Citi Research has recently lowered its year-end target for the Indian stock market, indicating growing concerns among international investment banks about India's "high oil prices + high volatility" scenario. According to a Reuters report on March 16, Citi reduced the Nifty 50 year-end target from 28,500 points to 27,000 points, while also lowering the corresponding forward valuation assumption from 20 times to 19 times.
Rationale for Downgrade
This reduction is not solely based on valuation contraction but also reflects weakened earnings forecasts and macroeconomic assumptions. Citi believes that the energy and logistics disruptions caused by the Iran war are undermining India, an economy already highly reliant on imported energy. If the supply shock persists for three months, India's GDP growth rate for the 2027 fiscal year could decrease by 20 to 30 basis points, inflation may rise by 50 to 75 basis points, and the current account deficit could increase by $25 billion.
Implications for Policy
Citi indicates that the Reserve Bank of India is likely to continue maintaining its pause stance in April; if fiscal tools can absorb most of the inflation impact, monetary policy expressions may tilt more towards supporting growth. In other words, in the short term, Indian policymakers are more likely to adopt a balanced strategy of "stabilizing growth and preventing the spread of imported inflation," rather than rushing to a fully accommodative stance. This judgment echoes the pressure of energy shocks endured by India's exchange rate and bond market recently.
Sector Differentiation
From an industry perspective, Citi believes that fertilizers and petrochemicals, due to their high dependency on Middle Eastern imports, are most susceptible to impact; the auto sector is facing dual pressures from rising energy prices and secondary disruptions in the component supply chain. On the market side, both the Nifty and the Sensex have already fallen by about 8% cumulatively since the outbreak of conflict, indicating that geopolitical risks have transmitted from sentiment to valuation and earnings expectation corrections.




