Showing posts with label Dalal Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dalal Street. Show all posts

Monday, June 27, 2011

Nifty resistance seen at 5600-5665

Since last Friday, we had seen heavy buying by FIIs on front-line stocks, which in turn caused short-covering, especially at and around of 5400 levels.

Later on Monday, the Nifty opened with a lower bias on global cues, but once again got support at around 5400. Now, 5414 and 5400 will act as major support levels and the major resistance would be at 5600 and 5665 which can attain in the short term. On the option segment, the Nifty call option open interest has fallen in at-the-money and in-the-money call options which lead the put-call ratio to stabilise above 1.20 levels.

In previous weeks, the Nifty put-call ratio has fallen below 1.20 levels and even tested 0.47 levels, now the scenario has changed dramatically and the current ratio has lend support to bulls. But the major outlook still remains weak, because we are still far below the 200 DMA of 5752, and Dow Jones is also set to break the 200 DMA of 11776 in the short term. The rally which we are seeing is a bounce back and it can be short lived as the June expiry is nearing.

The major heavy weight stocks have participated in the recent bounceback, and the trend may continue for some more time even if there are rough patches of high inflation and high interest burden. The situation can be better capitalised by selling the Nifty and its call options in the July series at higher levels.

July short strangle is considered, and it can be created by selling 5700 Nifty call option and selling 5400 put option. Risk averse can exit from the position as the time values of both options have started to decay. Fresh short positions on Nifty futures can also be considered when the Nifty comes very close to 5665 levels with a strict a stoploss above 5690.

Long call options are advisable in TCS and Maruti; both these stocks are expected to move up due to low implied volatility of its options. Grasim, ACC and Bajaj Auto can witness profit-booking in the near term. Investors can create small short positions in these stocks in June futures segmen

Nifty ends above 5525;Power Grid,BPCL,ONGC up

Indian markets ended on a firm note Monday as buying activity picked up in oil&gas stocks following hike in fuel prices. The Empowered Group of Ministers increased diesel prices by Rs 3 per litre, kerosene by Rs 2 per litre and LPG by Rs 50 per cylinder. The decline in international crude oil prices also boosted investor sentiments.

According to dealers, some short covering was seen in capital goods, banks and auto stocks ahead of June series F&O expiry. The fuel hike is likely to push inflation in double-digits which is above the comfort zone.

"We estimate the direct impact on headline inflation of the June 24 increase to be 0.6 percentage point (ppt), and an overall impact of 0.9 ppt for FY12. We therefore raise our WPI inflation forecast to 8.6%, with most of the increase likely in the near term. We project the July and August headline inflation numbers could be in the double digits, higher than expected, but we continue to expect inflation to peak in September," said Tushar Poddar, Chief India Economist, Goldman Sachs .

There's some concern for the rate-sensitive sectors in near-term as the Reserve Bank of India is expected to continue to hike interest rates.

"We maintain our view of 50bps of cumulative tightening by December-11, although the RBI's anti-inflationary stance could result in a further elongation of the rate tightening cycle," said Rohini Malkani, Economist, Citi India.

National Stock Exchange's Nifty closed at 5526.60, up 55.35 points or 1.01 per cent. The broader index touched a high of 5552.65 and low of 5434.25 in trade today.

Bombay Stock Exchange's Sensex was at 18412.41, up 171.73 points or 0.94 per cent. The 30-share index hit a high of 18494.11 and low of 18132.70 intraday.

BSE Capital Goods Index was up 1.75 per cent, BSE Bankex gained 1.61 per cent, BSE Auto Index moved 1.49 per cent higher and BSE Oil&gas Index advanced 1.40 per cent.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch has raised its target price on state-run oil marketing companies Indian Oil, Hindustan Petroleum and Bharat Petroleum. HPCL target price is increased to Rs 500 from Rs 441 per share, Oil India to Rs 1,756 from Rs 1,583, while BPCL's target price was raised to Rs 739 Rs 650.

Citigroup has said that the price hikes were well ahead of its expectations and upgraded state-run oil marketing companies including Indian Oil Corp , Hindustan Petroleum Corporation , Bharat Petroleum Corporation and Oil India to "buy" citing these companies stand out as clear near-term beneficiaries due to the sharply reduced under-recovery burden.

Power Grid Corporation (5.07%), BPCL (4.71%), ONGC (4.01%), Reliance Capital (3.57%) and Maruti (3.16%) were the major Nifty gainers.

Reliance Infrastructure (-1.13%), Grasim (-1.10%), DLF (-0.99%), Ambuja Cements (-0.75%) and ITC (-0.72%) were the top index losers.

