Crypto investing: Beware of traps laid by cybercriminals, warn experts

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“I am excited reading news about cryptocurrencies. I would like to invest there in a small way. Advise me how to go about it,” a senior corporate executive posted on his LinkedIn wall, triggering a volley of suggestions from his followers.

With cryptos gaining currency, there has been a huge interest among a section of the middleclass that is frantically searching Google or checking with the IT crowds to understand this new investment tool to make a small investment to test the waters.

Cybercriminals are quick enough to cash in on the frenzy. In Hyderabad, a corporate executive was duped into opening a crypto account in a fake crypto firm. By showing an inflated increase in his investments, they went on to lure him to invest over ₹60 lakh. By the time he found that he was duped, it was too late. He ended up filing a case with the police.

Fake advertisements

Cyber security experts have cautioned the public not to fall prey to such fake invitations or fall for a plethora of advertisements, including some with fake endorsements by celebrities.

Oded Vanunu, Head of Products Vulnerability Research, Check Point Software Technologies, asked the prospective investors to be cautious and to double-check the URLs before clicking on them. “You should never give your pass-phrase to others,” he said.

“You should skip the ads. If you are looking for wallets or crypto trading and swapping platforms in the crypto space, always look at the first website in your search and not in the ad, as these may mislead you ,” he said.

Check Point Research has warned that scammers are using Google Ads to steal crypto wallets. Scammers are placing ads at the top of Google Search that imitate popular wallet brands, such as Phantom and MetaMask, to trick users into giving up their wallet passphrase and private key.

It estimated that over $500,000 worth of crypto was stolen in a matter of days recently.

Sanjay Katkar, Joint Managing Director and Chief Technology Officer of Quick Heal Technologies, said that the bull run on cryptocurrency and the windfall gains to those who had invested early in cryptocurrencies have attracted the interest of many.

“Taking advantage of this situation, scamsters are targeting new victims by coming out with attractive fake offers on social media,” he said.

The fraudsters are using photos and videos of celebrities to make the prospective users believe that the celebrities are endorsing the scheme.

“There had also been incidents where social medial handles of some celebrities got hijacked and using them to promote fake cryptocurrency schemes,” he said. One needs to be very careful while clicking on social media advertisements. “Look closely at the name of the website, or YouTube channel or Twitter account. The fake accounts will have small differences as a mis-spelling or use of fonts that make the fake account look a genuine one,” he said.

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5 things investors should know, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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1. Banking and PSU debt funds are mutual fund schemes that invest debt and money market instruments issued by banks and PSUs and public financial institutions.

2. At least 80% of the corpus of the scheme needs to be in instruments issued by banks and PSUs, and PFIs.

3. All these entities are either backed, regulated or controlled by the government which reduces default risk and hence the scheme is supposed to have low credit risk.

4. Fund manager takes the call on whether to be in the short-term instruments or long-term debt instruments and hence the scheme carries interest rate risk.

5. These funds may give higher returns than Bank FDs of similar duration.

(Content on this page is courtesy Centre for Investment Education and Learning (CIEL). Contributions by Girija Gadre, Arti Bhargava and Labdhi Mehta.)

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5 things investors should know, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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1. Banking and PSU debt funds are mutual fund schemes that invest debt and money market instruments issued by banks and PSUs and public financial institutions.

2. At least 80% of the corpus of the scheme needs to be in instruments issued by banks and PSUs, and PFIs.

3. All these entities are either backed, regulated or controlled by the government which reduces default risk and hence the scheme is supposed to have low credit risk.

4. Fund manager takes the call on whether to be in the short-term instruments or long-term debt instruments and hence the scheme carries interest rate risk.

5. These funds may give higher returns than Bank FDs of similar duration.

(Content on this page is courtesy Centre for Investment Education and Learning (CIEL). Contributions by Girija Gadre, Arti Bhargava and Labdhi Mehta.)

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3 things to look at before you invest in NCDs

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Of late, several NCD (non-convertible debenture) issues have been coming in the market. The current low interest rates on bank fixed deposits add to the appeal of these NCDs (or bonds) – both in the new issues as well as those trading in the secondary market.

