Friday, September 26, 2008

FII views : See Nifty at 5,500 levels if 3,800 holds

Ray Barros, CEO, Ray Barros Trading Group said if the Nifty follows the US markets, the markets could be in for a decent bounce. “The Nifty should be in for a decent bounce up to 5,500 levels. I see Nifty resistance at 4,500-4,600 and then at 5,100-5,200 levels. If Nifty holds lows of 3800, it can bounce to 5,500 by December.”

According to Barros, crude could bounce to USD 121-122 per barrel, then turn down to the USD 83-84 per barrel.

He expects gold to hit USD 925-935 per ounce, and then turn down to USD 700-725 per ounce.



Q: We held out to those supports of 3,800 on the Nifty, what kind of a bounce can you predict from here?

A: If the Nifty follows the US markets, we should be in for quite a decent bounce. I was thinking that the market would go into what I call a reversal of seasonals where September is a high rather than a low. But it looks as though September is going to be a low which means December is going to be the high for this quarter. That being the case we should see a bounce on the Nifty all the way back up to about 5,500.

We have a couple of levels we have to get through. We have to get through 4,500-4,600 and then again we have got to get through the 5,100-5,200 area. But if we can keep on heading north in line with the US markets, then I would expect 5,500 to be the target.

Q: So, you see it by the time we hit December? Is it going to be a clean run you think for the Nifty from about 4,200 to 5,000?

A: Yes I do, provided we can hold the lows that we managed to hold at about 3,800. If we can hold those lows, then I definitely think we are going to get up to about 5,500 by the end of December.

Q: What is happening with the commodities space, big bounce back for crude, and gold is making easy work of USD 900 per ounce? What kind of targets are you setting out there?

A: Crude is behaving the way I thought it would. Last time I was on the channel, I had said that thought we are in for a three-wave structural bounce, that bounce should take us to USD 121-122 per barrel. I think that will hold and then the market should turn back south. If those targets hold, I am looking for around USD 83-84 per barrel to be the ultimate target for crude, and then I expect it to go back up.

Gold is in a similar sort of position. It is actually pretty close to my targets of about USD 925-935 per ounce. This is where I expect gold to stop, turnaround, and hit back south. If USD 925-930 per ounce does not hold on gold, and it goes all the way back to USD 1,000 per ounce, then we have got one-two scenarios. Either the market has bottomed out and is ready to move up, which I am not quite ready to say that yet. I would expect the market to come back and retest that USD 750 per ounce area. If it does come down from USD 925-930 per ounce mark, then the bottom for me would be around USD 700-725 per ounce.

Q: In your eyes, has the Dow bottomed out for the intermediate term?

A: I think it has bottomed out for the quarter. There are good seasonal tendencies, and a very reliable pattern that has been holding for the last 15 years or so. We have a low around the third-fourth week of September then the market rallies, comes back down into the third or last week of October and then rallies straight up to the end of December.

Initially, I thought that there would be a reversal of those highs and lows, sometimes we have an inversion but in this particular case the strong bounce that we had the other day suggests that these seasonals are in place. So, the Dow should rally now to the end of December with an intermediate low around October.

Q: From amongst the entire BRIC ‑ Brazil, Russia, India, and China ‑ universe right now, if you had a chance to look at all those charts, what looks like it has got the most durable rally going?

A: I really think that the US at this stage and perhaps Indian markets are by far the strongest on a relative strength basis. I would tend to lean towards the Indian markets rather than the US simply because you are likely to get more shocks in the US.

The key instance in both cases is that we need to hold these lows that were established back in September. One should remember that particularly in the US, the Federal Government has done everything it can to prevent these markets from going south. If those lows give way, then I don’t think there is support before 9,000-9,200 maybe 9,500 at the earliest for the Dow. But relooking at the chart probably 9,000-9,200, it would be my target if these lows break. I don’t think they will but we have to keep that in mind. If they do break, we are going to get very strong directional moves.

stock analysis and recoendation by brokerages

Recommendations

Buy Godawari Power, target of Rs 260: Karvy

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Wednesday, September 17, 2008

