Friday, August 28, 2009

Market Outlook for 28th Aug 2009

INTRADAY calls for 28th Aug 2009
+ve script : Textile,PRAKASH, EIHotel,Arvind,IFCI,SBI
BUY BRFL-205 for 224+ with sl 200
BUY TITAN-1250 for 1270-1290+ with sl 1231
BUY Mundraport-584 for 600-605+ with sl 575
Expected Breakout
BUY PTC-95 above 98 for 105-110+ with sl 95
BUY IndBnk-134 above 137 for 151+ with sl 132
BUY GAIL-343 above 347 for 401+ with sl 340
Positional
BUY Bombaydye-381 for 505-530+ with sl 360
BUY Pantaloon-318 for 390+ with sl 300
Investment
BUY BRFL-205 with sl 165
BUY Aloktex-22 with sl 18
 
stocks that are in news today:
RNRL seeks oil ministry to become party to RIL-NTPC case: sources
Tata Steel says not to participate in Coal India IPO
RIL board meet on audited results postponed to September 2
Bharati Shipyard board meet on September 3 on issue of convertible warrants, shares
Thermax bags order worth Rs 255 crore
Valecha Engineering bags orders worth Rs 172 crore
Madhucon Projects board meet on September 3 on stock split from Rs 2 to Re 1
SRF buy back at maximum Rs 160/share opens on September 7
20 lakh Webel SL shares to hit market ((QIP issue))
Ex-dividend: Hero Honda @ Rs 20
 
Telecom Ministry Says:
-To auction 4 3G licenses; 1 reserved for PSUs
-3G auction reserve price at Rs 3,500 crore
-3G auction to be completed in 90 days
-Expect Rs 25,000 crore from 3G, WiMax auction
-BSNL, MTNL to match private sector winning bid in Delhi, Mumbai
-3 WiMax slots to be auctioned; reserve price at Rs 1,750 crore
 
NIFTY FUTURES LEVELS
RESISTANCE
4711
4716
4732
4739
4759
SUPPORT
4688
4682 
4660
4639
4632
4612
Buy SOBHA DEVELOPER; GITANJALI GEMS 
 
 
Strong & Weak  futures  
This is list of 10 strong futures:
Aban Off shore, Ansal Infra, DCHL, Purva, Bhushan Steel, Orchid Chem, India Bulls Retail, HCL Tech, FSL & Polaris Software. 
And this is list of 10 Weak futures:
Sesa Goa Ltd, Hind Uni Lvr, India Cements, Dabut India, Tata Steel, ACC Ltd, Colpal, Federal Bank, Hind Petrol & Canara bank.
 Nifty is in Up trend
NIFTY FUTURES (F & O):
Above 4709-4711 zone, rally may continue up to 4716 level and thereafter expect a jump up to 4730-4732 zone by non-stop.
Support at 4682 & 4688 levels. Below these levels, expect profit booking up to 4660-4662 zone and thereafter slide may continue up to 4639-4641 zone by non-stop.

Buy if touches 4632-4634 zone. Stop Loss at 4612-4614 zone.

On Positive Side, cross above 4737-4739 zone can take it up to 4757-4759 zone by non-stop. If crosses & sustains this zone then uptrend may continue.
 
Short-Term Investors:
Bearish Trend. 3 closes below 4628.40 level, it can tumble up to 4101.60 level by non-stop.
SL triggered. 3 closes above 4628.40 level, expect short covering up to 4891.80 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 SOBHA DEVELOPERS (NSE Cash) 
Uptrend may continue.
Mild sell-off up to 239 level can be used to buy. If uptrend continues, then it may continue up to 252 level for time being. 

If crosses & sustains at above 264 level then uptrend may continue.

Keep a Stop Loss at 227 level for your long positions too.
 
Buy GITANJALI GEMS (NSE Cash) 
Uptrend may continue.
Mild sell-off up to 120 level can be used to buy. If uptrend continues, then it may continue up to 131 level for time being. 

If crosses & sustains at above 136 level then uptrend may continue.

Keep a Stop Loss at 115 level for your long positions too.
 
 
Global Cues & Rupee
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 9,580.63. Up by 37.11 points.
The Broader S&P 500 closed at 1,030.98. Up by 2.86 points.
The Nasdaq Composite Index closed at 2,027.73. Up by 3.30 points.
The partially convertible rupee INR=IN ended at 48.91/92 per dollar on yesterday, stronger than its previous close of 48.93/94.
 
