Nifty Metal’s 18% YTD rally adds ₹1.6 lakh crore to investor wealth. Time to be euphoric or cautious?

Commodities, rather than equities, have been the focus of investors over the last year or so. The share price performance of top metal-producing companies is a testament to this trend. At a time when the Indian stock market is struggling, the Nifty Metal index has emerged as the best-performing sector among the 16 main indices on NSE.

Data from ACE Equity shows that only five of these 16 indices have eked out positive gains this year, including commodities, healthcare, pharma, energy and metal. And is the leading performer following a 18% rally, adding 1,60,503 crore to investor wealth. At the same time, the has slumped by over 8%.

Barring and , most stocks from the 15-stock index have eked out gains of up to 57%. Meanwhile, Vedanta shares recently traded ex-demerger, and the data doesn’t capture the true price trend of the Anil Agarwal-led company.

What’s driving metal stocks?

This rise in metal stocks is not a single-factor story. It is several tailwinds arriving at the same time, and that combination is what has made the move so sharp.

1. Surge in commodity prices

The primary driver has been a significant surge in global metal prices, according to Rajesh Singla, CEO & Fund Manager, Alpha AMC, as rising prices directly translate into better revenue and margin expectations for Indian metal companies. LME aluminium crossed $3,000 per tonne, copper climbed to multi-year highs near $13,000 per tonne, and zinc and silver prices moved sharply higher.

2. Weak US dollar

A declining has emerged as another boon for these metal counters as it helps drive demand. “Commodity prices denominated in dollars become more affordable for buyers in other currencies, stimulating global demand. Reduced uncertainty around US tariffs has also improved the export outlook for metal producers,” Singla explained.



3. Weakening Chinese capacities

Globally, supply discipline has improved. China registered a 4.6% decline in steel output in early 2026, which tightened global supply exactly when India’s domestic and export demand was picking up. Meanwhile, closures in Europe have tightened the market.

4. India’s infra push

The growing domestic demand is also an important catalyst. India’s infrastructure spend is running at an unprecedented pace, roads, railways, defence, urban development, all of which are metal-intensive, said Gaurav Bhandari, CEO at Monarch Networth Capital Ltd, underscoring the growing demand for metals like steel, copper wiring, and aluminium

India’s domestic steel demand is expected to grow around 9% in 2026, driven by government infrastructure spending with capital expenditure of 12.2 lakh crore budgeted for FY26-27.

Is the rally in metal stocks sustainable?

Though structural drivers remain in place, analysts remain concerned about valuations following the sharp run. The index had added 29% last year, recording six straight yearly gains.

Singla said that while the structural case for metals is real and not going away, he would urge caution on .

“India’s infrastructure pipeline, the energy transition, AI data centre buildout, and defence manufacturing all require copper, aluminium, and steel in volumes that will grow for years. India remains at the centre of the global ferrous growth story, underpinned by strong infrastructure spending, urbanisation, and manufacturing-led expansion. That is not a narrative; that is a decade-long demand curve,” he said.

However, he added that the has bounced 18% from its March 2026 lows, with several stocks hitting record highs including , Nalco, Vedanta, and . After a move of that magnitude in such a short period, the easy money has been made and from here, returns will depend far more on earnings delivery than on sentiment or global price momentum, he observed.

Bhandari also called the rally fundamental-driven, and not by euphoria. He noted that, unlike previous metal rallies, which were purely commodity-price led, this one is backed by volume growth, margin expansion, and balance sheet deleveraging. However, he cautioned that valuations in select pockets, particularly mid-cap metal names, need to be watched.

In Q4FY26, earnings from the have been encouraging. Metal majors like Tata Steel reported Q4 FY26 revenue of 63,270 crore, up 12.54% year on year, with consolidated net profit jumping 147% to 2,965 crore. Meanwhile, Hindalco reported Q4 FY26 revenue of 64,890 crore, up 16% year on year, with net profit surging 66.4% year on year. For a company of Hindalco’s scale, 66% profit growth is a strong signal that the aluminium upcycle has genuine legs, said Singla.

recorded its highest-ever revenue, production, and sales volumes in full-year FY26, with profit after tax soaring approximately 50.5%.

“What these numbers collectively signal is that the Q4 earnings cycle for metals is strong, broad-based, and earnings-driven rather than price-driven alone. The sector is not trading on a promise of future growth; the growth is already showing up in reported numbers. That is an important distinction, and it makes the current valuation conversation more comfortable than it would be if earnings were still lagging behind stock prices,” Singla noted.

Going ahead, Q1 earnings will likely decide the momentum of these gains. If globally, commodity prices hold, and domestic infrastructure spending continues at the current pace, the earnings momentum carries forward. If either softens, the stocks that have run the hardest will give back gains quickly, believe experts.

Bhandari advised staying with market leaders who have cost advantages and integrated operations. His top picks are Hindustan Copper and SAIL.

Disclaimer: This story is for educational purposes only. The views and recommendations made above are those of individual analysts or broking companies, and not of Mint. We advise investors to check with certified experts before making any investment decisions.

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