Sunday, July 27, 2014

Weekly Market Commentary - July 21, 2014 - July 25, 2014

The earnings season is here. Investors have now moved on from the rhetoric generated from budget session and have now put their noses back to where they should belong – corporate earnings numbers. So far, the government has been playing to the FII gallery and moving fast on their reform agenda – tweaking laws, creating more enabling environment, removing confusions over controversial policies and implementing steps to allow more foreign capital.

In the near term, investors are going to focus on earnings numbers – L&T, Maruti Suzuki, Bharti Airtel and HLL are lined up for next week. RBI policy review on August 5 will also be keenly watched for any macroeconomic commentary and inflation/interest rate signals.

Sensex ended this week up by 1.9% while Nifty was up by 1.7% and Midcap down by 1.9%

Monday - Sensex up by 0.3%, Nifty up by 0.3%, Midcap down by 0.1%

Markets went up led by rally in Reliance Industries after it reported quarterly earnings better than street estimates. In near term, markets will remain driven by corporate earnings as no new trigger is in sight.

Tuesday - Sensex up by 1.2%, Nifty up by 1.1%, Midcap up by 0.1%

Sensex and Nifty surged more than 1% and traded near their all-time highs led by telecom stocks following Idea Cellular's better-than-expected earnings. Bharti Airtel and Idea Cellular both rallied more than 5% as sentiment around telecom stocks improved.

Wednesday - Sensex up by 0.5%, Nifty up by 0.4%, Midcap down by 0.4%
Benchmark Indices continued on their winning run bolstered by gains in IT and banking leaders on upbeat earnings, higher capital inflows and positive global cues. TCS attained a market valuation of over Rs. 5 lakh crores (or about $84bn) for the first time. Bank of Baroda gained around 3% after RBI removed the stock from its caution list, allowing FIIs to invest in it. Jet Airways also rose around 4% after its chairman discussed its restructuring plan involving selling planes and renegotiating debt.

Thursday - Sensex up by 0.5%, Nifty up by 0.4%, Midcap down by 0.2%

Sensex and Nifty rose to their record highs after decision to raise FDI limit in insurance got cabinet approval. Modi government is doing its best to revive foreign interest in India and raising the FDI limit from 26% to 49% in capital starved insurance sector highlights its reform agenda. Cairn India slumped by 7% as company disclosed a related party transaction worth $1.25bn in the form of loan facility to parent Vedanta Group. Analysts have always been wary of this move where the new promoter group might take advantage of cash pile of Cairn India to fund their other projects – a step widely considered detrimental to minority shareholders’ interest.

Friday - Sensex down by 0.6%, Nifty down by 0.5%, Midcap down by 1.3%

Markets took a breather on Friday after continuously rising for nine sessions. Tata Motors declined most in six months after JLR price cuts in China raised concerns on margins in a key market.

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Weekly Market Commentary - July 14, 2014 - July 18, 2014

Markets started off the week low as absence of any big bang reform from the budget continues to irk some investors. Now that the budget euphoria is over and reality has kicked in, many investors are realizing the strong undercurrents in the economy. The macro environment is improving, the trade esp. exports numbers are picking up, inflation showed a decline and RBI in tandem with the govt. came to the rescue of ailing infrastructure sector with its exemption on reserve requirements.

The best part is that the govt. knows its task and is very devoted to achieve it. Next month it is going to take a call on the sale of $3.0bn worth of PSU stake.

I’ll say that the budget was just a starting point not the ending. Picture abhi baaki hai mere dost!

Sensex ended this week up by 2.5% while Nifty was up by 2.7% and Midcap up by 4.8%

Monday - Sensex down by 0.1%, Nifty down by 0.1%, Midcap up by 0.2%

Benchmark indices continued to trade on weak momentum, falling for the fifth consecutive session. FIIs have turned sellers and have disposed $120.6mn worth of stock on Friday, after been continuously buying $1.6bn worth stocks for previous six sessions into the budget.

