MPC meet, Omicron and IPO buzz among key factors to drive market this week, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi: Domestic equity markets ended the volatile week with modest gains, but kept the market participants on their toes. Despite the supportive GDP numbers, the new Covid-19 variant spoiled the party for equities.

Benchmark indices – Nifty50 and BSE Sensex – ended the week with gains of a per cent each, whereas the broader markets were in tandem, rising a per cent.

Amidst the wild swings, traders took refuge in the IT stocks, whose index rose about 4 per cent during the week.

“We reiterate our cautious stance given the uncertainty surrounding the new variant. Among the sectors, the IT pack looks firm while others are showing a mixed trend. Traders should continue with hedged trades and maintain positions on both sides,” said Ajit Mishra, VP-Research, Religare Broking.

Below are the factors that may help steer the markets next week:

RBI MPC meet

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is scheduled to meet between December 6-8. The committee will meet amidst the rising inflationary pressure and the scare of Omicron. It is expected that RBI will keep the rates on hold and markets would keenly watch the commentary of the RBI governor.

Omicron Scare

The rise of new coronavirus variants has spooked the traders globally, amidst the rising fear of a halt in economic activities. According to the World Health Organisation, the new variant is less lethal but likely to spread at a higher speed. Any jitter to normalcy or curbs on the movement are likely to dampen the sentiments further.

Fed‘s Stance

The sudden hawkish stance from Fed’s chair Jerome Powell has sent a clear signal to the market that combating the historic rise in inflation is the prime priority of the central bank. The two-year-long measure to boost demand and employment is likely to be gone and liquidity may be sucked out of the economy.

During two days of testimony in the week gone by, Powell acknowledged the emergence of the Omicron variant, which is a potential risk to economic growth.

Macroeconomic Data: India will release its macro-economic data, including factory manufacturing output and India Industrial Output (IIP) for October and CPI inflation for November on Friday.

Buzz in IPO mart

It will be raining IPOs next week on Dalal Street as four companies, namely RateGain Travel Technologies, Shriram Properties, CE Info Systems (MapmyIndia) and a Rakesh Jhunjhunwala-backed company Metro Brands will hit the primary markets.

Star Health Listing

Dalal Street will witness the listing of another Rakesh Jhunjhunwala backed Star Health and Allied Insurance Company, whose issue fell flat on Dalal Street. The issue was subscribed merely 79 per cent, forcing merchant bankers to trim OFS size to get the issue sail through. The company’s issue was open between November 30 and December 2.

US Jobless Claims

Global economic indicators such as US jobless claims would also be keenly watched after the recent volatility in the global equities this past week. The initial jobless claims would be on the radar of market participants, guiding the future course of action.

Technical Outlook

After a big bearish candle in the last week, the Nifty 50 index closed positive as compared to the last week, and is trading around the support of 20 EMA on the weekly chart, said Yesha Shah, Head of Equity Research, Samco Securities.

“The correction witnessed has done notable damage to the ongoing momentum, Nifty continues to trade below its rising trend line which had been supporting the uptrend thus far. Traders are advised to maintain a cautious to mildly bullish outlook and to maintain a strict stop loss below the 16,850 level,” she added.



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Sensex jumps 214 points in early trade; Nifty tops 17,220, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: Equity benchmark Sensex jumped over 214 points in early trade on Thursday, tracking gains in index majors HDFC twins, Reliance Industries and Maruti amid largely positive cues from Asian peers.

The 30-share index was trading 214.43 points or 0.37 per cent higher at 57,899.22 in initial deals. Similarly, the Nifty rose 53.95 points or 0.31 per cent to 17,220.85.

M&M was the top gainer in the Sensex pack, rising 2.38 per cent. HDFC, PowerGrid, Titan, Sun Pharma, Maruti, HCL Tech and Reliance Industries, were among the other gainers.

On the other hand, L&T, ICICI Bank, Nestle India, Axis Bank and Tech Mahindra were among the losers.

In the previous session, the 30-share BSE Sensex rallied 619.92 points or 1.09 per cent to close at 57,684.79. Similarly, the NSE Nifty surged 183.70 points or 1.08 per cent to 17,166.90.

Elsewhere in Asia, bourses in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Seoul were trading with gains in mid-session deals, while Tokyo was in the red.

Stock exchanges in the US ended with losses in the overnight session.

International oil benchmark Brent crude rose 1.07 per cent to USD 69.61 per barrel.

Meanwhile, India’s merchandise exports rose 26.49 per cent year-on-year to USD 29.88 billion in November on better performance by key sectors, while the trade deficit hit a record high of USD 23.27 billion as imports of crude oil and gold spiked.

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) remained net sellers in the capital market, as they sold shares worth Rs 2,765.84 crore on Wednesday, as per exchange data.



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HDFC Securities , BFSI News, ET BFSI

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HDFC Securities has reduce call on Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Ltd. with a target price of Rs 20. The current market price of Ujjivan Small Finance Bank is Rs 21.

Time period given by analyst is one year when Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Ltd. price can reach defined target.
Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Ltd., incorporated in the year 2016, is a banking company (having a market cap of Rs 3638.10 Crore).

Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Ltd. key Products/Revenue Segments include Interest & Discount on Advances & Bills, Income From Investment, Interest On Balances with RBI and Other Inter-Bank Funds for the year ending 31-Mar-2021.

Financials
For the quarter ended 30-09-2021, the company reported a Standalone Total Income of Rs 691.93 Crore, down -3.40 % from last quarter Total Income of Rs 716.29 Crore and down -15.41 % from last year same quarter Total Income of Rs 818.01 Crore. The bank reported net profit after tax of Rs -273.79 Crore in latest quarter.

