Despite recovery, why Indian stocks are trailing global indices
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Context
Despite global indices like the and Japan's recovering from the West Asia crisis, Indian stock markets are experiencing a noticeable lag. This underperformance is driven by heavy outflows of triggered by India's vulnerability to global crude oil prices and a structural lack of exposure to the booming Artificial Intelligence (AI) sector, which currently drives global market rallies.
UPSC Perspectives
Economic
The Indian economy is currently facing a dual challenge of capital flight and currency depreciation driven by (FPI) outflows. India's heavy dependence on imported crude oil makes it highly vulnerable to elevated energy prices triggered by the West Asia conflict, which can widen the Current Account Deficit (the shortfall between the money flowing in on exports and the money flowing out on imports) and squeeze corporate profit margins. As foreign investors sell Indian equities, the increased supply of Rupees in the forex market leads to currency depreciation. A weakening Rupee introduces severe exchange rate risk (the risk that an investment's value will drop due to currency fluctuations), reducing the dollar returns for foreign investors and prompting further sell-offs. While the routinely intervenes using its forex reserves to curb speculative bets and manage extreme volatility, underlying macroeconomic vulnerabilities to energy shocks remain a primary concern for UPSC candidates analyzing India's macro-financial stability.
Science & Tech
The divergence between Indian and global markets highlights a critical structural gap in India's technology sector: the absence of a robust, hardware-driven Artificial Intelligence (AI) ecosystem. Global indices are surging due to their heavy weightage in AI innovators and semiconductor chipmakers. In contrast, India's tech sector is heavily dominated by IT service providers, which comprise a relatively small weight in benchmark indices and are currently viewed by investors as vulnerable to AI disruption rather than beneficiaries of it. The reflects this paradigm shift, with global capital disproportionately flowing toward deep tech and hardware manufacturing based in countries like South Korea and Taiwan. For UPSC mains, this underscores the strategic necessity of government initiatives aimed at shifting India from a service-oriented IT hub to a global deep tech and semiconductor manufacturing powerhouse to attract long-term global capital.
Geoeconomic
India's market underperformance underscores the deep geoeconomic consequences of its energy dependency. Since India imports over 80 percent of its crude oil, any geopolitical instability in the Middle East translates into an immediate energy shock (a sudden and dramatic change in the price or supply of energy). Unlike the United States, which has achieved a degree of energy independence, India faces imported inflation whenever global crude prices spike due to conflict. Rating agencies and global banks factor this vulnerability into their assessments, often downgrading Indian equities to 'underweight' during geopolitical crises. For policymakers, this recurring market volatility serves as a stark reminder of the urgent need to accelerate the transition to renewable energy sources and diversify energy imports, thereby insulating the broader economy and domestic financial markets from external geopolitical shocks.