Mumbai: The surge in equity markets is not linked to economic recovery and maybe a sign of irrational exuberance, economists at SBI said on Monday, pitching for the second round of fiscal support to help the impacted sectors.
They also warned that banks will start reporting higher non-performing assets (NPAs) after September, once the six-month moratorium on loan repayment ends.
The markets shed over a fifth of their value in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic and have recouped some of the losses in the last few weeks. Interestingly, the gains happened even as the chorus of a contraction in GDP started among the analysts, wherein some expect a negative growth of up to 5 per cent in 2020-21.
There is a weak linkage between buoyant markets and economic recovery and the phenomenon largely reflects irrational exuberance, the economists wrote in a note, attributing the same to easy liquidity made available by RBI.
Beautiful markets do not signify a beautiful economy, they said.
They also seemed to suggest that India cannot rely a lot on agriculture to boost the overall GDP growth, pointing out that even if the farm sector's historically best performance of 15.6 per cent growth in 1951-52 were to be considered, a similar performance can only help the GDP growth by 2 percentage points.
We must think of a second round of fiscal support at least for the beleaguered sectors, the note said.