Monday, September 14, 2015

Nifty: Precariously close to breaking point

Thought for the day
"People who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do."
Isaac Asimov (American, 1920-1992)
Word for the day
Swimmingly (adv)
Without difficulty; with great success; effortlessly
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Three cheers for Leander Paes!!!
Have you noticed, Indian players usually do much better when paired with foreigners.
Doesn't it apply to business also?
Indian managers have done exceedingly good with foreigners like Page, Gates, Buffet, etc.

Nifty: Precariously close to breaking point

Last Friday Nifty tested the breaking point of a major bearish head & shoulder pattern and staged a feeble bounce back.
As the Nifty daily chart below shows, a material close below 7560 level will confirm a yearlong H&S pattern, opening the doors for a much larger and sharper correction over next six months.
In view of the higher volatility expected post FOMC rate hike decision on Friday, it is more likely that the market may continue to oscillate in the 7560-7940 range this week, before breaking out (or down) next week.
However, if Nifty manages to close above 8000 this week, the pull back rally may extend to at least 8240 next week.
In any case, from six months perspective, the eventual lower target of Nifty remains 6860 and the upside at this point in time appears capped at 8600 level.
A bounce back above 8170 level on favorable Fed, will be an opportunity to aggressively sell.
This week however my strategy should be wait on the side lines. In case of a early fall below 7600 during the week, I may consider buying near month ATM straddles for holding till Monday morning.
 
 
 

Friday, September 11, 2015

Crisis far away, but govt pressing the pedal hard


"There is not much danger that real talent or goodness will be overlooked long; even if it is, the consciousness of possessing and using it well should satisfy one."
-Louisa May Alcott (American, 1832-1888)
Word for the day
Lackadaisical (adj)
Without interest, vigor, or determination; listless; lethargic
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Heard on Raisina Hills about Bihar strategy - "MSY will contest all seats allocated to JDU in Bihar alliance to garner the Yadav and Muslim votes. Post elections, both Yadav relatives (LY and MSY) will form a majority government and show the door to Nitish Kumar!"

Crisis far away, but govt pressing the pedal hard

The more the government sings "All is Well", the more the people are getting suspicious about the real health of the economy. Though the situation is still miles away from being qualify as "crisis", the distance could be covered in no time if a global contagion propels the Indian economy down.
At this point in time like most of my friends, I am not too sure about where the problem actually lies. It could be that the government—
(a)   has access to specific information about economic progress in the country, but not able to communicate it properly; or
(b)   is mostly oblivious of the conditions at the ground and just indulging in complacent conjecturing based on random data like monthly IIP numbers or car sales; or
(c)    is well aware of the slack in the economy and rising discontentment, but has chosen to live in denial, hoping the problem will get resolved on its own with the passage of time; or
(d)   is struggling to find effective solutions around which consensus could be built; or
(e)    knows the problem well but has no clue about the solutions.
Whatever be the case, it would leave lot of space for skepticism and caution in investment.
Another thing that never fails to intrigue me is the government's fixation with China.
The finance minister, said in a recent interview with the BBC: “An economy which can grow at 8 to 9 per cent like India certainly has viable shoulders to provide support to the global economy.”
In one of the strongest “move-over-China” remarks, Jayant Sinha, minister of state for finance, said Delhi was ready to “take the baton of global growth” from Beijing. He chirpily told an audience in Bihar, one of India’s poorest and most benighted states: “In coming days, India will leave China behind as far as growth and development matter.”
We all know that in the context of global economy, to compensate for 1% fall in China's GDP, India would need to add 4% to her GDP.
Instead of indulging in shenanigans over slow down in Chinese and making rhetorical claims, the government needs to put its head together and seriously re-work its China strategy.
This is the time when we could strengthen our economic ties with China. This may not only pave way for resolution of geo-political issue in due course of time, but also help India overcome its primary of capital inadequacy.
We could use idle factories of China to produce for Indian markets at much cheaper cost, till the time our manufacturing capabilities are adequately augmented.
There is a major risk - that cheaper sourcing from China may lead to miscarriage of PM's "Make in India" baby. But ain't this risk too obvious to worry about?

Thursday, September 10, 2015

What da' ya' bring to table?

