After three phases of the Election - 2019, the
fate of 302 of the 543 seats in the Lok Sabha is sealed. The remaining seats
shall see voting in four more phases over the next few weeks. The Nifty and the
Sensex have scaled to new highs ahead of the 2019 elections as was the case
with the 2014 elections too. In the last two months alone, foreign portfolio
investors have infused close to Rs.55,000 carores and that had driven the
rally. But how have markets typically reacted to the elections in the previous
instances?
To understand the impact of the elections on the market, we can break
up the Nifty movement in - 6 months post-election outcome and compare it with
the second scenario when the Nifty returns are calculated for a full 1 year (6
months before and 6 months after election). The chart is quite interesting.
What do we infer from the above chart?
Irrespective of whether you bought the Nifty on the Election Day and held for 6
months or you bought 6 months prior to the election and held for 1 year, the
returns have been very positive. The only exceptions were the elections of 1996
and 1998, but that is perfectly understandable as these were the years that
threw up an extremely unstable coalition that did not last for long. If you
look at any of the other governments of 1991, 1999, 2004, 2009 or 2014 where
the governments lasted a full term, the returns around the election have been
actually positive. It did not matter that 1991 was a minority government while
1999, 2004 and 2009 were coalition governments. So the entire obsession about
the need for majority governments for healthy Nifty returns may be a tad
overstated.
If you take the last 5 elections from 1996
onwards, then the GDP growth in the year after the election has been higher
than the GDP growth in the year before the elections. The only exception was
the 2009 elections but that was understandable because the world economy was
just coming out of recession and that led to slightly lower growth in 2010.
Other than that we have seen better GDP growth in post-election years compared
to pre-election years.
Frankly, elections should not bother one’s investment decision. There are
various reasons that affect stock market, not only elections. Also there is not
much of a linkage between elections, GDP growth and stock markets. GDP is being
driven by a huge domestic market and a young population. Stock markets are
being driven by low inflation, corporate profits and more Indians investing in
equities. In fact, Indian stock markets have created wealth irrespective of
unstable governments, coalition governments, global crisis, droughts and
floods. At best, elections are one more such event for the markets!
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