Sensex, Nifty end lower today; banks, financials fall, ICICI Bank, SBI Life among top laggards, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Domestic equity indices ended in the red on Monday, with BSE Sensex down 0.2% at 58,177 points and Nifty 50 down 0.08% at 17,355. Mid and smallcap stocks outperformed the market today, with BSE Midcap index closing 0.32% higher and the smallcap index ending with a gain of 0.80%.

Nifty Media, Nifty Metal and Nifty Realty were among the other indices rose today. The remaining sectoral indices fell, which includes Nifty Bank Index and Nifty Financial Services down 0.58% and 0.19%, respectively.

ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank and SBI Life Insurance were the top laggards among Sensex stocks. While Kotak Mahindra Bank, Bajaj Finserv, Chola Invest and Power Finance emerged were among the top gainers in the index.

Stock Talk

SBI Life Insurance Company:

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board has offloaded 2.3 crore equity shares in SBI Life at Rs 1,171.07 per equity share, while BNP Paribas Arbitrage bough 96,35,692 equity shares at Rs 1,171 per share on BSE, the bulk deals data showed.

Punjab National Bank:

The board has approved raising Rs 6,000 crore through issue of Basel III additional Tier-1 (AT-1) bonds or Tier II bonds or combination of both in one or more tranches.

Indiabulls Housing Finance:

The company has received approval from the Competition Commission of India to divest its mutual fund business and sell it to Groww for Rs 175 crore

Other key takeaways

SREI’s Rs 35,000-crore loan may be classified as NPA

Banks may classify Rs 35,000 crore loan given to SREI group as Non Performing Asset (NPA) by the end of this quarter after the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) set aside the previous order restraining banks from such classification.

According to analysts’ estimates, Indian Bank and Canara Bank have exposures of ₹2,000 crore and ₹1,200 crore, respectively, to Srei group, while ICICI Bank and Axis Bank have ₹800 crore each.

India’s inclusion in global bond index to attract $170-250 bln inflows

India could be included in the global bond index early 2022, which can attract $170-250 billion in bond inflows in the next decade, said Morgan Stanley in a recent note.

Investors have been staying away from the Indian bond market for the past few years, given the widening fiscal deficit, above-target inflation and gradual weakening currency. However, recent macroeconomic stability could change early next year, according to analysts at Morgan Stanley.

US Markets

Wall Street ended sharply lower on Friday as investors weighed signs of higher inflation. Shares of Apple Inc tumbled following an unfavorable court ruling related to its app store.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average index fell 0.78% to close at 34,607.72 points, while the S&P 500 lost 0.77% and closed at 4,458.58. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.87% to 15,115.49.

Gold prices subdued as firm dollar dims safe-haven appeal

Gold prices were subdued on Monday as the dollar held firm, while cautious investors awaited readings on U.S. consumer prices due this week that could be crucial to the Federal Reserve’s decision on when to exit its super-supportive policy. Spot gold was flat at $1,787.40 per ounce after having recorded a weekly decline of 2.1%.

Market Outlook for the week ahead

-Nifty has been in a narrow range for the last 5 days and any breakout above 17,450, with above average volumes, may take Nifty to 17,550 levels. According to experts, Traders are advised to book profits if Nifty gives a daily close below 17,250 level.

-The market is expected to turn stock specific, and the Nifty will undergo a healthy consolidation this week, making it prudent to stick to the buy on decline strategy to accumulate quality stocks.

-As Nifty is not expected to breach 16900 in its consolidation phase, dips towards psychological level of 17000 would offer incremental buying opportunity in this week

– Bank Nifty is expected to form a higher base above the upper band of the recent range breakout area (36200). Experts stick with a positive stance with Bank Nifty gradually heading towards 37700 levels in September. Any breather in the coming week would offer an incremental buying opportunity in quality banking stocks.



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

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

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

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

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

(Narendra Nathan/ET Bureau)

Sector update: Engineering & Capital Goods

Tendering shows signs of uptick

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

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

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

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

(Emkay)



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Know how Banks and Financials performed throughout this week, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Benchmark indices have been on a record-breaking rally lately and August witnessed the stock market reaching many new highs. The BSE benchmark soared over 9% last month. Buying action continues to follow a positive global trend. The index has formed a strong bullish candle on weekly charts.

