Explainer: Digital currency vs cryptos – how are they different?

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The Centre’s plans to ban cryptocurrencies but introduce an official, digital currency. There is some confusion on the differences between the two – there are at least six key variances between official digital currency and cryptocurrency. While all cryptocurrencies could be considered digital currencies, not all digital currencies need to be official sovereign backed currencies. For instance, the virtual currency used in say, an online game, is also a form of digital currency, not backed by a central bank but governed by the game creators. Apart from that, the other key differences are: 

Issuing authority 

Offical digital currencies are issued by the central banks of a nation-state that oversees the banking system in that country. For instance, in India, like regular fiat currency, it will be the Reserve Bank of India that will issue digital currency, when mandated by the government. Similarly, in the US, it will be the Federal Reserve. However, in the case of cryptocurrency, there is no single issuing authority. Cryptocurrencies are usually developed by teams as a piece of code used for issuance through ‘mining’. Creation, as well as use, is maintained through a distributed ledger. They transmit value across a decentralised network of users. Thus while digital currencies are centralised, cryptocurrencies are de-centralised. 

Encryption and underlying tech 

There is little encryption that happens in official digital currency and no special cybersecurity measures. Anyone with a regular online bank account, for instance, can store and use digital currencies. Think of this as a form of e-cash. However, blockchain is the underlying technology used in most cryptocurrencies and, usually, these are stored in ‘wallets’ with a high degree of cyber security. 

While it is true that some of the crypto wallets have been hacked, generally the degree of cyber protective measures taken beforehand are more in the case of cryptocurrencies. 

Stability and fluctuation 

While official digital currencies are largely stable in value and thus easy to own and use in the global market, cryptocurrencies can wildly swing in value. In a single day, the price of a unit of cryptocurrency can vary as much as 50 to 70 per cent. Thus, fiat digital currencies provide more stability, while cryptocurrencies are known for their high degree of volatility and consequent risk. 

Transparency 

One key area where cryptos score is transparency. In this case, the entire history of transactions between two parties can be seen as it is done on blockchain and is immutable (cannot be changed). However, in the case of central bank-issued digital currency, it is the centralised issuing authority that decides how much information it wants to share. The receiver or sender of digital currency will receive information only related to that transaction. 

Cost of transaction 

In the case of digital currency, the issuing authority or the centralised controller can levy transaction fees each time the currency is debited or credited. The blockchain technology used in cryptocurrencies ensures that such expenses are minimised as there is no commission for third parties. This is especially useful when cryptocurrency is used to buy or sell, high-value assets. 

Legal framework 

In most countries, there is some kind of legal framework and protection around official digital currencies. However, when it comes to cryptocurrencies, that is not the case; in several parts of the world, it is still a grey area. Except for El Salvador, which decided to use Bitcoin (currently the most popular cryptocurrency) as legal tender, cryptocurrencies are in unchartered territory with their legal status not clearly defined. 

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PCHFL and API Holdings partner for financing solutions in healthcare

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Piramal Capital and Housing Finance Limited (PCHFL) has partnered with API Holdings through its digital platform Retailio to provide financing solutions to consumers, retailers and merchants in the API Holdings’ healthcare ecosystem.

Retailio is the country’s largest digital B2B healthcare platform.

Under this partnership, PCHFL has earmarked an initial amount of ₹100 crore for disbursement by March 2022, it said in a statement on Thursday, adding that the amount could be increased based on the initial market response.

BNPL solution

Further, PCHFL will provide solutions like Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) for consumers and merchants, multi-collateral loans for retailers, supply chain financing, hospital financing, invoice discounting, among others.

Jairam Sridharan, Managing Director, PCHFL said, “This partnership is in is line with our strategy of expanding our retail portfolio through a mix of collaboration-led origination model and leveraging our distinguished digital lending capabilities. We look forward to a profitable and long-term partnership with API Holdings.”

