10 November 2009

Sensex may drift down to 12500, -ve on RIL: Shankar Sharma

Sensex may drift down to 12500, -ve on RIL: Shankar Sharma


Shankar Sharma, Vice-Chairman and Joint Managing Director, First Global, says the Sensex can drift down to 12,000-12,500. He feels the next 3-4 months would to be challenging for equities. "We are looking at a 20% fall in global markets, so India would sell off more if they fall."

Shankar advises investors to stay away from high beta stocks. He is negative on Reliance Industries.

Below is a verbatim transcript of the exclusive interview with Shankar Sharma on CNBC-TV18. Also watch the accompanying video.



Q: It looked like global markets were getting ready for a deep correction last week, and then suddenly things have turned around and the S&P has gone right back to 1,100 again. Do you think the correction is over?

A: No. In fact, when the correction happened, I was of the view that we would get another bounce. Call it a sucker rally or whatever but I was personally of the view that we would see about 16,700–16,800 on the Sensex and US markets would probably go back to their highs or close to their highs. I think the Nasdaq 100 did get back to its highs yesterday.

What is interesting is that the emerging markets are still reasonably far away, good 2% on the aggregate from their highs whilst the US markets have made their highs. That is an interesting disconnect because usually emerging markets should have made their highs a lot earlier than the US markets ought to have but that has not happened this time.

Even today the follow through from the emerging markets (EMs) is far less vigorous than what one would have imagined given the size of the move yesterday on the US markets. Even yesterday, EMs were not that robust except the European and the Latin American end. But Asia was by and large quite tepid, and even today, I don’t see much sort of vigour in the move.


So that is beginning to, at least, surface a slight disconnect between what is happening on the EM side versus what is happening on the US equity side. My sense is that EMs will begin to lag significantly and that usually happens when markets fall rather than when markets rally because it is hard to imagine that EMs won’t participate in any big rally in global equity markets from hereon. So if EMs lag, that is usually a precursor to sell-offs rather than big rallies globally. My sense, therefore, is that over the next month or so, you are going to start seeing the reversal of what began in March this year and the next three–four–six months could be extremely challenging for equity markets globally be it India or be it the rest of the world.

Q: We are at that Sensex level you just talked about. So what seems the more likely move from here that we get into a trading range or that this market corrects faster than the others?

A: If markets do sell off India will sell off a lot more and my view is that markets globally will sell off rather than rally. They could do 1–2% here or there that’s fine but by and large I would on the side of the trade that I will wait for a chance to get shorts in rather than big longs round here globally.

If markets do well, which I think they will, India will sell off a lot more than that. I am looking at about 20% fall in global equities from hereon. India being typically at the high beta end of the market will probably fall a tad more than that and so will the other high beta emerging markets like Russia or Latin America.

Q: You are saying a 25% correction in the index in India is likely which would take it back to again that 12,500 kind of zone?

A: That wouldn’t surprise me in the least, absolutely not. I would definitely hold that view over the next six months that you could go all the way back to 12,000–12,500 and who knows as we always know overshoots happen on either side of the market. So on a bad day you could slide down 500 points even from there. Definitely, I do not think the upsides are there incrementally. You get a blast last rally, which could take you 200 points higher, that’s fine, that’s for a quick trader but not for any serious investor, definitely not.

Q: You would be very surprised if the year end saw a big move up for the markets because the counter argument is that liquidity is still comfortable and there may almost be a scramble to get something done by the end of the year by way of a performance?

A: These theories are very bad except that usually when they work, we say the theory works but there are enough number of times when they don’t work. Statistically, I am not a big believer in these easy, cozy theories because markets are all about destroying, precisely, those kind of theories.

If you think about the correction that happened in the last fifteen-twenty days globally, there was no apparent reason why it should have happened. That is the interesting bid that it was accompanied by pretty much good news globally. If you would look at the US gross domestic product (GDP) numbers, they were quite strong.

South Korea did blowout numbers on their GDP end. By and large, there was nothing that merited a sudden sharp fall of the kind that we saw. That makes you begin to think that is the market reading something which the headlines are not highlighting just yet? Go back to March when the rally started, there was still bad news. It continued for a good month to a month and a half, it was only around late May or June that you started to see real sequential growth coming in. However, I do remember the headlines in late March or mid-April and I was saying that the fundamentals have still not turned. The fact is that they did turn sequentially but it took a good two and a half months.

So sometimes market moves without reasons, you need to probably think a lot deeper that what is the market’s inner mind telling you. So my sense is it could well be that the market is beginning to read that in the next three–six months’ time, this whole easy liquidity and low interest rate and low inflation theory, which has made this move happen could go out the window because now you are going to see the ill-effect of a low inflation base this year begin to creep up from Q1 of 2010 and then again sequentially earnings may not be as strong as there has been because we were coming out of an absolute trough. So maybe the market’s mind is beginning to read those things that sequentially issues––be it on inflation or on rates or on earnings––may not be as robust as is necessary to propel this market higher.

Q: There has been a lot of talk about the dollar carry trade and how that’s fuelled asset prices and whether it will reverse in the next few months. What are your thoughts on the dollar and whether that might pan out?

