Money on the markets

A maturing market amid the mayhem

Apr 22, 2012 11:26 IST
Ambareesh Baliga

from Expert Zone:

India Market Weekahead – Volatile market within a narrow range

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(The views expressed in this column are the author’s own and do not represent those of Reuters)

A sharper-than-expected cut of 50 basis points in the repo rate boosted the benchmark indices early during the week. However, as expected, the Nifty could not gain higher than 5350 as apprehensions about the limited scope of further rate cuts suppressed sentiment.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) sounded cautious as recent growth trends indicate the economy is operating below its post-crisis levels. We anticipate a very limited scope for further reduction in policy rates going ahead as persistent liquidity deficit would make rate cuts difficult. Also the upside risk to inflation remains and further slippage on the fiscal front can aggravate inflationary pressure.

Globally, the euro zone markets also witnessed positive action following a successful bond auction by Spain and France. Appetite for these bonds during such distress times renewed some hope of revival in that region.

Reliance Industries came out with its Q4FY12 numbers after market hours on Friday. Its net profit of 42.4 billion rupees just fell short of the street estimate of 43 billion rupees, down 21 pct year-on-year. Lower production from its KGD6 offshore fields and weak refining margins dented profits. Sales, however, grew 16 pct to 878 billion rupees. Due to falling KGD6 production and weak cyclical margins, its near-term earnings are expected to remain subdued. The stock should remain sideways for some more time due to a lack of positive triggers, with the downside protected due to the ongoing buyback plan. Among cement heavyweights, Ambuja and ACC results also disappointed markets.

For the coming week, the markets are expected to remain volatile on account of derivative expiry. Some of the major corporate results -- beginning with TCS on Monday -- will remain crucial. Others include Sesa Goa, Wipro, Sterlite Industries, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank, Jindal Steel & Power, Siemens and Maruti Suzuki.

The rupee continued to be weak quoting above 52 rupees against the dollar. Though the RBI intervention in the currency market was expected to stem the fall, there doesn’t seem to be any such move. The rupee would continue to remain weak within a range. Oil prices gave some respite by correcting to $118.Closer home, with no action on increasing the retail prices of petro products, the subsidy burden continues to balloon.

COMMENT

What happened on friday 2.20 in NSE Will shudder many who witnessed helplessly and many incurred losses. It seems, Indian market is close to ‘ Circuit’?

Posted by fundselect | Report as abusive
Mar 4, 2012 12:27 IST
Ambareesh Baliga

from Expert Zone:

Brace for volatility, but utilise opportunity

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(The views expressed in this column are the author's own and do not represent those of Reuters)

After a 21 percent run so far this year due to unabated liquidity flow, markets paused for two weeks in a row with a cut of close to 5 percent. Data showing a slowdown in GDP growth in Q3 December spooked investors while macroeconomic worries arising from high oil prices also weighed on sentiments.

Foreign institutional investors’ (FII) flow continued unabated with $5 bln in February and $7 bln so far this year. Domestic institutional investors continue their selling spree with a net sell figure of $2.4 bln in February and $3.8 bln YTD.

The European Central Bank (ECB) announced 530 bln euros in the second Long-Term Refinancing Operation (LTRO) operation that was marginally higher than expected and compared with a 489 bln euro figure last time. However, there are still fears looming the Greek crisis has still not been resolved and there will eventually be a Euro exit as we have been indicating in the past.

Back home, the 5 percent government stake sale through the ONGC auction route scraped through with Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) moving in at the last minute to save the day for the government. There were debates the floor price was on the higher side. As a result, a large number of FIIs and mutual funds did not participate in the bidding. The decision makers needed to look at the market reality than pure mathematics. Any issuer should always pay heed to the reference price (which is the market quote) and give a suitable discount irrespective of the fundamentals. The ground rule of the market -- “the market price captures the current value of the stock” -- seems to have been forgotten by the decision makers. No investor (other than strategic), whether an institutional one or retail, would pay a premium especially when it’s not a scarce commodity. The government has to take this into account while strategising future divestments with regards to the pricing.

Markets this week are expected to remain volatile with three big events lined up over the next fortnight -- Uttar Pradesh election results on March 6, RBI credit policy on March 15 and the Union Budget on March 16.

If one were to believe the various exit polls, the Samajwadi Party (SP) may be set to regain power and is likely to win around 185 seats in the 403-seat Uttar Pradesh assembly. However, it remains short of majority and may need a partner. The stock markets have to some extent build on a SP-Congress alliance; but in case they stick to their pre-poll stand of not forging a partnership, there also remains a possibility of a hung house with SP as the largest party. Hence, we could have a scenario of President's rule.