With the acquisition of DHFL, PCHFL has become one of the leading players in the retail lending segment with access to over 10 lakh customers, presence in 24 States with a network of over 300 branches.

Also read: After DHFL buy, focus is now on implementation: Ajay Piramal

“By bringing together our potential synergies, we aim to provide capital to the underserved SME and MSME segment that would in-turn help fuel growth for these businesses,” said Harsh Parekh, Whole-time Director and Co-founder, API Holdings said.

API Holdings also has presence in Thyrocare and Akanamed, and through its subsidiary, owns the PharmEasy brand along with the proprietary technology platform which powers the PharmEasy marketplace

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“BUY” This Maharatna Stock With A Target Price of Rs. 220 Says ICICI Direct

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Q2FY22 results of Power Grid

According to the brokerage the company’s “Reported revenues came in at Rs 9929.2 crore vs. our estimate of Rs 10028.5 crore, implying growth of 9.6% YoY. However, transmission segment revenues came in at Rs 9679.6 crore, up 7% However, PAT came in at Rs 3338.7 crore, below our estimate of Rs 3471.9 crore as reported other income fell short of our expectations. Power Grid has also shown capitalisation of Rs 13275 crore in H1FY22 with CAPEX of Rs 3685 crore.”

ICICI Direct claims that “PowerGrid reported an in line set of Q2FY22 revenues. As per our expectations, growth rates in the transmission business have settled in the single-digit domain given peak of transmission CAPEX is behind us.”

For future price performance, the brokerage has also placed a key trigger on the stock by saying that “Higher than expected IRRs in the competitively bid tariff based competitive bids projects can rerate the stock. Diversification into smart metering and T&D infrastructure business.”

Key takeaways of recent quarter & conference call highlights according to ICICI Direct

Key takeaways of recent quarter & conference call highlights according to ICICI Direct

  • The company capitalised assets to the tune of Rs 7633 crore and Rs 13275 crore as on Q2FY22 and H1FY22 basis, respectively. The capitalisation target for FY23E is expected at Rs 12000-15000 crore.
  • The CAPEX incurred during H1FY22 was at Rs 3695 crore on a standalone basis. For FY22, the company expects a CAPEX of Rs 7500 crore. For FY23E, the CAPEX will be in the range of Rs 7500-10000 crore. The company till YTD has done 60% of the yearly capex target.
  • Gross block as of Q2FY22 was at Rs 243647 crore while debt was at Rs 135012 crore.
  • Total business opportunity was at Rs 26500 crore worth of projects, which will come up for bidding.
  • Overdue >45 days were at Rs 2705 crore vs. Rs 6145 crore in Q1YF21.
  • Standalone and consolidated CWIP were at Rs 11195 crore and ~Rs 15000 crore, respectively.
  • For FY23, the company expects Rs 7000-7500 crore worth of TBCB projects to be transferred to InVIT whereas the same will be Rs 15000 crore by FY24- 25 each.
  • The company plans to foray into the smart metering infra business where it will invest in the smart meter asset development business as floated by the respective state utility. Power Grid aspires to be present across the value chain wherein the company will set up the required infra and manage the O&M business as well. Power Grid plans to invest Rs 10000-12000 crore over the next four years. On the other hand, the company plans to foray into improving state T&D infra and invest another Rs 10000-12000 crore over the next four years.
  • The company has floated a separate telecom subsidiary wherein it will foray into the data centre business by leveraging on the land bank available at various substations.

Buy Power Grid With A Target Price of Rs. 220

Buy Power Grid With A Target Price of Rs. 220

ICICI Direct has claimed in its research report that “Within the power sector, Power Grid has been a steady performer due to strong asset addition in FY16-20. Now with relatively small size of renewable projects growth rate will taper down for the stock, which will be cushioned by a decent dividend yield. Maintain BUY rating on the stock. We value the stock at Rs. 220 i.e. 1.9x FY23E book value.”