A: When the dollar falls then you have a big rally in global equities, and particularly, in emerging markets. But I was looking at history and I was not able to find that this is a perfectly correlated situation and I am a big believer in that theory and I belong to the camp that the dollar has to strengthen for markets to fall and it could well do so.

However, there have been reasonable periods and even in the last three years in which it was counter to the conventional theory that the dollar actually strengthen while markets went up as well. So it is not always that this theory holds. My broad view is that the dollar might strengthen a tad but I do not see huge strengthening move. It may well be that the relationship may not hold in that. If the dollar actually does not strengthen what that does is, and let us say on the other hand it weakens, what that will probably do is it might push inflation argument back to the fore. Therefore, rates will follow in the whole reversal of the cycle. That is not going to be good news for the market. So the global economy is still very fragile and the last thing any country can afford is a resurgence of inflation.

Therefore, no economy in the world, that I can think of, can afford a move to tighten rates just now. Therefore, if the dollar actually weakens and rates begin to harden then you may see equity prices begin to tumble because the dollar is weakening rather than the relationship that the dollar weakens and because of that you end up having rallies in equity markets. So maybe this relationship is due for a break because all of us have become too cozy even in assuming that this is a way the trade actually works out.

Q: What do you think about this whole Reliance settlement issue, do you think it is likely? What is your own position in First Global on the Reliance stock?

A: We have been negative on Reliance Industries for quite a while now. I see no reason to change that view. These occasional spikes keep happening as there is hopeful talk that the settlement might be reached and I am not an insider on that trade for me to know whether there will be or not.

What I am more interested is knowing how the Supreme Court (SC) will interpret all the complexities around this and how will a court of law get into very detailed analysis of a business problem because typically courts are into issues of law rather than get into what is the cost of producing gas and stuff like that which even we analysts cannot figure out. So let us see how the SC takes this but I am no insider in this.

Q: What has gone a bit back of mind now is Q2’s performance by way of earnings, there were a lot of chinks over there. The only redeemed feature seemed to be the margin performance which as well maybe up for question in the next couple of quarters, what would your own earnings outlook be?

A: In light of what we have seen, it has been basically one big pack and that has been the auto pack that has truly been good. It has been outstanding in terms of numbers on an aggregate basis. Other than that, you are searching hard to justify a lot of their valuations, you are searching hard to see how incremental earnings growth will come through, if you look at the whole fund raising pie chart from the lows of March, it has gone to companies––infrastructure and realty pack––which have been at the poorest end of the market as far as business fundamental are concerned.

They have to my mind whatever little good news was there by way of their earning sequentially or whichever way you want to cut it, they just want to say that this is the only chance, let us put some numbers together, show the market that we are in good shape, let us get some capital and then we will figure out how to rework the numbers once you got money. It has been a little bit of a logic and reverse. However, companies that have not needed capital within that pack have been only the auto pack. So that has really gladdened the hearts but other than that the earnings picture was pretty relative to where the market is.

At 8,000 same earnings picture would have looked very different but at 17,000 where the markets were, this earnings number or these aggregate numbers are not going to take you to the highs. That has been my general view that the highs while tantalizingly close are unlikely to get reached or breached anytime soon even though for a brief moments, there have been moments that I doubt that is it really going to get there in November or December, etc. but on an aggregate basis, my view by and large has been that we would get a huge bear market rally which we got but it wouldn’t take us pass the highs simply because of the internals of the market by way of their marketcap weightages, hard to see which ones will take the markets higher because autos still don’t constitute much and that is the only area I feel comfortable about.

Q: What do you do with high beta now? Do you short that, do you stay away from it? How would you position yourself in that trade?

A: I never short anything at all, not in India anyway.

This news has just come in and complete details will follow shortly. We can send you an email alert when the details come. Register for your alert here.


Src: Moneycontrol.com
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Other Stories:

No out-of-court settlement with RNRL: RIL
Ambanis rubbish settlement rumours


Src: Moneycontrol, Economictimes

Srisai's Instinct Stock Calls for Dt: 10.11.2009

Srisai's Instinct Stock Calls for Dt: 10.11.2009

This(Srisai's Instinct Stock Calls) will be a New Initiative of this blog to Publish Blog Author's Own Investment/Trading Calls for Short-Medium Term perspective. But All these Calls are not given on Purely Technical perspective. Most of these Calls are given by Blog Author from His past Investment/Trading experiences. So Do not expect More depth in Calls. Author has tried his best to give some calls for the benefit of Investors/Traders from his experience and from some media/web/news based call. So author request all the investors/traders to take/try these Calls as RISK CALLS. And Keep Strict Stop Loss Own (or) Keep Resi,Supp levels As Stop Loss for their Trading(or) Trade/Invest @ your Own Financial Risk. All type of Comments are Welcome about this New Initiative. Dont Forget to Keep Stop Loss and Again Author Remembering you that he is giving calls only from his past trading experience...


