Earlier in November 2022, Morgan Stanley had reiterated its stance on the Indian markets and said that the bull-run remained intact. Back then, they expected the Sensex to hit 80,000 levels by Dec '23
In a bull-case scenario (30 per cent probability), Morgan Stanley expects the Sensex to hit 75,000 by December 2022-end and sees the 30-share index at 45,000 by the year-end in a bear case scenario
Policy makers in Asia, according to Morgan Stanley, will be able to normalise policy gradually, contingent on the pace of recovery, inflation dynamics, and the implications of the Omicron variant
In a bull-case scenario (30 per cent probability), Morgan Stanley sees the Sensex at 61,000 levels - an upside of around 22 per cent from the current levels
We believe the overall approach of the fiscal policy is in line with the message from the Economic Survey, said Morgan Stanley in a post Budget note
If investors start expecting that the electorate will deliver a fragmented verdict with weak leadership, the index, will likely head towards their bear case scenario of 33,000 levels
Global financial services entity Morgan Stanley has raised its 'Bull case' year-end target for the BSE exchange's benchmark Sensex to 39,000, from the earlier 33,000. This has come in the wake of the Indian markets scaling new heights. The brokerage says revival in corporate earnings and appetite for equities among domestic investors are expected to be key drivers for the rally. The Sensex closed at 30,188 on Friday.Which means in its best/Bull case scenario, the probability for which is pegged at 30 per cent, Morgan Stanley sees a 29 per cent upside to the market by end-December or over the next seven months."This could be the beginning of a new growth cycle. Earnings could compound at 20 per cent (annually) over the coming five years. Rising demand for equities from domestic households and potential M&A (merger and acquisition) activity would also push the markets in the coming months," said Ridham Desai, managing director, Morgan Stanley India.The Base case, where the ...