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Delayed

India Has Been the Best-Performing Major Emerging Market for Three Years. Here Is What Is Actually Sustaining It and What Could Break the Trade.

India has been the best-performing major emerging market for three consecutive years on the metric that matters most for international investors: sustained equity returns in US dollar terms. The Nifty 50 and the broader Indian equity indices have delivered returns that have substantially outpaced China, Brazil, South Korea, Taiwan, and the broader EM index, and the outperformance has been supported by both local currency equity returns and by rupee stability that has not produced the currency-driven dollar return drag that has affected other emerging markets.

The duration of this outperformance and the magnitude of the cumulative dollar returns has produced a valuation differential where Indian equities trade at meaningfully higher multiples than other emerging markets and at multiples comparable to or above developed market equities. The question for international allocators in 2026 is whether the structural forces that have produced the outperformance are durable enough to justify the valuation premium, or whether the trade has run far enough that the marginal risk-reward favours rotation toward less-loved emerging markets.

The honest analytical framework requires separating the durable structural drivers from the cyclical factors, identifying the specific risks that could change the trajectory, and assessing whether the current valuations price in too much of the favourable scenario or whether the structural strength supports continued premium multiples.

The Durable Structural Drivers

The strongest case for sustained Indian outperformance rests on several structural factors that operate over decade-plus time horizons rather than cyclical quarters. The demographic dividend is the most visible: India’s median age is in the late twenties, the working-age population is still growing, and the dependency ratio is favourable in ways that the rest of Asia (particularly China) cannot match. This demographic structure supports sustained consumption growth, labour-force expansion, and the productivity gains that come from urbanisation and formalisation of economic activity.

The reform agenda that the Modi government has executed across multiple terms has produced real institutional improvements. The Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation eliminated the cascade of state-level taxes that had constrained inter-state commerce, the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) provided a functional framework for distressed corporate resolution, the bank recapitalisation programs cleaned up the state-owned bank balance sheets that had been a drag on the broader economy, and the digital identity (Aadhaar) and payments (UPI) infrastructure has produced one of the world’s most sophisticated financial inclusion frameworks. These reforms compound over time as the institutional improvements translate into more efficient business activity.

The capital expenditure cycle has supported equity returns through both the direct beneficiaries (infrastructure, construction, capital goods) and through the broader productivity gains that capex-driven capacity expansion enables. Government capital expenditure has been sustained at levels that have supported infrastructure development across roads, railways, ports, and power. Private capital expenditure has finally accelerated after years of stagnation, with corporate profitability levels and capacity utilisation supporting investment decisions that capex-driven manufacturers have been responding to.

The manufacturing diversification away from China that has been a strategic priority for both Western multinationals and Indian policy has produced specific outcomes: Apple’s significant iPhone manufacturing scale-up in India through Foxconn and other partners, the broader electronics manufacturing growth, and the textile, automotive, and pharmaceutical capacity expansion that has captured share from Chinese alternatives. The Chinese economic transition’s challenges have created opportunities for India that the supply-chain diversification narrative supports.

The Rupee Stability That Underlies the Dollar Returns

The currency dimension of Indian outperformance is genuinely impressive and underappreciated in many analyses of Indian equity returns. The rupee has been notably stable against the dollar over the past several years compared to other emerging market currencies, with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) executing a managed exchange rate policy that has prevented the currency volatility that has plagued other EM currencies during episodes of dollar strength.

The RBI’s foreign exchange reserves — over $700 billion as of mid-2026 — provide substantial firepower for managing rupee stability against external pressures. The current account position has remained manageable, supported by service exports (IT services particularly) and remittances that offset the goods trade deficit. The capital flows have been supportive: foreign portfolio investment, foreign direct investment, and global capital deploying into Indian opportunities have all contributed to sustained capital inflows that support the rupee.

The policy framework has prioritised currency stability over other objectives that EM central banks sometimes prioritise. The RBI has accepted higher real interest rates than would be optimal for growth-only considerations in order to maintain the currency stability that supports the broader macro framework. This policy choice has costs (tighter financial conditions, modestly slower growth than would otherwise occur) but has produced the rupee stability that has been essential for the dollar-return story.

The broader dollar environment has been favourable for emerging market currencies generally, but India has benefited disproportionately because the rupee stability removes the currency risk that has been the primary obstacle for international investors considering EM equity exposure. A USD investor in Indian equities receives the underlying equity returns without the currency volatility that has historically plagued EM equity exposure.

The Valuation Premium and What It Implies

Indian equities currently trade at forward price-to-earnings multiples of roughly 20-22x for the broader market and significantly higher for specific sectors. This is a meaningful premium to other major emerging markets (Brazil at 8-10x, Korea at 10-12x, China at 10-13x, Taiwan at 14-16x) and to the broader EM index average. The premium is comparable to or above the US S&P 500 forward multiple, which is itself elevated by historical standards.

