Friday, July 11, 2014

Budget 2014 - Economy before Markets

Arun Jaitley presented his maiden budget on Thursday. The expectations from the budget were running high since the Modi govt got elected to power with clear majority. Narendra Modi's election campaign was rife with promises of reforms, employment and better days ahead. This budget, along with the railway budget presented on Tuesday were closely watched as they signaled the real intentions of new govt in power. It was not just investor's but the general public's way of finding out whether Modi govt can walk the talk.

Arun Jaitley, in a limited time and little maneuvering room available to him did a good job. He presented a budget which clearly indicated that India meant business. He, through his policy announcements tried to build a strong foundation for pro-growth path ahead. He did not fell in the trap of announcing reform measures to make stock market investors happy. Rather, he kept the focus on the audacious task of bringing economy house in order now, so that the benefits of growth can be reaped by all later.

But this budget was also not without few misses and disappointments. Many investors expected some announcement of doing away with controversial tax laws which FM has deliberately chose not to address. He explained his reasoning here in this interview. He also did not mention any policy to strengthen the recovery mechanism for banks.

Most investors were keen to find out how FM will create a balance between fiscal consolidation and kickstart the growth cycle. FM bravely accepted the challenge of capping the fiscal deficit target at ambitious 4.1% set by his predecessor. The fact that markets would not have blamed him or his govt on seeing a higher target number clearly sets out the intentions of the new govt. How much success will he meet only time will tell. For now, we can see and check the math behind the numbers and see for ourselves how much of these targets are achievable.

To meet the fiscal deficits target, FM seems to rely heavily on aggressive tax collections targets and divestment proceeds. The tax revenue is assumed to grow by 19.8% over actual FY14 figures with nominal GDP growth estimate of 13.4%. This tax revenue target is difficult to achieve, if not entirely impossible. The implicit assumption of tax elasticity of 1.5 in the tax revenue target is more reasonable during boom times, not when economy is trying to get out of pits.

Also, a third of tax revenues is corporate taxes which depend on their profitability, something which is beyond govt control. It will be unfortunate if govt resort to tax terrorism like its predecessor. In the event of not meeting their targets, they may have to hike their divestment targets.

Speaking of divestment targets, govt is hoping to net Rs. 63,425 crores in proceeds. Private companies have raised Rs. 12,000 crores via QIPs (which were heavily oversubscribed) in last few months. With India receiving $20bn annual FII inflows, the divestment target does not look unreasonable. Most analysts/economists expects govt to put its stake in Coal India and ONGC on block for retail investors soon. This will not only help achieve divestment targets, they will also help govt to adhere to SEBI prescribed promotor stake limit.

All in all, I think govt is on right track prioritizing fiscal consolidation over pro-growth measures. It would have been easy for govt to get carried away as country struggles with low growth rates, high inflation and threats of weak monsoons and drought situations. Instead, FM focused on getting the house in order, tightening the belts while trying not to hurt the wallet of general public and preparing the ground for better days ahead.

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Weekly Market Commentary - May 19, 2014 - May 23, 2014

As dust settles on election results, investors now keenly wait for the formation of new government structure, which PM elect Narendra Modi has indicated would be small and compact. Investors are all excited and the sentiment on the street is quite bullish – midcap gained more than 10% this week, largely due to strong performance from domestics. Also, see this chart.

Modi will take the oath of PM office on Monday along with his cabinet (hopefully) and we may see return of Arun Shourie to mainstream politics. He was widely known for his portfolio of disinvestment minister – when he ushered in slashing govt stakes from key companies in a bid to make them less bureaucratic, less corrupt and more competitive and efficient.

There are huge expectations with new govt, which has won this election on the agenda of development and reforms. A Reuters report cited this week that finance ministry is working on a proposal to cut welfare spending and reining in fiscal deficit to 3.8-3.9% of GDP in its first budget – hopefully will be presented in July. In my view, it is a prudent step – not only it will make govt. more fiscally responsible, it will also have a long-term impact on inflation.

Sensex ended this week up by 2.4% while Nifty was up by 2.3% and Midcap up by 10.2%

Monday - Sensex up by 1.0%, Nifty up by 0.8%, Midcap up by 4.4%
Markets continued their journey upwards, with Sensex and Nifty on their record-breaking spree. The domestics remained the central attraction to investors and sustained their rally. Gains were capped with exporters such as IT majors and pharma falling as rupee strengthened against the dollar.