 Interesting findings on web:
  U.S. stocks on Thursday finished with modest gains in thin volume, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average extending its winning streak into an 8th consecutive day, its longest such run since April 2007. The Dow Jones Industrial Average /quotes/comstock/10w!i:dji/delayed (INDU 9,581, +37.41, +0.39%) added 37.11 points, or 0.4%, to 9,580.63. The S&P 500 Index /quotes/comstock/21z!i1:in\x (SPX 1,031, +2.86, +0.28%) gained 2.86 points, or 0.3%, to stand at 1,030.98, while the Nasdaq Composite /quotes/comstock/10y!i:comp (COMP 2,028, +3.30, +0.16%) added 3.3 points, or 0.2%, to 2,027.73.
About eight stocks rose for every seven that fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to 1.16 billion shares, up from 1.05 billion at the close on Wednesday.
In other trading, the Russell 2000 index of smaller companies slipped 0.25, or 0.04 percent, to 583.77.
Dow makes it 8: Best win streak since April '07.
Wall Street closes at fresh 2009 highs, with blue chip average managing longest winning streak in nearly 2-1/2 years.
Sharp gains in financial and industrial stocks helped turn the market around, overwhelming losses in energy and utility companies.
Trading lacked enthusiasm, however, as it has over the past week, with many investors shying away from making greater commitments to stocks.
With many traders on vacation, volume has been extremely light, adding to the market's recent choppiness. The day's economic news, including a slightly smaller-than-expected dip in initial unemployment claims and a fairly benign reading on gross domestic product, did little to excite investors.
Analysts say the market has been running on its own momentum more than anything else, adding that a lot of the improving economic data has already been priced into stocks.
A lot of activity has also been driven by short-covering, analysts say, which tends to magnify the market's gains. Short-covering occurs when investors have to buy stock after having earlier sold borrowed shares in a bet they would fall.
Traders have been anticipating a pullback for weeks, but any dips in the market continue to be met with more buying.
"There is just too much cash sitting on the sidelines," said Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Investors.
There were still fears that a pullback, possibly coinciding with the end of the month, was developing.
"I'm taking a little risk off the table," Art Cashin, director of floor operations at UBS, told CNBC. "September is truly one of the toughest months on the calendar, so I think it's prudent to pull your horns in somewhat."
The mood seemed to be catching; fund managers pared their exposure to stocks and raised their bond holdings, a Reuters poll showed.
Stocks rose Thursday, with the Dow extending its winning streak to eight straight sessions in a thinly-traded advance fueled by bank shares and Boeing.
Dell (DELL, Fortune 500) reported weaker sales and earnings that beat expectations, in a profit report that was released minutes before the close of trading, ahead of schedule. Shares gained 6.5% in extended-hours trading.
"There's a floor in this market and it's probably at least 5% below the recent highs," said Tyler Vernon, chief investment officer at Biltmore Capital. "There's still so much cash on the sidelines that when we see a selloff, there are retail investors and institutional investors ready to jump back in."
Stocks have essentially risen for the last five months, with the S&P 500 ending Wednesday's session up 52% from the 12-year low it hit on March 9. But the pace of the run, coupled with light August trading volume, has left markets churning over the last two weeks.
Better-than-expected economic news -- and a healthy infusion of monetary and fiscal stimulus -- drove the rally. But the latest batch of economic reports have had less of an impact on investor sentiment.
Reports are due Friday on July personal income and spending from the Commerce Department and August consumer sentiment from the University of Michigan.
Gross Domestic Product, the broadest measure of the health of the economy, declined at a 1.0% annual pace in the second quarter, unchanged from the initial reading last month. Economists thought GDP would be revised to show it slowed at a 1.5% annualized pace, according to Briefing.com estimates. In the first quarter, GDP declined at a 6.4% annualized rate.
The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment last week dipped to 570,000 from a revised 580,000 the previous week. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com thought claims would fall to 565,000.
Meanwhile, energy stocks pulled off of their lows after crude prices reversed early losses. Like stocks, oil prices have been extremely volatile in recent weeks as investors try to determine whether current prices are warranted given still weak demand.
Dow components Chevron (CVX, Fortune 500) and Exxon Mobil (XOM, Fortune 500) both posted modest losses after sliding 2% through the early afternoon.
On the upside, shares of AIG (AIG, Fortune 500) rallied 27% after the company's CEO told Reuters that he doesn't support a fire sale of the insurer's assets. New CEO Robert Benmosche said in a year, people will say the bailed-out insurer is performing well. The stock has jumped 274% in August alone.
AIG shares have more than doubled in eight days.
Other financials rallying included Freddie Mac (FRE, Fortune 500), Fannie Mae (FNM, Fortune 500), Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) and Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500) -- all of which have also received government help. The four have been responsible for much of the trading volume over the last few sessions.
Also in active trading, bond insurer AMBAC Financial (ABK) jumped 28%, while CIT Group (CIT, Fortune 500) gained 12%.
Analysts said the gains in AIG and other financial shares were likely magnified by a "short squeeze," in which short sellers scramble to cover their positions in the stocks.
"I think the banks are way overdone right now," said Terry Morris, senior equity manager at National Penn Investors Trust Co., contending that short-covering drove bank stocks higher on Thursday. "They're not twice the companies that they were a week ago."
Dow component Boeing (BA, Fortune 500) said it will have its long-in-the works 787 Dreamliner in the air by the end of the year and that it will make deliveries in the fourth quarter of 2010. The airplane manufacturer said it will take a non-cash charge of $2.5 billion, or $2.21 per share, in the third quarter.
Shares rallied 8.7%.
Checking the NASDAQ Top 100: Making the most gains overnight was Seagate Technology, adding 12.04% to $13.59. Dell and NetApp were the next best performers. Looking at the downside, NII Holdings was the worst performer, loosing 1.69% to $22.71, followed by Amgen and Research in Motion.
Toll Brothers (TOL) reported a quarterly loss of $2.93 per share, versus a loss of 18 cents a year ago. The luxury homebuilder was expected to report a loss of $1.79 per share, according to Briefing.com estimates. Toll Brothers also reported a drop in revenue that nonetheless managed to top estimates.
Its shares, along with those of competitor Hovnanian [HOV  5.12    0.12  (+2.4%)   ], turned positive after being lower through morning trading.
TiVo [TIVO  10.16    -0.34  (-3.24%)   ] shares dropped it reported a smaller-than-expected loss, with sales exceeding estimates. It's also filing lawsuits against both Verizon [VZ  31.05    -0.43  (-1.37%)   ] and AT&T [T  26.42    -0.09  (-0.34%)   ] over patents regarding its time-shifting DVR technology, sending shares of both companies lower.
Verizon was the leading drag on the Dow.
The number of financial institutions on the government's watch list surpassed 400 in the second quarter, the highest level in 15 years, the government said Thursday.
For the week:
The Dow is up 74.67, or 0.8 percent.
The S&P is up 4.85, or 0.5 percent.
The Nasdaq is up 6.83, or 0.3 percent.
For the year:
The Dow is up 804.24, or 9.2 percent.
The S&P is up 127.73, or 14.1 percent.
The Nasdaq is up 450.70, or 28.6 percent.
Oil, Gold & Currencies:
The price of oil turned higher, erasing morning lows. Oil hit 10-month highs earlier in the week. U.S. light crude oil for October delivery rose $1.06 to settle at $72.49 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
COMEX gold for December delivery rose $6 to settle at $951.80 an ounce.
In currency trading, the dollar rose versus the euro and fell versus the Japanese yen.
The euro rose, headed for its first two-month gain against the dollar in 17 months, on optimism the 16-nation region is emerging from its recession, spurring demand for higher-yielding assets.
Europe's currency also strengthened for an eighth day against the pound, its longest winning streak since March 2005, before a European report that may show confidence in the economic outlook increased in August to the highest level in 10 months. The yen weakened against all 16 major counterparts after Japanese government reports showed the unemployment rate rose to an all-time high and consumer prices fell at a record pace in July, reducing the currency's allure as a refuge.
"The euro-zone economies look like they're starting to recover," said Masanobu Ishikawa, general manager of foreign exchange at Tokyo Forex & Ueda Harlow Ltd., Japan's largest currency broker. "The euro is easy to buy, given higher interest rates there than in the U.S. and Japan."
The euro rose to $1.4366 as of 11:13 a.m. in Tokyo from $1.4341 in New York yesterday, when it reached $1.4406, the highest level since Aug. 7. The currency has advanced 0.9 percent this month. It climbed to 134.57 yen from 134.14 yen, and strengthened to 88.24 British pence from 88.07 pence.
The yen weakened to 93.66 per dollar from 93.52 yesterday. It declined to 64.34 versus New Zealand's dollar from 64.28 yesterday and from 64.40 last week.
Executive, Consumer Sentiment
Europe's single currency strengthened as an index of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16-nation region climbed to 78 in August, the highest since October, from 76 in July, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists. The European Commission will release the data today in Brussels.
European Central Bank board member Mario Draghi said on Aug. 26 that the global economy appears to be recovering from its first recession since World War II even though "strong uncertainties" remain.
The yen headed for a second-straight weekly loss versus the New Zealand dollar on speculation investors sold the Japanese currency to buy higher-yielding assets.
Japan's jobless rate rose to 5.7 percent in July, eclipsing the previous worst of 5.5 percent seen in April 2003, the statistics bureau said today in Tokyo. Consumer prices excluding fresh food declined 2.2 percent in July from a year earlier after dropping 1.7 percent in the previous month, the statistics bureau also said today.
"The markets seem to be perceiving the data as a negative for the safe-haven status of the currency," said Takashi Kudo, director of foreign-exchange sales in Tokyo at NTT SmartTrade Inc., a unit of Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp. "This is probably why the yen is being sold."
The benchmark interest rate is 0.1 percent in Japan, compared with 2.5 percent in New Zealand, attracting investors to the South Pacific nation's assets.
U.S. Confidence
The dollar was poised for a third weekly loss versus the Swiss franc before a U.S. report forecast to show a gauge of consumer confidence rose this month, sparking an increase in risk appetite.
A Bloomberg News survey of economists showed that the Reuters/University of Michigan gauge on Aug. 28 is projected to rise. The barometer of confidence among U.S. consumers probably rose to 64.0 in August from 63.2 in the previous month.
The dollar was at 1.0581 francs, down from 1.0594 francs yesterday, holding near the year-to-date low of 1.0531 touched on Aug. 27.
"The overall picture that the global economy is gradually improving remains intact," said Tomokazu Matsufuji, a dealer in Tokyo at SBI Liquidity Markets Co., a unit of financier SBI Holdings Inc. "The safe-haven currencies are likely to weaken against higher-yielding ones as risk sentiment is on the mend."
Adding to signs the recession is easing, the U.S. economy, the world's largest, contracted less than economists forecast as companies reduced inventories, spending started to climb and profits grew, a Commerce Department report said yesterday.
Gross domestic product shrank 1 percent in the three months ended in June, matching the initial estimate on July 31. The contraction was less than the 1.5 percent median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 75 economists.
The main opposition Democratic Party of Japan may win more than 320 of the 480 seats at the election Aug. 30, the Asahi newspaper reported yesterday. Prime Minister Taro Aso dissolved parliament on July 21, triggering the general election.
"The DPJ lacks policies which can re-invigorate the corporate sector as it focuses on households," said Kazuto Uchida, chief economist in Tokyo at Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd., a unit of Japan's biggest banking group. "The limited prospect of an acceleration in growth expectations may prevent foreign investors from buying into Japanese assets."
Spending Policies
DPJ President Yukio Hatoyama and his party have pledged cash for child care and an abolition of highway tolls among their spending policies.
A convincing victory by the DPJ may turn out be positive for the yen in the short term, according to Koji Fukaya, a senior currency strategist at the Tokyo unit of Deutsche Bank AG, the world's largest currency trader.
"The DPJ won't block the Bank of Japan from hiking interest rates when the right time comes, and it will be reluctant to intervene currency markets," he said.
The Bank of Japan, which gained independence from the government in 1998, has kept its benchmark overnight lending rate at 0.1 percent since December. The rate has remained at 0.5 percent or lower since 1995.
Bonds:
Treasury prices slipped, raising the yield on the benchmark 10-year note to 3.47% from 3.43% late Wednesday. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.
Treasury sold $42 billion of 2-year notes Tuesday, $39 billion of five-year notes Wednesday. The sale of $28 billion of 7-year notes Thursday saw a weaker-than-expected demand, but it didn't seem to impact the bond market much.
What to expect:
Friday's data, consumer sentiment and personal income, will provide more clues about the U.S. consumer Friday. Consumer sentiment, reported at 9:55 am New York time, follows on a better than expected consumer confidence report earlier this week. Personal income is released at 8:30 am.
Asia:
Nikkei 225 10,530.62     +56.65 ( +0.54%) (08.06 AM IST).
The Nikkei share average rose 0.5 percent on Friday as exporters such as Kyocera Corp (6971.T) gained, with investors encouraged by a strong run-up on Wall Street, while Japan's Aug. 30 election and Chinese stock moves attracted attention.
Tokyo stocks rose Friday morning from the previous day's fall, buoyed by gains on Wall Street overnight, but the rebound was capped by a lack of other positive cues ahead of Sunday's House of Representatives election.
Casio Computer Co. (6952) shares rebounded sharply Friday morning, climbing as much as 10.5% to 936 yen, surpassing the previous year-to-date high set June 2.
All Nippon Airways Co. (9202) rose as much as 5 yen to hit 289 yen Friday morning, the day after Boeing Co. said it will supply its long-delayed 787 Dreamliner to the firm in October-December 2010.
HSI 20140.87 -101.88 -0.5% (08.14 AM IST).
Hong Kong shares wavered Friday, with Bank of China Ltd. /quotes/comstock/22h!e:3988 (HK:3988 3.84, +0.03, +0.79%) rising after its first-half performance beat expectations, though the advance was capped by a fall in Shanghai shares. The Hang Seng Index dropped 0.4% to 20,165.32 after opening higher, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index fell 0.5% to 11,518.92. China's Shanghai Composite dropped 1.8% to 2,893.56, with refineries and airline stocks sharply lower. China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., better known as Sinopec /quotes/comstock/13*!snp/quotes/nls/snp (SNP 89.80, -0.76, -0.84%) /quotes/comstock/22h!e:386 (HK:386 6.82, -0.19, -2.71%) , slumped 5.4% amid concerns about its earnings outlook, as Beijing hasn't allowed fuel price increases as some expected. Air China Ltd. /quotes/comstock/11i!airyy (AIRYY 12.08, +0.23, +1.94%) stock fell 5.2%, while China Southern Airlines /quotes/comstock/13*!znh/quotes/nls/znh (ZNH 16.64, -0.56, -3.26%) tumbled 4.1%. Baoshan Iron & Steel Ltd. /quotes/comstock/28c!e:600019 (CN:600019 7.01, -0.18, -2.51%) down 3.4% after the steelmaker's group agreed to buy a 15% stake in Australia's Aquila Resources /quotes/comstock/22x!e:aqa (AU:AQA 7.18, +0.63, +9.62%).
Hang Seng Index opens 166 points higher on Fri
Hong Kong stocks rose on Friday morning, with the benchmark Hang Seng Index opening 166 points higher at 20,409.
The Hang Seng China Enterprise Index, which tracks the overall performance of 43 mainland Chinese state-owned enterprises on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, opened 100 points higher at 11,671.
China Mobile<0941><CHL> increased 1.28% from the previous closing to HK$79.25. China Unicom (Hong Kong) Ltd<600050><0762><CHU> rose 3% and opened at HK$11.
SSE Composite  2867.62   -2.67. (08.17 AM IST).
Chinese stocks open 0.27% lower on Fri
Chinese stocks opened slightly lower on Friday morning, tracking losses from the previous closing.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index, which covers both A shares and B shares on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, opened at 2,938.42 points, down 0.27% or 7.98 points from the previous closing.
The Shenzhen Component Index on the smaller Shenzhen Stock Exchange opened 0.15% or 17.71 points lower at 11,880.03 points. 
Seoul's Kospi  [KR;KSPI  1602.54    3.2101  (+0.2%)   ] shares rose on stronger-than-expected U.S. data and a positive finish on Wall Street, with techs such as Hynix lifted by Dell's better-than-expected quarterly results.
And Australia's S&P/ASX 200 [AU;XJO  4467.0    16.20  (+0.36%)   ] was higher with energy stocks such as Woodside Petroleum helping lead the gains after a rise in the price of crude oil.
Woodside rose 1.3 percent to A$49.43, Beach Petroleum gained 1.9 percent to A$0.805 and Santos gained 0.5 percent to A$15.62 after oil prices pulled out of a two-day slump.
Asian stocks rose, sending the MSCI Asia Pacific Index to its second weekly advance in three, as commodity prices and Dell Inc. profit beat analyst estimates.
Inpex Corp., Japan's largest oil explorer, gained 2 percent. Samsung Electronics Co., the world's largest maker of computer- memory chips, added 1.4 percent in Seoul. Casio Computer Co. surged 7.3 percent in Tokyo after the Yomiuri newspaper reported the company is merging its mobile phone business with NEC Corp. and Hitachi Ltd. Japanese equities advanced before an Aug. 30 election that newspaper polls suggest will result in the ruling party being put out of office.
"Risk appetite has recovered from the depths that we had in March and people are looking at fundamentals," said Prasad Patkar, who helps manage about $1.1 billion at Platypus Asset Management in Sydney. "Confidence is there for the right reasons. Economies are stabilizing and things are starting to normalize."
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index advanced 0.4 percent to 113.47 as of 12:05 p.m. in Tokyo, taking its gain this week to 2.6 percent. The gauge has climbed 61 percent from a more than five- year low on March 9 on speculation government stimulus packages and lower borrowing costs will revive the global economy.
Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average added 0.8 percent. The country holds parliamentary elections on Aug. 30, in which the opposition Democratic Party of Japan is expected to win by a landslide, newspaper polls show. The ruling Liberal Democratic Party has governed Japan for all but 10 months since 1955.
Shanghai Composite
Australia's S&P/ASX 200 Index gained 0.7 percent. South Korea's Kospi Index climbed 0.9 percent. China's Shanghai Composite Index dropped 1.9 percent, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell 0.5 percent.
Futures on the U.S. Standard & Poor's 500 Index lost 0.2 percent. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose one basis point to 3.46 percent, according to BGCantor Market Data.
The S&P 500 rose 0.3 percent yesterday as crude oil futures rose for the first time in three days with a 1.5 percent climb. Separately, a Commerce Department report showed the U.S. economy shrank at a 1 percent annual rate from April to June, less than the 1.5 percent contraction estimated by economists.
Inpex gained 2 percent to 750,000 yen in Tokyo. Woodside Petroleum Ltd., Australia's second-largest oil producer, added 1.1 percent to A$49.32 in Sydney.
"Investors are putting their money in risk assets such as oil and stocks," said Kiichi Fujita, a strategist at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Tokyo.
Dell Earnings
BHP Billiton Ltd., the world's biggest mining company, added 0.7 percent to A$37.90. Copper for September delivery in New York increased 1.7 percent in after-hours trading.
Samsung Electronics rose 1.4 percent to 778,000 won in Seoul. Dell, the world's second-largest maker of personal computers, reported sales and profit that beat estimates after cutting manufacturing costs and attracting buyers with low- priced notebooks.
Second-quarter net income at the Texas-based company declined 23 percent to $472 million, or 24 cents a share, as sales fell 22 percent to $12.8 billion in the period. Analysts had predicted a profit of 22 cents a share on average and sales of $12.6 billion, according to a Bloomberg survey.
Dell suppliers in Taiwan gained. Quanta Computer Inc., the world's largest laptop maker, climbed 2.7 percent to NT$69.1. Compal Electronics Inc., the world's second-largest laptop maker, advanced 2 percent to NT$32.65.
Acer Inc., the world's third-largest computer maker, gained 2.8 percent to NT$72.8. HSBC Holdings Plc upgraded the stock to "neutral" from "underweight" and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. raised its share-price estimate by 19 percent to NT$74.
Casio Computer Co., the maker of digital cameras and mobile phones, surged 7.3 percent to 909 yen in Tokyo. Casio, NEC Corp. and Hitachi Ltd. are in talks to merge their mobile-phone businesses by April, the Yomiuri newspaper reported. The venture, of which NEC may own more than a half, would have more than 20 percent of Japan's mobile-phone market, the newspaper said.
NEC added 0.3 percent to 332 yen. Hitachi gained 1.2 percent to 326 yen. 

