Wall Street Sell-Off Deepens Amid Oil Surge and Mideast Tensions

Wall Street Sell-Off Deepens Amid Oil Surge and Mideast Tensions


Major indexes tumbled as crude topped $90 on U.S.-Iran escalation.

The Nasdaq plunged 361.31 points (1.6%) to 22,387.68, the S&P 500 tumbled 90.69 points (1.3%) to 6,740.02 and the Dow slumped 453.19 points (1%) to 47,501.55.

Wall Street faced a sell-off amid surging crude oil prices, with U.S. futures topping $90 a barrel. The spike stemmed from the escalating U.S.-Iran conflict spreading across the Middle East, raising fears of a global energy crisis as the seventh day brought intensified Israeli airstrikes and U.S. warnings of dramatic attack surges.

President Trump demanded Iran’s “unconditional surrender” on Truth Social, vowing U.S. involvement in selecting its future leaders to rebuild it stronger. A Labor Department report fueled negativity, showing a 92,000 job slump in Februarymissing expectations of a 60,000 gainwhile unemployment edged up to 4.4%.

 

Semiconductor stocks moved sharply lower dragging the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index down by 3.9% to its lowest closing level in almost two months. Transportation stocks were substantially weak, as reflected by the 3.5% plunge by the Dow Jones Transportation average. Steel, networking, financial and housing stocks also witnessed significant weakness while oil producer stocks were among the few groups to buck the downtrend amid the spike by the price of crude oil.

Asia-Pacific stocks turned in a mixed performance. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index jumped by 1.7% and Japan’s Nikkei 225 Index climbed by 0.6%, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index slid by 1%. Meanwhile, the major European markets have all moved to the downside on the day. While the U.K.’s FTSE 100 Index slumped by 1.2%, the German DAX Index declined by 0.9% and the French CAC 40 Index fell by 0.7%.

In the bond market, treasuries saw considerable volatility over the course of the session before closing modestly higher. As a result, the yield on the benchmark ten-year note which moves opposite of its price, dipped 1.3 bps to 4.13%.

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AMC stocks defy markets, enjoy outperformance and premium valuations

AMC stocks defy markets, enjoy outperformance and premium valuations


In a largely downward moving and volatile equity environment that has prevailed over the past 18 months, investors would expect a segment that is closely linked to the fortunes of the markets to underperform.

Listed players in the ₹81-lakh crore mutual fund industry have defied wars, geopolitical tensions, penal trade tariffs, AI-led disruptions etc. that have shaken markets over the past 1.5 years, and have thrived.

Most domestic asset management companies (AMCs) have not only delivered robust returns over this period, but are also trading at a valuation premium to the broader markets.

AMCs and wealth management companies delivered 14-65 per cent returns from September 2024 to March 2026, while the Nifty 500 TRI fell 7.5 per cent in this timeframe.

And barring one player, other AMC stocks trade at trailing twelve months’ PE (price earnings) multiple of 23.8 times to 46.3 times, while the Nifty 500 TRI trades at a PE of 23.5 times. The lone wealth management firm taken here commands a TTM PE of 73 times.

Interestingly, within the AMC space, the top mutual fund houses command a substantial valuation premium over the others in the listed space.

Explaining the outperformance

Despite the fall in the markets and the general negativity around equities, the mutual fund industry has been able to pull in assets at a robust clip.

HDFC, Nippon Life India and ICICI Prudential saw their average quarterly assets under management as of December 2025 grow 17.5-23.2 per cent year on year.

The likes of UTI, Canara Robeco and Aditya Birla Sun Life saw assets swell 11.5-15.5 per cent over the same period.

This growth in assets has also been accompanied by expanding profits. All AMCs witnessed growth in profits. The leading ones saw up to 29 per cent growth in TTM net profit growth.

Anand Rathi Wealth, too, managed a TTM net profit growth of 29 per cent.

UTI and Nippon Life India alone experienced single-digit growth in profits.

The sustainability of these valuations will depend on inflows into fund houses remaining steady, especially via the SIP route and AMCs continuing nimble operations to deliver above-average profit growth. A serious job-loss scenario in the broader economy due to AI-led disruptions, a prolonged war that induces inflation and sustained weakness in the markets may test this healthy run.

