Business
Markets to enter prolonged “drag phase,” not deep correction: Vikas Khemani
Earnings steady, but global shocks yet to reflect fully
Responding to concerns around earnings momentum and near-term market direction, Khemani noted that while corporate results have broadly held up, the real impact of global disruptions is still ahead.
“Earnings have been by and large okay but that was more the effect was before the war. The impact of the war is yet to be felt in the energy prices, supply chain disruptions, all those things in my opinion will be felt in Q1 earning and to that extent market is well prepared for that. I do not think market is really expecting any spectacular earning in Q1 and I think that at this point in time broadly everything looks alright except the fact that our energy bill which is very high, very dependent on the war getting over, oil prices coming down,” he said.
He added that inflation, interest rates, currency movement, and even US yields are all linked to the trajectory of energy prices.
“No major fall, but a prolonged drag” scenario
On whether markets could see a sharp correction, Khemani was relatively reassuring.
“I do not expect much fall to be honest unless something again worsens in the oil, escalates like I said the single biggest factor right now which is playing on everybody’s mind and on the economic front as well is the energy price, so it will just hang in there.”He also pointed to improving global supply expectations, including potential diplomatic developments and increased oil availability, which could stabilise prices.
India’s macro resilience remains intact
Despite global headwinds, Khemani remains constructive on India’s domestic growth story.
“If you see last quarter’s number across the board, volume growth has been very good in consumer, in automobiles, in insurance premiums, credit growth all those things are pointing towards the right direction. Our investment cycle has really held on and I do not think that is changing anytime in a hurry.”
He emphasised that while cost pressures and supply chain disruptions persist, there is no structural break in India’s growth trajectory.
Manufacturing and capex themes still strong
Addressing concerns around rising freight costs and global instability, Khemani reaffirmed his long-term faith in structural themes such as manufacturing.
“In fact, some of the plays on manufacturing side turns out to be good because of the currency depreciation. Demand drivers get stronger because every crisis also has a positive side of it… exporters do tend to benefit and they do tend to get volume growth compete better.”
He reiterated that the India growth story remains intact despite short-term macro pressure.
Mid and smallcaps: stock-picking is key
On mid and smallcap opportunities, Khemani stressed that the real alpha lies in bottom-up selection rather than index-level assumptions.
He said: “We are fully invested. Every sector if you see has large, mid, and smallcap segments… we are able to identify companies which can double their earning in three to four years’ time directionally and looks good.”
He highlighted opportunities across manufacturing, pharma, CDMO, BFSI, and even select IT names.
IT sector: contrarian opportunity emerging
Khemani noted that sentiment in IT is gradually shifting, potentially creating a contrarian entry point.
“In my opinion probably time has come where the narrative in IT is changing… IT is not going to go away because of AI… so I think that could be a sector which could be there.”
He pointed out that valuations remain reasonable and earnings growth could stay in the mid-teens range.
Pharma and healthcare: still a bottom-up story
On pharma, he remained positive but cautious about broad-based calls. “It has always been bottom up. I mean, we still remain very positive on the pharma, CDMO, or healthcare space… but yes, I think still lot rally left.”
NBFCs: stock-specific approach critical
Discussing NBFCs, Khemani emphasised selectivity, highlighting his fund’s exposure to Aditya Birla Capital.
“Aditya Birla Capital is one of our largest holding has been 3.5x in last three years… we invested in Aditya Birla Capital when it was Rs 100 one time book… so it is again more stock specific bottom up.”
On rising global market returns and investor FOMO, Khemani offered a strong counterview.
“I think it is a very in my opinion stupid idea to look for invest or diversify out of FOMO. It is very natural recency bias plays as a very big bias in every investor’s mind.”
He stressed that India has historically been one of the strongest long-term equity performers and diversification should be goal-based, not trend-driven.
Outlook
Khemani’s overall message is clear: markets are not on the verge of a major breakdown, but neither are they poised for a straight-line rally. The key variable remains energy prices, which will influence inflation, rates, currency, and global risk appetite.
Until that stabilises, markets may remain in what he calls a “holding pattern” — resilient, but restrained.
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Adobe Inc. (ADBE) Q2 2026 Earnings Call Transcript
Operator
Good day, and welcome to Q2 FY 2026 Adobe Earnings Conference Call. Today’s conference is being recorded.
At this time, I’d like to turn the conference over to Doug Clark, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Douglas Clark
Vice President of Investor Relations
Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us. With me on the call today are Shantanu Narayen, Adobe’s Chair and CEO; David Wadhwani, President of Creativity and Productivity; Anil Chakravarthy, President of Customer Experience Orchestration; and Steve Day, Senior Vice President, Corporate Finance and CFO of Customer Experience orchestration.
On this call, which is being recorded, we will discuss Adobe’s second quarter fiscal year 2026 financial results. You can find our press release, as well as PDFs of our prepared remarks and financial results on Adobe’s Investor Relations website.
The information discussed on this call, including our financial targets and product plans, is as of today, June 11, and contains forward-looking statements that involve risks, uncertainty and assumptions. Actual results may differ materially from those set forth in these statements. For more information on those risks, please review today’s earnings release and Adobe’s SEC filings.
Business
Another AI aftershock sends Indian IT stocks for a tumble
The Nifty IT index fell as much as 2.7% intraday before ending at 27,821, down 1.6% and the lowest closing level since May 15. The benchmark Nifty50 ended 0.2% lower.
“Indian IT companies were hammered due to Anthropic launching a new AI model that increased the risk to the revenue for domestic tech players,” said Kotak Securities senior vice-president Sumit Pokharna.
ET Bureau7th session of losses Anthropic’s new AI model renews investor fears amid a global tech rout. A cyclical recovery in Sept could provide the first sign of revival, analysts say
The newly launched model has higher capabilities than previous ones and the faster developments are increasing the pressure on application development and maintenance companies, Pokharna said.
Anthropic launched a Mythos class model, called Claude Fable 5, for general use on June 9.
Sentiment was also hurt by a 2% fall in the Nasdaq Composite Index Wednesday, as investors globally see rising risk due to concentration in some front-end AI stocks and are looking to diversify and rotate into other AI-enabler stocks.“The IT sector is in uncharted territory, given the prolonged revenue weakness during a generational technology shift driven by AI,” said Kumar Rakesh, an IT analyst at BNP Paribas. “This makes it difficult to predict whether the worst is over.”
All constituents of the IT index declined on Thursday. LTM dropped 2.6% while Infosys fell 2.3%. Oracle Financial Services Software and HCL Technologies slipped over 1.5% each.
A cyclical recovery, possibly in September, could be the first sign of revival despite ongoing structural challenges; however, this recovery could be delayed depending on geopolitical tensions, said Kumar.
“Investors should avoid companies that are struggling to transition and instead be extremely selective,” he said. “Persistent Systems among midcaps, and Infosys and Tech Mahindra among large caps, are the preferred picks in the sector.”
So far this year, the Nifty IT index has slumped 26.6%. The benchmark Nifty50 is down 11.4%.
Despite improved valuations, the sector has not bottomed out as headwinds like AI disruption, likely rate hikes in the US and geopolitical turbulence continue to weigh on the sector. The outlook is cautious and selective, said analysts. “Pain periods do turn valuations attractive and staggered accumulation of Infosys, TCS, Tech Mahindra along with Coforge can be considered for a two- to three-year horizon,” said Pokharna.
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