Thursday, August 13, 2009

Market Outlook for 13th Aug 2009

NIFTY FUTURES LEVELS
RESISTANCE
4484
4501
4532
4547
4578
SUPPORT
4450
4433
4385
4339
4324
4278
Buy DHAMPUR; EDSERV SOFTSYSTEMS
 
MSCI adds Unitech, Mahindra Satyam to global standard indices
NHPC IPO final book
-Overall 24 times; QIB 29 times; HNI 57 times Retail 3.9 times
-Enam garnered 52% or $11 billion of QIB book
 Jaypee Group & L&T
-Sign contract for super critical equipments
-Rs 4000 crore contract for super thermal project
 
Strong & Weak  futures  
This is list of 10 strong futures:
Tata Motors, Patni, Bharat Forge, Aban Offshore, Shree Renuka, Jindal Saw, Aurobindo Pharma, Cummins India, Mphasis & GT Offshore.
And this is list of 10 Weak futures:
Chambal Fert, MLL, Divi'S Lab, Suzlon, Colpal, Nagarjun Fertil, IOB, Federal Bank, Union Bank Of India  & HeroHonda.
 Nifty is sideways 
 
NIFTY FUTURES (F & O):
Above 4484 level, expect short covering up to 4499-4501 zone and thereafter expect a jump up to 4530-4532 zone by non-stop.
Support at 4433 & 4450 levels. Below these levels, selling may continue up to 4385-4387 zone and thereafter slide may continue up to 4339-4341 zone by non-stop.

Below 4324-4326 zone, expect panic up to 4278-4280 zone and have caution.

On Positive Side, cross above 4545-4547 zone can take it up to 4576-4578 zone. Supply expected at around this zone and have caution.
 
Short-Term Investors:  
Bullish Trend. 3 closes above 4473 level, it can zoom up to 4988 level by non-stop.
Stop Loss Triggered. 3 closes below 4473 level, it can tumble up to 4215 level by non-stop.
 
BSE SENSEX:
Higher opening expected. Profit Booking should start. 
Short-Term Investors:
 
Short-Term trend is Bearish and target at around 14235 level on down side.
Maintain a Stop Loss at 15973 level for your short positions too.
 
POSITIONAL BUY:
Buy DHAMPUR SUGAR MI (NSE Cash) 
Uptrend to continue.
Mild sell-off up to 88 level can be used to buy. If uptrend continues, then it may continue up to 92 level for time being. 

If crosses & sustains at above 94 level then uptrend may continue.

Keep a Stop Loss at 85 level for your long positions too.
 
Buy EDSERV SOFTSYSTEMS (NSE Cash) 
Uptrend to continue.
Mild sell-off up to 82 level can be used to buy. If uptrend continues, then it may continue up to 86 level for time being. 

If crosses & sustains at above 89 level then uptrend may continue.

Keep a Stop Loss at 79 level for your long positions too.

FII DATA
FII trading activity on NSE and BSE in Capital Market Segment(In Rs. Crores)
Category Date Buy Value Sell Value Net Value
FII 12-Aug-2009 2260.82 2765.81 -504.99
DII trading activity on NSE and BSE in Capital Market Segment(In Rs. Crores)
Category Date Buy Value Sell Value Net Value
DII 12-Aug-2009 1536.57 1345.99 +190.58
 
Global Cues & Rupee
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 9,361.61. Up by 120.16 points.
The Broader S&P 500 closed at 1,005.81. Up by 11.46 points.
The Nasdaq Composite Index closed at 1,998.72. Up by 28.99 points.
The partially convertible rupee INR=IN ended at 48.37/38 per dollar on yesterday, lower than Tuesday's close of 47.97/98.
 
 Interesting findings on web:
Stocks rallied Wednesday, buoyed by an improved outlook from the Fed and an encouraging housing report.
"I think [traders] like the rosy outlook from the Fed," said Dan Cook, senior market analyst at IG Markets. "The initial reactionwas to sell off a bit but when the market fully digested the statement, it seemed to like it," Cook added.
Cook says he would still be cautious of today's gains, particularly after the market's recent four-week rally, in which it gained 15 percent.
"There's still some downside to the market that's not priced in," Cook said, citing the shaky jobs front, a big credit restraint on consumers and commercial real estate among the potential speed bumps for the market. "A substantial correction would not be out of line at this point," he said.
On Wednesday at the New York Stock Exchange, the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 120.16 points, or 1.3%, to 9361.61, the Standard & Poor's 500 rose 11.46 points, or 1.15%, to 1005.81 and the Nasdaq Composite rose 28.99 points, or 1.47%, to 1998.72.
Financials were the biggest gainer, with the S&P financial-sector index up 2 percent, rebounding off a 3.5-percent slide Tuesday.
Good news on the housing front this morning: Existing-home sales rose 3.8 percent to an annual rate of 4.76 million in the second quarter, the National Association of Realtors reported. And the median sales price rose 4 percent to $174,100 in the second quarter from the first, though prices are still down nearly 16 percent from a year ago.
The Federal Reserve said the economy was improving and left interest rates at their lowest level in history. The major indexes jumped early in the session and rallied again after the central bank's statements.
The Fed closed out its two-day policy meeting this afternoon without making any major changes to stimulus programs while saying the economy appears to be stabilizing.
Financials shares led the market Wednesday after the Fed left interest rates low and Merrill Lynch analysts upgraded insurer Allstate ( ALL - news - people ). The Financial Select Sector SPDR, an exchange-traded fund, gained 2% during regular trading.
Allstate was up 6.3%.
Technology shares also helped the session's gains with the Technology SPDR ETF up 2% for the day after chip equipment firm Applied Materials ( AMAT - news - people ) beat analysts estimates Tuesday evening. Applied gained 3.3% for the day.
Toll Brothers [TOL  23.42    2.94  (+14.36%)   ] also delivered some much-needed good news on the housing sector. The homebuilder projected a 42-percent drop in third-quarter revenue but said the number of contracts signed increased for the first time in 16 quarters.
Toll Brothers shares jumped more than 14 percent. Beazer gained more than 9 percent, while Lennar and Pulte advanced 4 percent.
Mortgage applications fell 3.5 percent, however, as rising mortgage rates depressed refinancing demand. And the trade gap widened in June to $27 billion as higher prices on oil imports offset gains in exports.
Today's Treasury auction of $23 billion in 10-year notes was met with mediocre demand. The high yield was 3.734 percent, and the bid-to-cover ratio was 2.49, in line with the recent average of 2.48. This latest round will conclude tomorrow with a 30-year auction.
AIG [AIG  25.33    0.41  (+1.65%)   ] shares rose 1.7 percent after the insurer agreed to sell its Hong Kong consumer finance and India-based IT services units.
Macy's [M  16.40    0.93  (+6.01%)   ] jumped 6 percent after the retailer beat expectations, helped by cost-cutting efforts, but fell short with its full-year outlook.
And Sara Lee [SLE  9.72    -1.08  (-10%)   ], which makes everything from coffee cakes to Jimmy Dean sausages, also topped forecasts. But its shares fell 10 percent as sales fell sharply.
There are signs that the IPO market is returning to normal: Emdeon shares [EM  16.52    1.02  (+6.58%)   ] jumped 6.6 percent on their debut, the 15th of 17 IPOs this year to rise on their first day of trading.
And Starwood Property Trust [STWD  20.00  ---  UNCH  (0)   ] closed at $20, its IPO price. Both Starwood and Emdeon increased the size of their IPOs at pricing to meet demand.
Centex (CTX: 12.54, 0.59, 4.94%) also one of the gainers.
Ford Motor Co. (F: 7.71, -0.1, -1.28%) said it will boost production of its Ford Focus vehicle, including working factories overtime and Saturday shifts, Dow Jones reported.
The U.S. Department of Justice and Swiss bank UBS (UBS: 15.3199, 0.5999, 4.08%) said they have reached an agreement in principle regarding the release of 52,000 accounts tied to wealthy American banking clients. The accounts are part of an IRS tax probe into offshore assets that allegedly American clients hid to avoid paying taxes. The details of the agreement were not released and the settlement is pending court approval.
Microsoft (MSFT: 23.53, 0.4, 1.73%) and Nokia (NOK: 13.21, 0.11, 0.84%) announced a partnership to bring Microsoft Office software onto Nokia mobile devices.
Clothing retailer Liz Claiborne (LIZ: 3.99, -0.029, -0.72%) reported a loss of 48 cents, compared with an 11-cent profit a year ago as revenue plunged by nearly a third $683.8 million. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected a loss of 40 cents and revenue of $691 million.
The Federal Reserve on Wednesday gave its most upbeat assessment of the American economy since the financial crisis unfolded, adding its voice to a number of recent reports suggesting that the great recession was ending.
Policymakers at the Fed, after warning about a steep economic decline just a few months ago, said the economy was pulling out of its slump and the central bank was winding down one of the debt-purchase programs it had created to stimulate growth.
"Economic activity is leveling out," the Fed monetary policymaking committee said after its two-day meeting.
"We're no longer at DEFCON 1," Richard Yamarone, economist at Argus Research, said, referring to the defense term for being under siege. "The Fed is pulling in some of its life preservers now that the economy is no longer sinking."
The more upbeat assessment reassured investors that they've been making the right bets and stocks bounded higher, with the Dow Jones industrial average rising 120 points.
But there was still plenty of caution in the Fed's language, and as expected it left official interest rates at record levels of near zero.
As in its previous statement after meeting in late June, the Fed said Wednesday that "economic activity is likely to remain weak for a time." And the central bank expressed concerns about ongoing job losses, lower household wealth, tight credit and sluggish income growth -- all factors constraining consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of U.S. economic activity.
What is more, the Fed gave no indication that it was considering imminent hikes in the key federal funds rate -- the rate banks charge one another for overnight loans. Policymakers voted 10-0 to maintain the rate at zero percent to 0.25 percent, where it has been since December, and reiterated that they would likely keep it there for "an extended period."
"They're nowhere close to thinking about ... raising rates," said Alan Levenson, chief economist at T. Rowe Price Group in Baltimore. Many analysts believe the Fed won't lift rates until next year, and some say not until 2011.
Yet the Fed stated more strongly than before that household spending was stabilizing and that businesses were making progress in aligning inventory with sales. Many companies have pulled back sharply on inventory in recent months, suggesting that they soon will have to ramp up production and orders so they can restock store shelves and warehouses.
With economic conditions improving, the Fed also said Wednesday that in October it would phase out its program to purchase $300 billion of Treasury securities, which the central bank undertook to reduce long-term interest rates and help prop up the economy. The program was announced in March and slated to expire in September.
Some analysts said that the end of the Treasury purchases signaled the beginnings of an eventual withdrawal of liquidity injected by the central bank. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has pushed extraordinary stimulus measures to pump money into the economy to loosen up credit markets and help revive the economy.
"I think it's a vote of confidence in the economy," said Chris Rupkey, economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi in New York.
"They're taking their foot off the gas pedal," he said of the winding down of the Treasury purchases.
The Fed did not announce changes in its other programs to buy various debt, including $1.25 trillion of mortgage-backed securities.
U.S. markets weren't able to make much Wednesday of a Federal Reserve statement that showed only a very subtle improvement in policymakers' views of the economic recovery.
While stocks embarked on a slow climb, government bond prices dipped below the session lows hit the previous hour on a disappointing auction of 10-year notes. The dollar initially exploited a tentative upgrade in the statement's language on the economy, with a rally against the euro and yen, but then it fell back.
By 3:15 p.m. in New York, the euro was at $1.4214 from $1.4154, and the dollar also pared gains against the yen, still higher on the day at Y96.23 from Y95.93. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 172 points at 9413.61, and 10-year Treasury note had recovered from a swoon to hit breakeven for a 3.70% yield.
The most striking revision in the Federal Open Markets Committee's latest statement is it now sees "economic activity leveling out." The last one, in June, referred to a slower pace of contraction.
But for the government bond market, the key was the FOMC's decision to delay the expiry of its Treasurys purchase program from
September, to end-October. The extra month allows it to spread out the remaining 15% of the $300 billion it committed to the program when it launched in March, spending less with each market intervention.
The Fed is "buying time" by extending the Treasury purchase program to keep a moderate influence over yields and avoid upsetting the market with a more sudden withdrawal, said James Newman, head of U.S. government and agency trading in New York at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc.
The Fed gave no hints of a timeline for withdrawing the other special lending and purchase programs that have seen financial markets through the last 18 months of crisis, though, reiterating instead that the central bank "is monitoring the size and composition of its balance sheet and will make adjustments to its credit and liquidity programs as warranted."
The Fed surprised no one by leaving its key target rate at the 0%-0.25% range it has held for the past eight months, and repeated that "economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels [in the target] for an extended period."
Bets on a hike are little changed in the futures markets since the statement's release - positions in Fed funds contracts are evenly split on the likelihood of a rise to 0.5% by February next year.
Bucking bad news, oil tracked the stock market Wednesday and closed above $70 a barrel. Data showed a rise in U.S. stockpiles and the International Energy Agency lowered its forecast for demand next year.
The dollar fell against most major currencies on Wednesday after the U.S. Federal Reserve said it would keep interest rates low for an extended period.
The Fed decided to keep its key rate at zero to 0.25 percent at its monetary policy meeting on Wednesday, in line with expectations. The central bank said it "continues to anticipate that economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period".
Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in June suggests that economic activity is leveling out, said the Fed in a statement released after the meeting.
The Fed said the U.S. economic activity is likely to remain weak for a time and committed to employ all available tools to promote economic recovery and to preserve price stability. It also decided to gradually slow the pace of buying Treasury securities to "promote a smooth transition in markets."
The euro bought 1.4214 dollars in late New York trading compared with 1.4148 dollars it bought late Tuesday. The pound rose to 1.6511 dollars from 1.6476 dollars.
The dollar fell to 1.0879 Canadian dollars from 1.1015 Canadian dollars, and fell to 1.0772 Swiss francs from 1.0819 Swiss francs. It rose slightly to 96.23 Japanese yen from 96.02 Japanese yen.

