India and Pakistan’s financial markets are gearing up for a potential rebound following a ceasefire announcement between the two nations. Investors in both countries are eyeing recovery as geopolitical uncertainties ease and economic fundamentals regain focus.
Foreign investors had maintained a 16-day buying streak in Indian equities until Friday’s volatility. Market experts believe buying flows will resume as conditions stabilise. Meanwhile, Pakistan’s fragile economy is set for a boost following the IMF’s approval of $1 billion in immediate disbursement and an additional $1.4 billion for climate resilience.
India’s NSE Nifty 50 index suffered its steepest drop in over a month, sliding more than 1% on Friday. The rupee was one of Asia’s weakest performers last week, while bond yields rose amidst risk premium adjustments. However, the RBI’s intervention helped limit losses.
Pakistan’s stock index plunged 9% following the April 22 attack in Kashmir, triggering a retaliatory strike from India. Yet, market optimism is building, with expectations of a relief rally backed by an unexpected interest-rate cut by the State Bank of Pakistan and additional IMF support.
Experts suggest that, assuming no fresh geopolitical escalations, India’s market focus will shift toward liquidity availability, potential RBI rate cuts, and an early trade agreement with the U.S. Pakistani traders expect a stock market surge following the ceasefire, though concerns over renewed tensions remain. Reports indicate India has yet to lift its abeyance on the Indus Water Treaty, a decision that could significantly impact Pakistan’s agricultural sector.
Despite lingering uncertainties, investors remain cautiously optimistic, monitoring policy signals and diplomatic developments as they navigate market fluctuations.