Indian stocks rise on IT, financial boost, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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BENGALURU, – Indian shares rose on Tuesday to hit another record high, led by gains in information technology and financial stocks, with investors betting on strong corporate earnings for the September quarter.

The NSE Nifty 50 index was up 0.5% at 18,571, while the S&P BSE Sensex rose 0.63% to 62,156.48 by 0355 GMT.

The Nifty IT index rose 1.8% and was the top gainer among the sub-indexes.

Shares of information technology services provider Larsen and Toubro Infotech surged 10% after reporting strong September quarter results.

Consumer giant Hindustan Unilever is among a slew of companies that will report earnings later in the day.

The Nifty metals index rose 0.6% as global prices surged on fears of production and supply cuts.

The Nifty bank index was up 0.6%, while the finance index gained 0.7%.

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FPIs pull out Rs 19,000 cr from banking, financial stocks in H1; stay cautious in H2, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Amid the euphoria in the stock markets, the Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have pulled out close to Rs 19,000 crore from the banking and financial sectors in the first six months of the current fiscal.

On the other hand, they have raised their exposure on stocks in the defensive sectors such as consumer goods, IT, pharma and telecom.

According to sector-wise FPI flow data compiled from depositories, FPIs pulled out Rs 18,700 crore from the financial services sector between April and September. Of the total outflows, Rs 13,872 crore went from the banking sector while Rs 4,827 crore was pulled out from ‘other financial services’, which covers financial institutions, non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) and housing finance companies (HFCs).

Nifty Bank lagging far behind vis-a-vis Nifty 50 return on a YTD basis, while the leaders are Nifty Metals, Nifty Realty and Nifty IT.

Banking sector

Within the banking sector, the equity segment witnessed an outflow of Rs 12,964 crore during the April-September period while Rs 1,014 crore went out of the debt segment during H1. On the other hand, the other financial services category witnessed an inflow of Rs 1,159 crore in equities and outflow of Rs 5,797 crore from debt in the first six months of the current fiscal.

“A stand out feature of FPI flows in recent weeks is the outflows from banking and inflows into IT. Even though IT is highly valued, this segment is attracting increasing flows since earnings visibility is high in the segment while banking is struggling with poor credit growth and rising asset quality concerns, V K Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Financial Services, said.

Defensive sectors

FPIs have been investing in defensive sectors due to rising volatility with the ‘household & personal products’ sector witnessed the highest FPI inflows in the last six months at Rs 6,725 crore followed by consumer durables ( Rs 6,580 crore), retailing (Rs 6,340 crore), telecom (Rs 5,773 crore) and insurance ( Rs 2,881 crore).

Though the economy has recovered in the second half, the market participants are having a cautious outlook as there has been no big jump in loan growth and concerns on NPAs remain.

Going forward, volatility in the global markets as well as global slowdown may impact foreign flows moving into Indian shores.

Also, any direction by US Fed towards tapering of the stimulus measures would make FPI flows into emerging markets volatile and at the same time it would be crucial in dictating the direction of foreign flows into Indian equities.



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

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The Nifty50 index crossing the psychological mark of 18,000 on Monday and Sensex surpassing 61,000 for the first time ever on Thursday marks the most weekly gains since the week ended September 3, and continuation of the bull phase.

The rally is special as it was achieved despite a truncated week, tepid global clues, global energy crisis, inflation threats and muted FII participation.

The Nifty 50 Index closed the week at 18,339, with gains of 2.5% and formed a bullish candle on the weekly chart for the second consecutive week. According to experts, this positive momentum is likely to continue till 18,500 levels in coming sessions. Immediate support for Nifty 50 is seen at 18,200.

Festival demand outlook, Q2 earnings data backed by recovery in economic activity, healthy FPIs and exports data, weak jobs report from the US, inflation fears, global energy crisis, developments around Asian markets, strong vaccination numbers were key driving factors this week.

Monday Closing bell: Benchmark indices close at record highs, led by bank stocks

The Indian benchmark indices erased intraday gains after hitting fresh lifetime highs following weakness in global peers, but managed to close at fresh record levels on Monday, supported by banking and auto stocks.

Nifty50 and BSE Sensex had hit fresh record highs of 18,042 and 60,476, respectively. At close, the BSE Sensex was up 0.13% at 60,136, and the Nifty gained 0.28% to close at 17,946.

The Nifty Bank index hit a new lifetime high of 38,495 in intraday trade before closing 1.4% higher at 38,294 levels. Nifty Financial Services gained 1.39% to close at a fresh high of 18,527, and the Nifty PSU Bank index also gained 0.78%. State Bank of India, Kotak Bank, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, were among top index gainers.

Tuesday Closing bell: Another day of fresh record highs, PSU Bank index gains over 3%

Post a volatile session, BSE Sensex and Nifty 50 recorded closing highs on Tuesday. The 30-stock index Sensex gained 0.25% to end at 60,284, while the NSE Nifty 50 index settled just shy of 18,000, at 17,992.

In the broader market, the BSE Midcap index rose 0.54% to 26,700, while the BSE Smallcap index gained 0.46% to finish at 29,893.

Nifty PSU Bank was the top gainer, rising over 3%. The Nifty Bank Index gained 0.59% to close at 38,521, while the Nifty Financial Services index ended 0.33% higher at 18,589. SBI, Bajaj Finserv and Axis bank were among top Sensex gainers, while HDFC Life and ICICI Bank were top laggards.