Oil& Gold:
Oil prices hovered around $70 per barrel Wednesday afternoon after the Federal Open Market Committee held the benchmark Federal Funds rate between 0% and 0.25% and signaled an eventual end to its program of buying long-term Treasury's to help bolster the economy.
"The announcement was initially bearish for oil," said Phil Flynn, senior market analyst at PFG Best Research in Chicago. 
"The (Federal Open Market Committee) is talking out of both sides of their mouth, sending a signal that quantitative easing is coming to an end but they kept the door open that if conditions change they can go back to it. But in a clear way they are sending a message that the party is over."
Light crude for September delivery closed up 71 cents a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surprising some analysts who expected crude to drop after an earlier EIA report that inventories rose by 2.5 million barrels over last week. That number was far higher than the expected 1 million barrels. Crude continued to dance around the $70 per barrel mark in after-hours trading.
Flynn said a weak dollar has bolstered crude prices and the government's attempts to prop up the economy have also proved bullish for oil.
"I think what is happening is, oil is torn," he said. The good news is the economy is getting better so we should be using more oil.  The bad news is the economy is getting better, which will lead to a reverse in the stimulus money, which could send oil lower.  I think oil will remain under pressure particularly as the dollar gets stronger.   
The Paris-based International Energy Agency also released its monthly report Wednesday, saying growth in worldwide demand will be lower in 2010 than previously forecast.    
Oil companies such as Exxon Mobil (XOM: 69.11, 0.96, 1.41%), Marathon Oil (MRO: 30.54, 0.63, 2.11%) and Total (TOT: 54.9704, 1.5704, 2.94%) were higher on the day.
Gold inched up towards $950 onThursday maintaining the previous day's uptrend after the U.S.Federal Reserve signalled its resolve to keep interest rates near zero, a move seen boosting bullion's status as an inflation hedge.
Bonds:
In Treasury bonds, short-dated notes posted gains while benchmark 10-year notes fell, a steepening of the yield curve that analysts attributed to the Fed's decision to hold down short-term rates into the future. The 10-year note closed at a yield of 3.72%, already down sharply from a two-month high last Friday of 3.89%.
What to expect:
THURSDAY: Retail sales; weekly jobless claims; import/export prices; business inventories; Treasury 30-year auction; Earnings from Wal-Mart, Kohl's and Nordstrom.
FRIDAY: CPI; industrial production; consumer sentiment; Earnings from JCPenney.
The following data is expected on Thursday: ECON
German flash GDP for Q2                        (0600 GMT) -
French preliminary GDP for Q2                  (0645 GMT) -
Swiss combined producer/import prices for July (0715 GMT) -
ECB publishes monthly bulletin                 (0800 GMT) -
Eurozone flash GDP figure for Q2               (0900 GMT) -
U.S. import/export prices for July             (1230 GMT) -
Weekly U.S. jobless claims                     (1230 GMT) -
U.S. retails sales for July                    (1230 GMT) -
U.S. business inventories for June             (1400 GMT) -
Markets will take measure of the American consumer Thursday, when monthly retail sales for July are released and Walmart reports its quarterly earnings.
Retail sales, reported at 8:30 am New York time, will continue to show a consumer under pressure but could be slightly better than last month's number. Economists forecast that July sales will be up 0.8 percent. Excluding autos, it is expected to be up 0.1 percent.
Discounter Walmart reports earnings before the opening bell and is expected to show flat results of 86 cents per share. Other reports of note include weekly jobless claims and import prices, both at 8:30 am and business inventories at 10 am. Other earnings expected Thursday include Dr. Pepper Snapple, Estee Lauder, Kohl's, Urban Outfitters, Autodesk and Nordstrom.
Accounting rule maker FASB holds a board meeting Thursday that is getting a lot of attention for its potential impact on banks. FASB is expected to consider a proposal to have financial instruments carried on balance sheets at fair value. There is no immediate action expected on this proposal, but if it results in modification of the mark-to-market rule it could impact bank earnings.
Stocks Wednesday broke a two-day losing streak, with the Dow up 120 points, or 1.3 percent at 9361. The S&P 500 recovered 11 points, or 1.1 percent, to close at 1005. The financial sector was the best performer, up 2 percent.
The dollar, back in step with the "reflation trade," fell as the stock market moved higher.
Long-term Treasurys were weaker as the government auctioned $23 billion in 10-year notes, and the Fed said it would wind down its purchases of government debt in October. The yield on the 10-year rose to 3.72 percent from Tuesday's 3.67 percent.
On Thursday, the Treasury plans to auction another $15 billion in 30-years.
The Fed, in its post-FOMC statement Wednesday, also said the economy is leveling out and said it would keep its Fed funds rate near zero, as expected.
Traders were encouraged by late afternoon news that hedge fund manager John Paulson was loading up on bank stocks in the second quarter. In an SEC filing, Paulson & Co reported that it held 168 million Bank of America [BA  46.34    0.95  (+2.09%)   ] shares as of June 30.
CNBC's Charles Gasparino was first to report the Paulson holdings.
Paulson's investments are closely watched since he predicted the collapse of the mortgage market and melt down in bank stocks. Paulson alsoreported holding 35 million shares of Regions Financial and 2 million shares of Goldman Sachs, among others.
Asia:
Japan's stock market rose slightly on Thursday, lifted by exporters such as Honda Motor after the Federal Reserve suggested the U.S. economy is  through the worst of the recession.
The benchmark Nikkei [JP;N225  10511.14    76.1397  (+0.73%)   ] slipped 1.4 percent the previous day after rising to a 10-month high of 10,587.36 on Tuesday.
Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) shares rose for the first time in three trading days Thursday morning on news that it plans to introduce a new low-price hybrid as early as 2011.
Shares in Astellas Pharma Inc. (4503) ended their two-day retreat Thursday, rising as much as 60 yen to 3,630 yen, despite a brief dip earlier that morning.
Namura Shipbuilding Co. (7014) shares opened bid-only Thursday morning, before trading limit-up at 660 yen, 100 yen above Wednesday's close.
The broader Topix gained 0.8 percent.
Kawasaki Heavy Industries and other companies involved in making trains gained after the chief of state-owned Vietnam Railways told  the Nikkei business daily that Vietnam will use Japan's bullet train technology in building its high-speed railway system connecting Hanoi and the southern commercial hub of Ho Chi Minh City.
Mazda Motor rose after the Nikkei business daily said the company could raise its domestic production outlook for April-September by about 10 percent as stimulus programs in Japan and abroad boost demand.
Mazda outperformed the transport subindex, which rose 1.2 percent.
Australian shares were also higher in early trade, bolstered by banks, though top miner BHP Billiton and Telstra slipped  after their results.
The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index [AU;XJO  4400.6    57.50  (+1.32%)   ] was up, as was New Zealand's benchmark NZX 50 index.
But in Asia, investors were also a little cautious on how Chinese stock markets may fare Thursday. The Shanghai Composite Index dropped 4.7% Wednesday to a one-month low amid concerns China was already curbing bank lending, though Beijing has recently repeated its intention to keep its monetary policy loose and supportive.
First NZ Capital strategist Chris Green said: "Given that China's a key motivator of why people are more confident about an economic upturn, if there is any question about that, that will have a negative impact. That is the major risk to the global growth story."
The Tokyo stock market was lifted by short covering, and as auto stocks bounced after declining Wednesday. Toyota Motor was up 1.2% and Honda gained 1.6%.
Steel and brokerage stocks were also stronger but "there are not enough buying cues for players to buy beyond short-covering," said Yumi Nishimura, a market analyst at Daiwa Securities SMBC. With no domestic trading cues, "once short-covering runs its course, the market will just wait for more U.S. economic indicators."
Commonwealth Bank of Australia was the biggest contributor to the market's strength in Sydney as the stock rose 2.6% courtesy of broker upgrades after the bank's healthy results Wednesday. BHP was down 0.6% on concerns over high valuations.
Telstra was 2.5% lower, even though it reported full year profits rose 10.3%, beating expectations. The quality of the results was slightly weaker than expected, said Macquarie, with growth driven by cost cutting, offsetting disappointing sales revenue growth of 2.9% compared with the 3.4% Macquarie expected.
In New Zealand, First NZ Capital broker James Lee said the FOMC's comments, "which didn't really change the world," were not responsible for the local market gains, as investors chased cyclical stocks, building materials, airline and manufacturers. "The rally we've seen in markets is well beyond the worst being over - the market is now pricing recovery."
Fletcher Building was up 2.9% while Air New Zealand rose 4.1%, Nuplex Industries gained 4.7% and Fisher & Paykel Appliances was up 3.7%.
Korean stocks were lifted by banks and auto stocks, and as foreigners were net buyers. Shinhan Financial rose 3.1% while Kia Motors added 1.9%.
Ssangyong Motor was up by its daily limit of 15% as its creditor Korea Development Bank said it would provide KRW130 billion to help Ssangyong normalize its operations.
Foreign exchange markets were quiet as the FOMC "took a very balanced approach" in its statement, said Hideaki Inoue, a senior dealer at Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking.
He said if global stocks gained more in coming weeks, that could push yen-crosses up, "and in that case, the dollar/yen could go into a 97 to 98 range." The euro in turn was likely "to be sensitive to moves in Chinese share markets, which have become a key focus recently."
The U.S. dollar was at Y96.05 from Y96.19 in late New York trade. The euro was at $1.4214, from $1.4196 and at Y136.53, from Y136.63.
Japanese government bonds were higher, but gains were limited by the rise in Tokyo shares. The lead September futures contract was up 0.01 at 137.51 points and the two-year cash yield was 0.5 basis point lower at 0.26%.
JGBs were supported as investors relieved the week's major events were done, RBS Securities strategist RuiXue Xu said. "This may help make domestic investors feel comfortable to return to the market."
Spot gold was at $949.20 per troy ounce, up $2.00 from the New York close. Barclays Capital said gold was trending higher, but remained in the middle of a large range. "In the bigger picture, we regard the contracting range of the past six months as constructive for an eventual move through $981 toward the $1,033 peak and beyond, to new all-time highs."
Base metals were still largely flat with the LME three-month copper contract steady from the London kerb at $6,190 per ton and aluminum at $1,979 per ton, down $6.
The September Nymex crude futures contract was up 56 cents at $70.72 per barrel on Globex

HSI 20815.57 +380.33 +1.86%. (08.37 AM IST).
Hong Kong shares rebounded Thursday after the U.S. Federal Reserve said economic activity was leveling out and promised to keep interest rates exceptionally low. But Shanghai shares extended their decline on fears bank lending would slow. The Shanghai Composite dropped 1.1% to 3,079.86 on top of its 4.7% slump the day before, with banks and metal producers falling further. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index rose 2% to 20,847.09 on gains across the board, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index added 1.8%.