Major market driving factors for this week are considered to be the Improving general pandemic conditions, GDP numbers indicating revival in economic activity, increased confidence in facing a potential third wave, the stress on universal vaccination and the indications from Jackson Hole address.

Monday Closing bell: All time high
Nifty made a strong bullish bar on Monday (30 August, 2021) closing at its all time high level. The rally was also supported by Banknifty. Nifty closed at 16,931 up by 225 points. Banknifty closed at 36,347 up by 720 points.

Tuesday Closing bell: All time high
Another All time high Nifty made another lifetime high on Tuesday. It had been showing strength since the last four trading sessions. The Sensex closed at 57,552.39, up 662.63 points, or 1.16%, while Nifty was at 17,132.20, up 201.15 points, or 1.19%. Metals, IT financials were top gainers.

Wednesday Closing bell : Markets end in Red

The Indian benchmark indices ended in the red after hitting record highs in the early trade on September 1. At close, the Sensex was down 0.37%, at 57,338.21, and the Nifty was down 0.33%, at 17,076.30.

However, Axis Bank and Induslnd Bank were among top BSE Sensex gainers. Bank Nifty gained 0.4% to settle at 36,574. Nifty sectoral indices mostly ended in green, except for Nifty Financial Services.

Thursday Closing bell: Markets end Flat
Benchmark indices ended higher with Nifty closing above 17200 led by IT and FMCG stocks. At close, the Sensex was up by 0.90% at 57852.54, and the Nifty was up 0.92% at 17234.20. Except for auto and PSU Bank, all other sectoral indices ended in the green with IT and Pharma indices up 1% each. HDFC Life was amonth the top Nifty gainers. BSE midcap and smallcap indices gained over 0.5% each.

Friday Closing Bell: Fresh record
The Sensex closed at 58,129.95, up by 0.48%, while the Nifty was at 17,323.60, up 0.52%. Boosted by Reliance Industries and a jump in Exide Industries following the sale of the battery maker’s insurance unit Exide Life Insurance to HDFC Life Insurance, while the focus was also on a key US jobs report later in the day.

Among sectoral indices on the NSE, Nifty Bank fell the most – down nearly by 1.5% to 23,531 levels. HDFC Bank, Induslnd Bank, HDFC Life were among the top losers.

Industry Key Takeaways

India’s GDP rose 20% in the June quarter

India’s economy expanded at its fastest ever in the June quarter, helped by the low base of the year-earlier record contraction and a strong rebound in manufacturing and construction, data released on Tuesday showed. The data also reflected thag Fiscal deficit narrowed to a nine-year low of 21.3% of annual budget estimate as of July end at Rs 3.21 lakh crore, helped by a rise in revenues and decline in non-interest revenue expenditure.

Kotak Mahindra Bank to sell 20 crore shares of Airtel Payments Bank to Bharti Enterprises:

Kotak Mahindra Bank on August 31 said it will sell 20 crore shares held in Airtel Payments Bank (APBL) for a cash consideration of Rs 294 crore or more to Bharti Enterprises Ltd. A share purchase agreement was executed by the bank for divestment of 20,00,00,000 equity shares (8.57 percent stake) held by Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd in APBL.

ICICI Bank hits Rs 5 lakh crore market cap; what should investors do?

On September 1, Private sector lender ICICI Bank crossed Rs 5 lakh crore in market capitalisation for the first time only to become the second bank to attain the said feat. Among banks, HDFC Bank, the country’s largest lender by assets, remained at the top with Rs 8.7 lakh crore market capitalisation, while SBI is at the third spot with Rs 3.81 lakh crore market cap, Kotak Mahindra Bank at 4th and Axis Bank at 5th.

HDFC Life Insurance share price hits 52-week high

HDFC Life Insurance Company share price touched 52-week high of Rs 775.65and rising percent intraday on September 2 as company board is going to consider fundraising on September 3.

“A meeting of the board of directors of HDFC Life Insurance Company is proposed to be held on Friday, September 3, 2021 to consider issue of equity shares and / or other securities of the company by way of preferential allotment,” company said in its release.

HDFC Life to acquire 100% stake in Exide Life Insurance:

HDFC Life Insurance on Friday announced that its board has approved acquisition of 100% of the share capital of Exide Life Insurance Company Ltd for a total consideration of Rs 6,687 crore. Exide Life will be subsequently merged into HDFC Life.

