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Some random thoughts

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The global macro landscape remains in flux. A strange mix of structural deflationary forces is colliding with equally powerful inflationary pressures. Technology, demographics, geopolitics, and policy responses are all pulling in different directions — making this one of the most complex investing environments in decades. I am not competent enough to decode where the current conditions are driving us. Nonetheless, I would like to share some random thoughts with the readers and seek their views on these. Inflation vs Deflation: The great tug of war At the structural level, Artificial Intelligence, aging demographics, and the rapid adoption of renewable energy are profoundly deflationary for the global economy. ·           AI is driving efficiency, collapsing cost structures, and displacing traditional labor models. ·           Demographics in most major economies — from China to Europe to Japan — ar...

1HFY26 – India shackled

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The first half of the financial year FY26 has been good for financial and commodity markets in general. Despite elevated geopolitical concerns, renewed trade war, slowing growth in major economies and emerging deflationary pressures, stock market, crypto assets, and precious metals, and industrial metals performed rather well. Energy and soft commodity prices were lower, indicating good price control. The global central bankers accordingly remained on the easing path. India however was an outlier in the global context. Indian equities, currency and bond markets were one of the worst performers globally. South Koren equities were the best performing equities in 1HFY26. Chinese and German equities were other notable outperformers. Equity indices of the US, Japan, and the UK also recorded strong gains. The most notable feature of global markets was the sharp rally in precious metal. The central bankers across emerging markets accelerated their gold accumulation, in view of the geopolitica...

FY25 – All’s well that ends well

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Financial Year 2024-25 (FY25), may be recorded in the annals of history as a watershed year for global politics, geopolitics, markets and the financial system. The events that occurred during the past twelve months have opened up significant possibilities for emergence of a new global order. Although the contours of the likely new global order are yet to begin taking a shape, it appears that fight for dominance over technology; endeavor to gain fiscal strength; interventionist democracy where the state exercises intensive control over citizens; and top priority to energy security would be four key characteristics of the new order. The markets began to take cognizance of the broader developments and oscillated wildly between the extremes of greed and fear during the year. However, thankfully, markets managed to close the year on a rather satisfactory note. Most asset classes – equity, bonds, precious metals, base metals and real estate yielded decent returns for the year. Moreover, as...

Cautious FOMC spoils the Santa party

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The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) of the US federal Reserve (Fed) obliged the market consensus by cutting its overnight borrowing rate by 25bps to a target range of 4.25%-4.5%. One member of FOMC voted against the cut, preferring to maintain the status quo. Noting the economic conditions, especially still elevated inflationary expectations and resilient growth, the Fed indicated that 2025 may see fewer cuts than the previously estimated number. “With today’s action, we have lowered our policy rate by a full percentage point from its peak, and our policy stance is now significantly less restrictive,” Chair Jerome Powell said at his post-meeting news conference. “We can therefore be more cautious as we consider further adjustments to our policy rate.” The FOMC raised its projection for full-year 2024 GDP growth to 2.5%, from 2% in September. However, in the following years, the FOMC officials expect GDP to slow down to its long-term projection of 1.8%. The committee lowered its...

Alternatives continue to remain attractive

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Traditionally, the asset allocators have considered the potential return of the various alternatives (to equity and fixed income) to determine the portfolio structure of investors. Of course, the factors like size of portfolio, feasibility of investing in assets like real estate, risk appetite of individual investor, and liquidity requirements etc., influence the allocation to some alternatives. However, dematerialization of assets like real estate (through REITS), Gold (ETF) Bonds (bond funds, RBI direct investment platform etc.) now makes the alternatives relevant even for small investors. In the past one year, the alternatives assets (e.g., gold, bitcoin) have performed significantly better than equities. Even the average yield of long duration bond funds has been similar to the Nifty50 return. The investors may therefore want to evaluate the return prospects of these alternatives in future to determine their asset allocation strategy.   In this context, I note the following to ...

Hold on to your horses, for now

The benchmark Nifty50 has rallied over 3% in the past three trading sessions. This rise in Nifty50 has come after a fall of ~11% in the preceding eight weeks. Most market participants have attributed this rally to the assembly election results of Maharashtra. The incumbent alliance (Mahayuti) has registered a sweeping victory, with BJP winning ~90% of the seats it contested. The popular narrative is that the overwhelming victory in the Maharashtra election would strengthen the Prime Minister led union government and reinvigorate the development agenda, especially the infrastructure capex. I find this narrative counterintuitive and mostly speculative. There is absolutely no substantive evidence to support these assumptions. To the contrary, there are some indications of slowdown in infra capex in FY26, as fiscal consolidation gets higher priority. In this context, I take note of the following: ·          Mahayuti alliance was running a stable m...

Goal incongruence

Lower duty on gold, wider trust deficit In her final budget for FY25 (presented in July 2024), the finance minister had cut the import duty on gold from 15% to 6%. No clarity was provided for this measure in the budget papers. It is widely speculated that the move was to help the RBI in augmenting its gold reserves and bring back its gold stock held with foreign custodians; and also lower the domestic gold prices to help the government to redeem the sovereign gold bonds at a lower price. The move has resulted in higher consumer demand for gold, resulting in larger quantities of gold import having adverse impact on the current account balance. This is prima facie contrary to the intent of the government to encourage household savings to move away from physical assets like gold towards financial assets; and maintain a healthy current account balance to support INR and bond yields. The move dented the credibility of the government and widened the trust deficit a little more. Cooking...

The morning after

The union budget for the fiscal year 2024-2025 has been read, analyzed, criticized, and apparently brushed aside by the markets. Changes in the taxation of capital gains; changes in the custom duty and capital gain tax structure for gold; and higher rate of STT on derivative transactions are three points that have attracted the maximum attention, especially from the market participants. I had posted my first impression of the Union Budget FY25 on Tuesday. On a second reading of the budget documents and listening to the views of a variety of experts, I have gathered some more inputs that I would like to share with the readers. Impact of capital gain tax changes on equity markets The long-term capital gain tax (LTCG) on sale of listed shares has been increased from 10% to 12.5% and the short-term capital gain tax (STCG) has been increased from 15% to 20%. The market reacted negatively to the announcement initially. However, all the losses were recouped within an hour. This has sur...