03 January 2010

Stock Reports and Mkt analysis from Leading Sources

Mutual Funds Investment Picks - 2010


Weekly Newsletter - Jan 2 2010


Markets likely to test new highs


Weekly Newsletter - Jan 3 2010


ValueGuide 2010


Sobha Developers


Mutual Funds Analysis


Royal Orchid Hotels


Daily Newsletter - Jan 4 2010


Top Stock Picks - 2010


2010 Yearly Stock Picks


Hindalco Industries


Blackstone - 2010 will be a difficult year


IVRCL Infrastructure


Navneet Publications


Everest Kanto


Jet Airways, Wipro, Moser Baer, Sesa Goa, Voltas


Reliance Infrastructure


Elecon Engineering


MOre @ http://www.deadpresident.blogspot.com/


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TECHNICAL ANALYSIS: Index Outlook: Optimism reigns supreme
Indian equities bid a fitting adieu to 2009 with the Sensex waving merrily from its 52-week high. The New Year will begin on an irritating note for market intermediaries as trading begins an hour early from Monday. But then, as the ancient ...

STOCK MARKETS: Sensex outlook for 2010
If 2008 was a year of unprecedented decline in the equity market, 2009 will go down as the year of astounding rebound. In the Outlook for 2009 published on December 28, 2008, we had expected one leg of the bear market to end in the first ...

STOCKS: Orchid Chemicals & Pharmaceuticals: Sell
Shareholders can consider paring their exposure to the stock of Orchid Chemicals & Pharmaceuticals, which recently sold its antibiotic injectables business to the US-based Hospira Inc for $400 million (about Rs ...

STOCKS: Bombay Rayon Fashions: Buy
Investors with a long-term perspective can buy the stock of small-cap textile player Bombay Rayon Fashions (BRFL), manufacturer of fabric and apparel. At Rs 189, the stock trades at 10.6 times its trailing 12-month per share earnings. Though ...

STOCKS: India Cements: Book Profit
Investors in the stock of India Cements can consider booking profits at this point and entering the stock at a later date. Oversupply worries in the Southern region and the resultant pressure on prices in this region may curtail the ...

MUTUAL FUNDS: Tata Dividend Yield Fund: Hold
Investors can retain units of Tata Dividend Yield Fund (Tata Dividend), considering its steady returns track record over the long term. The fund seeks to invest in stocks that yield dividends higher than that of ...

INVESTMENTS: Investment ideas for 2010
The year 2009 started off on a subdued note for equity investors but by year-end both the BSE Sensex and Nifty were trading 80 per cent higher. With the markets trading at a price-earning multiple of well over 21 times from 11 times at the ...

STOCK MARKETS: Sensex in 2010
Global backdrop. Despite the strong gains recorded by equities across the world, most global benchmarks are still some way away from their previous peaks. The MSCI World index is positioned exactly half-way up the decline that ensued after the ...

TECHNICAL ANALYSIS: Index Strategy: Bull call spread on Nifty
Overall market sentiments as we move into a new trading year appear no less than bullish given the healthy rollovers seen in December derivative contracts. Traders can consider playing this uptrend in the market by setting a bull call spread ...

TECHNICAL ANALYSIS: Stock Strategy: Short strangle on Tata Power
Tata Power (1,382): The stock has been moving in narrow range for sometime. It closed last week above the crucial level of Rs 1,350. The outlook appears bullish as long as it stays above this level. The stock finds its next resistance at ...

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Wkly Tech Analysis: Old highs may be tested

The year 2009 ended on a high note, with benchmark (BSE & NSE) indices registering best yearly gains in the last two decades and touching fresh 19-month peaks. The year, however, will be most remembered for the Sensex and the Nifty hitting the upper circuit for the first time.

In the week under review, the markets surprisingly moved in an extremely narrow band despite the two holidays and the derivatives expiry. The BSE benchmark index, the Sensex, moved in a narrow range of 200-odd points. The index touched a high of 17,531 and settled with a gain of 104 points at 17,465.

