Citi has cut its rating on Indian equities to Underweight, a signal that the brokerage now expects India to perform below its benchmark relative to other markets it covers. The call rests on three concerns: persistent macroeconomic pressure, geopolitical risk, and earnings forecasts that look stretched.
Citi's target for the Nifty 50 sits at 27,000, implying roughly 11.7% upside from current levels. That may sound positive in isolation, but an Underweight rating means Citi believes other markets offer better risk-adjusted returns over the same period. In other words, the upside on offer does not compensate for the risks attached to Indian equities right now.
Earnings and the Iran War Factor
A key part of Citi's caution is its earnings outlook for FY27 and FY28. The brokerage's forecasts already factor in the impact of the Iran War, which adds an unusual layer of geopolitical risk to the numbers. Oil price shocks, supply chain disruptions, and wider regional instability can all feed into Indian corporate margins, particularly for import-heavy sectors. Citi has not stripped that risk out, it has baked it in, and the numbers still look weak relative to valuations.
Citi does acknowledge that market positioning in India has become lighter, meaning fewer institutional investors are currently overweight on Indian stocks. That can be a contrarian positive, less crowded trades tend to have less room to fall sharply, but Citi's view is that lighter positioning alone is not enough to turn bullish.
Where Citi Still Sees Value
Despite the headline downgrade, Citi identifies banks, telecom, defence, and pharma as preferred sectors within India. Banks offer relative earnings visibility; telecom benefits from ongoing data consumption growth; defence spending has structural government support; and pharma carries some export resilience. These sector calls suggest a defensive tilt rather than a broad growth bet.
For investors, the practical read is straightforward: Citi is not calling a market crash, but it is saying India deserves a smaller allocation than benchmark weight right now. The combination of unresolved geopolitical risk, downward earnings pressure for FY27-28, and better opportunities elsewhere drives that conclusion. Watch whether other brokerages follow with similar cuts, and track how FY27 earnings revisions evolve over the coming quarters.