'The World Is in Trouble': Deutsche Bank Chief Economist
The global economy still faces turmoil as government try to figure out how to move out of fiscal rescue packages, which could lead to another two downturns, Deutsche Bank Chief Economist Norbert Walter said Thursday.
In addition, nervousness on the part of major dollar holders could pressure the greenback and lead to a very worrying 2010, Walter said.
Norbert said recently in research notes "the world is in trouble."
"I believe that the rescue packages brought on have been so costly for so many governments that the exit from this fiscal policy will bevery painful, very painful indeed," he said. "Some of us are already talking about a W-shaped recovery. I'd probably talk about a triple-U-shaped recovery because there are so many stumbling blocks here to get out of this."
"There are a few countries that have not dismissed people, they had a dramatic drop in their sales but they kept on people because they believed the recession would be very shallow," Walter said. "They now have to fire people. That will increase unemployment and they therefore, of course, may be endangering retail sales in some countries."
If Australia hikes rates in September or October, markets "will certainly shiver" and cause zig-zagging at the bottom of the recession, Walter said.
And while the White House struggles with issues like health care and puts a fiscal policy exit strategy on the back burner, there are big concerns of about the direction of the U.S. dollar.
"I'm deeply worried about the worries of those investors who have invested a lot, really a lot into the dollar" like the Chinese, Japanese, Arabs and Russians, he said.
"If they have second thoughts about the quality of this currency then the dollar is bound to weaken" which means higher long-term interest rates for a country where government debt is approaching 100 percent of gross domestic product, he said.
If that happens, "2010 could be a worrisome year for all of us," he said.
Chinese bank eyes top insurer for growth
Bank of Communications (BOCOM), China's fourth-largest lender by market value, may launch its own insurance unit as early as this year as part of its efforts to become a financial conglomerate in the long run, said Thursday's China Daily.
The bank plans to buy a stake in China Life-CMG Life Insurance Co, an insurer now 51-percent owned by China Life Insurance, said Dicky Yip, vice-president of the bank. He declined to reveal details of the deal.
The move echoed earlier market rumors that a slew of major Chinese lenders, including China Construction Bank and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, are eyeing stake buys in the nation's insurers in a bid to diversify their financial services portfolios.
In a high-profile deal in early June, Ping An Insurance (Group) announced it was buying a controlling stake in Shenzhen Development Bank (SDB), initiating its ambitious goal to become a comprehensive financial supermarket offering a wide range of services under one roof.
The tie-up is still awaiting regulatory approval, which could take several more months, adding to concerns for other Chinese financial firms that seek to undertake such cross-sector acquisitions, analysts said.
China drafts regulation on monopoly price
China's top economic planner, the National Development and Reform Commission, unveiled Wednesday a draft regulation on monopoly prices.
The regulation applies to cases of monopoly prices both inside and outside the country, when monopoly prices outside the country impact the domestic market, according to the regulation posted on the commission's Web site.
Other than deals reached among more than two parties for the purpose of monopolizing prices, power abuse of government agencies to eliminate or limit competition is also regarded as violation of the regulation.
Those who violate the regulation would be punished according to stipulations in the country's anti-monopoly law, according to the commission.
Individual retailers or producers may face confiscation of illegal earnings and a fine of up to 10 percent of last year's sales, while industry associations are subject to a fine of no more than 500,000 yuan (73,529.4 U.S. dollars) or could be dismissed as an association.
Government agencies that violate the regulation would be ordered by their superiors to orrect their actions, and officials held responsible would be disciplined according to relevant laws.
The commission said the regulation was aimed to prevent monopoly prices and to endorse fair competition so as to safeguard the interests of consumers and the public.
The commission is soliciting public opinion for the regulation until Sept. 6.
China's fiscal revenue up 10.2% in Jul
China's fiscal revenue grew 10.2% year on year to RMB 669.59 billion in July, said the Ministry of Finance in a statement published on its website.
The central government's revenue increased 12.1% from a year earlier to RMB 375.24 billion in July, while local government revenues rose 8% to RMB 294.35 billion, according to the statement.
In the first seven months, the nation's fiscal revenue totaled RMB 4.07 trillion, slightly down 0.5% from the same period of last year.
Fiscal revenue has been on the rebound since May when it grew 4.8% year on year. There was a 19.6% increase in June. In the first four month of this year, the figure declined 9.9% on a yearly basis.
In the first seven months, there was a 3.5% year-on-year decline in domestic value added tax, a 69.8% surge in domestic consumption tax, an 8.2% growth in sales tax, an 8.9% decline in corporate income tax, a 29.3% decrease in customs duties and a 69.2% plunge in stock trading stamp tax.
China's fiscal expenditure was RMB 498.57 billion in July, up 9.3% year on year. The figure brought the total fiscal expenditure in the first seven months to RMB 3.39 trillion, up 23.5% from a year earlier.
SingTel Posts First Profit Increase in Five Quarters
Singapore Telecommunications Ltd., Southeast Asia's largest phone company, posted its first profit gain in five quarters, helped by higher earnings from India.
Net income rose 7.7 percent to S$945.4 million ($654 million), or 5.92 Singapore cents a share, in the three months ended June 30 from S$878.1 million, or 5.5 cents, a year earlier, the company said in a statement today. Profit from wireless units overseas, including India and Indonesia, gained 16 percent, generating more than half of SingTel's earnings.
Bharti Airtel Ltd., India's biggest phone company, accounted for 24 percent of SingTel's income and was the biggest profit contributor from overseas. SingTel is counting on Bharti, which is negotiating a merger with South Africa's MTN Group Ltd., to tap countries with higher growth potential as markets including Singapore and Philippines become saturated.
"The current operating environment remains a challenge," Chief Executive Officer Chua Sock Koong said in the statement. "We will also explore and monitor investment opportunities and will be disciplined when reviewing these opportunities."
SingTel fell 1.6 percent to S$3.18 in Singapore trading yesterday. First-quarter net income was in line with the S$943.5 million median of four analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales rose 1.9 percent to S$3.85 billion.
    
 
INVESTMENT VIEW
Is Bombay Dyeing Over-Valued? Well, there are no financials at all.
 
Bombay Dyeing-Look At The Q1 2010 Numbers
Revenues Q1 Rs crore Rs 349 (Rs 330)
Loss Rs 19 crore (Rs 48 crore)
Equity Rs 38.6 (Rs 38.6)
 
-The above numbers have been achieved after booking a profit of Rs 60 crore on transfer of company's interest in freehold property to a wholly owned subsidiary-a case of fictitious accounting.
 
-Bombay Dyeing has also not made any provision for loss of Rs 22 crore on account of Forex Hedges it has taken in the past.
 
-Surprisingly investment in Real Estate is as big a business for Bombay Dyeing with investment at Rs 745 crore, those in Polyester and Textiles business is roughly Rs 1400 crore.
 
-Is Bombay Dyeing now a Real Estate entity? Will Real Estate operations sustain over a length of time is difficult to say, but it is obvious that the Textile operations are losing money hand over fist.
 
-So is this stock carrying a fictitious or a totally speculative bubble value?
 

(Some forward looking statements on projections, estimates, expectations & outlook are included to enable a better comprehension of the Company prospects. Actual results may, however, differ materially from those stated on account of factors such as changes in government regulations, tax regimes, economic developments within India and the countries within which the Company conducts its business, exchange rate and interest rate movements, impact of competing products and their pricing, product demand and supply constraints.)
 
--
Arvind Parekh
+ 91 98432 32381

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Market Outlook for 12th Aug 2009

 spot levels today
NSE Nifty Index   4471.35 ( 0.76 %) 33.70       
  1 2 3
Resistance 4521.80 4572.25   4633.70  
Support 4409.90 4348.45 4298.00

BSE Sensex  15074.59 ( 0.43 %) 64.82     
  1 2 3
Resistance 15240.75 15406.91 15595.17
Support 14886.33 14698.07 14531.91
INTRADAY calls for 12th Aug 2009
Positional
Buy FCSsoft-51 @ 48 for a target 60-65 stop loss 45
Buy GVKPIL-46 @ 44 for a target 50-55 stop loss 41
Buy Orbitcorp-192 @above 197 for a target 207 stop loss 192
 
Strong & Weak  futures  
This is list of 10 strong futures:
Bharat Forge,Patni,Cummins India,Shree Renuka,Tata Motors,FSL,HCL Tech,Mphasis,Jindal Saw & GT OFFshore.
And this is list of 10 Weak futures:
Suzlon,Chambal Fert,Divi'S Lab,Indn Hotels,Nagarjun Fertil,Patel Engineering,Hero Honda.Pantaloon Retail ,Educomp & MLL
Nifty is sideways
 
RIL-NTPC gas dispute: from agencies
-RIL files caveat in SC ahead of NTPC appeal
-NTPC expected to move SC against Bombay HC ruling in July
-Bombay HC allowed RIL to amend plea in gas dispute with NTPC
Mint Exclusive
-NTPC, NHPC, PGCIL and PFC to sell entire stake in PTC
-4 PSU promoters together hold 16.32% stake in PTC
-Move prompted as PTC competes in utilities space
-Final decision on stake sale requires cabinet approval
 
UCO Bank - Exclusive: Sources Say
-UCO Bank's General Insurance Venture to consist of banks' consortium
-3-4 mid-sized domestic banks to hold 74% stake in venture
-Foreign partner to hold 26% in UCO Bank's General Insurance Venture
 
NIFTY FUTURES (F & O):
Below 4447 level, expect profit booking up to 4401-4403 zone and thereafter slide may continue up to 4357-4359 zone by non-stop.
Hurdle at 4474 level. Above this level, buying may continue up to 4481-4483 zone and thereafter expect a jump up to 4496 level by non-stop.

Multiple Resistance Zones at 4525-4527 zone & at 4540-4542 zone. Sell at around these zones. Stop Loss at 4583-4585 zone.

On Negative Side, break below 4342-4344 zone can create panic up to 4298-4300 zone. If breaks & sustains this zone then downtrend may continue.
 
Short-Term Investors:
Bullish Trend. 3 closes above 4473 level, it can zoom up to 4988 level by non-stop.
Stop Loss Triggered. 3 closes below 4473 level, it can tumble up to 4215 level by non-stop.
 
