Thursday, September 12, 2024

Silent transitions

My relationship manager at a private bank recently offered me a “metal card”; claiming it to be the most premium credit card available in India. I learnt that though globally the metal cards have been in vogue for two decades, these have become popular in India only in the past couple of years. Of course, I did not meet the eligibility criteria for the card, and also, I found it to be too ‘elite’ for my spending profile.

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Smart people learn from history or those who learn from history are smart

In recent weeks, a lot of market participants and commentators have expressed concern about the rising household (retail) investors’ interest in the SME segment of the Indian stock market. It has been highlighted that most of the businesses being listed on this platform may not be genuine and/or sustainable. The regulators have also expressed apprehensions about the widespread manipulation in the prices of several SME stocks. A 400x oversubscription to the recent Rs120mn IPO of a motorcycle dealership in Delhi has provided further impetus to the discussions on this topic.

There are demands that the criteria for listing on SME segments must be tightened and there should be deeper scrutiny of the companies proposing to list on this segment. The regulator, SEBI, is considering these demands and intends to prescribe stricter rules for the SME listings.

In this context it is pertinent to note the following points.

1.    As part of the broader capital market reforms, which included abolition of capital controls and establishment of an autonomous market regulator (SEBI), the Over-the-Counter Exchange of India (OTCEI) was established in 1990. OTCEI was modeled after the NASDAQ trading platform of the US and meant to provide small and medium sized enterprises (SME) a fully automated national platform for raising risk capital.

A number of SME promoters used this platform to raise money in the 1990s. However, the experiment was considered a failure as the listing process lacked adequate scrutiny and ingenious promoters were able to raise money at unsustainable valuations. A majority of the companies that raised money on OTCEI vanished, inflicting substantial losses to the investors.

2.    In the mid-1990s there were 29 recognized stock exchanges in India. The 28 regional stock exchanges (RSEs) helped the local companies to raise risk capital. All these RSEs had floor base trading and physical settlement of securities. A majority of investors in these local companies were also from the same state or region. For example, a company listed only on the Madras Stock Exchange was more likely to have investors from Tamil Nadu as its shareholders, because investors from other regions usually did not have access to the Madras Stock Exchange.

With the advent of the National Stock Exchange (NSE) as a computer based national trading platform, things started to change from 1995 onwards. In a couple of years the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) also transformed itself into a computer based national trading platform. Over the next decade and a half, all the RSEs faded into oblivion. Most relevant companies migrated from these RSEs to these two national stock exchanges. But many smaller local companies, listed only on these RSEs, also perished along with them. Not all of those companies were fraudulent. Many of them were just not big enough to qualify for trading on national stock exchanges. Investors in those companies also suffered for a long period; until they made offers to buy back their shares.

The point to ponder over is “did the market participants – regulators, stock exchanges, brokers, investment bankers, investors, etc., - learn any lesson from the OTCEI and RSEs episodes?” To me, prima facie, it appears that the same drama is being played all over again at SME platform; and only the unscrupulous promoters and intermediaries have learnt their lessons from the past failures, and become even more smart.

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Opportunity or threat

Last weekend I received an innocuous looking post facto graph from a friend. The chart depicted how the Chinese companies have gained prominence during the first two decades of the twenty-first century. Evidently, these developments have already occurred and are there for everyone to see and feel. There is nothing about this that can be changed.

Thursday, September 5, 2024

Funding crisis deepening for emerging economies

The latest report of the United Nation Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) highlights that the funding deficit for the developing economies to meet Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is rising. As per the report, the gap is now about US$4trn, up from US$2.5trn in 2015 when the SDGs were adopted.

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Mahadev must prepare to absorb venom, once again

One small cap solar PV module manufacturer stock has yielded a return of 100x in less than two years, since its IPO listing in October 2022. There are many other “clean energy” stocks which have witnessed 5x to 20x rise in their stock prices. In most of these cases, the improvement in business and financial fundamentals of the concerned company is not commensurate with the rise in the stock price.

Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Waiting for a divine intervention

Last weekend I visited some villages in the Bareilly, Shahjehanpur and Hathras districts of Uttar Pradesh. I had an opportunity to speak with several medium, small and marginal farmers.

Thursday, August 29, 2024

State of the unorganized sector in India

Last month, the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) released the results of its annual survey of unincorporated sector enterprises (ASUSE). The survey was conducted during October 2022 to September 2023.

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Employment- Gender gap and skill mismatch remain alarming

The latest Periodic Labor Force Survey (PLFS), released on 16 August 2024 by the National Statistical office (NSO), provides some useful insights into the current employment conditions in the country. The following are some of the key observations from the Survey report.

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Staying put for now

The US Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Jerome Powell has provided the much-anticipated fuel to the US markets, which appeared running out of fuel after a shocking job revision. Speaking at the annual Jackson Hole symposium, he unambiguously hinted that “The time has come for policy to adjust” as “inflation has declined significantly. The labor market is no longer overheated, and conditions are now less tight than those that prevailed before the pandemic”. Though he qualified his remarks by adding, “the timing and pace of rate cuts will depend on incoming data, the evolving outlook and the balance of risks”.

Thursday, August 22, 2024

1QFY25 – Earnings held no surprise, optimism moderating

The latest earnings season (1QFY25) is almost over. the ~4% yoy growth in NSE500 profit after tax (PAT) has marginally exceeded the modest expectations of a 3% yoy growth. NSE500 revenue grew ~6% yoy. This is the slowest pace of growth since the covid affected 1QFY21. The refiners and oil marketing companies materially dragged the overall performance. Sequentially, the earnings growth slipped sharply from 4QFY24.