"Housekeeping ain't no joke."
-Louisa May Alcott (American, 1832-1888)
Word for the day
Ogdoad n)
The number eight or group of eight.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Over to Patna!
 

What da' ya' bring to table?

The Finance Minister said on Wednesday that the government is finalizing a list of tax exemptions to be phased out as part of the exercise to reduce corporate tax rate to 25 per cent in four years. He also clarified that every tax demand cannot be termed as tax terrorism, he said, the government will not relent on pursuing black money in India or abroad.
To me it implies that in next four years the effective corporate tax rate may be 10-15% higher than the present effective rate of tax. And it will be much more difficult to evade or "plan" tax liability.
I am sure it does not sound music to many years.
My interaction with many of these market participants, including industrialist, traders, brokers, analysts, investors and bankers, in past many months has underlined a serious dichotomy. The market is asking for something it does not want – serious economic reforms.
An overwhelming majority of publically traded companies are found to be direct or indirect beneficiary of (a) the inefficiencies of the administration; (b) lack of transparency; (c) incongruent policy framework; (d) unduly supportive politicians; (e) government largesse in form of misdirected subsidies; and (f) protection from fair competition at the expense of consumers, etc.
Some real economic reforms, as against administrative and procedural corrections, could destroy the basic premise behind many large Indian companies.
The economic reforms often mean transformational changes that not necessarily lead to immediate rise in corporate profitability and aid in resource grabbing. On the other hand these usually do lead to lesser protection, more competition and larger accountability for corporates. If you do not want to pay taxes, cost of compliance and market linked compensation for exploitation of natural resources clamoring for economic reforms may not yield much.
Those clamoring for reforms may want to figure out whether:
(a)   Industries and businesses who have thrived historical on government largesse and not necessarily on the enterprising abilities of promoters are willing to give back to society by way higher taxes, higher voluntary CSR spending, technology upgrade for better resource utilization, etc.;
(b)   Regions like Gujarat and Maharashtra, which are economically more developed despite not being endowed richly with natural resources, are willing to acknowledge that a part of their development is due to imperial designs of British regime and share their wealth with exploited regions like Jharkhand and Odisha.
(c)    Caste, communities, families and individuals which command ownership of the major part of economic resources and occupy most of the social space, are likely to voluntarily vacate some space for the historically oppressed and downtrodden.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

First things first

"Let my name stand among those who are willing to bear ridicule and reproach for the truth's sake, and so earn some right to rejoice when the victory is won."
-Louisa May Alcott (American, 1832-1888)
Word for the day
Febrile (adj)
Feverish, with fever
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
The so called "Modi effect" has been completely neutralized from equity and forex market.
Time is now to decide - if a new beginning should be made or let things be like that!

First things first

Expectation is a strange animal. More you beat it, stronger it rises. Consistent underachievement is perhaps the only way to kill it.
The national media widely and prominently reported the fall of Sensex to May 2014 level when the incumbent government assumed charge from the outgoing UPA government. INR is weaker by over 10% vs USD, since then.
The astounding victory of NDA had raised staggering expectations in all sections of the society. Mandate 2014 was unmistakably for a person who projected himself as epitome of pragmatism, development, inclusivity, nationalism and good governance. He therefore does not enjoy the luxury of hiding behind the shields like limitation of coalition, party ideology and conventional political paradigms. People afforded him complete freedom to deliver on the promised change and expected an express delivery from him.
After 15months of regime change, the mood at best could be described as that of circumspection.
First to set the record straight, I note that the total market capitalization of companies listed on BSE has risen to INR92trn from INR82trn at the end of May 2014. The real effective exchange rate of INR (REER) for the basket of 6 as well as 36curremcies is also higher as compared to May'14 level.
So, if equity market and INR valuation is any criteria to evaluate the performance of a government, it has not been bad, especially in light of global uncertainties and volatility.
Second, I had been frequently highlighting that Narendra Modi unmistakably has the administrative and strategic prowess to drive the change. However, it would be preposterous to assume that he can do it on his own. He needs the support and cooperation of all in his colossal endeavor. So far there is little evidence of cooperation from the fellow politicians (including from BJP, allies, and opposition) and business community. The problem therefore is that a vast majority of 1.26bn Indians is expecting Narendra Modi to deliver for them, at least on economic front, but no one is willing to give anything from their side.
Least of all, the populace which has grown to be non-compliant by habit, not necessarily by intention, is not even willing to change habits like spitting on roads, violating traffic rules, encroaching on pavements in front of their house/shops, and exploiting domestic helps and child labor etc.
PM has met the captains of Indian industry yesterday. I am not privy to what transpired in the meeting, but from anecdotal evidence and media reports I can guess that it was nothing useful - in the sense that industry sought favors which the government is not in a position to grant and offered nothing in return.
In my view, two tasks need to top the list of priorities for the government–
(a)   Bridging the multitude of deficits prevalent in the country, especially trust deficit, governance deficit, compliance deficit, skill deficit, social and physical infrastructure deficit, and capital deficit. Though the Prime Minister has shown vision to achieve past of this task, there is little evidence of execution on this front.
(b)   Bringing India into a state of equilibrium by removing social, and regional, economic imbalances. This task cannot be accomplished without active cooperation of all the states. So far no reason to be optimist on this count.......to continue

