City
Epaper

India among ‘attractive' emerging markets for investment: Report

By IANS | Updated: October 27, 2025 09:30 IST

New Delhi, Oct 27 The GST simplification, income tax reductions and central bank easing are set to boost ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 27 The GST simplification, income tax reductions and central bank easing are set to boost consumption in India, according to a new report by UBS, which has ‘Attractive’ view on Indian equities amid expectations for earnings recovery, as the multinational investment bank turns bullish on emerging markets (EM).

According to analysts at UBS, “We upgrade EM equities (MSCI EM) to Attractive, reflecting a constructive macro backdrop, and improving financial conditions on the back of Fed easing and a softer US dollar. Our preferred markets are Mainland China, India, Brazil, and Indonesia”.

The case for investing in EM equities has evolved significantly since the launch of the asset class as a large number of EM stocks are much more than a play on commodities and financials, according to the financial services firm.

“In sum, alongside the US, emerging markets are among the few regions globally offering direct exposure to structural tech growth,” UBS noted.

Emerging markets are also portfolio diversifiers, as it comprises domestically-driven economies like India to more cyclical ones like Brazil.

UBS has raised their MSCI Emerging Markets targets to 1,420 for December 2025 (up 2.2 per cent from the current 1,389) and 1,470 levels for June 2026.

The latest International Monetary Fund (IMF) regional economic outlook report for Asia has said that India’s economy is projected to expand at a healthy pace of 6.6 per cent this year (FY26), up from 6.5 per cent in 2024 (FY25) -- owing to strong Q2 growth and GST 2.0 reforms.

The forecast for India has improved since April 2025 as strong Q2 growth and the goods and services tax (GST) reform are expected to outweigh the negative effects of higher US tariffs on demand for Indian goods.

“Economies in the Asia-Pacific region have been resilient in 2025, posting stronger-than-expected economic growth in the first half of the year amid external and domestic challenges. Nevertheless, higher US tariffs and increasing protectionism will likely reduce demand for Asian exports and eventually weigh on growth in the near-term,” said the IMF.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS State Secretary says Gaza peace needs Hamas disarmament

InternationalTrump vows sharp cuts in US drug prices

InternationalRubio says Venezuela regime backs criminal groups

InternationalRubio says US alone can mediate Russia-Ukraine war

International"Violation of federal law": US Democrats on Epstein files redactions

Business Realted Stories

BusinessRBI Governor considered benign inflation outlook for rate cut: MPC Minutes

BusinessHero Motors sign MoU with KPIT Technologies to set up Centre of Excellence for Light Electric Vehicles

BusinessRBI's central board deliberates on domestic and global economic situations

BusinessTripura govt pitches state as emerging tourism hub: CM Saha

Business5 research initiatives driving India-AI Impact Summit 2026