Nifty Future cmp 4906

Already NF has run nearly 10% from Recent low of 4538 levels... And 20 DMA is at 4930 levels.. PCR Ratio nearly at 1.40 levels(Slightly overbought)... Resi @ 4930-4957-4970 levels... Be cautious for next three sessions ahead of IIP Data, Inflation Data which is on November 12th... So Long traders are advised to HEDGE their LONG Positions with 4800 PE option..... Supports at 4905-4880-4864 levels...


GSPL cmp 91

Stock has breached 90 level and closed above that 90 after long time.... So If 87-90 holds with Good voulmes then can see 100-110 levels soon.... Supports at 84-78-72 levels....


Hindalco cmp 129

It seems stock has support at 117-108 levels... Resi @ 137-140 levels.. If it crosses that 140 levels, then could see 177 target in medium term... Buy for Medium term investments...


PiramalHealthcare cmp 397 (outside call)

Breakout above 408 could make stock target to 414-421-430 levels....


IDBI cmp 124

Looks good at this level... Buy this Stock with 113 as Strict StopLoss and Go LONG....


By


Srisai

Morning Views from ET etc

Financial, industrial stocks will do a lot better: Ridham Desai

Ridham Desai, the chief India equity strategist at Morgan Stanley, says stocks will be volatile in the near term and that — after the
Ridham Desai
Ridham Desai, Chief India equity strategist, Morgan Stanley
spectacular run-up this year — further gains will be muted in 2010. In an exclusive interview with ET NOW, Desai identifies financial and industrial stocks as his top picks. He says that equity investors need to carefully watch crude oil prices, IPOs, progress in infrastructure spending, and of course, the speed of monetary tightening. Excerpts:


Aren’t you more optimistic on corporate earnings this fiscal than the rest of the Street?
Yeah, the next two quarters could be very strong, and that is where the Street may be missing a point. We are running into a favourable base effect. So, if you look at the run rate in this quarter, I am just extending it to the next two quarters, too. This will give you a broad-market earnings growth of around 25%.

Recently, you wrote that investors were becoming a little complacent about volatility. And suddenly, volatility is back with a vengeance...
It looks like it’s going to be volatile near term. Central banks are going to decide the exit policy, which may generate volatility. But fundamentally, when you plot returns versus expected growth, it appears that the market has already priced in the growth that we are expecting for the next six months. There are two outcomes now: either the economy and the company deliver the expected growth and markets go nowhere, or they exceed the growth forecast and then markets adjust. If they don’t, then we are getting into choppy waters.

The quality of US growth does appear to be rather weak. What is your view on the kind of risk the anaemic US consumer poses to Indian markets?
We don’t think that the US Fed, for example, is going to be in a hurry to pull out the stimulus, because I don’t think there is enough evidence to suggest that growth is back and will stay in the US. Now, we aren’t in the double-dip camp. But many in America believe that we are heading for a double dip in 2010. Our view is that we will get some moderate growth and then we will get some exit from the Fed. India, on the other hand, is experiencing a better quality in growth than it did in the previous cycle.

This time around, the economy is on a very strong footing. I am impressed with the way the government has managed the fiscal policy, which is why we have come out of this quite quickly. And now, we are looking at a potential growth rate of 7-7.5% in the next 12-15 months. Of course, since the US is stuck in a range-bound growth, it will affect India’s growth.

What are some of the key factors that we need to watch out for in predicting the direction of markets?
Generally speaking, the market believes that whenever crude oil goes up, it is bad for India; and if that was the case, then the Indian equity market should not have done well over the past 3-4 months. But the Indian market has done well and the reason is that crude oil is not a problem when capital flows are strong. Also, crude oil becomes a problem if you get a very sharp spike in a very short time.

RBI is taking away the punch bowl of low interest rates. Is it going to be a problem?
Well, it already has. It’s one of the few
Ridham Desai
Ridham Desai, Chief India equity strategist, Morgan Stanley
central banks to have already moved. The central bank’s track record is very good. RBI has conducted itself very well in the past. In 2006, when RBI chose to tighten and ring-fence banking from real estate, there was criticism that it was stamping out growth and that this was not good for India. But in hindsight, it’s a good thing to do, because it prevented banks from any problem when the property bubble collapsed. RBI is doing something similar right now. So far, RBI has conducted itself extremely well.

What about the risk that all the infrastructure spending that we are hearing about does not really materialise?
We have made tremendous progress in rural infrastructure. We have added about 1.5 lakh kilometres of roads, at a run rate of 100 km a day. It’s a fantastic achievement that has happened. We have managed to get electricity into rural areas. So, NREGA has done some good work and the rural infrastructure is clearly on the upswing. Now, we need to also fix urban infrastructure. Our base case is that we will get enough spending in roads and electricity.

Is more than $20 billion of equity issuances in a year a problem for the market in terms of its absorption capacity?
That’s a moving target really, because it is all a function of where we are in terms of liquidity, what happens to global growth, where we get to on exit policy by the Fed and by ECB. So, the India market can absorb around $20-25 billion in the next 12-15 months.