If you are looking to invest in NCDs to better your debt returns, here are a few points to note.

Return metrics

The fixed coupon or interest rate, calculated on the face value of the bond is what an investor receives periodically (say, quarterly, half-yearly or annually) in the form of interest income. This is the ‘return’ most investors usually focus on. If you invest in an NCD in the primary issue and stay invested until maturity, then the periodic coupon or interest indicates your investment return.

Alternatively, if you buy an NCD in the secondary market and stay invested until maturity, then you must focus on the YTM (yield to maturity) rather than the coupon rate as the correct indicator of your return. The YTM takes into account not just the periodic coupons but also the price at which the bond is bought and redeemed to arrive at the total return. Let’s take an example. Secondary market data from HDFC Securities shows that AAA-rated Tata Capital Financial Services bonds (series – 890TCFSL23 – Individual) priced at ₹1,123 per bond, with a residual maturity of 2.07 years offer a coupon of 8.90 per cent and YTM of 6.79 per cent. A YTM lower than the coupon implies that a bond is trading at a premium. That is, the current market price of the bond is greater than its face value. The latter is what will be paid to you on maturity. In the prevailing low interest rate environment, an 8.9 per cent coupon bond commanding premium pricing is hardly surprising.

Then, there are NCDs that come with a call or put option. Callable bonds give the issuer the right to call back the bond before its maturity by paying back the principal. Putable bonds give the investor an option to exit before maturity and receive the principal. In case of NCDs with a call option, the appropriate return metric to look at is YTC (yield to call) and not YTM. The YTC is the return that an investor gets if the bond is held until the call date. Only very few retail NCDs come with such an option.

Exit or not

While NCDs get listed on the stock exchanges and provide the possibility of an exit option, not many can be bought and sold as easily as shares. This is due to the lack of adequate trading volumes for many NCDs in the retail segment. In such a case, one must be prepared to stay invested until maturity.

Once an NCD lists on the exchanges, it may trade at a price different from its issue price. Over time, the value of the bond will fluctuate in response to factors such as interest rate changes and ratings upgrades or downgrades. So, if you sell a bond before maturity, your final investment return will be impacted by the difference between the selling price versus the purchase price of the bond. This could result in a capital gain or loss for you. Today, with interest rates expected to rise, albeit not immediately, the existing lower-coupon bonds carry the risk of depreciating in value over time resulting in a possible capital loss when sold.

Taxation

The coupon or interest received from NCDs is taxed at your income tax slab rate. Short-term capital gains are taxed at your slab rate and long-term gains at a flat 20 per cent rate with indexation benefit. Capital gains on sale of NCDs that have been held for more than a year in case of listed NCDs and more than three years in case of unlisted ones are treated as long-term in nature.

NCDs in the retail segment quote at their dirty price. That is, the quoted market price is inclusive of the accrued interest on them.

According to Nimish Shah, CIO, Waterfield Advisors, when an NCD is sold, the differential between the sale price and the purchase price is segregated into two parts – capital gains and accrued interest – for taxation purposes. Let’s say, you buy a bond with a coupon of 8 per cent per annum (paid semi-annually) at a face value of ₹100 in January. Suppose this bond is trading at price of ₹110 on March 31. Since the first coupon payment is due in June, the accrued interest by March-end is ₹2. The difference between the sale and purchase price of the bond of ₹10 will be split into two parts – ₹2 accrued interest and ₹8 capital gains and taxed as such – when the bond is sold in March.

 

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What to expect from the week ending September 17, 2021, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Nifty march takes a break: Nifty was on a one way trip after breaking the 16,000 barrier. However, it then decided to take a pause. Nifty’s gain during the last week was just 46 points or 0.3%. Increasing number of delta covid variant cases and its negative impact on the global economy continues to be the main worry. However, central bankers continue to support the economy. For instance, European Central Bank (ECB), in its recent meeting, has signalled that it will only slightly reduce its emergency bond purchases over the coming quarter.

In addition to the increasing pace of vaccination, market sentiment is also buoyed by continued support by RBI and government of India.

