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Sunday, July 5, 2009

Budget wishlist: Allow FDI in education sector

Courtesy : Moneycontrol


HRD
Minister Kapil Sibal has kicked off educational reforms by getting Cabinet approval for the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Bill. The sector still wants more from the government.
There is also a call to give the recommendations of the Yashpal Committee their due. These include allowing FDI in education, and increasing public private partnerships.

Here is a verbatim transcript of Kritika Saxena’s comments on CNBC-TV18. Also watch the accompanying video.


Kapil Sibal may be pushing for more transparency in the education sector, as his part in the UPA government's reforms movement. But analysts feel his drive may not bear much fruit, if the sector continues to struggle for funds. The interim budget hiked government outlay on higher education nine-fold. But the IITs and the IIMs are still groaning about the lack of funds from the government -- each institution says it needs at least Rs 6 crores more for better infrastructure.


Pankaj Chandra, Director, IIM Bangalore said. “The courts must go out and tell the government that they must provide the kind of funds this would require. We can only request the government.”


Experts say the cabinet-approved the right of children to free and compulsory education bill will be effective only if the government shells out more financial assistance towards the economically weaker sections of society.

Ninad Karpe, CEO, Aptech said, “ Two things the government needs to do is take care of loans and assistantships and second probably direct intervention in terms of remedial coaching and remedial training particularly to the backward and scheduled caste and scheduled tribes.


There is also a call to give the recommendations of the Yashpal Committee their due. These include allowing FDI in education, and increasing public private partnerships.


Sumeet Mehta, CEO, Zee Learn said, “If in the budget we can make provisions for private partnerships to come in and expand the availability of quality institution, I think it will be a big leap.”


Ninad Karpe, CEO, Aptech said, “From the budget perspective specifically, it will be good to see government allowing FDI in education.”


Granting of this wishlist, experts say, will put educational reforms on the fast track.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Sensex ends 419 points up on blockbuster Friday

Courtesy : Money Control

Today was a blockbuster day for Dalal Street. The indices surge ahead with banks and metals leading the charge. In the first day of the June series, stock futures added six crore shares in open interest. The Nifty closed the day 134 points higher at 4,375, while the Sensex shut shop at 14,764, up 419 points.

Also see: Mkts close strong; banks, cap goods, IT, realty up 3-4%

Here is a verbatim transcript of Udayan Mukherjee’s comments on CNBC-TV18. Also see the accompanying video.

The July series starts off with a bang. The Nifty jumped 130 points to close at 4,375.

Tata Steel goes a little soft on weak reported earnings but L&T, ICICI Bank and Sterlite shone inside the index. The loser of the day is Sun Pharma. It tangs on reports of US FDA seizing drugs from Caraco’s plant in the US.

On today’s rally:

It was a terrific start to the series. It appeared for the last few days that the Nifty was trying to claw back with 4,150 as a support. Yesterday, that progress got stalled because of the futures and options expiry, but today since that baggage had been lifted, market moved very smoothly in the second half of the series. The breadth was good, volumes are okay. There was good leadership from stocks like L&T, ICICI Bank, and some of the metal names. Sun Pharma was only the accident, but otherwise you can sense that the market is trying to put in a pre-Budget rally. The week has closed well after a faltering kind of start and who knows maybe with some good news from the global front it might well extent into the Budget next week.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Stocks in News - 24 June 2009

Courtesy : Moneycontrol

Suzlon looking to exit Hansen: Sources


Suzlon Energy may be looking to exit its European subsidiary Hansen. The wind turbine power giant has been learnt to be in advanced talks with a European firm to sell its entire 61% stake for around USD 1.3 billion. CNBC-TV18’s Nimesh Shah reports why the Tulsi Tanti-promoted Suzlon is wanting to sell of its assets.

Even as it surprises most investment bankers, it is learnt from reliable sources that Suzlon may put up its entire 61% stake in Hansen on the block and may sell it for about USD 1.1–USD 1.3 billion. The deal may be announced as soon as this weekend — perhaps with the company’s results, sources say.

Suzlon, in an official communication to the London Stock Exchange on Jun 15, said, “Suzlon is evaluating every options for their holding in Hansen and the talks may lead to disposal of part or entire stake in Hansen”. However, in a statement to CNBC, it said it would not offer any comment on market speculation. The deal is under the observation of the takeover panel in London.

