Each year, WisdomTree screens the investable Indian equity market for the
rebalance of the
WisdomTree India Earnings Index (WTIND). First, WisdomTree calculates the
Earnings Stream of India’s equity market to identify firms that have generated positive cumulative
profits. Then qualifying companies are weighted by their proportionate contribution to the total
Earnings Stream. Typically, firms whose price levels have declined but whose earnings have either remained constant or grown tend to see increases in their weights at the rebalance. This annual rebalance discipline anchors the Index to
fundamentals and helps manage
valuation risk.
Instead of focusing on just a
large-cap subset, WisdomTree strives to encapsulate a broad measure of the Indian equity markets. As of the most recent rebalance, WTIND had 300 securities that spanned the large-, mid- and small-cap segments. The
MSCI India Index had 70 companies that are primarily large cap and mid-cap. We think the limited inclusion of a large section of the small-cap universe is a significant difference between the WisdomTree approach and
market capitalization-weighting methodologies.
Size Capitalization Exposure
Small-Cap Exposure Can Increase Diversification: Through 195 holdings, WTIND had more than 14% exposure to the small-cap segment of the Indian market, compared to only one security with less than 0.1% weight for the MSCI India Index. It is also interesting to note that the
price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio for the small-cap segment of WTIND is around 9x earnings, which is more than 25% and 54% lower than the large-cap segment of WTIND and MSCI India, respectively. Typically, small-cap stocks might be expected to trade at higher valuations than large-cap stocks as a result of the higher expected growth potential.
Relative Value Sector Rebalance
Next, we outline how the annual rebalance impacted sector changes for WTIND. We compare the sector composition before the
annual screening to the sector composition after the rebalance. Additionally, we compare the underlying sector performance to the broad WisdomTree India Earnings Index to look at the performance of sectors that saw their weights increase or decrease. It is the interaction of earnings growth and price performance that provides the basis for determining which sectors tend to see increases or decreases in weight at the annual WisdomTree Index rebalance.
Sector Changes

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Adding Weight to Underperformers and Subtracting Weight from Outperformers: WTIND added the most weight to the Energy, Consumer Discretionary and Telecommunication sectors, all of which underperformed the WisdomTree India Earnings Index over the period. Each of these sectors had median earnings growth that was higher than median price growth, ultimately improving the relationship between earnings and prices. On the other hand, WTIND subtracted the most weight from Financials and Information Technology, two sectors that outperformed the broad Index over the period. This is another example of how the annual rebalance process acts as a forced discipline to sell high and buy low, based on underlying fundamentals.
Financials Remain in Focus
A sector that surely stands out for India is Financials, currently accounting for about 6% of its approximate $2 trillion
gross domestic product (GDP). We think this sector has special underpinning in India’s growth potential, and sector growth will likely be led by the commercial bank and insurance industries. Commercial bank assets are expected to grow from $1.4 trillion (August 2015) to an enormous $28.5 trillion by FY 2020. India’s life insurance industry is one of the biggest in the world with about 360 million policies, and this is expected to increase at a compounded annual growth rate of 12% to 15% over the next five years.
1 A fast-growing economy, rising income levels and improving life expectancy rates are some factors that could boost earnings in this area.
India’s Finance Ministry and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) have taken a host of measures to liberalize, regulate and reform the industry. Primary steps include the following:
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Strengthen & Increase Access For Investors: Foreign institutional investor (FII) and foreign direct investment (FDI) limits merged into a composite sectoral cap of foreign investment. New composite sectorial limit for private banks is at 74%. This is encouraging as FII is relatively easier to invest and liquidate. Now unused capacity from FDI could be filled up by FII investments, giving foreign investors the opportunity to buy equities in India.
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Steps to Expand Volumes & Bolster Earnings: Aggressive
credit targets in various subsectors like agriculture (credit growth of ~12-13% YoY in 2015–16
2), retail, housing, mortgage lending etc. Reform measures are targeted to encourage credit and debit transactions, ultimately helping grow earnings.
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Reduction in Corporate Taxes from 30% to 25%
Given projected growth rates, it is no surprise that Financials has been a key sector in recent budget presentations and in several other reforms launched by prime minister Narendra Modi’s government. We believe an Index that smartly weighs the Financials sector can potentially participate in the tremendous growth that India in general, and Financials in India specifically, can offer.
Unless otherwise noted data source is WisdomTree, as of 8/31/15.
1Source: Government of India, India Brand Equity Foundation.
2Source: Government of India, Union Budget 2015.
Important Risks Related to this Article
Investments in emerging, offshore or frontier markets are generally less liquid and less efficient than investments in developed markets and are subject to additional risks, such as risks of adverse governmental regulation and intervention or political developments.
Investments focusing on certain sectors and/or smaller companies increase their vulnerability to any single economic or regulatory development. This may result in greater share price volatility.
Investments focused in India increase the impact of events and developments associated with the region, which can adversely affect performance.
Diversification does not eliminate the risk of experiencing investment losses.
The Global Industry Classification Standard (“GICS”) was developed by and is the exclusive property and a service mark of MSCI Inc. (“MSCI”) and Standard & Poor’s (“S&P”), a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., and is licensed for use by WisdomTree Investments, Inc. Neither MSCI, S&P nor any other party involved in making or compiling the GICS or any GICS classifications makes any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to such standard or classification (or the results to be obtained by the use thereof), and all such parties hereby expressly disclaim all warranties of originality, accuracy, completeness, merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose with respect to any such standard or classification. Without limiting any of the foregoing, in no event shall MSCI, S&P, any of their affiliates or any third party involved in making or compiling the GICS or any GICS classifications have any liability for any direct, indirect, special, punitive, consequential or any other damages (including lost profits), even if notified of the possibility of such damages.