Macquarie sets up trust JV in Shanghai.
Angel Yeast to issue RMB 300 mln in financing bills.
Midea Electric's net profit up 18.63% in H1.
Powertech to buy Spansion's plant in Suzhou.
JPMorgan raises stake in Yanzhou Coal Mining to 5.04%.
China industrial output to rise 11.5% in Q3: MIIT.
T. Rowe Price cuts stake in Wumart Stores to 10.97%.
Panzhihua Iron & Steel to issue RMB 1 bln in notes.
SAIC Motor reports 26% decline in net profit for H1.
NetDragon Websoft's net profit plunges 42.4% in H1.
Sportswear firm Li Ning reports 41.6% surge in net profit for H1.
Guangzhou's industrial exports up 2.3% in Jul.
BOE to invest RMB 28 bln in 8G TFT-LCD production line.   
 
Half-year net profit of BOC (HK) down 5.6%
Bank of China (Hong Kong) said Thursday its half-year profit fell by 5.6 percent from a year earlier, dragged lower by falling interest income amid the deepening economic downturn.
The bank's net profit for the six months ending June 30 amounted to 6.69 billion Hong Kong dollars, down from 7.09 billion Hong Kong dollars in the same period last year.
However, the bank said it represented a major improvement against the net loss of 3.75 billion Hong Kong dollars in the second half of 2008, which can be attributed to the increase in operating income as well as the decrease in impairment charges on securities investments.
Net interest income decreased by 11 percent to 8.93 billion Hong Kong dollars as net interest margin narrowed by 27 basis points to 1.76 percent. But the net fees and commission income grew by 1.7 percent year-on-year to 2.95 billion Hong Kong dollars driven by the rebound of the local stock market in the first half of this year.
The bank's vice chairman and chief executive He Guangbei said the performance in the first half of this year reflected the progress the bank had made in regaining its growth momentum. As the turbulence and its knocks-on effects began to subside, the bank would pursue a prudent yet flexible development strategy in an environment of change and challenge.
He also said BOC (HK) would actively expand the RMB-related banking business as the sole Clearing Bank for Renminbi business in Hong Kong. 