Tuesday - Sensex up by 0.1%, Nifty up by 0.2%, Midcap up by 1.0%
Strong performance by domestics and midcaps continued as cabinet formation days draws nearer.

Wednesday - Sensex down by 0.3%, Nifty down by 0.3%, Midcap up by 0.7%
Finally, benchmark indices took some breather as blue chips such as L&T retreated from recent strong gains a day after foreign investors turned net sellers for the first time in about a month.

Thursday - Sensex up by 0.3%, Nifty up by 0.3%, Midcap up by 1.7%
Expectations that Coal India might get split into smaller companies, led to a rally in the stock. The Nifty closed at a record high as investors resumed buying stocks of companies expected to benefit from an economic recovery. Titan surged after RBI allowed banks to provide gold loans to jewellery makers.

Friday - Sensex up by 1.3%, Nifty up by 1.2%, Midcap up by 2.0%
Markets rallied after SBI surged 10% after reporting decline in bad loans indicating worse may be over for banking sector in terms of asset quality. There was some rally in power stocks in expectations of reform measure from incoming government.

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Weekly Market Commentary - Jun 24 - Jun 28, 2013

There is a thing with democracies. They squabble over issues/decisions, slows down progress, are mostly unable to reap the benefits of good times and sometimes take action to soothe one interest group which works as detrimental to rest of the country, before realizing it is too late. More often than not, reforms happened with the gun pointing at their head. It was balance of payment crisis in 1991, this time rising deficits and sliding rupee did the trick. Govt finally got its act together and bite the bullet over gas pricing. The war is not yet over as markets are looking at rising external debt. 44% of total external debt is maturing in the next one year which, if not restructured, will eat into 59% of total foreign exchange reserve country has. Chart below, from Livemint, illustrates the situation better.
Sensex ended this week up 3.3%, while Nifty gained 3.1% and CNX Midcap was up by meagre 0.3%.

Monday - Sensex down by 1.2%, Nifty down by 1.4%, Midcap down by 2.6%
Market extended their losses from previous week as the global stocks continue to slid post Fed announcement of curtailing its bond buying program. Market seems to be ignoring the ifs and buts in the announcement and is running havoc with no plan in sight. Markets were also nervous when Chinese central bank made comments to the effect that liquidity in the system is reasonable, when China is facing liquidity squeeze. Central bank suggested fine tuning the system, which market assumed as reducing liquidity. Shanghai went down more than 5%.

Indian markets mirroring their global peers, are also under pressure due to rising CAD worries and fall in currency value. Brokers are of the view that FIIs have sold over $5 billion of debt and equities in June so far.

Tuesday - Sensex up by 0.5%, Nifty up by 0.3%, Midcap down by 0.6%
The Indian stocks went up in early trade as China tries to soothe investors’ nerves, short covering as F&O expiry nears. Markets also bought oil and gas stocks ahead of pending decision on gas price revision. Gas price were supposed to be revised previous week itself but the decision was deferred as Oil Minister was out for an official tour.

Wednesday - Sensex down by 0.4%, Nifty down by 0.4%, Midcap down by 0.0%
The Chinese central bank move to provide liquidity to some parts of its financial system to stabilize money market rates cheered the global market. Indian markets had a rangebound session as good news from China, short covering due to nearing F&O expiry was completely offset by rupee playing a spoilsport sliding below 60/$ level.

Thursday - Sensex up by 1.7%, Nifty up by 1.7%, Midcap up by 0.7%
Sensex and Nifty rallied as investors cheered the downward revision on US GDP data from 2.4% to 1.8%, which eased the concerns of reduced Fed spending. RBI also took advantage of this news and advanced its release of CAD data by one day. India's March quarter CAD came at $18.1 billion, 3.6% of GDP vs. consensus estimate of $21.7 billion or 4.4% of GDP. Corresponding figure for December quarter was 6.7%. The FY13 CAD stood at $88.2 billion and the Q4 Balance of Payments (BoP) stood at a surplus of $300 billion versus a $600 billion deficit year-on-year. Short coverings on the last expiry day of June series also buoyed the market.

