Indian stocks are on fire. Investors who want to partake will need to keep a cool head as a trading frenzy and rising valuations have the potential to spoil the party.

There are fundamental reasons for investors to be bullish on the country. India’s economy is strong despite a recent slowdown, with gross domestic product in the second quarter up 6.7% year on year. That has helped drive earnings growth: Net income for the companies in the Sensex index rose 9% year on year in the second quarter, according to Morgan Stanley.

Foreign investors have streamed into the Indian market. Following outflows in the first half of this year, they have returned after Prime Minister Narendra Modi secured his third term in this year’s elections. Net inflows from foreign institutional investors into Indian stocks have been around $26 billion since the beginning of 2023.

Much of India’s stock rally has been driven by domestic investors, especially from individual investors. Net inflows into equity mutual funds in India amounted to 3.6 trillion rupees, equivalent to $43 billion, since the beginning of last year until July of this year, according to the Association of Mutual Funds in India.

The total notional value of equity derivatives traded on the National Stock Exchange of India in the first eight months this year reached 63 quadrillion rupees, a 52% rise from the same period last year. Around $5 trillion notional value of derivatives are traded daily in September.

IPOs in India totaled nearly $8 billion so far this year, already exceeding the total amount for all of 2023, according to Dealogic. That makes it the world’s second-largest IPO venue after the U.S. And investors are rushing into them, with many being more than 100 times oversubscribed, sending them surging in dot-com style on their first days of trading.

 MSCI India had a forward price/earnings ratio above 24 times at the end of August, compared with around 21 times for the S&P 500. And, unlike the U.S., smaller stocks are even more expensive: The Nifty Microcap index has surged 34% this year, outperforming the bigger companies. Small-caps on the Bombay Stock Exchange trade at 36 times trailing earnings, according to CEIC.

We're a leading global provider of financial services with offices in Stockholm, London, New York and Singapore. The highest level of our financial services is guaranteed by professionalism, a deep understanding of the financial markets. MS Capital Consulting works with the world’s leading financial institutions, delivering the experience and helping them achieve high performance. Marius Ghisea is the President and CEO of MS Capital Consulting. He is an investment analyst and an advisor for institutional and individual investors. With 14 years experience in capital markets, Marius Ghisea provides advice for long-term investors with low-risk investments strategies.