HLIC also announced that out of the aggregate amount, Rs 725 crore will be settled in cash and the balance via issuance of over 8.70 crore equity shares at an issue price of Rs 685 per share to Exide Industries Ltd.



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Vinay Sharma, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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We like the large private sector banks and some of the large PSUs as well. We like the larger banks over the mid-sized and smaller peers as these banks have great access to capital. They provide good provisioning for the anticipated Covid stress and the balance sheets are also quite healthy, says Vinay Sharma, Equity Fund Manager, Nippon India Mutual Fund.

Do you think that from now we are looking at a sweet spot for banking where the worst is behind us and maybe good times will be here?
The banking sector has gone through ups and downs over the last six-seven months and it has been a relative underperformer in the market as well and the reason was the second Covid wave. The asset quality stress that was anticipated after that and results being not so great compared to some of the other sectors. Also, banking is one of the sectors which, even after the base effect, is showing single digit growth in terms of credit instruments whereas most other sectors are expected to show very healthy growth once the base effects plays out. So I guess that is the reason for banking underperformance over the past few months.

Looking ahead, if the Covid third wave does not happen, then surely banking looks to be on a sound footing on a fundamental basis. The latest data is showing some signs of uptick in credit growth. We were just talking about the corporate capex cycle picking up and even if the capex cycle does not pick up, we have seen corporates deleveraging India for four to five years and their balance sheets are as good as what they used to be before the financial crisis.

We feel corporate credit might pick up sooner than what the Street is expecting. Retail credit is growing steadily and another good sign is the real estate cycle picking up in India. Housing is such an important part of the household balance sheet. So if the real estate cycle picks up, then it bodes well for the banking sector as well. So overall, unless a severe third wave happens, we believe things will turn positive for the sector. The economy is looking good and valuations are in our favour since the sector has underperformed quite a lot over the past five-six months compared to the broader market.

We are making a case of corporate credit growth coming in. How would you play that? Across banks, what is the best place to capture that credit offtake and also would you now look at the banks that have more corporate books or retail books?
The distinction between corporate and retail credit has now disappeared between the large four or five banks except maybe one or two because what has happened is, in the last few years, most erstwhile corporate banks have also grown their retail books as there was no growth in corporate banking anyway.

Therefore today, balance sheets are largely between 60-40, 50-50 between retail and corporate in that order. So to play the fundamentals in banking, what we really like is the large private sector banks and some of the large PSUs as well. We like the larger banks over the mid-sized and smaller peers as these banks have great access to capital. They have been able to raise capital as and when they want from markets. They have provided good provisioning for the anticipated Covid stress and therefore balance sheets are also quite healthy.

Also, given the kind of technology changes that are happening in this sector and the kind of investments that are required in technology, we believe that these banks are the best place to partner with new fintechs and invest in technology and keep up with time. Therefore, large private sector banks and some large PSU banks are what we would recommend among banks.

The market is rerating banks for becoming fintechs and fintechs for becoming banks. Bajaj Finance is getting rerated because it is moving into a platform. Where is the middle path? Who do you think will be the eventual winner in this called platform/fintech adoptability?
I cannot talk about individual companies but as I have already said, it is the large banks with good operating profitability or the large finance companies where operating profitability is fairly high, that are well placed to capture this phenomenon of becoming a platform or investing in technology. What you need is access to talent, access to capital and a large customer base. The large entities in India have all these prerequisites; their customer base is fairly high, they can access great talent in terms of technology personnel as they are attractive places to work in. And they also have the data. So if there is any chance of some of these large banks or some of these entities to have a great plain technology, it has to be the larger banks and some of the larger NBFCs as well.

While we have seen fintech taking away some market value from banks in developed economies, in India, the scenario might be a little bit different because in India the banks have access to easy capital and therefore they can pick and choose partners and at some point also buy out some of these fintech firms if they think they are becoming a threat to their market share.

Also, these banks have a huge customer base and as long as they can analyse their customer base, cross sell and do data analytics, they are in a great position to partner or fight with some of these fintechs.

A couple of years ago, the buzzword was microfinance, then it was small banks or small microfinance companies which have become small finance banks. But that is the end of the financial space which is facing a crunch. Bandhan is struggling, Ujjivan is struggling, AU is struggling. What will happen to the SFB space?
There is no doubt a great opportunity in the bottom of the pyramid space and in some of the customer base that they are trying to address which is the urban poor, rural poor or small MSMEs and the stuff. So opportunity wise, I do not think there is any doubt of that in India. What has hampered them over the last few years is that macroeconomic shocks have happened at regular intervals. We had GST, demonetisation and then Covid. They haven’t really got a launching platform of steady three, four years which a new business requires to catapult itself.