Jan 22, 2012 11:21 IST
Ambareesh Baliga

from Expert Zone:

India Market Weekahead: RBI policy holds the key

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(The views expressed in this column are the author's own and do not represent those of Reuters)

Markets extended a rally for the third consecutive week led by strong FII inflows. FIIs have pumped in $1.2 billion so far this year as risk sentiment stabilised after several European debt auctions saw lower borrowing rates and overwhelming demand. Improvement in U.S. economic data, rupee appreciation and December quarter earnings exceeding lower expectations helped the market rally nearly 8 pct in three weeks.

The initial set of corporate results surprised the street as HDFC Bank, Axis Bank, Wipro, TCS, HCL Technologies and Hero MotoCorp posted better-than-expected numbers.

However, Reliance Industries (RIL) disappointed with a net profit de-growth of 13.6 pct year-on-year on the back of lower refining and petrochem margins. Its gross refining margins declined sharply to $6.8 per barrel from $9 per barrel. The buyback of $2 billion at a maximum price up to 870 rupees/share for up to 120 million shares or 3.6 pct equity via open market is seen as a cover-up for the subdued results. RIL stock has already gained 8 pct during the week after the announcement of the buy-back program. We may see a knee-jerk reaction to the results when trading opens on Monday but the buy-back may provide a cushion at the lower end.

As expected, shares of power generation companies gained after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh pledged help on chronic power shortages in the country in its meeting with business leaders. Our top pick Tata Power jumped 9 pct while NTPC gained 5 pct. Any action at the ground level will lend a helping hand to other sectors such as banking where there is a fear of NPAs from the power sector as well as capital goods which has seen a slowdown in order flows.

The rupee maintained a stronger tone during the week and strengthened to near 50 levels against the dollar. Sustained net inflows so far in 2012 along with short covering helped strengthen the rupee. It may be difficult for the rupee to extend the recovery further in the near term and we expected consolidation at current levels.

The coming week is truncated on account of Republic Day on January 26. We have the all important quarter review of monetary policy on January 24. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is widely expected to keep its key lending rate -- the repo rate -- steady. However, a few sections of the market are expecting a CRR cut.

Dec 19, 2011 12:57 IST

from Expert Zone:

Stock market under stress

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(The views expressed in this column are the author's own and do not represent those of Reuters)

The first big jolt to the market after the 2008 crisis had come last August when FIIs disinvested 95 billion rupees worth of equity and moved into liquid assets. That brought the Sensex down by 1500 points and pulled the dollar up by 4 rupees.

The FIIs wanted to reduce their risk which had been heightened by the EU crisis. It was not Greece alone but even Italy, the third largest European economy, which was in danger of sovereign debt default. These governments could borrow only at interest rates over 7 pct, about 2 pct more than the average rate for EU countries.

Undoubtedly, the prospects for the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) were grim and there could have been sheer chaos had a weak state like Greece or a strong state like Germany left the Union. France and Germany did finally persuade other members to accept fiscal consolidation and establish a permanent bailout fund. An early agreement failed mainly because of the veto exercised by Britain. Hence, a new treaty will have to be signed which is not likely before March.

The promise of a new treaty was not enough to create confidence among investors in the solidarity of the EU or the European banking system. For that reason the recovery of world markets did not come through. The BSE Sensex hardly changed its mood and, with the added fear created by the 5 pct fall in industrial production, declined further.

There were triggers that could have kicked up stock prices. A good opportunity for market recovery was lost when the government almost withdrew the earlier amendment to facilitate FDI in retail. With a fractured parliament and undependable allies, it is unlikely that any major reform will come through before the elections in Uttar Pradesh.

The next budget can be a trigger but is unlikely to be one. For, the kind of pressure under which it is at present requires the finance minister to seek approval to borrow another 550 billion rupees, mainly to fund subsidies. As such, it may be difficult to even maintain the fiscal deficit at 4.6 pct as provided in the last budget.

Dec 13, 2011 16:30 IST

from Expert Zone:

2012 – Boom or Doom?