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

The stock has been picked from the brokerage report of ICICI Direct Limited. Investing in equities poses a risk of financial losses. Investors must therefore exercise due caution. Greynium Information Technologies, the author, and the brokerage house are not liable for any losses caused as a result of decisions based on the article.



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Only a handful of cryptocurrencies that exist today likely to survive: Raghuram Rajan

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Out of the 6,000-odd cryptocurrencies currently in existence, only a few are likely to survive, according to the former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan.

Rajan, in a recent interview with CNBC TV-18 said that only one or two, or at most, only a handful of the cryptocurrencies that exist today would survive in the future.

“If things have value only because they will be pricier down the line, that’s a bubble,” Rajan said.

The former RBI governor compared the current mania in cryptocurrencies to the tulip mania in the Netherlands in the 17th century.

Also Read: Explainer: Digital currency vs cryptos – how are they different?

He added that the issue was that most cryptocurrencies did not have permanent value. Additionally, some of them would survive to facilitate payments, especially cross border payments.

“In the US, crypto is a $2.5 trillion problem that nobody really wants to regulate,” he said.

According to Rajan, part of the problem was the lack of understanding of the space and how to regulate it, among regulators.

He added that the government can examine these crypto entities more closely when they get too big to make sure that there isn’t fraud.

Rajan’s remark come as the bill to ban all private cryptocurrencies and facilitate introduction of the Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) topped the government’s busy agenda for the Winter Session of Parliament.

Also read: Exchanges on tenterhooks as they await details of proposed cryptocurrencies Bill

Top cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDT, Shiba Inu, Dogecoin, Sandbox among others crashed overnight on Indian crypto exchanges on Wednesday as investors panicked following the government’s plans on the bill seeking to prohibit private cryptocurrencies while allowing certain exceptions to promote the underlying technology.

Additionally, the former RBI Governor said that the government must focus on the underlying blockchain technology, letting it flourish adding that blockchain ways of transacting were much cheaper, especially across borders.

There has been a fair share of regulatory concerns when it comes to cryptocurrencies.

However, despite regulatory uncertainty and the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) concerns, India now has close to 400 cryptocurrency-based start-ups offering various services to the crypto ecosystem.

According to data sourced by BusinessLine from Tracxn, there are 380 crypto start-ups and 12 Non-fungible Tokens-based (NFT) start-ups currently operating in the country, as per previous reports.

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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(Amount in ₹ crore, Rate in Per cent)