Market breadth was positive on the NSE with 1669 gainers against 1212 losers.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Inflation & possible RBI rate hike

Share investors are likely to cheer the increase in fuel prices that is expected to improve India's deteriorating finances, partly weighed down by fuel subsidies and demonstrate the government's commitment towards reforms. But this optimism is unlikely to translate into gains for stocks as the much-awaited decision on diesel and cooking gas prices will add to inflationary pressures in the short-term and may prompt the central bank to increase rates further.

"It is a bold move by the government after a long time and investors will like it," said Motilal Oswal, chairman & managing director, Motilal Oswal Financial Services . "While the move is inflationary in short term, the market has more or less discounted it, but a lot will depend on the monetary policy reaction," he said.

On June 16, the Reserve Bank of India raised key rates for the tenth time since March 2010 and is widely expected to tighten the screws further in July.

Focus to be on Europe, Crude Oil

Investors fear more rate increases would be excessive and would delay the economy's ability to bounce back once inflation settles around the central bank's comfort level of 6%. India's wholesale price inflation jumped to 9.06% in May. Fund managers expect inflation to accelerate to over 10% over the next few weeks as higher fuel prices would increase transportation costs of food.

In the longer run, most economists say, the higher price of diesel will encourage more rational use of the fuel and benefit the wider economy. "The increase in diesel and LPG prices may have an effect on inflation in the short term and in turn worry the market, but the move is beneficial for the economy and long-term investors will be happy," said Aneesh Srivastava, chief investment officer, IDBI Federal Life Insurance.

Brokers said the focus this week will continue to remain on the debt situation in Europe and the direction of crude oil prices. Benchmark Indian share indices - Sensex and Nifty - rose almost 3% on Friday, as foreign investors bought shares worth Rs 890 crore after global crude oil slid, Europe pledged to rescue Greece, and China hinted that it may be nearing the end of monetary tightening.

In the past few months, the perception of a government in disarray has gained ground as it has increasingly given the impression of being unable to deal with a blizzard of scams and agitations by groups claiming to represent civil society.

A widely-followed CEO poll carried out by industry body Ficci and published by ET in its edition dated June 13 reported that a majority of respondents expected little of the Congress-led UPA government. The price hikes may help reshape the impression of haplessness. Late on Friday, the government raised diesel rates by Rs 3, LPG by Rs 50 per cylinder and kerosene by Rs 2 per litre.

In May, the government had increased petrol prices by Rs 5 per litre. The government last increased prices of diesel and cooking gas on June 26 last year, despite global crude strengthening since then. "If all petro product prices are passed on properly, markets will bottom in the next three months and recover significantly thereafter because growth is still there," said Sankaran Naren, chief investment officer, ICICI Prudential Asset Management.

OMCS TO BENEFIT

Shares of oil marketing companies may surge on Monday as the government's decision to increase petroleum product prices will help trim losses that they incur from subsidised sale of oil and cooking gas. Brokers said the step has brought cheer to investors in these companies as they expected a lesser increase in diesel prices and none in kerosene and cooking gas.

Though the three oil marketing companies - Indian Oil Corp (IOC), Bharat Petroleum Corp (BPCL) and Hindustan Petroleum Corp (HPCL) - together will still incur revenue losses from fuel subsidies of Rs 121,000 crore this year, the increase in product prices will reduce their monthly borrowings and improve cash flows.

"Shares of oil marketing companies will rise this week not because the petro price increases will bring these companies back into profits, but that there were very little expectations from the government," said the investment head of a mutual fund owned by a public sector bank. "Also, their valuations are almost at rock bottom because these stocks have hardly seen any movement," he said.

Shares of BPCL and IOC have fallen about 4% so far in 2011 against the 10% fall in the Sensex during the period. HPCL shares, which surged 6% on Friday, have been unchanged since January. BPCL and IOC gained almost 3% each on Friday ahead of the meeting of the government representatives to decide on the prices. Oil marketing companies buy crude at international prices, but sell diesel, kerosene and LPG at subsidised prices fixed by the government.

The government compensates them through a mix of cash subsidies and discounts from oil exploration and production companies, including Oil & Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) and Oil India. Shares of ONGC and Oil India could also rise on Monday as their share of the overall subsidies will drop after the price increases. "Outlook of upstream companies have been clouded by the ad hoc nature of the subsidy-sharing formula. Lack of concrete subsidy-sharing mechanism has resulted in earnings/valuations of upstream companies being contingent upon government directives," said Enam Securities, in a note prior to the rise in prices.