markets will sink to 10000 levels



Ridham Desai, MD and Co-Head Equity, Morgan Stanley, said the markets have made lower tops and bottoms, which confirms that we are definitely in a bear market. "Price damage is the first indicator. Around 75% of the price correction is over in the current bear market. Fundamentals have also given way. A lot of stock market drivers are taking us further into the red. The bottom may lie around 10,500. So, the markets are likely to se more downside for the next six months." He feels that valuations have come off. "Markets are trading around 14 times forward earnings. They are still not cheap. Valuations will get attractive around 10 times earnings." According to Desai, the markets are seeing a bear market rally. "There can be an 20-40% upside in the markets, but investors should sell into it, as one will never know when bear market end. It can only be defined in hindsight." The markets may not go though a prolonged sideways move like the one in the 1990s, he said. For the markets to rise, Desai said, crude prices need to top out. "Consensus estimate for FY09 growth has come in at 20%, which needs to be revised downward. We see more pressure on EBIDTA margins and downward adjustments. However, earnings bottom is dependent on policy response to economic woes like inflation." He feels that investors need to patient. "One will get good buying opportunities on corrections. Investors can buy in small amounts for in investment perspective of around 2-3 years. They need to look at price erosions and valuations, which is the most fundamental tool. Investors also need to put capital to work slowly. They will see better times to invest further." Desai does not see the markets hitting new highs very soon. "We can go back to the old highs by July 2010. However, equities will still remain the best asset class with CAGR returns of around 20%." On politics, he said that expectations on reforms increase around formation of new governments. "Elections are likely to happen in May 2009. By then, the bear market may be over

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

AIG can also be next victim of bankruptcy

NEW YORK: Insurer American International Group Inc struggled for survival a day after a financial tsunami swept away investment bank Lehman Brothers and forced the sale of rival Merrill Lynch in the biggest financial industry shake-up since the Great Depression.

AIG scrambled for a financial lifeline on Monday after investment bank Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc failed to find a rescuer and Merrill Lynch & Co Inc agreed to be taken over by Bank of America Corp.

The US Federal Reserve has hired investment bank Morgan Stanley to review options for AIG -- which has lost some 92 percent of its value so far this year -- a person familiar with the situation said Monday.

AIG's precipitous stock decline has led ratings agencies to threaten downgrades that could force it to post more collateral and nullify insurance contracts, possibly setting in motion a chain reaction that could threaten its survival.

In an ominous sign, two ratings agencies went ahead with downgrades after the market closed on Monday.

"AIG seems to be the next guy on the chopping block," said Tom Sowanick, chief investment officer at Clearbrook Financial LLC in Princeton, New Jersey.

Again seeking a private solution to Wall Street's woes, the Fed had asked JPMorgan Chase & Co and Goldman Sachs Group Inc to explore arranging $70 billion to $75 billion in loans to support AIG, among other financing options, another person familiar with the situation said.

Fearing a financial meltdown, the US presidential candidates sparred Monday over who could best restore the system's health, with Republican John McCain pledging reform and Democrat Barack Obama saying hands-off Republican policies were the problem.

US stocks tumbled across the board, with the Dow Jones industrial average dropping 504 points as Wall Street had its worst day since markets reopened after the September 11 attacks.

There was speculation that Wall Street's worsening meltdown could prompt the Fed to ac

indian stocks aafecting from lehman bankruptcy

lehman Brothers has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after Barclays and Bank of America abandoned talks to buy the company. Following the news, the IT space felt a fair bit of pressure. With Lehman Brothers filing for bankruptcy and Bank of America taking over Merrill Lynch; the key question would be - do these companies have significant exposure to the Banking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI) space and what would be the impact?

As has been observed in the previous three-four quarters, every time there is a client-specific issue, it shows up on the financials in the next one-two quarters.



Lehman Brothers, which has filed for bankruptcy, seems to have very little outsourcing done as of now and the exposure remains with Wipro and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS). Wipro has given a statement that Lehman Brothers is not such a significant client and they are not worried about it. Extrapolating what Wipro has said, TCS may not see much of the impact.



But one needs to watch out for what happens with Merrill Lynch because Merrill Lynch was a significant client for both Satyam and TCS. The one which is going to suffer from Merrill Lynch’s takeover is going to be Satyam because it was a significant top client for them. Where TCS gains over Satyam is it has in relationship with the acquiring company Bank of America, which gets more outsourced work. Infosys and Bank of America have a very steady relationship. So Infosys maybe one of the gainers.



S Mahalingam, CFO, TCS has said that the company has a very steady-state relationship with both Merrill Lynch and Bank of America. So he is expecting no impact coming from this part of work at least.



HCL Technologies has done a little bit of work for Lehman Brothers but the management has clarified that it is over and they are not going to be impacted by it. EDS does a lot of work for Bank of America globally. So one needs to wait and watch of what kind of shape this takes and whether any work pours down to Mphasis.



When one puts all of this together, there is some loss but given that most of our top five companies have over 40-45% exposure to BFSI space, then mood is worried and concerned right now. Everybody is calling their relationship manager and trying to figure out what is happening officially because normally there is a two-three months' time, by when the impact actually flows down to the offshoring vendors.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

sensex @ 10000 by december end

HONG KONG: Patrick Shum, chief strategist, Karl Thomson Securities, said the Sensex may drop to 10,000 by the end of the year.

At what levels, in terms of price correction, does India become good on a valuation basis to look at?

