI Says
S. Naren, executive director and chief investment officer of ICICI Prudential Asset Management Co., listens during an interview in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- India’s battered small-capitalization stocks will eventually make a comeback for those investors willing to wait, according to ICICI Prudential Asset Management Company.

Sankaran Naren, who helps manage 3.4 trillion rupees ($47 billion) as the chief investment officer at the firm, said that the shares look interesting now and are well positioned to deliver results in three to five years.

For Beaten Indian Small Caps, Patience Is Virtue, ICICI Says

India’s small-capitalization stocks have been struggling over the past two years, during which they have lost almost 30% of their value. In contrast, the benchmark equity index completed its fourth annual gain in 2019 amid a surge in global demand for blue-chip stocks.

“At this time, the polarization between large and small caps is just too much, we think over the next three to five years this polarization will go away,” Naren said. Still, “we are not yet in a situation where equities is a dirt-cheap asset class where we can give a big buy call.”

For Beaten Indian Small Caps, Patience Is Virtue, ICICI Says

Analysts at other firms expect gains in the S&P BSE Sensex this year to be led by just a handful of big names, similar to 2019, as economic uncertainty is likely to keep investors flocking to the safety of quality stocks. The S&P BSE Sensex climbed 1.25% on Tuesday, its biggest advance since Nov. 25, data compiled by Bloomberg shows.

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ICICI Prudential’s investment chief is advising clients to follow an asset allocation strategy based on their risk appetite and to consider debt and credit funds. The firm plans to increase its exposure to smaller companies gradually.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nupur Acharya in Mumbai at nacharya7@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lianting Tu at ltu4@bloomberg.net, Naoto Hosoda, Tim Smith

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