Key factors driving the market, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: All-round buying led by IT and pharma stocks lifted benchmark indices to their fresh all-time highs on Monday. Sensex climbed 57,500 mark for the first time ever while Nifty scaled 17,100 level.

A distinguishing feature of this bull market, which started in April 2020, is that it has been remarkably stable without any major correction. Now, with the Fed giving a commentary favourable to bulls, momentum is likely to continue, said an analyst.

“This market has proved skeptics wrong till now. Even while enjoying the party, investors should be prepared for a sharp correction. Partial profit booking is never a bad idea. IT stocks have turned a bit weak perhaps due to dollar appreciation. But experience tells us that the performance of IT companies depends more on the deal wins than the exchange rate. So dips can be used to buy,” said VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Financial Services.

How are the bluechips doing?
After opening in the green, benchmark indices maintained their lead. At 3.18 pm, BSE flagship Sensex was up 674 points or 1.19 per cent to 57,564.71. NSE benchmark Nifty rose 207 points or 1.23 per cent to 17,138.50. The index managed to reach the 17,000 mark from the 16,00 level in just 28 days.

In the 50-share pack Nifty, Bharti Airtel was the biggest gainer, up 2.19 per cent. HCL Tech, Tech Mahindra, Divi’s Labs, TCS, Britannia, Kotak Mahindra Bank and Dr Reddy’s Labs were among other gainers.

Tata Motors was the top loser in the pack, down 0.84 per cent. M&M, ONGC, Hindalco, L&T, SBI, Reliance Industries, IndusInd Bank, and HDFC were among those that traded in the red.

FACTORS DRIVING MARKETS
Good news
Dollar down: The dollar hovered near two-week lows against a basket of currencies, steadying from falls after Fed chief Jerome Powell gave no signal regarding the central bank’s tapering timeline except that it could be “this year.”

Bad news
China growth slows: China’s factory activity expanded at a slower pace in August as coronavirus-related restrictions and high raw material prices pressured manufacturers in the world’s second largest economy.

Broader markets
Broader market indices were trading higher, outperforming their headline peers. Nifty Smallcap was up 0.62 per cent, while Nifty Midcap added 0.44 per cent. Broadest index on NSE, Nifty 500 was up 0.24 per cent.

India Energy Exchange, Affle India, Rossari Biotech, IndiaMart InterMesh, Bombay Burmah and Fortis Healthcare were gainers from the space while PI Industries, Bharat Forge, Jindal Steel, Sterling Wilson Solar, SPARC and Kalpataru Power were under selling pressure.

Global markets
MSCI’s gauge of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan slipped 0.25 per cent, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell more than 0.3 per cent.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index and China’s benchmark CSI300 Index opened down 0.1 per cent and 0.2 per cent, respectively.



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Yes Securities , BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Yes Securities has buy call on Axis Bank with a target price of Rs 822. The current market price of Axis Bank Ltd. is Rs 783.75.

Time period given by analyst is Intra Day when Axis Bank Ltd. price can reach defined target. Axis Bank Ltd., incorporated in the year 1993, is a banking company (having a market cap of Rs 240332.38 Crore).

Financials
For the quarter ended 30-06-2021, the company reported a Consolidated Total Income of Rs 20285.41 Crore, down -3.53 % from last quarter Total Income of Rs 21028.45 Crore and up 4.23 % from last year same quarter Total Income of Rs 19461.77 Crore. The bank reported net profit after tax of Rs 2356.91 Crore in latest quarter.

Investment Rationale
The stock has resumed the uptrend after breaking out of a Triangle pattern resistance on good volumes. Technical indicator RSI has turned upwards after forming a positive divergence, confirming the bullishness.

Promoter/FII Holdings
Promoters held 11.4 per cent stake in the company as of June 30, 2021, while FIIs held 53.7 per cent, DIIs 23.7 per cent and public and others 11.3 per cent.



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Bank stocks gain over 2% as Nifty crosses 16,900, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indian benchmark indices started the week on a positive note, hitting fresh record highs of 16,931. Traders took encouragement as foreign direct investment (FDI) into the country rises. Asian shares perked up and the dollar fell to a two-week low, today after the US Federal Reserve chairman’s speech.

Benchmark indices gained over 1% and closed at fresh record highs amid positive global cues. At close, the Sensex was up 1.36% at 56,889 and the Nifty was up 1.35% at 16,931.