  Volume
(One Leg)
Weighted
Average Rate
Range
A. Overnight Segment (I+II+III+IV) 499,319.80 3.32 1.00-5.25
     I. Call Money 8,727.45 3.27 2.00-3.55
     II. Triparty Repo 378,107.65 3.32 3.10-3.45
     III. Market Repo 109,313.70 3.34 1.00-3.68
     IV. Repo in Corporate Bond 3,171.00 3.58 3.50-5.25
B. Term Segment      
     I. Notice Money** 313.55 3.30 2.75-3.45
     II. Term Money@@ 339.30 3.25-3.65
     III. Triparty Repo 1,145.00 3.35 3.35-3.35
     IV. Market Repo 335.00 3.50 3.50-3.50
     V. Repo in Corporate Bond 0.00
  Auction Date Tenor (Days) Maturity Date Amount Current Rate /
Cut off Rate
C. Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) & Marginal Standing Facility (MSF)
I. Today’s Operations
1. Fixed Rate          
     (i) Repo          
    (ii) Reverse Repo Wed, 24/11/2021 1 Thu, 25/11/2021 177,454.00 3.35
    (iii) Special Reverse Repo~          
    (iv) Special Reverse Repoψ          
2. Variable Rate&          
  (I) Main Operation          
     (a) Reverse Repo          
  (II) Fine Tuning Operations          
     (a) Repo          
     (b) Reverse Repo          
3. MSF Wed, 24/11/2021 1 Thu, 25/11/2021 0.00 4.25
4. Special Long-Term Repo Operations (SLTRO) for Small Finance Banks (SFBs)£          
5. Net liquidity injected from today’s operations
[injection (+)/absorption (-)]*
      -177,454.00  
II. Outstanding Operations
1. Fixed Rate          
    (i) Repo          
    (ii) Reverse Repo          
    (iii) Special Reverse Repo~          
    (iv) Special Reverse Repoψ          
2. Variable Rate&          
  (I) Main Operation          
     (a) Reverse Repo Thu, 18/11/2021 15 Fri, 03/12/2021 445,742.00 3.99
  (II) Fine Tuning Operations          
     (a) Repo          
     (b) Reverse Repo Tue, 23/11/2021 7 Tue, 30/11/2021 148,073.00 3.99
  Tue, 02/11/2021 28 Tue, 30/11/2021 50,007.00 3.97
3. MSF          
4. Long-Term Repo Operations# Mon, 17/02/2020 1095 Thu, 16/02/2023 499.00 5.15
  Mon, 02/03/2020 1094 Wed, 01/03/2023 253.00 5.15
  Mon, 09/03/2020 1093 Tue, 07/03/2023 484.00 5.15
  Wed, 18/03/2020 1094 Fri, 17/03/2023 294.00 5.15
5. Targeted Long Term Repo Operations^ Fri, 27/03/2020 1092 Fri, 24/03/2023 12,236.00 4.40
  Fri, 03/04/2020 1095 Mon, 03/04/2023 16,925.00 4.40
  Thu, 09/04/2020 1093 Fri, 07/04/2023 18,042.00 4.40
  Fri, 17/04/2020 1091 Thu, 13/04/2023 20,399.00 4.40
6. Targeted Long Term Repo Operations 2.0^ Thu, 23/04/2020 1093 Fri, 21/04/2023 7,950.00 4.40
7. On Tap Targeted Long Term Repo Operations Mon, 22/03/2021 1095 Thu, 21/03/2024 5,000.00 4.00
  Mon, 14/06/2021 1096 Fri, 14/06/2024 320.00 4.00
  Mon, 30/08/2021 1095 Thu, 29/08/2024 50.00 4.00
  Mon, 13/09/2021 1095 Thu, 12/09/2024 200.00 4.00
  Mon, 27/09/2021 1095 Thu, 26/09/2024 600.00 4.00
  Mon, 04/10/2021 1095 Thu, 03/10/2024 350.00 4.00
  Mon, 15/11/2021 1095 Thu, 14/11/2024 250.00 4.00
8. Special Long-Term Repo Operations (SLTRO) for Small Finance Banks (SFBs)£ Mon, 17/05/2021 1095 Thu, 16/05/2024 400.00 4.00
Tue, 15/06/2021 1095 Fri, 14/06/2024 490.00 4.00
Thu, 15/07/2021 1093 Fri, 12/07/2024 750.00 4.00
Tue, 17/08/2021 1095 Fri, 16/08/2024 250.00 4.00
Wed, 15/09/2021 1094 Fri, 13/09/2024 150.00 4.00
Mon, 15/11/2021 1095 Thu, 14/11/2024 105.00 4.00
  Mon, 22/11/2021 1095 Thu, 21/11/2024 100.00 4.00
D. Standing Liquidity Facility (SLF) Availed from RBI$       20,001.80  
E. Net liquidity injected from outstanding operations [injection (+)/absorption (-)]*     -537,723.2  
F. Net liquidity injected (outstanding including today’s operations) [injection (+)/absorption (-)]*     -715,177.2  
G. Cash Reserves Position of Scheduled Commercial Banks
     (i) Cash balances with RBI as on 24/11/2021 633,293.35  
     (ii) Average daily cash reserve requirement for the fortnight ending 03/12/2021 650,308.00  
H. Government of India Surplus Cash Balance Reckoned for Auction as on¥ 24/11/2021 0.00  
I. Net durable liquidity [surplus (+)/deficit (-)] as on 05/11/2021 1,123,716.00  
@ Based on Reserve Bank of India (RBI) / Clearing Corporation of India Limited (CCIL).
– Not Applicable / No Transaction.
** Relates to uncollateralized transactions of 2 to 14 days tenor.
@@ Relates to uncollateralized transactions of 15 days to one year tenor.
$ Includes refinance facilities extended by RBI.
& As per the Press Release No. 2019-2020/1900 dated February 06, 2020.
* Net liquidity is calculated as Repo+MSF+SLF-Reverse Repo.
# As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/287 dated September 04, 2020.
^ As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/605 dated November 06, 2020.
As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/520 dated October 21, 2020, Press Release No. 2020-2021/763 dated December 11, 2020, Press Release No. 2020-2021/1057 dated February 05, 2021 and Press Release No. 2021-2022/695 dated August 13, 2021.
¥ As per the Press Release No. 2014-2015/1971 dated March 19, 2015.
£ As per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/181 dated May 07, 2021 and Press Release No. 2021-2022/1023 dated October 11, 2021.
~ As per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/177 dated May 07, 2021.
ψ As per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/323 dated June 04, 2021.
Ajit Prasad            
Director (Communications)
Press Release: 2021-2022/1248