Analysts who track the company are surprised with the development as Hansen, the company they bough in 2006 for USD 556 million, is a good value-add for Suzlon. Hansen’s presence also bodes well for Suzlon’s other subsidiary, REpower. The deal value is USD 1.1–USD 1.3 billion, which means it is valuing Hansen at an enterprise value of close to USD 1.8 to USD 2.1 billion. Hansen trades on the London Stock Exchange at a market cap of USD 1.5 billion — Suzlon is getting a price of more than what the current market cap is, even as it may lose what analysts say is an important strategic fit.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Power, Consumer Goods buoy Sensex

Courtesy : Business Standard

The Sensex today opened up 53 points at 14,377. The index slipped to a low of 14,207 down 117 points, following weak cues from the global markets. The index was rangebound for some time, and thereafter gained 273 points from the day's low to a high of 14,480.

Tata Motors gains in early trades
RNRL surges 4%; RIL down marginally
Max India surges 7% on raising Rs 150cr
Bharati Ship, Great Off, ABG in focus
Sensex ends up 86pts
Moser Baer gains 3% on new LCD launch

The Sensex finally ended at 14,423, up 99 points.

The BSE Power and Consumer Goods indices gained over 2.5% each to 2,877 and 12,568, respectively.

The market breadth was fairly positive. Out of 2,668 stocks traded, 1,801 advanced while 797 declined.

THE INDEX MOVERS...

Jaiprakash Associates surged 6% to Rs 213. Sun Pharma rallied 5% to Rs 1,345. TCS, Tata Motors and Grasim gained 4.2% each at Rs 382, Rs 357 and Rs 2,322, respectively.

ACC added 3% to Rs 768. Reliance Infrastructure, Mahindra & Mahindra, Hindalco, BHEL and ONGC advanced around 2.5% each.

Reliance Communications, Larsen & Toubro, Tata Steel, NTPC, Bharti Airtel, DLF, Wipro, ITC and Hindustan Unilever were also up.

...AND THE SHAKERS

HDFC Bank and HDFC slipped 2% each to Rs 1,456 and Rs 2,309, respectively. ICICI Bank and Sterlite dropped 1% each.

OTHER PROMINENT GAINERS..

Torrent Power zoomed 16% to Rs 164. Educomp Solutions soared 11% to Rs 3,427. Tata Teleservices Maharashtra rallied 10% to Rs 38.35.

Biocon, IVRCL, Max India, Indiabulls Real Estate, Balrampur Chini Mills, Glenmark Pharma, Hindustan Zinc, LIC Housing Finance, Punj Lloyd and Gujarat State Petronet surged 6-9% each.

...AND OTHER LOSERS

MMTC shed 4% to Rs 30,917. Canara Bank dropped 3.5% to Rs 255.

Godrej Consumer Products, Bharat Forge, Everest Canto Cylinder, Allahabad Bank, Jet Airways, Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services and Nalco slipped 2-3% each.

VALUE & VOLUME TOPPERS

Suzlon topped the value chart with a turnover of Rs 268.70 crore, followed by Reliance (Rs 210.12 crore), Reliance Natural Resources (Rs 209.47 crore), Educomp Solutions (Rs 180.71 crore) and Reliance Capital (Rs 173.83 crore).

The volume chart was also led by Suzlon with trades of over 23 million shares. It was followed by Reliance Natural Resources (22.96 million), Unitech (18.9 million), IFCI (14.86 million) and Ispat Industries (11.49 million).

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Can we trade time as an asset class?

The time index
Courtesy : Mukul pai, Business Standard


This will depend on the pace at which time indexing revolutionises our understanding of time as an asset class.

Top Stories Bankex helps Sensex recover, ends up 82pts DoT puts on hold spectrum panel report till 3G auction Rupee ends lower at 47.74 against dollar FIPB defers decision on United Breweries warrants proposal Omar asks India Inc to hold 'Davos-type' meet in Kashmir Austral Coke seeks shareholders' nod to raise $200 mn On one side we have comments like will the equilateral triangle loses symmetry as time triads move and on the other is a clear idea of time triads being an empty philosophy. A controversy is a start, at least there is a debate, a thought. Volatility has been around since markets started trading, but it was not until 1993 that the idea started trading as a VIX index. Now we have hedge funds trading volatility, as an asset class. Will the market evolve to trade new asset classes such as time?
As a start it looks counterintuitive. We are already trading time indirectly, but how can you trade time directly? And if you could, how will you commoditise time as an asset class? Before we understand how time triads can itself become an asset class, one should realise that indexing techniques over centuries have moved from price weighting to free float to fundamental indexing. The idea of a benchmark is simple and investible.