What makes you overweight on consumer-discretionary stocks such as auto?
We are still at the early stages of a growth cycle where consumer discretionary tends to do well. If I have to put a pecking order on the sectors, it will be probably financials, industrials, energy and then consumer-discretionary. We are still overweight on all the four sectors, but the pecking order will shift because of the fact that we have already seen a lot of performance from autos and the cycle is now taking off. So, when the cycle is about to start, consumer-discretionary is usually the best sector, financials follow next.

In the next 12 months, you will see financials and industrials do a lot better; industrials have done well, largely because of hopes of infrastructure spending. In financials, we will go through an expansion in net interest margins. The worst of the non-performing loan (NPL) cycle is behind us and loan growth will recover quite sharply in 2010. The earnings environment for financials will be good, and in terms of valuations, some of the industrial stocks do look rich.

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It's advantage RIL in LyondellBasell bid

Top 5 picks of the day | Mid-term picks | Views/Recommendations

Top stories

Nifty may face resistance at 4950
10 Nov 2009, 0226 hrs IST, Devangi Joshi

After experiencing an initial bout of sluggishness, the Nifty managed to gain 2% at close on Monday and also managed to move past 4830.

Heard on the Street
10 Nov 2009, 0220 hrs IST

Extending trading hours may have its advantages but the proposal does not seem to have gone down well with the broking community.

Nifty could even slip below 4000: Dynamix Research
9 Nov 2009, 1629 hrs IST

Sanjeev Agrawal, Dynamic Research & Management believes that the current rally is a pullback in a wider correction and that stocks could head lower once more.


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DP Blog Updates

Gold hits new all time high

Viceroy Hotels




Src: Economictimes, DP Blog

09 November 2009

Morning Views - 09.11.09 (From ET,BS)

Intermediate trend reversal?

A short-term correction inside a continuing intermediate downtrend

The market bottomed and turned around in what seemed like a short-term correction inside an intermediate downtrend. The Nifty was up 1.8 per cent at 4,796.15 points, while the Sensex was up 1.65 per cent at 16,158 points. The Defty was ahead 2.46 per cent with the rupee hardening again.

FIIs stopped selling and became token buyers while domestic institutions continued to be steady buyers. Volumes remained high. Smaller stocks outperformed the pivotals with the Midcaps up 3.9 per cent while the BSE 500 gained 2.47 per cent and the Junior rose 4.26 per cent.

Outlook: This looks like a short-term correction inside a continuing intermediate downtrend. There is resistance between 4,850-4,950 and the current move is likely to fizzle out somewhere in that zone within the next two sessions. In the next downtrend, it would be interesting to see if successive supports at 4,700-4,750 and 4,500-4,550 held.

Rationale: The market has corrected from the 2009 high of 5,181 (October 20) to a low of 4,538 (November 3). If it has established an intermediate downtrend starting October 21, that low of 5,538 will most likely be broken. Using Fibonacci retracements, the up move from 3,918 (July 13) to 5,181 (October 20) should be followed by a correction that lasts 4-6 weeks minimum and corrects to 4,700, 4,550, or 4,400.

The first two levels were hit in the first two weeks of the new trend. But the likely time period of correction is not over. So, the third level (62 per cent retracement) is likely to be hit. The Exponential 200 Day Moving Average is around 4,300, which reinforces support at 4,300-4,400.

Counter-view: We've seen before that intermediate downtrends within a long-term bull market are often short in terms of time and mild in terms of levels. Correction levels have already matched and it's possible that the time period will be truncated. If it happens, it will need to be driven by enthusiastic FII buying. A new intermediate uptrend would be signalled by climbing past 5,050 and confirmed only by beating 5,181.

Bulls & bears: The pullback was quite broad as indeed was the earlier slide. Stocks from all sectors participated. However, the CNXIT underperformed, probably because of rupee strength. Banks and real estate counters were among the stronger contributors to the recovery. Sugar continued to remain in a bull run that is disconnected from other market movements.

Metals, airlines and PSUs all jumped, apparently on news-based triggers. Traders should be selective about entering PSUs since many of them are noticeably illiquid. Auto stocks remained depressed. Some shuffling out of defensive FMCG counters into more aggressive plays appears to have occurred since HUL and ITC under-performed. The other defensive sector, pharma continued to do well.

MICRO TECHNICALS

JET AIRWAYS
Current Price: Rs 465
Target Price: Rs 485

The stock has seen enhanced volumes and pushed to a new 2009 high suggesting a recent reversal of the long-term trend. It has a likely target of Rs 485-495, where it will hit heavy resistance. Keep a stop at Rs 455 and go long. Book profits above Rs 485.


POLARIS
Current Price: Rs 166.3
Target Price: Rs 175

The stock has gained over 300 per cent since March. It made another surge on high volume. There is resistance near the 2009 highs, starting at about Rs 175. Keep a trailing stop at Rs 160 and go long. Book 50 percent profit at Rs 175 and move the stop up to Rs 170.