Bank of China Plans to Slow Lending in Second Half
Bank of China Ltd., the nation's third-largest by assets, plans to slow credit growth in the second half of the year and improve loan quality after posting an unexpected profit gain in the second quarter.
Net income climbed 10 percent to 22.6 billion yuan ($3.3 billion), based on earnings figures the Beijing-based company reported yesterday. That exceeded the 19.51 billion yuan average estimate of five analysts compiled by Bloomberg.
Bank of China joined its three biggest publicly traded rivals in reporting better-than-estimated profits after state- owned lenders advanced a record amount of new loans in the first half to revive economic growth. Plans to rein in loan growth may relieve investors concerned that asset bubbles will form and bad loans will rise. Bank of China advanced more new credit than any other Chinese lender in the first half.
"BOC took full advantage of the loose monetary policy in the mainland to expand its market share," Bank of America Corp.'s Merrill Lynch & Co. analysts led by Winnie Wu wrote in a note today. "BOC could offer one of the best earnings growth stories in 2009 and 2010."
Shares in the company rose 1.6 percent to HK$3.87 at 10:06 a.m. in Hong Kong. The stock has gained 82 percent this year, outperforming China Construction Bank Corp., Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. and Bank of Communications Ltd.
Credit Growth Slows
Lending in the second half will be "much smaller," with new credit in July and August dropping from the monthly averages of the first half, President Li Lihui told reporters yesterday.
Bank of China was the last of the country's four biggest publicly traded lenders to report earnings.
The profit growth "confirms our belief that the worst is over for Chinese banks," said Lu Xiaojiu, an analyst in Beijing at BOCOM International Ltd. who expects the lenders to post a 12 percent rise in full-year profit.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao in March set a new loan growth target of 5 trillion yuan in 2009 for the banking industry to revive economic growth that dropped to 6.1 percent in the first quarter, the slowest pace in almost a decade. New loans, which reached a record 7.73 trillion yuan as of July 31, may top 11 trillion yuan by the end of the year, BNP Paribas SA estimates.
Construction Bank this week warned of asset bubbles in capital markets after posting a 4.9 percent drop in net income in the first six months. ICBC, the world's biggest bank by market value, last week said its profit in the period rose 2.9 percent on record lending.
Equities Rally
China's regulators are changing tack after gross domestic product expanded 7.9 percent in the second quarter and the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rallied 25 percent.
The China Banking Regulatory Commission last month required the nation's lenders to raise reserves to 150 percent of non- performing loans by the end of this year, and on July 27 told banks to ensure loans intended for investment in fixed assets go to projects that support the real economy. Three days later, it announced plans to tighten rules on working capital loans.
The regulator also sent draft rule changes to banks on Aug. 19 requiring them to deduct all existing holdings of subordinated and hybrid debt from supplementary capital, people familiar with the matter said last week. As a result, banks may need to rein in lending to meet capital requirements.
Bank of China is considering plans to replenish capital and maintain the capital adequacy ratio at an "appropriate" level, Li said yesterday.
Net Interest Income
The lender posted an 8.3 percent drop in first-half net interest income, or the difference between revenue from lending and payments to depositors, as the profitability of loans worsened. Income from fee-based services, such as trade finance and distribution of insurance policies, gained 2.6 percent to 22.98 billion yuan.
Bank of China set aside 7 billion yuan to cover potential loan defaults in the first half, an increase of 7.8 percent from a year earlier. Its impaired-loan ratio narrowed to 1.83 percent from 2.29 percent three months earlier.
Impairment losses on Bank of China's subprime-related investments and other securities holdings stood at $4.67 billion as of June 30, down from $4.84 billion three months earlier. The loss remains more than that suffered by all the other Chinese banks combined.
The bank still held $2.2 billion of subprime-mortgage investments, $1.05 billion of securities backed by so-called Alt-A home loans and $3.2 billion of other "non-agency" mortgage investments as of June 30.
China Telecom first-half net income falls 29% to $1.3 billion
China Telecom Corp., the nation's largest fixed-line operator, said Thursday its net income for the first half fell 29% from a year earlier because of significant costs for its new its 3G network and for marketing, as well as the loss of 9 million fixed-line subscribers.
Meltdown 101: Is Dow 10,000 important?
It's time to look in the closet for that crumpled Dow 10,000 cap.
The first time the Dow Jones industrial average entered five-figure territory, corporate bigwigs tossed hats that said "Dow 10,000" to cheering traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
That was a decade ago. Traders could soon see 10,000 again soon, but any celebrating would be more a show of relief than an expression of brimming confidence.
The Dow stands about 500 points shy of the 10,000 mark, putting the milepost on investors' radar for the second time in a year. In October, the Dow tumbled below that mark as traders saw an already weak economy come to a jerking halt.
Now, the stock market is in the sixth month of what investors hope will be a lasting recovery on Wall Street and in the economy. So 10,000 is, once again, in sight. But what would hitting that mark mean this time, if anything?
Analysts say it's mostly a psychological barrier, but it could draw more attention to the enormous run in stocks since March. It could also fan skepticism about a market that some analysts say has gained too much, too quickly.
Here are some questions and answers about what it would mean for the Dow to hit 10,000.
Q: When did the Dow first close above that level?
A: After several tries, the Dow finished above 10,000 on March 29, 1999, in the midst of a powerful market rally that would end with the dot-com collapse at the start of this decade.
Q: What would Dow 10,000 mean this time?
A: Some analysts say it holds little significance given how far the market remains from its peak almost two years ago. But many contend that seeing Wall Street's best-known thermometer roll back to five digits could inject traders with confidence.
"It's a like a century rather than 99 years. There's not that big of a difference but there's a big difference psychologically," said Dan Cook, senior market analyst at IG Markets in Chicago.
Q: What would it mean for the market's recovery?
A: The Dow is down 32.6 percent from its peak of 14,165 in October 2007. At 10,000 it would still be down 29.4 percent. Other indicators that traders tend to pay more attention to, like the Standard & Poor's 500 index, are also down by similar amounts.
Q: Should a climb past 10,000 make investors more confident?
A: Analysts are divided. But it would certainly feel better than when the Dow skidded 370 points on Oct. 6, 2008, to close below 10,000 for the first time in four years. By March, the Dow had tumbled to a 12-year low of 6,547. That was a drop of 53.8 percent from its high.
Some analysts say, though, that reaching 10,000 would make them nervous that the market was overheated.
"I'd rather almost hit the March lows again before it hit 10,000 because I do think we have run ahead of ourselves," Cook said.
Q: What would be needed to push the Dow above 10,000?
A: Investors will need to see more signs of an improving economy, because the stock market tends to bounce back as the economy is getting ready to recover from a recession. Investors need reassurance that they've been right to buy into the market.
Recent economic readings on housing, employment and the economy's output have signaled that the longest recession since World War II, which began in December 2007, could be ending.
"It's good news that the market has reached 9,500, but it's particularly good news that it's confirmed by most of the important economic numbers that we're looking at," said Hugh Johnson, chief investment officer of Johnson Illington Advisors in Albany, N.Y.
"It's not fanciful or whimsical or sheer speculation," he said, adding that some doubters have missed the rally. "The market is right; strategists, economists and individual investors have been wrong."
Q: Should average investors prepare in some way for the Dow at 10,000? Should they even care?
A: Long-term investors shouldn't react to day-to-day moves in the market, but it could be a good time to prune portfolios. Most financial advisers say it's wise to pull money from the strongest performers and funnel some of it to other investments. That helps guard against letting one part of a portfolio carry too much weight.
Q: What if the Dow doesn't hurdle 10,000?
A: If weeks and months go by and the index hasn't cruised past that number, some investors will see that as a signal that the rally is over. But keep in mind that stocks paused in June before surging again in July. Some analysts say a time-out is what stocks need after the Dow surged 45.8 percent since March — the kind of gain that might take investors five years to amass in less volatile periods.
Q: If the Dow does reach 10,000, how soon might we see another notable number?
A: Cook contends that a number like 10,500 could come within days because short-sellers — investors who try to make money by predicting that stocks will fall — could get spooked by the Dow's ascent. As worried short-sellers buy stock to cover their bets, the market could get a boost.
Q: What could blow the market out of the water?
A: It's impossible to say what could upend the rally, but analysts caution that any big disruption in the economy's recovery — like new waves of foreclosures or jumps in unemployment rolls — could send stocks tumbling.
Japan Logs Record CPI Drop and Jobless Rate
Japanese core consumer prices fell a record 2.2 percent in July from a year earlier, with weak demand playing a growing role in pushing the world's No. 2 economy deeper into deflation.
And Japan's jobless rate rose to a record high 5.7 percent in July
While last year's spike in energy costs continued to weigh on on-year comparisons in prices, an index stripping out both energy and food prices showed deflationary pressure was broadening.
The core-core inflation index, similar to the core index used in other developed countries, fell 0.9 percent in July from the same month a year ago after declining 0.7 percent in June.
The drop in the core consumer price index, which excludes volatile fresh fruit, vegetable and seafood prices but includes those of oil products, matched a market forecast and was bigger than a 1.7 percent drop in June.
It was the third straight month of record falls in the index, and the biggest drop under calculation methods dating back to 1970. July also marked the fifth straight month of annual falls, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications data showed on Friday.
Core consumer prices in Tokyo, available a month before the nationwide data, fell a record 1.9 percent in August from a year earlier, more than a market forecast of a 1.8 percent decline.
Japan's economy returned to growth in the second quarter, pulling out of its longest recession since World War Two, but analysts warn of a rocky road ahead as the nascent recovery was based on short-term stimulus efforts around the world.
Jobless Rate Hits Record
Job availability in Japan sank to a record low, reinforcing views that it will take time for the job market to recover despite a pick-up in corporate activity.
The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate rose to 5.7 percent from 5.4 percent in June and was above a median market forecast of 5.5 percent.
The jobs-to-applicants ratio slid to 0.42 from 0.43 the month before, meaning only about four jobs were available for every 10 applicants. It was the lowest reading since the data began in 1963 and fell short of a median market forecast of 0.43.
The number of new job offers fell 23.4 percent in July from the same month last year but was flat from June, when new job offers rose on month for the first time in six months.
China's planning agency warns of rising inflation risk
China's economic planning agency said Thursday inflationary expectations are on the rise even as prices show few signs of moving higher, highlighting growing concerns among official agencies about the dangerous side effects from rapid credit growth, according to a report.
The National Development and Reform Commission said in a statement that regulators should closely monitor prices and seek to prevent shortages in the week-long national holiday beginning Oct. 1.
"Overall inflation expectations have increased, affected by recent price rises, high credit growth, and the stock market and property rebound," Dow Jones Newswires cited the National Development and Reform Commission as saying a statement.
The agency added that broad-based inflation was unlikely in the near term.
China's Baosteel to Buy 15% of Australia's Aquila
Baosteel Group, China's biggest steel mill, has agreed to invest US$240 million for a 15 percent stake in Australian coal and iron ore miner Aquila Resources, underscoring China's huge appetite for Australian assets.
Fed Officials: Must Not Ignore Stimulus 'Exit Strategy'
The U.S. Federal Reserve should be careful not to over-stimulate the economy and stay focused on an exit from its aggressive monetary expansion as growth resumes, two senior Fed officials said on Thursday.
St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President James Bullard said the central bank would need to think about scaling back its economic support in the months ahead, while Richmond Fed chief Jeffrey Lacker said it should weigh whether to carry through with all of its current stimulus plans.
"As we head to 2010, the Fed will shift its focus to implementing an exit strategy in order to avoid any potential inflation threats to the economy,'' Bullard said in prepared remarks.
"Monetary policy is still very accommodative and the (Fed) intends to keep the fed funds target near zero for an extended period,'' he said, according to a summary of his presentation on the economic outlook at the College of Business at the University of Arkansas-Little Rock.
Bullard emphasized that the exit ought to mean allowing the Fed balance sheet to shrink, perhaps by selling assets that it purchased this year to counter the worst recession since the Great Depression, rather than speedy rate hikes.
Lacker, speaking earlier at an event in Danville, Virginia, suggested the Fed should consider now whether its planned purchases of mortgage securities might give the economy more of a boost than it needs.
"I will be evaluating carefully whether we need or want the additional stimulus that purchasing the full amount authorized under our agency mortgage-backed securities purchase program would provide,'' said Lacker, who is a voting member of the central bank's policy-setting committee this year.
The Fed plans to buy up to $1.45 trillion of agency mortgage debt by Dec. 31, 2009, as well as $300 billion of longer-dated U.S. government bonds by the end of October.
The purchases were designed to prevent a contraction in the U.S. monetary base as growth slumped. Policy-makers thought this could inflict a Japan-style deflation, or period of widespread falling prices, which would have made the U.S. recession much worse. As a result they Both officials, who are generally viewed as sitting on the more hawkish, or anti-inflationary, wing of the Fed's policy-setting committee, said that the economy was showing signs of healing.
"Recent data suggest the economy is stabilizing, and there should be positive economic growth in the second half of 2009,'' said Bullard.
Their comments were somewhat at odds with remarks on Wednesday by Atlanta Federal Reserve President Dennis Lockhart, who said there should be no hasty move toward raising rates and who urged policy-makers to show patience before withdrawing monetary policy stimulus, to ensure the recovery take holds. 