Investment Rationale
Ujjivan SFB reported yet another quarter of loss at INR2.74bn as the stressed pool remained persistently elevated. While the aggregate stress pool (PAR>0) declined sequentially from 31% to 19%, the excessive stress suggests normalisation would be delayed beyond FY22. Restructured book increased from 5.5% to 10.2% sequentially, with loan loss coverage at 75% (including INR0.25bn of COVID provisions), driven by accelerated provisioning at ~10.4% of gross advances. Business momentum was revived with disbursals of INR31.2bn (near pre-COVID levels) and a declining share of MFI loans (70%). With limited visibility of RoA reflation and a stubborn stress pool, it downgrades Ujjivan SFB from ADD to REDUCE with a revised TP of INR20 (earlier INR34) and downgrade Ujjivan Financial Services from BUY to ADD with a revised TP of INR189 (earlier INR322).

Promoter/FII Holdings
Promoters held 83.32 per cent stake in the company as of 30-Sep-2021, while FIIs owned 0.56 per cent, DIIs 0.76 per cent.



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IndusInd Bank shares tank after report of loan evergreening allegation at unit, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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BENGALURU – Shares of IndusInd Bank slid as much as 11.45% on Monday after a report said whistleblowers had alleged loan evergreening at the private sector lender’s micro finance arm.

On Friday, the Economic Times reported that whistleblowers had alerted the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the IndusInd board that Bharat Financial Inclusion (BFIL) had evergreened some loans – a practice where new loans are given to stressed borrowers to enable them to repay existing loans.

IndusInd denied the allegation in an exchange filing on Nov. 6 and said the report was “grossly inaccurate and baseless”.

However, it said nearly 84,000 loans were disbursed in May without customer consent due to a technical glitch and that the issue was rectified expeditiously.

IndusInd did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

On Monday, shares of the private sector lender were the top percentage losers on the Nifty private bank index and on track for their worst session since April 2020.

Due to pandemic-related restrictions, some loans had to be disbursed via cash at BFIL, and as of September-end, only 26,073 clients out of 84,000 were active with loan outstanding at 340 million rupees ($4.58 million), IndusInd said.

In multiple emails to the RBI and the IndusInd board in October, a whistleblower group that included BFIL officials alleged that the unit had evergreened loans, inflated revenues and under-reported non-performing assets, the report said.

The report also cited two people familiar with the developments saying there was a separate whistleblower complaint from an outsider on Oct. 14 that suggestions to set up risk management and audit committees for BFIL were ignored.

In its exchange filing, IndusInd said an independent review had been initiated by the bank to see if there was any process lapse or accounting failure at BFIL.

($1 = 74.1900 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Chandini Monnappa in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)



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Idea Exchange — Markets could have been delinked from economy for a while but not for 18 months…don’t think it will crash: Nilesh Shah, MD, Kotak Mahindra AMC

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Nilesh Shah, MD, Kotak Mahindra AMC

Nilesh Shah, MD of Kotak Mahindra AMC, explains why he is confident about India being a “long-term growth story” and why markets will “continue to correct”, says he doesn’t believe RBI will increase interest rates to a level where it derails growth, and calls for regulation of cryptocurrencies. This session was moderated by Associate Editor Sandeep Singh.


Sandeep Singh: From a peak of around 62,200 a couple of weeks ago, the Sensex lost around 5% or 3,000 points over the last week. How do you see this and do you expect to see the correction continuing?

In the near future, I think the corrections will continue. However, every correction is an opportunity to buy into the market. I believe, in the market, there is a red zone and a green zone. In the red zone are stocks, where floating stock is limited and there is a concentrated holding. That concentrated holding allows people to put any price on those stocks. Now at some point of time, the law of gravity will apply and those stocks have got corrected. Second, in every bull run, we see operators pull up prices of, let’s say, penny stocks. Some of them have gone up as high as 8,000%, some 4,000% and some by 500%. Now all these stocks too have to come to an end. And generally, they make the top of the market. So we are seeing more correction in this red zone than in the green zone. The momentum of the market now is a bit negative. It will take some time to correct and consolidate it.

Sandeep Singh: What makes you confident that markets will rise in the medium-term?
Let’s get a slightly long-term view. In the pre-90s, the villain in most of our Hindi films was a black marketeer — Roti Kapda aur Makaan, Kalicharan and so on. We have shifted from double-digit inflation to mid-single-digit inflation. That is a big change in the economic fundamentals of India. Pre-1990, we were always short of foreign exchange reserves. Fast forward to 2021, we have a$636-billion reserve… For most of our 75 years, we were an infrastructure-deficit economy. Now we are becoming an infrastructure-available economy. Our power consumption has gone through the sky, but are also able to produce power. We are also moving from physical to physical-digital infrastructure. Today, in a developed world, if you want to transfer money from one bank to another bank, it is a seven-day job. In India, it is happening instantly, thanks to RTGS and NEFT, among others. Earlier, we were a capital-constrained economy; not any more. Also, public-private partnership is emerging. From the government running all the businesses to the government saying that we have no business to be in business, is a big mindset change. Air India, BPCL, IDBI, LIC, Container Corporation, Shipping Corporation, Neelachal Ispat — if all these things get divested, then imagine the benefit this country and the economy will get.