BSE SENSEX:  
Lower opening expected. Profit Booking should start. 

Short-Term Investors:
Short-Term trend is Bearish and target at around 14235 level on down side.
Maintain a Stop Loss at 15973 level for your short positions too.
 
POSITIONAL BUY:
Buy NDTV LTD (NSE Cash)
 
Uptrend to continue.
Mild sell-off up to 172 level can be used to buy. If uptrend continues, then it may continue up to 187 level for time being. 

If crosses & sustains at above 197 level then uptrend may continue.

Keep a Stop Loss at 162 level for your long positions too.
 
Buy CUMMINS (I) (NSE Cash)
 
Uptrend to continue.
Mild sell-off up to 312 level can be used to buy. If uptrend continues, then it may continue up to 329 level for time being. 

If crosses & sustains at above 339 level then uptrend may continue.

Keep a Stop Loss at 302 level for your long positions too.
 
FII DATA
FII trading activity on NSE and BSE in Capital Market Segment(In Rs. Crores)
Category Date Buy Value Sell Value Net Value
FII 11-Aug-2009 2191.36 2368.83 -177.47
DII trading activity on NSE and BSE in Capital Market Segment(In Rs. Crores)
Category Date Buy Value Sell Value Net Value
DII 11-Aug-2009 1451.61 822.74 +628.87

 Global Cues & Rupee  
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 9,241.45. Down by 96.50 points.
The Broader S&P 500 closed at 994.35. Down by 12.75 points.
The Nasdaq Composite Index closed at 1,969.73. Down by 22.51 points.
The partially convertible rupee INR=IN closed at 47.97/98 per dollar on yesterday, below its previous close of 47.82/83.
 
 Interesting findings on web:
S
tocks slumped Tuesday, with a pummeling in bank shares and jitters ahead of a Federal Reserve announcement giving investors a reason to retreat.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 96.5 points, or 1.03 per cent, to 9241.45.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite points fell 22.51 points, or 1.13 per cent, to 1969.73 and the broad-market Standard & Poor's 500 index retreated 12.75 points, or 1.27 per cent, to 994.35.
"I think there's some apprehension ahead of the Fed," said Ryan Detrick, senior technical strategist at Schaeffer's Investment Research. "We know they're going to leave rates alone, but there's some question about what they'll say."
The banking sector retreated after CIT Group (CIT, Fortune 500) delayed its quarterly filing, reviving bankruptcy fears, and several analysts sounded an alarm on the sector. Influential analyst Richard X. Bove of Rochdale Securities said that bank stocks are trading on "fumes" and that investors should take some short-term profits. JPMorgan Chase downgraded bond insurer MBIA (MBI), according to published reports.
After opening with narrow losses, stocks moved swiftly lower in New York Tuesday thanks to a reading that showed wholesale inventories dropped more than expected.
The Commerce Department's June reading showed businesses reduced inventories at the wholesale level by 1.7%, a deeper cut than analysts expected.
A 0.4% rise in sales marked the first back-to-back increase this year, but it couldn't lift the sagging market.
Another bright spot came in the second-quarter productivity reading from the Labor Department, which jumped 6.4%, but even that figure came with red flags. Employers aggressively cut hours, reining in labor costs, which helped boost productivity and pretty up second-quarter earning reports. The strategy is an effective one in the midst of recession, but not a sustainable solution for long-term bottom line growth, and Tuesday's data further depressed any lingering hope for a better employment picture before the year is out.
The NFIB said its small business confidence index fell in July for the second straight month, dropping 1.3 points to 86.5. Dunkelberg said the number is consistent with negative growth in gross domestic product, depsite the predictions of many economists who see GDP turning positive this year.
Amid Tuesday's losses, Wall Street also had an eye on the Federal Reserve, which opened a two-day monetary policy meeting. Traders are anxious to see if the central bank will embrace signals that the economy is in recovery and hint at possible rate hikes early next year.
Ahead of the Fed meeting, the Commerce Department releases the June trade gap. The trade gap is expected to have widened to $28.5 billion from $26 billion in May, a 10-year low.
Stock declines were broad based, with 26 of 30 Dow issues falling.
Stocks continued to slide Tuesday as bank stocks dragged on the broader market following a weak prognosis from a well-known banking analyst.
Financial stocks, which have gained 25 percent in the past month, skidded after Rochdale Securities analyst Dick Bove recommended taking short-term
profits in the sector, saying bank stocks were running on "fumes" and not reality in their recent run-up. He said bank earnings won't improve in the third or even the fourth quarter. Still, he says the sector is attractive long-term.
Citigroup [C  3.69    -0.25  (-6.35%)   ] and Wells Fargo both dropped more than 6 percent.
Citigroup ( C - news - people ) published its second-quarter TARP progress report, announcing it approved $6 billion in new initiatives to extend credit to consumers and businesses during the period. At the close of the quarter, Citi had put $15.1 billion to work, out of the $50.8 billion in TARP capital it allocated to such programs. Shares of Citi were down 27 cents, or 6.9%, to $3.67.
AIG shares [AIG  24.92    -3.78  (-13.17%)   ] fell another 13 percent and Bank of America [BAC  15.85    -0.83  (-4.98%)   ] lost 5 percent following a story in the Wall Street Journal today about the SEC's plan to ramp up its enforcement actions to convey a "sense of urgency."
Piling on to the pressure on the banking sector, Miller Tabak cut its price targets on Zions Bancorp [ZION  16.428    -1.502  (-8.38%)   ] and Regions Financial [RF  4.76    -0.21  (-4.23%)   ]. Those stocks shed 8.4 percent and 4.2 percent, respectively.
CIT Group shares [CIT  1.20    -0.28  (-18.92%)   ] tumbled 19 percent after the company said it would file for bankruptcy protection if it failed to complete its debt tender or arrange other financing.
CIT Group ( CIT - news - people ) has delayed a second-quarter filing to its regulators, as it works on a tender offer to bondholders designed to stave off bankruptcy. The lender already received a $3 billion emergency loan from a group of debt holders, and said it is reviewing assets that it may be able to sell.
Shares of Freddie Mac [FRE  1.56    -0.13  (-7.69%)   ], the battered government-sponsored mortgage agency, skidded 7.7 percent a day after the company reported its first quarterly profit in two years. Shares of its sister agency, Fannie Mae [FNM  1.07    0.07  (+7%)   ], jumped 7 percent.
At the same time, regional banks like Huntington Bancshares (HBAN: 4.45, -0.32, -6.71%) tumbled after Miller Tabak cut its price targets on Zions Bancorp (ZION: 16.48, -1.45, -8.09%) and Regions Financial (RF: 4.79, -0.2, -4.01%).
The market was also buzzing about an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal today about Ginnie Mae, the Government National Mortgage Association, and the fact that much of its lending is essentially subprime.
Target shares [TGT  42.20    0.22  (+0.52%)   ] rose 0.5 percent after activist hedge-fund manager William Ackman converted most of his options in the retailer into common stock to become more of a long-term investor.
Several other retail stocks also rose, including Wal-Mart, Macy's and Gap.
More moving-and-shaking news out of the auto sector: General Motors executives said the all-electric Chevrolet Volt — expected to hit showrooms late in 2010 — will get 230 miles per gallon.
Dow financial issues American Express (AXP, Fortune 500), Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500), JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500) and Travelers Companies (TRV, Fortune 500) all declined. The KBW Bank (BKX) index lost 4.4%.
Among other financial sector movers, CIT Group (CIT, Fortune 500) slumped after saying it will delay filing its quarterly report as it continues to try to restructure its debt and avoid filing for bankruptcy protection.
IBM (IBM, Fortune 500), Cisco Systems (CSCO, Fortune 500), Chevron (CVX, Fortune 500), Caterpillar (CAT, Fortune 500), Walt Disney (DIS, Fortune 500) and General Electric (GE, Fortune 500) were the Dow's other big decliners.
In corporate news, hedge fund Pershing Square Capital revealed it cut its stake in retailer Target ( TGT - news - people ) nearly in half. Pershing, run by William Ackman, disclosed a 4.4% holding in the discount retailer, down from 7.8% as of May 26. Ackman has pushed for a series of changes at Target, which gained 45 cents, or 1.1%, to $42.43 Tuesday.
General Motors ( GMGMQ.PK - news - people ) made a splash Tuesday, estimating that its forthcoming electric-powered Chevy Volt could get up to 230 miles to the gallon in city driving. The automaker's Chief Executive Fritz Henderson also said GM is on track to report positive cash flow in 2010 and return to profitability in 2011.
Applied Materials (AMAT, Fortune 500) is likely to be active Wednesday. After the close Tuesday, the chipmaker reported a quarterly loss versus a profit a year ago on weaker revenue. However, the results were better than what analysts were expecting and shares gained 3% in extended-hours trading.
Corning (GLW: 16, -0.37, -2.26%) said the 6.4-magnitude earthquake that struck central Japan on Monday disrupted production at a Japanese factory, forcing the company to cut its production outlook for LCD screens. The glass maker said it now sees third-quarter volume falling 5% to 10% from a year ago.
Tellabs (TLAB: 6.15, 0.25, 4.24%) jumped to a 52-week high after the company announced plans to buy back up to $200 million of its stock. Tellabs, which has no debt, said late Monday it will use some of its $1.2 billion in cash and equivalents for the program, starting as early as Aug 13.
The gold market is watching the U.S. dollar as the Federal Open Market Committee meets, because any hints on interest rate hikes or announcement on the Federal Reserve's Treasury-buying program could bolster the greenback and weaken the metal's price.
The two-day FOMC meeting began Tuesday, with an interest-rate decision expected around 2:15 p.m. EDT (1815 GMT) Wednesday.
Few anticipate the Fed will move interest rates in the short term, said Adam Klopfenstein, senior market strategist at Lind-Waldock, a division of MF Global.
Nevertheless, he said, a shift is afoot in dollar buying, with participants moving from buying the dollar as a safe haven to buying the currency in anticipation of interest rate hikes over the next few years.
"Any talk about higher rates is going to support the dollar," said Frank Lesh, broker and futures analyst with FuturePath Trading. "We all know rates are going up. It's a question of when and how fast."
Lesh thinks it will be next year before interest rates start rising.
Fed decisions are key for the dollar, and consequently for gold, because the metal acts as an inflation and currency hedge, meaning it is often bought in times of dollar weakness and sold in times of dollar strength. A stronger greenback also tends to pressure dollar-denominated commodities, such as gold, by making them more expensive in other currencies, damping demand.
Another possible support for the dollar may come if the Fed announces it won't renew its Treasury-buying program.
That could be dollar supportive because those Treasury purchases are viewed by some as inflationary, and it might be taken as a sign of economic improvement if the buying is seen as no longer needed, Lesh said.
"I think they're going to let this program end in September," Lesh said, but he emphasized that doesn't mean the Fed will necessarily make that announcement Wednesday.
Klopfenstein said the dollar may even head lower in the short term if the Fed statement doesn't contain what participants are expecting.
If the FOMC announces that it won't extend the Treasury-buying program, that would be positive for the dollar, a Barclays Capital research note said.
Barclays expects gold's gains to be capped by a falling euro against the dollar.
"Prices continue to take their cue from currency movements and external markets," Barclays said.
Treasury prices were higher, even as the government prepares to issue $75 billion worth of new debt this week. The latest round of bond auctions starts with Tuesday's $37 billion offering of three-year notes. The benchmark ten-year note had a yield of 3.70%, down from 3.80% Monday.