Toyota Will Shut California Plant in First Closure
Toyota Motor Corp. will shut an assembly plant for the first time in its 72-year history after the failure of a joint venture with General Motors Corp. 
 
INVESTMENT VIEW
TCS: The Big Keep Getting Bigger

 
 Tata Consultancy Services, a unit of India's Tata Group conglomerate, said Thursday it was selected as a strategic information technology vendor for BP PLC, one of the world's biggest oil and gas companies. Terms were not disclosed.
 
The deal is part of a year-old effort by BP to lower costs by consolidating its information technology vendors for application development and maintenance. Tata will work on refining, manufacturing and corporate IT maintenance.

(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

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Market Outlook for 27th Aug 2009

NIFTY FUTURES LEVELS
RESISTANCE
4696
4700
4715
4721
4740
SUPPPORT
4671
4668
4647
4628
4622
4603
Buy JINDAL PHOTO;MOTHERSON SUMI
 
INTRADAY calls for 27th Aug 2009
+ve script : Shiping, GESHIP, ABGShip
BUY Drreddy-825 above 830 for 842+ with sl 826
BUY STER-679 above 682 for 695+ with sl 677
BUY ABGShip-203 for 215+ with sl 199
BUY GMDC-97 for 105+ with sl 94
RISK Takers call
BUY LICHousing-673 above 677 for 686-697+ with sl 670
BUY TATAComm-519 above 522 for 537-545+ with sl 517
Positional
BUY Balmlawrie-471 for 537+ with sl 455
BUY Everon-396 for 554+ with sl 357
BUY Prajind-98 for 130+ with sl 91
 
Strong & Weak  futures 
 This is list of 10 strong futures:
Aban Off shore, Ansal Infra, Purva, Bhushan Steel, Patni, FSL, Tata Motors, Oracle Fin Serv & Orchid Chem.
And this is list of 10 Weak futures:
Bajaj Hind, India Cements, Chambal Fert, Balrampur Ch, Federal Bank, Cipla Ltd, Sesa Goa Ltd, Canara Bank, IDFC & Sail Ltd.
Nifty is in Up trend
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 26-Aug-2009 2289.71 1911.17 378.54
DII trading activity on NSE and BSE in Capital Market Segment(In Rs. Crores)
Category Date Buy Value Sell Value Net Value
DII 26-Aug-2009 1612.74 1484.09 128.65
 
NIFTY FUTURES (F & O):
Above 4694-4696 zone, rally may continue up to 4700 level and thereafter expect a jump up to 4713-4715 zone by non-stop.
Support at 4668 & 4671 levels. Below these levels, expect profit booking up to 4647-4649 zone and thereafter slide may continue up to 4628-4630 zone by non-stop.

Buy if touches 4622-4624 zone. Stop Loss at 4603-4605 zone.

On Positive Side, cross above 4719-4721 zone can take it up to 4738-4740 zone. If crosses & sustains this zone then uptrend may continue.
 
Short-Term Investors: 
 Bearish Trend. 3 closes below 4623.80 level, it can tumble up to 4092.20 level by non-stop.
SL triggered. 3 closes above 4623.80 level, expect short covering up to 4889.60 level by non-stop.
 
BSE SENSEX: 
 Higher opening expected. Uptrend should continue. 
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 JINDAL PHOTO (NSE Cash) 
Uptrend may continue.
Mild sell-off up to 143 level can be used to buy. If uptrend continues, then it may continue up to 153 level for time being. 

If crosses & sustains at above 161 level then uptrend may continue.

Keep a Stop Loss at 135 level for your long positions too.
 
Buy MOTHERSON SUMI (NSE Cash) 
Uptrend may continue.

Mild sell-off up to 93 level can be used to buy. If uptrend continues, then it may continue up to 102 level for time being. 

If crosses & sustains at above 110 level then uptrend may continue.

Keep a Stop Loss at 85 level for your long positions too.
 

 
Global Cues & Rupee  
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 9,543.52. Up by 4.23 points.
The Broader S&P 500 closed at 1,028.12. Up by 0.12 points.
The Nasdaq Composite Index closed at 2,024.43. Up by 0.20 points.
We did't get update on Rupee.
 