Among index stocks, Reliance Infrastructure surged over 4 per cent. NTPC, Grasim, Bharti Airtel, SBI, Hindalco and Jaiprakash Associates were the other major gainers. Sun Pharma dropped 3.6 per cent. DLF, Wipro and ITC were some of the other prominent losers.

Lack of momentum on the upside suggests the up move may halt temporarily. The Sensex needs to sustain above 17,550 for further gains, while on the downside, the index may seek support at 17,385-17,335, below which the bears are likely to have the upper hand.

The longer-term picture, since we are at the start of the New Year, looks quite promising. Chances are that we may re-test the 21,000-mark this calendar year, while there are multiple strong supports for the index on the downside. The bias will remain bullish as long as the index remains above 13,840 this year. There is a further deeper support around 11,590 in case of extreme bearishness. On the positive front, the Sensex is first likely to target 19,550, followed by 21,090, in 2010.

The Nifty moved in a range of 62 points and ended with a gain of 23 points at 5,201. Last week, I had mentioned that the Nifty needed to sustain above 5,210 for fresh bullishness. As we see, the index was unable to close above 5,210 on any single day. Currently, the chart suggests that the Nifty needs to close above 5,237 for fresh bullishness. The Nifty may face resistance around 5,225-5,240 and find support around 5,177-5,163. A dip below 5,163 could see the index fall to 5,100 and then further lower to 5,010.

Unlike the Sensex, the yearly Nifty chart reveals that it will be difficult for the index to attain its 2008 peak (6,357) this year. In fact, the index has strong resistance around 6,225. The first significant target for the index is 5,790. On the downside, the index is likely to find considerable support around 4,600 and further lower at 4,175.



Src: BusinessLine and DP Blog, Business-Standard and Etc

02 January 2010

India to overtake China in 2020

India to overtake China in 2020: Swaminathan Aiyar



In the past decades, India has been world number one in starvation deaths, foreign aid and bribery. In the 2000s, it was transformed from a
chronic under-performer to a potential superpower. Here are eight predictions of what it will look like in 2020:

India will overtake China as the fastest-growing economy in the world. China will start ageing and suffering from a declining workforce, and will be forced to revalue its currency. So its growth will decelerate, just as Japan decelerated in the 1990s after looking unstoppable in the 1980s. Having become the world’s second-biggest economy, China’s export-oriented model will erode sharply — the world will no longer be able to absorb its exports at the earlier pace. Meanwhile, India will gain demographically with a growing workforce that is more literate than ever before. The poorer Indian states will start catching up with the richer ones. This will take India’s GDP growth to 10% by 2020, while China’s growth will dip to 7-8%.

India will become the largest English-speaking nation in the world, overtaking the US. So, the global publishing industry will shift in a big way to India. Rupert Murdoch’s heirs will sell his collapsing media empire to Indian buyers. The New York Times will become a subsidiary of an Indian publishing giant.

In the 2000s, India finally gained entry into the nuclear club, and sanctions against it were lifted. By 2020, Indian companies will be major exporters of nuclear equipment, a vital link in the global supply chain. So, India will be in a position to impose nuclear sanctions on others.

India, along with the US and Canada, will develop new technology to extract natural gas from gas hydrates — a solidified form of gas lying on ocean floors. India has the largest gas hydrate deposits in the world, and so will become the biggest global producer. This will enable India to substitute gas for coal in power generation, hugely reducing carbon emissions and making Jairam Ramesh look saintly.

India will also discover enormous deposits of shale gas in its vast shale formations running through the Gangetic plain, Assam, Rajasthan and Gujarat. New technology has made the extraction of shale gas economic, so India will become a major gas producer and exporter. Meanwhile, Iran’s mullahs will be overthrown, and a new democratic regime will usher in rapid economic growth that creates a shortage of gas in Iran by 2020. So, the Iran-India pipeline will be recast, but in reverse form: India will now export gas to Iran.