Wednesday Closing bell : Benchmark indices up for third straight day, end at record highs

The domestic equity market sustained its upbeat mood, supported by a positive global market, and witnessed record breaking moves by the BSE Sensex and Nifty 50 for the fifth consecutive session on Wednesday. At close, the BSE Sensex jumped 0.75% to end at 60,737, and NSE Nifty 50 index settled at 18,161, up 0.94%.

Nifty PSU Bank continued its winning streak to close 0.80% higher at 2,670. The Nifty Bank index gained 0.30% to close at 38,635, while Nifty Financial Services ended the day at 18,652 up by 0.34%. HDFC Bank emerged as one of the top Sensex gainers while SBI Life, Axis Bank and SBI were among the losers.

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

Thursday Closing bell: Sensex surpasses 61,000 for the first time, Nifty closes above 18,300; banks, financials outperform

Benchmark indices extended the record rally in the sixth consecutive session, with Sensex and Nifty ending at fresh record closing high. At close, the Sensex surpassed the psychological level of 61,000 for the first time ever to close 0.94% higher at 61,305, and the Nifty surpassed 18,300 to close higher at 18,338 gaining 0.97%. BSE Midcap and Smallcap added 0.5% each.

The Nifty Bank index outperformed and closed 1.83% higher at 39,340, while Nifty Financial Services closed at 18,949 up by 1.58%. PSU Bank also finished higher at 2,716 gaining 1.74%.

Index heavyweights such as HDFC Bank rose the highest, up 2.9%, followed by ICICI Bank, HDFC, and State Bank of India, among others, contributed the most to the indices’ gain.

Key Takeaways

India may log close to double-digit growth this year, says FM Nirmala Sitharaman

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

India is looking at close to near double-digit growth this year and the country will be one of the fastest-growing economies, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has said.

The minister also emphasised that she expects the economic growth next year to be in the range of 7.5-8.5 per cent, which will be sustained for the next decade.

“As regards the growth of India, we are looking at near to double-digit growth this year and this would be the highest in the world. And for the next year, on the basis of this year, (the) growth would definitely be somewhere in the range of eight (per cent),” Sitharaman said here on Tuesday during a conversation at Harvard Kennedy School.

Four Indian banks rise in Asian rankings on stock market boom

Four Indian banks have featured among the 20 largest banks in the Asia-Pacific region in terms of market capitalisation in the third quarter of 2021, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

HDFC Bank was ranked seventh with a market cap of $119 billion, a quarter on quarter increase of 6.7% while the next was ICICI Bank at 12th spot, with its market cap rising 11.2% quarter on quarter to $65.5 billion.

The State Bank of India rose two spots to 17th on the list as its market cap rose 8.1% to $54.5 billion. Kotak Mahindra Bank’s market capitalisation rose 17.5%, the highest on the list.

UCO Bank’s Atul Kumar Goel elected as IBA chairman: Sources

Atul Kumar Goel has been elected as the chairman for Indian Banks’ Association for 2021-22, sources said. Goel will be succeeding Rajkiran Rai G, who is also the managing director and chief executive officer of Union Bank of India.

Goel is currently heading UCO Bank as its MD & CEO. The government had extended his tenure for two years till November 1, 2023. His term was originally scheduled to end on November 1, 2021.

Last month, Banks Board Bureau recommended Goel for the managing director and chief executive officer position of Punjab National Bank, after interviewing 11 candidates.

Life insurance industry at risk of sharply rising rates: IMF

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week
The life insurance industry is at risk if there is a sharp rise in bond yields, with an extreme situation potentially causing insurers to liquidate investments reaching $1 trillion in the United States and Europe, the International Monetary Fund warned on Tuesday.

Vulnerabilities have increased for life insurers, the IMF said in its Global Financial Stability Report, noting the industry is at the “center of fixed income markets” owning about 20% of global bonds and 30% of credit investments. Life insurers have long-dated liabilities and are a critical source of demand for bonds with long maturities, wrote the IMF’s Fabio Cortes and Deepali Gautam in the report.

NBFCs set to recover from Covid blues in Q2, post rise in loan demand, collections
Non-bank lenders and housing finance companies, which suffered during the first quarter of this fiscal, are likely to report a steady recovery in asset quality and demand for fresh loans along with improved payment collections in the September quarter.

“The first quarter of fiscal 2022 was impacted by the second Covid wave. Relative to 1QFY22, we expect disbursement volumes of 170-230% for most Affordable Housing/Vehicle Financiers. Impact on AUM growth is likely to be higher for short duration products like Vehicle loans as collections held up well in 2QFY22, Motilal Oswal Securities said in a note.

Banks set for a sharp earnings rise in Q2, may face asset quality jitters

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

Indian banks’ earnings are likely to pick up in the September quarter, led by a recovery in business growth, fee income and a gradual reduction in credit costs. ICICI Bank could deliver 16.6% year-on-year loan growth, while Axis Bank and Kotak Mahindra Bank could grow over 9% each. SBI may post decline in bad loans.

However, they may be tempered by higher provisioning in the retail and small and medium enterprises (SME) loan segments that have seen higher delinquencies.



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Sensex, Nifty capture new heights; auto, banking shares shine, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai, Equity benchmarks Sensex and Nifty on Monday scaled new peaks by continuing their winning run to the third session in a row, propelled by gains in mainly auto, power and banking shares.

After scaling a new intraday high of 60,476.13 during the session, the 30-share Sensex closed 76.72 points or 0.13 per cent higher at 60,135.78 – marking its new closing high as well.

Similarly, the Nifty rose 50.75 points or 0.28 per cent to its all-time closing high of 17,945.95. Intraday, the NSE gauge touched a new peak of 18,041.95.