“India’s domestic and external dynamics remain strong with both government and the RBI continuing to take appropriate policy decisions which will continue to act as tailwind to economic recovery as well as equity markets performance,” says Hemant Kanawala, Head – Equity, Kotak Mahindra Life Insurance.

Though Nifty is capable of climbing to 17,600 level,—the upper end of the rising channel, technical analysts were expecting this pause. As mentioned in previous week, Nifty may even fall to its support band of 17,000 – 17,170 before climbing back to 17,600. 17,170 is a good support now because it was a major resistance earlier. Despite Nifty going up, 17,000 continues to be the major point for Nifty put option writers. For instance, the open interest at 17,000 is placed at 84,843 contracts, compared to 23,223 contracts at 17,100, 36,725 at 17,200 and 34,263 at 17,300. Since the metal prices are still trading at higher levels (eg aluminium prices hit a 13 months high recently), the next upmove may be triggered by metal stocks.

(Narendra Nathan/ET Bureau)

Sector update: Engineering & Capital Goods

Tendering shows signs of uptick

April-August tendering grew 13% y-o-y on the back of higher tendering in the power, T&D and road segments. While tendering in the rail segment was flat, water and real estate saw a decline. The road segment accounted for the largest share of tenders, 30% of overall tenders. Water/railways/irrigation tenders accounted for 11-14%/8%/6-14% of total tenders during the April-August period. For July-Aug 2021, the pace of tendering activity exceeded the April-June 2021 level (by 15%), led by road, power equipment, railways and water supply, indicating a healthy pickup in capex activity.

Awarding activity
YTD awarding activity increased by more than 67% y-o-y on a low base. The 2-year CAGR for this period stood at 28%. road/power T&D/railways/real estate witnessed strong growth. Excluding the road segment, the 2-year CAGR for tenders stood at 14%. Apart from roads, railways/power distribution segments have also seen strong growth in recent years. Roads/railways constituted 26%/16% of the awards during April-August. On account of a large award won by BHEL (Rs 108 billion by Nuclear Power Corp of India), power equipment awards have jumped 6x in the second quarter, leading to growth of 18% in overall awards during the period, further supported by roads and water supply.

Central and state capex
For the April-July1 period, the Central government achieved 23% of its annual budget target with an outflow of Rs 1.28 trillion (up 15% y-o-y). While the overall Central government capex growth during April-July stood in mid-teens, key ministries, roads and railways, reported growth of 110% and 22%, respectively. Taking cues from such figures, developing these sectors, in addition to defence, remains the government’s top priority. Additionally, state government spending (top 15 states) at Rs 565 billion during current financial year (up more than 100% y-o-y) has been far higher than last year’s spending (12% of BE has been achieved vs. 7% y-o-y). On a combined basis (Central + States), capex growth stood at 34% y-o-y.

Credit growth to industries grew marginally by 0.1% y-o-y as of July 2021, while infrastructure credit grew 2.5%. At Rs 10.8 trillion, outstanding infrastructure credit is near the historical high, though it has been in the Rs 10-11 trillion range for the last two years. Overall industrial credit outstanding (as % of non-food credit) has gradually declined to 26% as of July 2021 and currently stands at a decadal low. Top picks from Emkay coverage Our top picks in the sector are L&T, KEC International and Kalpataru Power Transmission, considering their superior execution capabilities, existing order backlog, and relative valuations.

(Emkay)



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Tax Query: TDS on capital gains for NRI investing in MFs with power of attorney

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My son Prabaharan is an NRI. I am investing in mutual funds for him basis a power of attorney. The payment is made from the joint savings account of Prabaharan and myself (Indian resident account). In the circumstances stated above, is it necessary to deduct TDS from the capital gains?

K. Ramachandran

As per the provisions of section 196A of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (‘Act’), every person responsible for paying to Non-Resident any income in respect of prescribed mutual funds, shall deduct taxes at source (‘TDS’) at 20 per cent on such income, at the time of credit or payment whichever is earlier. I understand that your son is the legal owner of the mutual funds and qualifies to be a non-resident in India and is receiving income in the nature of Capital Gains on transfer of mutual funds. As per the above-mentioned provisions, TDS would be deducted by the payer at 20 per cent of such Capital Gains at the time of credit or payment, whichever is earlier. Please note that for your query, I have not analysed and commented on any exchange control regulations / legal aspect.

