Friday, August 13, 2010

Trading View: August 13

Markets haven't really been moving as per my views in the past few weeks - they have been exceptionally strong. FIIs continue to pump money into the Indian markets, making it the most stable markets even on global-down days. Downside volatility has almost disappeared from Nifty, and markets just seem to be inching up. 


There are plenty of red flags, but for the moment its more like 'ignorance is bliss' once again. The results haven't really been exceptional - with only banks and autos surprising on the upside. Rest all have been a drag on the markets at best. Telecom is almost wiped out completely out of the rally, and so is Real Estate. IT and Metals, which led to the first leg of the rally from 5000 to 5300 levels seems to have gone quiet taking recessionary global cues. Now, for the next leg up, we need pure domestic sectors, and this is where banks and autos fit the bill. Indian banks are primarily a domestic story, with negligible global operations and exposure. And so is the auto sector - with most of the supply being absorbed by local demand. Only Hyundai exports a decent chunk of its production, but thats not listed in India anyways. Other domestic stories are FMCG, and Infrastructure. If we do have a next leg up, I would be betting on Infrastructure more than anything else. 

I'm not particularly bullish over the short term, though over the longer horizon I do believe that as a whole the India story is intact, at least for the next 3-4 years. We do have a case of over-heating and excessive inflation, but these are not big issues to worry about. 

Monday, August 9, 2010

Market View: August 9

This post assumes the reader has seen 'Inception'. In case you haven't, sorry for all the comparisons with the movie. Just to give you a rem/primer on the movie, its a new version of the Matrix trilogy - with more emphasis on the construction of matrix than on action and Trinity. 

We are all dreaming. In fact, we have been dreaming for the past couple of years. The reality was bad, very bad for the human race to digest. The Americans and Europeans who had spent their lives living off their credit card debt were suddenly to be told that it was not the right way of existence. It would have led to widespread depression (not the economic variety), and panic. So, to save the world, Uncle Ben Nolan weaved this dream - that all was well again. 

He injected massive amounts of penicillin in the system, and everyone went to dream. Whether we are in the first level of dreams or further down is anyone's guess. The only certainty is that no one would be able to get us out of it - neither crash landing, and nor any kicks on the back. The dream is much better than the real world - everything appears rosy, markets seem to be making a new high every day, gold is up, real estate prices are back to their peak levels and so are the markets. There are small-cap growth stories floating all around - and there are plenty of multi-baggers waiting to be discovered. Each new guy you meet has a secret of stocks that would become 4x in no time. 

This is not the real world, and we all have been dreaming. In the real world, more than 10% of people are out of jobs. There is a massive oversupply in the real estate markets, and there are no buyers. Government debt has exceeded all their previous highs, and yet show no sign of abatement. Companies are issuing fresh equity/debt at a breath-taking pace, each one trying to go ahead of others. 

Someone would need to start pulling the brakes. Or risk a crash.