Maruti was the top gainer in the Sensex pack, rallying nearly 4 per cent, followed by PowerGrid, ITC, NTPC, SBI, M&M, Kotak Bank and HDFC Bank.

On the other hand, TCS was the top loser on the Sensex, shedding over 6 per cent, after the company’s Q2 earnings missed street expectations.

According to an Emkay Global note, TCS Q2 operating performance missed expectations, reporting lower-than-expected revenue and earnings before interest, taxes and corporate overhead or management (EBITM).

The company on Friday reported a 14.1 per cent rise in consolidated net profit at Rs 9,624 crore in the September 2021 quarter.

Following suit, Tech Mahindra, Infosys, HCL Tech and Reliance Industries fell up to 2.76 per cent.

Sectorally, BSE utilities, power, auto, metal, realty and bankex rose up to 2.80 per cent, while IT, teck, telecom and energy fell up to 2.87 per cent.

Broader midcap and smallcap indices rose up to 0.60 per cent.

Indian markets started on a positive note following positive Asian market cues as investors took comfort on news of opening up more vaccinated travel lanes in 8 countries as COVID cases declines, said Narendra Solanki, Head- Equity Research (Fundamental), Anand Rathi.

“During the afternoon session, markets continue to trade handsomely as broad gains in rate sensitive counters, viz, auto, realty and utility. Traders also took support as data showed country’s exports growing at a healthy rate. Exports have touched USD 197 billion during April-September this fiscal.

“Additional optimism came in as foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) remained net buyers to the tune of Rs 1,997 crore so far in October,” he added.

Elsewhere in Asia, bourses in Hong Kong and Tokyo ended with gains, while Shanghai was in the red.

Stock exchanges in Europe were largely trading with losses in mid-session deals.

Meanwhile, international oil benchmark Brent crude rose 2.12 per cent to USD 84.14 per barrel.

The Indian rupee ended 37 paise lower at 75.36 against the US dollar on Monday. PTI ANS MKJ



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

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The domestic equity market was in a cheerful mood on Friday as the Reserve Bank of India’s Monetary Policy Committee decided to maintain status quo on key policy rates and retain an “accommodative” stance till evidence of durable growth appears.

It was RBI Governor Das’s comments on the future course of monetary policy action, ramping up of economic growth and elevated inflation that cheered investors.

The benchmark indices extended rally for second consecutive session on Friday, and as a result the market closed higher in four out of five sessions this week.

Festival demand outlook, RBI monetary policy, Q2 earnings data backed by recovery in economic activity, US President’s recovery, weak cues from Asian markets, Evergrande crisis, developments around US economy and strong vaccination numbers were key driving factors this week.

Monday Closing bell: Benchmark indices snap four-day losing streak, end almost 1% higher each

Dalal Street staged a strong comeback on Monday, recouping some of last week’s losses, as benchmark indices each ended almost 1% higher. At close, the Sensex and Nifty50 were up 0.91% at 59299 and 17691, respectively.

The broader markets, too, ended the day in the positive territory, with the BSE Midcap gaining 1.51% and BSE Smallcap 1.71%.

The Nifty PSU Banks outperformed gaining 2.10%, the Nifty Bank ended 0.95% higher at 37,579, and the Nifty Financial Services ended 0.96% higher at 18,312. Bajaj Finserv, SBI and Bajaj Finance were among the top gainers.

Tuesday Closing bell: Indices volatile, each end nearly 1% higher

Domestic equity indices started the day flat with negative bias but bulls asserted control as the day progressed, forcing headline indices to surge higher. S&P BSE Sensex closed 0.75% higher at 59,744, while the Nifty50 jumped 0.74% to end at 17,822.

The broader markets underperformed, with the Midcap index almost unchanged and Smallcap index ending with gains of 0.4%.

After a volatile session, the Nifty PSU Bank index ended 0.44% lower at 2,542 points, breaking its six-day winning streak. The Nifty Bank gained 0.43% to close at 37,741, while Nifty Financial Services ended 0.30% higher at 18,367. IndusInd Bank soared 5% to end as the top Sensex gainer, while Bajaj Finance and Bajaj Finserv were among the top laggards.

Wednesday Closing bell : Benchmark indices fell 1% amid weak global cues

Domestic benchmark indices traded with gains most of Wednesday but failed to sustain the highs and closed deep in the red. At close, the Sensex was down 0.93% at 59,189 and the Nifty was down 0.99% at 17,646.

Broader markets were also volatile, with BSE Midcap index falling 0.5% and Smallcap index ending with more than 1% loss.

The Nifty PSU Bank highly underperformed the day, losing 1.94%, while Nifty Bank slipped 0.58% ending at 37,521. Nifty Financial Services closed 0.32% lower at 18,309.

Only three of thirty Sensex constituents closed with gains. HDFC Bank was the top gainer, jumping 1.24%, followed by Bajaj Finance and HDFC. Deep down in red was IndusInd Bank, down over 3%.

Weekly Market Wrap Up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

Thursday Closing bell: Nifty ends near 17,800, Sensex jumps 0.80% ahead of RBI policy

The Nifty had a sharp bounce after a steep decline the previous day. After opening in the green, Nifty maintained the lead and closed with a gain of 0.85% at 17,796, while Sensex ended the day with a gain of 0.80% at 59,667.

Except oil and gas, all other sectoral indices ended in the green, the BSE midcap and smallcap indices outperformed adding over 1% each.

