Nifty VMI – how it gauges market mood
The investment action suggested by the Nifty VMI has been derived by analysing over 20 years’
worth of
data on the Nifty PE ratio, the Nifty PB ratio and different momentum indicators of the Nifty 50
index.
Market mood is a factor of both valuations and sentiment of the ongoing market cycle. Going by
valuations
alone to judge market mood can result in premature action as the Nifty PE ratio can be subdued or
high for a
prolonged period. Using Nifty momentum alone can mean mistiming at getting in at highs or ignoring
good
investment opportunities.
The Nifty VMI therefore capitalises on both valuation signals and momentum triggers to check if the
market
mood is conducive to invest now. The Nifty VMI goes the additional step to consider the investment
timeframe, since longer timeframes have a different risk-return behaviour than shorter timeframes
given the
prevailing market mood.
- Valuation Indicator: The green zone is when the Nifty PE ratio
is at the
lower end of the range based on average PE levels. The yellow and orange zones come into play
when the
Nifty PE ratio moves out of the comfort levels into the more expensive zones. The red zone is,
obviously, when the Nifty PE ratio reaches expensive levels. To test the effectiveness of this
indicator, we took the daily consolidated Nifty PE Ratio for the past 20 years, analysed the
trends in
the Nifty PE Ratio along with the Nifty PB ratio. As the PE over the years can markedly shift as
economic and market scenarios change, benchmarking current valuations against very old Nifty PE
ratio
levels can be misleading. Therefore, our algorithm to fix the cut-offs is dynamic to consider
structural
shifts in the Nifty PE ratio levels.
- Momentum Indicator: This indicator is the second factor that the
Nifty
VMI uses to decide if investing at the prevailing market levels has the potential to deliver
satisfactory returns with low risk. The indicator uses moving averages of different timeframes
to gauge
whether market momentum is strong, weak or somewhere in between. The model uses a combination of
short-term and medium-term moving averages of the Nifty 50 to classify momentum into 3 broad
groups of
low, partial and high momentum.
- Nifty VMI: This indicator considers the current Nifty PE ratio
in
context of the valuation zone, the strength of momentum, and the investment timeframe to gauge
market
mood. We designed this indicator based on the quantum of returns generated in different
timeframes, on
all possible combinations of the Nifty PE ratio and momentum that the past 20 years have thrown
up, and
on the probability of losses. The Nifty VMI considers loss instances as risks and average
returns as
reward to build a matrix of valuation zones, risks, and reward. This matrix is used to peg
whether
investing now can pay off in terms of risk-return potential.
Key points to note on the Nifty VMI
The Nifty VMI is an extremely useful market mood and investment indicator. However, there are a few
points to note:
- The Nifty VMI is based on the Nifty 50 PE ratio and momentum alone. The indicator is based on
past return and risk trends in the market at different valuations and momentum levels and how
the markets will behave if those trends repeat themselves. While the Nifty 50 is definitely a
broad market indicator, some market segments such as say the mid or small-cap segment may behave
differently in both returns and downsides compared to the Nifty 50.
- The Nifty VMI is not an indicator to book profits, sell, or exit your funds and stocks. It is
an investment indicator only.
- The Nifty VMI considers returns of the Nifty 50 index to gauge whether it is the time to invest
in the equity market. It is not a call on any specific stock or fund. It tells you whether you
can invest in equities now. You will have to pick your own stocks or funds or ETFs to invest in
or use our recommendations - Prime
Stocks or Prime
Funds 😊
- The Nifty VMI’s risk-return calculations were done on a lumpsum basis alone and is ideally
suitable for such investment decisions. So you can use them for stocks that you are in your buy
list. If you are investing through SIPs, you will be already investing at different market
levels, reducing the timing risk, and averaging costs. Therefore, the Nifty VMI can be less
effective. You can at best decide to deploy additional lump sums other than the SIPs you are
running, when our indicator suggests that it is a good time to invest.
- Always consider your risk level and timeframe before making any investment.
General disclosures and disclaimers