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Jounrey more important than destination

"Do the things you know, and you shall learn the truth you need to know."
-Louisa May Alcott (American, 1832-1888)
Word for the day
Schlemiel (n)
An awkward and unlucky person for whom things never turn out right.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
The simple question is "whether OROP will remain confined to armed forces, or it will spread to other public services also?"
A more complex poser would be "Should it?"

Jounrey more important than destination

Speaking to the journalists at the sidelines of G-20 meet in Ankara, the finance minister Arun Jaitely reportedly said, "Factors like the Chinese devaluation of yuan and the US Fed's likely interest rate hike are "transient" and it will be only the real economy that will dictate the currency rate fluctuations and markets in India".
I am not sure whether this statement was made in zest or he really meant it. For, if he really meant it, the observers may want to evaluate if he is living in denial. I would leave it here.
Nonetheless, in my personal belief such events are never "transient". Though cyclical in nature such events invariably leave a lasting impression on global economic structure.
First, standing here in summer of 2015, many market participants who are in their 20's and 30's may see watershed events like making and dissolution of USSR; erection and demolition of German Wall; beginning and end of cold war; signing and termination of Bretton Wood Agreement; rise and fall of Japanese Yen; rise and fall of Asian tigers as "transient" in the global economic and political order; whereas those in their 70's and 80's might still be considering these events in their investment, trading and risk management strategies.
The lesson here is that what is "transient" to an anthropologist or geologist may not be so to a historian or politician.
Secondly, specifically speaking, US Fed rate hike this time is nothing like a point in normal monetary policy cycle. This follows almost a decade of unconventional monetary policy measures that have created imbalances of gigantic proportion in the global economic order. The rate hike would signal the recognition of need for normalization. The process would be lengthy, extensive, somewhat disruptive and not without pain. Denying it as "transient" could have disastrous consequences.
Similarly, liberalization of CNY might mark the beginning of the correction of a prolonged inconsistency in the global economic order. The disproportionate trade imbalances created through "controlled" CNY since the entry of China in WTO winter of 2001 will correct to the detriment of lenders and commodity suppliers who have created capacities to match inflated Chinese demand.
The general view is that these corrections in global order will create good opportunities for India. But these opportunities will not occur automatically. India may perhaps need to effect necessary corrections in her own socio-economic structure to become compatible to these opportunities.
For example, over next decade China may have to run down its forex reserves to compensate for the lower trade and capital inflows. Similarly, the commodity economies thriving on credit driven Chinese and other EM demand may also run down USD reserves to compensate for lower Chinese demand and collapsing commodity prices. USD yield may rise consequent to Fed rate hike attracting USD investments (or carry trade unwind) from across the world. Consequently, the global economy may face a "transient" liquidity shortage.
The wealth of Indian investors could erode materially in the transition if the government does not create conducive environment to attract adequate global flows to compensate for FPI outflows in this period.

 
 

Monday, September 7, 2015

Nifty: Outlook weakens further

Thought for the day
"I am not afraid of storms for I am learning how to sail my ship."
-Louisa May Alcott (American, 1832-1888)
Word for the day
Coincident (adj)
Happening at the same time.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
The people who knew the former president Dr. Kalam, please tell me - How Kalam Saheb's soul would have reacted to his name being dragged in street level controversy?

