09 December 2009

There could be correction in Jan: M Stanley

There could be correction in Jan: M Stanley

italic;"> Sridhar Sivaram , ED, Morgan Stanley.


It is very interesting to see that Morgan Stanley is actually negative on PSU banks and positive on private sector banks. What would the logic out there be?

Well, our view is that we could see a tightening cycle coming very soon, may be in January itself. Typically what we have seen in the past is that when we have a tightening cycle, the PSU banks tend to underperform this sector and market in general because broadly they are seen as a bond proxy. Some of that may have changed, so we would go by that view and we think in a volatile interest rates environment, the private sector banks are better positioned as opposed to the PSU banks.

So you would not get tempted to buy into the PSU banks simply because they are just so much cheaper?

Well, as I just said we are broadly underweight the PSU banks, so I would not say that within the PSU basket, there would not be banks, which may look attractive at various points of time but you have to keep in mind that PSU banks as a basket have always traded cheaper to the private sector banks. So to that extent, the discount would always be there.

The question obviously comes that there is a possibility of the earnings moving up because of deposit re-pricing and stuff like that but what we understand is that this is already known in the market and there is nothing special about this but what could come as a surprise is the accent of the CRR hike, the extent of the tightening cycle going forward. We do not where the inflation currently is because this data is not being shared right now, but, our own internal estimate is that inflation could be closer to 7.5-8% by March, which basically would mean that we would have to tighten with GDP at 7.9%, IIP double-digit growth. These are all ingredient for a tightening cycle to come much faster than what the market expects.

In light of the fact that yes, there could be a bit of tightening if you will. What about some other interest rate sensitive? Say for example, real estate, there are lot of IPOs also in the pipeline currently, one has opened today. How would you view this space?

Well, I would not comment on specific stocks but as a sector, we would be underweight the sector. Again with the same view that we would like to stay underweight interest rate sensitive as much as possible, so real estate is obviously one of them because of the tightening cycle and obviously as you mentioned, there is enough paper coming in the market, so there will be enough movement within stocks because people who already own may want to look at some of the other stocks. So we would be underweight the real estate sector also.

Consumer discretionary, which is autos would also be the other sector, which we would want to stay underweight, especially the passenger vehicle market. The two-wheeler market is less sensitive to interest rates, so broadly as you would understand what interest rate sensitive sectors and stocks are. We would broadly be underweight those sectors, and we will see how things pan out from thereon.
There could be a correction in January if interest rates actually go up but if growth continues, markets could continue to move up, say
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Src: Economictimes.Indiatimes

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