Divergence in valuations

It is also noticeable that on the PE metric and the market capitalisation to AUM parameter, there is considerable difference between the top three listed players and the next three.

One key reason for this premium lies in the market share the larger AMCs pull in.

ICICI Prudential, HDFC and Nippon Life India make up over 33 per cent of the total asset management in the industry and they accounted nearly 38 per cent of the inflows over December 2024-December 2025 period.

In contrast, the other three players accounted for 11 per cent of the industry’s assets and just about 9 per cent of the inflows in the last one year.

ICICI Prudential (with leadership in large-cap, value and opportunities) and HDFC (flexi-cap, mid- and small-cap) have most of their equity and hybrid schemes in the top quartile of those categories.

Nippon Life India has leadership in mid- and small-caps, passive funds with its gold and silver ETFs enjoying the highest AUM in the industry.

Aditya Birla Sun Life and UTI have a patchy equity fund record in recent years, which explains their lower inflows. Canara Robeco does have a few funds in the top or mid quartiles, though some have faced the brunt of the recent sharp correction in the broader markets.

Published on March 7, 2026



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A Large-Cap Fund For Volatile Markets

A Large-Cap Fund For Volatile Markets


After 18 months of market volatility, conditions were finally beginning to stabilise in February this year. This period also saw the presentation of a robust Budget and progress on the US trade deal, following agreements with the European Union and the UK.

However, with a war erupting again in West Asia last week, geopolitical concerns have returned to the fore, raising the risk of trade disruptions and oil price spikes.

All frontline and broader equity market indices had already come under pressure weeks before the war, amid fears over AI-led disruption to businesses and jobs, particularly in the software segment, and its likely spillover effect on domestic consumption.

During such times, a relatively safer approach for long-term investors would be to buy into large-cap funds directing them towards specific goals.

Bandhan Large Cap fund can be good addition to investors with a seven-year or higher perspective via the SIP route as a portfolio diversifier.

It has been an above-average performer in the category over the past 6-7 years. The scheme has a track record of nearly 20 years.

Above-average show

Though Bandhan Large Cap was a moderate performer in the period leading just prior to Covid-19, its performance has been strong thereafter.

Over one, three, five and seven-year timeframes, the fund has outperformed the Nifty 100 TRI by 1.5-3.4 percentage points.

The fund’s five-year point-to-point returns are healthy at 14.2 per cent, which compares favourably with peers in the category.

When five-year rolling returns are considered from January 2018 to February 2026, the fund has outperformed the Nifty 100 TRI over 76 per cent of the time. The mean return for the fund is 16.8 per cent, while for the Nifty 100 TRI, it is 16.1 per cent.

Over this rolling period and timeframe, Bandhan Large Cap has delivered more than 12 per cent for over 82 per cent of the time and in excess of 15 per cent for over 68 per cent of the time.

When returns on monthly SIPs (XIRR) over the past 10 years are considered, the fund has delivered 14.7 per cent. A similar SIP in the Nifty 100 TRI would have returned 13.6 per cent.

The fund has an upside capture ratio of nearly 107.7, indicating that its NAV rises a bit more than the benchmark during rallies. It has a downside capture ratio of 100.6, indicating that the scheme’s NAV falls almost in line with the benchmark during corrections. A score of 100 indicates that a fund performs exactly in line with its benchmark. This inference is based on data for the March 2021 to March 2026 period.

All return figures and the ratios pertain to the direct plan of the fund.

Steady portfolio mix

In keeping with its mandate, Bandhan Large Cap fund predominantly holds only large-cap stocks, usually clocking 80-85 per cent of the portfolio. When broader markets are attractive and vibrant, the fund takes 12-15 per cent exposure in mid- and small-caps.

Bandhan Large Cap Fund holds a little over 60 stocks, making the portfolio diversified without being overly diffused. Except for the top four or five holdings, no individual stock accounts for more than 4 per cent of the portfolio.

In terms of sector holdings, banks have always figured on top of the pile and have accounted for over a quarter of the overall portfolio. Given the segment’s relative outperformance since the market peak of September 2024, the fund’s own returns have been helped by higher exposure to the sector as well as to the financial services space.

Interestingly, IT and software segment has been among the top holdings of the fund across timelines. However, the fund has been decreasing exposure to the sector over the past one year and it is now in single digits as AI-led disruption knocked out considerable value from frontline stocks.

