Sunday, December 18, 2011

Which Business Will Survive If Re Crashes To 65 For A Dollar?


The rupee has crashed from Rs 45 to Rs 54 to the dollar, before recovering slightly to Rs 52.80 on Friday. In RBI Mid year policy review they have given more significance to foreign exchange policy rather than to control interest rate.But here, its not about depreciation of rupee rather than we should call it as appreciation of dollar. Dollars are gaining demand after euro crisis and that's why it is appreciating in compare to all major currencies.

Till recently confidence in India was high, and dollars flooded in from overseas Indians and foreign investors. Much of the black money that had earlier left returned through the Mauritius window. But now dollars are flooding out because people have lost confidence in the ability of the political system to make decisions or implement reforms. As long as confidence in India ebbs, so will the rupee.

This creates problems. Corporations and banks that have taken dollar loans suddenly face hugely higher repayment and interest rates in rupee terms. Importers face much higher rupee bills. By making imports more expensive, the rupee's fall can stoke inflation at a time when it is already over 9%.

For all these reasons, people want the RBI to sell dollars and prop up the rupee. Caution, please. Remember that exactly the same arguments were put forward in Thailand by businesses and banks in 1997 to prop up that country's falling currency.

That propping up helped only temporarily, emptied Thailand's treasury and sparked the Asian financial crisis. We must not fall into that same trap. India's foreign exchange reserves of $308 billion may look big enough to warrant spending tens of billions on propping up the rupee. Danger: the benefit will be temporary but the damage to reserves may be permanent.

Foreign loans coming up for repayment in the next six months total almost $150 billion. In normal times, lenders would happily re-lend this sum. But with investor confidence in India ebbing and the Eurozone crisis deepening, lenders cannot be depended on to re-lend maturing loans.

The Eurozone banking system could go bust if European government bonds are downgraded sharply by rating agencies, something entirely on the cards. In the accompanying financial panic, investors will withdraw from all markets associated with ris, including emerging markets like India, and rush into safe havens like the US and just sit on cash.

If that happens, dollar flows into India could come to a sudden stop. In that case, repayments of old loans will halve our foreign exchange reserves in six months, and deepen the panic.

That is an extreme scenario. But even without a Eurozone banking collapse, confidence in India is ebbing. Several Indian businessmen are saying it is easier to get decisions and make investments abroad than in India. If even Indians are losing faith in India, will foreigners be any different?


On Thursday, it issued new rules limiting the net open positions of banks in foreign exchange, limiting some forms of currency speculations, and reducing the ability of importers and exporters to bet on the future of the rupee. These steps helped the rupee to recover from 54.25 to 52.80 to the dollar.

However, technical fixes of this kind can have only a limited impact. They cannot reverse something as fundamental as loss of confidence in India.

How do we restore that confidence? There is no quick-fix for this. Reputations are built slowly but lost quickly. Anger against corruption has reached boiling point, and that is a good thing. But the political reaction to public anger has not inspired confidence.

Several people are being arrested on evidence that looks very thin, and seems guided more by politicking than a genuine attempt to catch the guilty. The opposition desperately wants to involve P C Chidambaram somehow in a scam originating in the DMK. The Congress government has responded by filing a case against telecom decisions taken by Pramod Mahajan when the BJP was in power.

Many bureaucrats and businessmen have indeed been complicit in big corruption. But the current wave of arrests looks increasingly like vendetta than a genuine desire to root out corruption. So, no bureaucrat wants to take any decision for fear of being hauled up by a vendetta in later years. Businessmen are reluctant to invest in such a murky atmosphere.

Key Analysis-:
Looks like we are toast. And also looks like this new year party would be all about how we have lost money for good. Well as with all disaster movies that show crises after crises hitting the protagonist and finally victory and well earned at that; I am sure that just on the other side of 2011 there will be a strong recovery we would all be proud of. Asides, for the next couple of weeks, particularly week starting 19/12 I would imagine that we are hitting the slowness in the scheme of things. General lethargy to trade and look at the markets. People would look at an alibi to postpone purchases of stocks and consequent low volumes.
This is actually a good time to cherry pick in the large cap names. Nice time to have them all, at a price that you have been waiting for. Remember, just like all good things come to an end; bad things DO come to an end to. So stock up as always said, till stocks last.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Reforms in Companies Bill- To Strengthen corporate governance framework

The Companies Bill that was approved by Union Cabinet late on Thursday night is likely to be tabled in the ongoing Winter Session. This will change the key provisions of more than 50-year old Companies Act, 1956.The reforms in the Companies Act, 1956 were started after the Satyam scam exposed the weakness in the corporate governance framework, the role of auditors and independent directors.

What will change:
*New corporate responsibility (CSR) framework, greater shareholder democracy and stricter corporate governance norms
*The bill suggests that profit-making cos above a certain threshold will have to spend at least 2% of the average profits in the preceding three years on CSR activities
* It proposes to introduce class action suits and a fixed term for independent directors
* It proposes to tighten laws for raising money from the public
* It seeks to prohibit any insider trading by company directors or key managerial personnel by treating such activities as a criminal offence
* The Bill aims to give more powers to the Serious Frauds Investigation Office
* Introduces new concepts like one person company, class action suits and women directors on boards
* Sebi Act will be made supreme in market-related conflicts

Monday, August 29, 2011

MANTRA FOR RETAIL INVESTORS

Markety havey broughty back they 2008y ghostsy to remindy us that western debt will continue to haunt us life time. Only 'strong will investors' can survive this situation and emerge stronger than before. The rules are simple but very difficult to follow and withy little bit of understanding, anyone can make up their mind to stay and buy more while the market continues to fall.