The Nifty Bank Index ended 2.02% at 36,347. Amongst the top gainers were Axis Bank at Rs 784 adding 4.21% followed by RBL Bank at Rs 169 (4.02%), Bandhan Bank at Rs 285 (3.55%), SBI at Rs 422 (2.49%), ICICI Bank at Rs 713 (1.99%), PNB at Rs 36 (1.66%). All major indices ended in the green.

Nifty Financial Services ended higher at 17,843 adding over 1.85%. Amongst the biggest gainers were Chola Invest. at Rs 548 adding 4.46% followed by Indiabulls Hsg at Rs 227 (3.61%), Bajaj Finance at Rs 7,165 (2.86%), Power Finance at Rs 129 (2.77%), Bajaj Finserv at Rs 16,560 (2.25%).

Buzzing stocks

Axis Bank share price gained over 2% as the private lender began issuing debt securities under a Rs 35,000-crore debt raise plan.

The bank said on August 30 it started issuing securities under the debt-raise plan announced earlier this year. The private sector lender’s board had in April approved a capital-raise proposal of up to Rs 35,000 crore by issuing various debt instruments in Indian or foreign currency in domestic/overseas markets in one or more tranches.

Other key takeaways

Q1FY22 GDP prints likely to be released on August 31

India’s April-June quarter (Q1) GDP numbers are likely to show a significant surge owing to the lower base of last year’s first quarter and a rebound in consumer spending post the second wave of COVID-19.

Experts believe that even though May had seen a slowdown due to the lockdowns, there was a sharp recovery in June and that the economic impact of the second wave has been much more muted than the first wave . According to a Reuters poll, the country’s Q1FY22 GDP growth might have touched a new record.

SBI research report Ecowrap suggests that the country’s Q1FY22 GDP is expected to grow at around 18.5 per cent. However, it is lower than the Reserve Bank of India’s GDP growth projection of 21.4 per cent for the June quarter.

Bank of India extends term of P R Rajaqopal as executive director

The company has extended the term of office P R Rajagopal, Execurive Director of Bank for a period of two years beyond his currently notified term which expires on 28.02.2022, or until further orders, whichever is earlier. Bank of India shares rose 0.97% to Rs 68.00.

FPIs net buyers invest Rs 986 cr in equities in August

Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) pumped in a net of just Rs 986 crore in Indian equities during August, as cautiousness continued to persist among overseas investors.

According to data from depositories, FPIs bought equities worth Rs 986 crore and invested Rs 13,494 crore in the debt segment during August 2-27. This translated into a total net investment of Rs 14,480 crore.

Gold prices continue to shine

Gold prices rose from a low of USD 1,785.20 on Friday and continued their upward trend on Monday, reaching a high of USD 1826.3 in the early morning session. Gold prices are expected to rise due to a drop in the dollar index and Fed Chair Powell’s dovish tone.

Gold prices are likely to continue solid when trading above the 20-day EMA’s important support level of USD 1797.56, but they may confront significant resistance between USD 1834- USD 1850.

Dollar hit a fresh two-week low

In overnight trade on Wall Street, US stocks surged as US Treasury yields fell on Friday after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell indicated the US central bank could begin scaling back its bond buying programme by year-end but did not give a firm timeline. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.69%, the S&P500 index gained 0.88% and the Nasdaq Composite added 1.23%.

Held back by the message from the US Federal Reserve chief that there is no hurry to dial back massive stimulus, the dollar hit a fresh two-week low at 92.595 before steadying around 92.66, still a touch lower on Monday.



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Centrum Broking , BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Centrum Broking has add call on Ujjivan Small Finance Bank with a target price of Rs 31. The current market price of Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Ltd. is Rs 25.9.

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 4484.98 Crore).

Financials
For the quarter ended 30-06-2021, the company reported a Standalone Total Income of Rs 716.29 Crore, down -2.56 % from last quarter Total Income of Rs 735.14 Crore and down -7.57 % from last year same quarter Total Income of Rs 774.98 Crore. The bank reported net profit after tax of Rs -233.47 Crore in latest quarter.

Investment Rationale
Provision spike could impact FY22 PAT by 76% while overall stress accretion would lower FY22/23 ABV by 20%/13%. MFI/MSE loan exposure at 80% is affecting Ujjivan, leading to rise in delinquencies and protracted recoveries. Lower multiple to 1.8x FY23ABV (earlier 2.1x), revise TP to Rs31 from Rs42. Change rating from BUY to ADD. Risks: higher provisions.