More and more regions of India will demand separate statehood. By 2020, India will have 50 states instead of the current 28. The new states will not exactly be small. With 50 states and a population of almost 1.5 billion, India will average 30 million people per state, far higher than the current US average of 6 million per state.

China, alarmed at India’s rise, will raise tensions along the Himalayan border. China will threaten to divert the waters of the Brahmaputra from Tibet to water-scarce northern China. India will threaten to bomb any such project. The issue will go to the Security Council.

Islamic fundamentalists will take over in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The US will withdraw from the region, leaving India to bear the brunt of consequences. Terrorism will rise in India, but the economy will still keep growing. How so? Well, 3000 people die every year falling off Mumbai’s suburban trains, and that does not stop Mumbai’s growth. Terrorism will bruise India, but not halt its growth.


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Top 10 Indian companies of the decade



Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Last updated on: December 31, 2009 21:18 IST
350)this.width=350;"> Bhupesh Bhandari

India Inc entered the 21st Century more confident and more competitive. Many of the previous decade's top ten were not even around a decade earlier. In this era of change few thought in year 2000 that by 2010 Ratan Tata would continue to head any list of high performers. He did!

Life began for Ratan Tata in 2000. That year, Tata Tea acquired Tetley of the United Kingdom. This was the first major acquisition of a global brand by an Indian company.

Four years later, it was Tata Motors' turn -- it bought the heavy vehicles business of bankrupt Daewoo Motors in South Korea. Next year, Tata Steel acquired NatSteel in Singapore. All of this paled into insignificance in 2007 when Tata Steel bought Anglo-Dutch steel maker Corus for $12 billion. It made Tata Steel the fifth largest steel company in the world.

A year later, Tata Motors became the new owner of marquee brands Jaguar and Land Rover after it paid Ford $2.3 billion. The crowning glory came in 2009 when he launched an ultra-low-cost car, the Nano. Not bad at all.

The decade that draws to an end will go down in history as the one in which Indian business spread its footprint across the globe. Strong economic growth till 2008, which was driven by domestic consumption, had filled the coffers of most companies.

The flow of global capital had taken the stock markets to new heights, which made Indian businessmen rich beyond compare. The list of Indian billionaires had become long. They had the money to buy assets that were on the block. Click NEXT to read on further. . .


Image: Tata Group chairman Ratan Tata.
Photographs: Reuters



Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Last updated on: December 31, 2009 21:18 IST
350)this.width=350;">

Reliance Industries got even bigger in 2002 when it announced India's biggest gas discovery in the Krishna-Godavari basin.

That year it acquired Indian Petrochemicals Corporation and merged Reliance Petroleum to become the country's largest company in the private sector. RIL entered the Fortune 500 list two years later.

In 2000, Reliance Industries' assets were worth Rs 50,000 crore -- not small by any standard. Today, the assets are worth Rs 2,45,706 crore. The revenue of the unified Reliance Group stood at Rs 21,541 crore in 2000. In 2008-09, in contrast, Reliance Industries clocked a turnover of Rs 1,39,269 crore.


Image: Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani.
Photographs: Reuters
Source:



Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Last updated on: December 31, 2009 21:18 IST
350)this.width=350;">

But the decade's big story for the Ambani family was sibling rivalry. Anil, the younger of the two Ambani brothers, accused Mukesh of usurping the family stake after the death of patriarch Dhirubhai in July 2002.

It turned out to be a no holds barred fight, which should come to a head early in the New Year in the nation's Supreme Court. In the settlement of 2005, Mukesh retained control of the oil & gas and petrochemicals business, while Anil got power and telecom.

Mukesh has since then diversified into retail, while Anil has taken strides in entertainment -- he acquired Adlabs and Steven Spielberg's Dreamworks studio. The Reliance business empire thus looks very different from ten years ago.


Image: Reliance founder late Dhirubhai Ambani (seated), with his sons Mukesh and Anil (right).
Photographs: Reuters
Source:



Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Top 10 Indian companies of the decade

Last updated on: December 31, 2009 21:18 IST
350)this.width=350;">

Hindalco, of the Aditya Birla Group, bought Canadian aluminum maker Novelis for $6.4 billion.