The Nifty PSU Bank Index recovered from the previous day’s losses to end 0.64% higher at 2508. Nifty Bank was able to end above the 37,700-mark, gaining 0.62% to close at 37,753, while Nifty Financial Services closed 0.15% flat with positive bias at 18,336. Induslnd Bank made its way back among the top gainers, while HDFC was among the worst performing Sensex constituents.

Friday Closing Bell: Sensex ends above 60,000 post RBI MPC meet outcome

Benchmark indices ended over half a percent higher each on Friday as investors cheered the outcome of the RBI MPC meet. BSE Sensex ended 0.64% up at 60,059, while the NSE Nifty 50 settled at 17,895, up 0.59%.

The Nifty PSU Banks outperformed and soared 1.65% to end at 2,550. The Nifty Bank ended flat, with a positive bias at 37,755, up 0.06%, while the Nifty Financial Services index ended in the red at 18,289, down 0.34%. Piramal Enterprises was the worst performing Sensex stock, down more than 5%, followed by ICICI Prudential and Kotak Mahindra Bank. Axis Bank and Bajaj Finserv were among top gainers.

Key Takeaways

RBI keeps key policy rates unchanged in Oct MPC meet

The Reserve Bank of India today decided to maintain status quo on key policy rates, for the eighth time in a row, in its bi-monthly Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

The repo rate remains unchanged at 4%, while the reverse repo rate at 3.35%. The central bank also decided to maintain accommodative stance.The central bank has also kept the MSF and bank rates steady at 4.25 percent.

The central bank has cut CPI inflation forecast for FY22 to 5.3 percent from 5.7 percent, while it has retained FY22 GDP growth forecast at 9.5 percent.

For Q2FY22, RBI expects GDP at 7.9 percent, up from 7.3% earlier, for Q3 , at 6.8%, up from 6.3%, while for Q4 and Q1FY23, RBI has retained its projection of 6.1% and 17.2%, respectively.

For CPI inflation, RBI expects 5.1%, from 5.9% earlier in Q2, while 4.5% from 5.3% in Q3, and retained the projection at 5.8% for Q4. For the first quarter of FY23, RBI sees CPI at 5.2%, up from 5.1% projected earlier.

Life insurance companies poised for strong Q2

Weekly Market Wrap Up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

Indian life insurance companies are poised to post up to 34% growth in the value of premiums, paced by higher volumes, group insurance coverage and sale of fixed-income linked coverage products.

However, margin expansion could be restrained due to a rise in reinsurance rates. Analysts are also monitoring residual Covid-linked claims in the second quarter after a sharp jump in the first quarter that led to a rise in provisions.

Elara Securities expects the top four life insurers – HDFC Life, ICICI Prudential Life, Max Life and SBI Life – to post an annualised premium equivalent (APE) growth of between 14% and 34% in the second quarter.

RBI moves NCLT against SREI Equipment Finance and SREI Infra

The Reserve Bank of India has taken the Srei Infrastructure Finance and Srei Equipment Finance to the National Company Law Tribunal’s Kolkata bench on Friday, a day after the Bombay High Court rejected a writ petition by Srei group promoter Hemant Kanoria against the central bank move to supersede the boards of the company.

This is on expected line as the central bank had announced on October 4 that it would take steps to refer the Srei case to the bankruptcy court.

Govt may allow 20% foreign investment in LIC IPO

Weekly Market Wrap Up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

India is considering a proposal for foreign investors to own as much as 20% in Life Insurance Corporation, according to a person with knowledge of the matter, which would enable them to participate in the nation’s biggest initial public offering.

Under discussion is a plan to amend FDI rules so that investors can pick up the stake without the government’s approval under the so-called automatic route, the person said, asking not to be identified as the deliberations are private.

While FDI of as much as 74% is permitted in most Indian insurers, the rules don’t apply to LIC because it is a special entity created by an act of parliament.

Insurers can maintain current a/cs in appropriate number of banks: Irdai

Insurance regulator Irdai on Wednesday said insurers can maintain current accounts in an appropriate number of banks for premium collection and policy payments for the convenience of policyholders and ease of doing business. Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (Irdai) has issued the clarification in the backdrop of the RBI’s circular on “Opening of Current Accounts by Banks – Need for Discipline”.

In the August 2020 circular, the RBI had instructed banks not to open current accounts for customers who have availed of credit facilities in the form of cash credit (CC) / overdraft (OD) from the banking system.

Moody’s affirms ratings of 9 Indian Banks, changes outlook to stable

Weekly Market Wrap Up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

Global rating firm Moody’s on 6 October, affirmed the long-term local and foreign current deposit ratings of Axis Bank, HDFC Bank, ICICI and State Bank of India at Baa3, following sovereign rating action. At the same time, their rating outlooks have been changed to stable from negative.

This rating action is driven by Moody’s recent affirmation of the Indian government’s Baa3 issuer rating and change in outlook to stable from negative.

Moody’s also affirmed the long-term local and foreign currency deposit ratings of Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, Punjab National Bank and Union Bank of India. The rating outlooks of these banks has also been changed to stable from negative.



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Which sectors may lead and which ones may lag now, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The week gone by remained choppy. In our previous weekly note, we had mentioned that Nifty is unlikely to see a runaway rise from here on, as the technical setup as well as options data were pointing to consolidation ahead. Nifty traded in a 490-point range over the past five sessions and stayed largely in the corrective mode.
The index consolidated in a broad but defined range, as it dragged the resistance points lower. Following a stable but corrective week, the headline index closed with a net loss of 321 points (-1.80 per cent).

