Citing expected improvement in the macroeconomic situation, Goldman Sachs on Monday upgraded India's rating to ‘market weight', indicating bullishness in the short-term.
After maintaining an ‘under weight' status on India for one year now, Goldman Sachs also cited lower oil prices and government's push for policy reforms for the upgrade.
“We upgrade India after a year at under weight, on a turn in the macro cycle, oil prices, valuation, and policy reform,” it said in a research note.
The upgrade comes at a time when there are rising fears of domestic economic slowdown amid escalating debt turmoil in the U.S. and the Europe.
However, Goldman expects the Indian economy to grow 7.3 per cent in the current fiscal, lower than the earlier projection of 7.5 per cent expansion. The Reserve Bank of India has forecast 8 per cent growth in 2011-12.
Global economic uncertainty apart, India is grappling with high prices with headline inflation touching 9.44 per cent in June.
To tame rising prices, the apex bank had hiked key policy rates eleven times since March, 2010.
Goldman Sachs noted that the Reserve Bank of India's latest move to raise the repo rate by 50 basis points was a clear sign in that it is vigilant in bringing down inflation expectations.
“Despite the near-term weakness, we believe the policy tightening was a necessary step to reigning in inflation expectations and will ultimately serve as a net positive for the Indian equity market on a medium to longer term horizon,” the research note said. According to Goldman Sachs, core inflation is expected to taper off “in the autumn months... believe the equity market will already start to discount a moderation in inflation.''
Goldman Sachs noted the current correlation between oil and Indian equities is relatively low and positive, suggesting that current oil price movements are not weighing on investor sentiment with regards to India. Regarding policy reforms, Goldman Sachs said that over the past few months, there has been some encouraging development on the political front in India even as it cautioned that much remained to be done. The research cited steps such as market regulator SEBI's move to raise the investment limit for foreign investors in the domestic corporate bond market to $40 billion and partial deregulation of petrol prices.