My father (aged 61 years) retired in March 2020 and invested ₹15 lakh in senior citizen savings scheme in post office in May 2020. Is the amount invested eligible for 80C for all the five years, or it is only for the first year? Is the amount enough to fulfil the entire ₹1.5 lakh limit under 80C for all the 5 years?

Gokulanathan K

As per the provisions of Section 80C of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (‘Act’), the deduction is available in respect of any sum paid or deposited (as specified in the said section) during the concerned Financial Year (‘FY’), subject to a maximum eligible deduction of ₹150,000. Accordingly, for the amount contributed in May 2020, the deduction available to be claimed in your father’s hands would be for FY 2020-21, which shall be restricted to ₹150,000 (i.e. only for the year in which the amount is deposited in an account under Senior Citizen Saving Scheme). The amount invested during FY 2020-21 would not be eligible for deductions in future years.

The writer is a practising chartered accountant

Send your queries to taxtalk@thehindu.co.in

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Here is a beginner’s guide to ‘FIRE’

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‘Freedom to retire early’ — the biggest aspiration of the BL Portfolio Survey respondents — strikes a chord with the ‘FIRE’ or ‘Financial Independence, Retire Early’ movement in the US.

At its core, ‘FIRE’ is all about building a nest egg and hanging up your boots much before the traditional retirement age. We take a closer look at this trend.

What is it

The origin of FIRE is vaguely traced to the 1992 book ‘Your Money or Your Life’ by Vicki Robin and Joe Dominguez. The book encourages one to reassess one’s relationship with money, pointing out that ‘we are sacrificing our lives for money, but it is happening so slowly that we barely notice’. Salary/money is something that an individual earns for time spent. Having a clear understanding of relationship with money would ensure an optimum trade-off between time and money (implying, money earned which in turn gets spent or saved).

The FIRE movement, which started gaining traction soon after the global financial crisis of 2007, requires following a disciplined approach of saving aggressively and starting to invest from a young age in a prudential manner.

Proponents recommend even saving as high as 75 per cent of one’s income to retire very early. The objective is to reach a level of savings that will yield sufficient returns in the form of dividends, interest income or rental income with which one can meet living expenses comfortably. At this point, one has the freedom to choose whether one wants to work, or take up only gigs that give one happiness or are in sync with one’s passion.

Some withdrawal from the capital ie the principal amount can also be factored to meet living expenses. This, however, comes with risks in today’s world where average life span is getting extended, and one should not run the risk of falling short of financial resources at a later stage in life, when one might not be able to work.

Ideal corpus

Based on current living standards and investment return prospects in the US, those in the FIRE bandwagon there follow something known as the ‘4 per cent rule’. One’s total yearly living expenses is multiplied by 25; if it is possible to earn a 4 per cent annual yield on that from investments, then one can quit their job, according to their mantra. A yield below 4 per cent with rest withdrawn from principal also might be fine, according to some proponents, since some of the corpus might appreciate over time, but this comes with risks.

When it comes to planning for a similar objective for a FIRE aspirant in India, two important factors imply the multiple applied to yearly living expenses may need to be higher than 25 — high inflation and low yields.

India has historically had much higher inflation than the US, which means one’s savings erode faster over a period of time. India goes through periods of negative real interest rates (inflation higher than interest rate) like in the last year, denting the real income of retirees preferring safe investment options. Hence, a yield of higher than 4 per cent may be needed on savings.

Besides, rental yields and dividend yields in India are much lower than that in developed markets (Nifty 50 dividend yield at 1 per cent versus Dow Jones Index dividend yield at near 2 per cent). Hence, focussing entirely on capital appreciation and withdrawing from principal to make up for the lower yield presents a risky proposition, warranting a higher multiple to yearly expenses.

Hence, other factors such as frugal living and wise investing may be required to get this dream of early retirement closer to reality.

