Category: Your Money

Weekly Recap: The Blip

NIFTY.2013-07-26.2013-08-02

 

The Nifty went down on both knees, down -3.54%, and Financial Tech and MCX got bentIT was once again the best performing sector, benefiting from the Rupee’s slide.

Index Performance

indexperf.2013-07-26.2013-08-02

 

Top winners and losers (CNX 100)

 

LUPIN +4.22%
BAJAJHLDNG +4.28%
TITAN +8.13%
JPASSOCIAT -28.78%
DLF -25.47%
PFC -19.20%
Investors were willing to ignore compressed margin at Titan and ramped the stock higher. DLF reflected the credit crunch in real-estate and infra.

ETFs

BANKBEES +0.86%
GOLDBEES +0.49%
INFRABEES +0.47%
NIFTYBEES -2.36%
PSUBNKBEES -2.76%
JUNIORBEES -6.72%
Banks tried to stage a comeback but the Junior Nifty got dragged down by the troubles at Financial Tech.

Advancers and Decliners

A lot of breakage here. Tread carefully.
adline2.2013-07-26.2013-08-02

Yield Curve

Yield curve

The yield curve remained inverted with long term rates trending higher.

Sector Performance

Sector perfornamce

Though for the weekend

During the whole modern era from 1750 onward—which contains, not coincidentally, the full life span of the United States—human well-being accelerated at a rate that could barely have been contemplated before. Instead of permanent stagnation, growth became so rapid and so seemingly automatic that by the fifties and sixties the average American would roughly double his or her parents’ standard of living. In the space of a single generation, for most everybody, life was getting twice as good.

At some point in the late sixties or early seventies, this great acceleration began to taper off. The shift was modest at first, and it was concealed in the hectic up-and-down of yearly data. But if you examine the growth data since the early seventies, and if you are mathematically astute enough to fit a curve to it, you can see a clear trend: The rate at which life is improving here, on the frontier of human well-being, has slowed.

Source: The Blip

NSEL – Contagone

For commodities, the futures or forward curve would typically be upward sloping (i.e. “normal”, “in contango”), since contracts for further dates would typically trade at even higher prices. In broad terms, backwardation reflects the majority market view that spot prices will move down, and contango that they will move up. Both situations allow speculators to earn a profit.”

A contango is normal for a non-perishable commodity that has a cost of carry. Such costs include warehousing fees and interest forgone on money tied up, less income from leasing out the commodity if possible. For perishable commodities, price differences between near and far delivery are not a contango. Different delivery dates are in effect entirely different commodities in this case, since fresh eggs today will not still be fresh in 6 months’ time.

Back in April 2012, the ministry of consumer affairs, food & public distribution shot a show cause notice to the National Spot Exchange Ltd (NSEL) asking it to explain why products that monetize contango shouldn’t be treated as short-selling. The problem was that brokerages and “wealth managers” were hawking products that involved simultaneously entering into a 3-day buy contract and a 20-day sell contract and pocketing the difference.

This ET article of October 2012 explains the trade: “There is no product offering assured or fixed rate. In physical trade, the practice is such that a trader or stockiest, who buys from mandi on cash payment and supplies to a mill such stock, gets payment from the mill after 15-25 days (varies from commodity to commodity and place to place). If the supplier insists for cash payment, the mill applies a CD (cash discount of 2%). Hence, the interest rate prevalent in physical trade of commodity varies from 24 % p.a. to 30 % p.a. Compared to that, on NSEL the cost of money involved in procurement has come down to 15 – 18 %, which is beneficial to the processor.”

