Overview
Bernstein on Wednesday downgraded its year-end target for the Nifty to 26,000 from 28,100, warning that an extended Middle East conflict could inflict a macroeconomic shock on India approaching the severity of the post-2008 global financial crisis. The brokerage pointed to a confluence of higher crude prices, a weakening rupee and rising inflation as the key channels by which a prolonged conflict could damage growth and markets.
Current market context
The Nifty has fallen 12% year-to-date as the conflict moves into its fourth week. Bernstein’s revised target represents roughly 13% upside from prevailing levels, and is based on a valuation of 18.5x one-year forward price-to-earnings. Despite trimming the target, Bernstein maintained a neutral stance on the index.
Downside scenario and macro projections
In a severe, prolonged outcome where hostilities continue through 2026, Bernstein warned of sustained double-digit inflation, GDP growth slowing to the 2-3% range, the rupee weakening beyond 110 to the dollar and the Nifty falling to levels well below 20,000. The analysts posed the question: "Can a long-drawn conflict return us to the GFC horrors?" and noted that a 3-4% haircut to GDP growth would be "virtually like a recession" for an emerging economy.
The report recalled the post-2008 experience in which India’s growth dropped from around 10% to 5%, inflation rose to 10% and the rupee slid roughly 30% to 60 against the dollar over five years. Separately, Bernstein highlighted that the rupee has already depreciated about 11% over the past 18 months.
External buffers and FX considerations
Bernstein noted India’s Foreign Currency Assets have declined to $555 billion, below 2021 levels, and now account for less than 78% of total reserves, down from over 90% in 2021. The Reserve Bank of India’s net forward book is estimated to be near $100 billion, which the brokerage said limits the central bank’s capacity to defend the currency. In its baseline view, Bernstein expects the rupee to breach the 97-98 level this year.
Current account, remittances and import cover
The brokerage projects a current account deficit for the March quarter of 2.5% of GDP, the widest since September 2022. It highlighted that Gulf remittances, which account for around 40% of inflows, have been hit by the conflict. Import cover as measured by Foreign Currency Assets stands below 10 months, near multi-decade lows, further constraining external resilience.
Inflation and crop risk
Bernstein also flagged a 62% probability of El Niño disrupting the 2026 summer crop, a shock that could send consumer price inflation above the Reserve Bank of India’s 6% tolerance band.
Rates and growth linkages
The 10-year to 2-year bond yield spread has compressed back to August 2025 levels, the brokerage said, indicating that rate cuts are effectively priced out. Bernstein added that this yield-curve compression alone could shave roughly a full percentage point off annual GDP growth.
Scenario framework for the Nifty
Bernstein set out four discrete scenarios and corresponding Nifty levels: 27,500 in the case of rapid de-escalation; 26,000 if the conflict is resolved within a month with crude trading at $85-90; 24,100 if hostilities extend two to three months; and 19,900 in a full-year crisis. The report concluded with the observation that "Waiting out for clear signals, in such times, is often the best strategy."