Category: Your Money

Weekly Recap: something else is going to happen

Nifty weekly performance heatmap

The Nifty ended the week -0.24% (-0.18% in USD terms)

Index Performance

Saved by IT…

Index weekly performance

Top Winners and Losers

INDHOTEL +5.27%
HCLTECH +6.95%
TATAMOTORS +7.94%
CIPLA -10.48%
AMBUJACEM -7.18%
HINDALCO -6.11%
HCL Tech – the gift that keeps on giving?

ETFs

GOLDBEES +1.27%
BANKBEES -0.22%
NIFTYBEES -0.43%
INFRABEES -1.13%
PSUBNKBEES -2.32%
JUNIORBEES -2.43%
PSU Banks and Infrastructure are turning out to be the most hated sectors so far this year…

Advancers and Decliners

advancers and decliners

Investment Theme Performance

High beta continues to get crushed – will the real Modi rally please stand up?

Sector Performance

weekly sector performance

Yield curve

yield curve

Thought for the weekend

via Barry Ritholtz:

2014-Research

Analysts have been uniformly bearish on bonds and bearish on emerging market equities. To quote Rule No. 9 from Bob Farrell: “When all the experts and forecasts agree — something else is going to happen.”

Weekly Recap: Less is More

nifty weekly heatmap

The Nifty ended the week –0.43% (-0.17% in USD terms.)

Index Performance

IT corrected and pharma was boosted by expectation-beating earnings…

weekly index performance

Top Winners and losers

NTPC +7.51%
TATASTEEL +7.98%
COALINDIA +8.95%
BHEL -9.84%
ADANIENT -5.51%
SRTRANSFIN -5.41%
BHEL took a tumble. Just when you thought it couldn’t get any worse for the company, it did. But what a move in the metal stocks!

ETFs

JUNIORBEES +0.79%
GOLDBEES +0.34%
NIFTYBEES -0.19%
BANKBEES -0.58%
PSUBNKBEES -1.28%
INFRABEES -1.71%
Infrastructure continues to be in disfavor. Mid-caps saw a bit of a lift towards the end of the week.

Advancers and Decliners

If you stare hard enough, you can see the brown shoots:

advancers and decliners

Investment Theme Performance

This Quality-to-price theme has had an unbelievable ride so far. Time to rebalance.

Sector Performance

weekly sector performance

Thought for the weekend

Brief diagnostic interviews, lasting only five minutes each, were held with a series of patients at the time of their admission to hospital and then presented to groups of experienced psychiatrists who were required to make a diagnosis. The content of the interview was presented in three alternative ways — as a videotape, as an audiotape, or as a written transcript. It turned out that an accurate diagnosis could be made within the first few minutes of an interview and behavioural cues seem to be of little or no importance in this regard, irrespective of the medium (transcript, audio, etc…) i.e. less is more.

 

Source: Do Behavioral Cues Matter?

Returns on Recurring Deposits

Earlier, we discussed returns on a systematic investment plan (SIP) on an index ETF (To SIP an ETF or Not?) The analysis was incomplete because it did not discuss returns on a similar investment made on a risk-free asset. How would a recurring deposit over the same period of time perform?

To simplify, lets have a look at the overnight rates on our zero-coupon yield curve:

zero coupon yield

We can use these rates as a rough approximation for 1 month risk-free returns. What would returns be if an investor put in a fixed amount every month and re-invested it based on the risk-free yield above?

Since 2011: 9.66%
Since 2012: 10.25%
Since 2013: 11.98%

Compare this to SIP on ETF returns:

Since 2011: 7.40%
Since 2012: 8.58%
Since 2013: 5.33%

Three years worth of data points are too short to draw any conclusions. And unfortunately we don’t have yield curves before 2011, so we’ll take the 1-Month Mumbai Interbank rates as a proxy.

mibor

Recurring Deposit

Start Year (Jan) IRR
2004 7.87%
2005 8.03%
2006 8.18%
2007 8.33%
2008 8.54%
2009 8.90%
2010 9.49%
2011 9.86%
2012 10.13%
2013 11.19%

SIP on the JUNIORBEES ETF

Start Year (Jan) IRR
2004 10.77%
2005 9.48%
2006 8.66%
2007 8.47%
2008 9.81%
2009 8.70%
2010 4.91%
2011 7.40%
2012 8.58%
2013 5.33%

It looks like right up till 2009, the market outperformed the risk-free rate. And then took a turn for the worse and is yet to recover. Better days ahead, hopefully.

Update from Prakash Lekkala:

we will be taxed 30% on fixed deposit returns… so considering that, dollar cost averaging did better than FD, except in 2010 and 2013.

Bond MF’s would have done better since 2010, as you wouldn’t have paid tax after indentation

When Hot Money Turns Cold

EM Currencies

When capital flows into emerging markets, regulators are faced with a dilemma: They could raise rates and get a foreign credit boom, or cut rates and have a domestic credit boom. They chose door number 2. So emerging markets had big domestic credit parties. That ended last May when Bernanke said the Fed would soon start drawing down QE. Hot money ran for the door, currencies dropped, and the weakness that had been there all along became obvious.

Source: Everything You Need To Know About the Emerging Market Currency Collapse

But the problem really is where the flows go. If they go into new business development, creating jobs and economic activity that eventually is self-sustaining then they are to be welcomed. But if they go into real estate and/or construction (whether housing or infrastructure), or into funding consumer or government spending, then they could be blowing up potentially damaging bubbles. So the challenge is to determine when inward flows are helpful and when they are not. And this is not easy for governments to do.

Source: Capital Controls or Cooperation

The raw facts are that a remarkable amount of money has been pulled out of EM with indecent haste; and that this was the first emerging market sell-off to be conducted mostly through ETFs. They now account for about $300bn of the $1.3tn in emerging market equities. The total pulled out exceeded the sums that exited during the 2008 crisis, even before emergency rate rises in Turkey, India and South Africa. Emerging market ETFs suffered redemptions of $4.4bn (4.8% of their assets) last week. Over the past three months, they have shed 15.8% of their assets.

Source: Emerging markets are badly served by ETFs

Should the US Fed cooperate with the EMs as it goes about tapering? They did not even mention EMs in their latest meeting. And it makes sense.

While more than half of the U.S.’s exports go to countries with developing economies, not all are in the same boat. Of the handful of countries with the worst troubles — large trade imbalances and tumbling currencies — only Brazil and India are significant export destinations. The U.S. sends 2.8% of its exports to Brazil, and 1.4% to India. U.S. companies get about 52% of their international profits from Europe. So overall, a recovery in Europe could outweigh any struggles from Asia or other developing markets.

Source: Emerging-Market Contagion? Think Again, U.S. Trust Says

Investing: Man vs Monkey

A must read article at Priceonomics:

In 2010, a Russian circus monkey named Lusha picked an investment portfolio that “outperformed 94% of the country’s investment funds” to great acclaim. Given 30 blocks, each representing a different company, and asked “Where would you like to invest your money this year?”, the chimp picked out 8 blocks. An editor from a Russian finance magazine commented that Lusha “bought successfully and her portfolio grew almost three times.” He suggested that “financial whizz-kids” be “sent to the circus” instead of rewarded with large bonuses.

 

Can your portfolio beat a blind-folded monkey, when adjusted by risk?

Source: How Well Do Blindfolded Monkeys Play the Stock Market?