All this is changing India like never before. Have we achieved everything? No. It is a work in progress. We need to bring rule of law in the country. We pass a law which says that if your cheque bounces three times, you will go behind bars. What have we achieved in reality? Forty lakh cases of cheque bouncing are clogging up the judicial system. This cannot work. An entrepreneur will invest when he is convinced that there is the rule of law. We have to reform our judicial infrastructure. Also, when you are trying for economic growth, you are labelled as suit boot ki sarkar. Our whole focus is on dividing the pie and getting equality rather than expanding the pie even with inequality… You can’t become a prosperous country until you respect business…

We were growing at mid-single digit, now we have laid the foundation for a higher single-digit growth and that is giving investors the confidence that now India is a long-term growth story.

Sandeep Singh: The current stock market rally has continued for 15 months despite issues of job losses, loss of life, impact on businesses. The common refrain is that the stock market is delinked from the economy.
Stock market could have been delinked from the economy for a while, not for 18 months. We saw that kind of madness during the Harshad Mehta, Ketan Parekh times… Today, can someone take out money from the banking system and put it in the stock market? No. At that time, the average PE (Price to Earnings) of the market was 40, today we are at 20. At 20 PE, how can one say there is a bubble? In 2008 too, we saw correction but that was driven by sub-prime. But it is unlikely that we are seeing a sub-prime kind of an event. I wouldn’t say markets are delinked from the economy; I would instead say they are optimistically discounting the future and if that future is not delivered, there will be correction. But there will not be any crash in the market because even if the 20 PE comes down to 15 PE, people will go to buy. Unless a sub-prime kind of an event happens, where all FPIs (Foreign Portfolio Investments) decide that they have to move out, I don’t think markets will crash. They will undoubtedly correct. And right now, we are in a negative momentum, but markets most likely will not crash like 2008 or 2020.

George Mathew: Why do we see many more retail investors jumping onto the stock market bandwagon? Does the RBI’s accommodative policy have a part to play in increasing liquidity?
Where will the retail investors deploy money? Can they buy real-estate? It is a big-ticket investment. Bank deposits will get them 3-5%. Gold and silver had negative returns last year. So where will you put your money? By definition, it is equity. And they have seen their neighbour making money so they have also jumped onto the bandwagon. Not all retail investors are blind followers. There is a fair amount of mature investors who have been investing in the stock market through its ups and downs and have been building up their positions in equity because interest rates are so low in other places. Is RBI’s accommodative policy fuelling the equity market rally? The credit growth in the economy does not suggest that the liquidity that the RBI has built up has moved to retail investors. I don’t think credit growth is 30-40 per cent, where I need to be concerned. So RBI has excess liquidity in the system but unfortunately, it is only moving from the banks to the RBI and vice-versa. It has not moved from the RBI to banks to the customers. This is mine and your savings getting invested in the market. People have started taking increasing exposure because of low interest rates and the last 18 months’ positive experience of making money.

Sandeep Singh: A lot of FPI money is flowing into the market. How does it translate into change in the real economy for sectors such as healthcare, education?
Digitisation of education is our solution to the shortage of quality teaching. There will be stories of children not having electronic instruments or good network coverage. But at least with digitisation I am able to cover 10-50 % of the population. Without that, no one will be covered. So you have to see if the glass is half full or half empty. In healthcare, we have seen top-of-the-line consultancy being provided in whichever part of India you are in… Digitisation is changing the way things are moving and more importantly, for ideas, capital is available… Capital availability is helping them expand at a much faster rate. Byju’s without global capital could not have reached where it is.

George Mathew: There is speculation around the world about interest rates rising again. In India, do you think interest rates have bottomed out? When will they start rising again?
In September 2020, we said RBI will raise interest rates by March 2021. In March 2021, we said RBI will raise interest by September 2021. In September 2021, we are saying RBI will raise interests by March 2022. Today, India’s CPI inflation at 5.3 % is the same as the US’s. Our interest rates are at 6.3%, 100 basis points real, their interest rate is 1.7, it is negative. RBI has managed our monetary policy significantly better than other countries. They have ensured that liquidity remains absorbed, interest rates remain under check, the borrowing programme of the government goes through, the financial market remains stable and functioning. At the same time, inflation and growth rate remain supported. I don’t think we could have got a better RBI Governor than Shaktikanta Das. Rates will rise in India and globally, but not as much as the market is fearing. I don’t think central bankers are going to increase interest rates to a level where it derails growth. They will raise so that inflation remains under control but post that, they will again support growth. Today, we have $636 billion of reserves, positive interest rates, our inflation numbers are well under control. Put all this together, rates will rise, but it will not rise to derail growth.

Sunny Verma: The government is pushing ahead with a giant privatisation plan… they plan to privatise two banks. Should we allow industrial houses and corporate houses entry into banks?
We, as a democracy, do not have the screening process where only good people get the license… We open the gates for everyone and then keep on tightening the screws…. You need a good screening process to give licenses to good people and have strict boundaries… It is ironic that the ADR shareholders of Satyam have been compensated but the Indian shareholders have got nothing. Isn’t it a shame that for a crime committed in India, the compensation is paid in the US? Our regulators, judicial system should be ashamed of it.

Sandeep Singh: Since you bring market intelligence to the table, has there been any discussion within the government on crypto currency?
I believe regulators are working on it. There will be some regulation. Cryptocurrencies are becoming too big to ignore now. It is more of a semi-urban and rural phenomenon. In Tier 2 towns, it’s spreading like wildfire. I am not qualified enough to say if crypto is a fraud or not… who knows, it may be the future and we are early entrants. So why not regulate and make people aware that this is high-risk, high return? So that tomorrow if it goes out of hand, it does not jeopardise many investors.