That is one reason why these banks have not really done so well compared to some of the other entities. But we do believe that selectively, some of these have good managements, the right kind of talent, the technology partnerships and therefore some of them can create value given the opportunity size that exists in India.

Before turning into small finance banks, these banks were mostly microfinance entities which were actually dealing with a customer base for a long period of time. They have the know-how of how to deal with these customers. It is just that macro has not favoured them for the last four, five years and that has hampered them.

But one has to be selective and look at the right management pool, the right customer base. Pure microfinance business does suffer from its own ups and downs because when the cycle or things are going tough for them, these entities suffer a lot. Therefore we like SFBs more than pure microfinance entities because SFBs give a diverse profile compared to pure microfinance entities.

You run a firm or fund which in a sense is for financials. Given that five, six years ago the option to buy into financials was limited, you could only buy the three, four, five private banks and some small banks but now the space is expanding. There are AMCs, insurance companies. Do you see the flows which came into the traditional banking funds will get challenged because the mandate is to run a financial fund and the options to bet on the financial space are plenty?
I would say that is a good thing. We are getting more diversification in sectoral funds and sectoral funds are generally considered to be more volatile. So diversification reduces volatility. Also, as I said earlier, across the world some of the new business models like fintechs or platforms have created huge wealth for their investors and we anticipate the same to happen in India over the next two or five years as some of these businesses come into public markets.

Therefore from a flow point of view or from an investment point of view, we believe this is a great thing that has happened as investors are getting more options now within financial space as well as a technology angle. I would not call it a negative, I would call it a really good thing.



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Indians invest record sums in global debt, equities and bank deposits, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Resident Indian individuals invested in overseas assets for a record sum since the central bank opened up the avenue through the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS).

Indians have invested $1.53 billion in debt, equities and bank deposits through the LRS since the pandemic-induced lockdown in March 2020, the highest since 2004-05 when the window was introduced, data on outward remittances released by the central bank showed.

Investment advisors say this trend could accelerate with brokerages such as ICICI Direct and HDFC Securities facilitating direct investments, and mutual funds offering schemes that buy overseas stocks such as Facebook, Alphabet (Google) or Amazon.

“A combination of factors triggered interest among resident Indians to invest in global securities during the pandemic,” said Vijay Chandok, managing director at ICICI Securities. “While diversification of assets prompted them to look overseas, the growth story of new-age companies too was a draw-card. Moreover, investors drew comfort from the familiarity of investing into companies whose platforms they have been using or reading about – like Google, Facebook or Amazon.”

Under the LRS, all resident individuals, including minors, are allowed to freely remit up to $ 250,000 per financial year (April – March) for any permissible current or capital account transaction or a combination of both. These include capital account transactions such as investment in debt/equity instruments, deposits and purchase of properties. The permitted remittances also include most current account transactions like expenses on travel, studies, maintenance of relatives, gifts and donations.

“A lot of Indian brokers have started to offer the easy facility of investing abroad through tie-ups. The new class of investors post the pandemic beginning has seen the way tech stocks abroad (mainly US- Nasdaq) have performed and want to participate in that up-move,” said Deepak Jasani, head of retail research – HDFC Securities.

As global economic activity started picking up, so have the investments in equities and debt securities. They more than doubled to $171 million during April-June’21 compared to $84 million in the same period a year ago. Also, investments in deposits rose sharply during the period.

Financial players have launched technology initiatives to take outward remittance services to the country’s micro-markets. Emkay Global Financial Services recently tied up with Stockal – a global investment platform – to help its clients invest in US-listed stocks and securities.

“Diversification is critical as it reduces risk and helps optimise the gains,” said Ashish Ranawade, Head of Products, ‎Emkay Wealth Management. “The US markets, through equities and exchange-traded funds, offer one of the most interesting avenues to diversify.”



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Indians invest record sums in global debt, equities and bank deposits, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Read More/Less


Resident Indian individuals invested in overseas assets for a record sum since the central bank opened up the avenue through the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS).

