Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. India stands out as a compelling growth and transformation story, largely driven by infrastructure, with GDP growth projected at 6.5% or higher in 2024 and 2025—one of the highest growth rates of any peer economy in the world, said Stefan Hofer, managing director and chief investment strategist at LGT Bank Asia. “So, we want to buy that growth." Though, “the natural caution is the valuation," he warned.
From the valuation standpoint, although India is not cheap, it is not cheap for a reason and that is the growth. More importantly, he believes that “although investors will take note of the high valuations, it won’t stop them from buying Indian equities". Edited excerpts: The US election is the most significant event of the year for global investors, sparking plenty of pre-election debate about positioning.
However, with polls consistently proven wrong, the unexpected "Red Sweep"—Republicans taking the White House and Congress—was seen as the least likely outcome. Before the election, we were bullish on US equities, especially technology and financials, and favoured Indian and Japanese stocks. We were more cautious on China and Europe.
Post-election, we didn’t change our positioning, as the outcome actually reinforced our views. We continue to favour US stocks, particularly in technology. The reason is that Republicans are less likely to break up major tech companies like Google, Apple, and Facebook, whereas Democrats have been more focused on antitrust and competitive behaviour.
We believe Republicans will support these big tech firms in their competition globally. Our overall positioning has not changed. Though, the one thing that we added after the election was US small- and
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