George Mathew: The RBI Governor recently spoke about the need to tighten the auditing process. His observations came after three major financial groups collapsed in the last 2-3 years. Do you think the auditing process is weak in corporate India, especially the financial sector?
This malaise is not only in the auditing profession. For an investor, there are six layers of protection. The first is the management… If you look at the Bernie Madoff scandal — that was a US $60 billion scandal, but the actual money was $18 billion. Out of that, Irving Picard (a court-appointed trustee for the liquidation of Bernard L Madoff Investment Securities) recovered $16 billion. How did he recover? Madoff’s, his wife’s, son’s every piece of property was sold — shares, bonds, investment, personal items, everything… Madoff had to submit any spending above $100 to Picard… Now look at the cases in India. You have to go after the management… that’s not happening here. Then comes the Board of Directors. But how many are discharging their job? Then comes the auditor. Now there are a few very good auditors. In the pre-90s, Y H Malegam refused to sign the balance sheet of a leading textile company. How many such CAs have we seen? Very few. Then comes the rating agencies. The rating agencies which gave AAA rating to Dewan Housing Finance Limited have a lot of introspection to do. Then comes the investors. Our jobs is to keep the management and companies on their toes on good governance. Finally come the regulators and judicial authorities. All of them have to work together to ensure good governance.

Sandeep Singh: While there’s optimism over the future, over the last one and a half years, there have been a lot of job losses. MSMEs lost businesses to listed companies. What’s your prescription for a more inclusive growth?
Let me give you the example of when SMEs have worked well. You would have heard of Morbi, a town in Gujarat. There was a dam burst in the 80s and the entire town was flattened. Then Morbi started coming up by making tiles. They initially used coal to make tiles, but the pollution levels rose and the HC ordered that they switch to natural gas. But that switch from coal to natural gas meant that the entire industry became formalised — unlike coal, natural gas couldn’t be bought in the black market. Then, the units there began focusing on improving quality. With LPG or CNG burning, you will know how many tiles you have produced. Then they focused on quality, on economies of scale. Some focused on becoming contractors, some on the export market. Today Morbi exports 7,000 crore worth of tiles. There was a fear that Chinese tiles would invade the market; instead, they compete with China in the Middle East etc. All this happened because you formalised MSMEs. From tiles, Morbi moved to clocks. World’s largest clock manufacturer Ajanta is based in Morbi. Then, calculators… Orpat is a Morbi-based company. This is the model for us. Another such model is Tirupur in Tamil Nadu… How do we ensure formationalisation of MSMEs? When you are evaluating MSMEs, you have to allow market forces to work.

A corollary to that is Amul, which brought millions of farmers on a formal platform. Now that is a cooperative model, while Morbi is a private model. Sitting in Delhi, I can’t decide the model to revive MSMEs. Market forces at the local level will have to do what is right for the industry.

Sunny Verma: We saw the US taper tantrum in 2013 and saw how the jerky policy announcements impacted markets. Now people have been saying the impact of such a tantrum on emerging markets could be 10 times what it was then.
People become wiser from experience. What happened in 2013? Ben Bernanke talked about taper tantrum to warn markets. That warning itself created a correction in the markets because some people panicked. All those people who sold in 2013 became wiser because when the taper tantrum actually began, there was no correction. In fact, markets went up. All those people who bought despite Ben Bernanke warning, will buy 10 times what they bought then because they made a lot of money. So will people be as stupid as in 2013? No. Secondly, in 2013, India was dependent on FPI to a much more extent than what it is today. Third, in 2013, China was competing with India to collect FPI inflows. That’s no longer the case. More importantly, if the taper tantrum starts at 21,000 Nifty, of course there will be correction, but what if it begins at 15,000 Nifty? There’ll be no effect then.

Sandeep Singh: You spoke of certain changes in India over the years when it comes to economics, inflation, infrastructure. Have these set off any changes in the political economy?
By and large, most parties are focused on economic issues. But unfortunately, Opposition parties and the ruling party may have a stand on a particular issue, but when their roles reverse, they also change their stand. For instance, Air India should have been divested when it had a monopoly over the Indian skies. We would have got some much more money if it had been divested then. Similarly, MTNL-BSNL. How to make decisions that make economic sense? That’s our biggest challenge. This political process has to evolve. We as citizens also have to realise that there will be short-term pain for long-term gain. Mis-allocation of capital is the real challenge.

Sandeep Singh: We hear of a lot of Centre versus state issues. How do you look at this?
The states and the Centre have to work together, there is no choice. We are a federal structure. If the Central government opens the door… right now, we have this great opportunity of China Plus One. Because of Wuhan, because of China’s acrimony with others, every country that has a base in China is looking to diversify. All the countries in the world, including India, are chasing that investment. Even if the Centre makes this image of the country, invites manufacturers to be in India, builds highways, builds dedicated freight corridors, at the end of the day, the factory will be run in the state jurisdiction. The local administration will have to support it. Then we will be able to capture this China Plus One. If we don’t work together, the opportunity will be missed like in 1980.

Sandeep Singh: Do you see rising commodity prices as a threat to growth?
Commodities are a cycle — they go up and down. I have to create an economy that’s insular to commodity price movement. Today, India has moved in that direction. Our IT exports are more than Saudi Arabia’s oil exports. Our remittances plus software combined gives us an edge to manage rising commodities prices. As oil prices go up, there is an impact on the economy, undoubtedly. But by pushing my IT exports, remittances, I can neutralise it to an extent.