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“BUY” This Large Cap IT Stock For A Upside of 25% Says Sharekhan

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Sharekhan’s take on HCL Technologies

According to the brokerage “We expect a strong bounceback in growth in Q3FY2022 given strong deal wins, robust net headcount addition, anticipated good recovery in products & platforms business, client additions and broad-based demand. HCL Tech’s strong IMS capabilities, robust partnerships with hyperscalers and strengths in digital foundation and modern applications position the company to capitalise opportunities in cloud space. HCL Tech’s new payout ratio of at least 75% of net income over FY2022-2026 is positive. It provides comfort on efficient capital allocation ahead and will limit any large inorganic investments.”

The brokerage also claims that “We expect a strong bounceback in growth in Q3FY2022 given its strong deal wins, robust net headcount addition, anticipated good recovery in products & platforms business, client additions and broad-based demand. The company recruited around 35,549 employees on a net basis in the last four consecutive quarters, which increased 2x y-o-y over its revenue growth over the same period. Strong headcount addition and robust deal booking provide growth visibility in the coming quarters of FY2022.”

Buy HCL Technologies With A Target Price of Rs. 1,400

Buy HCL Technologies With A Target Price of Rs. 1,400

Sharekhan has said in its research report that “We believe the company’s strong digital capabilities, new geography expansion, solid competencies to capture opportunities in cloud space, aggressive net employee additions and broad-based demand would help HCL Tech to accelerate its growth in FY2023 and minimize the gap in growth with large peers in subsequent years. HCL Tech is likely to sustain its margin performance on the back of revenue growth, pyramid management, higher offshoring and expansion into low-cost smaller cities.”

The brokerage also claims that “The stock price has corrected by ~18% from the peak over last three months due to revenue miss in Q2FY2022. At CMP, the stock trades at a reasonable valuation of 19x/17x its FY2023E/FY2024E earnings, at a sharp discount to large peers. HCL Tech’s new payout ratio of at least 75% of net income over FY2022-2026 is positive as it is likely to abate investors’ concerns relating to its capital allocation strategies toward large acquisitions. Hence, we maintain a Buy on the stock with an unchanged PT of Rs. 1,400.”

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

The stock has been picked from the brokerage report of Sharekhan Limited. Investing in equities poses a risk of financial losses. Investors must therefore exercise due caution. Greynium Information Technologies, the author, and the brokerage house are not liable for any losses caused as a result of decisions based on the article.



