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Ditch IT for Power and Metals: BofA Securities Warns of ‘Dangerous’ Earnings Gap

By Arth Vani AI Desk · 2026-06-08

Amish Shah of BofA Securities suggests shifting investment focus away from the IT sector toward domestic infrastructure and commodities. The brokerage warns that current market valuations face a downside risk as earnings forecasts remain overly optimistic.

Amish Shah of BofA Securities suggests shifting investment focus away from the IT sector toward domestic infrastructure and commodities. The brokerage warns that current market valuations face a downside risk as earnings forecasts remain overly optimistic.

While the Indian retail investor has traditionally leaned on the Information Technology (IT) sector for stability, global brokerage BofA Securities is sounding a fresh alarm. Amish Shah, Head of India Research at BofA, suggests that the market’s reliance on IT might be misplaced, pointing instead toward a massive structural shift in infrastructure, power, and metals.

The ‘Dangerous Gap’ in Earnings

BofA Securities has identified what they call a 'dangerous gap' between consensus earnings forecasts and the ground reality. Shah warns that market expectations for corporate earnings are currently too high, creating a risk of a downward correction from current levels. This mismatch suggests that many popular stocks may be overvalued, leaving retail investors vulnerable to price drops if quarterly results fail to meet these lofty targets.

Why IT is Out and Infrastructure is In

The core of BofA’s strategy involves pivoting away from export-oriented services like IT and moving toward domestic growth drivers. The brokerage argues that while IT faces global headwinds, India’s internal demand for infrastructure—specifically linked to data centers and energy security—is booming.

Valuation Reality Check

Shah notes that while commodities and metals are currently driving earnings, these sectors do not typically command the 'premium valuations' that tech companies do. However, in the current market cycle, the reliable growth in these value-driven sectors may offer a safer harbor than the high-multiple IT stocks that are struggling to justify their prices.

For retail investors, the message is clear: the next phase of the Indian market rally might not be led by the screens of Bengaluru, but by the steel plants, power grids, and shipyards that form the backbone of the physical economy.

Investment in securities market are subject to market risks. Read all the related documents carefully before investing. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.

Source: Economictimes
Investments are subject to market risks. This article is for informational purposes only and not financial advice.