Shubhajit Roy: You spoke about people and economies becoming wiser with experience. With the benefit of hindsight, how would you look at demonetisation?
Demonetisation had its positive and negative effects. The negative effects were felt on MSMEs. But the positive effect was on digital adoption as a lot of payment models evolved. Now one intended benefit of demonetisation didn’t come through, not because the government failed, but because citizens failed. When demonetisation happened, we hoped people would not put the black money into their accounts, that they’ll take the hit on their balance sheet.

Unfortunately, people found many ways to convert black money into white and deposited that bank into the banking system.

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Sensex rises over 100 pts in early trade; Nifty near 18,300, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai, Equity benchmark Sensex advanced over 100 points in early trade on Wednesday tracking gains in index heavyweights like Reliance Industries, ICICI Bank and Asian Paints. The 30-share index was trading 106.71 points or 0.17 per cent higher at 61,456.97 in initial deals. Similarly, the Nifty advanced 26.70 points or 0.15 per cent to 18,295.10.

Asian Paints was the top gainer in the Sensex pack, rallying around 6 per cent, followed by ICICI Bank, Sun Pharma, Nestle India, Dr Reddy’s and TCS.

On the other hand, Axis Bank, Bajaj Finance, Tech Mahindra and IndusInd Bank were among the laggards.

In the previous session, the 30-share index ended 383.21 points or 0.63 per cent higher at 61,350.26, while Nifty surged 143 points or 0.79 per cent to 18,268.40.

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) were net sellers in the capital market, as they offloaded shares worth Rs 2,368.66 crore on Tuesday, as per exchange data.

High input costs have adversely impacted margins and profitability of select consumer and manufacturing companies despite steady volume and sales growth, said Binod Modi Head-Strategy at Reliance Securities.

This essentially raises concerns about sustainability of earnings rebound in subsequent quarters, which has weighed on sentiments recently, he noted.

However, “despite that overall performance so far has been good with sharp growth in revenue aiding double digit growth in earnings,” he said, adding “in our view, the market may remain volatile with downward bias in the near term and investors will track the pricing power of industries”.

Elsewhere in Asia, bourses in Shanghai, Hong Kong, Tokyo and Seoul were trading with losses in mid-session deals.

Stock exchanges in the US ended on a positive note in the overnight session.

Meanwhile, international oil benchmark Brent crude fell 0.47 per cent to USD 85.25 per barrel.



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Reliance Securities’ CEO says equities could gain another 10% by end of fiscal year, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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As far as Indian equity markets are concerned, the million-dollar question is valuations. Benchmark indices have soared so far this year and remain near lifetime highs. Last week UBS gave a pessimistic view on how much further equity indices could climb and speculation is rife that indices are set for a correction. Lav Chaturvedi, Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director, Reliance Securities, believes that there is an upside of 10 per cent by the end of the financial year. In a candid chat with ETMarkets.com, Chaturvedi explains his rationale. Edited excerpts:

My first question is about valuations. Nifty, Sensex both are at lifetime highs. Are valuations stretched? How much of an upside are you seeing for benchmark indices?
There are two aspects to it. I want to summarise and then I will answer your question specifically. Overall on the one year forward earning basis, the market is at around 30-35% premium which is from 18x to 23x. That is the multiple that we are at. However, having said that, there are still some components which are included in benchmark Nifty in recent years like HDFC Life, SBI Life, Shree Cements carry higher P/E multiple than excluded stocks. Hence, a part of the premium has come from there. Further, improved visibility of earnings rebound post second wave of Covid-19 resulted in higher premium for the market and also from the market cap to GDP perspective.

We further note that the spread between G-Sec yield and Nifty earnings yield has gone up to historical average of 190bps, which may be a cause of concern for the near term. Overall though, the markets have run up and from here on, we would probably see another 10% jump towards the fiscal year end. That is something that we see. There could be some corrections along the way, the journey will have some blips but overall whoever is invested probably will see around 10% to 15% from here on a year-to-year basis.

From the perspective of a midcap versus small cap or a large cap; which part do you think right now holds the most value?
It is in the front end. We have seen significant growth in the largecap stocks. But it is going to be more broad-based and the midcap and smallcap stocks will probably continue the momentum given improved visibility of sustained earnings growth. However, in addition to earnings growth, investors must focus on cash flow generation and corporate governance of companies.

There will always be specific stocks and specific opportunities within the indices will probably provide opportunity and corrections will provide an entry level and another opportunity for anyone in retail or anybody who would have not entered so far.

Notably, every bull phase creates some winners, which causes midcaps to turn into largecaps. We already have many examples like Shree Cement, Tata Consumers, Avenue Supermarts, Adani Ports, Divi’s Lab, SBI Cards, among others.

There has been a flurry of IPOs so far in the year. What are the challenges of valuing these new age entrants into the market?
In 2019, from around $2.5 billion in the primary market (which is IPO) to almost $12 billion so far in 2021, it has been a phenomenal journey. LIC and Paytm are among others that could come in this year. So clearly it is a year of fundraising.

A year when a lot of primary activity is happening is very good because that provides risk capital.

The valuations with regards to overall IPOs or more specifically new age companies will probably be the function of what has been expected and what the investment horizon is. Clearly, if one goes for LIC IPO versus the Zomato or Paytm IPO will be on a completely different perspective. While LIC IPO is on today’s base and some growth rate in future, the new age technologies like Paytm or Zomato will probably be more based upon a little longer term.

Whoever is in it for the long haul…these kinds of IPOs will definitely benefit them. However, there are some players who are not for the long term. Probably more conventional IPOs will be better for them.