 Interesting findings on web:
The stock market is running out of reasons to go higher.
After rocking between gains and losses Wednesday, the Dow Jones industrials managed to rise for a seventh straight day, marking another high for the year.
But there was hardly any excitement. The Dow rose just 4 points, while other major indexes gained less than 1 point despite positive reports on home sales and factory orders.
An increasingly cautious mood has gripped the market in recent days, following a period of fervid buying this spring and summer that sent stocks up more than 45 percent since early March. While economic data is showing modest improvement, investors are worried stocks may have overshot the economy's recovery.
"The market jumps and then it sort of fades again," said Keith Walter, portfolio manager at Artio Global Equity Fund. "There's not a lot of commitment here."
With trading volume and news flow tapering down amid Wall Street's annual summer slowdown, analysts say there are few near-term catalysts that could get the market's rally going again.
"We seem to be floating up on air," said Andrew Frankel, co-president of Stuart Frankel & Co.
Stocks seesawed without a clear direction despite a Commerce Department report that said new home sales rose 9.6 percent in July for the fourth straight monthly increase. Sales rose to 433,000, the strongest pace since September and well above the 390,000 figure economists expected.
The latest sign of improvement in housing didn't do much to impress investors, though, who have already factored in a recovery in the long-suffering home industry. Some of the latest gains can be attributed to a federal tax credit for first-time home owners currently set to expire in November, and the industry has been pressing Congress to extend it.
Separately, the Commerce Department said orders for goods expected to last at least three years rose 4.9 percent in July — the biggest jump in two years and more than the 3 percent increase economists had expected.
However the overall increase was driven by a surge in orders for transportation equipment, which benefited from the government's recently expired Cash for Clunkers program that drove thousands of people to trade in older cars for new ones. Excluding transportation goods, orders rose 0.8 percent, just short of analysts' expectations.
Across the pond, German business confidence jumped to its highest since last September, according to the Ifo business-climate index.
The morning began with news of Senator Ted Kennedy's death at age 77. Kennedy died after a long battle with a brain tumor, having served in the Senate since 1962, making him the third longest serving senator in history.
Kennedy was considered one of President Obama's major allies in his health-care reform initiative, and the President issued a statement saying he and First Lady Michelle Obama were "heartbroken" to learn of Kennedy's death.
The Dow rose 4.23, or 0.04 percent, to 9,543.52. Over the past seven days, the Dow has risen 408 points, or 4.5 percent. The last time the Dow posted such a long winning streak was on July 21, when its seven-day gain came to 770 points, or 9.4 percent.
The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 0.12, or 0.01 percent, to 1,028.12, while the Nasdaq composite index rose 0.20, or 0.01 percent, to 2,024.43.
All three indexes are now at their highest levels since last fall.
Stocks ended flat Wednesday as investors shrugged off solid demand from today's five-year Treasury auction and some encouraging economic reports.
For the third consecutive day, equities bounced after favorable news, but the gains fizzled.
After a five-month run-up that has pushed the broader S&P 500 up 52 percent from its 12-year closing low on March 9, analysts have been questioning the rally's strength even as economic data points to improved demand.
"It's a sleepy day on Wall Street," said Fred Dickson, market strategist at D.A. Davidson & Co in Lake Oswego, Oregon.
"It seems like traders have lost the momentum after a huge upward move and they are finally taking a breather."
For the week:
The Dow is up 37.56, or 0.4 percent.
The S&P is up 1.99, or 0.2 percent.
The Nasdaq is up 3.53, or 0.2 percent.
For the year:
The Dow is up 767.13, or 8.7 percent.
The S&P is up 124.87, or 13.8 percent.
The Nasdaq is up 447.40, or 28.4 percent.
Declining stocks narrowly outnumbered advancers on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume came to a light 5.10 billion shares, down from 5.74 billion shares on Tuesday.
In other trading, the Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 0.80, or 0.1 percent, to 584.02.
New home purchases in the US rose 9.6% last month, boosting Home Depot 1.5%. GE, 3M and Caterpillar all slumped more than 1% after durable goods orders, excluding cars, trucks and airplanes, climbed less than economists projected.
But the data proved bullish for the housing sector, driving the Dow Jones U.S. Home Construction index .DJUSHB up 3 percent.
Among the index components, D.R. Horton Inc (DHI.N) advanced 5.7 percent to $13.79 while Beazer Homes (BZH.N) climbed 5 percent to $4.23.
Home Depot Inc (HD.N), the largest home-improvement retailer and a Dow component, gained 0.9 percent to $27.57.
Durable goods excluding transportation rose 0.8 percent, below expectations, although overall durable goods orders posted the largest jump since July 2007, a separate Commerce Department report showed.
Industrial stocks tumbled, in part after China said it would take steps to curb overcapacity among steel and cement producers.
The Dow Jones Heavy Construction index .DJUSHV fell 1.8 percent, with Jacobs Engineering (JEC.N) down 2.8 percent at $45.10. US Steel Corp (X.N) fell 2.4 percent to $43.24.
One of the top drags on the Nasdaq was Apple Inc (AAPL.O), down 1.2 percent at $167.41.
Earlier, Nokia (NOK.N) said it would try to tackle Apple's iPhone in the smartphone market with a bet on Linux software, according to industry sources. Nokia's U.S.-listed stock was up 4 percent at $13.13.
In earnings-related activity, Williams-Sonoma (WSM.N) shot up 11.3 percent to $17.21 after it posted a surprising second-quarter profit.
Topping the Nasdaq's list of biggest percentage decliners was the stock of Concurrent Computer (CCUR.O), which sank 17.6 percent to $4.63 after the company said it expects lower spending trends to continue in the first quarter.
US Steel dropped 2.4% as China said it might seek to reduce overcapacity among steel and cement producers.
Shares of homebuilders surged for a second day after the housing data showed the supply of new homes on the market shrank to the lowest level since April 2007. If supply is decreasing, builders may need to ramp up production.
Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. rose 43 cents, or 9.4 percent, to $5, tacking on to its 6.5 percent jump the day before. The stock is now at its highest level since October. Lennar Corp. rose 61 cents, or 4.1 percent, to $15.58 — its highest point since September.
Sharp declines in industrial and material stocks weighed on the market as commodities prices wavered. A long rally in commodities prices that started earlier this year has been sputtering in recent weeks amid concerns of waning demand from China.
Financials finished mixed, with Bank of America [BAC  17.79    0.04  (+0.23%)   ] and AIG [AIG  37.69    3.72  (+10.95%)   ] finishing up. Citigroup [C  4.63    -0.12  (-2.53%)   ] and JPMorgan [JPM  43.30    -0.28  (-0.64%)   ] slipped.
Fannie Mae [FNM  1.85    -0.01  (-0.54%)   ] and Freddie Mac [FRE  2.03    -0.03  (-1.46%)   ] started higher but ended lower, with Freddie down 1.5 percent and Fannie off 0.5 percent.
In August's quiet trading, Bank of America, Citi, Fannie and Freddie have accounting for an extraordinary amount of volume, which traders have dubbed a "dash for trash."
Caterpillar [CAT  47.25    -0.58  (-1.21%)   ], Boeing [BA  47.82    -0.43  (-0.89%)   ] and Alcoa [AA  12.26    -0.09  (-0.73%)   ] were among the biggest drags on the Dow. Industrials took a hit after China announced plans to curb overcapacity among steel and cement producers.
Toyota [TM  86.91    0.31  (+0.36%)   ] will cut production in response to slumping sales, with cuts possibly reaching 700,000 vehicles, or about 7 percent of the company's global production capacity.
Williams-Sonoma [WSM  17.21    1.74  (+11.25%)   ] jumped 11 percent after the housewares chain posted a surprise profit.
Oil,Gold & Currencies:
Oil prices fell further Wednesday after the government reported an increase in crude supplies. Light, sweet crude fell 62 cents to $71.43 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Oil inventories rose by 100,000 barrels last week, when analysts had expected a 600,000-barrel decline.
Gold futures edged lower as a stronger dollar reduced the metal's investment appeal.
The most active December contract settled at $US945.80 an ounce, down 20USc, in New York. It fell as low as $US941.20 earlier.
The less active August contract, which expires on Thursday, also ended at $US944.30.
The dollar advanced for a fourth day against the euro amid concern restrictions on Chinese production will stifle an economic recovery, sparking demand for safe-haven currencies.
The yen rose versus all of its 16 most-active counterparts as regional shares declined on the proposed production curbs and before reports estimated to show the U.S. economy contracted at a faster pace and Japanese unemployment rose. The pound dropped to the weakest level in more than a month against the yen before a U.K. report today forecast to show British home prices increased at a slower pace this month.
“Uncertainties about China’s policy action, aimed at tackling credit expansion, will continue to be a key driving force of the market,” said Toshiya Yamauchi, a Tokyo-based manager of the foreign-exchange margin trading department at Ueda Harlow Ltd. “Should the Chinese stock market struggle, the safe-haven currencies may strengthen.”
The dollar traded at $1.4243 versus the euro at 11:07 a.m. in Tokyo from $1.4255 yesterday in New York. The yen was at 133.70 per euro from 134.36. The dollar weakened to 93.87 yen from 94.26 yesterday.
Britain’s currency was at 152.38 yen from 153.17 yesterday after touching 152.18, the lowest since July 14. It fell to $1.6233 from $1.6249 in New York. It touched $1.6160 yesterday, the weakest since July 13.
The Australian dollar declined to 82.63 U.S. cents from 82.84 cents as crude oil, the nation’s fourth-most valuable export, fell for a third day to $71.33 a barrel.
Chinese Policy
China’s cabinet said yesterday it’s studying restrictions on overcapacity in industries including steel and cement as policy makers seek to rein in investment growth fueled by a record credit expansion this year.
“China is a key engine for Asia’s economies, so any curbs on investment would likely undermine a recovery in the region,” said Tsutomu Soma, a bond and currency dealer at Okasan Securities Co. in Tokyo. “Risk aversion will probably increase, leading to buying of the yen and the dollar.”
The Chinese government will also increase “guidance” over parts of the coal, glass and power industries, the State Council said on its Web site yesterday. Controls on stock and bond sales by companies in targeted sectors will be strengthened, it said.
The nation’s benchmark stock index has dropped 15 percent from its Aug. 4 high this year on concern banks may tighten credit after extending a record $1.1 trillion of loans in the first six months.
The Shanghai Composite Index opened lower today before rising 0.1 percent. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average declined 1.6 percent and the MSCI Asia Pacific Index of regional shares lost 0.7 percent.
Japanese Data
The yen advanced for a third day against the euro as a Bloomberg News survey of economists showed the unemployment rate in Japan rose last month, sapping risk appetite. The rate is forecast to match a record high of 5.5 percent.
Consumer prices excluding fresh food dropped an unprecedented 2.2 percent in July, according to a separate survey. Both reports are due tomorrow.
Adding to concerns that a global recovery will be slow, the U.S. government’s revised figures for second-quarter gross domestic product, due today, may show the economy contracted at a 1.5 percent annual rate, compared with the preliminary showing of a 1 percent fall, according to a Bloomberg News survey.
The pound declined for a seventh day against the euro, the longest run since January, on concerns that an economic recovery there may lag behind major counterparts.
The average cost of a home climbed 0.5 percent in August following a 1.3 percent rise in July, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists before the Nationwide Building Society releases the data today.
“The recovery in U.K. house prices may be stalling a bit,” said Lee Wai Tuck, a currency strategist at Forecast Pte in Singapore. “It’s not good for the economy and it’s negative for the pound.”
The Bank of England has cut its benchmark interest rate to 0.5 percent, allocated 175 billion pounds ($284 billion) to buy bonds and is raising 220 billion pounds of debt through March 2010 to fund stimulus packages and bank bailouts.
Bonds:
Government bond prices were little changed despite favorable demand at an auction of $39 billion in five-year notes. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note held steady at 3.44 percent.
What to expect:
THURSDAY: 2nd reading on Q2 GDP; weekly jobless claims; Kansas City Fed report; Fed's Bullard speaks; seven-year auction; earnings from American Eagle, Toll Brothers and Dell.
FRIDAY: Personal income and spending; consumer sentiment; Earnings from Tiffany.
Thursday's data includes weekly jobless claims and second quarter GDP, which is the second read for that number. Earnings include American Eagle [AEO  14.58    0.24  (+1.67%)   ], Toll Brothers [TOL  23.14    0.83  (+3.72%)   ], Royal Bank of Canada [RBS  18.44    0.91  (+5.19%)   ] and Toronto Dominion [TD  60.55    0.07  (+0.12%)   ], before the open.
Dell [DELL  14.6761    0.1061  (+0.73%)   ], Marvell Tech [MRVL  14.40    0.31  (+2.2%)   ] and Novell [NOVL  4.75    0.03  (+0.64%)   ] report after the close.
Gus Faucher, director of macroeconomics at Moody's Economy.com, said he expects unemployment claims to come in at about 568,000, down slightly.
"The labor market is improving in the sense job losses are shrinking. Employers aren't cutting back as quickly as they had," he said. Traders are watching this number closely after two previous weeks of slightly larger-than-expected new claims.
They are also watching it with an eye toward next Friday's key monthly jobs report for August. Faucher said he may tweak his expectations for the August report, if there are surprises in Thursday's data. For now, he expects a decline in payroll employment of 235,000. He sees the unemployment rate rising to 9.5 percent, versus 9.4 percent in July.
"It's still our anticipation that the labor market is getting worse at a slower pace. It's definitely not at the point where we see job gains. We should start to see gains early in 2010," he said.
Faucher said he expects to see the Q2 GDP revised to -1.5 percent. Second quarter GDP was initially reported at -1 percent, better than most economists had expected at the time.
The big decline in inventories in the second quarter is expected to affect that number.
"Industry got rid of a lot more inventory than we originally thought so that's going to be a negative for GDP in the second quarter, but it's going to be positive for GDP in the second half of the year," as companies increase production to rebuild inventory, he said.
China was big in the news but not much of a factor for markets, as it had been earlier this month when the Shanghai market sold off. Traders are wary about a report from official Chinese news that the state council is studying limits on industries where there is overcapacity, such as steel and cement. Also, Aluminum Corp of China said that smelters, traders and warehouses are all holding as much as 600,00 metric tons of inventories due to surplus output, far more than reported stocks held by the Shanghai Futures Exchange.
Chandler, in a note, said it is also being aggravated by Chinese smelters coming back on line to take advantage of a 30 percent jump in prices.
"We need to be concerned about it because China is one of the engines of the world economy and we need to worry about what it means to us," said Chandler, in an interview. He said China is trying to constrain its growth because it is worried about creating a bubble.
Asia:
Asian stock markets were mostly lower Thursday, succumbing to some profit-taking after Wall Street's limp showing, though losses weren't too severe as positive economic data from the U.S. bolstered sentiment.
Japan's Nikkei was down 1.5%, Australia's S&P/ASX 20 was 0.6% lower, while South Korea's Kospi Composite lost 0.6%. New Zealand's NZX-50 was flat.
Nikkei 225 10,470.99     -168.72 ( - 1.59%). (08.00 AM IST).
Japan's Nikkei average fell 1.6 percent on Thursday after hitting a 10-month closing high the previous day, with exporters such as Canon Inc (7751.T) losing steam, while trade remained cautious ahead of Sunday's election.
The benchmark Nikkei .N225 shed 168.72 points to 10,470.99, after rising 1.4 percent the previous day to score its highest close since Oct. 3.
The broader Topix declined 1.5 percent to 960.54.
Chubu Electric Power Co. (9502) Thursday said it plans to complete safety checks of the No. 3 reactor at its Hamaoka nuclear power station in Shizuoka prefecture, central Japan, around late September.
Nissan Motor Co. (7201) shares fell back Thursday morning, falling 18 yen from Wednesday at one point to 665 yen after buying ran its course. 