Indians have invested $1.53 billion in debt, equities and bank deposits through the LRS since the pandemic-induced lockdown in March 2020, the highest since 2004-05 when the window was introduced, data on outward remittances released by the central bank showed.

Investment advisors say this trend could accelerate with brokerages such as ICICI Direct and HDFC Securities facilitating direct investments, and mutual funds offering schemes that buy overseas stocks such as Facebook, Alphabet (Google) or Amazon.

“A combination of factors triggered interest among resident Indians to invest in global securities during the pandemic,” said Vijay Chandok, managing director at ICICI Securities. “While diversification of assets prompted them to look overseas, the growth story of new-age companies too was a draw-card. Moreover, investors drew comfort from the familiarity of investing into companies whose platforms they have been using or reading about – like Google, Facebook or Amazon.”

Under the LRS, all resident individuals, including minors, are allowed to freely remit up to $ 250,000 per financial year (April – March) for any permissible current or capital account transaction or a combination of both. These include capital account transactions such as investment in debt/equity instruments, deposits and purchase of properties. The permitted remittances also include most current account transactions like expenses on travel, studies, maintenance of relatives, gifts and donations.

“A lot of Indian brokers have started to offer the easy facility of investing abroad through tie-ups. The new class of investors post the pandemic beginning has seen the way tech stocks abroad (mainly US- Nasdaq) have performed and want to participate in that up-move,” said Deepak Jasani, head of retail research – HDFC Securities.

As global economic activity started picking up, so have the investments in equities and debt securities. They more than doubled to $171 million during April-June’21 compared to $84 million in the same period a year ago. Also, investments in deposits rose sharply during the period.

Financial players have launched technology initiatives to take outward remittance services to the country’s micro-markets. Emkay Global Financial Services recently tied up with Stockal – a global investment platform – to help its clients invest in US-listed stocks and securities.

“Diversification is critical as it reduces risk and helps optimise the gains,” said Ashish Ranawade, Head of Products, ‎Emkay Wealth Management. “The US markets, through equities and exchange-traded funds, offer one of the most interesting avenues to diversify.”



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Saibal Ghosh on 3 sectors offering best risk rewards now, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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“The market is expensive. Some of the pockets of the market are even more expensive. The market tends to overshoot the fundamentals from time to time but this is the time to pick stocks very carefully,” says Saibal Ghosh, Chief Investment Officer, Aegon Life Insurance Company.

How do you analyse the market in valuation terms? If you look at the valuations versus the earnings prospects of corporate India, does it appear reasonable?
Valuations are definitely very high on a PE multiple basis but at this point of time, the market is discounting the earning growth cycle for next three to five years and it is not very unlikely that at the beginning of the cycle the multiple remains at a high level. The steepness in the yield curve is also telling us that the market is expecting economic growth to sustain for the next three to five years. So yes, the market is expensive. Some of the pockets of the market are even more expensive. The market tends to overshoot the fundamentals from time to time but this is the time to pick stocks very carefully.

Are you participating in many of these consumer tech IPOs because this argument of valuation appears to be most hectic and loudest in those pockets? Are you looking forward to some of the future offerings?
Yes we do because the belief in technology is definitely there and from that point of view, we are at an inflection point where we are seeing disruptions in some of the sectors. Let us take for example two-wheelers. The disruptions are here and at the same time, some of the new tech, new age digital and e-commerce companies are getting listed and maybe the composition of the index will undergo a sea change in the next two to three years.

Given the valuation at the end of the day, the market loves to buy growth and many of these e-commerce players which are coming to the market, are aggregators and from that point of view, it is very difficult to value them by traditional valuation methods. Having said that, some of the valuations will also evolve. But at the end of the day, the market loves to buy growth and I firmly believe that this is the beginning of a change in the composition of index in days to come and we as fund managers have to be ahead of it and recognise some of it.

How are you approaching the broader markets, the midcaps in particular? What kind of largish or midsize midcaps are you picking?
Not a particular category, it is more a bottoms up approach because at the end of the day, we believe in the domestic growth story to pick up in days to come. We believe that this growth cycle will continue for the next three to five years.

If we really were to play the domestic growth story, midcaps typically represent the India growth story better than many of the largecaps. So, some of the midcap stocks can get into your portfolio from that perspective. These are little largish midcaps, good quality names with no governance issues and strong business models. So yes, we are banking on a few of them.

