Automobile company Tata Motors, metals and mining major Vedanta, oil marketing firm BPCL, private sector IndusInd Bank, and two-wheeler major Bajaj Auto have witnessed their market cap slip below the Rs 1-trillion mark this year.
Illustration: Dominic Xavier/Rediff.com
Companies with more than Rs 1 trillion market capitalisation have gone down by five in 2018 despite the benchmark Sensex gaining 5 per cent.
Automobile company Tata Motors, metals and mining major Vedanta, oil marketing firm Bharat Petroleum Corporation (BPCL), private sector IndusInd Bank, and two-wheeler major Bajaj Auto have witnessed their market cap slip below the Rs 1-trillion mark this year.
Currently, there are 27 companies in the club, down from 31 at the end of 2017. Consumer goods company Nestlé is fresh in the club.
Last calendar year, the markets saw a secular upward move with the benchmark Sensex gaining 28 per cent and the NSE Midcap 100 index rallying 47 per cent.
Markets this year have been choppy with the Sensex gaining as much as 14 per cent at one point to lifetime highs and then declining close to 15 per cent.
“Except for 10 or 15 companies, everybody else has seen an erosion in its market cap this year. Last year, the rally was broad-based. This year, it has been extremely skewed in favour of select stocks,” said G Chokkalingam, founder, Equinomics Research and Advisory.
Among the 31 companies that were in the Rs 1-trillion club during the start of the year, 16 have seen an erosion in their market cap, while the others have witnessed an increase.
In absolute terms, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Reliance Industries (RIL) and Hindustan Unilever (HUL) saw a big increase in their market cap.
TCS has added Rs 2.32 trillion in its market cap to Rs 7.5 trillion; RIL has added Rs 1.35 trillion to Rs 7.2 trillion; and HUL has added nearly Rs 1 trillion to Rs 3.94 trillion.
The worst erosion in absolute terms was for Bharti Airtel. It’s market value eroded by Rs 900 billion to Rs 1.21 trillion.
Tata Motors saw its market cap value go down by Rs 78,000 crore, or 62 per cent, to Rs 46,900 crore, and Maruti Suzuki witnessed its market value decline by Rs 73,000 crore to Rs 2.2 trillion.
Market participants said a combination of global and local factors have led to a lot of volatility in the market.
Locally, the reintroduction of long-term capital gains, goods and services tax (GST), and the IL&FS default have weighed on investors' sentiment.
On the global front, the rising US dollar and bond yields led to risk-aversion among overseas investors, who pulled out close to $5 billion from domestic stocks in 2018.
Besides, rising tensions between the US and China, two of the world’s largest economies, have also weighed on the companies linked to global trade.
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