From a technical perspective, Nifty has marked the 17,900-17,950 zone as an intermediate top. This also gets reflected in the Options data, which shows highest Call Open Interest at strike price 18,000 after heavy Call writing activities. The previous five days saw the formation of a broad trading range in the 17,400-17,950 area. Unless the market violates either of these two points, the index should continue to oscillate in this broad range. Any major slippage below the 17,400 level will be damaging for the market.

Following heavy Put writing at 17,400 and 17,500 levels, strike price 17,500 showed highest Put OI. The coming week is likely to see Nifty attempt to stabilise with a positive bias. The 17,650 and 17,750 levels will act as potential resistance points, while support will come in at 17,400 and 17,310 levels.

The weekly RSI stood mildly overbought at the 73.30 level. The RSI was neutral and did not show any divergence against the price. The weekly MACD continued to be bullish and traded above the Signal Line. A large Black Body emerged on the candles; it reflected the directional consensus among the market participants that prevailed during the week.

Pattern analysis showed Nifty was well above the upper rising trend line support. In the event of continued corrective activity, if Nifty tests this trend line support, the next support may emerge in the 17,350-17,400 area. This trend line is drawn from the low point of March 2020 and joins the subsequent higher bottoms.

All in all, it is largely expected that while defending the 17,350-17,400 zone, Nifty may stay in a defined range and continue to consolidate. The most recent price action saw Nifty’s supports being dragged lower to 17,800 from 17,950 level. So, the 17,800 level will be the most immediate resistance if Nifty attempts to gain some stability and pulls itself back.

Over the coming days, we expect a selective sectoral outperformance in the market. There are higher chances that select banks, auto, pharma and PSE stocks will continue to do well. Shorts should be avoided and purchases must be kept highly stock-specific in the coming week.

In our look at Relative Rotation Graphs®, we compared various sectoral indices against CNX500 (Nifty500 Index), which represents over 95 per cent of the free float market cap of all the listed stocks. The analysis showed a lot of inherent strength in the market. The IT and Realty Indices are placed inside the leading quadrant. Apart from this, Nifty Energy Index and the Bank Nifty have rolled inside the improving quadrant. This showed their likely relative underperformance against the broader market.

Dalal Street Week Ahead: Which sectors may lead and which ones may lag now
Dalal Street Week Ahead: Which sectors may lead and which ones may lag now
Along with this, Media, Private Banks, PSE, PSU Bank and Auto Indices are all trading inside the lagging quadrant. However, all these indices are showing a very distinct improvement in their relative momentum against the broader Nifty500 Index. All these groups are likely to put up a resilient show over the coming days. The Nifty Services Sector Index has rolled inside the improving quadrant, while Nifty Commodities and the Metal indices are inside the weakening quadrant. They show no sign of any improvement in their relative momentum. Some stock-specific isolated performances may be seen, but the indices are likely to relatively underperform the broader market.

Important Note: The RRG™ charts show the relative strength and momentum in a group of stocks. In the above chart, they show relative performance against the Nifty500 Index (broader market) and should not be used directly as buy or sell signals.

(Milan Vaishnav, CMT, MSTA, is a Consulting Technical Analyst and founder of EquityResearch.asia and ChartWizard.ae and is based at Vadodara. He can be reached at milan.vaishnav@equityresearch.asia)



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How Sensex, Nifty have raced ahead of global peers since March 2020

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India’s equity indices have outperformed global peers by a wide margin since the Covid-induced sell-off of January-March 2020.

India’s benchmark indices, the Sensex and the Nifty50, have surged 107 per cent and 112 per cent till date from their close of 29,468.49 and 8,597.75, respectively, as at end-March 2020. In comparison, BRICS (excluding India’s) as well as other major indices such as the US’ Dow Jones Industrial Average, Germany’s DAX and Japan’s Nikkei 225, are up only 30-72 per cent over the same period.

So, what has driven this outperformance of the domestic bellwethers?

Advantage India

The rub-off effect of India emerging as a preferred investment destination in the region for global investors is the key reason. Deepak Jasani, Head of Retail Research, HDFC Securities, says: “China losing the advantage of cheap labour, cheap and adequate power coupled with unpredictable policies have made foreign investors wary, and money is moving out of China into other countries including India.”

Ankur Maheshwari, CEO, Equirus Wealth, echoes this: “As events such as the investigations against Alibaba and, more recently, the Evergrande debt crisis unfold, investors are losing confidence in China and this has made India a relatively better avenue for foreign money flows.”

RBI data show that India attracted robust Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) of $64.36 billion in 2020 — a 27 per cent jump over the $50.6 billion received in 2019. In contrast, China saw an inflow of $141 billion in 2020 (latest available data), down 5.4 per cent compared to 2019.

Lacklustre market

India’s under-performance before 2020 is another reason for the strong recovery post the Covid-19 sell-off.

Nikhil Kamath, Co-Founder, Zerodha and True Beacon, says, “The rise in Indian benchmarks for two or three years before 2020 was not steep as other major indices. This created a lot of foreign investment flows into India on a relative scale compared to the other Asian and Western countries”.

This is evident from the data on the Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI) flows into equity. Among the BRICS nations, India stands out as highly preferred destination. Since March 2020, the net FPI inflows in Indian equities add up to $38.4 billion so far. Brazil’s net inflows are $14.46 billion, whereas South Africa saw a net outflow of $12.17 billion since March 2020.

The under-performance prior to 2020 made Indian equities relatively cheaper as well. Ashish Shanker, MD & CEO, Motilal Oswal Private Wealth, says, “Indian counters had become cheap due to the huge under-performance since 2015. The market cap-to-GDP was just 50 per cent when markets fell.” This coupled with a strong recovery in corporate profits has sustained the attraction for Indian equities into 2021.

