Nifty Set For 25K By December, But BofA Flags A Rocky Road Ahead
Tariff wars, crumbling US exceptionalism and weakening domestic liquidity, along with FII outflows, add to market volatility, warns BofA.

Analysts at Bank of America have turned constructive on India’s key benchmark index after cutting its December 2025 target to 25,000 from 26,500 less than three weeks ago.
They now see potential returns of 14% for the NSE Nifty 50 in 2025, as it trades at its long-term average valuation on earnings growth estimates, which they view as conservative versus the bearish stance on the street.
Benchmark indices—Nifty 50 and Sensex—have fallen 14.67% and 13.84%, respectively, from their Sept. 27, 2024 peak.
Despite turning constructive on Nifty, BofA analysts remain conservative on its earnings estimates compared to broader street consensus. Nifty earnings are pegged to grow at 12% in fiscal 2026 and 13% in fiscal 2027, lower than consensus estimates of 15% and 14%, respectively.
It sees six sectors—telecom, financials, industrials, energy, IT, and autos—driving 85-89% of this earnings growth, with telecom contributing the largest share at 35%.
Headwinds Weigh Heavy
The note also highlighted three headwinds that could weigh on markets. The possibility of tariff wars remains a concern, with potential disruptions to global supply chains making earnings growth difficult to predict.
There are also worries about a slowdown in the US economy and re-acceleration of inflation, which could lead to continued foreign investor outflows and a broader risk-off sentiment.
Given Nifty’s 97% correlation with the S&P 500, any weakness in global markets could have a direct impact. Additionally, analysts flagged the risk of softening domestic liquidity, which could further pressure market sentiment.
BofA prefers select domestic cyclicals, expecting RBI rate cuts to boost financials and autos. It favours healthcare and telecom for their resilience amid global uncertainties. Consumer staples have been downgraded to 'underweight,' as income tax cuts are already priced in, and valuations remain expensive.
SMID Valuations A Cause For Concern
Despite a sharp 21-26% correction in mid- and small-cap stocks, analysts believe the segment will continue to see negative incremental returns. They expect the growth differential between SMID caps and Nifty to narrow, leading to a contraction in their valuation premium.
Mid- and small-cap stocks still trade at a significant premium to Nifty and remain expensive on fundamental metrics. With Nifty now trading at its long-term averages, analysts see limited upside for these segments, which continue to trade at historically high valuations.