Economy:
U.S. productivity in the second quarter jumped at the fastest pace in six years, the government said Tuesday. Productivity -- which measures how much workers produce per hour worked -- rose 6.4% versus forecasts for a rise of 5.5%. Productivity rose 0.3% in the first quarter.
Oil and gold:
U.S. light crude oil for September delivery fell $1.15 to settle at $69.45 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
COMEX gold for December delivery rose 70 cents to settle at $947.60 an ounce.
Bonds:
Treasury prices rallied, lowering the yield on the benchmark 10-year note to 3.67% from 3.77% late Monday. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.
The government is offering $75 billion this week as part of its ongoing efforts to reduce the deficit and fuel its recovery efforts.
Investors reacted mildly to the conclusion of the first auction Tuesday. Treasury sold $37 billion in three-year notes and saw stronger demand than in other recent auctions.
On Wednesday, the government auction $23 billion in 10-year notes and on Friday it auctions $15 billion in 30-year bonds.
Treasury prices rose Tuesday as investors anxious about the Federal Reserve's assessment of the economy took shelter in government debt.
The government's auction of $37 billion in three-year notes went well, allowing Treasurys to hold their gains. But investors, who were pulling money
out of the stock market and stashing it in government securities, were more focused on what the Fed will say about the economy when it ends a two-day meeting Wednesday.
It's a foregone conclusion that the central bank will hold the federal funds rate at its current level near zero. The question is whether Chairman Ben Bernanke and other Fed officials will be more upbeat about the economy in the statement that accompanies the rate decision — especially after the unemployment rate fell unexpectedly last month to 9.4 percent from 9.5 percent in June.
Stocks fell for a second straight day Tuesday, putting a slight dent in a four-week rally that lifted the Standard & Poor's 500 index 15 percent. As jitters over the Fed meeting sent stocks lower, investors saw a good opportunity in the relative safety of the Treasury market.
In late trading, the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose 26/32 to 95 17/32, pushing its yield down to 3.67 percent from 3.78 percent late Monday.
A lower yield is good news for consumers because it is tied to rates on mortgages and other loans.
"People are taking advantage of these yield levels to put some money to work," said Carl Lantz, a fixed income strategist at Credit Suisse.
The rise in Treasury prices added to Monday's gains, which came after big losses on Friday in reaction to the unexpected dip in the unemployment rate.
The Treasury's three-year note auction was a success. The auction's bid-to-cover ratio, a measure of demand, was 2.90 percent, compared with 2.62 percent at a similar auction last month and above a recent average of 2.58 percent.
Indirect bids, an indication of foreign buying, hit an all-time high, Lantz said.
"All the statistics look good," he said. "A good auction all around."
The government is selling massive amounts of debt this year to help pay for its bailout of the financial system and jump-start the economy. Investors have been worried that demand would abate amid the surplus, but so far most auctions have been going well. If demand were to consistently fall short, the government would have to raise the interest it pays, which would drive up borrowing costs and potentially hinder the economy's recovery.
In total, the Treasury Department is issuing $75 billion of debt this week. On Wednesday, the government will auction $23 billion in 10-year notes followed by $15 billion in 30-year bonds on Thursday.
The three-year note rose 6/32 to 99 12/32, while its yield fell to 1.72 percent from 1.78 percent.
In other trading, the 30-year bond rose 1 14/32 to 96 27/32, and its yield fell to 4.44 percent from 4.53 percent.
The two-year note rose 4/32 to 99 21/32 and its yield fell to 1.18 percent from 1.25 percent.
The yield on the three-month T-bill was unchanged at 0.17 percent. Its discount rate was 0.18 percent.
The cost of borrowing between banks fell. The British Bankers' Association said the rate on three-month loans in dollars — the London Interbank Offered Rate, or Libor — slipped to 0.45 percent from 0.46 percent.
What to expect:
WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage applications; international trade; weekly crude inventories; Treasury 10-year auction; Fed announcement; Earnings from Macy's.
THURSDAY: Retail sales; weekly jobless claims; import/export prices; business inventories; Treasury 30-year auction; Earnings from Wal-Mart, Kohl's and Nordstrom.
FRIDAY: CPI; industrial production; consumer sentiment; Earnings from JCPenney.
Among the stocks expected to see active trading Wednesday are LDK Solar Co. Ltd., Liz Claiborne Inc., Macy's Inc. and Sara Lee Corp.
LDK Solar Co. Ltd. /quotes/comstock/13*!ldk/quotes/nls/ldk (LDK 11.22, +0.18, +1.63%) is expected to post a second-quarter loss of 91 cents a share, according to analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters.
Liz Claiborne Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!liz/quotes/nls/liz (LIZ 4.02, +0.01, +0.25%) is projected to post a second-quarter loss of 40 cents a share.
Macy's Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!m/quotes/nls/m (M 15.44, -0.03, -0.19%) is forecast to post second-quarter earnings of 14 cents a share.
Netease.com Inc. /quotes/comstock/15*!ntes/quotes/nls/ntes (NTES 45.30, +0.29, +0.64%) is expected to post second-quarter earnings of 45 cents a share.
Sara Lee Corp. /quotes/comstock/13*!sle/quotes/nls/sle (SLE 10.85, +0.05, +0.46%) is projected to post fiscal fourth quarter earnings of 24 cents a share.
The Progressive Corp. /quotes/comstock/13*!pgr/quotes/nls/pgr (PGR 15.80, -0.37, -2.29%) is forecast to post second-quarter earnings of 36 cents a share.
U.S. Home Systems /quotes/comstock/15*!ushs/quotes/nls/ushs (USHS 2.97, +0.25, +9.19%) is expected to post a second-quarter loss of 10 cents a share.
After Tuesday's bell, NYSE Euronext's NYSE Group Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!nyx/quotes/nls/nyx (NYX 28.47, -0.22, -0.77%) said short interest on the New York Stock Exchange fell in the second half of July from the first half, to the lowest level since late February. Short interest fell to 14.03 billion shares from 15.64 billion shares. Short interest on July 31 was equal to 3.67% of total shares outstanding.
Watch List
Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. /quotes/comstock/15*!ndaq/quotes/nls/ndaq (NDAQ 21.89, -0.01, -0.05%) said Tuesday that short interest declined over the most recent period. The exchange had short interest in 6.78 billion shares in 2,903 securities at the end of July 31, compared with 7.14 billion shares in 2,883 securities as of July 15.
Warnaco Group Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!wrc/quotes/nls/wrc (WRC 37.30, -1.01, -2.64%) said late Tuesday that its second-quarter profit fell to $17.8 million, or 38 cents a share, from $19.4 million, or 41 cents a share, in the year-ago period.
Asia:
Stock markets in Asia were slightly lower in morning trading Wednesday, with a selloff in the US weighing on trading and investors somewhat cautious ahead of a Federal Open Market Committee meeting.
Japan's Nikkei [JP;N225  10502.96    -82.50  (-0.78%)   ] average pulled back from 10-month highs on Wednesday, as concerns over a U.S. economic recovery grew after an unexpectedly large drop in  wholesale inventories and negative comments about the banking  sector from a prominent analyst.
Analysts said investors were locking in profits ahead of the end of the Federal Reserve board meeting and issuance of its policy statement, with attention on whether it unwinds some of the quantitative easing policies currently in place.
Exporters such as Canon fell but Sapporo gained on a report it will buy 20 percent stake  in drinks maker Pokka Corporation as part of a three-way tie-up  with Meiji Holdings.
"There's some concern that the Nikkei has been overbought,  and that put together with inability to read what the Fed might  do is leading to profit-taking," said Takashi Ushio, head of the  investment strategy division at Marusan Securities.
"I wouldn't go so far yet as to call what's happening now an  adjustment, but for the Nikkei to rise past 11,000 we need to see  proof of quite a sharp recovery in earnings," said Ushio.
Japanese wholesale prices fell a record 8.5 percent in July from a year earlier, highlighting growing deflationary pressure in the economy and limiting the Bank of Japan's scope for ending its unorthodox policy measures, but analysts said there was little impact from this on the Nikkei.
Tokyo stocks fell Wednesday morning on renewed jitters over the U.S. economic recovery path, with Japanese exporters weighed down by a stronger yen and financial shares tracking their U.S. peers' decline.
IT Holdings Corp. (3626) shares opened ask-only Wednesday morning, as the company on Tuesday evening downgraded its earnings outlook for the current year through March 2010.
JGC Corp. (1963) shares bounced back Wednesday after a down day on Tuesday, at one point up 76 yen at a year-to-date high of 1,729 yen.
Australian stocks recovered early losses to stand flat after Commonwealth Bank of Australia reversed course as investors took an optimistic view of its earnings results and outlook. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 [AU;XJO  4328.2    -3.80  (-0.09%)   ] was up slightly.
It earlier posted a 2.3 percent rise in second-half profit, above analyst expectations, although it gave a cautious outlook.
"It's quite a promising result and it's quite promising for the rest of the financial sector," said James Foulsham, head of  trading at CMC Markets.
In Korea, the Kospi [KR;KSPI  1556.33    -22.88  (-1.45%)   ] slid on US weakness, with KB Financial among the big losers.
Singapore Slides, Hong Kong Starts Down
Singapore's Straits Time Index [GB;STI  2576.25    -21.05  (-0.81%)   ] was also down. Shares of Ascendas Real Estate Investment Trust fell sharply after the firm announced that it had made a private placement of 185 million new units at S$1.63 each, analysts said.
The price was at the bottom of the indicative range of S$1.63 and S$1.70, and well below the firm's pre-suspension price of S$1.76.
"People are taking it as a 'sell' signal that the company needs to raise cash as it's not the first time they're dipping into the market," said a trader from a local brokerage.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng index [HK;HSI  20623.04    -451.1719  (-2.14%)   ] started down 2 percent.
HSI 20561 -513.21 -2.44%. (08.32 AM IST).
Hong Kong stocks fell Wednesday from their highest level in nearly a year, as investors locked in profits after recent strong gains in market heavyweights HSBC Holdings Plc. and China Mobile Ltd., as well as Chinese banks. The Hang Seng Index dropped 2% to 20,655.77 in early trade, after ending above 21,000 Tuesday. The Hang Seng China Enteprises Index lost 2% to 11,744.17, also hurt by a decline for stocks in mainland China, where the Shanghai Composite dropped 0.9%. Shares of HSBC /quotes/comstock/22h!e:5 (HK:5 86.08, -0.40, -0.46%) /quotes/comstock/13*!hbc/quotes/nls/hbc (HBC 54.90, +0.53, +0.98%) dropped 3.1%, and China Mobile /quotes/comstock/22h!e:941 (HK:941 91.10, -0.25, -0.27%) /quotes/comstock/13*!chl/quotes/nls/chl (CHL 57.55, -0.01, -0.02%) shrank 2.9%, while Bank of China /quotes/comstock/22h!e:3988 (HK:3988 3.79, +0.05, +1.34%) /quotes/comstock/11i!bachy (BACH.Y 12.10, -0.45, -3.59%) fell 2.4%. 

Hutchison Telecom shares suspended
Hutchison Telecommunications International Ltd. /quotes/comstock/22h!e:2332 (HK:2332 1.98, -0.03, -1.49%) /quotes/comstock/13*!htx/quotes/nls/htx (HTX 3.79, -0.09, -2.35%) said Wednesday its shares have been suspended from trading "pending the release of an announcement regarding a very substantial disposal by the company." The Hong Kong telecom didn't give further details. It was slated to announce earnings later in the day.

Microsoft Corp. has reached an agreement with Nokia Corp. to make a mobile version of Microsoft's Office suite of software that works on Nokia mobile phones, The Wall Street Journal reported late Tuesday, citing a person familiar with the matter. 

Chinese prosecutors have charged four staff members of Anglo-Australian miner Rio Tinto Plc. with corporate espionage and bribery, according to an announcement late Tuesday in state media. 