What is the earnings season telling us so far? Is the financial sector out of the woods in terms of asset quality?
Earnings so far have been decent and hence the markets are doing well. However, input cost inflation turned out to be a key concern for the market in the last couple of days.

With regards to whether the asset quality is out of the woods or not, the financial stability report from RBI says that it may take around four to six quarters for banks or for the lending companies to recover from the complete impact of any recession or any significant event like Covid-19.

So far so good but I would like to keep an eye on this for another couple of quarters at least so that we can see how it is going to pan out but all the policy responses that have been done so far both on the monetary and fiscal space have been supportive.

But we have another couple of quarters to look out for.

We have seen that so far this month the rupee has taken quite a beating because of a combination of factors; we have oil prices, we have the US Fed talking about tapering etc. Some companies like those in the IT space could benefit from this but what are the broader market implications of depreciation of the rupee?
The rupee usually is a function of two main components; one is the internal policies — how are the interest rates and second are the external fund flows and the liquidity in addition to the crude and other commodity prices.

There was an interesting article that says that the option strike in the US is going as far as above $200 for the Brent crude. It is phenomenal to even read that.

Obviously in the near term, crude probably has an upward trajectory till some correction is brought in by OPEC.

There are two key things that are going to play for currency in the near term future; one will be what steps Fed takes to taper or in what form and fashion.

That will probably determine the liquidity flow and that is where the currency play will come.

And the second is how the local interest rates or the domestic interest rates pan out. These two combinations will probably see where the rupee goes from here. Overall, it may be hovering around the range on a bit of a weakening but it is not going to be too much.

It is going to be around the range depending on what Fed does and how the domestic interest rates pan out.

Recently even the Bank of England governor has been talking about tightening monetary policy. The Fed has given a clear timeline that by November, bond purchases will be tapered. In terms of FII flows coming into India, do you think there would be a meaningful impact once all of this starts out in the advanced economies?
As we have seen in the past, tapering in itself does not cause the reverse fund flows. It is more if something is done beyond expectations.

Whatever has already been priced in or already been considered will not cause any impact on the FIIs.

If something is done over and above what has been expected, there may be some impact. However, the good part is that India being a strong story and robust inflow; that will probably offset some of those reversals because of interest rate arbitrage or the currency.

So overall, we do not expect on a more structural basis FPIs or FIIs flows to be reversed.

Yes, there could be some few months here and there, there could be some correction based upon the event but overall we should be okay.

We have been seeing a lot of talk recently about inclusion of India’s bonds in global indices. RBI has been talking about it. Many research reports including big foreign brokerages have been talking about it. Would that be a game changer for Indian financial markets?
I personally believe it will be and if you would have noticed, there was a recent comment by the deputy governor also that inclusion of the Indian bonds in the global indices in a way is a journey towards the capital account convertibility.

That kind of the roadmap that we are heading toward is very transformational for India to have a foreign flow like that. But it comes with its own impact and as long as that has been managed, I it is going to be a big, big plus for a country like India where there will be a debt fund and infrastructure funding and a lot of that positive funds will probably flow in.

We just have to ensure that the ecosystem has been addressed in a way where we are ready for the capital account convertibility which we have been speaking about for a long time.

In the last policy, the RBI kept interest rates unchanged but it stopped its government security acquisition programme and increased the size of its variable rate reverse repos. Some have taken that as a precursor to some degree of normalisation. Do you think that RBI could run the risk of falling behind the curve if it does not do something like a reverse repo hike by December?
I personally do not believe so. Whatever is being done is along the lines of expectation. There are a lot of reports out there that actually forecast when the interest rate cycle by the central bank will start normalising to pre-Covid level.

A timeline of over the next 12 to 18 months is probably a reasonable timeline because we have to see that it is not just the price stability but it is also about the economy and the growth which needs to be balanced. Anything which is done prematurely on one dimension has an impact on the other dimensions as well?
Yes 100% India will be. I personally believe that India will be both in top 5 and top 3 with regard to the best performing market. The only thing we have to see is that hopefully it will be on a dollar basis because that is where the currency will come into play and that probably will be a much more robust story and I do believe even there we have a fair chance.



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Markets back in green; banking stocks rise, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai, India’s key equity indices – S&P BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty50 – traded in the green during Monday’s pre-noon trade session.

Initially, the Nifty opened flat and started to fall in the first few minutes of the trade.

However, the key indices pared losses around the pre-noon session.

In terms of sectors, bank index is the largest gainer whereas Realty, Auto, IT and FMCG have lost the most so far.

At 11.30 a.m., the 30-scrip sensitive index traded at 60,959.72 points, up 138.10 points or 0.23 per cent.

The Sensex opened at 61,398.75 points from its previous close of 60,821.62 points.

Besides, the NSE Nifty50 traded at 18,140.45 points, up by only 25.55 points or 0.14 per cent.

It opened at 18,229.50 points from its previous close of 18,114.90 points.

“Nifty has taken support from 17,968 and the 17,948-17,968 band has to be protected for Nifty to bounce meaningfully from here,” said Deepak Jasani, Head of Retail Research, HDFC Securities.

According to Likhita Chepa, Senior Research Analyst at CapitalVia Global Research: “There may be some cautiousness as IMF notes that the pandemic has taken a turn for the worse in Asia.

“Traders may be concerned as foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have turned net sellers in Indian market by pulling out Rs 3,825 crore in October so far. There may be some buzz in power stocks as the Ministry of Power announced new rules to sustain economic viability of the sector.”