It’s true that the market has fallen and the portfolio of retail investors is down by 25-30% minimum. But some expert and analyst are trying to act very smart with their words that they have predicted this situation long back and in actual sense it is not true. The investmenty went down not only to the retail investors but also for big businessmen like Mukesh Ambani. I will attempt to comparey the real life investments made by Mr. Ambani recently and how we can learn from this to remain calm and come back stronger.

Investment made by Mukesh Ambani-(EIH Ltd operates Oberoi Hotels}-:

Exactly in august 2010, Mukesh Ambani bought 5.54 cr shares {14.12% stake} in EIH Ltd. For 1021 cr rupees that is for Rs 184/share. Immediately after he bought this stake, EIH announced the right issue of 5 shares for every 11 shares held at Rs 65/share. So Mr. Ambani was eligible for additional 2.52 cr shares taking his investment to Rs 1183 cr and final price per share comes out to be Rs 146/share.

EIH Ltd. Is trading at Rs 86 now {Aug 26, 2011} and his investment is down by 41%. Do you think a businessman like Ambani did not do his due diligence before investing? Of course he did. But the truth is no matter who you are how you analyze, uncertainty and stock market are inseparable. Some people argue that some guys make money irrespective of the market. If that is true, why did great investors like Rajat Gupta {former Managing Director of McKinsey} was involved in insider trading? I agree some guys make money but only with this kind of unscrupulous practices}.

So the point I am making here is, you can be Ambani and still will not be able to predict what’s going to happen in the market. Do you think Mr. Ambani would have bought EIH shares at Rs 146 if he knew market will fall. If he knew then, he would have of course waited for the market to fall and bought the same stake for less than Rs 800cr and might have saved 500 cr in the process. But what’s the lesson here? Even though his investment declined in value, he remains calm and does not panic and sell. Once the market reverses the trend, he will not only get back his investment but generates decent return over investment as well. All he does is remain invested and ride out the volatility. Why can’t a retail investor do the same thing? It is possible if you stop looking at your portfolio every day.

Market has become far more attractive now and this is definitely a great opportunity who have missed out in 2008-09 market crash. Forget about where SENSEX is trading now, expert can say whatever they want {14 times EPS or 12 times EPA etc.}. If you are not buying now and wait for the bottom fishing, you will get poor quality of fish later on. Good stocks move up faster when market recovers. Most of them will trade at attractive valuation. But patience is the key here. One should not get panic when stock price goes down from purchase price. Believe in your Investment and keep averaging the good stocks. We need to take calculated risk in order to be successful in anything let alone the stock market.

Conclusion:

Stocks are available at very good valuation and investors who follow the disciplined investment process can reap rich rewards in the next few years.

Garvit Dave

Contact- garvitdave87@gmail.com

Monday, April 4, 2011

Irrational Investors- You & Me

The market correction has given the much needed opportunity for many people who either want to enter now or re-align the portfolio with better stocks. I was looking at the prices of some of the stocks and found how irrational investors are we and how the investor behavior forms the market sentiment. I will discuss this with one real time example.

Bajaj Holdings & Investments-:

Beta

0.6716

Dividend Yield (%)

3.68

Market Cap

90487.19

Total Shares Out.

111293510

Return on Equity

1112935100

Book Value

451.31

200 Days Price Avg

816.53

50 Days Price Avg

757.4

6 Month Change(Rs.)

-10.4

P/E

8.76

EPS

92.85

Face Value

10

Whether it is grocery or stock we all want to buy at a price lesser than its real value. For example, if someone sells an article worth Rs. 2100 for price of just Rs. 750, will people buy? I would think so. But it does not happen at least in stock market. With my personal research I found out, Bajaj Holdings & Investments has 31.49% and 38.55% stake in Bajaj Auto Ltd. & Bajaj financial services ltd and also 24% in Maharashtra Scooter ltd. Apart from these, they have 100% subsidiary called Bajaj Auto holdings ltd and 1% stake in ICICI bank ltd plus other equity investments.

Let’s calculate per share worth of this company-

Value of Bajaj Auto & Bajaj Finserv stake= Rs. 16500 cr.

Other equity investments including ICICI Bank = 3100 cr.

Value of fixed income securities = Rs 2576 cr.

So total value of these investments is Rs. 22176 cr. Bajaj holdings have total O/S shares of about 11.12 crores. So if you divide the total investment value of Rs 22176/11.13 crores o/s shares, you get per share value of Rs 2000.But the current market price is just Rs 820 which 60% lesser than the actual investment value. Also the businesses they have invested in {Bajaj Auto & Bajaj Finserv} are doing extremely well and future is also bright. Even if we assume 25% holding company discount, the stock still has about 40% upside. I know many market analysts know this fact but I am not able to accept why stock price is hovering around Rs. 800. One more interesting thing, this stock did trade at RS3100 in December 2007-January 2008 during previous market peak. So can we say it as a big investment opportunity or irrational behavior of investors? Only time can answer.

Regards

Garvit Dave