“A strong 20 per cent growth in corporate profits in FY21 was a major driver and the market cap-to-GDP now stands at 120 per cent,” he added.

Domestic factors

Low interest rates on fixed income instruments and the rising market attracted Indian investors to equities. In addition, index heavyweights like HDFC and ICICI Bank saw strong retail participation that helped in taking the indices higher.

Record capital raising by Reliance Industries and its strong 127 per cent surge since March 2020 are major factors that drove up the indices.

Will the party continue?

The Sensex and the Nifty 50 touched a new all-time high of 60,412.32 and 17,947.65, respectively, earlier in September, but came off those highs last week. The new peaks, though, came at a time when other global indices like the Dow Jones and Nikkei had already turned around from their peaks a few weeks ago.

Caution is the word

With the benchmark indices continuing to remain resilient so far in spite of the weakness in the other global markets, experts advise caution. They say that a correction is due and could come with a lag compared to other global markets; at the same time, the fall could be limited as fresh buying can emerge again at lower levels, they feel.

 

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The indices were volatile this week, in line with its global peers, while the broader market indices continued to outperform. The BSE Sensex breached its 60,000-mark, while the Nifty extended its winning run to five weeks in a row on Wednesday, posting the longest weekly gaining streak since 20 December 2020.

However, overall, the indices were muted this week, with experts suggesting indices may see further correction on concerns over global economic recovery and US inflation.

Stock specific moves, cues from Asian markets, US debt ceiling crisis and uptick in bond yield, strong vaccination numbers were key driving factors this week.

Monday Closing bell: Benchmark indices end flat with positive bias, Nifty Bank up nearly 1%

The BSE Sensex pared 334 points from the day’s high to end 29 points higher at 60,078, while the NSE Nifty50 closed at 17,855. During the day, the Sensex logged a fresh record high of 60,412.

The broader market indices underperformed the benchmark Sensex, as the BSE Midcap closed flat and BSE Smallcap down 0.13%.

The Nifty PSU Bank ended flat with positive bias gaining 0.48%, the Nifty Bank ended 0.90% higher at 38,171, and the Nifty Financial Services ended 0.41% higher at 18,706. SBI and HDFC Bank were among top gainers, while Bajaj Finserv was the top laggard, losing more than 2%.

Tuesday Closing bell: Indices bleed, financials highly underperform

After crashing nearly 1,000 points, Sensex recovered from its day’s low to finally close at 59,668, down 0.68%. The Nifty, meanwhile, tumbled 0.60% to end at 17,749.

The broader market also declined, in tandem with the benchmarks. The BSE Midcap index lost 0.71% and the BSE Smallcap 0.62%.

After a volatile session, Nifty PSU Bank gained 1.24% closing at 2,398. Bank Nifty ended in the red, losing 0.59% to end at 37,945, while Nifty Financial Services ended 0.92% lower at 18,534. Kotak Mahindra Bank was among the top gainers, while Bajaj Finance, Bajaj Finserv, ICICI Bank and Induslnd Bank were top laggards.

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

Wednesday Closing bell : Indices volatile for second day; PSU Banks gain over 2.5%, financials fall

Indices remained volatile for the second day in a row on Wednesday, ending with losses. S&P BSE Sensex recovered from intraday lows and closed 0.43% lower at 59,4113. NSE Nifty 50 turned positive during the day but failed to hold gains and closed 0.21% lower at 17,711.

Midcap and Smallcap indices outperformed benchmark indices, closing with gains.

Nifty PSU Banks finished the day with 2.72% gains, while Nifty Bank slipped 0.53% ending at 37,743. Nifty Financial Services closed 0.88% lower at 18,371. HDFC was among the worst-performing Sensex constituents, falling 2.15%, followed by Axis Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and HDFC Bank.

Thursday Closing bell: Indices witness 3-day losing streak, both down 0.5%

Domestic headline indices ended with losses for the third consecutive session, with the Sensex witnessing a tug of war between gains and losses for most of the day to end 0.48% lower at 59,126. The Nifty50 dropped 0.53% to close at 17,618.

Nifty PSU Bank Index maintained its winning streak, closing with 0.80% gains. Nifty Bank, however, fell below the 37,500-mark, down 0.84% to close at 37,425, while Nifty Financial Services closed 0.37% lower at 18,303.

Bajaj Finserv was the top Sensex gainer, jumping 2.19%, followed by Bajaj Finance. Axis Bank, SBI and Kotak Mahindra Bank were among the top drags.

Friday Closing Bell: Sensex, Nifty witness losses for fourth day, both down 0.5%

Indices settled in the red for the fourth straight day on Friday, with Sensex closing 0.6% lower at 58,766, and the Nifty50 falling 0.5% to close at 17,532.

Nifty PSU Bank index continued its winning streak for the fourth consecutive session, closing 1% higher. Nifty Bank, however, fell more than half a percent to close at 37,225, while Nifty Financial Services closed 0.91% lower at 18,137.

Bajaj Finserv fell more than 3%, and Bajaj Finance, ICICI Bank and Induslnd Bank were among top laggards. Muthoot Finance gained over 5%, and Au Small Finance Bank, Bandhan Bank, PNB were among top gainers.

Key Industry takeaways

Icra revises up FY22 GDP growth forecast to 9%

Ratings agency Icra on Monday revised up its 2021-22 real GDP growth estimate for India to 9 percent from the earlier 8.5 percent. A ramp-up in COVID-19 vaccination, healthy advance estimates of kharif (summer) crop and faster government spending were the factors which led to the revision, the agency said in a statement. Icra on Monday said it expects the second half of the fiscal year to have brighter prospects.