The bull interpretation of the valuation premium is that Indian equities deserve a structural re-rating because the durable growth potential, the institutional improvements, and the demographic dividend justify multiples that previous EM valuations did not. The argument is that India is not being properly compared to other EMs but should be evaluated on a developed-market valuation framework given the structural quality of the growth trajectory.

The bear interpretation is that the premium prices in too much of the favourable scenario, that the marginal investor decision at current valuations requires expecting Indian fundamentals to continue exceeding expectations rather than just meeting them, and that the historical pattern of EM valuation premiums has been that they eventually compress when execution disappoints or when external conditions become less favourable.

The honest analytical position is somewhere between these interpretations. The structural case for sustained Indian outperformance over a 5-10 year horizon is genuinely strong, but the current valuations require the structural case to continue playing out without significant disruption. The risk-reward at current entry valuations is asymmetric — limited upside if everything continues to go well, substantial downside if any of the favourable forces reverse.

The Political Risk That Markets Tend to Underprice

The political dimension of Indian macro deserves more attention than it typically receives in equity analysis. The Modi government’s 2024 election produced a result that fell short of the BJP’s parliamentary majority expectations, requiring coalition support from the NDA partners to maintain the governing arrangement. The coalition dynamics have constrained policy execution in ways that the BJP’s previous parliamentary majorities did not, and the specific reforms that face coalition resistance have moved more slowly than they would have under a clear majority government.

The structural political risk is what happens after Modi. The Prime Minister’s personal political brand has been a critical component of the BJP’s electoral success, and the succession question for both the BJP and the broader Indian political landscape is one of the most significant medium-term variables that equity analyses tend to set aside. The continuity of the reform agenda, the foreign policy posture, and the macro framework all depend partly on the political continuity that Modi has personified.

The opposition political dynamics — the Congress Party’s modest revival, the regional parties’ continued importance, the various caste and religious tensions that have been managed but not resolved — represent the other dimension of political risk. Indian politics is sufficiently fractured that any specific election produces meaningful uncertainty, and the equity market’s tendency to focus on the immediate-term policy continuation rather than the structural political fluidity has produced complacency that may not be warranted.

The Specific Sector Dispersion

The aggregate Indian equity performance has been driven by specific sector dynamics that warrant individual attention. Financial services — particularly the private banks (HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank) and non-bank financials — have benefited from the credit cycle, the digital banking transformation, and the broader formalisation of the economy. The IT services giants (TCS, Infosys, HCL, Wipro) have benefited from continued global IT services demand and from the AI-related transformation that has supported services revenue.

The capital goods and infrastructure sector has performed well as the capex cycle has accelerated. Manufacturers across automotive, pharmaceuticals, and consumer products have captured shares of the domestic growth and increasingly of export markets. The energy and materials sectors have benefited from the broader commodity environment and from India’s specific energy security and renewable transition policies.

The consumer-facing sectors have had more mixed performance. Rural consumption has lagged urban consumption, the high-end consumer sectors have outperformed the mass-market segments, and the K-shaped recovery dynamics that affected India during the pandemic have not fully reversed. Investors evaluating Indian consumer exposure need to distinguish between the premium consumer sectors (where pricing power and growth are strong) and the mass-market sectors (where demand has been more cyclical).

The Catalysts That Could Change the Trade

The specific catalysts that could meaningfully disrupt the Indian outperformance include external shocks (global recession, dollar strength that overwhelms RBI policy capacity, specific commodity price shocks that disproportionately affect Indian inflation and growth), political events (election results that challenge policy continuity, coalition disruptions, geopolitical tensions that affect the supply-chain diversification narrative), and execution disappointments (capex cycle that fails to sustain, banking sector credit quality deterioration, specific sector-level shocks).

The valuation-related catalysts that bear monitoring include any significant repricing of the broader EM complex (which could pull Indian multiples lower despite Indian fundamentals continuing to perform), changes in foreign portfolio flow patterns (which have been net positive but could shift), and changes in domestic flow patterns (Indian mutual fund inflows have been a substantial support for valuations that could moderate).

For international allocators evaluating Indian exposure in 2026: the sustained outperformance and the underlying structural strength make Indian equity exposure a legitimate component of EM allocations, but the entry valuation matters significantly. Investors with no existing Indian exposure face the question of whether to build positions at current premium multiples or wait for cyclical pullbacks that may or may not arrive. Investors with substantial existing Indian exposure that has accumulated significant gains face the question of whether to take profits or maintain positions through what may be continued outperformance.

The honest position is that India remains structurally one of the most attractive long-term EM exposures despite current valuation concerns, that the specific risks are manageable but not negligible, and that the trade has been running for long enough that the marginal new dollar deployed into Indian equities should be priced with awareness of how far the structural case has already been recognised by the market. The next several years will test whether the premium valuations can be sustained or whether the trade enters a consolidation phase that allows the fundamentals to grow into the multiples.

Brian G
Brian is the founder of BKThemes with over 30 years of experience in web development. He specializes in WordPress, Shopify, and SEO optimization. A proud alumnus of the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, Brian has been creating exceptional digital solutions since 1993
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