Promoter/FII Holdings
Promoters held 83.3 per cent stake in the company as of June 30, 2020, while FIIs held 5.1 per cent, DIIs 4.2 per cent and public and others 7.3 per cent.

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Key factors driving the market, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bulls continued the upward momentum on Dalal Street on Tuesday as well, thanks to buying in bank and financial services stocks. However, gains were in check due to some weak global cues.

A clear trend in the market during the last several trading sessions is the outperformance of largecaps led by high-quality private sector financials. The underperformance of the mid- and smallcaps segment is a desirable and healthy trend since it is removing the froth in the segment, said an analyst.

“An area of concern in the market now is the frenzy in the IPO market where retail investors are applying for IPOs and OFSs without any consideration of fundamentals and future prospects. The goal is just to make money on the listing. Many retail investors are likely to lose money in the future from some of these issues,” said VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Financial Services.

How are the bluechips doing?
After opening in the green, benchmark indices climbed further. At 9.32 am, BSE flagship Sensex was up 207 points or 0.40 per cent to 54,610. NSE benchmark Nifty advanced 52 points or 0.32 per cent to 16,310.

“Nifty closed higher after testing our turnaround point of 16,174, which is encouraging, but not an outright signal towards directional upsides. We would pin our hopes on the 16,246/33 region to hold early dips and attempt a push towards 16,320 or 16,400. However, even such an up move would still be within our broadening wedge expectation. In other words, volatility would continue to dominate,” said Anand James, Chief Market Strategist at Geojit Financial Services.

In the 50-share pack Nifty, HDFC was the biggest gainer, up 1.57 per cent. Kotak Mahindra Bank, Axis Bank, HDFC Life Insurance, Reliance Industries and IndusInd Bank were among other gainers.

Shree Cement was the top loser in the pack, down 3.50 per cent. Power Grid, Hero MotoCorp, Grasim, Nestle India, Bajaj Auto, Wipro, Britannia, Indian Oil and ITC were other losers in the pack.

FACTORS DRIVING MARKETS
Good news
US job data: Job openings, a measure of labour demand, shot up by 590,000 to a record high of 10.1 million on the last day of June, the US Labour Department reported. This signifies improving economic conditions.

Bad news:
Bond yields, dollar rise: The dollar index firmed near more than two-week high. US Treasury yields rose to a more than three week high as record-high job openings on top of stronger-than-expected employment gains in July added to the narrative of an improving labour market.

Rate hikes?: Two Federal Reserve officials said on Monday that the US economy is growing rapidly and that while the labour market still has room for improvement, inflation is already at a level that could satisfy one leg of a key test for the beginning of interest rate hikes.

Virus scare: Persistent concerns over the spread of the Delta variant of the coronavirus dented sentiment and triggered falls in metals and oil prices.

Broader markets
Broader market indices were trading mixed, underperforming their headline peers in morning trade. Nifty Smallcap was down 0.04 per cent, while Nifty Midcap rose 0.45 per cent. Broadest index on NSE, Nifty 500 was up 0.32 per cent.

Birlasoft, IOL Chemicals and Pharma, Future retail, Hindustan Aeronautics, GSPL and Escorts were gainers from the space, while Vodafone Idea, Prestige Estates, IDFC First Bank, Happiest Minds, Caplin Point and BASF were under selling pressure.

Global markets
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan declined 0.4 per cent, with Korea’s KOSPI index down 0.56 per cent, while China’s blue chip index CSI300 shed 0.33 per cent.

Japan’s Nikkei was UP 0.9 per cent while Australia’s benchmark S&P/ASX200 was 0.2 per cent higher on the back of strong earnings results.



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Why betting on stocks based on big-picture themes doesn’t work

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No one can resist the onward march of an idea whose time has come, Victor Hugo said. In bull markets, there are many who apply this to stock investing as well. While conventional investors run screeners, scan company filings and analyse quarterly numbers to identify buys, idea investors believe that to find multi-baggers, all they need to do is latch on to a powerful idea.

So, the moment the Centre announces an Atmanirbhar Bharat push, they’re buying chemical or pharma intermediate companies. In a Digital India push, they’re buying fibre-optic cable makers. When it announces higher FDI in insurance or defense, they’re buying up listed insurers or PSU defense equipment makers. If e-commerce is taking off, they buy logistics stocks and if States are ramping up Covid testing, they bet on diagnostic labs.

