Welcome to the world of Robinhood traders. Eligibility criteria: Unemployed/WFH, smartphone, zero fee trading account, no experience and a free paycheck from the government. Better still, despite being an amateur, you hit bullseye every now and then, because you are constantly pulling the trigger. But, what if you are a ‘wizened sharpshooter’? Well, keep waiting for the elusive precise moment to shoot while chidiya is chugging khet. This has been the ironical absurdity of the markets over the past few months. And, this may be a norm that old-style ‘value’ investors will have to adjust their strategy to.
Globally, FAANG (Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Google) has transitioned into FAMGA (Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon), and in India, more than one-third of the rally since March is on account of the Big Daddy – Reliance Industries. The rest are the usual suspects at the broad Index level. Some sectors like IT, pharmaceuticals and chemicals have made a comeback, too. Thankfully, some trampled mid and small caps have also seen decent gain, while the dark horse has been gold, which hit a new all-time high and deservedly so.
An existing dichotomy is the striking fall in fixed deposit/money market rates at one end, and sustainable dividend yield on some cash-rich large caps in the vicinity of 5%, at the other! The lower deposit rate suggests demand contraction given lost Q1FY21, and the latter suggests a mindset that can oxymoronically be termed, ‘Safe Greedy’. Income has contracted, investors have more time on their hands than usual and savings are also yielding less. They want more income but do not want to take risk and therefore are being ‘Safe Greedy’ by piling into the same favoured stocks. The more adventurous are venturing into mid and small caps, where even traded value of Rs.10 million-20 million exaggerates price movement, which then ‘attracts’ more speculators.
If we juxtapose the above with ground reality, it makes for a warped picture. Yes, equities are a lead indicator, but investors are now deriving solace from the immediate future. It is likely that FY22 earnings may be similar to FY20. So, we have lost two years but the benchmark Index has covered more than half the ground it lost in March. In fact, the market has been running ahead of earnings for many years, despite earnings disappointment year after year.
Perhaps, this is attributable to vanishing time value of money. That is, when interest rates are zero, and if you apply DCF to value a company, then earnings a year later or 10 years later have the same (present) value. This is totally absurd, but the current reality. That is why investors have conveniently brushed aside FY21 as a washout and are already focusing on FY22 or even FY23 in some cases.