–IANS

rv/sn/ksk/



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Mcap of five of top-10 most valued firms down by over Rs 1.42 lakh cr; HUL, RIL most hit, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, The combined market valuation of five of the top-10 most valued companies eroded by Rs 1,42,880.11 crore last week, with Hindustan Unilever, Reliance Industries and Tata Consultancy Services emerging as major laggards. Last week, the 30-share BSE benchmark Sensex declined by 484.33 points or 0.79 per cent. Market benchmarks — Sensex and Nifty — declined for the fourth consecutive session on Friday.

The market valuation of Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL) tumbled Rs 45,523.33 crore to reach Rs 5,76,836.40 crore.

Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) valuation eroded by Rs 45,126.6 crore to Rs 16,66,427.95 crore and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) market worth tanked by Rs 41,151.94 crore to Rs 12,94,686.48 crore.

The market capitalisation (Mcap) of Bajaj Finance plunged Rs 8,890.95 crore to Rs 4,65,576.46 crore and that of HDFC Bank Ltd fell by Rs 2,187.29 crore to Rs 9,31,371.72 crore.

In contrast, Kotak Mahindra Bank added Rs 30,747.78 crore taking its valuation to Rs 4,30,558.09 crore.

ICICI Bank‘s market valuation zoomed by Rs 22,248.14 crore to reach Rs 5,26,497.27 crore.

The valuation of HDFC jumped Rs 17,015.22 crore to Rs 5,24,877.06 crore and that of State Bank of India gained Rs 11,111.14 crore to Rs 4,48,863.34 crore.

Infosys added Rs 1,717.96 crore taking its valuation to Rs 7,29,410.37 crore.



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Know how banks, financials performed this week, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Indian equity market witnessed volatility during the week, with domestic benchmark indices ending in the red in four out of five sessions. The Nifty50 on Friday closed at 18,114, with more than 1% weekly loss, but investors were prompt to take corrections as a buying opportunity.

The Nifty Bank remained the star performer, crossing the 40,000-mark, with more upside to come in banks. Banks, including PSU banks, were the main sectoral gainers while FMCG, Metals, Realty, Pharma and Auto were the largest losers.

According to experts, immediate support for Nifty50 is coming near the 18,000-mark. If the index manages to hold above the mark, the market can expect a swift pullback. Meanwhile, resistance is seen near 18,250-18,350.

Festival demand outlook, Jul-Sep earnings data backed by recovery in economic activity, vaccination numbers crossing 1 bln mark, developments around Asian markets, healthy FPIs and exports data, strong industrial production data, developments around the US economy, inflation fears, global energy crisis, were key driving factors this week.

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

Monday Closing bell: Market closes higher for seventh session, Nifty PSU Bank gaining nearly 4%

Extending their winning streak into seventh straight session, Indian indices ended with record gains on Monday, led by banks and financial stocks. The Sensex hit a record high of 61,963, while Nifty touched an all-time high of 18,525 intraday.

At the end of the day’s trade, the Sensex settled 0.75% higher at 61,765, while Nifty50 added 0.76% to close at 18,477. The broader market was positive, with midcap and smallcap stocks also clocking stellar gains.

The Nifty PSU Bank outperformed with nearly 4% gains to close at 2,824. The Nifty Bank index also ended the day with strong gains and ended 0.87% higher at 39,864, while Nifty Financial Services closed 0.46% higher at 19,034. Most of the banking stocks had a good run on Monday after strong numbers posted by HDFC Bank.

Tuesday Closing bell: Dalal Street closes in red, snaps seven-day winning streak

Sensex, Nifty witnessed a volatile session on Tuesday, ending in the red after having touched fresh all-time highs earlier in the day. At the closing bell, S&P BSE Sensex finished 0.08% lower at 61,716, while NSE Nifty 50 ended the day at 18,418, down from an intraday high of 18,604.

Broader markets fared worse than the benchmark indices to end deep in the red as Nifty Midcap 50 closed 2.22% lower, while the Smallcap 50 was down 1.47%

The Nifty Bank index touched 40,000 intraday but closed 0.36% lower at 39,540, while Nifty Financial Services ended flat with positive bias to close 0.18% higher at 19,068. After gaining nearly 4% in the previous session, Nifty PSU Bank Index ended 3.74% lower on Tuesday.

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

Wednesday Closing bell: Bears pull down benchmark indices, Bank Nifty close flat with marginal losses

Domestic equity indices continued to fall for the second consecutive session on Wednesday amid heightened volatility. S&P BSE Sensex 0.74% lower at 61,259, while the NSE Nifty 50 index fell 0.83% to settle at 18,266.

In broader markets, the BSE Midcap index shed 1.9% to close at 25,915, and the Smallcap index tumbled 2.3% to end at 28,879.

The trend remained largely negative, with only PSU bank indices closing in the green, up 1.54%. Bank Nifty closed flat with marginal loss of 0.6% at 39,518, while Nifty Financial Services closed 0.58% lower at 18,957. SBI, IndusInd Bank, and Bajaj Finance were the top gainers on the Nifty50 index while Bajaj Finserv was among the top laggards.

Thursday Closing bell: Market ends flat with negative bias, banks and financials outperform

A flat recovery, led by select financial shares, helped key benchmark indices recoup some of their losses. BSE Sensex fell over from the day’s high to end below the 61,000-mark at 60,923. The Nifty50 also oscillated between 18,384 and 18,048 during the day before signing off at 18,178.

The broader markets moved in tandem, with the BSE Midcap and Smallcap indices falling 0.4% and 0.7%, respectively.