China imports record crude, iron ore as economy expands
China's imports of oil and iron ore hit a record high in July, customs data showed Tuesday, as the nation's $586 billion stimulus plan continues to push up demand for commodities.
Crude imports jumped 18% from a month ago to 19.63 million metric tons last month, or about 4.64 million barrels a day, according to monthly data released by China's General Administration of Customs. Iron-ore imports rose 5% to 58.08 million metric tons.
China, the world's second-biggest oil consumer and the No. 1 user of iron ore, spent $13.8 billion in the imports of the two commodities. China's strong demand for commodities came also as the country continued to build its strategic reserve for crude, copper and other commodities.
Total oil imports in the first seven months rose to 110.4 million metric tons, up 5.5% from a month ago. Iron-ore imports rose to 355.25 million metric tons, up 31.8% from a year ago.
"This rapid and broad-based growth in commodity imports in July reflects both the strong real demand in China and China's deep pockets," said Ting Lu, an economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, in a note.
Merrill Lynch recently raised its forecast for the world's third-largest economy to grow 8.7%, from 8% previously. China last month reported its economy increased by a higher-than-expected 7.9% in the second quarter. See full story on China's economic growth data.
Official data released on Tuesday showed China's industrial production and investments in urban fixed assets increased at a rapid rate in July, keeping alive expectations government policies will continue to support an economic recovery. See related story.
While global oil demand is expected to fall this year for a second year in a raw, China's oil demand is expected to rise by 1.1%, according to the International Energy Agency. The IEA also expects China's oil demand in 2010 to rise by 4.2% to 8.3 million barrels a day.
"Recent data continue to paint a bullish picture for underlying energy demand in China, and one that is clearly improving," said Amrita Sen, an oil analyst at Barclays Capital.
China imports more than half of its oil demand.
In Tuesday trading, crude futures slid 1.9% to $69.23 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Oil has rallied about 60% this year.
U.S-listed shares of PetroChina Ltd. /quotes/comstock/13*!ptr/quotes/nls/ptr (PTR 116.09, -1.68, -1.43%) slid 1.4% to $116.17, those of China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. /quotes/comstock/13*!snp/quotes/nls/snp (SNP 86.43, +0.14, +0.17%) fell 1.6% to $86.64.
Japan wholesale prices fall record 8.5%
Wholesale prices in Japan fell a record 8.5% in July from the year-earlier period, the Bank of Japan said Wednesday.
The fall in the preliminary domestic Corporate Goods Price Index outpaced a 6.7% on-year fall in June. However, the July figures marked a 0.4% rise when compared to the month before.
The drop was the fastest on-year decline on record but still came in below an average market forecast for an 8.6% fall, according to a Kyodo news report.
Import prices were down 33.3% on-year in yen terms and down 26.5% on a contract-currency basis, the data said.
Export prices fell 15.3% in yen terms and 6.5% in contract currencies.

Report: Economists Say Recession Over, Want Bernanke to Stay

Economists date the start of the recession to December 2007 -- defining much of Ben Bernanke's term as Federal Reserve chairman -- and a majority in a Wall Street Journal survey agree that the recession is coming to an end.
Is the recession over? Economists polled by the Wall Street Journal say yes, and they suggest that's a big reason why Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke should stay.
The Journal reports that the experts are overwhelmingly in favor of President Obama asking Bernanke to stay on for another four-year term when his current term ends Jan. 31. Bernanke has been a key figure in the government's efforts to reverse the country's economic meltdown, a role that has earned him some criticism but also praise for handling of the crisis.
Economists date the start of the recession to December 2007 -- defining much of Bernanke's term, which started in early 2006 -- and a majority agree that the recession is coming to an end.
Bernanke "deserves a lot of credit for stabilizing the financial markets," Joseph Carson of AllianceBernstein told the Journal.
Obama said last week that the "worst may be behind us," and the Labor Department on Tuesday seemed to bolster that notion, reporting that productivity surged in the spring by the largest amount in almost six years while labor costs plunged at the fastest pace in nine years.
Productivity is a key ingredient for rising living standards because it means that companies can pay their workers more with the wage increases financed by rising output.
However, in the current recession, companies have been using the productivity gains to bolster their bottom lines in the face of declining sales. Many companies have been reporting second-quarter earnings results that have beaten expectations despite falling sales, due largely to their aggressive cost cutting.
Many economists believe the current recession is on the verge of ending. If the economy starts to grow in the second half of this year, companies are expected to switch from layoffs and trimming workers' hours to boosting employment as demand for their products increases.
As for Bernanke, it seems increasingly likely that he'll get to keep his job.
"Continuity is critical as we emerge from this crisis," Diane Swonk of Mesirow Financial told the Wall Street Journal. "Otherwise, we could slip back in again.
Bernanke is the best suited to undo what has been done when the time comes."

China's July fiscal revenue up 10.2% 

China's Ministry of Finance announced Wednesday that the country's fiscal revenue in July rose 10.2 percent year on year to 669.59 billion yuan (97.96 billion U.S. dollars). 

White House Adviser Summers Predicts Slow Recovery.

Breaking News:

U.S. Marines Mount Assault on Taliban Town
U.S. Marines have mounted a helicopter assault to seize the Taliban-held town of Dahaneh in southern Afghanistan and are fighting gain control of the area ahead of next week's presidential elections.
The assault began before dawn Wednesday, with Marines entering the town as others battled militants in the surrounding mountains.
Associated Press journalists traveling with the first wave say Marines were met with small arms, mortar and rocket propelled grenade fire. Fighting is still under way hours later, with U.S. Marine Harrier jets streaking over the town and dropping flares in a show of force.
Marines have captured several suspects and seized about 66 pounds (30 kilos) of opium.
   
INVESTEMENT VIEW
Are Banks creating A Real Estate Bubble? 

Are they spurring unwanted personal consumption by throwing cheap loans at borrowers?
 
It's a crazy circle. Banks lower interest rates on deposits, find there are no takers for credit. So they go out and reduce rates on personal and car loans, even mortgages. But these sectors are the worst hit by rising numbers of unemployment. So Banks try something else-they go for GOI Treasuries.
 
For 10 year paper they bid 7 per cent, but already 2-3 year deposit rates fetch 7 per cent so there is an asset-liability mismatch if Banks go for long term paper funded by equally costing short term paper. So once more they cut deposit rates and the circle keeps repeating till the situation becomes so bad, that interest rates drop to zero and yet there are no safe customers to whom money can be lent out. So what do you do?
 
Just sit on your haunches and hope for better times. Or atleast this is what commercial banks are doing. Either they get cheap deposits or they get higher yields on 10 year Treasuries. The failure of the recent Bond offering from the Government last week shows the malaise. The GOI will not accept higher yields and Banks will not accept lower yields.
 
The Depositor will suffer and so would investors as Bank returns keep dropping. Anyone with common sense should look around the Globe, even with zero per cent interest rates in Japan, US and Hong Kong the economies are not growing. Infact, Economic Activity is sinking. So zero interest rates is not the answer. The answer lies in Growth, but if the Banks start taking speculative risk on sectors like Real Estate then we have a problem of Banking proportions on our hand.
 
To raise or not to raise?
 
Do the banks want to raise rates? Probably not. Not when they know the fragile state that many of their borrowers will be in once rates really start rising.

The fact is they've got to. With all the debt floating around on the market, and more to come, the competition for debt issues will be even fiercer this time next year.

Banks will have to offer higher levels of interest in order to attract funds. That will have to filter through to their borrowers. There's no question about that.

The ability to move on interest rates has been helped by their little PR coup on bank fees. It's much easier for them to take a small hit in the pocket now on fees knowing full well they'll have an easy excuse to increase interest rates regardless of what the RBI does.

Even until recently the economists at the major banks were still singing from the same hymn sheet - "interest rates will fall further." Most of them were calling for a drop to 2% as they told us not to worry about inflation.

All the while the banks were helping to fuel the hot air keeping the property bubble in the air. They've succeeded in suckering in hundreds of thousands of property buyers on the back of artificially low interest rates. 

Extraordinarily, not a single one of the expert economists at the banks have considered this to be a problem. How could they possibly ignore it?

After all, the low interest rates and government cash bribes have given the property sector a three-in-one boost. A boost that can only result in a bubble.

This triumvirate consists of: people who would have bought into the market now anyway, those that have been delaying a purchase, and those that have brought forward a purchase.

The simple laws of supply and demand tell you that if you're grouping together every potential purchaser from the last five years, today, and the next five years, it has to have an impact on prices.

When demand rises, prices rise. We're not talking a complex scientific formula here.

But still the mainstream media largely ignores it.

The big problem for the banks and the property sector could come as early as next year. With interest rates even 1% higher than today, and no government bribes there will undoubtedly be fewer buyers in the market.

That will be bad news for the banks, especially if home repossessions continue to rise. Think about what it'll be when rates push higher and the cost of servicing loans also increases.

All we can say is that it's a good job the banks are stocking up the cupboards now. We may soon find out whether they've kept enough in reserve to last through the Property Winter of Discontent or not.

(Some forward looking statements on projections, estimates, expectations & outlook are included to enable a better comprehension of the Company prospects. Actual results may, however, differ materially from those stated on account of factors such as changes in government regulations, tax regimes, economic developments within India and the countries within which the Company conducts its business, exchange rate and interest rate movements, impact of competing products and their pricing, product demand and supply constraints.)
 


--
Arvind Parekh
+ 91 98432 32381

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Market Outlook 11th Aug 2009

NIFTY FUTURES LEVELS
SUPPORT
4376
4316
4256
RESISTANCE
4438
4500
4560
4620
4680
Buy SRF; WIPRO
 
INTRADAY calls for 11th Aug 2009
+ve Script : Mindtree
Buy PATNI-379 for a target 387-396 stop loss 372
Buy Mphasis-504 for a target 520-531 stop loss 497
Buy Cummins-293 for a target 299-306 stop loss 288
Short BOI-321 at 328 for a target 321-317 stop loss 335
Buy EID-parry-332 above 337 for a target 355-363 stop loss 325
Buy Hindoilexp-199 above 203 for a target 209-214 stop loss 198
 
Strong & Weak  futures  
This is list of 10 strong futures:
Patni,Mphasis,Bharat Forge,GT OFFshore,Aurobindo Pharma,TCS,Shree Renuka,Wipro,Polaris Softwar, & DCB.
And this is list of 10 Weak futures:
Suzlon,Chambal Fert,Divi'S Lab,Nagarjun Fertil,Educomp,IDBI Ltd,R Com,Colpal,Pantaloon Retail & Hero Honda.
Nifty is in Up Trend. 
 
NIFTY FUTURES (F & O):  
Selling may continue up to 4376-4378 zone for time being.
Hurdle at 4436-4438 zone. Above this zone, expect short covering up to 4498-4500 zone and thereafter expect a jump up to 4558-4560 zone by non-stop.

Sell if touches 4618-4620 zone. Stop Loss at 4678-4680 zone.
 
On Negative Side, break below 4316-4318 zone can create panic up to 4256-4258 zone. If breaks & sustains this zone then downtrend may continue.
 
Short-Term Investors:  
Bullish Trend. 3 closes above 4473 level, it can zoom up to 4988 level by non-stop.
Stop Loss Triggered. 3 closes below 4473 level, it can tumble up to 4215 level by non-stop.
 
BSE SENSEX:  
Lower opening expected. Recovery should start. 
Short-Term Investors:  
Short-Term trend is Bearish and target at around 14235 level on down side.
Maintain a Stop Loss at 15973 level for your short positions too.
 
POSITIONAL BUY:
Buy SRF LTD (NSE Cash) 
Uptrend to continue.
Mild sell-off up to 142 level can be used to buy. If uptrend continues, then it may continue up to 150 level for time being. 