Aditya Birla Sun Life AMC IPO fully subscribed on Day 2

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

The initial public offer of Aditya Birla Sun Life AMC Limited was fully subscribed on the second day on Thursday. The Rs 2,768.25crore initial share sale received bids for 2,99,46,460 shares against 2,77,99,200 shares on offer, translating into 1.08 times subscription, according to an update on the NSE.

The qualified institutional buyers (QIBs) category was subscribed 6 per cent, non-institutional investors 40 per cent and retail individual investors (RIIs) two times. The initial public offer is of 3,88,80,000 equity shares.

RBI extends MSF facility for banks until March next year

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

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on September 28 said it has extended the marginal standing facility (MSF) relaxation for banks until March 31. Earlier, this facility was given till September 30.

Under MSF facility, banks are allowed to avail of funds by dipping into the Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) by up to an additional one percent of net demand and time liabilities (NDTL), i.e., cumulatively up to 3 percent of NDTL.

“With a view to providing comfort to banks on their liquidity requirements as also to enable them to continue to meet LCR requirements, it has been decided to continue with the MSF relaxation for a further period of six months, i.e., up to March 31, 2021,” the RBI said.

US Fed’s tapering inclination may impact India’s FPI inflows, says CARE Ratings

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The US Federal Reserve’s indication of tapering asset purchases is likely to impact the flow of funds into Indian markets, but may not be immediate, CARE Ratings said in a report.

The tapering is likely to affect India’s foreign portfolio inflows. Earlier when the Fed had announced tapering in 2013, FPI inflows to India had shrunk in the 2015-18 period.

RBI lifts PCA curbs on Indian Overseas Bank

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The Reserve Bank of India on 29, September lifted Prompt Corrective Action restrictions from the Indian Overseas Bank, the central bank said in a release.

The decision came after the bank reported its earnings for the year ended March 31, 2021, and the RBI observed that IOB was not in breach of the PCA parameters. IOB has also provided a written commitment that it would comply with the norms of Minimum Regulatory Capital, Net NPA and Leverage ratio on an ongoing basis



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The Indian market seems to be in roaring bull phase, with the BSE Sensex hitting 60,000 points for the first time ever on Friday. However, the market did face some volatility this week, but investors were prompt to take the corrections as a buying opportunity.

The Sensex completed a 10,000-point journey to the 60,000-mark within months, having hit 50,000 in intraday trade for the first time in January 2021.

This is almost a global phenomenon, with China, Hong Kong and a few other countries being among exceptions as they reel in the budding Evergrande crisis. The mother market US, is leading the bulls, dismissing tapering indications from the US Federal Reserve.

Stock-specific moves, developments around China’s economy, US Fed meeting, revival of activity in Europe, improving economic data, strong vaccination numbers and healthy pick up in daily inoculations were considered to be key driving factors this week.

Monday Closing bell: Dalal Street painted red, banks and financials highly underperform

The BSE Sensex closed the day 525 points lower at 58,491. During the day, it touched a high of 59,203 and a low of 58,390. Only six of the 30 Sensex stocks ended in the green, while the Nifty50 fell 1.07% to end below the 17,400-mark at 17,396.

Broader markets also languished in trade, ending the day with deep cuts. The BSE MidCap fell 1.79% and SmallCap was down 1.84%.

The Nifty PSU Bank index majorly underperformed, closing down 4.18%. Nifty Bank ended 1.76% lower at 37,175, while Nifty Financial services ended 1.61% lower at 18,177. Bajaj Finserv was among the top Sensex gainers while SBI, Induslnd Bank and HDFC were top laggards.

Tuesday Closing bell: Indices witness smart recovery, end in green

The Indian market witnessed a smart recovery after Monday’s fall on the back of a recovery in US futures and Europe markets. At close, the Sensex was up 0.88% at 59,005, and the Nifty50 was up 0.95% at 17,562. BSE MidCap index rose nearly 1%, while the SmallCap ended flat with a positive bias.

Nifty PSU Bank ended flat with a negative bias, down by 0.05%. Bank Nifty staged a recovery to end at 37,235, with gains of 0.24%, while Nifty Financial services ended 0.73% higher at 18,310. Bajaj Finance was the top Sensex gainer on closing, up 5%, followed by IndusInd Bank and Bajaj Finserv were top Nifty gainers.

Wednesday Closing bell : Indices end flat with negative bias, banks, financials underperform

Benchmark indices Sensex and Nifty50 witnessed a tug-of-war between bulls and bears on Wednesday before closing with marginal losses. On the closing bell, BSE Sensex settled at 58,927, down 0.13% while the NSE Nifty50 closed at 17,546, slipping 0.09%.

The Nifty PSU Bank finished the day with 0.48% gains. Bank Nifty slipped 0.78% giving up 37,000 mark at 36,944, while Nifty Financial Services closed 0.86% lower at 18,152. HDFC was the worst-performing Sensex constituent, falling 1.39%, followed by ICICI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and HDFC Bank.

Weekly Market Wrap Up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

Thursday Closing bell: Indices end at all-time highs; banks, financials gain over 2% each

Indian benchmark indices extended early gains and hit record high levels with the Sensex closing at 59,885, up 1.63%, and Nifty50 at 17,823, up 1.57%. The broader market outperformed the benchmarks, as BSE MidCap and SmallCap indices rose 1% each.

