Posts

Covid trades

 With each report announcing further success in the endeavors of developing an effective vaccine for SRAS-CoV-2 (previously termed Covid-19) infection, the level of anxiety amongst the stock market traders and investors is rising disproportionately. Most of them appear anxious to find the best trade for the “normalization”. The fact that in past two years, the returns on investment for most of the investors and traders have been sub optimal, is further fuelling the anxiety. Most of them appear to believe that first mover will make extra ordinary gains, while the slow movers will miss this once in a decade opportunity. Recent discussion with market participants in India, US and Singapore, indicates that they are exploring a variety of ideas that could give extra ordinary return in next one year. Some of the common ideas include technology, healthcare and reflation. Logistics also appears to be fast emerging as one of the favored ideas. The following are the arguments I have hear...

India employment - Gender gap and skill mimatch need to be corrected

 The latest quarterly bulletin on employment and unemployment indicators released by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, Government of India makes interesting reading. The latest data presented in the bulletin in based on the Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) carried out between July-September 2019, i.e., well before the lockdown forced by the outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. The key highlights of the survey are as follows: ·          For the purposes of the Survey, the “Labour Force Participation Rate” (LFPR) is defined as the ratio of population which offers itself for employment, whether currently employed or unemployed. The “Worker Population Ratio” (WPR) is the ratio of employed workers in the total population of the country. ·          As per the latest data, in urban areas, LFPR was ~37%. For the young people (15-29yrs) the rate was at ~39%, while all people above 15...

Rush to gold as safegurd from hyperinflation could be quixotic

 Many readers have found my thoughts on “hyperinflation” yesterday little abstract (see Hyperinflation - Highly improbable ). They want me to elaborate further on why I think that “hyperinflation” is highly improbable in foreseeable future. I do not mind sharing the bases of my views on this topic. However, before elaborating my views of “hyperinflation”, I would like to clarify that when I say “hyperinflation”, I do not mean the term in its literal sense, because in that sense it makes no sense in the present day conditions. In the current context, by hyperinflation, we should understand episodes of sustained high inflation over a period of many months. To put this in further context, please note that “hyperinflation” is generally used to describe situations where the monthly inflation rate is greater than 50%. At this rate, an item that cost Rs1 on January 1 would cost Rs130 on January 1 of the following year. At least, in past few centuries, there is no instance of a global ...

Hyperinflation - Highly improbable

 It was particularly gloomy winter evening of 2008 in South Mumbai. The global financial markets had their knees frozen. One of the top global financial institutions, Lehman Brothers had collapsed a couple of months back. Another global financial giant Merrill Lynch lost its identity to Bank of America. Some peripheral European countries were on the brink of defaulting on their sovereign obligations. The bankers in the financial hub of India (South Mumbai) were staring at massive job losses. Numerous businesses were on the brink. Many large investors had also suffered huge losses in their portfolios. For younger investors and bankers in their 20s and 30s, the conditions were totally unprecedented. The fear, uncertainty, scale of value destruction was overwhelming as they had not experienced anything like that before. Most of the then had seen 5yrs of strong bull market in credit and capacity building in infrastructure, energy and housing. Suddenly, all the credit started to look ba...

Too many cooks will spoil the dish

 A few month ago, the banking and monetary regulator in India, the reserve Bank of India (RBI), assumed the responsibility of stimulating the economic growth, in addition to its primary responsibility of regulating & supervising the banking & money market institutions, formulating & implementing monetary policy to achieve the objectives of financial stability and price stability. Given the state of economy, no one could find any fault with the RBI assuming this additional responsibility. In fact the RBI was commended for taking this extra load. It is very well accepted that a well-functioning, deep and robust financial market is a must for economic development. On Wednesday, the financial market regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) assumed the additional responsibility for reviving the sagging Indian economy. SEBI’s chairman reportedly said “SEBI is considering multiple steps to reboot the economy through financial market reforms”. He said, “It...

Market moving in circles

Image
 In past one month I have read a lot of commentary about the smart investing, sectoral shifts, trade rotation, reflation trade, emergence of old economy etc. in the India equity markets. I find it pertinent to note the sectoral performances over three time periods – One year; Since Lock Down (25 March 2020); and Past three months when the unlock exercise meaningfully started. Some of the key features of sectoral performances over these time frames could be listed as follows: ·          Nifty has given positive return over all three time frames, but one year return in miniscule 2.6%, much lower than the bank fixed deposit or liquid fund return. ·          Only two sectors IT and Pharma have consistently outperformed the benchmark Nifty over all timeframes. PSUs as a sector have been consistently the worst performer on all time frames. ·          Energy, Inf...

Bretton Wood is not about Gold

 In the aftermath of devastation that took place due to the second world war (WWII), some key global institutions were created and multilateral agreements signed to (i) avert chances of another major war; (ii) enhance global cooperation for accelerated reconstruction work; and (iii) promotion of globalization of trade and commerce to ensure equitable growth and development. Bretton Wood agreement signed in 1944 was one of such efforts. The Bretton Woods agreement established the U.S. dollar as the reserve currency for world. The idea was to prevent competitive devaluations of currencies, avert trade wars and promote international economic cooperation for growth & development. The Bretton Wood signatories agreed to maintain fixed exchange rates between their respective currencies and the US Dollar. The US dollar in turn was pegged to the price of the gold. Until WWI, most countries followed the gold standard for their respective currencies; which essentially meant that they ...

Festivities missing from this festival season

 Last weekend I did my annual festival market check. This year, besides the main markets of Delhi, I visited some local markets in predominately lower middle class areas; and some markets in rural areas of North Delhi. I managed to speak with some very large importer and traders of consumer goods; auto dealers, farmers, real estate developers and owners of leased properties. Based on my observations, interactions and information, I would like to share the following feedback with readers: ·          The overall demand situation this festival season is materially worse than the last year. It is pertinent to note that the last year was also not good per se. ·          A large importer and trader dry fruits, mainly almonds and walnuts, indicated that global dry fruit prices are down over 25-30% as compared to last year. In India despite supply disruptions due to broken logistic chain, the prices are low...

This winter may be longer than usual

Image
 With each passing day, the realization is growing that it will “years” not months or quarters before the normalcy returns to the global economy. Regardless of the statistics on global trade, national income and corporate earnings, the impact of pandemic on humanity, especially poverty, inequality, and suppression is overwhelmingly devastating. The pandemic has indubitably undone the decades of efforts in poverty alleviation and public health in numerous developing and underdeveloped countries. As per a recent Bloomberg report based on a study conducted by the World Bank and Philippine’s local agencies, “almost half of shuttered businesses were unsure when they could reopen”. As per the report, “in emerging parts of Southeast Asia, where a wave of job losses and weak social safety nets mean millions are at risk of losing their rung on the social mobility ladder. The region is likely to come in second behind the Indian subcontinent in charting the number of new poor in Asia this y...

How Indians waste their time

Image
National Sample Survey Organization (NSSO) recently published a very interesting report. The report highlights how an average Indian uses his time. Based on a survey conducted between January and December 2019, the report describes how Indian household uses their time especially on unpaid caregiving activities, volunteer work, unpaid domestic service producing activities of the household members, learning, socializing, leisure activities, self-care activities, etc. The key finding of the survey (conducted for persons aged 6yrs and above) could be listed as follows: Engagement of people in various activities ·          The percentage of women engaged in employment and related activities is very low (18.4%) as compared to male (57.3%). The percentage of rural women in employment is higher (19.2%) than the urban women (16.7%). ·          More rural women (25%) produce goods for own use than the urban wo...