Foreign investors in India are changing investment strategies to favour domestic-oriented companies, mid-cap stocks and state-owned enterprises, based on hopes that Prime Minister Narendra Modi's new government will revive Asia's third-largest economy.
These sectors have underperformed the wider market over the past year and are seen having far more upside potential if the economy picks up thanks to Modi's reformist agenda.
"There is a positive structural change underway in the Indian economy.
"Indian financials and cyclical stocks look attractive," said Gaurav Patankar, a fund manager in New York at The Boston Company Asset Management, which oversees $50 billion in assets.
Patankar, whose firm is overweight Indian stocks, was optimistic that the strong mandate given by voters to Modi would lead to better governance, and more focus on how state-owned companies are run, shrinking the valuation gap with private sector rivals.
Reflecting the gap in valuations, the Bombay Stock Exchange public sector unit index for state-run firms is trading at a price to earnings ratio of 11.9 times compared to 15.5 times for the benchmark BSE Sensex.
Investors' rebalancing has moved funds away from exporters, large cap companies and firms that compete with state-owned companies.
Since Modi's landslide victory on May 16, the BSE midcap index has surged 15.9 per cent, and the BSE public sector index has added 11 percent, outperforming a Sensex that has gained 4.5 per cent.
Fund managers think the economy has bottomed out after two disappointing years of below 5 percent growth -- the worst slowdown in more than a quarter of a century.
And while the Sensex hit record highs on June 11, its valuations at around 15.5 times forward earnings are still at par with its 10-year average.
India has received net foreign portfolio flows of $10 billion so far this year, more than other emerging markets in Asia, such as South Korea, which received $1.8 billion and Taiwan, which received $8.56