HSI 20353.72 -102.6 -0.5% (08.10 AM IST).
Hong Kong shares declined early Thursday, with Esprit Holdings getting thrashed after the fashion retailer's half-yearly earnings disappointed, while China-related stocks fell on weakness in the Shanghai market. The Hang Seng Index fell 0.8% to 20,292.39, and the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index gave up 0.9%, while China's Shanghai Composite lost 0.8% to 2,943.63. Esprit /quotes/comstock/22h!e:330 (HK:330 53.20, -6.75, -11.27%) skidded 11.6% in strong volume after reporting a 40% drop in profit, while energy producer Cnooc Ltd. /quotes/comstock/22h!e:883 (HK:883 10.54, -0.10, -0.94%) /quotes/comstock/13*!ceo/quotes/nls/ceo (CEO 137.19, +1.14, +0.84%) dropped 1.3%, also on weaker-than-expected half-yearly earnings.
Hang Seng Index opens 166 points lower on Thu
Hong Kong stocks declined on Thursday morning, with the benchmark Hang Seng Index opening 166 points lower at 20,289.
The Hang Seng China Enterprise Index, which tracks the overall performance of 43 mainland Chinese state-owned enterprises on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, opened 97 points lower at 11,560.
SOHO China Ltd<0410> decreased 0.69% from the previous closing to HK$4.33. Cheung Kong (Holdings) Ltd<0001> fell 1.01% and opened at HK$98.

SSE Composite  2965.60   -0.07.(08.23 AM IST).
Chinese stocks open 0.67% lower on Thu
Chinese stocks opened lower on Thursday morning.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index, which covers both A shares and B shares on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, opened at 2,947.83 points, down 0.67% or 19.76 points from the previous closing.
The Shenzhen Component Index on the smaller Shenzhen Stock Exchange opened 1.05% or 126.37 points lower at 11,868.66 points.
Asian Stocks Decline as China Mulls Production Curbs; Rio Falls
Asian stocks declined, led by commodity companies, after China’s government said it may curb overcapacity in the steel and cement industries, as well as strengthen controls of stock and bond sales.
Rio Tinto Group, which got 19 percent of its sales in China last year, sank 2.6 percent in Sydney. Mitsubishi Corp., a Japanese trading company that gets more than a third of its revenue from commodities, retreated 2.5 percent. China Vanke Co., the nation’s biggest publicly traded property developer, sank 2.7 percent in Shenzhen on share-sale plans.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index lost 0.6 percent to 112.84 as of 10:47 a.m. in Tokyo. The gauge has climbed 60 percent from a more than five-year low on March 9 on speculation government stimulus packages and lower borrowing costs will revive the global economy.
“There’s been a few stories about Chinese authorities trying to pull back on some of the stimulus,” said Stephen Halmarick, Sydney-based head of investment markets research at Colonial First State, which holds about $114 billion. “In the short term, it takes some of the froth off the big rally we’ve had in the market.”
Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average dropped 1.4 percent to 10,493.35. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index declined 0.2 percent. South Korea’s Kospi Index fell 0.5 percent.
Studying Curbs
Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 0.3 percent. The gauge was little changed yesterday as a smaller-than- estimated rise in orders for some durable goods and possible curbs on raw-materials suppliers in China outweighed a surge in new-home sales.
The Chinese government said yesterday it’s studying curbs on overcapacity in industries including steel and cement. It will also increase “guidance” over parts of the coal, glass and power industries, the State Council said on its Web site. Controls on stock and bond sales by companies in targeted sectors will be strengthened, it said.
Rio sank 2.6 percent to A$57.40. BHP Billiton Ltd., the world’s biggest mining company, lost 1.4 percent to A$37.61. Mitsubishi dropped 2.5 percent to 1,875 yen in Tokyo. Mitsui & Co., which counts commodities as its biggest source of profit, declined 3.3 percent to 1,219 yen.
“For commodity exporters like Australia the demand from China for commodities has been one of the key reasons we’ve managed to avoid the worst of the global downturn,” said Colonial’s Halmarick.
Commodity Prices
OZ Minerals Ltd. slumped 5.2 percent to A$1.09. The Australian copper and gold producer reported a first-half loss on the sale of $1.6 billion of mines.
Material producers were the second-biggest drag on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index today following declines in commodity prices. Crude oil slipped 0.9 percent to $71.43 a barrel in New York yesterday, the lowest settlement since Aug. 18, and a gauge of six metals in London fell for a second day, dropping 0.8 percent.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index’s five-month rally has lifted the average price of its companies to 24 times estimated earnings, up from 13.7 at the end of 2008. The gauge’s current valuation is higher than the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index’s 17.2 times and 15.1 for Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index.
“Current prices fully reflect a possible V-shaped recovery in company earnings next year,” said Mitsushige Akino, who oversees the equivalent of $637 million at Tokyo-based Ichiyoshi Investment Management Co. “It’s still unclear whether such a recovery will indeed happen and this uncertainty is allowing speculators to dominate the market.”
In Shenzhen, China Vanke fell 2.7 percent to 10.65 yuan after saying it plans to raise as much as 11.2 billion yuan ($1.6 billion) by selling additional shares.
James Hardie Industries NV, the biggest seller of home siding in the U.S., climbed 3.8 percent to A$7.40 in Sydney. Sales of new homes in the U.S. jumped 9.6 percent in July, the most in four years, a government report showed.
China Zhongwang's net profit jumps 71.7% in H1.
Country Garden July contracted sales revenue hits RMB 1.25 bln.
Asustek's net loss hits NT$131 mln in Q2.
Chi Mei sees stable flat panel prices in Q4.
Shanghai-based firm to buy license from Pierre Cardin.
Sinotrans' net profit declines 61% in H1.
China surpasses Germany as world's largest exporter: WTO.
BP sells China LPG unit to Zhangjiagang Oriental Energy.
Platinum Investment cuts stake in TravelSky to 11.89%.
China Everbright Bank gets CBRC approval on private placement.
Belle Int'l reports RMB 988 mln in net profit for H1.
Poly posts H1 results, narrows gap with Vanke.
Kerry Properties sees profit fall to HK$1.88 bln in H1.
Global semiconductor revenue to drop 17% this year: Gartner
Siemens bought two Chinese metal companies.
U.S. regulator eases rules for private buys of failed banks.