Suzlon, set up in 1995 by Tulsi Tanti and now the world's third-largest wind energy company, shelled out $525 million for Hansen Transmissions of the Netherlands and $1.6 billion for REpower of Germany.

Vijay Mallya downed Scottish whiskey maker Whyte & Mackay for close to $1 billion. Dr Reddy's paid over $500 million for Betapharm of Germany, Ranbaxy $324 million for Terapia of Romania.

There were numerous other buys across the world in telecom, engineering, financial services, FMCG, information technology et al. In addition, Indians began to get plum projects. GMR bagged a $2.57 billion project to modernise an Istanbul airport. Indian business, in short, acquired a global spread.


Image: Aditya Birla Group chairman Kumaramangalam Birla.
Photographs: Rediff Archive








Src: ET, Rediff

31 December 2009

Top 10 picks on Dalal Street for 2010

Wishing ALL a VERY HAPPY and PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR 2010



Top 10 picks on Dalal Street for 2010


Experts take on best stock bets for 2010
29 Dec 2009, 0557 hrs IST


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ET Bureau

It was a year when sentiment swung from despair to euphoria. Investment gurus believe the worst is behind us. But the big question is, who will call the shots in 2010 — the bulls or the bears? And if it is going to be a sideways market, where do the big opportunities lie?

ET spoke to some of the savviest players to feel their pulse . Here are some of their picks...


Honda Siel Power
29 Dec 2009, 0556 hrs IST


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Latest Quotes | Charts | News/Announcements | Quarterly Results | P&L | Price History

By: CJ George, MD, Geojit BNP Paribas Financial Services

CMP: 263

1Yr Return: 75% P/E: -45.0

Market Cap: Rs 267 crore

Production is on in full swing at Honda Siel Power’s Greater Noida plant, as part of its parent company’s bigger game plans for India. Consolidation of component making and assembly operations at one place is expected to save costs considerably, thereby boosting profitability margins. Current market price of Rs 250 is backed by Rs 160 cash surplus per share and Rs 45 cash earnings per share for FY11.



TTK Healthcare
29 Dec 2009, 0556 hrs IST


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By: CJ George, MD, Geojit BNP Paribas Financial Services

CMP: Rs 237

1Yr Return: 235% P/E: 20.7

Market Cap: Rs 192 crore

TTK Healthcare is into niche businesses in pharma, FMCG, foods, medical devices etc. It is also working on development of coronary stent, vascular graft and stent graft for thoracic aortic aneurysm and abdominal aortic aneurysm repair. In the coming years, medical devices business will grow at a faster rate with an operating profit margin of 45%.



Wipro
29 Dec 2009, 0556 hrs IST


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Latest Quotes | Charts | News/Announcements | Quarterly Results | P&L | Price History

By: Nirmal Jain, CMD, India Infoline

CMP: Rs 694

1Yr Return:v 199% P/E: 25.4

Market Cap: Rs 1,01,841 crore

Wipro’s focus on cost control has helped it improve its operating margins. The company has diversified its pricing model the most over the past one year. Contribution from fixed price projects is up almost 10 percentage points YoY. In fact, its onsite realisations are around 5% better than Infosys. Also, better integration among its diversified service offerings are enabling it to win large multi-service deals.



More on this @

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshowpics/5390102.cms


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Alternative investment therapy
Alternative investment therapy
Ten fastest growing companies

Ten fastest growing companies
Ten worst performing companies
Ten worst performing companies
Experts take on sectoral bets for 2010
Experts take on sectoral bets for 2010



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Browse

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/yearender.cms




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Other Articles:

Asian stocks set for 70% gain this year

Govt to split NALCO in three; stock surges


2009: Best year post 1993 & 1999 for India ( 2009)


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Wishing ALL a VERY HAPPY and PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR 2010