Bank Nifty surged 2.24% to close at 37,771, while Nifty Financial Services closed 2.28% higher at 18,566. Nifty PSU Banks finished the day with 1.19% gains. Bajaj Finserv, HDFC, Axis Bank, IndusInd Bank, State Bank of India were top Sensex gainers

Friday Closing Bell: Fresh record closing highs; Nifty ends above 17,850, Sensex crosses 60K.

The BSE Sensex crossed 60,000 for the first time ever, while the Nifty50 closed above the 17,850 level. At close, the Sensex was up 0.27% at 60,048 and the Nifty50 was 0.17% higher at 17,853. BSE MidCap index fell 1%, while smallcap index was down 0.3%.

Bank Nifty gained 0.16% to end at 37,830, while Nifty Financial Services ended at 18,630, up 0.34%. HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank and HDFC were among the top index gainers. SBI, Axis Bank and Bajaj Finance were among top laggards. The Nifty PSU Bank index shed 1.62%, dragged by losses in shares of Bank of Baroda and Canara Bank.

Key Industry takeaways

Kotak Mahindra Bank forays into healthcare financing

Weekly Market Wrap Up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

Kotak Mahindra Bank (KMBL) on Tuesday announced that it has launched healthcare financing solutions, ranging from healthcare infrastructure loans, medical equipment finance and unsecured healthcare loans, aiming to cater to key stakeholders.

KMBL has introduced the offerings at attractive interest rates, and includes lending facilities such as the Insta Programme for quick approval of loans up to Rs 50 lakh.

Retail depositors earning negative returns; equities boom gives leeway to raise rates: SBI

Weekly Market Wrap Up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

The current bull run in financial markets is possibly a break from the past as households and now the opportune time to revisit the taxation of interest on bank deposits, said SBI.

Economists believe that, Retail depositors are earning negative returns on their bank deposits and hence, there is a need for reviewing taxes on interest earned.

If not for all the depositors, the taxation review should be carried out for at least the deposits made by senior citizens who depend on the interest for their daily needs, the economists led by Soumya Kanti Ghosh said in a note, which pegged the overall retail deposits in the system at Rs 102 lakh crore.

IIFL Finance to raise up to Rs 1,000 crore via secured bonds

Weekly Market Wrap Up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

Fairfax-backed IIFL Finance plans to raise a Rs 1,000-crore public issue of secured bonds on September 27 for business growth and capital augmentation. The bonds offer up to 8.75% yield and are rated AA/Stable by Crisil and AA+/negative by Brickwork.

The size of the issue is Rs 100 crore, with a green-shoe option to retain over-subscription up to Rs 900 crore (aggregating to a total of Rs 1,000 crore).

“The funds raised will be used to meet the credit need of more such customers and accelerate our digital process transformation to enable a frictionless experience,” IIFL Finance CFO Rajesh Rajak said.

Govt may block Chinese investment in LIC IPO as company a ‘strategic asset’

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The government wants to block Chinese investors from buying shares in Life Insurance Corp (LIC), underscoring tensions between the two nations. State-owned LIC is considered a strategic asset, commanding more than 60% of India’s life insurance market with assets of more than $500 billion.

India has sought to limit Chinese investment in sensitive companies and sectors, banned a raft of Chinese mobile apps and subjected imports of Chinese goods to extra scrutiny.

“With China after the border clashes it cannot be business as usual. The trust deficit has significantly widen(ed),” a government official said, adding that Chinese investment in companies like LIC could pose risks, according to a report.

Govt extends Uday Kotak’s term as IL&FS chairman by 6 months

Weekly Market Wrap Up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

The government on Wednesday extended the term of Uday Kotak as non-executive chairman of debt-ridden IL&FS group by another six months.

The government through a gazette notification extended the term of Kotak, who is also the managing director and chief executive officer of Kotak Mahindra Bank, till April 2, 2022.

The notification was issued by the department of financial services in the ministry of finance dated September 21, 2021.



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Sensex skyrockets 958 pts; Nifty tops 17,800, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Equity benchmark Sensex zoomed 958 points to end at a fresh lifetime high on Thursday, tracking gains in index majors Reliance Industries, HDFC twins and ICICI Bank amid a positive trend in global markets. Similarly, the broader NSE Nifty soared 276.30 points or 1.57 per cent to its new closing peak of 17,822.95. It touched an intra-day record of 17,843.90.

After scaling a new peak of 59,957.25 during the day, the 30-share Sensex settled 958.03 points or 1.63 per cent up at an all-time high of 59,885.36.

Bajaj Finserv was the top gainer in the Sensex pack, rising over 4 per cent, followed by L&T, HDFC, Axis Bank, SBI, Reliance Industries and IndusInd Bank.

On the other hand, Dr Reddy’s, ITC, Nestle and HUL were the laggards.

Domestic equities witnessed sharp recovery with benchmarks Nifty and Sensex both recording fresh all-time highs, said Binod Modi, Head-Strategy at Reliance Securities.

Favourable FOMC meeting outcome and ease of concerns from possible default of Evergrande aided market rally. Financials and Reliance Industries have dominated market rally, followed by metals, IT and auto, he added.

US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the Fed plans to announce as early as November that it will start to taper its monthly bond purchases, should the job market maintain its steady improvement.

Elsewhere in Asia, bourses in Shanghai and Hong Kong ended with gains, while Seoul was in the red. Japanese market was closed for holidays.

Stock exchanges in Europe were also trading on a positive note in mid-session deals.

Meanwhile, international oil benchmark Brent crude slipped 0.12 per cent to USD 76.10 per barrel.



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