There was a major setback for drug industry after India's drug pricing regulator cut and capped the prices of more than 100 drugs used to treat diseases. Sanofi India, with the largest basket of anti-diabetes and heart disease medicine lost more than 10% as its revenue is expected to hit by Rs.139 crores in this fiscal year alone.

Tuesday - Sensex up by 0.9%, Nifty up by 1.0%, Midcap up by 2.3%
Sensex and Nifty took a break from falling and rose about 1% each after June inflation data showed consumer inflation slowing to the lowest since January 2012. CPI eased to 7.31% after Modi govt. curbed farm exports.

Wednesday - Sensex up by 1.3%, Nifty up by 1.3%, Midcap up by 1.5%
Infrastructure and related stocks went up as RBI exempted long term bonds raised for lending to the sector from reserve requirements. Investors are happy as banks, and hence the infra companies would now have access to more funds at lower costs. India also released its trade data, which showed 10.22% y-o-y rise in exports in June as external demand picked up amid weaker currency environment.

Thursday - Sensex flat, Nifty up by 0.2%, Midcap up by 1.2%
Sensex and Nifty continued to trade in green led by infra related stocks which remained buoyed on previous day’s news. Improved rain prospects also led to some sentiment improvement. The focus has now moved to corporate earnings with TCS set to release its numbers later in the day.

Friday - Sensex up by 0.3%, Nifty up by 0.3%, Midcap down by 0.5%
IT stocks rallied on the great set of numbers from TCS, which reported a 45% growth in its bottomline. Lenders continued to gain after the reserve requirement relied from RBI. Shares of NBFCs which take gold as collateral, surged after RBI issued draft guidelines for those seeking a license to set up a payments banks or a small bank.

Saturday, July 19, 2014

Paranormal Activity - How Para 102 is a hidden gem in Jaitley's budget

Majority of people missed a very important piece of announcement on the budget day. Even I did not think about it till I decided to read the full budget transcript this Friday evening – yeah, that’s how I spend my Friday nights.

I found a hidden gem in the orgy of information and announcement in the para 102 – just where the discussion about MSME sector starts. Here is the snapshot:


And now why this para is important. Before I start torturing my keyboard, here is a snapshot from India Market Strategy Report from Credit Suisse published in July 2013 – exactly a year ago.



The report cites and analyses National Statistics Commission data and reckon that Half of India’s GDP and a whopping 90% of its employment is generated in informal sector. The report also mentions that “Unlike in the developed economies where informality is purely a deliberate choice to avoid taxation or regulations, in India it is more structural: a reflection of the lack of development and limited government reach.”

This does not mean that GDP of India is underestimated by 50%. Nah. GDP of any country is anyway an estimated number – but this estimate is particularly doubtful and is bound to get revised, hopefully upwards, if 50% is outside the reach of government surveyors. Government conducts surveys, updates its methodologies and its GDP calculation series every few years. Last time it was done GDP calculation jumped by 0.6% annualized for all years in the series. See the chart below.


This data has implications for taxpayers also. It is a well-known fact that India is one of the most taxed countries in the world. And it is by definition, informal sector is outside the purview of tax authorities. So the formal part of the economy gets taxed heavily.


What Arun Jaitley has tried to do in his maiden budget is sort of recognize the contribution made by the informal sector – Own account enterprises and decided to set up a committee to study ways to reach, cover, finance and then maybe tax them.

When countries around the globe are busy finding ways to generate income from erstwhile illegal activities – for example, sale of marijuana in some US states (read here, here and here), India already has all the money on the table but not in the record books.

If India is able to make some significant progress in this area, not only India will have higher reported GDP, better employment records but also better insurance and banking penetrations, more people under social security net and in the meanwhile tax net will increase and will bring more equity to the taxpayers around the country.

Wonder, where is the debate over this?