Why India’s annual budget is a powerful market force
Each year bosses and investors are glued to TV screens to learn whose business found favour and whose fell out of it
IN MOST BIG economies the government’s budget plans seldom drive large movements in the stockmarket. Except in India. Bosses and investors parse the documents for clues about which industries or firms gained favour and which fell out of it. Markets react accordingly. In February 2008 the Mumbai bourse’s main index fell by 12% in five days after India’s then-rulers were perceived to have responded inadequately to the global financial crisis. This year’s budget came on February 1st, a Saturday. Stockmarkets held a special weekend session. Bosses and investors were glued to TV screens as the finance minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, recited the provisions—until, after a record two hours and 41 minutes, she was too exhausted to go on.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Buy and sell tax-and-spend”
Business February 8th 2020
- After a nervy year America Inc has a bounce in its step
- Tesla gains $60bn in market value in a week
- Talk of succession atop Big Tech grows louder
- How modern workers are at the mercy of ratings
- Why India’s annual budget is a powerful market force
- Gold companies try to restore their sparkle
- Away from the headlines, defence is Boeing’s next problem
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