Nifty: Outlook weakens further

India’s benchmark equity indices sank to their lowest level in 14 months on Friday and are staring at a volatile week ahead as well.
On weekly chart, Nifty has perhaps given worst closing since January 2008.
Nifty not only undid the entire recovery from low 7667 recorded last week and closed lower than the low of last week, but also did not make any attempt to test the gap created on Monday.
The market has gained good momentum - volumes are higher and volatility is rising. Though there are no sign of capitulation as yet, but the consistently negative market breadth suggests that the move towards large cap has begun. This is usually often a sign of poor market expectations.
The option data is also suggesting an extremely cautious market. The activity in 7000 and 6500 Nifty put options has gained currency last week.
At present Nifty is trading close to its minor support level of 7640. But there no buying opportunity. If Nifty fails to trade above 7975 in next 10 trading sessions, it would be a major signal to aggressively short Indian equities for a certain target of 7450 and eventual target of 6860.
Buying opportunities may emerge only below 7130 Nifty level.
 

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Till QE4

"The person you consider ignorant and insignificant is the one who came from God, that he might learn bliss from grief and knowledge from gloom."
-Khalil Gibran (Lebanese, 1883-1931)
Word for the day
Well-nigh (adv)
Very nearly; Almost
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
It appears that the Bihar is headed towards "winner takes it all" results.
180-200 seats for NDA or Grand Alliance will surely resonate loud in the winter session of the Parliament.

Till QE4

Attending an investors' meet in Delhi yesterday evening was quite a revelation. Despite heightened volatility, sub-par macro data, global turmoil and tight liquidity conditions - the greed still appeared the primary sentiment.
There were though some signs of fear gaining currency in the whispers about the worsening credit quality of Indian corporates, especially those with USD debt on their books. Awareness about the market turmoil and frequent margin problems was also reasonably good.
The participants were cautious in deploying fresh money after recent spurt in volatility, but there was no sign of capitulation. The narrative moved around "there is no alternative" (TINA). Nationalism rather than economics was conspicuous as the guiding principle.
After listening to the views of so many experienced, large and professional investors, it appears to me that the trade is gradually transitioning from micro to macro. It is mostly "India over other emerging markets" due to her macro stability and better fundamentals.
Logically as this transition progresses, the divergence between the performance of cyclical and secular sectors should weaken. Likewise, the returns of specific portfolios and benchmark should also converge.
I shall be watching Indian markets keenly over next couple of months to find reflections of this trend. It might provide three major trade opportunities in Indian context - (i) Long financials and energy and short consumers; (ii) Long Bank Nifty and Short Nifty; and (iii) short volatility.
I would however maintain that in strict technical sense the benchmark indices may see 10-12% correction from the current levels over next 6-9 months. The correction in broader markets could be much deeper and wider.
I am also worried about the complacency over the impact of the impending US Federal rate hike. A stronger USD post the "lift" may potentially trigger an avalanche of carry trade unwinding, impacting many EM currencies.
Many emerging markets have enjoyed weaker USD, near zero interest rates and higher commodity prices for over a decade. They have accumulated debt in billions of USD debt. The rise in EM debt consequent to USD appreciation, along with higher debt servicing cost and lower commodity realization, will definitely be disruptive. unless adequately compensated by aggressive USD flows towards these markets.
I am therefore in the school which believes that QE4 is not only inevitable but imminent also.
The time between the rate hike by US Fed and the commencement of QE4 will however be extremely tough on EM investors - be it equity, bonds or currencies.
As of now I do not see any need to change my investment strategy.
By the way, the best part of the evening was a simple Jain dinner (to my liking, without onion!) served after the meeting;. I love the food that is easy to cook, eat and digest.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

May have to wait a little longer for good times

"Most people who ask for advice from others have already resolved to act as it pleases them."
-Khalil Gibran (Lebanese, 1883-1931)
Word for the day
Argy-bargy (n)
A vigorous discussion or dispute.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Does Hardik Patel has the potential to become symbol of Gujarati Pride, the way Bal Thackeray emerged as symbol of Marathi pride?