Takeaways

Finally, if you want to be on the FIRE bandwagon, here are three things that you can do, which also form the core of the FIRE movement:

One, spending only on what is essential — not indulging in excessive consumerism and thereby devaluing your own effort. It was your effort that earned you the money and spending that money without much thought devalues the effort. Tempering down on consumerism also comes with positive consequences for the environment which appears be a cause important to millennials.

Two, saving wisely — investing in a prudential and judicious manner that can grow your corpus optimally and also give you comfort, confidence, and peace of mind .

Three, valuing the time that you spend at work — when one realises that money is a by-product of how one spends his/her time, then one gets more conscious of making use of that time more productively. Following the first two principles would help you choose a job you may like. At the same time, when you realise that your savings and spends which will help you reach your goal is a function of your time at work, you will also begin utilising that time more effectively.

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How to use online stock screeners

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Do you depend on your friends for suggestions or advice on picking stocks for your portfolio? Well, it’s good to have such friends but it is very important that you do the due diligence yourself to make sure you are selecting the right ones from the lot. Stock screeners help you narrow down on a few select stocks based on specific criteria. Platforms such as Screener.in, Tickertape, Yahoo Finance, StockEdge and Investing.com help you do this conveniently.

Common screeners

Most of these platforms already have a few templated screeners that you can use for stock selection. These are screeners based on various factors such as popular investment themes, formulas and valuations. A few common screeners that one can find on almost all platforms include growth and value-tap companies, debt-reducing entities, bluechips, high ROCE (return on capital employed) firms, high dividend yield and cash-rich companies.

Before selecting a particular templated screener, one should go through the criteria used for developing it. For example, Screener.in’s ‘value stocks’ screener filters stocks with the following criteria – last year’s EPS (earnings per share) greater than ₹20, debt to equity ratio of less than 0.1, average return on capital employed of greater than 35 per cent in the last five years, market capitalisation of more of ₹500 crore and operating profit margin of greater than 15 per cent in the last five years.

On most platforms, you can also alter the criteria to match your investment strategy. One can further narrow down the filtered stocks based on industry/sector and market cap.

The filtered stocks can be further analysed by clicking on any stock from the list. Almost all the platforms provide the company balance sheet, and profit and loss and cash flow statements, ratios and quarterly results with a historical perspective. In addition to the above details, StockEdge also provides instant details on mutual fund holdings for a particular stock as on a particular date.

Besides editing the existing templates, you can also create your own screener based on your requirements. Some platforms such as StockEdge allow creating a bundled screener with both fundamental and technical metrics.

You can also save the created screener for further use.

Premium plans

The good news is that most of the above mentioned facilities are provided for free by the platforms. However, there are some services which are behind a paywall. The free and premium services differ from one provider to another. For instance, narrowing down filters industry-wise and exporting data come as a free service by Investing.com while it is chargeable by Screener.in. Having said that, Screener.in provides more than 1000 templated screeners which is not the case with the former. Screener.in’s premium plan comes at Rs 4,999 per annum and provides options to add more colums to the screener, in addition to providing material such as detailed notes to accounts and credit rating reports that comes handy during fundamental analysis.

In the same way, while inserting a customised ratio comes under a free plan in Screener.in, it is chargeable under other platforms such as Tickertape. Tickertape’s Pro plan comes at Rs 1,133 per annum which includes offering earnings forecasts, brokerage reports, and metrics such as percentage of analysts recommending buy call on a stock. Meanwhile, StockEdge premium plan comes at Rs 2,999 per year for unlocking higher number of metrics for the screener. It provides inhouse stock reports for some of the stocks. While screeners from Investing.com and Yahoo Finance may come free, the screener options would be limited.

The cost and the services offered by these platforms cannot be compared as facilities provided by each one of them vary.

Points to note

Whether you go for the free service or the paid option, note that not all platforms work alike. For example, a value stocks screener from one platform may not result in the same stocks as that from another as the criteria used could be different across platforms. Thus, understanding the criteria used is essential before using the screener data.