Petroleum products (refiners) have also been a prominent part of the fund’s portfolio.

Higher exposure to pharmaceutical, biotechnology and automobile companies has also contributed to Bandhan Large Cap Fund’s strong performance over the past couple of years.

The FMCG segment does not have much prominence in the fund, nor does retailing. These segments have been heavy underperformers in recent years as business (alternative channels) and demand disruptions have hurt their prospects.

The fund’s picks in most sectors are restricted to the top two or three stocks.

Overall, Bandhan Large Cap is a steady rather than spectacular performer that can deliver above-average returns over 7-10-year timeframes.

Published on March 7, 2026



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When SIP returns turn uncomfortable

When SIP returns turn uncomfortable


Indian equity markets have been in a corrective phase since September 2024, and the impact on SIP returns in equity mutual funds has been swift and visible. As highlighted in our earlier report (https://tinyurl.com/4jntrjmh), the 3-year SIP return in actively managed IT funds recently slipped into negative territory, the first such instance since the pandemic-led market disruption of early 2020.

Against this backdrop of volatility, how has the broader market SIP performed? A bl.portfolio analysis of 3-year rolling SIP returns on the Nifty 100 Total Return Index (TRI), a proxy for large-cap stocks, shows the XIRR falling from about 25 per cent in September 2024 to 9.7 per cent by February 2026. The decline is sharper in the broader market. The 3-year SIP return for the Nifty Midcap 150 TRI has dropped from around 39 per cent to 14 per cent over the same period, while the Nifty Smallcap 250 has fallen from about 40 per cent to 7.2 per cent.

For investors tracking their SIP dashboards, the decline is difficult to ignore. But does it point to a deeper problem, or is it simply part of the normal ups and downs of the market? To answer this, we examine rolling SIP returns across 3-, 5-, 7-, 10- and 15-year periods to understand what long-dated data actually show.

For this study, 20 years of data from the Total Return Indices of the Nifty 100, Nifty Midcap 150 and Nifty Smallcap 250 were analysed. SIP returns were computed assuming monthly instalments using month-end index values. SIP returns are measured using XIRR, or extended internal rate of return, which calculates the annualised return for investments made at different dates and amounts, as is the case with periodic SIP instalments.

Possibility of negative returns

The data show that negative SIP outcomes do occur, but their frequency depends heavily on the segment and the holding period. They are a normal part of equity investing, especially over shorter holding periods. Three-year SIP returns have turned negative during market stress periods such as the global financial crisis of 2008–09 and the pandemic shock of 2020.

Even in the relatively stable Nifty 100, a 3-year SIP has delivered negative returns in 9 out of 204 months, or about 4 per cent of the time. In the Nifty Midcap 150, negative outcomes occurred in 20 months, or roughly 10 per cent of the time. The frequency is much higher in the Nifty Smallcap 250, where a 3-year SIP generated negative returns in 45 months, accounting for about 22 per cent of the observations.

The depth of losses also varies sharply across segments. The worst 3-year SIP return on the Nifty Smallcap 250 was -37.8 per cent, compared with -33.6 per cent on the Nifty Midcap 150 and -22.7 per cent on the Nifty 100.

Another striking aspect is the duration of such phases. The Nifty Smallcap 250 remained in negative 3-year SIP return territory for 26 consecutive months during the period between September 2018 and October 2020. In contrast, the longest such stretch was just four months for the Nifty 100 and five months for the Nifty Midcap 150.

The encouraging takeaway is that the risk of negative outcomes falls sharply as the investment horizon increases. At a 7-year tenure, only the Nifty Smallcap 250 has briefly slipped into negative territory, with a return of about -6 per cent. At 10 years, even smallcap has touched near-zero only once, at -0.2 per cent. Large- and mid-cap indices have not produced negative SIP returns beyond five-year periods.

A 3-year large-cap SIP gives sub-FD returns in one out of six months

The 3-year rolling SIP data for the Nifty 100 shows that the return fell below 7 per cent, assumed here as the fixed deposit benchmark, in 34 out of 204 months. That is about 17 per cent of the time. The proportion rises to around 24 per cent for mid-caps and nearly 29 per cent for small-caps.