May have to wait a little longer for good times

The macro data released in past three days has made it imperative that claims of witnessing green shoots made during past few months should be revalidated.
Some inconsistencies in provisional GDP data for 1QFY16 suggest that the 7% number may be further revised downward in due course.
The core sector growth and factory output growth data for July and August respectively suggest that the conditions are not much different in the current quarter also. In fact the agriculture activity may have slowed down further due to poor monsoon.
The rise in government capital expenditure may reflect in somewhat better construction activity. But steep slowdown in private projects could neutralize that as well.
We may therefore need to work with a 6-7% growth assumption henceforth rather than 7.5-8% assumed earlier.
Secondly, the PMI data for August reveals serious lack of pricing power with manufacturers. The slowdown comes despite manufacturers making the steepest cuts to prices since early 2009, as input costs fell for the first time in six months.
At macro level, we may therefore see:
(a)   Continued negative print on producer price inflation in coming months.
(b)   Low level of inventories in the system may support the prices at current levels. In fact, lower inventories may temporarily support pick up in manufacturing activity as producers rebuild inventory positions.
(c)    RBI may be under pressure to cut policy rates further.
Some banks have shown intention to transmit the rate cuts by lowering lending rates ahead of RBI's policy. Though a token 25bps cut may not help much, a material cut (50-75bps) accompanied by liquidity easing measures like SLR cut and USD buying to neutralize the rate cut impact on currency may provide some impetus.
At micro level:
(i)    We may see material earning downgrades post 2QFY16 results, as analysts recalculate the lower commodity price advantage for manufacturing companies. In my view, most of this advantage may be passed on to consumer, given the sluggish demand environment.
(ii)   A material fall in real estate and equity prices from current levels may trigger a contagious rating downgrade in corporate debt of troubled sectors, especially textile, sugar, power, metals and other infra asset owners. The stress on financial sector may therefore not ease in material proportion in next few quarters.
(iii)  INR depreciation beyond a certain level may also add to the debt burden of many companies which have borrowed overseas money.
In simple words, investors may have to wait little longer for good times.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Mr. Market emerges victorius, once again


"Time has been transformed, and we have changed"
-Khalil Gibran (Lebanese, 1883-1931)
Word for the day
Enceinte (adj)
pregnant
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Governor Rajan says he continues to remain "accommodative". Whereas industry finds him unnecessarily hawkish.
Could you solve this conundrum?

Mr. Market emerges victorius, once again


The apparent failure of the largest equity for debt swap in the history holds important lesson for all of us.

The Chinese policy makers faced with mammoth debt of state of enterprises (SoE) and poor health of their financial sector hastily encouraged transfer of risk from SoEs to their unsuspecting population.

The process worked like this:

·         The state encouraged the household investors to take out their deposits from banks, bring in their money lying in overseas accounts, leverage their strong balance sheet and overseas assets to buy equity in SoEs, which had unmanageable debt on their books.

·         The SoEs would redeem their debt to the domestic lenders from the equity money collected from household investors.

·         Lenders would use the repayment received from SoEs to fund the margin money to fuel an unprecedented stock market boom to create wealth effect at massive scale.

This wealth effect was needed to propel domestic consumption needed to support (i) the economic growth that was sinking as the export demand slowed down and (ii) the overcapacities in infrastructure sector that had begun to look ridiculous.

The objective therefore was to kill many birds with one stone, e.g., - (a) convert the unmanageable debt of SoEs into equity, (b) restoring the health of lenders through repayments received from SoEs; (c) create a massive wealth effect to encourage domestic consumption to lower the reliance on exports for growth; (d) make the humongous investments made in infrastructure building in past one decade financially viable through higher utilization rate.

The gamble has obviously failed.

Mr. Market has once again emerged victorious in a battle with the state. It is proven once again that attempts to control free markets through state command are least likely to succeed.

The refusal of Chinese stock market to play the ball has actually increased the financial stress to ominous level - as a large part of the stress which was concentrated only at few SoEs and lenders has got spread out widely to households.

As we know from our experience from a similar episode, popularly known as Harshad Mehta period (1989-1991), the destruction of household wealth at this massive scale causes structural problems in the economy and the impact lasts for many years.

Even after so many years of that episode, the household investment in stock market has not reached even at half the level seen in early 1990s. Despite one of the highest household savings rate in emerging markets, the foreign money gets to play the controlling role in our stock market.

More on this later this week.