But exciting as it may seem, selecting stocks based on such big-picture themes seldom adds durable wealth to one’s portfolio. If you’re itching to try it out, watch out for these pitfalls.

Skipped homework

Most long-term winners in one’s stock portfolio come from understanding a company’s business better than others in the market, spotting a sector trend early or buying a business when the market is under-estimating its potential. But when you’re chasing hot new ideas, there’s often no room for deep study of a company or a sector. Being in a hurry to ride a wave before it fizzles out, can force you to skip necessary homework, leading you to buy lemons.

A recent and somewhat extreme example of an idea stock that proved to be full of hot air is Bombay Oxygen Investments. As the media filled with reports of oxygen shortages during the second wave of Covid, thematic investors scrambled for companies that would gain from this theme. Bombay Oxygen Investments, thanks to the keyword in its name, shot up by 140 per cent between end-March and mid-April from ₹10,000 to over ₹24,000. But after little digging revealed that the ‘oxygen’ in the company’s name was a legacy of the past, the stock crashed 40 per cent.

The company, earlier in the business of manufacturing industrial gases, had discontinued this activity in August 2019 to secure a NBFC license from RBI. Since December 2019, it has been engaged in investment operations that have nothing to do with oxygen.

Shifting focus

While Bombay Oxygen may not have set out to deliberately mislead investors, there are many companies in the Indian market that are ever willing to oblige fickle markets by entering any business that seems to be the current flavour of the season. Scores of obscure firms attached ‘cyber’ to their names during the dotcom boom, construction companies transformed into ‘infra’ firms in the 2007-08 bull market and several new ‘logistics’ companies cropped up in the e-commerce boom. Owning such companies can be quite a roller-coaster, because you may find that instead of sticking to and scaling up in the business you bet on, they are constantly shifting shape to cater to market preferences.

Investors in Vakrangee Software have seen it morph from a company focussed on last-mile financial inclusion, to a play on e-governance and Digital India, to a retailer for Bharat in a short five-year span. Originally a franchisee for the Aadhar UID project in 2010, Vakrangee pivoted to being an e-governance firm that helped folks in tier-3 towns and villages perform internet-related tasks through an extensive network of over 40,000 Vakrangee Kendras in 2016-17. It then made unrelated forays, through subsidiaries into providing logistics for e-commerce giants and retailing gold. Even as the company’s revenues have taken a sharp tumble, it is readying yet another pivot, from e-governance to setting up a pan-India ATM network. While the stock has crashed over 90 per cent from its peak of ₹500, the company has run into governance issues as well after scotching a ₹1000 crore buyback plan, abrupt resignation of its auditor and penalties from SEBI for fraudulent trading in the stock.

To avoid betting on such wrong horses, run a check on the company’s annual reports and management commentary over the years. Frequent business pivots are a sign that the management is more focused on managing its stock price than on building a scalable business.

Execution woes

Idea investors focus a lot on big-picture trends that will play out in future. In the process, they may forget to check if the company they’re betting on has the execution capability to translate its larger-than-life vision into reality.

A good example of a great-sounding idea turning out to be a pipe dream is Educomp Solutions, a favourite stock with idea investors between 2008 and 2010. Listed in 2006, the company’s management successfully marketed the idea that Indian schools mostly using old-world methods of chalk-and-board teaching, were ripe for digital transformation pan-India. The hardware company, engaged in the computerization of schools pan-India, showcased itself as a high-growth play on ed-tech solutions for K-12 education. Within three years of listing, it was reporting 100 per cent revenue growth with operating profit margins of 48 per cent. Having installed its Smartclass solutions in about 2500 schools, it set itself a target of expanding to 15,000 schools and a ₹1000 crore revenue. It later transpired that in its aggressive bid to sign on more schools, Educomp didn’t pay attention to whether these school tie-ups actually translated into revenues. After many delayed or skipped payments, the company faced mounting receivables and debt, defaulted on bank loans and turned an NPA in 2016. It was later subject to CBI raids. The stock which hit dizzying heights of over ₹1000 in its heydays is currently at ₹3.

Educomp’s story is a lesson that captivating big-picture ideas need not translate into profits on the ground. It pays to be particularly wary of managements who set order-of-magnitude targets and sell you big dreams.