Also, when using a screener across industries, make sure the criteria used is relevant for all sectors. Further, if you would like to save the screeners used for picking stocks, go for platforms that allow you to export the data. Screener.in and Investing.com are two such platforms.

Finally, make sure you opt for ‘latest data’ while selecting a screener. This will pull out data only for those stocks for which the latest data is available..

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Financial planning for a family of 4

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Sankaran (42) and his wife Revathi (39), parents of 2 children, work in the IT industry. They want a financial plan to achieve their goals in future. They had prioritised their key goals as follows.

1. Education fund for kids, aged 9 and 4.

2. House at the earliest, preferably a 3-BHK in Chennai at a cost of ₹1.2 crore

3. Investing for retirement

4. New car at an additional cost of ₹8 lakh in 2022

5. Protection of family from unfortunate events

The family’s cash flow and assets are as follows:

 

All the investments in real estate were made based on third party compulsion in the last 4 to 5 years. They had not seen their assets appreciate considerably. They had sought unit-linked insurance policies on the assumption that they were investing in mutual funds. They had started to invest in mutual funds two to three years ago. With home loan interest rates at attractive levels and surplus cash available in hand, the couple wanted to buy a house.

Sankaran did not exhibit confidence of getting any substantial increase in his salary in the coming years. Revathi was comfortable continuing with her employment.

 

We reviewed their investments and recommended the following.

a) Build up ₹ 6 lakh towards an emergency fund

b) Set up protection by buying term insurance for Sankaran for a sum assured of ₹1 crore and Revathi for ₹1 crore without riders.

c) Buying health insurance for the family for a sum insured of ₹10 lakh. Though the family is covered for medical emergencies through employer-provided group insurance, these covers had many restrictions along with low sum insured. The health cover was also insufficient considering their life style

d) Keep track of spending for the next one year to ascertain their actual monthly expenses. The expenses may have come down because of the Covid lockdown and that they could go back to their old spending habits once life returned to normal.

e) Restructure their holdings in unit-linked insurance plans within the next one year, mainly to reduce the annual commitment. This would reduce the premium commitments from ₹ 6 lakh per annum to ₹1 lakh per annum

f) Sell two of their plots of land to partially fund the house purchase, so that their leverage could be restricted and an unproductive asset monetised. This would help them to buy a house for ₹1.2 crore while also restricting the loan component to ₹60-70 lakh.

With adequate contingency measures in place, reduced premium commitments and surplus available as cash, they were better placed to service the housing loan without additional financial burden. They were also advised to reduce expenses wherever possible to foreclose the loan in the next 8 to 10 years.

Education goal

Towards elder son’s education, they would require about ₹35 lakh in the next nine years. They would also require ₹57 lakh for the younger son’s education. (Current cost for education is presumed at ₹15 lakh with inflation assumed at 10 per cent).

At 11 per cent expected return, they would need to invest ₹14,000 and ₹16,000 per month in large-cap mutual funds to fund these two education goals.

Retirement goal

We recommended that they invest ₹25,000 in large-cap mutual funds towards their retirement corpus. With an expected return of 11 per cent over the next 20 years, they would be able to achieve a corpus of ₹2.16 crore. Along with regular PF and NPS accumulations that they were making, they should be able to reach a sizeable corpus towards retirement.

Other facets

To become successful investors, we encouraged them to keep an ‘Investing Behaviour Journal’ to keep a record of their emotions as and when there were wild swings in the markets either up or down.

The writer, Co-founder of Chamomile Investment Consultants in Chennai, is an investment advisor registered with SEBI

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Valuations out of comfort zone: What you should do now

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A famous law in economics — Stein’s Law– states, “If something cannot go on for ever, it will stop”.

With the Sensex touching the 50,000 mark last week, one thing on every one’s mind is this – will the exuberance continue or will the markets succumb to Stein’s law? In this column we analyse two metrics that investors can keep track of to judge the market situation.

Buffet Indicator

In an interview in 2001, legendary investor Warren Buffet noted that the single best measure of where valuations stand at any moment was the ratio of market capitalisation of all listed securities as a percentage of GNP. This has subsequently become famous as the Buffet Indicator. Since in many cases there is no significant difference between GNP and GDP, the market capitalisation by GDP is more commonly used.