However, the Consumer Affairs Ministry, in all its wisdom, decided that this practice needed to stop. In July, it asked NSEL not to launch new contracts until further instructions from the government. This was akin to yelling “fire” in a crowded movie theater and the commodity markets went into a tail spin. The NSEL had this to say in its press release: “Such structural change has disrupted the market equilibrium as volumes on the Exchange have gone down significantly. It created conflicting views in the minds of large number of members that there are certain regulatory issues pertaining to the contracts running on the Exchange in view of direction dated July 12, 2013, which has been widely reported in media. This abrupt action has created uncertainty and doubt about continuity of trading on the Exchange and hence most of the participants started withdrawing from the market. While the Exchange has run successfully without any disruption since last five years, such structural change has created market dis-equilibrium, leading to this scenario.”

Meanwhile, financing costs in the real-world for stokiests has probably gone back up and beyond 30%. And this happened:

FINANTECH - Financial Technologies (India) Limited - Technical Analysis Charts - Intraday - News - Options - StockViz

MCX - Multi Commodity Exchange of India Limited - Technical Analysis Charts - Intraday - News - Options - StockViz

Weekly Recap: Passion is an affliction

NIFTY.2013-07-19.2013-07-26

The Nifty ended -2.37% for the week, largely fueled by RBI’s move to tighten liquidity to save the Rupee from “evil speculators.” IT was the best performing sector, benefiting, ironically, from the Rupee’s slide.

Index Performance

Index performance

Top winners and losers (CNX 100)

HEROMOTOCO +5.22%
TECHM +7.55%
IDEA +9.40%
JPASSOCIAT -15.93%
CANBK -15.43%
UBL -15.00%
In spite of Abhishek Bachchan’s endorsement, IDEA was the best idea…

ETFs

GOLDBEES +2.04%
NIFTYBEES -2.48%
JUNIORBEES -3.27%
PSUBNKBEES -3.44%
BANKBEES -3.52%
INFRABEES -3.77%
Banks continued to under perform and Gold was the only place to hide this week.

Advancers and Decliners

Market breadth was largely negative…

advancers decliners

Yield Curve

Short term rates continued to rise, putting a squeeze on rate sensitives…
yield curve

Sector Performance

Rate sensitives and cyclicles got trounced
sector performance

Thought for the weekend

I’ve had it with optimism. Optimism, at least US style, got us into this mess. It gave us 30+ years of indulgent parenting in which self-esteem was considered to be more important than skill acquisition, self-discipline, cooperation, and learning to cope with adversity.

Source: NakedCapitalism

Is a rate hike imminent?

Is the RBI going to surprise the market with a rate hike when it meets on July 30th? If past is prelude, then the RBI, having to deal with a lame-duck government, might just pull the trigger on this one. Consider what it did during the Asian currency crisis back in 1997/98 (courtesy Barclays):

asian currency crisis

If FII inflows don’t hold up, then they might just do this. Interesting times…

 

Weekly Recap: Nobody Really Understands Gold

NIFTY.2013-07-12.2013-07-19

The Nifty clocked in a modest +0.34% rise this week, largely driven by FMCG.

Index Performance

indexperf.2013-07-12.2013-07-19

 

Top Winners and Losers (CNX 100)

 

GODREJCP +11.88%
GSKCONS +13.49%
HINDUNILVR +14.05%
ASHOKLEY -14.61%
YESBANK -13.43%
INDUSINDBK -11.50%
FMCG stole the show while Ashok Leyland stock holders lost their shirts…

ETFs

GOLDBEES +0.65%
NIFTYBEES +0.50%
JUNIORBEES +0.22%
INFRABEES -1.00%
PSUBNKBEES -5.14%
BANKBEES -5.42%
Banks got hammered thanks to RBI’s liquidity draining actions to support the rupee…

Advancers Decliners

The A/D line continued on its downward trajectory…
adline2.2013-07-12.2013-07-19

Yield Curve

The yield curve inverted…
yieldCurve.2013-07-12.2013-07-19

Sector Performance

And the market went all defense…

sectorperf.2013-07-12.2013-07-19

Thought for the weekend

Mr. Bernanke, Fed Chairman: Nobody really understands gold prices and I don’t pretend to understand them either.