Not all idea-based stocks turn out to be lemons on the scale of a Bombay Oxygen or an Educomp or a Vakrangee. Investors in the stocks of diagnostic chains or pharma API companies have for instance, made significant gains in the last one year. But this is more because such companies already had established business models that had evolved over many years and had operating metrics, even before the Covid opportunity came by. Even in such cases, long-term investors may need to ask two questions – whether the big pop in earnings from the opportunity will sustain and whether stock valuations already factor in a best-case scenario.

Overall, even if idea-based investing excites you, it may be best allocate only a fixed portion of your portfolio to such opportunistic bets.

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Nifty hits all-time high as heavyweights HDFC twins, RIL lift D-Street, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Domestic equity benchmarks began Friday’s session on a strong note with the Nifty50 benchmark scaling a record high amid strong buying interest in heavyweights such as HDFC twins, RIL and ICICI Bank.

The S&P BSE Sensex index rose as much as 361.83 points to touch 51,477.05 in the first few minutes of trade, and the broader NSE Nifty 50 benchmark climbed to a record high of 15,455.55, up 117.7 points from its previous close.

HDFC was the top performer in the Sensex universe, trading 1.25 per cent higher in early deals. HDFC Bank, IndusInd Bank, ICICI Bank, RIL and SBI were among other gainers.

On the other hand, Sun Pharma was the top laggard, down 3 per cent. Dr Reddy’s, M&M, Nestle and Bajaj Auto were among other blue-chip losers.

Analysts awaited more Q4 earnings from India Inc for cues. M&M, REC, Ipca Laboratories, Sundaram Finance, Max Healthcare and Glenmark Pharma are among the companies slated to report their financial results later in the day.

Equities in other Asian markets cheered in the early session in line with global markets as strong US economic data solidified hopes of continuing recovery. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was up 0.40 per cent. Japan’s Nikkei 225 soared 1.95 per cent, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 0.46 per cent and South Korea’s Kospi 0.42 per cent.

Overnight on Wall Street, equity benchmarks finished higher following more signals that the economy is continuing to recover. Investors were encouraged to see that weekly unemployment claims fell to another pandemic low. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.41 per cent, the S&P 500 0.12 per cent and the Nasdaq Composite ended flat.

In the oil market, prices pushed higher supported by firm US economic data and expectations of a strong rebound in global fuel demand in the third quarter. Concerns eased about the impact of any return of Iranian supplies. Brent crude futures for July gained 0.2 per cent to $69.62 per barrel.



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Dogecoin’s popularity soars ahead of Nifty, mutual funds in India, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: A joke well said is when everyone laughs or at least goes back home and Googles it. Mind-numbing rallies in the cryptocurrency world are not absurd, but the rise of the ‘Doge’ has confounded even the biggest of cryptocurrency lovers.

Dogecoin, a cryptocurrency born out of a light-hearted joke in 2013 with no revolutionary endeavours, such as those of Bitcoin creator, has soared 5,500 per cent in 2021 so far, despite having nearly halved its value over the past week.

Simply put, Dogecoin is an Internet meme currency with the symbol of the Japanese Shiba Inu dog for the meme generation, backed by individuals like Elon Musk, the founder of Tesla, SpaceX and Starlink.

And, Indians are intrigued.

The popularity of the meme cryptocurrency has been soaring among Indians since the beginning of April from virtually zero interest prior to that. Much of the interest has been driven by reports that pegged the digital currency’s returns at over 10,000 per cent year to date, something unheard of in the world of traditional investing.

More Indians were searching for the term ‘Dogecoin’ on Google on Friday than Bitcoin and mutual funds combined, data on Google search trends showed. The rise in popularity of the cryptocurrency has been such that it is threatening to overtake popular search terms in India’s investing landscape like ‘Nifty’ and ‘Sensex’.

Industry watchers in India said almost all of the interest in Doogecoin is being driven by young investors, who are ardent admirers of Elon Musk, given his image as a futurist and his involvement in the development of some of the most revolutionary companies of the 21st century.

The surge in interest is despite Dogecoin giving up almost half of its value earlier this week following the Tesla Founder’s comments on a popular US comedy show that the cryptocurrency was nothing more than a ‘hustle’, confirming the suspicion of most.

Prior to Musk’s appearance on the Saturday Night Live last week, the interest in Dogecoin virtually broke the roof for the cryptocurrency market, as several cryptocurrency exchanges in India such as WazirX were unable to handle the deluge of orders.