If crosses & sustains at above 154 level then uptrend may continue.
Keep a Stop Loss at 137 level for your long positions too.
 
Buy WIPRO LTD (NSE Cash) 
Uptrend to continue.
Mild sell-off up to 511 level can be used to buy. If uptrend continues, then it may continue up to 524 level for time being. 

If crosses & sustains at above 536 level then uptrend may continue.

Keep a Stop Loss at 500 level for your long positions too.
 
Global Cues & Rupee
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 9,337.95. Down by 32.12 points.
The Broader S&P 500 closed at 1,007.10. Down by 3.38 points.

The Nasdaq Composite Index closed at 1,992.24. Down by 8.01 points.

The partially convertible rupee INR=IN closed at 47.82/83 per dollar on yesterday, above its previous close of 47.85/86. 
 
FII DATA
FII trading activity on NSE and BSE in Capital Market Segment(In Rs. Crores)
Category Date Buy Value Sell Value Net Value
FII 10-Aug-2009 2539.36 3179.28 -639.92
DII trading activity on NSE and BSE in Capital Market Segment(In Rs. Crores)
Category Date Buy Value Sell Value Net Value
DII 10-Aug-2009 1188.3 1102.16 +86.14
 
Interesting findings on web:
Stocks slipped Monday as investors pulled back ahead of a two-day Federal Reserve meeting and following a big rally that pushed the Dow and S&P 500 to 9-month highs.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 32.12 points, or 0.34%, to 9337.95, the Standard & Poor's 500 slid 3.38 points, or 0.33%, to 1007.10 and the Nasdaq Composite tumbled 8.01 points, or 0.40%, to 1992.24.

"We are in a mild profit-taking mode after a rally, and we are also nearing September, the historically worst month for stocks," Art Hogan, chief market analyst at Jefferies, told Reuters.

Most of the banking sector followed State Street lower but Citigroup CITIGROUP INCC 3.94  0.09  +2.34%  NYSE Quote  |  Chart  |  News  |  Profile [C  3.94    0.09  (+2.34%)   ] gained more than 2 percent. Bank of America and JPMorgan also advanced after a report showed U.S. banks are poised to make $38.5 billion from customer overdraft fees this year and as they're also likely to benefit from all the new car buying that has resulted from the "Cash for Clunkers" program.

Merck (MRK, Fortune 500) shares gained 1.7% after Goldman Sachs upgraded it to "buy," from "not rated" according to published reports.

McDonald's (MCD, Fortune 500) reported that sales at stores open a year or more, a retail metric known as same-store sales, rose 2.6% in July, raising hopes that it will see a strong third quarter. Shares gained almost 2%.

Freddie Mac (FRE, Fortune 500) shares surged 128% in active trading Monday, one day after the government-run home mortgage lender reported its first quarterly profit in two years. The company, along with Fannie Mae (FNM, Fortune 500), was saved from extinction last year amid the credit market collapse after receiving billions in government aid. Fannie Mae gained 51%.

But a variety of economically sensitive shares fell, including Dow components Alcoa (AA, Fortune 500), DuPont (DD, Fortune 500), 3M (MMM, Fortune 500), Boeing (BA, Fortune 500) and Caterpillar (CAT, Fortune 500). Other Dow losers included Cisco Systems (CSCO, Fortune 500), Travelers (TRV, Fortune 500) and Walt Disney (DIS, Fortune 500).

State Street ( STT - news - people ) shares fell 2.4%, after an SEC filing indicated the asset manager's $625 million reserve for exposure to subprime-related investments may not be sufficient. Apparently the firm is concerned that its reserve may fall short of covering fees and penalties related to litigation and investigations by regulators.

Bankrupt telecom equipment maker Nortel Networks ( NRTLQ - news - people ) announced Chief Executive Mike Zafirovski will step down, and its board will be culled to three members from nine, on the heels of rising losses as it attempts to shed assets.

Microsoft ( MSFT - news - people ) shares lost 0.6%, after the tech heavyweight agreed to sell its Razorfish digital advertising firm to France's Publicis for approximately $530 million in cash and shares. Under the deal, Microsoft commits a minimum amount to spend each year on digital strategy, creative and marketing services from Razorfish.

The insurer American International Group rose 9%.

The materials sector of the S&P fell the most, losing 2.3%, weighed down by Nucor corp. /quotes/comstock/13*!nue/quotes/nls/nue (NUE 47.01, -0.09, -0.19%) and AK Steel Holding /quotes/comstock/13*!aks/quotes/nls/aks (AKS 20.37, +0.06, +0.30%) , both off more than 4%.

Stocks like Macy's (M: 15.21, -0.78, -4.88%) and Aeropostale (ARO: 35.86, -1.64, -4.37%) tumbled after electronics retailer Best Buy (BBY: 37.67, -2.106, -5.29%) was cut from "buy" to "neutral" by Goldman Sachs. The analysts said Best Buy faces increased competition and challenges related to its product mix.

JCPenney, which report earnings later in the week, down more than 3 percent.

EBay (EBAY: 22.49, -0.03, -0.13%) and General Motors unveiled a promotion to sell GM cars and trucks online in California for one month.  GM said consumers will be able to use the eBay micro site, which is set to launch Tuesday, to compare and shop between different dealerships.

Priceline.com (PCLN: 150.24, 18.92, 14.41%) climbed 14% to 52-week highs after the online travel agent said its net income jumped 35% during the second quarter. Lifted by a 12.8% jump in gross bookings, the company beat the Street with an adjusted-profit of $2.02 per share and an 18% jump in revenue to $603.7 million.

Sysco (SYY: 25.03, 0.17, 0.68%) disclosed a 5.6% slide in net income and a steeper-than-expected decline of 6.6% in revenue. The food distributor posted an adjusted-profit of 50 cents a share, topping the Street's view by a penny.

YRC Worldwide (YRCW: 2.69, 0.43, 19.03%) closed up 19% after the International Brotherhood of Teamsters agreed to new concessions in an effort to keep the transportation service provider out of bankruptcy. YRC said the teamsters agreed to an additional 5% wage cut and an 18-month suspension of union pension fund contributions.

Virgin Mobile USA (VM: 4.7, -0.17, -3.49%) beat the Street with a second-quarter profit of 23 cents per share. However, the phone carrier, which is being acquired by Sprint Nextel (S: 3.71, -0.088, -2.32%), said its operating revenue slid 3.8% to $307.6 million, missing estimates.  Virgin said it remains confident in its guidance for both its adjusted earnings and free cash flow for 2009.

Hormel Foods (HRL: 38.23, 2.09, 5.78%) hit a 52-week high after the food processor boosted its full-year guidance, citing better-than-expected sales and lower feed costs. The maker of Spam said it expects to earn $2.36 to $2.42 a share, compared to the Street's view of $2.29.

Dish Network (DISH: 19.3, 0.88, 4.78%) reported an 81% plunge in quarterly profit, but the struggling satellite TV provider posted its first net subscriber gain in five quarters. Dish disclosed EPS of 14 cents and in-line revenue of $2.9 billion.

EchoStar (SATS: 15.97, 1.17, 7.91%), formerly a Dish unit, more than doubled its profit to $1.18 a share. The satellite TV provider's revenue tumbled 21% to $383.1 million.

Elsewhere in tech, Research In Motion RESEARCH IN MOTION LIMITEDRIMM 73.28  -3.81  -4.94%  NASDAQ Quote  |  Chart  |  News  | Profile [RIMM  73.28    -3.81  (-4.94%)   ] shares skidded nearly 5 percent, its third-straight decline, after UBS downgraded its rating on the stock to "neutral" amid worries that Verizon Wireless, one of RIM's largest customers, might launch its own iPhone.

Oil and gold:

U.S. light crude oil for September delivery fell 13 cents to settle at $70.93 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Oil prices have been gaining in recent weeks on bets that the global economy is stabilizing.

COMEX gold for December delivery fell $12.60 to settle at $946.90 an ounce.

Bonds:

Treasury prices rallied, lowering the yield on the benchmark 10-year note to 3.77% from 3.84% late Friday. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.

The U.S. government is auctioning $75 billion in debt this week as part of its efforts to fuel the economic recovery and manage the budget deficit.

What to expect:

TUESDAY: Two-day Fed meeting begins; wholesale trade; Treasury 3-year auction; Earnings from Applied Materials.

WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage applications; international trade; weekly crude inventories; Treasury 10-year auction; Fed announcement; Earnings from Macy's.

THURSDAY: Retail sales; weekly jobless claims; import/export prices; business inventories; Treasury 30-year auction; Earnings from Wal-Mart, Kohl's and Nordstrom.

FRIDAY: CPI; industrial production; consumer sentiment; Earnings from JCPenney.


Tuesday Look Ahead: Watching the Dollar

The Fed starts a two-day meeting Tuesday, and there are just a few economic reports, including productivity and costs at 8:30 a.m., and wholesale trade at 10 a.m. The NFIB's small business survey is reported at 7:30 a.m.

Traders are also watching the Treasury's auction of  $37 billion in 3-year notes at 1 p.m.

The dollar gained for a third day against a basket of currencies. Commodities, especially gold and other metals, moved lower.

"The bears held themselves together. The dollar started to exert its influence," said Art Cashin, director of floor operations at UBS. He said stock market bears though won't have an advantage as they head into Tuesday, and right now it's a toss up as to which direction dominates.

"The stock market benefited greatly from weakness in the dollar. It would seem natural that if it were to rally, it would put pressure on stocks," said Cashin. The dollar staged an interesting intraday reversal Friday after better than expected jobs data, sparking a debate about whether the dollar is now going to trade along with perceived relative strengthening in the U.S. economy instead of against the idea of recovery.

Cashin said it is important to see whether the dollar's rise is more than a short-lived phenomena and how other financial markets relate to it.  As the dollar firmed Monday, stocks and assets that rode higher with it, weakened. The commodities-related materials sector was the worst performer, down 1.6 percent. Second worst was consumer discretionary, down 1.2 percent, followed by a 1.1 percent decline in industrials, another group sensitive to the global reflation trade.

The dollar index was 0.3 percent higher at 79.212. It was also 0.3 percent higher against the euro, at $1.4142. Traders were also watching the Chinese stock market, down for a fourth day and another metric for the global economic recovery.

Bonds traded higher and yields fell along the curve Monday.

Larry Summers, President Obama's chief economic adviser, speaks at noon at a National Bureau of Economic Research event. He is expected to speak for 30 minutes and then take questions for another 30 minutes.

President Obama participates in a town hall on health care in New Hampshire.

General Motors holds an 8 a.m. press briefing.

Frank DiPascali, who helped run Bernard Madoff's investment advisory operation, is expected to plead guilty to fraud and could become a central witness against others in the fraud case.

Asia:
Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 [JP;N225  10544.93    20.6699  (+0.2%)   ] drifted near a 10-month high to rise 0.2 percent while the broader Topix inched up 0.1 percent. Little impact was expected from a strong earthquake that jolted Tokyo and surrounding areas Tuesday morning, with many factories in the area shut for summer holidays. Exporters like Honda Motor, TDK and Tokyo Electron weighed on the index as the yen gained strength. But Toshiba shares chalked up gains on news it will make Blue-ray disc players by the end of 2009 to end its format war with competitors.

Shares in Daiichi Sankyo Co. (4568) extended their winning streak to seven days Tuesday, buoyed by hopes for the drugmaker's new anti-influenza agent CS-8958, or laninamivir.

Shares in Nippon Shinyaku Co. (4516) gained ground early Tuesday, but quickly pared some gains before the lunch break.

