WhiteOak Bullish on India's Small and Mid-Cap Stocks

Author: Berke Yılmaz

WhiteOak Capital Sees Sweet Spot in Indian Small and Mid-Cap Stocks

Singapore-based WhiteOak Capital's emerging markets CIO Hiren Dasani says India’s small- and mid-cap stocks are entering a sweet spot, driven by stronger earnings, price corrections, and improving valuations compared to large-caps.

Structural Themes Drive Opportunity

According to Dasani, the real opportunity lies in companies tied to powerful structural themes such as manufacturing, supply-chain diversification, defense, energy infrastructure, and AI-linked global capex, which are better represented in the broader market.

Market Divergence and FPI Outflows

In 2026, while the Nifty 50 and Sensex have dropped 8.3% and 10.5%, small- and mid-cap indices have gained 2.6% and 2.2%. Foreign portfolio investors have offloaded $23.86 billion in Indian equities, surpassing last year's record outflows. Dasani views this selling as a valuation reset rather than a rejection of India’s fundamentals.

Domestic Inflows Remain a Key Support

Record buying by domestic mutual funds in small- and mid-caps in April continues to support these segments. WhiteOak notes that India’s 10–12% earnings growth outlook remains intact, though investors are reassessing it against improving earnings visibility in other emerging markets like Korea and Taiwan, fueled by AI-led capex.

Sectoral Preferences and Fund Exposure

WhiteOak favors industrials, manufacturing, and select financials, citing strong momentum in engineering firms, auto ancillaries, and capital-goods companies with multi-year growth visibility. Opportunities are also seen in non-banking financial companies, MSME lenders, and microfinance firms where credit costs appear to have peaked. The fund is cautious on IT services due to AI-driven pricing pressure.

WhiteOak Capital manages $11.23 billion globally, with 40% allocated to India. Its flexi-cap, multi-cap, and special opportunities funds manage ₹79.07 billion, ₹34.21 billion, and ₹15.39 billion respectively.

Impacted Symbols

Symbols affected by this headline and their sentiment signals

The news, analyses, and comments on this platform do not constitute investment advice. When making investment decisions, you should conduct your own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor if necessary. FiNews cannot be held responsible for any losses that may arise from the use of this information.

More Headlines