WazirX, India’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, reported one of the highest single-day trading volumes of $350 million on May 7, a day prior to Musk’s appearance on the show. Some industry watchers suggested that much of the volumes were being driven by Dogecoin investors.

Musk has tried to make amends ever since his SNL gaffe by announcing the launch of a moon mission called DOGE-1, which will be funded entirely by Dogecoin.

Further, his Twitter poll earlier this week on whether Tesla should accept payment in Dogecoin or Bitcoin coincided with the shock announcement on Thursday that the electric vehicle company will suspend acceptance of Bitcoin as payment due to environment-related concerns.

“…if Elon Musk is able to improve some of its technical flaws as he said, that could help it gain long-term value,” said Vikram Rangala, chief operating officer at ZebPay.

Dogecoin’s lack of fundamental value compared with other major crypto assets such as Bitcoin and Ethereum is not lost even on cryptocurrency experts, who argue that it has none of the traits such as fixed supply that have made Bitcoin popular.

However, when the world’s second richest man is himself on the driver’s seat, one can only expect people to hop on to the bandwagon.



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How to build a resilient equity portfolio amid market volatility

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The bull run since March 2020 has been unprecedented by historical standards – a bull run in the midst of the worst recession since World War 2. It resembles a rooftop party when the hotel lobby is on fire under full conviction that the fire men (central bankers and governments) have the tools (monetary and fiscal stimulus) to douse the fire and fix the mess.

It is often said that markets look to the future and this phrase has been oft-repeated to justify market movements contrary to current fundamentals. Same time last year (April/May 2020) many market observers were agog with opinions that Covid-19 would be under control in a year, setting the stage for economic recovery. Well, here we are one year later in May 2021, witnessing a deadlier second wave.

Given the uncertainties, markets have remained volatile in recent times. Have you assessed whether your portfolio is bear market proof? Bear market proofing does not mean building a portfolio will not decline in a bear market, but building one which is well positioned to withstand the phase and reap benefits, when the cycle turns favourably. Here’s what you can do.

No aggressive averaging

Painful investment stories include cases of investors buying stocks first while it is in triple digits in a bull market, averaging aggressively in double digits in a bear market and finally selling it in single digits! As correction in certain stocks increase, investors tend to increase allocation to that stock out of belief that is more attractive and overall portfolio positions may become concentrated.

When a bull market ends and bear market plays out, many stocks you thought were built to last, become history. Our own bellwether indices – Sensex and Nifty, had quite a few stocks that turned out this this way after three-digit or four-sigit share prices– JP Associates, Unitech, ADAG Group stocks, Suzlon. Yes Bank etc are examples. If that is the case with bellwether stocks, you can only expect a larger rout in mid- and small-cap stocks. Geodesic, Tulip Telecom, Educomp, Everonn, Karuturi Global, IVRCL etc. are just a few examples from a large universe of stocks that were touted as next big guns of the market in the earlier decade, but mis-fired.

A rule for each bucket

So, which stocks should you average and which ones you shouldn’t ?

Thematic/high risk bets (10-15 per cent of principal invested) – These can become potential multibaggers if the theme plays out successfully and the stock becomes a bellwether of the theme. If you had bet on electric cars as a theme in the early part of last decade and bought Tesla, it may have paid off. But this pay-off came after multiple near bankruptcy situations for Tesla. Similarly, in early stages it will not be clear who would be the ultimate winner of a theme. If you are looking to make 10-20x return on a stock, there is no reason for you to average if the stock goes to x/2 as the risks are higher when you average, given the theme/stock may not play out. Hence to manage the risk here, what investors can do is to make a one-time investment and resist the urge to average during corrections. Besides your research, if you are lucky your investment will pay off. If not, you would not have lost more.

Quality/value stocks (60-70 per cent) – Companies with best-in-class managements and corporate governance, strong balance sheets (very marginal debt or net cash in balance sheet) can be placed in this category. If any company is going to survive a bear market, it would be these companies. Companies in this category can be averaged periodically through the bear market phase like you would do in the case of a mutual fund SIP.

Cyclical stocks (20-25 per cent) tend to be most volatile to changes in macro backdrop and hence can give outsized returns or losses as this backdrop changes. Naturally in a bear market, their performance will be far worse than the broader index. If you are a long-term investor, this category of stocks you can buy or average when they are trading at levels closer to historical trough valuation levels.

