Year-Ender: Nifty Beats Sensex In 2025, Indian Stocks Bullish For 2026; What Should Investors Do?
The Indian stock market is ending the year 2025 on a broadly positive note; however, the performance has been extremely volatile.
According to smallcase managers, India's long-term outlook remains firmly positive, underpinned by favourable demographics, policy continuity, rapid urbanisation and sustained productivity gains.

As 2025 draws to a close, Indian equity markets are sending mixed signals. According to the managers, Benchmark indices remain close to record highs, but beneath the surface, the picture is far more nuanced. Valuations are stretched across large parts of the market, smaller stocks are under pressure, and investors are becoming increasingly selective about where they deploy capital. The managers believe that as US growth moderates and the Federal Reserve eventually pivots, interest-rate differentials should increasingly favour Emerging Markets, with India standing out as the most attractive destination. They believe that India's macro backdrop remains constructive, aided by moderating inflation, the beginning of a rate-cut cycle and continued policy focus on manufacturing, infrastructure and exports. They expect the economy to grow at a steady 6-7% in real terms, with inflation anchored closer to ~4%, implying a phase of more stable, though slightly lower, nominal growth compared to the previous decade.
Dhiren Shah, smallcase manager, Co-Founder, Kamayakya said, "We remain bullish on Indian equities in 2026, with a clear focus on stock selection rather than index levels. While public capex has driven growth so far, the next phase will come from a revival in private capex as corporate balance sheets strengthen and capacity utilisation rises, setting up the next leg of India's structural growth. Our bottom-up view is anchored on chemicals, infrastructure and manufacturing-sectors that combine policy support with a cyclical recovery."
The managers note that the ongoing structural reforms-such as GST 2.0, expansion of the PLI framework and enacted direct tax cuts-are strengthening earnings durability rather than fueling short-term growth spikes. At the same time, rising domestic participation through SIP inflows of ~₹30,000 crore per month provides a strong and resilient counterbalance to volatile foreign capital flows.
Vivek Sharma, smallcase manager, Investment Head, Estee Advisors said, "Tariff-related noise from the US, particularly around a potential Trump return, is more of a sentiment and liquidity risk for India than a structural one. It can tighten global liquidity, lift volatility and lead to temporary FII outflows, but it does not change India's core growth story. At the same time, the AI-led surge in a few US mega-cap stocks has pulled a disproportionate share of global capital, leaving emerging markets under-owned despite stable fundamentals. This has made Indian markets more vulnerable to short-term, flow-driven swings, even as domestic growth and earnings remain on a solid footing."
Disclaimer: The views and recommendations expressed are solely those of the individual analysts or entities and do not reflect the views of Goodreturns.in or Greynium Information Technologies Private Limited (together referred as "we"). We do not guarantee, endorse or take responsibility for the accuracy, completeness or reliability of any content, nor do we provide any investment advice or solicit the purchase or sale of securities. All information is provided for informational and educational purposes only and should be independently verified from licensed financial advisors before making any investment decisions.


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