Friday, October 22, 2010

FII inflows could take mkts up further: Nomura

Here is expert equity call for the day on how the markets are expected to trade:


FII inflows continue to be strong and are a big relief and could take the markets up further before a correction. Even though the market is fundamentally expensive, we advise not taking cash calls and rather running a diversified portfolio.

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Fed likely to embark on another round of QE: Citi

Here is expert equity call for the day on how the markets are expected to trade:


Markus Rosgen, Citi: The Fed is likely to embark on another round of quantitative easing to help ensure the economic recovery and create jobs. A consequence of this extraordinary policy is a weaker dollar. The Dollar Index is now close to 40-year lows. Further dollar weakness should be positive for Emerging Market equities. We have upgraded China to Overweight and India to Neutral.

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Buy when markets correct 510%: StanChart Cap Markets

Though markets have managed to float above the alarming levels, experts foresee an impending correction.


Markets may dip 5-10% and has advised to use corrections as a buying opportunity.


"If you look at six-12 months from now, I am fairly positive on the market. What you would find from time to time is profit taking maybe a bit of consolidation but I am not looking for significant pullbacks, 5-10% is the most likely pullbacks. Those will be periods of accumulation opportunities," he explained.


According to Kumar, both commodities and earnings of companies will continue to support markets.


Kumar also added that cement valuations are reasonable with a two-yr perspective.


Q: What is your sense ? are we bracing ourselves for a bit of a cut out here or do you think it is a pause before the rally resumes again?


A: I think the market is in good shape. If you look at six-12 months from now, I am fairly positive on the market. I am not looking for significant pullbacks, 5-10% is the most likely pullbacks you will see from time to time on profit taking and other factors. Those will be periods of accumulation opportunities.


Q: What did you make of the staggering USD 37 billion that we got for Coal India? Does it instill some more confidence and the kind of money that the markets can raise?


A: Absolutely. You have much bigger scale fundraisings done in other emerging markets in the recent past be it China or Brazil. But this level of interest, which has come into such a large size issue, is a good indication that India is now mainstream. As far as global flows are concerned and the issues are there, if they are good quality issue prices reasonably it is going to see a lot of attraction in terms of global flows.


Q: There has been a lot of attention on the last couple of sessions about what?s going on in China, whether rates might harden and whether commodities might get dented back. Do you see any of these as risks going forward or do you think its incremental global noise which will not lead to or induce any major correction?


A: I don?t think it will induce a major correction but what has happened in the last couple of quarters, is that India has got more than a proportionate share of the global flows. As the growth recovery happens and as China also attracts little bit more attention, it is very well possible that some of the attention could also be diverted towards China.


On a sustainable basis, I do not see it causing a deep correction. On the commodity front, it?s important to point out that we have an extremely positive view on the commodity sector over the next couple of years. Commodities will continue to do well and that is something which maybe a bit of a dampener in some of the other sectors but aggregate on an overall basis, is not going to be something which is going to be a reason for major concern for the Indian market.


Q: In the medium-term, how do you see the markets pan out? Post this 5-10% correction that the markets will digest, do you think we can take it to new highs?


A: Yes. Absolutely. The concept of new highs or record levels, to some extent, in a growth market should be natural, that over a period of time we keep creating new highs. If you look at the macro over the next couple of years, that looks pretty strong. Some of the growth drivers are in place.


This financial year is also going to be the year of transition when the growth drivers are shifting from some of the one-off factors like the government stimulus etc to more structural factors like capex etc. The next couple of years look fairly strong to me on the macro side and that should give you around 20% earnings growth which is what is going to underpin returns from our equities market.


Q: What have you made of earnings season so far? Do you think for the next couple of quarters before this fiscal is out, earnings will remain supportive to equities heading higher?


A: Yes, earnings will remain supportive. What you will find is in some of the sectors where the bottoming out of earnings is yet to happen and in fact one such sector we are quite positive on is cement.


We think, between this quarter and the next quarter, the fundamentals and earnings will bottom out, so that in a market which has come back up to 20,000 where value is becoming increasingly difficult to find, I think that is one sector where you still have mid-cycle valuations. But broadly on an overall basis, earnings will be supportive not just for the next two quarters but for the next two years.


Q: We did some correction in commodities stocks yesterday, mostly all of the metal stocks. If you are bullish on commodities, do you still think there is value? Should you be using these bouts of weakness to accumulate?


A: Yes. That is our view and that is our global view as well. Across the resource sector, we see sustained strength over the next couple of years more particularly in copper, iron ore and coal as well. Most of these consolidation or profit taking events or situations in the market would be an opportunity to accumulate the resources sector.