Keep powder dry

While definitely at every point in time, including times of euphoria, markets offer opportunities for long-term investors, there is no case to go all out into the markets when it is trading at levels significantly above historical mean.

At a broader level, markets keep giving slam dunk opportunities to enter from time to time as, what is known as the ‘Minsky Moment’ plays out in every market cycle. Excessively speculative periods in bull markets are usually followed by a collapse. Shares fall well below fair value as the speculation involving extreme levels of leverage gets unwound when the economic expectations shift to the negative. For example, if you had missed the 2004-2007 bull market rally, you would have again got an opportunity to enter the markets at 2005 levels in 2009. Similarly, if you had missed the 2013 to 2020 rally, you would have again got an opportunity to enter the market at 2014 levels in 2020.

As per recent data, FPIs own around $575 billion in Indian equities,of which 75 per cent is concentrated in just 40 stocks. Any threats to the dollar carry trade due to inflation concerns in the US, combined with leverage taken by Indian investors as well, may trigger Minsky Moments. So, in case you have missed the 2020 rally, keep calm. You are likely get an opportunity to enter at attractive levels in the future.

(This is a free article from the BusinessLine premium Portfolio segment. For more such content, please subscribe to The Hindu BusinessLine online.)

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What has led to Indian millennials storming the stock market

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A surge is visible in the equity markets, both in pre- and post-Covid India. Besides, most of the newcomers are between the age of 20 and 30 years. This young generation, or the so-called millennials, are more adaptive to new technology, apart from being keen on finding new ways to achieve their goals. There are other catalysts to this influx of first time participants. For instance, the entire stock markets ecosystem has evolved over the last five years and is conducive to new young participants.

Also, the surge of learning platforms and more genuine resources to conduct research has further helped spur the participation. Unlike their previous generations, the term stock market doesn’t bring a sense of fear among millennials as they are well read and well informed. They take their own decisions and take calculated risks in the markets.

Reduced dependency on brokers

Previously, the brokerage firms were dominating the industry in terms of providing a platform to trade, stock suggestions and managing money on the client’s behalf. However, with the entry of new-age tech brokers the industry has seen a drastic change as now there are separate companies offering different specialised solutions to each of the above services — a trading platform, specific recommendations and holistic financial planning.

The new entrants have given special attention to ease of use and focus towards providing a hassle-free experience through the use of technological advancements. It’s a win-win for all. From KYC updation to new account opening, everything can be done digitally. Almost everything is just a click away.

Besides, the broking industry has also become highly competitive in terms of the charges, which have given a further fillip to millennial participation. Zerodha, which is a discount broker, for instance, saw higher influx of younger investors during the pandemic. Investors in the age group of 20-30 years now make up 69 per cent of the company’s investors compared to 50-55 per cent pre-Covid.

Growth in learning platforms

Millennials prefer to make their own decisions. They focus on learning about stock markets and stock market education platforms have provided a lot of support. There is a plethora of knowledge available on the internet, — including blogs, YouTube, and online courses –at optimal cost to help people start their own stock market journey.

Some popular stock market education portals cover topics from basics to expert level. Examples of such platforms include Udemy and Elearnmarkets. These platforms offer courses suiting all needs–offline, online, self-paced, or live.

This has helped young participants to first develop a proper knowledge base and then venture into the markets so that they are more apt to handle the volatile nature of the market.

Ease of doing research

Earlier, the brokers and media houses used to do all the research and give trading calls to their clients through news, calls and reports. The scenario has now changed with the millennials barely relying on such news and preferring to do their own research. In this regard, research sites have gained popularity, which has simplified the process of doing fundamental and technical analysis.

Offering a host of information such as market news, charts, financial data of companies, everything at a click, online tools and platforms have made stock research quite accessible. Stockedge is one such platform that hosts such information. These platforms have helped participants take well-informed decisions. Access to information and readymade analytics is no more a barrier for them. Other platforms such as TradingView, Chartink, have made intraday trading easy for active traders in the market by providing them solutions that help them make quick decisions during market hours.

We see how the entire ecosystem has become very inclusive and supportive for anyone to join in, learn and grow.

The stock market has recently been in an upward trend and has raised optimism among newbies. But the market is unpredictable and may become volatile soon. Experienced participants manage through such volatile phases and only time will tell if the millennials shy away or continue with their journey.

The author is a co-founder and CEO of StockEdge & Elearnmarkets.com

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