Friday - Sensex up by 2.8%, Nifty up by 2.8%, Midcap up by 2.9%
Indian markets rallied as govt got its act together and approved doubling of gas prices from current $4.2/mmbtu to $8.4/mmbtu. The gas price decision was in limbo for several months now as various govt ministries, such as fertilizer, power and oil quarrel over the impact on their respective sectors. This decision was in tandem with the recent approval to power producers to pass on the imported coal cost to the consumers. The new gas pricing will get into force from April 1, 2014 and will work to attract investments in the sector as it makes several projects, big or small, across the country even more economical.

Rupee also rebounded to 59 levels after govt announced reforms to attract investments in the country and reduce country's dependence on imported gas (fuel). Govt has also initiated towards setting up of a coal regulator to settle disputed over quality and quantity of coal sold in the Indian markets. The poor quality of coal has led to squabbling between the country's premier energy producer NTPC and largest coal producer Coal India.

Friday, May 31, 2013

Weekly Market Commentary - May 27 - May 31, 2013

We started the week with big bang news of another potentially huge discovery in KG-D6 by RIL and ended the week with weak, but expected sub 5% 4Q GDP numbers.

In the context of current Indian market performance, you can safely say that current volatility is the by-product of easy liquidity and uncertain economic environment. Every new economic data brings with it the question everyone is asking, whether this is the last of the bad news we are receiving. With every data release, we hear experts talking about Indian market bottoming out. But have we?

Current GDP figures are at decade low, consumption is showing decline, rupee is falling, RBI is dithering on rate cuts and Indian investor is choosing to stay away from stocks making our markets even more vulnerable to sudden FII outflow which could prove disastrous to the economy. This week sensex made a small gain of 0.3% while Nifty and CNX Midcap ended flat.

Monday - Sensex up by 1.7%, Nifty up by 1.7%, Midcap up by 1.2%
Sensex zoomed past 20K mark, gaining more than 350 points in the process. Main catalyst was Reliance Industries late Friday announcement of big gas discovery in KG D6 basin. Company is planning to start appraisal drilling soon to ascertain the amount of gas discovered. It remains to be seen how much of this gas, Reliance, can actually drill out commercially. Discovery also gives Reliance an additional weapon to strongly pursue market pricing of gas with govt. RIL, along with its partner BP are currently negotiating for higher price for their KG-D6 gas which is strongly contested by Petroleum Ministry and Fertilizer Ministry. There was also some short covering seen in the market, as current F&O contract expires this week.

Tuesday - Sensex up by 0.6%, Nifty up by 0.5%, Midcap up by 0.6%
Markets remained cautious ahead of GDP data announcement on Friday. Coal India, country's largest coal supplier, which reported earnings post market hours previous day, reported a jump of 35%, beating the consensus estimates, on the back of higher supplies and lower employee expenses. Company also announced its decision to hike prices by 10%.

Wednesday - Sensex down by 0.1%, Nifty down by 0.1%, Midcap down by 0.6%
No major movements in Sensex, as markets focus on Friday GDP data announcement and F&O expiry. Sun Pharma, country's top drugmaker by market value, reported 23% rise in 4Q profits and announced a bonus share issue.

Thursday - Sensex up by 0.3%, Nifty up by 0.3%, Midcap down by 0.1%
Sensex made small gain as investors cover up their position on the day of F&O expiry. Tata Motors and Mahindra & Mahindra beat the consensus estimates while ONGC reported a decline in 4Q profit on the back of lower sales and higher payment on statutory levies.

Friday - Sensex down by 2.3%, Nifty down by 2.3%, Midcap down by 1.0%
Markets went downhill as GDP grew at mere 4.8% in 4Q and 5% for full fiscal year 2013. Though, the street was expecting sub 5% GDP figure for 4Q, it was the comments from RBI which set the bearish tone pushing the investors towards the exit. RBI governor maintained it cautious stance suggesting that inflation data still has upward risk while current account position stays out of comfortable range. These comments deprived the market of any rate cut hopes in June meeting and led to selling across the board. Rupee also took the hit and is trading now at close proximity of 57 to a dollar.