Time indexing

So what's time indexing? The time index tracks the performance of a pair of assets, a quantifiable study of pair performance. Pairs can be between Nikkei- Bovespa, Gold - Oil, or between any two economic time series. Pairs can tell us a lot about markets and where we are headed. But, what do pairs have to do with time? When you are long on an asset class and short on the other, you are taking out the price and just trading on time. This is why long Dow Industrials and short Dow Transports (or vice versa) is a pair idea, which lets us trade time as an asset class. Now conventionalists may argue, what fun is it to trade two indices, which move up and down together?

This is where we come in. Performance cyclicality was highlighted first time in the Kyoto University journal, Nistor and Pal. The paper illustrated performance cycles between Nikkei and BRIC countries. The research proved that performance between two economic zones illustrated through the countries composite equity index was not just cyclical, but even quantifiable. One of the conclusions of the paper was demonstrated through our feature ‘Long India - Short China’. The pair delivered 50 per cent over a quarter. Markets are quantifiable and they allow even regional indices to be pegged against each other profitably. What the paper demonstrated was that irrespective of the tight or lose correlation of an asset, performance cyclicality can be demonstrated at all time frames. The paper was indirectly demonstrating time fractals, triads.
The advantagesThere are some clear advantages of trading on time triads, time indexing, or performance as an asset class. Being long and short two high correlated assets can reduce market risk i.e. offer market neutrality. This makes the strategy attractive. What is the investment world looking for? The first and foremost is a reduction in risk. For example, shorting Bank Nifty and going long on Nifty reduces portfolio volatility and captures performance between the two sector indices creating relative alpha. Now this strategy may not perform better in a trended market, but it will surely outperform stagnation or declining market. The pace of wealth destruction and changing risk appetites also makes time indexing a viable option.
So what's at the heart of the investment strategy? It is the ability to isolate the performance cycle. How do you do it? First, you accept that cyclicality of time exists and Kitchin, Juglar, Berry and Strauss were thinkers and not just illusionary pattern watchers. Second, one should understand that cycle regularity is not just about equality but power law proportionality. Third, one should start connecting or overlaying larger time fractals with smaller fractals. This again brings us to time triads, triangle in a triangle essence.
What kind of pairs? Large cap against small cap indices, value versus growth indices and mid economic versus late economic. What if we go wrong? Well! If you can invest in a naked asset with a risk return history, you can invest in a market neutralising, capital conserving simulated spot time index too. Above all if speculative volume can trade anything that moves, this is still an open source model. What about risk management? A diversified time index with many components could take care of emerging risk from the strategy.
We have been carrying pairs in this feature starting 2004. Frankly speaking, it took us a lot of time to comprehend that what we were really trading, pairs or time. It took us more time to understand the fractal aspect. Long India, Short China was one such pair we featured profitably. We have illustrated Oil - Sensex, CNXIT - Sensex, BSE500 -Sensex and many such pairs to highlight not only performance cyclicality but also market, economic perspectives and direction. We are not very far from the first Indian Time index.
The global pairs
Another example of performance cyclicality can be built around the three pillars of global economy, gold, Dow and oil. So what does the gold - Dow pair (ratio line) tell us? It says that gold has hit an intermediate underperformance low against not only Dow, but also Sensex. This means that long gold, short Dow (Sensex) should be profitable pair for more than a few weeks. Even the larger primary performance cycle is also up in favour of gold and against Dow.
The respective performance cycle has been working from 1976 with an average five-year cyclicality. The last cycle was in 2008 and should complete sometime in 2012. This means there is more for gold ahead against American equity. This could mean that Dow should underperform and fall against gold, gold should rise or outperform Dow or fall but less compared to Dow. The very fact that gold did not collapse against anything also suggests that the underlying larger cycle of gold (2008-2012) outperformance against the Dow continued to work.
If we need more confirming evidence we can look at Dow - oil pair (ratio line). It might seem like a counter intuitive pair, but though gold and hoil belong to the same commodity class, they can behave differently. Unlike gold, oil has pushed up to cycle highs against the Dow. This could be owing to extreme oversold levels, reprieve in recession worries, or simply putting volatility cycles ruling oil.
There could be a thousand more reasons to explain why oil shot up against both gold and Dow. What really matters is where is the performance cycle (time oscillators) between oil and Dow headed now? The respective pair has reached an extreme against oil and is non-confirming suggesting topping oil performance against the Dow. This means that the oil intermediate topping could be near. Even if Dow pushes up above 8,800-9,000 levels in the ongoing leg, oil needs magic to sustain and push to further highs against Dow.

