In the first budget under the new coalition government, the finance minister continued on the path of fiscal consolidation, highlighting the continuity and consistency in direction of policy making. Large windfall gains from RBI’s dividend payout and surge in tax revenues provided the government sufficient room to bring down the deficit from 5.1% to 4.9%. However, the tweaks to the taxation structure, even if few of the changes were expected, led to a knee jerk reaction in the equity markets at the time of announcement. Tax buoyancy will enable the government to boost economic growth with capex allocation and added focus to job creation with ELI (Employee linked incentive) schemes and tax breaks for salaried class will lead to pickup in consumption. Overall the focus on fiscal consolidation, the incentive to boost employment, focus on incentivizing the MSME and manufacturing sectors, will continue to structurally build a strong growth prospect for India.
The budget specifically focused on employment, skilling, MSMEs, and the middle class. It laid out 9 Priorities for generating opportunities for all and with the intention that future budgets will also build on these priorities. In addition to the production linked incentives (PLI) the government this time has focused on Employment linked incentives (ELI).
The most awaited event post-elections, the budget, has finally passed. India remains one of the fastest growing economies globally. Macros remain strong with an easing inflation cycle, progress of monsoons and robust economic growth. The fiscal discipline by government will translate to crowding in for private investments. With the government also emphasizing on private capex, the entire curve of the capex cycle stands to benefit in light of multiple enablers such as deleveraged corporate balance sheets, healthy profitability, rising domestic demand, and increasing capacity utilization. Even though there is no change in the capex expenditure, compared to the interim budget, it is a 17% growth on YOY terms, which in itself is a healthy figure. Tax benefits to salaried class, focus on employment generation, and continuation of policies directed towards housing and rural reforms (agri/allied sectors) can have a positive impact on the consumption theme.
Companies that have witnessed growth, are today seeing high multiples. Whereas segments where multiples are low, growth is not yet delivered. Hence, in the near term we believe returns could be muted; while we continue to be positive on the long-term growth potential of the Indian equity market.
The government has reduced the fiscal deficit from 5.1% to 4.9%. Gross and net borrowing numbers haven't changed much hence market reaction today was muted. The government is committed to stay on course of the fiscal consolidation path, gliding down from 4.9% in FY25 to 4.5% in FY26. This was in line with our expectations. We continue to remain constructive on rates on the back of sustained FPI flows in debt post index inclusion of Indian G-Secs, stable outlook on external front and the recent S&P sovereign outlook upgrade. Accordingly, from a strategy perspective, we will maintain an overweight duration stance within the respective scheme mandates. We do expect the 10-year bond yields to trade in a narrow range in the near term and to soften to 6.75% over the next few quarters.
Source of Data: Axis MF Research, India Budget 2024-25. Date: 23rd July 2024
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