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(The views expressed in this column are the author's own and do not represent those of Reuters)

What a year 2011 has been. Except certain commodities such as gold and oil, every other asset class has been hit. With Sensex down more than 20 pct YTD, 10 year g-sec yields up by almost 1 pct and rupee down by almost 14 pct against the dollar, it has been a poor year for investors. This was caused by a bout of strong global risk aversion led by the European sovereign debt crisis, high inflation in emerging markets and consequent monetary tightening, and lack of proper policy action in India. The only salvation came from commodities such as oil (up almost 26 pct in rupee terms) and gold (up almost 38 pct in rupee terms).

Are any of these likely to continue haunting us in 2012? Or will there be a new set of problems? Is the worst already behind us? That's the million dollar question on everybody's mind. The irony is few of us, if at all, have the right answers. Still based on evidence available today, one can hazard a guess.

What does 2012 have in store for the investor? There is no doubt that growth has slowed down. The poor industrial growth numbers over the last quarter and the latest second quarter real GDP growth of 6.9 pct (manufacturing growth was a mere 2.7 pct whereas mining output contracted) drive the point home.

Is it going to change in a hurry? Seems improbable. After all, more than a year of continuous rate hikes should have taken its toll on growth. And to top it up, inflation is yet to subside at least on a year on year basis, even though that is not the best way to look at it. The fall in the rupee hasn't helped either, exacerbating the already high trade deficit and inflation by making imports costlier.

But aren't we pricing it all in? Aren't equity valuations cheap and yields already near 2008 highs? True. But stocks can get cheaper still? Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent. Remember, we are still looking at Sensex valuations with respect to FY13 earnings which price in a 16-17 pct growth over FY12. Whereas FY12 earnings growth is already being revised down to 10 pct, expected FY13 growth can be downgraded further if macro indicators worsen. Also, the Sensex earnings yield (basis forward PE of 13-13.5 as per FY13 earnings estimate) at approx 7.5 pct is still short (approx 0.8 pct) of the one year bond yield. Historically, equity markets have come out of a bear phase once Sensex earnings yields have been higher than bond yields by more than approx 50 pct i.e. the ratio between Sensex forward earnings yield and bond yields has been around 1.5. On this basis, valuations seem to be in a fair zone rather than being screaming cheap. For Sensex yields to become 1.5 times of bond yields today either the Sensex will have to be de-rated further or the bond yields will have to come down significantly. It is unlikely that either of these events happen in isolation. Rather a combination of both, i.e. a price or time correction in stocks coupled with the bond yields coming off significantly seems to be a more plausible scenario going ahead.

The initial part of the year 2012 (probably the first half) thus might continue to see high volatility as a result of the above. But as we move to the latter half of 2012, things should start improving. Bond yields are most likely to have come down quite some distance by that time (assuming that inflation moderates -- month on month growth momentum in core WPI inflation is already showing signs of slowing down -- and RBI starts cutting rates) and equities should be available at a real bargain by then. The second half of 2012 should thus be much better than the first.

Dec 12, 2011 14:22 IST

from Expert Zone:

Sensex: Key takeaways from 2011

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(Nipun Mehta is an award-winning private banker with many years of experience across Asia. The views expressed in the column are his own and not those of Reuters)

About a year back in November, we were at the highest ever level of the Sensex with hopes of moving higher. A year hence, as we inch closer to the end of 2011, the Sensex has fallen more than 26 pct from its peak, and then recovered a bit.

In the interim, there have been bouts of volatility, long periods of dull range-bound movements, and a lot of events and learnings from the domestic and international markets.

The biggest learning in the last year has been for the present generation of investors who would not have seen such a long period of stock market underperformance and for whom the definition of long-term has changed. For those who started investing after 2003, the last three years have been an excruciating period yielding seriously negative returns. Most of these portfolios are still a few years away from returning to green. The key lesson is, short-term is out and long-term is in, with long-term to be defined as more than three years.

The other key learning during 2011 has been for the Indian corporate sector, where some hardly ever hedged their forex exposure. It was largely perceived by these companies that the rupee would remain stable and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) would intervene whenever there were sudden bouts of currency inflows or outflows.

This prevented several mid-sized companies from taking a forex cover with the objective of saving costs. After losing significant sums during 2011 on account of foreign currency fluctuations, risk management for forex has all of a sudden become the buzzword for companies that have foreign currency exposure. The corporate sector is unlikely to take the currency fluctuations for granted any longer.