Shares in Chubu Electric Power Co. (9502) lost further ground Tuesday, after a major earthquake earlier that morning halted the firm's Hamaoka nuclear power plant's No. 4 and No.5 reactors in Shizuoka Prefecture.

Japanese stocks bucked a regional downtrend and rose Tuesday morning, as investors awaited the outcome of the Bank of Japan's monthly policy meeting later in the session for clues to the nation's economic recovery.

The central bank is widely expected to keep rates on hold, and it has already extended liquidity-boosting steps at its last meeting. As a result, investors' main focus will be on whether the bank tweaks the language of its cautious statement that the Japanese economy is improving.

"The BOJ is anticipated to leave rates unchanged at 0.1%, and while some economic indicators -- including machine orders, industrial production, and manufacturing PMI -- have shown signs of improvement, the central bank is likely to continue focusing on risks stemming from persistently weak domestic demand and deflation," said Terri Belkas, a currency strategist at DailyFX.com.

Government data on Monday showed Japanese core machinery orders jumped more than forecast, as did the nation's current-account surplus. But going forward, the outlook for orders -- considered a leading indicator of corporate capital spending -- was unclear.

"Japan's economic conditions have stopped worsening. Public investment is increasing, and exports and production are picking up.

Business sentiment, especially of large manufacturing firms, has stopped deteriorating," the BOJ said in a statement after last month's unanimous decision to leave rates on hold.

"On the other hand, business fixed investment is declining sharply," the bank said in the June statement, "mainly reflecting weak corporate profits."

Last month, the BOJ said it would maintain its outright purchases of corporate bonds and commercial paper from financial institutions through year's end, as well as continue extending loans collateralized by securities. These special liquidity-boosting measures had been scheduled to expire in September.

It also slightly trimmed its median forecast for real gross domestic product for the fiscal year ending in March 2011, to a contraction of 3.4%, compared with its previous forecast for a fall of 3.1%. But it raised its outlook for the core consumer price index to a 1.3% drop from 1.5% fall.

The BOJ last cut its target rate for unsecured overnight call money in December, when it reduced it from 0.3%.

Ahead of the policy statement, the U.S. dollar was buying 96.92 yen, down from 97.15 yen in late North American trading on Monday.

BOJ keeps rates on hold, keeps cautious economic view


The Bank of Japan kept interest rates on hold on Tuesday and maintained its cautious view on the economy, as deepening deflation and weak corporate spending threaten its forecast for a modest economic pick-up later this year.

The decision to keep rates on hold at 0.1 percent was made by a unanimous vote, as widely expected.

BOJ Governor Masaaki Shirakawa will hold an embargoed news conference and his comments are expected to come out some time after 4:15 p.m. (0715 GMT).

The BOJ said in a statement that annual falls in consumer prices were accelerating in reaction to last year's spike in oil prices. But the bank repeated that the pace of fall would narrow in the latter half of this fiscal year ending in March 2010.

The BOJ stuck to its view that Japan's economy has stopped worsening and was set for a pick up due to a sharp rebound in industrial output.

The BOJ voted last month to extend by three months the September deadline for its unconventional measures aimed at easing corporate funding strains. Markets have thus expected no new announcement from the central bank on policy measures.

Japan's economy is expected to have grown 1.0 percent in April-June after four straight quarters of contraction, a Reuters poll showed. But economists expect any recovery to be fragile as uncertainty over the global economic outlook keeps companies and households from boosting spending. 


In South Korea, the KOSPI traded flat as investors digested news that the central bank had left interest rates steady at a record low of 2 percent -- a move that was widelyexpected. Meantime, SK Energy tumbled over 2 percent after it delayed plans to build an oil production facility.

Australia's S&P/ASX 200 was off its early lows but the index was still down 0.1 percent. Helping to cushion losses in the market, shares of JB Hi-Fi surged over 6 percent after it reported a 45 percent rise in full-year profit.

Greater China shares were mixed, with the Taiwan Weighted index and Hang Seng both down about 0.3 percent while the Shanghai Composite gained 0.2 percent.

HSI 20772.48 -157.04 -0.75% (08.37 AM IST)

Shares in Hong Kong were little changed in early trading, while those in Shanghai edged slightly higher as investors reacted to a barrage of economic data for July, including consumer and industrial inflation figures that came in broadly as expected, while industrial output and fixed-asset investment grew at a weaker-than-expected pace. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index was up 0.02% at 20,934.13 in early action, while Shanghai's Composite Index added 0.4% at 3,262.89.

Singapore's Straits Times resumed trade after a long weekend to climb more than 1 percent as investors were pleased with the citystate's final GDP reading showing the economy grew by a seasonally-adjusted 20.7 percent in the second-quarter from the previous three months. This was stronger than an initial estimate of 20.4% growth.

China industrial output slows, retail sales rise

China's industrial output and investments in fixed assets grew at a smaller-than-expected rate in July, while retail sales ticked higher, according to government data released Tuesday. Industrial production expanded 10.8% in July over the year-earlier month, against expectations of a 11.7% increase forecast in a Reuters poll. Urban fixed-asset investment rose 32.9% in the first seven months of the year, falling short of expectations and also slowing from a 33.6% growth in the first half of 2009. But monthly retail sales rose by 15.2%,following a 15% increase in June. Consumer prices dropped 1.8% from the year-earlier period, while producer prices declined 8.2%, in line with expectations.

China's July CPI falls 1.8 %, PPI drops 8.2%

China's consumer price index (CPI), a main gauge of inflation, dipped 1.8 percent in July from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) announced Tuesday.

This marked the sixth consecutive month of decline since the index dropped 1.6 percent in February, the first fall since October 2002.

The index was unchanged compared with June, according to the NBS. The CPI fell 1.7 percent in June year on year.

The country's producer price index (PPI), a major measure of inflation at the wholesale level, fell 8.2 percent year on year in July, according to the NBS. It showed a month-on-month increase of 1 percent.

The July decline compared with a 7.8-percent drop in June and 7.2-percent drop in May year on year.


China's imports, exports continue falling in July

China's imports and exports continued falling in July from a year earlier, the General Administration of Customs announced here Tuesday.

Exports dropped 23 percent year on year last month while imports were 14.9 percent lower than a year earlier.


China urban fixed-asset investment up 32.9% in first seven months

China's urban fixed-asset investment rose 32.9 percent in the first seven months of this year from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics announced Tuesday.


China's industrial output up 10.8% in July

China's industrial output accelerated 10.8 percent in July from a year earlier, after gaining 10.7 percent in June the National Bureau of Statistics said at a press conference Tuesday.


China's power output up 4.8% in July

China's power generation expanded 4.8 percent in July from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Tuesday.


Fed meeting:

This week, the focus is on the Federal Reserve, which concludes its two-day policy meeting Wednesday.

The central bank is expected to hold rates steady at historic lows near zero. Yet, as usual, investors will be focused on what the bank will say in its statement, particularly about the health of the economy, any risk of inflation and what its exit strategy may be after putting so much stimulus into the financial system.

In line with comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, the central bank is not really worried about inflation yet. Hepburn said the bankers are not likely to say much about an exit strategy until later in the year.

The consumer will also be in focus this week, with economic reports on inflation, and profit reports from Wal-Mart Stores (WMT, Fortune 500) and other retailers. Wal-Mart shares bucked the sector trend, ticking higher, despite comments from JPMorgan that the retail giant won't see same-store sales growth for the second quarter as summer business was weak.

Wall Street advanced Friday after the government's July jobs report showed unemployment fell for the first time in a year.

Ahead of the meeting, Treasury prices were slightly higher and the dollar was weaker against the yen and stronger against the euro. 


Dow Theory shows buy signal but pullback due

Dow Theory, one of the oldest stock market forecasting methods, has shown a new buy signal: the Dow Jones Transportation Average joined the Dow Jones Industrial Average to close above January highs, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch. However, the bank's analysts said on Monday that a momentum indicator known as breadth thrust, which focuses on the proportion of advancing to declining stocks, shows a pull-back of 15 to 20 percent this fall when combined with the Dow Theory buy signal.

Last week the broad-based S&P 500 index closed above 1000 for the first time in nine months and is now up around 50 percent since March lows, while the Dow Industrials recently saw their best five-month run since 1938. The run-up has left many investors trying to second guess if and when a correction is due.

"The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above its January high in late July, and the Dow Jones Transportation Average closed above its January high on Friday," Merrill said in a research note. "According to the Dow Theory, this signals a new primary uptrend and is a bullish indicator for the market."

Dow Theory aims to identify the primary trends in stock markets, lasting from one year to several years. It stipulates that the industrials index must "confirm" a high or a low in the Dow Jones Transportation Average for a trend to last.

Breadth thrust indicates when the market moves from an oversold condition when a gauge of the proportion of advancing stocks moves above a certain level. Merrill's analysis shows that significant corrections have followed strong rallies when a breadth thrust has occurred at the market bottom.

"This analysis, along with the Dow Theory new buy signal, points to a more modest 15 to 20 percent pullback," said Merrill.

Merrill is watching a number of indicators to gauge whether the market is entering an immediate correction. These include investor sentiment gauges, the peaking of buying and rise in selling, loss of leadership in technology, the percentage of stocks above their 200-day moving average, and a peak in China's equity market.

They say stock charts indicate S&P 500 support levels, or levels at which the index should not easily fall below, at 930 to 900 and resistance levels, presenting a barrier to for the index on the way up, at 1055 to 1065.

    
INVESTMENT VIEW
India Real Estate: Few Developers Are Ever Going To Make Money

The recent massive run-up in Real Estate stocks reminds of a fake bull run in Tech stocks post the fall of Year 2000. Few Developers, inspite of targeting 'affordable housing" are ever going to make money in Real Estate. By this logic HDIL, IBREL, Unitech and DLF may all be over-valued showing rosy prospects that do not seem to be the reality.
 

The Indian real estate markets have seen a sharp and meaningful correction in terms of decline in property prices, demand and transaction volumes over the last 2 years. We had highlighted the demand and supply disconnect in our report in August 2007 and how we believed that the real demand lies at the bottom of the pyramid.

 The developers have started to make the right noises since the last two quarters and have announced their affordable housing plans but after looking closely at their present projects it appears that their price product matrix is again skewed towards margins, like it was 2 years back. 


"The con is on" - Affordable is not exactly affordable 
After assessing the current affordable housing projects of various developers, it appears that the con is on again and developers are again quoting unviable selling prices for these projects. A fairly large number of these projects are located in far flung locations which may lack basic amenities and recreational facilities.

 

Moreover, the affordability (in terms of willingness to pay) decreases as one moves away from the centre of the city and hence the price has to be fairly competitive as compared to those flats which are well within the city.


Most of the upcoming affordable housing projects are basically the residential projects planned by the developers on their land on the city outskirts. Some of the affordable housing projects that are currently on offer by major listed real estate developers will see that volume off take will be much lower than what most companies are projecting. 


Looking at an example, say if the agricultural land cost in city outskirts is Rs 250 / sq ft, after land use conversion the cumulative land cost will come to Rs 313 / sq ft. As regards the cost of construction, in the present scenario an affordable housing dwelling may not cost more than Rs 900 / sq ft to the developer as the prices of cement, steel have come down in last 1 year and it will be a "no frills" kind of construction. Even if we add a developer margin of 30% on the total cost, the price per sq ft comes to Rs 1,576 per sq ft.
 

(Some forward looking statements on projections, estimates, expectations & outlook are included to enable a better comprehension of the Company prospects. Actual results may, however, differ materially from those stated on account of factors such as changes in government regulations, tax regimes, economic developments within India and the countries within which the Company conducts its business, exchange rate and interest rate movements, impact of competing products and their pricing, product demand and supply constraints.)
 
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Arvind Parekh
+ 91 98432 32381