Showing posts with label india stock market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label india stock market. Show all posts

Friday, September 27, 2013

Warren Buffett & co. Abandons ‘Buy India’ Theme

Former value investor and now Obama crony Warren Buffett cut losses from his investments in India along with other major investors.

From the Bloomberg: (bold mine)
Little more than two years after Warren Buffett labeled India a “dream market,” the economy is expanding at the slowest pace in a decade and the nation’s debt ratings are at risk of being cut to junk.

In the last three months, ArcelorMittal (MT) and Posco scrapped plans for $12 billion of investments, while global funds pulled $12.6 billion from Indian stocks and bonds. The exodus drove the rupee to a record low and caused short-term borrowing costs to soar, sending the government’s two-year bond yield to the biggest premium to the 10-year rate in Bloomberg data going back to 2001. Even Buffett packed up and left, with Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/A) exiting an insurance distribution venture.
Earlier the legendary investor Jim Rogers said that he has shorted India, while Greed and Fear author CLSA’s Chris Wood sees India as highly vulnerable to a sovereign debt crisis.

Despite the sharp rebound of India’s markets, India’s problems has been structural, has been intensifying and has been highly dependent on a risk ON environment

From the same Bloomberg article: (bold mine)
Investors see little prospect of India tackling budget and current-account deficits that drove the rupee down 20 percent in two years as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh boosts food subsidies to woo voters before a May 2014 election. Standard & Poor’s said this month there is more than a one-in-three chance the nation will lose its investment-grade rating within two years, while Pacific Investment Management Co. sees a “large” chance of a cut in as little as 12 months. Last year’s economic growth of 5 percent compares with an average 7.6 percent in the previous decade…

Weakened by corruption scandals and the loss of allies, Singh’s government has passed the fewest bills ever by an administration sitting a five-year term. That is allowing imbalances to build in Asia’s third-largest economy.

The current-account deficit widened to a record 4.8 percent of gross domestic product in the fiscal year ended March 31, while the 4.9 percent shortfall in public finances was the highest among the four largest developing nations. The World Bank estimates more than 800 million people live on less than $2 per day in India, where consumer-price inflation has held close to 10 percent for more than a year.

Data this month showed gains in wholesale prices unexpectedly accelerated to a six-month high of 6.1 percent in August. Every 10 percent decline in the rupee adds as much as 80 basis points, or 0.80 percentage point, to wholesale-price inflation, Nomura Holdings Inc. estimates show.
The emergence of bond vigilantes has only exposed on the structural defects of highly politicized economies as India. 

India’s war on gold for instance is a symptom of shrinking real markets due to expansive political controls.

Yet fickle foreign funds stampede in and out of Indian markets
Raghuram Rajan outlined a plan to give concessional swaps for banks’ foreign-currency deposits when he took charge as the 23rd governor of the Reserve Bank of India on Sept. 4. That, along with the U.S. Federal Reserve’s decision this month to continue monetary stimulus that has buoyed emerging-market assets, has helped the rupee pare some losses. Foreign funds have bought a net $2.04 billion worth of Indian shares in September and outflows from debt have slowed to $594.6 million.

The rupee has rallied 5.8 percent in September, after a 14 percent slide in the previous three months that was the worst performance among 24 emerging-market currencies tracked by Bloomberg. The S&P BSE Sensex (SENSEX) of local shares has climbed 6.8 percent this month as Rajan’s measures and the Fed’s policy boosted inflows. It fell 5.8 percent in the June-August period.
Those ‘financial tourist dollars’ flowing into India of late represents the throng of frantic yield chasing players, in the words of CLSA’s Chris Wood "crowded into quality, albeit expensive stocks that have outperformed".

And proof of this has been the wide divergence between blue chips and small companies, again from Bloomberg:
India’s smallest companies are trailing its biggest corporations by the most since 2006 in the stock market. The S&P BSE Small-Cap Index, a gauge of 431 companies with a median market value of $91 million, has tumbled 26 percent this year, compared with a 2.4 percent advance in the Sensex, where the median value of 30 firms is $16.9 billion, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
The most important development has been in India’s bond markets, which appears to be signaling a forthcoming recession or even a crisis via an inverted yield curve, again from the Bloomberg (bold mine)
A cash crunch created by the RBI to shore up the exchange rate caused short-term interest rates to exceed long-term ones, inverting the yield curve that gauges the length of investment against returns. Three-month government debt costs jumped to as high as 12 percent at the end of August, from 7.31 percent three months earlier. Two-year bond yields exceeded 10-year rates by as much as 272 basis points on July 31. Notes due in a decade pay 8.72 percent, compared with 2.63 percent in the U.S., 0.69 percent in Japan and 3.98 percent in China. 

Inverted yield curves typically reflect investors’ lack of confidence in an economy and presaged bailouts in Europe in the past three years. Greece’s two-year debt started paying more than 10-year securities a month before the government sought financial aid for the first time in 2010, while Portugal’s curve inverted a week before it sought a rescue.
Inverted yield curves are manifestations of the transition from policy induced inflationary boom to a deflationary bust.