Q: From the heavy weights, where else would you deploy your money in terms of sectors and which sectors you think could really take the markets higher now?


A: In terms of a house view, a couple of sectors that we pointed out to are cement and autos. It will take another quarter or so for cement to bottom out. That is typically the time to accumulate those sorts of sectors. Autos are in a sustained trend and that will continue.


If you look from the recent underperformer?s category, over the last six-12 months, real estate has been one of those underperformer sectors. A little bit of volume and price momentum comes back into the sector and you will find that real estate could be one of the sectors which will have a better performance over the next three-six months.


On a longer term basis, in the next one-two years or beyond, some of the sectors like financials remain as one of the absolute core holdings to own in this kind of a macro environment as well as in the market with the liquidity that we are seeing. That is one sector, which has the potential to take in and absorb a lot of liquidity, as well as benefit from broader macro growth performance that you are going to see in India at least over the next two years.

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Focus on quality, dividends as themes: Morgan Stanley

Here is expert equity call for the day on how the markets are expected to trade:


Jonathan Garner, Morgan Stanley Asia: MSCI Emerging Market has traded above our 2010-end base case target price. We have reduced our equities Overweight to 4% from 6% and raised our cash weight. This removes the increase in equities weight we made at the end of May. We recommend focusing on quality and dividends as themes and in our focus lists reduced beta in Asia-Pacific ex-Japan.

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Coal India IPO to see strong retail demand: Raamdeo Agrawal

The initial public offer (IPO) of Coal India received an overwhelming response from institutional bidders while today is the last bidding day for retail and high net worth individuals (HNIs).


According to Raamdeo Agrawal of Motilal Oswal it will see huge participation from the retail side too.On the overall markets, he noted that cash market volumes have started improving from September. However, he is a little cautious on earnings. He thinks that there might be some bad earnings towards the end.


Agrawal is bullish on auto sector in the both 2-wheeler and 4-wheeler spaces.


Q: What did you make of the Coal India subscription and do you think retail and HNI will follow with oversubscription today?


A: I am sure there is lot of excitement. I am getting lot of calls from many places?whether to go ahead and buy in. We should get some surprising number in terms of subscription from every segment. It?s a bumper thing.


Q: You think they left enough value on the table. What is your sense of fair value there?


A: Firstly, it is that its world?s largest mining company. India?s third largest coal reserve company in the world and they have literally monopoly on that. We are energy short and our dependence on coal is very high. We have a large land mass so even if imported coal comes to the sea coast it becomes difficult to take to deep northern and eastern parts. They have their own competitive advantage vis-?-vis imported coal. It?s a terrific story. Of course, we know all the issues about their weakness but once it goes public that itself is going to help the company bring in more efficiency, more transparency. I remain positive on this particular stock.


Q: Your quarter-on-quarter broking revenues are sort of flattish?up 2% but cash market volumes are going up. You are not seeing any great traction as more and more cash market volumes pickup in your brokerage income?


A: Actually cash market volume is most significant part of the broking revenue in our kind of revenues. We saw only in last month?that is September?some traction in participation by the retail. Even October is somewhat better but very big increase in volume is yet to come through whereas expenses are much more fixed in character. So when you open new offices and hire new employees the expenses keep going up. So the operating leverage for broking business is working in reverse at this point of time.


Q: How are you positioning yourself as a brokerage at this point of time because the market is approaching new highs, domestic participants have sort of been skittish so far. Are you investing in the business hoping that retail and HNI interest will grow over time or you want to see the first signs of big participation coming back before you do that?


A: The investment in business?expansion of distribution, expanding the infra stream coming out with newer products, even in AMC we have launched new product despite all the headwinds we have in the business?so we are going all out in terms of whatever we can do and what we think is right because we know we cannot time the market. We cannot time the investors?when they will come in, when they will go out. So we are going about investing with an optimistic view that it is not very late that investors are going to come. We are not keeping anything waiting.


Q: Are you sending any divergent kind of trends between HNIs and pure retail? I am talking about differential ticket sizes. Since you talk to both classes of investors and they are both important for generating revenues for you, are you sensing any divergence in behaviour between these two investor classes?


A: No. Surprisingly, even the large institutional investors? revenues, its not that large investors are doing much better?bringing in much more business and smaller investors are less. The trend is more or less same. Of course the very small investors have not participated yet big time in the market. Maybe the first signs are coming from Coal India subscription?maybe some more subscriptions which comes in will wake them up from their non-participation and create some excitement into the market.


I don?t know what will create excitement?maybe index going to the new high, maybe maximum rally in midcaps. Something has to happen before people come in wholesale into the market.