Shum: I guess at the end of this year, the Sensex may drop to 10,000 points. I think at that level, it is a good time for buying. Before that, I suggest investors should be more patient and wait for the correction.

What is your worst-case scenario for inflation and interest rates now?

Shum: Inflation is over 12% - so it is higher than the economic growth, and we can see in India that the economy is under stagflation. The central bank will have less flexibility to implement their policys... so uncertainty will affect investment sentiment.

What is the flow of money from the FII side into Asia? Are they looking at equities in emerging markets?

Shum: Most of the equity markets is still facing pressure because a strong US dollar means money is returning to the US. So, in the near term or the rest of this year, money flow to Asian markets will be low, and the equities markets will face certain pressure.

You said India is probably heading towards stagflation? Is that correct?

Shum: I think investors, for the rest of this year, should hold more cash and increase their cash holding... I can see more downside in the coming months.

From an economic stand point, I didn't catch the word stagflation. What is that?

Shum: In economic terms, you can see the sub-prime crisis in the US, and in the European market, we can see negative GDP growth. So, in economic terms, I think the global economy will slow down.. so it's not a good time for investments.

What accounts for the rally that we saw in Indian equities all through July? We were one of the outperformers ...

Shum: I think in the near-term, the Indian market will underperform but in the long- term, let's say 1-2 years, I think India will outperform because the fundamentals are still good... in the near-term, strong inflation will erode consumers' purchasing power. I think the valuation of the Indian market is relatively higher than other markets...

I think the market will become weaker because inflation is still there, and I think because of strong oil prices and food prices, inflation pressure will increase and the central bank may raise interest rates again.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

NSG meet approves nuclear waiver for India

The 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) has approved a US plan to engage in nuclear trade with India. Following the green signal by the NSG that will cement the Indo-US Civil Nuclear Deal, India has finally come out of the 34-year old nuclear apartheid.


The approval came after almost three days of meeting in Vienna on Saturday. The NSG meet was called to minimise any damage to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, which India has not joined.

now the nuclear deal is signed the
stocks that are benefited from nuclear deal

companies like L&T, BHEL, NTPC, Areva T&D, Alstom Projects, Rolta, HCC, ABB, Crompton Greaves, Siemens stand to gain.

L&T


L&T has done engineering, procurement and construction projects for nuke power plants. It is currently working on the 2,000 MW Kudankulam nuclear project. The company will get into mainstream nuclear projects if the deal goes through. L&T�s talks with Toshibha failed. It entered into a recent tie-up with Mitsubishi for super critical boilers. The Mitsubishi technology would be used for Nuclear Power Corp. L&T may leverage its relationship with Mitsubishi for its other nuclear business.

BHEL


BHEL supplies up to 500 MW of equipment to Nuclear Power Corp. It is looking for a tie up manufacturing equipment of up to 700 MW & 1500 MW. The company has been in talks with Alstom, GE Energy, Russia's LMZ and Siemens. It has an existing tie-up with Siemens for nuclear technology.

NTPC


The company is in talks with Nuclear Power Corporation of India. It is looking at setting up 2000 MW nuclear plant. He is In talks with GE Energy for technology and fuel. NTPC is looking at the project to be operational by 2012-2013.

Areva T&D

Areva T&D is looking at a plant for uranium mining and recycling. The plant would be set up after nod from Nuclear Power Corp.

Alstom Projects


The company already makes nuclear reactors and rotors. Its parent company is a world leader in conventional nuclear projects. It makes turbines for nuclear power stations. It supplies steam turbines to over 30% of nuke power stations globally.

Rolta


The Rolta-Stone and Webster joint venture competent provides reactor-building technology. It will leverage on its partner's core competency. Stone & Webster's parent has 20% in Westinghouse Electric, a nuclear reactor maker.

Gammon has undertaken turnkey construction for nuclear projects.

HCC


HCC has constructed four of seven nuclear power projects in India. It is an EPC contractor for nuclear projects.

ABB


ABB makes components for power projects. Its parent company�s exposure includes new
nuclear power plants, systems and components. The parent company�s exposure includes fuel services, waste management and decommissioning.

Crompton Greaves


Crompton Greaves works with Nuclear Power Corporation of India. It has completed a switchyard for nuclear project.

Walchandnagar Industries makes critical equipment for India's nuclear power facilities.

Siemens has a marginal exposure through its parent company.

Reliance Energy plans to invest additional Rs 12,000 crore in nuclear power capacity. It plans to install 2000 MW of nuclear power capacity.

Tata Power has tied up with some major nuclear equipment suppliers like Areva. It already has a relationship with Toshiba; it will leverage on it.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Anand Rathi neutral on 20 Microns IPO

Anand Rathi Securities has come out with a research report on 20 Microns' IPO. It has given a neutral rating to the issue.