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Fed officials express resolve to address inflation risks

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Federal Reserve officials in discussions earlier this month said the central bank “would not hesitate” to take appropriate actions to address inflation pressures that posed risks to the economy.

In minutes released on Wednesday of the Fed’s November 2-3 meeting, Fed officials maintained that the spike in inflation seen this year was still likely to be transitory while acknowledging that the rise in prices had been greater than expected.

The minutes covered a meeting in which the Fed voted to take the first step to roll back the massive support it has provided to an economy pushed into a recession last year after widespread lockdowns to contain the Covid-19 virus.

At the November meeting, the Fed approved reductions in the amount of Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities it had been purchasing to put downward pressure on long-term interest rates.

Also read: The return of inflation and what central banks are doing

The committee approved reducing by $15 billion in November and another $15 billion cut in December in the $120 billion in monthly purchases of Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities it had been making. The expectation was that these monthly reductions would continue until the bond purchase programme was phased out in the middle of next year.

Inflation in recent months has been hitting levels not seen in decades. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and other Fed officials have argued that the prices pressures were likely to be transitory and fade away once problems such as supply chain bottlenecks are resolved.

Fed needs to reduce bond purchases quickly

But the Fed minutes showed a growing concern that the unwanted price pressures could last for a longer tie and the Fed should be prepared to move to reduce bond purchases more quickly or even start raising the Fed’s benchmark interest rate sooner to make sure inflation did not get out of hand.

“Various participants noted that the committee should be prepared to adjust the pace of asset purchases and raise the target range for the federal funds rate sooner than participants currently anticipated if inflation continued to run higher than levels consistent with the committee’s objectives,” the minutes said.

The Feds policy rate was cut to a record low of 0 per cent to 0.25 per cent in the spring of 2020 as the Fed focused its efforts on keeping the Covid recession from spiralling into a deeper downturn.

The Fed will next meet on December 14-15 and some private economists said the central bank may decide to send a stronger signal at that time of the Fed’s intentions to address the economy’s jump in inflation.

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FPIs Sell Shares Worth Rs 23,000 Crores In Cash Market, Is China Becoming Attractive?

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Last few days sees relentless selling pressure by FPIs

Purchases Sales Net sales
November 18 8781.77 12712.39 -3930.62
November 22 11705.76 15144.52 -3438.76
November 23 10101.07 14578.13 -4477.06
November 24 9608.48 14731.13 -5122.65

Relentless selling pressure, is there more exit likely?

Relentless selling pressure, is there more exit likely?

The selling pressure has been relentless and many Foreign Portfolio Investors like Blackrock Ind recently said that China looks much better than the Indian markets in terms of valuations.

According to a Bloomberg Report, Blackrock Inc. is trimming its investments in Indian equities and becoming more optimistic on China on attractive valuations amid expectations that policy hurdles will ease next year.

“Valuations are key right now,” Belinda Boa, head of active investments for Asia Pacific at the world’s biggest asset manager, said at a briefing. “Because of the outperformance we’ve seen in India this year, on a relative basis, we are starting to take profits and becoming more positive on Chinese growth stocks,” she said.

Recently, Goldman Sachs too downgraded Indian Equities citing expensive valuations. According to Goldman Sachs, the Indian equity market is trading near peak 12-month forward PE valuations of 23 times, which is at a record 60% premium to the Asia Pacific ex-Japan region. Morgan Stanley also cut India’s rating, citing expensive valuations.

US easing, inflation worries add to concerns for emerging market stocks

US easing, inflation worries add to concerns for emerging market stocks

The US Fed has decided to trim its bond purchase programme, thus pulling back liquidity. On the other hand bond yields in the US have surged to 1.68%. Each time bond yields rise, they make emerging market stocks even less attractive.