The Nifty Bank index, meanwhile, ended 1.3% higher at 40,030 after hitting a new record high of 40,200 intra day, while Nifty Financial Services gained 1.22%, closing at 19,188. Kotak Mahindra Bank rallied 6.5% to close as the top Sensex gainer, followed by HDFC, ICICI Bank and SBI.

Stealing the show, Nifty PSU Bank index added nearly 3%, led by Union Bank of India, Indian Bank, Bank of Maharashtra, UCO Bank, and PNB.

Friday Closing bell: Markets end in red for fourth session, banks and financials fare well

Bulls attempted to make a comeback during the early trade on Friday but failed to hold their ground, forcing Dalal Street to close in the red for the fourth day running.

At close, S&P BSE Sensex fell 0.17% to close at 60,821 while NSE Nifty 50 dropped 0.35% to end at 18,114. Midcap and small-cap indices fared worse than largecap peers, lossing more than 1% each.

Bank Nifty index continued to outperform , closing at 40,323, up 0.73%, while Nifty Financial Services closed 0.59% higher at 19,302. Nifty PSU Bank ended the day with a loss of 0.47%.

HDFC was the top Sensex gainer, jumping 2.25%, followed by IndusInd Bank, and Kotak Mahindra Bank. PNB, Power Finance and Chola Invest were among top drags.

Banks and financial services- September quarter results

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

HDFC Bank: the bank on Saturday reported a standalone net profit of Rs 8,834 crore, up 18% from Rs 7,513 in the year-ago period. Core operating profits came at Rs 15,131.8 crore, up 18.24% YoY and 4.1% Q-o-Q.

HDFC Bank’s net interest income (NII) plus other incomes increased by 14.7% to Rs 25,085.2 crore. GNPAs were at 1.35% of gross advances as on September 30, 2021, as against 1.47% as on June 30, 2021.

Provisions came down 18.8% at Rs 3924.7 crore. The bank’s loans grew 15.5% from a year ago, about three times the banking sector’s rate.

Federal Bank: Private sector lender reported a near 50% jump in net profit for the September quarter on lower provisions and improvement in asset quality even as its total income shrunk.

The net profit stood at Rs 460 crore compared with Rs 308 crore in the year-ago period. Total income fell about 3 per cent at Rs 3,824 crore from Rs 3,937 crore.

Operating profit fell by about 9% at Rs 865 crore from Rs 947 crore over the same period. However, a 54% lower provisions at Rs 245 crore helped the net profit surge.

YES Bank: The bank today reported a 74.3% y-o-y growth in net profit to Rs 225 crore for the said quarter against analysts’ expectations of a Rs 31 crore net loss.

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

The NII fell 23.4% y-o-y to Rs 1,512 crore. The healthy bottomline performance of the lender was thanks to a sharp decline in provisions. YES Bank’s provisions for bad loans declined 65% to Rs 377 crore.

GNPAs ratio fell to 15% from 15.6% in the previous quarter. Similarly, net NPA ratio came in at 5.5% as against 5.8% in the previous quarter.

Bank of Maharashtra: Net profit jumps 103 % to Rs 264 cr. The bank’s recovery from written-off accounts stood at Rs 340 crore, including Rs 258 from the DHFL resolution. Net interest margin (NIM) improved to 3.27%, GNPA declined 5.56% and Provision coverage ratio improved to 92.38%.

Banks’ recovery and up-gradation stood at Rs 645 crore from Rs 556 crore last year around the same time.

IDBI Bank: The bank on Thursday reported a 75% jump in net profit to Rs 567 crore from Rs 324 crore in the same period of the last fiscal. The NII grew 9% to Rs 1,854 crore, NIM improved to 3.02%, compared to 2.70% in the second quarter last fiscal.

Bank’s GNPAs declined to 20.92% against 25.08% a year ago. Net NPAs improved 1.62% from 2.67%. Provisions for bad loans and contingencies also rose to Rs 434 crore.

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

HDFC Life Insurance: The life insurer on Friday announced a 15.9% fall in its consolidated net profit to Rs 274.16 crore in Jul-Sep, as against Rs 326.09 crore a year ago.

Total income, however, rose to Rs 20,478 crore against Rs 16,426 crore a year ago, while the net premium income increased by 52% to Rs 11,445 crore from Rs 10,056 crore, the insurer said in a regulatory filing.

Value of new business (VNB) recorded a robust 30% growth to Rs 1,086 crore over last year. Profit after tax on the other hand stood at Rs 577 crore for H1, 26% lower than H1 FY21.

LIC Housing Finance:
Net profit for the said quarter fell 69% at Rs 248 crore as compared with Rs 791 crore in the year-ago period. NIM for the quarter dipped to 2 per cent as against 2.20% in the June quarter.

The company’s total income for the quarter was lower at Rs 4,715 crore as compared to Rs 4,982 crore during the year-ago period. The NII was Rs 1,173 crore as against Rs 1,238 crore.

Its total loan portfolio stood at Rs 2.38 lakh crore registering an 1% y-o-y growth. During the quarter, total disbursements grew 29%. Retail home loan disbursements grew 38%.

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

L&T Finance Holdings: The company on Wednesday reported a 10% decline in its consolidated net profit to Rs 223 crore. Total income fell to Rs 3,134.46 crore as against Rs 3,508.91 crore during the year-ago period.

Rural finance business saw the highest-ever Q2 disbursement at Rs 4,987 crore, a jump of 51% quarter-on-quarter. The total disbursements in the quarter stood at Rs 7,339 crore.

GNPAs stood at 5.74% during the quarter, amounting to Rs 4,796 crore. Debt-to-equity ratio stood at 4.40 in Q2FY22. Capital adequacy improved to 25.16%.



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