India: The Reset That Strengthened the Case

Key Takeaways

  • After a year of overheated valuations and investor crowding, India’s equity market has undergone a healthy reset with more defensible valuations and renewed investor interest.
  • Post-election policy continuity reinforces India’s unique combination of macro prudence and growth ambition, supporting opportunities in infrastructure, manufacturing and digital formalization.
  • With resilient earnings, strong domestic inflows and light foreign positioning, India now offers long-term compounding potential at more reasonable entry points than in 2023.

After a difficult 12 months, India's equity story is quietly regaining its rhythm. Valuations that once looked stretched have compressed to more defensible levels, policy continuity after the 2024 election has reassured markets and the long-term growth engine, powered by demographics, digital infrastructure and industrial reshoring, remains intact. For investors who found India "too hot" last year, the temperature is beginning to normalize.1

From Overcrowded to Overlooked

Twelve months ago, India was everyone's favorite emerging-market story, given its high growth, strong earnings and political stability. The problem was that too much capital chased the same idea at once. By late 2024, valuations on the Nifty 50 traded near historic premiums versus other emerging markets, while foreign inflows stalled.2 The subsequent cooling in performance wasn't about broken fundamentals—it was about digestion.

That digestion phase may now be ending. Recent market behavior suggests investors are rediscovering India with more realistic expectations. Valuations have moderated to levels that may be more "defensible," even after accounting for an elevated return on equity. Unlike past cycles where corrections were triggered by macroeconomic instability, this one was valuation-driven, a healthier reset that clears the way for renewed participation.3

The Post-Election Reassurance

India's general election was a stress test for its market narrative. The results, while slightly below the ruling coalition's earlier dominance, confirmed continuity rather than disruption. Investors now have greater visibility on the government's infrastructure and manufacturing push, alongside disciplined fiscal management.

Policy direction remains consistent: large-scale capex in transportation, renewables and defense; ongoing formalization of the economy through a goods and services tax (GST) and digital payments; and the expansion of production-linked incentives. In effect, India's policy mix remains one of the few in emerging markets combining growth ambition with macro prudence.4