J P ASSOCIATES
Current Price: Rs 228
Target Price: Rs 240

The stock has seen a V-shaped recovery on good volumes from a bottom at Rs 190. It could rise till Rs 240. But there is a large downside if current support is broken. Keep a stop at Rs 225. Go long with a target of Rs 240. If the Rs 225 stop breaks, go short with a target of Rs 215.


RCF
Current Price: Rs 73.5
Target Price: Rs 80

The stock shot up on massive volume expansion once the new PSU public holding policy was announced. There's plenty of resistance above the current price but it probably has sufficient momentum to reach Rs 80. Keep a stop at Rs 71 and go long.


HCC
Current Price: Rs 134.1
Target Price: Rs 145

The stock has crossed a key resistance on high volumes. It has a target projection of Rs 145, which is close to the 2009 high. Keep a stop at Rs 131 and go long. Clear the position between Rs 142-145 because it's unlikely to beat the Rs 145 mark.

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Strategic moves 09-NOV-09
After a sharp correction at the start of the week which saw Smart Portfolios slip into the red, the markets bounced back sharply and recouped losses.
Markets at a glance 09-NOV-09
The markets staged a recovery after a steep correction during the first half of last week.
Sensex may fall 10% 09-NOV-09
India’s stock market may fall by as much as 10 per cent within six months as company earnings fail to meet expectations, according to Pankaj Tibrewal, manager of the country’s best performing equity fund this year.
High volatility on the cards 09-NOV-09
High turnover and high volatility characterised trading last week.
Intermediate trend reversal? 09-NOV-09
The market bottomed and turned around in what seemed like a short-term correction inside an intermediate downtrend.
Go long 09-NOV-09
The increased competitive intensity between wireless telephony service providers has not only had a dampening effect on the stock prices but is also reflecting in their September 2009 quarter results.
Analysts' corner 09-NOV-09
IVRCL's second quarter numbers were in line with expectations.
Provisioning issues 09-NOV-09
The broader indices were in the correction mode in the recent past, but the new RBI provisioning stipulations ensured that banking stocks suffered more.
'We will turn profitable in FY11' 09-NOV-09
The country’s largest film and entertainment services company Reliance MediaWorks (earlier known as Adlabs Films) has seen a 37 per cent growth y-o-y in revenues to Rs 189 crore but is still making losses at the net level for the September quarter.
Making a comeback 09-NOV-09
Financial intermediaries such as the broking companies, whose fortunes are closely linked to the markets, had a tough time till early 2009.

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Attractive midcap, small stocks can be risky

Top 5 picks of the day | Mid-term picks

RIL closes in on big-bang overseas acquisition

Analyst's Pick: Mindtree
9 Nov 2009, 0834 hrs IST

Mindtree appears to be in favourable spot in the R&D offshore market (45% of company revenues) and cyclical IT services market.

Analyst's Pick: Tulip Telecom
9 Nov 2009, 0833 hrs IST

Edelweiss rates Tulip Telecom (TTSL) as a 'Sector Outperformer' on a relative return basis.

Analyst's Pick: NTPC
9 Nov 2009, 0831 hrs IST

NTPC hinted that it might miss its target of adding 22 GW capacity in the 11th five-year plan (FY08-12).

Analyst's Pick: Jindal Steel & Power
9 Nov 2009, 0830 hrs IST

Goldman Sachs is downgrading Jindal Steel to 'Neutral' from 'Buy', with a revised target price of Rs 625.

Analyst's Pick: Federal Bank
9 Nov 2009, 0827 hrs IST

Citigroup maintains 'Buy' rating on Federal Bank. Federal's Q2FY10 profits were 20% below estimates largely due to asset delinquencies and higher loan-loss charges.

Analyst's Pick: Patni Computers
9 Nov 2009, 0825 hrs IST

Morgan Stanley maintains `Equal Weight'rating on the stock at the revised price target of Rs 425.

Nifty to get support at 4700-4600 range
9 Nov 2009, 0102 hrs IST, Devangi Joshi

With the weekly gain of 84 points, Nifty has managed to stay afloat above its 20 week moving average. For the coming sessions, the Nifty would look at 4640 due to the presence of the 100-DMA around that level.

Possible intermediate uptrend starting, buy stocks with clear uptrends: Deepak Mohoni

India Inc's Q2 results do not provide strong signs of recovery
9 Nov 2009, 0812 hrs IST, Santanu Mishra

The September 2009 quarterly result of India Inc does not provide strong signs of recovery. Investors need to watch next two quarters before jumping into any conclusion.

High premium IPOs may mar chances of quick return for retail investors
9 Nov 2009, 0755 hrs IST, Krishna Kant

Potential disinvestment candidates include some of the most profitable PSUs but given the recent experience the IPOs could be at a high premium minimising the chances of a quick return for retail investors.

Private trusts for children making a comeback
9 Nov 2009, 0749 hrs IST, Kiran Kabtta Somvanshi

Private trusts for children had its glory days in the 80s when every other film had such a thing in the storyline. It's seeing a comeback as several parents are turning to it.

Analysts' Picks: Mindtree, Tulip Telecom, NTPC, Jindal Steel & Power, Federal Bank, Patni Computers
9 Nov 2009, 0743 hrs IST

Analystss take on Mindtree, Tulip Telecom, NTPC, Jindal Steel & Power, Federal Bank and Patni Computers.