Secondly, from a broader market perspective, so far we were playing an inflationary trade where we were overweight on the source of inflation like commodities. All that has given us handsome returns, but going forward, we believe that the companies with a stronger pricing power even in the domestic market will perhaps fetch a good return and as a result, some of the midcaps are in our portfolio.

Where exactly are you seeing the best margin of safety and most attractive risk rewards including contra calls?
There are three sectors where we are looking broadly. On the industrial side, there are some stocks where we are finding great opportunities and some of the capex stocks which are on the digital front. Those are the areas we are finding extremely important because we are at an inflection point where digital is taking over. That expansion used to happen in the industrial capex sector as well. So we are banking on some of those stocks also.

We are also finding real estate very interesting given the valuation. The affordability index has gone up, the RERA is definitely a great change and we are also seeing some of the new generation housing finance companies coming up. We are quite positive on the real estate sector and we are finding value there. From a risk return perspective, that would be an interesting pocket.



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Zomato | Paytm | IPO: What new age tech IPOs mean for the brokerage industry, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Indian brokerage industry has had a very good run in the last one year with the stock market booming despite the ongoing Covid-19 crisis. The otherwise trying time saw the onset of two new strong trends in financial markets – the return of the retail investors and companies coming to the primary market with unprecedented force.

These two factors have kept the brokerage sector busy as well as thriving. On its part, broking companies improved their platforms to promote ease of trading with the adoption of technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), lowered brokerage fees, and tweaked their offering to suit the needs of new investors.

All these efforts helped the brokerage industry bear fruits and be future ready for the trend that is to stay for a long term. Ratings agency CRISIL estimated broking revenue to have grown around 65-70% during the financial year 2020-21 as against about 7% growth to the previous fiscal. Although the revenue forecast seems dimmer for the current financial year and probably beyond, because of market and regulatory factors, there is no denying that the industry has entered one of its most exciting times.

Riding the IPO boom
What has also ushered in a phase of change for the industry is the launching of initial public offers (IPOs). According to PrimeDatabase, there were 69 public issues which raised Rs 74,707 crore in FY21 and so far, this fiscal, around 24 companies have raised as much as Rs 37,366 crore.

The stock market debut frenzy was triggered by food delivery app Zomato, which raised $1.3 billion from the primary market this year. The owners of fintech apps like Paytm are looking forward to the IPO. The $2 billion public issue is slated to be the largest IPO in India since the Coal India IPO in 2007.
Several other unicorns and interesting start-ups joining the fray include PolicyBazaar, MobiKwik Systems, Nykaa E-Retail, and Delhivery.

There are abundant instances when the IPO mania stretched beyond a point resulting in losses for the investors. Be it the IPO boom of 1992 or the one in 1999 or the IPO boom of 2006-08 which ended with the sub prime crisis.

Time for innovation
The IPO boom is expected to bring many more millennials to the stock market given the value they see in these services companies which are in insurance, food delivery, and ecommerce, things they use on an everyday basis. With the onset of the new-age investors, helped by increased internet penetration and disposable income, the brokerage industry will go through a sea change in terms of use of technology. Already, a new crop of brokerages such as Zerodha have been creating waves in the industry. Existing and traditional brokerage firms too have ensured that they are not left behind in upgrading themselves.

As the industry and its needs evolve, technological innovations will become all the more visible. The innovations will not be restricted to investors looking at the Indian market but also beyond into more matured and bigger markets in the West. Global investments will be another area that will keep brokerages on their toes in the year ahead.

Bumps that can be straightened out
There are opportunities for revenue growth and the brokerage industry is likely to face pressure from the new regulatory changes. Two key implementations that will impact revenue growth are the upfront margin requirement mandated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India from last year and the phased increase in peak margin requirements, which will go up to 100% by September 2021. So even if new client additions bring in more revenue, these requirements would dent full potential. If Sebi were to reconsider its decision on these policies, the brokerage industry would be able to ride high.

(The author, K K Maheshwari, is President at Association of National Exchanges Members of India (ANMI). The views are his own)



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Bharti Airtel | HDFC Bank: Would HDFC Bank, Bharti Airtel make good bets now? Sandip Sabharwal answers, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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If insurance stocks correct more, then they could give an opportunity for investors who are looking to invest for one or two years, says Sandip Sabharwal of asksandipsabharwal.com.

