The BSE SmallCap index has officially entered bear market territory, falling 25% from its all-time high reached in September 2024. The carnage has wiped out approximately Rs 15 lakh crore in investor wealth, with over 400 small-cap stocks declining more than 40% from their peaks.
What Triggered the Crash
The small-cap selloff has been driven by a confluence of factors:
Valuation Reset: Small-cap stocks had rallied 65% between March 2023 and September 2024, pushing the BSE SmallCap index PE to 32x — well above the 10-year average of 22x. The correction has brought valuations to 24x, but still above historical averages.
FII Exodus: Foreign investors have been net sellers of Rs 1.4 lakh crore in Indian equities since October 2024. While FIIs primarily sell large-caps, the sentiment contagion has hit small-caps disproportionately as retail investors panic.
SEBI Crackdown: The regulator’s tightened disclosure norms for small and mid-cap mutual fund schemes, requiring stress testing and liquidity disclosures, spooked investors who feared forced selling by fund houses.
Global Risk-Off: US tariff threats and rising Treasury yields have reduced appetite for risky assets globally, with emerging market small-caps bearing the brunt.
Worst Hit Stocks
Several retail-favorite stocks have seen devastating declines:
- Vodafone Idea: -62% from peak (debt concerns resurface)
- IREDA: -55% (PSU premium evaporated)
- Paytm: -48% (profitability timeline pushed back)
- Cochin Shipyard: -45% (defence premium unwinds)
- RVNL: -52% (order book concerns)
Is It Time to Buy?
Seasoned fund managers are divided. Nilesh Shah of Kotak AMC suggests being “selectively greedy” in quality small-caps trading below 15x PE with clean balance sheets. However, Saurabh Mukherjea of Marcellus warns that small-cap valuations could fall another 15-20% if global conditions deteriorate.
Our advice: Avoid catching falling knives. Wait for Nifty to form a base above 23,000 and FII flows to stabilize before deploying fresh capital into small-caps. Use SIPs to average in gradually rather than making lump-sum bets.