It’s clear that bond yields across the globe are set to rise, aggravated by rising inflation. This may lead to a sharp pull back in equities going ahead. What is keeping the Indian markets afloat is the huge amount of liquidity that is flowing into domestic mutual funds. This trend is likely to continue in the future and this may lend some support to the domestic market. So far, domestic investors have bought shares worth Rs 16,000 crores. However, if we see mutual fund holdings, most of them are barely sitting on any cash. We expect the markets to continue to exhibit volatility and it is a good idea to now look at debt, if interest rates rise.

According to Siddhartha Khemka, Head – Retail Research, Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd the markets are likely to continue with consolidation given weak global cues, persistent FII selling and premium valuation.

“In the absence of any fresh trigger and subdued sentiments, investors would await for the fundamentals to catch up with valuations. Market could take direction from the US economic data and fears the pace of tapering to be accelerated which could prepone the interest rate hike cycle. It would also track the Covid situation in Europe which could impact the global economic activities. Monthly F&O expiry tomorrow could add to the volatility,” he says.



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This Private Sector Bank Revises Interest Rates On Fixed Deposits

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Tamilnad Mercantile Bank FD Rates

With effect from 18th November 2021, the bank is now promising the following interest rates to the general public on their domestic deposits of less than Rs 2. Cr maturing in 7 days to less than 10 years.

Period Interest rates in % p.a.
7 – 14 days 2.75%
15 – 29 days 3.50%
30 – 45 days 3.50%
46 – 60 days 3.75%
61 – 90 days 3.75%
91 days – 179 days 4.50%
180 days – 270 days 4.75%
271 days to less than 1 year 5.00%
1 year 5.25%
Above 1 year to less than 20 months & 20 days 5.25%
20 months & 20 days 5.25%
Above 20 months 20 days to less than 2 years 5.25%
2 years less than 3 years 5.35%
3 years to 10 years 5.00%
Source: Bank Website

Tamilnad Mercantile Bank FD Rates For Senior Citizens

Tamilnad Mercantile Bank FD Rates For Senior Citizens

Senior citizens will continue to get an additional rate of 0.50% on their term deposits maturing in 1 year to 10 years. Here are the latest fixed deposit interest rates of Tamilnad Mercantile Bank provided to senior citizens.

Period Interest rates in % p.a.
7 – 14 days 2.75%
15 – 29 days 3.50%
30 – 45 days 3.50%
46 – 60 days 3.75%
61 – 90 days 3.75%
91 days – 179 days 4.50%
180 days – 270 days 4.75%
271 days to less than 1 year 5.00%
1 year 5.75%
Above 1 year to less than 20 months & 20 days 5.75%
20 months & 20 days 5.75%
Above 20 months 20 days to less than 2 years 5.75%
2 years less than 3 years 5.85%
3 years to 10 years 5.50%
Source: Bank Website

Tamilnad Mercantile Bank NRO Term Deposit Interest Rates

Tamilnad Mercantile Bank NRO Term Deposit Interest Rates

Tamilnad Mercantile Bank has also modified its interest rates on NRO deposits. Senior citizens should note that additional rates on NRO deposits are not applicable.

Period Interest rates in % p.a.
7 – 14 days 2.75%
15 – 29 days 3.50%
30 – 45 days 3.50%
46 – 60 days 3.75%
61 – 90 days 3.75%
91 days – 179 days 4.50%
180 days – 270 days 4.75%
271 days to less than 1 year 5.00%
1 year 5.25%
Above 1 year to less than 20 months & 20 days 5.25%
20 months & 20 days 5.25%
Above 20 months 20 days to less than 2 years 5.25%
2 years less than 3 years 5.35%
3 years to 10 years 5.00%
Source: Bank Website



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“BUY” This Large Cap FMCG Stock With A Target Price of Rs. 272: HDFC Securities

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Q2FY22 results of ITC Ltd.