Consider PNB for long-term investment
9 Nov 2009, 0732 hrs IST, Karan Sehgal

Punjab National Bank has outperformed its peers on all important parameters including growth, asset quality and margins. Investors should consider it for long-term investment.

Valuing bonds and dollar not easy anymore
9 Nov 2009, 0722 hrs IST

The ad-hoc combination of quantitative easing, government stimulus packages and zero-interest-rate policies has distorted markets beyond recognition.

Bajaj Electricals glowing with progress
9 Nov 2009, 0712 hrs IST, Devangi Joshi

Consumer, as well as infrastructure oriented business activities make Bajaj Electrical a good buy on dips.

Chettinad Cement on growth path
9 Nov 2009, 0706 hrs IST, Amriteshwar Mathur

Chettinad Cement has increased capacity but concern over surplus supply in south remains.

Retail is all about scale: Kishore Biyani
9 Nov 2009, 0656 hrs IST, Supriya Verma Mishra

What can Pantaloon shareholders expect in future? ET Intelligence Group finds out in a conversation with the company's managing director Kishore Biyani.

Silver possesses good investment potential
9 Nov 2009, 0650 hrs IST, Devangi Joshi

While gold is trading at its all-time high, silver is restricted by its industrial usage. The white metal may, however, benefit from the strong fundamentals of the yellow metal.

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Src: EconomicTimes, Business-Standard

Srisai's Instinct Stock Calls for Dt: 09.11.2009

Srisai's Instinct Stock Calls for Dt: 09.11.2009

This(Srisai's Instinct Stock Calls) will be a New Initiative of this blog to Publish Blog Author's Own Investment/Trading Calls for Short-Medium Term perspective. But All these Calls are not given on Purely Technical perspective. Most of these Calls are given by Blog Author from His past Investment/Trading experiences. So Do not expect More depth in Calls. Author has tried his best to give some calls for the benefit of Investors/Traders from his experience and from some media/web/news based call. So author request all the investors/traders to take/try these Calls as RISK CALLS. And Keep Strict Stop Loss Own (or) Keep Resi,Supp levels As Stop Loss for their Trading(or) Trade/Invest @ your Own Financial Risk. All type of Comments are Welcome about this New Initiative. Dont Forget to Keep Stop Loss and Again Author Remembering you that he is giving calls only from his past trading experience...

Nifty Future cmp 4790

Nifty Future Will face Stiff resi @ 4864-4880 levels... BEARS Will get Happy if BULLS not able to hold/cross this levels... Next Resi @ 4905-4930.... Supports at 4765-4724-4704-4681 levels....


Time TechnoPlast cmp 40

Buy this Stock as Purely Investment Perspective... You can get good returns if you hold this for a 1 year period. Supports at 33 levels...


Mphasis cmp 722

Its IT stock... Stock is running..... running..... in the upper side..... Looks Good.... Supports at 660-630 levelels.... Buy this Stock with Given support(660-630) as Strict StopLoss and Go LONG.... Further Upside is expected...


Adani Enterprises cmp 827

I like this stock very much... Because when NFut at 5150 level this stock was at below 700 range... Now NFut in 4800 range , but this stock is at 800 levels... Looks Good at this level... Year high nearly at 870 levels... Supports at 740-730 levels.. Buy This Stock with 730 as Strict StopLoss... Good return expected in medium term.


JSL cmp 98

(Formerly)Jindal Stainless Steel .

Stock has crossed stiff resi levels of 90-93 in few days ago... But hovers around that level... Take that resi as Support & StopLoss 90-93, Go LONG in this counter... Other Supp at 75-78 levels... Year high was 118.... Good returns expected in Medium term...



By

Srisai..

07 November 2009

Teens who are already CEOs of their own companies

Teens who are already CEOs of their own companies


By: Mahafreed Irani, TNN

After the daily grind of school and tuitions, most kids prefer to wind down by harvesting virtual strawberries on Farmville.

But some would rather make money. Meet a new breed of teens who are already CEOs of their own companies. Their success shows that you don’t need a fancy MBA to be an entrepreneur, only broadband and some out-of-the-box thinking.

MOOLAH ROUGE: Mohnish Nagpal, 17 years

Mohnish doesn’t take a break after college. He starts work at 5.30 pm when his target audience in the US wakes up and logs on to the internet. Nagpal makes money online by telling others how to make money online. His blog: Sensonize.com.

One of his posts, for instance, gives tips to teens who can do with some extra money. It lists blogging , affiliate marketing, paid surveys and writing articles for directories as some of the ways of making money. “Very few people know that you can even earn by tweeting,” he says. With a steady five-figure income, he doesn’t have to worry about pocket money. He even bought himself a six-gear mountain bike recently. “Every time someone clicks an advert on my blog, I get paid for it,’’ he smiles.