20 Microns will open for subscription on September 8, 2008 with its public issue of 43,50,632 Equity shares of Rs 10. The price band has been fixed at Rs 50-55. The issue will close on September 11, 2008.

Anand Rathi Securities' report on 20 Microns' IPO:

20ML is a multi-product company which helps to protect it from reductions in demand for any one product type.

20ML’s mining resources and plants are strategically located in the states of Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Tamil Nadu. The manufacturing units of the company are well connected with national - highways and railways which helps the company in reaching to its customers economically.

20ML’s implementation of business planning tools, focus on technical support, field coaching and constant evaluation of product knowledge and training has helped in improving effectiveness and field force productivity. Customer segmentation has also helped to sharpen the focus on its key customers.

A demand under the Central Excise Act to the tune of Rs 107.29 million if decided against the company will adversely affect the financial conditions and the business of operations of the company.

Out of the total issue proceeds (at higher end of price band) of Rs 239.28 million, the offer for sale is Rs 147.16 million and thus the company will be receiving only Rs 92.12 million.

20ML faces competition from unorganized sector whose costs are lower due to exemption from excise duty. The players in the unorganized sector change their formulations to absorb some of the cheaper ground material to lower their cost of production and in turn reducing their pricing. Thus 20ML may be forced to reduce the prices of its offerings and services, which may reduce its revenues and margins and/or decrease its market share, which would adversely affect the business operations of the company.

Valuation:-

At the price of Rs50-55, the issue is priced at 13.6x-15x its FY08 EPS of Rs3.68 and at 15.4x-17.0x its FY08 FDEPS of Rs3.2. On comparison with its established peers which are comparatively larger in size, 20ML appears expensive. Taking into account the valuation and considering the risks associated with the investment concerns cited above, We are NEUTRAL to the issue

latest research

Radico Khaitan Ltd -
sazal sharetraders Research Team / Mumbai Sep 05, 2008 14:44

Radico has acquired a 36% stake in an Aurangabad-based distillery for a sum of Rs1.6bn.

CMP Rs70





We met the management of Radico Khaitan and came back with a cautiously positive view on the company. Radico aims for a 5% volume growth in its flagship whisky brand ‘8PM’ in FY09 while overall IMFL sales is likely to increase by 12% yoy. ‘Magic Moments’, a vodka offering, is expected to double its sales in current year. A new launch is planned in the brown spirits segment even as on operating front the company braces for a rise in the cost of molasses, a key raw material. It has acquired 36% stake in a distillery in Aurangabad, which is likely to be commissioned by December 2008.



Click here for the company update on Radico Khaitan Ltd.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

ONGC can head upto Rs 1,250-1,300: ASHWANI Gujral

Technical Analyst, Ashwani Gujral is of view that Oil & Natural Gas Corporation, ONGC looks most positive that could be headed back to about Rs 1,250-1,300.

Gujral told CNBC-TV18, "I think crude has much further to go so in energy if I assume that you are talking about oil stocks, they at least have further 10-15%, I think Bharat Petroleum Corporation, BPCL could easily go up to Rs 360, Hindustan Petroleum Corporation, HPCL could trade back up to Rs 275-280 and Oil & Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) looks most positive that could be headed back to about Rs 1,250-1,300."

Disclosures: It is safe to assume that analyst and his clients may have an investment interest in the stocks/sectors discussed.

Shankar Sharma of First Global said that the overall trend in market is still down and the rally from 12,500-15,000 is over and done with. He feels that the sharp oil price correction is likely and India will be a big beneficiary from the same. According to him, India will benefit from fund reallocation in Emerging Markets, or EMs if crude cracks. He feels that the markets may slip to 10,000 levels this year or early next year and may then start moving up gradually over next three years. He sees the Sensex bottom within the 10,000-12,500 range. He believes that the market could double from lows but that may be short-lived.

According to him, valuations of BHEL, L&T is still expensive. He doubts further stellar returns from SBI and feels that the rally is over. RIL may drive the next leg of fall in the market and could test levels substantially below Rs 2,000 per share, he said. He doesn't see much downside for IT from current levels.

Sharma said, "Nothing has really changed. The GDP numbers have come in confirming our fears but this is just a recent set of numbers. We don't know what lies ahead. Overall the trend is down punctuated by the rallies we keep seeing. When I say bull market, I mean taking out the highs and continuing to the path of 25000 and beyond. Markets could reach 18000-19000 - that rally is still to be played out. So, markets can double from lows but that still won't be a bull market. It will coincide with crude having come off, some talk of political certainty because inflation has cooled off. That rally will propel markets close to 20,000 but I doubt if that will be so quick. Crude has to come off substantially at USD 80-85 per barrel. Our case is it will and may take 12 months to get to the USD 50 per barrel levels. Crude may rally 10-20% from its lows. When it hits USD 50 per barrel, you will see India begin to come back on its own."