HDFC Securities has stated in its research report that “ITC delivered in-line revenue growth, with a few positives in key segments. Revenue was up 12% YoY with cigarettes/FMCG/hotels/agri/paper growing 11/3/254/-7/25% YoY. Cigarette revenue growth was 10%, with a volume growth of 9.5%. Given the positive growth rate for cigarette volumes and potential for price hikes, we expect a sustainable cigarette recovery in H2FY22. Cigarette EBIT growth was at 10%. FMCG business registered steady 6% growth and clocked 11% two-year CAGR. FMCG EBITDA margin was at 10% (+30bps YoY, >300bps in Q2FY20) despite commodity headwinds.”

The brokerage has also added that “The discretionary/OOH categories recorded strong YoY and sequential growth due to increased mobility. Staples and convenience foods growth remained moderate on a high base and saw a sequential pick-up this quarter as well. The company performed well across all channels, including MT, eCommerce (7% revenue share) and rural. It increased its market coverage/direct outlet servicing by 1.4/1.1x YoY. Hotel occupancy improved 3x over Q2FY21 and ARRs improved as well. Hotels saw strong cost control but reported an EBIT loss of INR 480mn (vs IRs 1.8bn in Q2FY21) due to negative operating leverage. The agri business exports saw strong growth in wheat, rice, leaf tobacco, aqua and spices. The paper business clocked 25% YoY growth, led by value-added products and demand revival. The paper margin improved, led by higher realisations, investments in pulp import substitution and cost-competitive fibre chain.”

Buy ITC Ltd With A Target Price of Rs. 272

Buy ITC Ltd With A Target Price of Rs. 272

The brokerage has claimed in its research report that “ITC stock has underperformed the sector and benchmarks over past few years due to concerns, including environment social and governance (ESG) norms (leading to outflow of FPI money), regulatory/competitive challenges in the core cigarette business, and concerns over capital allocation. Doing a deep-dive into financials, we found that ~60% of ITC’s cash flows have been paid as dividends, while only 15% has been utilized to scale up capacities across segments, with the majority deployed in the promising FMCG business, followed by hotels and paper & packaging business. The remaining portion is held as non-core investments. Paper/agri businesses are generating healthy ROCE and are capable of self-funding CAPEX needs but hotel segment is playing a spoilsport.”

“However, the company has developed a sizeable footprint in hotels and the management has noted that it will henceforth go asset-light for hotels, where the focus would now be on managed properties. In the FMCG business, with significant front-end investment already done to build capacities, we expect a material decline in annual organic CAPEX here. Financial re-engineering (apart from a recent increase in dividend payout ratio to 80-85%) can unlock value: de-merger of capital guzzling and low-return-generating hotels business – since incremental expansion is expected to happen through management contract route and hence may not require cash infusion from parents, and listing of ITC InfoTech – revenue of Rs 2445 Cr in FY21 – since it is completely unrelated to core cigarettes business. Cross synergies and ITC’s big ambitions for FMCG may restrict any demergers here but the scaling up of the FMCG business could provide another strong FCF generating business” HDFC Securities has clarified.

According to the brokerage’s call “Strong recovery in cigarettes business, focus on profitable growth in FMCG business – With the resumption of normalcy and higher mobility, we expect demand trends to improve to achieve cigarette recovery. A gradual FMCG business turnaround with improving profitability remains another important catalyst for stock outperformance over the medium term. At 14.3x Sept’23 EPS, ITC trades at a steep discount to the FMCG sector. At these valuations, there is limited downside risk, and the risk-reward ratio in the current market scenario is favorable for ITC. We feel investors can buy the stock in Rs 229-234 band (14.3x Sept’FY23E EPS) and add more on dips in Rs 204-209 band with a base case target of Rs.257 (18x Sept’FY23E EPS) and a bull case target of Rs.272 (19x Sept’23E EPS).”

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

The stock has been picked from the brokerage report of HDFC Securities Limited. Investing in equities poses a risk of financial losses. Investors must therefore exercise due caution. Greynium Information Technologies, the author, and the brokerage house are not liable for any losses caused as a result of decisions based on the article.



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