This year, Nagpal, who first earned Rs 5,000 off the internet at 13, started Limespace Networks, a website-hosting company that caters to 35 customers . A student of commerce and IT at MMK College in Mumbai, the teenager, who wants to retire at 25, doesn’t think about the future much. His wish may well come true. He has already made it to a list of top international bloggers aged 21 or under on Retireat21.com, a forum for internet entrepreneurs.


GEEK GOD: Monik Pamecha, 13 years

If you don’t find 13-year-old Monik Pamecha in his room at his Santa Cruz home, look for him at his Wi-Fi-enabled terrace. For, when it gets noisy, this blogger likes to escape upstairs, sit on the water tank and dash out posts to his subscriber base of 16,000.

The self-proclaimed geek runs technology website etiole.com, a networking site for “geeks” called iluvtech.org and URL shortening service hop.im. Pamecha’s sites are so popular he’s regularly visited by PR executives of gadget companies who deliver their latest products at his doorstep in anticipation of a review on his five-year-old blog, Etiole. The blog has 26 other authors who he has recruited from around the world. Each gets paid from the advertising income generated by the website traffic they attract. Apart from reviews, Pamecha posts technology tips. One of his posts is on “five places where you should not keep your iPhone” .

Not content with three websites to his name, Pamecha, a student of Lilavatibai Podar School in Mumbai, is all set to launch a media-sharing website. But he says he couldn’t have achieved so much without his father’s support. Manoj Pamecha bankrolls his son’s ventures, buys him gadgets and advises him on how to take “calculated business risks” .


MEDIA PLAYER: Farrhad Acidwalla, 15 years

Founder-CEO of Rockstah Media, Farrhad Acidwalla has converted his Dadar Parsi Colony house in Mumbai into a workstation for his web development and media company. Staying up all night on his Mac Book Pro is a habit he’s acquired after three years of juggling business and homework . Acidwalla earned his first cheque at the age of 13.

“I created an aeromodelling and aviation website that attracted a lot of attention and sold it later,” says the HR College student who has a long list of clients including corporates. “I have just bagged clients from the education industry in UK,” he says.

Today, the self-taught web-developer works with a team of web designers, developers, search engine specialists and social media marketers to build and promote websites. He swears by his company’s slogan, “creating awesomeness” , and looks up to fellow web-based businessmen like Ayush Software’s Karamveer Singh, Kratee’s Annkur Agarwal and Mouth Shut’s Faisal Farooqui. “Being young is an added advantage as I can come up with many innovative ideas,” he says.



More about this at Teens who are already CEOs of their own companies

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Heard on the street


Bulls & bears rush to cut market exposure



Even as the market remains divided about whether this is the right time to lock-in profits, the buzz is that some of the leading traders and operators have already trimmed their exposure to stocks, of late. Grapevine has it that Rar(e)ing Bull and Old Fox cut a portion of their stock positions a couple of weeks ago, before short-selling in the market.

Indices fell around 8-9% in the past two weeks of October. It is also speculated that they covered their short positions early this week. Pink Panther, who has been officially banned from trading in Indian markets till 2017, is also rumoured to have created huge short positions in the market.

IFCI back in favour after stake sale talks revive

Financial institution IFCI, which was in limelight in the later part of the previous bull run, is once again finding favour among traders and operators. The stock, which has gained close to 16% in a week, closed at Rs 51 on Friday, up 2.5% from the previous close. Talks that drove up the stock in 2007 have resurfaced now. Speculation has it that the government is looking to revive the process for selling its stake in IFCI soon.

Traders, who had bet on the stock aggressively in late 2007, when it was at its peak, are unlikely to forget the stock plunge after IFCI, in December 2007, called off the process for the stake sale to a strategic partner, after the Sterlite Industries-Morgan Stanley consortium demanded management control.

AMC plans listing as its asset base swells

A FINANCIAL services major, which is planning to list its asset management company in the near future, is striving hard to ramp up its asset base. According to fund industry sources, a swollen asset base would help the financial services
behemoth command higher valuations at the time of public issue.

The fund house, as per industry grapevine, is also keeping distributors in good humour by handing out extra commissions and freebies for bringing money into its schemes. The effort appears to be showing results, as the fund house has gained appreciably in both equity and bond asset bases, of late.

Contributed by Nishanth Vasudevan, Apurv Gupta & Shailesh Menon

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Look at some top picks in the auto sector



Src: Economictimes.Indiatimes

Selloff boon: Govt richer by Rs 50k cr in 1 session

Selloff boon: Govt richer by Rs 50k cr in 1 session

MUMBAI: In just one session on Friday, Dalal Street made North Block richer by over Rs 50,000 crore, before government sold even one share in its
portfolio of companies.

The stocks of government-run companies were on a roll — thanks to the government's decision that at least 10% more stake in all listed PSUs will be divested — as investors rushed in to lap up these scrips.

Consequently, the total market capitalisation of 48 PSU companies went up by about Rs 62,000 crore with the government's share in this increase at about Rs 50,000 crore.