So, if oil is turning down against Dow, and gold is turning up against the Dow, what equity strength are we speaking about for the next few weeks? We have a history of contrarian calls from oil at $100, when we said it was not sustainable. The March low call on markets and BSE Metals’ compelling valuations were made at a time when $5 was thrown as an achievable figure for oil. We are at $70 now.
Performance cycles (time oscillators) are easy to understand, but they become tougher to grasp when you start to explain them fundamentally. The real counter intuitive thinking is not how we can have long Dow and short Oil and still call gold as a performer, but how time indexing can revolutionise how we understand and trade time as an asset class.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Expectation from Banks - Fin Minister

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee wants banks to lower interest rates and pass on benefits to borrowers. In his meeting with state-run bank chiefs, Mukherjee told bankers to ensure credit to industry at lower rates and asked them to match the cut in interest rates undertaken by the Reserve Bank of India.

HIGHLIGHTS

Banks should provide credit to industry at reasonable rates
Banks should address interest rate concerns quickly
Stock markets seem to be quite bullish
Credit at reasonable rates an area of concern
Govt to play only supportive role in PSU banks’ merger
To continue focus on public spending


It was the first meeting of the finance minister with the bankers after the Congress took power at the centre. No wonder then, the message to bankers was firmer. Tired of requesting its own banks to reduce rates to boost economic growth which is likely to slow to 6.5% this year, Mukherjee told the bank chiefs to immediately take corrective steps.

"It is said that the reduction in key rates by RBI is not getting adequately reflected in reduction of BPLR (benchmark prime lending rate) of banks...I would urge the banks to address these concerns expeditiously and in adequate measure," he said. "This will help restore the environment for rapid growth and ensure that the growth process benefits."

The finance minister has reasons to be angry. The Reserve Bank of India has cut the benchmark reverse repo rate  - the rate at which it borrows from banks by 275 points since October 2008. Banks on their part have lowered lending rates by 150-200 basis points only. After the meeting, bankers said they would look at cutting interest rates. 

Mukherjee hoped a cut in interest by the banker will help the economy expand by 7% in the current fiscal year. A cut interest by state-run banks will prompt the private banks to follow suit as they dominate the country's financial sector.
 

"The stock market also seems to be quite bullish," Mukherjee said, referring to the main share index that has jumped more than 90% from its 2009 trough in March helped by foreign portfolio of almost $7 billion in period.

Sensex hits 10-month high on growth cue

Courtesy : Business Standard

Indian stocks rose to a 10-month high, led by Larsen & Toubro, after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said the economy can rebound to a 9 per cent growth rate amid global recession.
 
The Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensitive Index, or Sensex, rose 461.08 points, or 3.1 per cent, to 15,127, the highest since August 12. The S&P CNX Nifty Index on the National Stock Exchange advanced 2.7 per cent to 4,550.95. The BSE 200 Index added 3.1 per cent to 1,836.78.

Larsen & Toubro, India’s biggest engineering company, surged 6.3 per cent, while Jaiprakash Associates, the largest builder of dams, climbed 8.1 per cent after Singh said there was “maneuverability” on roads and ports.

Tata Consultancy Services led software providers higher after Satyam Computer Services said it was profitable before its former chairman disclosed a $1-billion fraud in January. Satyam hit the 10 per cent daily limit to Rs 66.80 after it reported Rs 160 crore ($33.6 million) profit for the quarter ended December 31.

Hyderabad-based Satyam made the first public disclosure of earnings estimates since former Chairman Ramalinga Raju said in January he inflated the software provider’s assets by more than $1 billion, prompting India’s biggest corporate fraud probe.

The accuracy of the results couldn't be guaranteed as the financial figures stretching back to 2000 were yet to be verified by an independent auditor, the company said in a statement to the National Stock Exchange.

DLF, the nation’s largest developer, jumped 10 per cent to Rs 402.65, and Larsen & Toubro added 6.3 per cent to Rs 1,572.80. Jaiprakash advanced 8.1 per cent to Rs 224.20.

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