The incidence of such underperformance declines as the holding period increases. For a 5-year SIP, the share of periods with returns below 7 per cent falls to about 10 per cent for large-caps and around 14 per cent for mid-caps. However, for small-caps it remains relatively high at about 30 per cent, reflecting the deeper drawdowns typical of this segment.

With a 7-year SIP tenure, the frequency drops further to about 3 per cent for large-caps, 6 per cent for mid-caps and 18 per cent for small-caps.

This pattern highlights the importance of staying invested for longer periods. Interestingly, the AMFI Annual Report 2025 shows that despite improving investor behaviour, a large share of SIP assets are still held for shorter periods. As of March 2025, about 81 per cent of direct SIP assets and 67 per cent of regular SIP assets were held for less than five years.

Volatility increases sharply down the market-cap curve

Return volatility rises significantly as one moves down the market-cap ladder. The worst 3-year SIP return on the Nifty 100 was -22.7 per cent, while the best was 29.5 per cent, a spread of about 52 percentage points. For the Nifty Midcap 150, the range widens from -33.6 per cent to 40.8 per cent, a spread of about 74 percentage points. On the Nifty Smallcap 250, the range stretches from -37.8 per cent to 46 per cent, nearly 84 percentage points.

The same pattern holds for 5-year SIP returns. The Nifty 100 has delivered between -3.1 per cent and 23.1 per cent across 5-year periods. The Nifty Midcap 150 has ranged between -6.9 per cent and 36.4 per cent, while the Nifty Smallcap 250 has swung between -17 per cent and 38.5 per cent.

Takeaway

The key takeaway is straightforward. Those investing in mid- and small-cap funds through SIPs need patience. A horizon of at least seven years, and ideally 10 years, is necessary to smooth out volatility. The shorter the investment horizon, the higher the chances of seeing negative or below fixed-deposit returns. Large-cap funds are relatively more stable, but even there a three-year horizon may be too short. Staying invested and allowing time to work remains the most reliable way to benefit from SIP investing.

With inputs from Kumar Shankar Roy

Published on March 7, 2026



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Wall Street Sell-Off Deepens Amid Oil Surge and Mideast Tensions

India Ratings & Research upgrades ratings of P N Gadgil Jewellers to 'A+' with 'stable' outlook


P N Gadgil Jewellers said that the credit rating agency India Ratings & Research has upgraded the company’s long-term rating to ‘IND A+’ from ‘IND A’ with a ‘stable’ outlook.

The agency has affirmed the company’s short-term rating at IND A1.

India Ratings & Research said that the upgrade reflects PNGJ Groups strong retail revenue growth through healthy same store sales growth (SSSG) and ramping-up of operations at its newly opened stores along with EBITDA expansion, translating into improved credit metrics in FY25 and 1HFY26.

The rating also reflects the groups improved financial flexibility post an initial public offering (IPO) by PNGJ in FY25.

 

Furthermore, India Ratings expects the groups scale as well as profitability to continue to improve over the medium term, on the back of a strong brand recall and customer acceptance in Maharashtra, and prudent expansion in the non-core markets.

The ratings also reflect Ind-Ras expectation of a sustenance of PNGJ Groups credit metrics in the medium term, owing to the stabilisation of operations of the newly opened stores while benefitting from the established brand and experience of the promoters in the jewellery retail business in western India with a strong legacy of over 190 years.

The ratings, however, are constrained by the regional concentration, although the company has been diversifying its presence and has opened stores in central (Madhya Pradesh) and northern India (Uttar Pradesh) in FY26.

India Ratings believes that penetrating into non-core markets meaningfully in the targeted breakeven period will be critical for store economies and profitability at the group level. In addition, the high regulatory oversight, gold price fluctuations and intense competition expose the company to margin pressures.

The agency further notes that company has capex plans over FY26-FY28 to expand the number of stores to 80 stores by FY26 and 100 by FY27. With the exhaustion of IPO proceeds, the agency believes that a judicious funding mix for capex and growth working capital and scaling up through the franchisee model will be critical for maintaining the overall credit perspective.

P. N. Gadgil Jewellers is an Indian jewellery company. As of September 2025, it had 63 retail stores including one outlet in the US (47 owned and 16 franchise stores in India).

The scrip had advanced 2.46% to end at Rs 540.80 on the BSE today.

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