According to Buffet, in the context of US economy, if the percentage relationship falls to the 70-80 per cent levels it’s good time to buy. If the ratio approaches 200 per cent as it did in 1999-2000 during the dotcom bubble, investors were ‘playing with fire’.

Of course, it was playing with fire as those who remained invested in the benchmark Nasdaq index at those levels of market cap-to-GDP, saw 77 per cent of their investment value burnt from the peak of the bubble in March 2000 to its bottom in October 2002.

Right now the market capitalisation-to-GDP in the US is around 190 per cent — right in the ‘playing with fire’ zone. Given that financial events in the US always impact the rest of the world, this poses risk for stock markets across the world. .

Where does India fare in this metric? India’s current market cap-to-GDP is around 100 per cent now. While this might appear lower than the ratio in US, we need to see this in the context of our economy and history.

Our market cap-to-GDP peaked at around 149 per cent in December 2007, and the Nifty 50 index fell 60 per cent from those levels by March 2009, falling back to a ratio of a little above 60 per cent of the annual GDP at that time. Since then, the highest we have reached is 105 times in 2017 Given our history, the Buffet Indicator for India is signalling over valuation. Every time it has crossed the 80 to 90 per cent levels, markets have either crashed or atleast underperfomed risk free options. While it might be lower than the ratio in the US, one needs to factor in that we have an unorganised sector that makes up 50 per cent of the GDP and our corporate profits to GDP ratio is about half the levels prevailing in the US.

Trailing PE ratio

Historically, Indian markets have always cracked or underperfomed sooner or later after benchmark Nifty50 index nears/crosses trailing PE of around 24 times. In the peak of the Y2K/dotcom bubble, it traded up to a PE of 29 times in February 2000. From the peak level of 1,756 then, the Nifty 50 corrected by around 50 per cent as the bubble burst and unwound.

In the housing bubble driven bull market of 2007-08, it traded up to a PE of 24 times in January 2008 and subsequently the index witnessed wealth destruction of around 60 per cent as the entire world faced consequences of the sub-prime crisis created by the housing bubble. Currently, the trailing PE of Nifty 50 is at a historical high and mind boggling 36 times. Even if one were to be very generous and take an EPS 20 per cent higher (closer to FY20 consensus EPS estimates prior to covid-disruption) to adjust for Covid impact on earnings, it trades at around 29 times – levels from which it crashed in 2000.

While in general the logic is that markets look to the future and one should look at forward PE, trailing PE has been historically a good indicator from an index level. The reasons being forward earnings is built more on expectations which may or may not pan out, and the other reason being forward earnings cannot be disconnected from trailing earnings. While there might be individual cases of earnings differing vastly from trailing levels, at an aggregate or index level it is usually not the case.

Historically, trading at over stretched PE ratios has had severe consequences. For example, the main index in China SSE Composite traded up to a PE of over 40 times in 2007 as equity mania rose to historic proportions there. This culminated in a correction of more than 70 per cent. Despite robust economic growth since then, the index is still 40 per cent below its peak of 2007, nearly 14 years later. It trades at humbling PE of around 18 times today.

What this means to you

While market pundits and fund managers you watch on TV might justify these valuations by pointing to record low interest rates, they are sharing only half the truth.

The other part which is not explicitly explained is that interest rates are low because economic growth is low. Low growth will result in low earnings growth. In the long term stock markets have always been a function of earnings growth and interest rates. They are likely to perform worst when interest rates are high and earnings growth is low. They perform best when interest rates are low and earnings growth is high. Hence the current scenario where interest rates and earnings growth are low is not a case for all time high valuations.

Whether it is the Buffet Indicator or the PE ratio, the indications clearly are that Indian markets are in over-heated territory. That means it is time for you to be prudent in your equity allocation, plan for the long-term and not follow the herd for quick profits. As the famous quote from ‘The Dark Knight’ goes – ‘You either die a hero or live long enough to become the villain’. Bull markets usually choose the latter. One must invest wisely to not get trapped by the villain.

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