We have seen a bit of traction come by this week, specially in HDFC Life. There are two parts of this story in insurance as a whole — life and general. What is your take on the insurance stocks in India?
On one side, the long-term growth prospects are very strong because of the fact that insurance penetration in India is still suboptimal. It is not as suboptimal as it used to be a decade back but it still has a long way to go because there are still lots of uninsured people. Secondly, the way insurance was sold in the past and the changes that are getting made, are yet to play out. So that is one part of the story.

The second part of the insurance story has to do with the valuation story and the provisioning required because of Covid etc, which is event based and cannot be extrapolated because that does not impact the long-term mortality rate of the country.

But on valuations, these stocks are not cheap and that is the key issue. At this point of time, as far as insurance companies go, because the valuations of most of these companies — be it HDFC Life, ICICI Pru — which used to be cheap but is no longer cheap — or SBI Life are very expensive taking into account annualised premium equivalent or the new business premium into account, moving into the COVID hit quarter of last year.

Growth adjusted, these stocks are not cheap but they tend to be contrarian movers to the market. So when markets are weak, these stocks typically hold on and they do not do as well when the markets are moving up. In a corrective move, they could hold on but not absolute gain wise. I would still think that if these stocks correct more, then they could give an opportunity for investors who are looking to invest for one or two years.

For investors with a longer term horizon of say five to ten years, they will still make money even if they buy at these rates.

How do you think the market is reading into fundraising plans of Bharti Airtel? Seems like not quite well. looking at the price action in the stock today?
On one side, we have lots of IPOs getting lapped up at very high valuation. On the other side, we have a company which is actually on the verge of a growth cycle in earnings, where the market has not reacted well to its fundraising. That is fine. I would agree with the fact that fund raising by Bharti of a reasonable size could actually help it strengthen its balance sheet; secondly, gain market share in key segments and also get ready for 5G. The market is at an all-time high.

The Bharti Airtel stock went to a new high before correcting 5-6% from the top. So it is perfectly fine. I don’t think that it is a bad move. It depends on the way they are structuring whether they are getting in more money from Singtel or who is investing or whether it is going to be a QIP or rights issue. We still need to see these things but I would think that it is not a bad move to strengthen the balance sheet as the industry has gone through a very tough phase. The pricing discipline should come in but it has not yet come in.

The stock could obviously remain somewhat weak in the near term till the fund raising gets through but longer term the stock should do well.

What happens to banks? While ICICI Bank and SBI are showing leadership amongst the large banking names, HDFC Bank looks ready to play catch up then to ICICI Bank and SBI and form part of the leadership gang within banks?
The HDFC Bank stock performance will depend more on how the new management executes growth strategy and whether they can do it by managing the NPAs in a manner which was there under Aditya Puri’s leadership. The first signs over the last couple of quarters do not seem to indicate that and to that extent, it is an open competition. The challenge for most of the banks now are twofold; one, the overall credit growth in the system is just 6% and everyone is grappling for growth. So, some banks which were used to growing at 15-20% like HDFC Bank, how do they grow like that when the system wide growth is just 5-6% without taking risk as that could lead to an NPA spike. So that is a challenge.

The overall banking sector is challenged to that extent because there is no growth. There were initially some moves in a lot of these financial schemes because the NPA spike up due to the first wave of Covid was not as much as what people were expecting and the second wave actually has led to some NPA spike. So I would think that the overall financial space is at a stage where more consolidation is needed and it could still underperform as the markets correct.

In the case of HDFC Bank, they need to execute to retain the premium and for that, we will have to wait for two to three quarters. The initial bump up has happened as some restrictions got removed by RBI but that move is more or less through now. It will depend on growth and the NPA picture.



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Bajaj Finance | ICICI Bank: Hiren Ved is betting on Bajaj Finance and ICICI Bank. Here’s why, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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We continue to be extremely bullish on the opening up trade. Whether it is hospitality, retail, consumer banks or real estate, there are a slew of sectors that can be played, says Hiren Ved, Co-Founder, CEO, Director, and CIO of Alchemy Capital Management.

You have been tracking very closely the ethanol opportunity. What kind of opportunity do you see for sugar companies, for players like Praj? Or is the best behind us given how steep the move has been in some of these stocks?
It is just beginning, it is not behind us. We are still seeing the early stages of adoption of ethanol in this country. We have accelerated the pace, very clearly the government is clear that they want to accelerate this space. The prime minister also mentioned about the focus that he wants to give hydrogen as a clean fuel.

