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Tag Archive | "GDP"

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The funda of fundamentals

Posted on 21 November 2008 by Anurag Sharma

Imagine buying a stock at Rs 100, probably on the suggestion of a friend, neighbor, aunt, girlfriend, hoping to double, triple your money, touching the lunar surface in no time…

And then,

80,70,50,25,10,5 …..What the hell is happening? You question all deities you pray to as to why this is happening to you. And the final stage: investor and advisor resort to desperate measures as panic sets in quick and fast.

Sitting in front of their computer screens pressing that F5 key again and again believing against hope, hoping against hope, investors dig for some divine intervention that will move their stocks price up. The friend’s stock is up; the aunt’s stock is up, while our pal is still pressing that Refresh button hoping to make a killing. Let’s put him out of his misery, what?

It’s not going to happen.

It’s never going to happen

Unless you realize that you have made a wrong stock pick without knowing if that company makes pajamas or refines crude oil.

In times like these, when 15000 levels on the BSE Sensex seems folklore, your broker is pressing you to put money in a new rising star company, which might be a shooting star very soon. You don’t know. Fact is, nobody does. In markets like these, you don’t know what stock to buy at what levels because the benchmark index is at 9-10 PE on FY09 earning (PE is prices to earning ratio, which gauges how expensive it is to buy index stocks in comparison to other markets in the world, on the basis of earning). The best option is to be sold and stay put. The advisories and advocates of the stock markets burp out levels at which you should buy, hold, go long, go short,  specific stocks,… They are as clueless as you are as soon as one variable changes, be it interest rates, earnings of the company, and so on.

The Indian economy is not running away anywhere. Neither is the stock market. Having grown by near 9% average for the last 5 years in a row to reach $1 trillion in GDP (It’s about $700 billion now, due to FII money exit and rupee devaluation), the economy cannot and will not sink like the Titanic. It has a mass of over 1.3 billion people and with 240 million households, demand surely exists - for consumer durable and FMCG companies, for roads, bridges, dams, power, and what not. So consumption spending is surely there. What is missing is investment spending; this will take sometime from an individual’s point of view as the current interest regime is too high.

All the above-mentioned demand areas requires $100 billion of investments annually for the next 5 years. Let’s say FIIs might be able to pullout about $20 billion ($12 billion has already been pulled out this year so far). The numbers are still more than sufficiently optimistic to drive our economic growth.

To fuel all this government will surely relax investment norms in key critical sectors like railways, telecom, banking, airlines. So our growth story is still visible and we will surely see a ray of light at the end of the tunnel.

So all investors, new or old! Stop pressing that Refresh button and dig in a little deeper when you invest.

The author is working as Research Associate at Padmakshi Financial Services Ltd.

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Personal Loan & Equity Investments

Posted on 22 September 2008 by Abhishek K Singh

Personal loans are gaining popularity among loan seekers in a big way. Be it planning a vacation or getting you daughter married, down payment of your new house or medical obligations, a personal loan may be used for any purpose. A personal loan may be a secured or an unsecured loan where the end use of the money is not supposed to be declared while taking the loan. The rate for unsecured personal loans ranges from about 15 % to 25 % per annum depending up on the credit history and the income of the loan seeker. This type of personal loan is more popular among the public.

The problem begins when people take these kinds of loans for investments into various instruments including equities. Markets have been pretty volatile for last few months and are expected to behave the same for quite some time. So if you planning to take a personal loan and invest in to equities of mutual funds thinking that the markets are at low then think again. The inflation rate has been moving up. The last numbers posted was well above 12%. With the growth in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) around 8% to 9% the economy may see a negative growth in the current fiscal. The Reserve Bank of India has tried to tighten the liquidity situation by increasing the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) by 50 basis points. They may increase it by another 50 to 100 basis points if needed to keep a check on the inflation numbers. The condition worsens if the loan you have taken is on a floating interest rate. You end up losing money in the equity markets and pay more towards the loan at the same time. This is like being the rope in a tug of-war match where both sides are trying to pull you towards themselves to the fullest.

A better way to invest into equity market is by the way of arbitrage. It is buying in the cash market using the loan amount taken and selling it in derivative market by way of futures at a price which is more than the price bought added with the interest amount. On the day of maturity you reverse your position on both the markets and difference of the amount over and above the cash market price added with interest on the loan and the price sold in the futures market is your profit.

To explain arbitrage lets take the following example.

One lot of Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) is of 75 shares. Suppose the price of one RIL share is Rs. 2200 on 1st July, 2008. The maturity is on 31st July, 2008. The total amount of loan of 75 shares is (2200*75) = Rs. 165000. If the interest rate is 18% per annum then for one month the amount of interest is (165000*1.5%) = Rs. 2475 which is (2475/75) = Rs. 33 per share. Thus you need to short one lot of Reliance at any price which is more than (2200+33) = Rs. 2233. If you manage to short at a price say Rs. 2250, then you make a profit of (17*75) = Rs. 1275 on one lot which is almost 9.3% per annum. Now no matter what the price is on the expiry, you will manage to earn the amount stated above as you have already squared off your position.

The main thing over here is to find the right price to buy in the cash market and sell in the futures market. If you manage to hit the right price over the screen, then bingo! You have made money where everyone is losing it.

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The Apnapaisa Blog specifically disclaims any responsibility for any loss, actual or consequential, caused due to any decisions taken on the basis of any material appearing on the blog. Please consult your personal finance advisor, insurance agent, or broker before taking any decision to buy any financial product.