As Austrian economist Gary North explains (bold original)
This monetary inflation has misallocated capital: business expansion that was not justified by the actual supply of loanable capital (savings), but which businessmen thought was justified because of the artificially low rate of interest (central bank money). Now the truth becomes apparent in the debt markets. Businesses will have to cut back on their expansion because of rising short-term rates: a liquidity shortage. They will begin to sustain losses. The yield curve therefore inverts in advance.

On the demand side, borrowers now become so desperate for a loan that they are willing to pay more for a 90-day loan than a 30-year, locked in-loan.

On the supply side, lenders become so fearful about the short-term state of the economy -- a recession, which lowers interest rates as the economy sinks -- that they are willing to forego the inflation premium that they normally demand from borrowers. They lock in today's long-term rates by buying bonds, which in turn lowers the rate even further.

An inverted yield curve is therefore produced by fear: business borrowers' fears of not being able to finish their on-line capital construction projects and lenders' fears of a recession, with its falling interest rates and a falling stock market.

An inverted yield curve normally signals a recession, which begins about six months later. The stock market usually begins to fall six months prior to any recession. So, the appearance of an inverted yield curve normally is followed very shortly by a falling stock market. Fact: The inverted yield curve is an anomaly, happens rarely,and is almost always followed by a recession.
So while the yield chasing manic crowd may drive India’s frothy markets to even higher levels, the emergence of the inverted yield curve implies of a escalating risk of a market shock.

India epitomizes what has been going on globally; manic yield chasing punts pushing up markets, even as unsustainable imbalances have become more evident and more prone to violent adjustments.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Parallel Universe: India Edition

More signs of parallel universes or divergences between the real economy and the financial markets

From the Voice of America September 10 report 
As a plunging currency and a slowdown in consumption hamper India’s once vibrant economy, many industries are facing the prospect of plummeting profits.

Usually at this time of the year, consumer companies look ahead to windfall profits. Starting in September, consumption increases because it is considered auspicious to buy new products such as cars and televisions for the main Hindu festival, Diwali, to be celebrated in November.   

But this year the mood in most corporate headquarters is pessimistic. The reason: the plunging rupee. India’s currency has lost nearly 20 percent of its value in recent months, pushing up costs for companies that rely on imports of raw materials. That is a large number ranging from electronics to automobiles.
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Nope. Untrue. Not from the way India’s stock market has recently behaved where the BSE index is seem as just a breathe away from the this year’s highs. 

This world has been full of surprises. In just about two weeks India has undergone a dramatic transformation coming from a brink of a crisis to a state of euphoria-nirvana.

And these have been one major reason why people have seen markets as having only one direction: up up and away! Risks have all vanished!

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The rallying Indian rupee or USDINR (yahoo)

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Yields of India’s 10 year bonds seem as hardly receptive to the stock market and the rupee. 

[Bloomberg’s chart has not been updated to include yesterday’s close so I put on my “update” via the red line.]

Has the transformation been real? Has the newly installed Rajan led central bank delivered the miracle?

Well the jury is out whether all these are sustainable or if they are mirage.

Saturday, October 06, 2012

Electronic Errors Caused a Flash Crash In India’s Stock Markets

Electronic malfunction caused a flash crash in India’s stock market yesterday.

From Bloomberg,
The plunge and rebound in Indian stocks that pushed the S&P CNX Nifty (NIFTY) Index down 16 percent over eight seconds underscored concern about financial markets.

Trading in the Nifty and some companies stopped yesterday in Mumbai for 15 minutes after the 50-stock gauge tumbled as much as 16 percent. A brokerage that mishandled trades for an institutional client was to blame, according to the National Stock Exchange of India.

Regulators around the world are probing market structure and electronic trading after a series of malfunctions. In May 2010, high-frequency orders worsened the so-called flash crash, which briefly wiped $862 billion from U.S. stocks. The Nasdaq Stock Market in May this year was overwhelmed by order cancellations and trade confirmations were delayed in the public debut of Facebook Inc. (FB), 2012’s largest initial public offering.

“Everyone is very sensitive to these electronic errors,” Adam Mattessich, head of international trading at Cantor Fitzgerald LP, said by phone in New York. “It’s the kind of thing that could be nothing or it could become a financial calamity.”

Orders entered by Emkay Global Financial Services Ltd. (EMKAY) that led to trades valued at 6.5 billion rupees ($126 million) caused the drop, NSE spokeswoman Divya Malik Lahiri said from New Delhi.

Circuit breaker limits enforced by the NSE get activated “after existing orders are executed,” Ravi Varanasi, head of business development at the exchange in Mumbai, said by phone. “We are investigating the reason behind the wrong orders and how checks and balances at the member’s end failed.”
Admittedly flash crashes from electronic errors can be a source of anxiety.

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Intraday performance of the NIFTY

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But as the above shows, markets eventually smooth out any anomalies.

Despite the intraday flash crash, India NIFTY was down only .7% yesterday and posted 1.9% gain over the week. From the start of the year the NIFY is up 24.28% as of Friday.

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All charts from Bloomberg

Bottom line: Bugs happen. Politicization of the electronic flash crash isn’t required and won’t guarantee perfection. At worst, it may work to the contrary.