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Mkt likely to continue upward march in 2011: Ridham Desai

Here is expert equity call for the day on how the markets are expected to trade:


Ridham Desai, Morgan Stanley: Indices are approaching all-time peaks and very naturally investors are drawing comparisons with 2007. The market hit its all-time high in January 2008 before it plunged. But the market and the economy are not comparable to the exuberance of 2007 on most counts. Our base case is none of the risk events of 2008 will happen in 2011 and to that extent, the market is likely to continue its upward march in 2011.

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Choksey sees markets surging higher in January, bets on IT

Having corrected already 300 points, I see that possibility of going down of not more than about 100-125 points on Nifty from current levels and that could give a good base to Nifty to get stabilised,? he elaborated.


According to Choksey in the next one-two months we are going to see a good tight range for the Nifty of around 300-350 points and thereafter probably from the middle of December to January we should be seeing a further upside taking place.


Choksey?s top picks in the IT sector are Infosys, TCS, Wipro, Mahindra Satyam and HCL Technologies.


Here is a verbatim transcript of his comments. Also watch the accompanying video.


Q: We have already corrected to 6,000. How much more of a cut are you expecting?


A: The amount of cut that we could probably see is not much from current levels. We have already seen about 300 point kind of a correction which we have seen from the highs in the market. Now whether the market would further go down??it probably to a certain extent spends on the liquidity factor, which is showing some amount of kind of a volatility currently. More importantly because the dollar as a currency is gaining relative strength compared to euro in current times and as a result of which the general tendency of the investors globally would be to stay with the dollar currency and investment in dollars. To an extent you may not see the kind of liquidity which we have seen in recent past and as a result of which it can possibly drag down the market to a certain extent. But having corrected already 300 points, I see that possibility of going down of not more than about 100-125 points on Nifty from current levels and that could possibly give a good base to Nifty to get stabilised.


In fact, I do see that in the next one-two months you are going to see a good tight range happening for the Nifty of around 300-350 points and thereafter probably from the middle of December to the beginning of January or middle of January you should be seeing a further upside taking place. But overall the earning momentum would provide good impetus to the market for future growth as I see it currently.


Q: What have you made of the technology numbers that have come so far? HCL Tech just reported and the growth has been so strong be it HCL Tech, Infosys. How would you play these stocks and what would your preferred picks be?


A: HCL Tech probably on one count to a certain extent disappointed. Maybe the forex loss that I see from the reported numbers, to a certain extent, it?s been on a relatively on higher side maybe this was not factored in by us while working out this numbers. The euro currency may have played its role, looks like at this point of time. I think more important part is that the companies are basically trying to grow in a double-digit and that is very important and this company has also shown that kind of growth at the top-line level. That gives good confidence.


As far as the valuation goes probably they are not very expensively traded like HCL Tech on a forward earning estimate basis is getting somewhere around closer to 17 times whereas average for the midsize-IT companies could be around 16 times, they are not very expensively traded. If they show better promise for the growth at the bottom-line level as well then in my viewpoint there would be some buying interest returning back to likes of HCL Tech or Mahindra Satyam and probably would see more amount of action happening in that particular area.


In frontline IT companies, we do like Infosys, TCS and Wipro but at the same time we don?t see too much of headroom for these companies in given situation unless some amount of inorganic growth takes place. Otherwise the larger opportunity should be see in likes of Mahindra Satyam and HCL Technologies.


Q: What are you thoughts on Oberoi Realty? Where do you see it listing and what is the fair value according to you?


A: On the whole, if you look at this particular company, I like the business model because its one of the better model?it is an asset light model. I like this particular business because they have good amount of properties under execution for which they have demand in Mumbai market. That is why I am positive in this company. But if you are looking at the valuation currently at which they have placed this share, they are not as cheap. Probably they are among the expensive lot as far as the valuation goes. From that perspective I don?t see too much of follow-up buying happening immediately on the listing and maybe you could see between 3-5% kind of a discount happening on this stock over a period of time after listing.


If one gets this stock relatively closer to somewhere around Rs 225-240 levels?that maybe the first entry point even though have to pay some premium to the business model that this company assumes.


Q: What would your thoughts be on both of these Piramal Healthcare and Biocon?both of them news based?


A: I find Biocon quite interesting and definitely the stock could get rerated going forward as well because Pfizer kind of a deal is something that definitely in a short to near-term is a good point and at the same time the assurance to get the higher amount of income also again of USD 150 million over a period of time and that itself is a very good point as far as this company is concerned.


In my viewpoint the way in which insulin market for which they have tied up with Pfizer, I see good amount of prospects happening for Biocon. This company has struggle for long period of time in getting into this kind of developments and probably the better times are going forward ahead for this company. So certainly I would like to have Biocon as far as investment choice is concerned.

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