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Showing posts from September, 2021

US Fed may not remain completely data driven

In its latest meeting the US Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) reiterated its position stated in the last meeting. The Committee maintained status quo on the Fed rate (Repo Rate) and its asset (bond) buying program (US$120bn/month). The limit for single counterparty under reverse repo has been raised to US$160bn from the present US$80bn, allowing the banks to park more money with the Federal Reserve. The Committee reiterated its stance of last meeting, stating that “If progress continues broadly as expected, the Committee judges that a moderation in the pace of asset purchases may soon be warranted”; implying that the FOMC decision on QE continues to be data driven, and the present reading of data guides a gradual unwinding of the monetary stimulus introduced to mitigate the impact of Covid-19 pandemic. “While no decisions were made, participants generally viewed that so long as the recovery remains on track, a gradual tapering process that concludes around the middle of...

A peep over the China Wall

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Whether we like it or not, China is a key factor in India’s policy making function. The China factor materially influences our economic policies, foreign policy, and defense policy. This may be true to a material extent for US, Japan and Korea policy making functions also. Inarguably , the Chinese economy has been one of the key driving forces for the global economy in past three decades. Chinese have labored hard for over five decades, since beginning of cultural revolution in 1966, to emerge as a potent global force. In past three decades they have subsidized the global economy by providing cheap labor and capital; and funded a large part of the US and EU fiscal deficits since early 2000s. The Chinese support was a key factor in keeping the global market afloat during the global financial crisis. It would not be entirely wrong to say that China also helped the developed economies in protecting “their environment” by letting them relocate most of their polluting industries to China....

Does equity investing work for you?

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Despite the risks inherent in equity share ownership, the traumatic shocks of 1992, 2000, 2008 and 2020, equity remains a popular investment option among both individual and institutional investors. In fact, after the global financial crisis of 2008-09, the riskier equity (startups and pre revenue) has become even more popular with the investors who have been chasing yields on one hand and had access to cheap money on the other hand. After the market crash due to outbreak of pandemic, the inflows into global equity funds have surged exponentially. The net flows in 2021 YTD alone exceed the net flows during previous two decades (2001-2020). Anecdotal evidence suggests that one of the main reasons behind this unshakable popularity is the possibility of scoring “big”. It is this chance of multiplying the money in short term, which has attracted hordes of investors to the stock market. Nonetheless, there is no dearth of people who are scared of the word ‘equity investing’.   Some o...

Seven seas to cross for full recovery

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 The latest macro data indicates that the Indian economy may be standing at an inflection point. It may have survived a major accident in the form of Covid19 pandemic; luckily scraping through with couple of broken bones and some bruises. The economy is recuperating well and is perhaps ready for discharge from the hospital. Of course, for next few quarters the economy may still need to use the crutches of government spending, before it could walk on its own. The amount of bill for the recovery from pandemic would mostly be known in next six months. We would also know how the cost of pandemic would be shared between various stakeholders, i.e., government, citizens and businesses. Post pandemic, the challenges before the government are multifold; and so are the opportunities. A successful resolution of these challenges could trigger a virtuous cycle of growth and catapult the economy to the higher orbit. A failure may not be an option, as it could cause a disaster of unfathomable...

A random walk through the street

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  A random walk through the settlement statistic of NSE for past two decade and half decades provided some interesting insights into the market evolution over past two decades. It is interesting to note the things that have changed and the things that have not. Regardless, it is comforting to note that Indian markets are maturing well and the systemic risk appears to have subsided materially. The best part was to observe that our markets have become more democratic with deeper and wider participation. (All data is sourced from www.nseindia.com) Indian market maturing well The latest bull market has shown that the Indian investors and traders are maturing very well. The tendency to recklessly over trade that was witnessed during dotcom bubble, and to some lesser extent during credit bubble of 2007-08, seems to have been reigned well now. To give it some perspective, at the peak of the dotcom bubble, the average daily turnover of NSE was close to 0.8% of the total market capi...

Will the markets witness a major sectoral rotation from 2HFY22?

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 If we consider the sector wise performance since April 2020, there exists huge disparity between various sectors. While Metals and IT have remained massive outperformers; the consumer (FMCG & media) and PSU Banks have been lagging far behind. Auto, Services, Pharma, and Infrastructure have performed mostly in line with the benchmark Nifty. Pharma and Infrastructure performance is little surprising as both the sectors had major catalysts in Covid19 and massive government spending on infra building to stimulate the sagging economy. But what is most surprising is the lack of investors’ interest in PSU banks. Notwithstanding, numerous research upgrades of SBI; government beginning the process of disinvestment in couple of PSBs; improved profitability shown by all the PSBs in FY21; and a market heavyweight buying material stake into Canara Bank; and many private sector lenders faring much worse than their Public sector peers - PSU Banks have failed to impress the traders and in...