In India, sugar companies are likely to turn into energy companies. Sugar is more likely to become a by-product and ethanol is likely to become a big product. But there are several layers of opportunity. What we are currently seeing is just a momentum in 1G ethanol which is the traditional sugar based ethanol. Where we see opportunities going ahead is when ethanol starts getting made out of food grains. As you know, we have a huge stock of foodgrains lying in our godowns and that is the next big opportunity that we see in terms of converting this extra food grain into ethanol and then biomass into ethanol.

Then there is a large opportunity for CBG. It is a medium term opportunity and still a little bit away but we are already starting to see the early signs of that and then there is hydrogen. The entire move to cleaner fuels, bio-fuels is a reality. The kind of climate change issues that we have seen around the world — the temperatures in Canada, the floods all around the world including Europe. The world is waking up to the fact that they need to move to greener fuels. The best is not behind us; it is just starting in my view.

How would you approach a stock like Bajaj Finance? It is at an all time high. The stock in a sense has been a great wealth creator for shareholders in the last 20 years. Do you think in the next three years, Bajaj Finance can give double digit returns and outperform the Nifty?
I think that the opportunity is significantly big and they have shown that they have been able to execute on that opportunity very well over the last few years. Financial services is undergoing a very silent revolution. It is one sector which is likely to be impacted by technology the most and if you look at the kind of soft infrastructure or digital infrastructure that India has laid out in terms of the UPI, payment companies etc. there is likely to be competition from all sides in financial services.

Apart from looking at a bank or an NBFC in a very traditional sense, like we used to evaluate them in the past when you look at if they are very strong on the liability side, asset side, credit underwriting standards, the most relevant is going to be all these trends plus digital capabilities. Amongst all the financial services companies that are listed today, in my opinion Bajaj Finance is way ahead of everybody. We saw what happened to the HDFC Bank stock price when they encountered digital issues and there was a moratorium by the RBI on issuing new credit cards. The stock underperformed for a long period of time. Now at least that part of the problem is over but going forward, we want to be invested in financial services companies which are ahead of the curve when it comes to digital adoption. Two companies make the cut — one is Bajaj Finance and the other is ICICI Bank, The rest follow.

How would you play the recovery and business normalcy? Would it be via the consumption facing names in retail, the entertainment and multiplexes stocks or through the construction industrial materials and metals and even real estate?
We firmly believe that there is significant upside in the so called opening up trade or consumer discretionary stocks and there are several ways to play that. One can play it through banks because in general, banks have been underperforming through the Covid period. So one of the opening up trade is banks. You mentioned real estate. We do not have a very significant exposure there but we are very closely looking at the opportunity in real estate. We believe that it is not just an opening up trade. After a long consolidation in that sector, we are seeing a significant uptick and that is the other way to play.

Thirdly, where we have exposure in a lot of big grocery retailers like Avenue Supermart, Trent, V-Mart. We are also very bullish on the QSR opportunity. We believe that all these opening up opportunities are significant. Many of these businesses have gotten more agile on the cost side; they have become more digital and their economics will only improve as things open up.

While incomes in the lower middle class and the rural areas have been hit, there has also been savings and as things open up, there will be a lot of pent up demand and spending is likely to come back with vengeance once we are through with the large part of the vaccination. So whether it is hospitality, retail, consumer banks or real estate, there are a slew of sectors that can be played. We continue to be extremely bullish on the opening up trade.

There is one more sector and one more stock which is in trouble and that is nothing to do with demand, it has got to do with availability. The semiconductor shortage has affected Tata Motors and now Maruti. Should one be a buyer in Tata Motors or Maruti?
Thus is a genuine constraint. Unfortunately it has come at a time when demand is so robust. Had there not been this issue, the sector would have been off the rockers but having said that, this may persist for maybe a quarter or two. Even OEMs are looking at alternative strategies.

We have to watch the situation. If the semiconductor issue gets resolved in a matter of few months, then there is a huge pent up demand in automotives and we believe that Tata Motors has done some phenomenal restructuring of the business both at the JLR end as well as on the domestic piece as well and today they are not only perceived but are actual leaders in the EV race in their passenger vehicle segment. A significant value creation can happen over the long run but investors will have to possibly live with some uncertainty in the short to medium term because of the semiconductor issue. But in the long run, we see a significant potential for rerating.



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