It is gradually becoming apparent that after a few years of excellent domestic economic growth, even when the global economy was struggling, the growth momentum for an 8 pct (or thereabouts) GDP growth for the country cannot be taken for granted any more. Estimates for closer to 7 pct GDP growth for 2011-12 have already been announced by rating agencies. The decision paralysis and governance deficit within the government is at an unanticipated new low and threatens to pull down GDP for 2011-12 to 6.5 pct levels. The greater threat, however, is for the Indian corporate sector -- starting to look overseas for expansion rather than investing in India, a far cry from the 'India shining' story that used to pull large investments from other countries into India.

Nov 23, 2011 12:43 IST

LIVE BLOG: Sensex, Nifty plunge to 2011 lows

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The BSE Sensex and Nifty plunged to fresh 2011 lows in Wednesday trade, a day before the expiry of derivatives contracts, amid renewed worries about faltering global growth.

Nov 4, 2011 21:29 IST

Should the petrol price hike be rolled back?

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A petrol price hike always results in unhappy consumers, street protests and politicians trying to accuse the ruling government of being insensitive.

State-run oil marketing firms’ petrol price hike of 1.8 rupees per litre, the fourth such increase since March and the 10th since prices were decontrolled in June 2010, is another blow to the common man, already reeling under the pressure of rising food prices.

The move, as always, has sparked nationwide protests demanding a rollback. Mamata Banerjee has even threatened to quit the UPA coalition.

But, as prices were decontrolled last year, Manmohan Singh and Pranab Mukherjee were quick to clear their stance. Mukherjee reminded critics that petrol prices were decontrolled and the government had no say, while Singh said there was need for decontrolling more prices. IOC also ruled out any rollback.

The opposition has condemned the move. BJP leader Yashwant Sinha even dubbed yesterday’s petrol price hike and food inflation data of 12.21 percent a ‘Terrible Thursday’.

While the blame game continues, the price hike will pinch the common man.  Do you think there will be any relief from soaring prices? Are you already making some alternate plans to save on expenses?

 

Oct 4, 2011 17:14 IST

from India Insight:

God and the central banker

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Can central bankers play god to the markets? India's central bank chief Duvvuri Subbarao does not believe so. In doing so, the Reserve Bank of India governor, a physics student, has taken refuge in quantum mechanics.

Subbarao takes the example of Einstein, who could not reconcile to the probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics all through his life.

Einstein famously said - "God does not play dice". Less known perhaps is the retort of his friend and mentor Niels Bohr who said - "Albert, stop telling God what he can or cannot do".

Subbarao draws this parallel in arguing that a central bank cannot tell markets what to do. "We have to take market signals as given," Subbarao said in New York at a recent IMF meeting.

In fact, he went on to say that central bank decisions get more validity if the market endorses them.

Central bankers have always enjoyed an elevated status in the financial world, possibly because of the wide-ranging powers they have enjoyed.  True, the sheen has come off at times.

Liaquat Ahamed referred to this in Lords of Finance when he wrote about central bankers ruling the financial world in the late 1920s -- Benjamin Strong Jr of the New York Federal Reserve, Montagu Norman of the Bank of England, Émile Moreau of the Banque de France, and Hjalmar Schacht of the Reichsbank. The Wall Street crash of 1929 and the depression that ensued crippled an entire generation and set the stage for the second World War. The orthodoxy of the central bankers of the day in trying to adhere to the gold standard was a prime cause.

Sep 21, 2011 15:01 IST

from Jeremy Gaunt:

Twisted Sister and the Federal Reserve

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The Federal Reserve's "Operation Twist" has set the literary- and musical-allusion juices flowing.  It is all about the Fed selling or not rolling over short-term debt and buying long-term bonds instead in order to keep borrowing costs low.

But that is frightfully dull for economists, analysts and reporters trying to get attention for their work. So, so far we have heard:

-- "Let's Twist Again", a reference to the 1960's Chubby Checker record about the dance craze . Problem is that the second line is "Like we did last summer", and the Fed did nothing of the sort, launching plain old quantative easing instead.

-- Twisted Sister might be a contender, but the heavy metal band's big hit "We're Not Going To Take It" probably better descibes market reaction to euro zone debt-crisis policy.

-- "Twist and Shout",  a reference to the rock song covered by The Beatles, among, others.  This is better. "Well, shake it up, baby, now" could indeed be the clarion call from financial markets for the Fed to so something, almost anything. But "Come on and twist a little closer, now, and let me know that you're mine" might be going a little far.

-- So the prize for now goes to literature not music:  "Oliver Twist".  Young Master Twist's  "Please Sir, I want some more"  just about sums it up.

Any others?

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