The hectic buying in PSU counters led to some of these stocks hitting the upper circuit limit. For example, MMTC closed the day 20% up at Rs 36,147, while NMDC ended 10% up at Rs 338. Both these are highly illiquid counters because public holding in both these companies is less than 2%. While in MMTC the government holds 99.33%, in NMDC the corresponding figure is 98.4%. ‘‘The government's decision to divest will lead to higher level of floating stocks in these counters and hence the euphoria around these stocks,'' said a dealer at a local brokerage.


Also Read
Fresh PSU sale to add Rs 3.2 l cr to M-cap
PSU investors richer by Rs 26,000 crore in a single day
Disinvestment of listed PSUs worth Rs 25k cr at current price
For first time, analysts differ on RIL's earnings growth prospects


Among the 49 listed PSUs, only MTNL ended in the red. Seemingly this was because the government holds 56% in this telecom company and will probably not divest 10% in it due to political and union pressures, market players said.

On Thursday, home minister P Chidambaram, who was earlier the finance minister, announced the government's decision about divestments in PSUs. He also said the government will divest stakes in all the profitable PSUs through public offers.

Market players pointed out that usually decisions about divestments are announced by the finance ministry but in this case it was the home minister who did so. In Friday's market, delivery volumes also went up substantially in most of the PSU counters.



Src: Economictimes < Selloff boon: Govt richer by Rs 50k cr in 1 session >

06 November 2009

Heard on the street - ET

Top five stock picks | Top 5 Mid-term Picks

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Heard on the street

Suzlon comes back in style after a losing streak



Suzlon shares were among the biggest gainers on Thursday, rising over 13% to close at Rs 62.50, and snapping a eight-day losing streak that had prompted speculation of the company facing difficulties. The stock rose, even as the company informed stock exchanges that it had pledged additional shares with Indiabulls Financial Services, to which it owes roughly Rs 200 crore.

A person familiar with the development said additional shares had been pledged to provide for margin due to the 34% fall in stock price in less than two weeks. The shares were being hammered on talk that the company was struggling to refinance its foreign currency loans. The dramatic surge in the stock price on Thursday was driven by talk that the company has now managed to refinance close to Rs 10,000 crore of loans.

A leading state-owned bank is said to have provided the wind power company a fresh loan of $465 million. Have the bears called off their attack? Suzlon November futures closed at a slight premium to spot, with open interest rising 2.6%. This could indicate that in addition to covering of short positions, some fresh long positions too may have been initiated.

Bears were hammering the shares in the hope that the company would not be able to meet the margin requirement, thus prompting the lender to offload the pledged shares. While the company may have tided over its liquidity problems, bears seem to be taking heart in the weak operating performance, and are still hoping to rake a neat profit on their short positions.

MF has the last laugh after early fund erosion

EVEN as rivals rejoiced over the approximate Rs 2,000-crore fall in assets under management (AUM) of a leading fund house in October over the last month, officials in the mutual fund in question were actually celebrating. The industry buzz has it that the fund house held a party for its employees on Wednesday to celebrate a fresh inflow of a few thousand crores (sources say in the range of Rs 2,500-3 ,000 crore) into various debt schemes.

Ind-Barath Power to tap IPO market

HYDERABAD-BASED power generation company Ind-Barath Power Infra, which recently got $100-million funding from private equity funds Sequoia Capital and Bessermer Venture Partners, is planning to go public soon. According to an official privy to the development, the company has initiated talks with merchant bankers for the same.

The private equity firms together picked up more than 15% stake in the company, valuing it at over Rs 2,100 crore. This is the second round of private equity funding for the power generator, which has projects in Karnataka, Orissa, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu. In 2007, Citi Ventures and UTI Ventures had invested Rs 300 crore in the company.


Contributed by Santosh Nair, Shailesh Menon & Reena Zachariah

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Src: Economictimes.Indiatimes.com

05 November 2009

Moneycontrol - Its Our 10th Birthday....

http://www.moneycontrol.com/promos/mc10.html

And what a journey it's been! From a site that was just a single Markets page to a multimedia platform integrating text and video, we sure have come a long way!

But before anything else, a word of thanks to our partners in growth. Over the last ten years, YOU, our amazing community of Moneycontrol users, have helped us evolve with constant feedback and advice on a daily basis. Thank you!

We've had fun the last ten years, arming you with essential information and expert insight, helping you keep track of your wealth. We've launched several successful features and services, because of which over a million of you visit it daily, making it India's largest financial site.

Looking forward, we hope to move from strength to strength, maintaining our tradition of launching useful features. And today on our tenth anniversary, we unveil our Newscenter, which we hope will become the one stop destination for news about Indian business and finance. Powered by Network18 brands such as CNBC TV18 and Forbes India, we promise you, it's going to become your fav page on the Net and mobile!

The other is our exclusive tie up with Intuit in India. Intuit, the world's best personal finance software service, will now power your Portfolio. Check it out.

We will also be celebrating this month by bringing you special columns and chats with men and women driving India's Business and Economy. There are also several contests with exciting prizes for you to win. All the more reason for you not to miss your appointment with Moneycontrol!

Here's wishing Moneycontrol the next ten years of success!

Team Moneycontrol


http://www.moneycontrol.com/promos/mc10.html

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