Karachi, Dhaka set to beat Mumbai, again

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Stock markets of Pakistan and Bangladesh are pulling ahead of Indian counterpart in returns. For the second year in a row, the BSE Sensex would underperform Karachi and Dhaka.

Karachi Stock Exchange 100 (KSE 100) is up 44 per cent during the current calendar year so far against 0.7 per cent rise in BSE Sensex. The Dhaka Stock Exchange’s (DSE) Broad index, at 6.5 per cent rise during the calendar year so far, is also ahead of the Sensex.

Last year, KSE 100 was up 2.1 per cent, outperforming the BSE Sensex, which had declined by five per cent during the same period. Bangladesh’s DSE Broad index had marginally beaten Sensex with a fall of 4.8 per cent in 2015. (See table)

The Karachi stock market has also outperformed its Indian peer over the long term. KSE100 has appreciated at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 33 per cent in the last five years against 11.2 per cent annualised returned earned by Indian equity investors during the period.

Pakistan’s equity and bond valuation are lower compared to India. For example, KSE100 index is currently valued at trailing 12-month price-earnings multiple of 12.4 times against BSE Sensex’s 19.7 times. KSE 100 offers dividend yield of 4.64 per cent, nearly triple the 1.6 per cent yield that Sensex offers to its investors. The corresponding ratios are not available for DSE.

Similarly, the 10-year government bond in Pakistan at eight per cent yield is nearly 150 basis points higher than India. With similar level of consumer inflation at around four per cent in both countries, a prospective bond investor earns higher real return in Pakistan than in India.

Experts attribute this to continued inflow of foreign institutional investments (FIIs) in the Pakistan unlike the sell-off in India. Foreign investors have pumped in nearly $1.1 billion in Pakistan during the July-October 2016 period, nearly three times their investment ($344 million) during the corresponding period last year according to data from the State Bank of Pakistan, the country’s central bank. All this money went into Pakistan’s bond market with foreign investors buying (on net basis) little over $1 billion worth of bonds during October 2016 itself. In contrast, FIIs have been net sellers on the Karachi stock market to the tune of $40 million during the first four months of Pakistan’s FY17, similar to their behaviour on Dalal Street.

In comparison, FIIs have been big sellers in Indian bonds and equity during the second half of the current calendar year. For example, foreign investors withdrew $1 billion from Indian bond market during October itself. In all, FIIs have sold $7 billion worth of Indian bonds during the October-December quarter so far. This has been the biggest sell-off by FIIs in any major bond market globally during the year so far.

Rate hike fears, sell off: 5 reasons why the rupee hit 68 levels today

 

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Rupee crossed the 68 mark against the US dollar in trade on Friday, as comments by the US Federal reserve chair, Janet Yellen, raised concerns regarding a possible hike in interest rates in December policy review.

Analysts at ICICI Securities expect the rupee to hit 68.1 levels going ahead. In a note, they recommended buying USD/INR November Futures contract on the National Stock Exchange (NSE) in the range of 67.55 – 67.65 for a target of 67.9 – 68.1 with a stop loss placed at 67.45.

Related Story: Fed Rate Hike Worries Weigh On Markets; Rupee Hits 68/$

Here are five reasons that pushed the rupee to 68 levels:

  • Possible rate hike by the US Federal Reserve
  • Strong US economic data:
  • Sell-off by foreign investors
  • Fund Outflows
  • US bond yields

 

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Sensex cracks 1,000 points; real estate shares crumble

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Markets staged a recovery after latest election results indicate that Hillary has narrowed the gap with Donald Trump in the race for the presidency.

Besides, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday announced that 500 and 1,000 rupee banknotes would be withdrawn from circulation at midnight to crack down on rampant corruption and counterfeit currency.

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Cyrus Mistry’s exit: Should you buy or sell Tata Group shares?

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Tata Group stocks, such as Tata Motors, TCS, Tata Steel, Tata Communications, Tata Metaliks, Titan Company and Tata Chemicals reacted sharply in early deals, and lost 1% – 3% a day after Cyrus Mistry was removed as the chairman of the Group. However, Tata Motors and Titan recovered some lost ground as trade progressed. By comparison, the benchmark indices – the S&P BSE Sensex and the Nifty 50 were trading 0.2% lower.
The development, which came after market hours on Monday, saw the 48-year old Mistry being dropped after being at the helm since December 28, 2012, and was replaced by Ratan Tata as the interim chairman.

So should you use this opportunity to exit Tata Group stocks or are they a good contrarian bet? Can these scrips underperform given the uncertainty within the conglomerate?

Read More……

 

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