GDP to grow at 8% in FY16, Sensex at 33,500 by Dec: Nomura

Maintaining a bullish stance on the Indian economy, Japanese brokerage Nomura Thursday projected a 8 percent GDP growth for the current fiscal year while retaining its Sensex target at 33,500 by December.

Mumbai: Maintaining a bullish stance on the Indian economy, Japanese brokerage Nomura Thursday projected a 8 percent GDP growth for the current fiscal year while retaining its Sensex target at 33,500 by December.

"We are of the view that India is in the initial stages of business cycle recovery," Nomura India Chief Economist Sonal Varma told reporters here.

"We are expecting growth at around 8 percent in FY16 versus 7.3 percent in FY15," she added.

Expecting the business cycle to pick up in the coming two quarters, Varma noted that a number of factors such as policy efforts from both the RBI and government support the projections for higher growth.

Government forecast GDP to grow at 7.8 percent in FY16, while RBI pegs it at 7.6 percent.

Falling cost of capital, cyclical and structural improvement in growth, a positive terms-of-trade shock are some of the reasons identified for positive outlook towards the capital markets, she added.

Varma also observed that FDI investments have picked up in the last one year and that almost 90 percent of the current account deficit (CAD) was funded by these inflows.

"We have seen USD 33 billion in net FDI inflow in FY15. Almost the entire USD 28 billion of CAD last fiscal was funded through FDI flows and the flows have been broad-based."

The pipeline of flows looks strong for the near-term. Based on first two months of FY16 the net FDI flow look to be tracking almost USD 36 billion, she added.

"We maintain our Sensex target at 33,500 by December," Varma said. The 30-share BSE benchmark index ended at 28,298 points today.

Nomura Managing Director and Head of Equities Prabhat Awasthi said foreign investors continue to be bullish on the stock market, which is evident from the significant rise in participation from domestic investors.

"When the foreign investors were selling the domestic investors were still buying stock which is a positive development. This time around its the local investors who have been buying on a sustained basis," Awasthi said.

Varma noted that "RBI is done with the rate cutting cycle for now primarily because the target going forward is to get inflation down to 4 percent in a period where the growth will gradually be picking up and in an environment where inflation expectations are still high."

She said India can expect inflation to essentially stabilise at 5-5.5 percent in the next 12-18 months.

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