Chinese newspapers available in Beijing and Shanghai carried the following stories on Thursday.
China's State Council, the country's cabinet, is seeking to tackle overcapacity and wasteful investments in some sectors, including steel, cement and wind power.
Chinese lawmaker and former central bank vice governor Wu Xiaoling said China may face long-term inflationary pressure due to the fast growth of M2 and new bank lending in the first half.
Major Chinese brokerage Shenyin Wanguo booked 2.92 billion yuan ($427.5 million) profit in the first seven months, exceeding its profit for 2008, said company president Feng Guorong.
The merger between China Eastern Airlines and Shanghai Airlines will not affect Air China's plans to make Shanghai one of its major global air hubs, said Huang Bin, Air China's board secretary.
CFM International, joint venture between General Electric and Safran and Pratt & Whitney, a unit of United Technologies, are among the potential engine suppliers for China's in-housed designed big commercial jet, said Zhang Jian, general manager of the jet's Chinese supplier.
Foreign aviation suppliers are competing for business opportunities arising from China's plans to build a jumbo jet, whose model will be unveiled in two weeks.
China's 600-year-old Forbidden City will provide visitors with richer, easier and more virtual access to the imperial building complex on its website.
Some 300 million Chinese now living in rural areas will move into cities in the coming 15 to 20 years, said Xu Zhongwei, deputy policy director of the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development.
China's industrial growth in 2009 could reach an estimated 11-12 percent, but irrational industrial structures, overcapacity and unplanned development remain problems, according to a report by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
A modified Renewable Energy Law under the review of the National People's Congress is set to guarantee the use of electricity from renewable sources.
Taiwan farmers are now allowed to join agricultural cooperatives in the cross-strait province of Fujian, the authorities said. For Hong Kong and South China newspapers see..... For Taiwan newspapers
US Mortgage Delinquencies Up in July: Equifax
Rising unemployment continues to make more Americans miss their mortgage payments, a negative sign for the U.S. housing market that has lately enjoyed strong data on sales, prices and mortgage applications.
Among U.S. homeowners with mortgages, a record 7.32 percent were at least 30 days late on payments in July, up from about 4.5 percent a year earlier and 7.23 percent in June, according to monthly data from the Equifax credit bureau.
The rate of subprime mortgage delinquencies rose to 39.48 percent from 39.25 a month earlier, though it is still below levels reached earlier this year, according to the data obtained exclusively by Reuters.
Mortgage delinquencies are driven by three factors, two of which appear to be solved or at least improving, said Dann Adams, president of U.S. Information Systems for Equifax [EFX  27.90    0.11  (+0.4%)   ]. First, loose underwriting standards are largely a thing of the past, now that lenders demand higher credit scores and are more careful to verify income. Second, home prices are stabilizing, or even rising, in some U.S. markets, which puts less pressure on home owners.
But the third factor, unemployment, remains a worry.
"Even if it's in the 200,000 to 400,000 (job losses) a month range, it will be a driver of these delinquency rates," Adams said. "Until unemployment starts to flatten out and begin to return to hiring, these numbers will probably continue to push up."
Mortgages are more likely to be delinquent in parts of the United States where the housing bubble was biggest, and underwriting standards were the loosest, such as Florida, Nevada and California; delinquency rates are less acute in parts of the Midwest and on the East Coast.
The mortgage data come against a backdrop of an improving housing market, whose health is considered critical to any U.S. economic recovery.
Sales of new single-family homes rose more than expected in July. Home prices were up in June, from May, in 18 of 20 metropolitan areas tracked by the Case-Shiller index, a monthly measure of U.S. home prices. Applications for loans to buy a home rose for a fourth straight week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
Demand has been helped in part by an $8,000 government tax credit for new home buyers that is to expire in November. Some home builders, meanwhile, have reported increases in signed contracts for the first time in years, such as Toll Brothers [TOL  23.14    0.83  (+3.72%)   ], which reports quarterly results on Thursday.
Areas of Concern
Against that backdrop, rising delinquencies suggest U.S. housing is not yet out of the woods. Early-stage delinquencies are a leading indicator of future bankruptcy filings, and Equifax's July data suggest bankruptcies will continue rising in coming months.
Bankruptcy filings were up 35 percent in July compared with a year earlier, accelerating from both June and May. Still, while more Americans are late on their mortgage payments, they seemed to be keeping up with credit card bills.
The proportion of bank cards at least 60 days past due was down for the fourth straight month in terms of units, and down for the second straight month in dollar terms. Equifax said this reflects both tight underwriting standards by card companies and consumers cutting back on their spending.
The number of new cards issued in the first half of the year, at 14.7 million, is down 39 percent from the same period in 2008, and those cards are now likely to go only to "prime" consumers with high credit scores.
"It is definitely a prime play right now," Adams said.
Separately, Equifax said it saw a huge increase in credit inquiries from auto dealers this month, in response to the cash-for-clunkers program.
"It will be interesting to see the underwriting standards put on that volume of new cars," Adams said. "We'll be watching that portfolio over the next three to six months."
Auto delinquency rates rose for the third straight month in July and are up about 13 percent over last year, to 0.75 percent. Subprime auto delinquencies, at 3.19 percent, are also up for three months running.
Meanwhile, student loan delinquencies are also up, partly reflecting graduates' difficulty in landing jobs after college.
Latest Japanese poll tips DPJ landslide: report
A new opinion poll in Japan added to indications that the opposition Democratic Party of Japan will trounce the ruling Liberal Democratic Party in the general election Sunday, according to a report Thursday. The Asahi Shimbun survey, as reported by Kyodo news, said the DPJ will take 320 of the 480 seats up for grabs in the powerful lower house of the Diet, while the LDP will capture "only around 100 seats." Other recent opinion polls have shown similar outcomes.

China Wealth Fund to Boost Investment 10-Fold: Report
China's sovereign wealth fund will increase new overseas investment this year by around 10 times from the previous year on signs the global economy has bottomed out, the head of the organisation said in a newspaper interview.
Gao Xiqing, president of China Investment Corporation (CIC), also said he was actively examining making new investment in Japanese companies and property on prospects of a recovery in the country's economy, according to the interview that ran on Thursday in Japan's daily Asahi newspaper.
CIC's new investment overseas, which shrank to $4.8 billion last year due to the deepening financial crisis, will increase by around 10 times this year to several tens of billion dollars, he said.
On whether Beijing will shift more from its $2-trillion foreign reserves to CIC, he said he couldn't reply because it was a decision for the Chinese government.
CIC was created in September 2007 and manages $200 billion of the country's foreign reserves, now the world's largest.
China ‘Tweaking’ Lending Policies to Reduce ‘Froth,’ RBS Says
China’s banking regulators are “tweaking” lending policies to remove “froth” from the system while growth remains the top priority for policymakers, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.
The goal is to manage risk exposure among banks and asset quality by checking lending from going into A-shares traded on the mainland and properties, Wendy Liu, Hong Kong-based head of China research at RBS ABN Amro, said in a report dated yesterday.
“The current tweaking seems aimed at reducing froth, rather than slowing growth,” Liu said.
China plans to tighten capital requirements for banks, threatening to curb the record lending that’s fueled a rally in the stock market this year, three people familiar with the matter said last week. Chinese banks handed out a record $1.1 trillion of new loans in the first half to support the nation’s 4 trillion yuan economic stimulus package.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index was the best- performing major market from Jan. 1 to Aug. 4, when it reached this year’s high. It has dropped 15 percent since then on concern the government will curb lending.
The banking regulator sent draft rule changes to banks on Aug. 19 that would require lenders to deduct all existing holdings of subordinated and hybrid debt sold by other lenders from supplementary capital, said the people, who have seen the document and declined to be named as the matter is private. This may cut lending by as much as 700 billion yuan ($102 billion), China International Capital Corp. said Aug. 24.
Loans, Stocks
Wei Jianing, a deputy director at the Development and Research Center under the State Council, estimated about 1.16 trillion yuan of loans were invested in stocks in the first five months of this year, China Business News reported on June 29.
Premier Wen Jiabao said in comments published this week that the government will maintain its fiscal and monetary policies as the economic recovery isn’t stable and faces many “uncertainties.” Authorities can’t be “blindly” optimistic as a “decline in external demand may continue for a longer time” and excess capacity may restrain industrial growth, Wen was quoted as saying on the State Council’s Web site Aug. 24.
The top policy priority for the government in 2009 and 2010 remains growth given possible weak U.S. consumer spending next year, RBS’s Liu said. Real estate and commodities will benefit “significantly” from a continuation of China’s pro-growth policy, she said, adding that policymakers have “far greater tolerance” for asset-price appreciation over the medium term than before.
China’s stock market may resume its rally in the fourth quarter as investors gain “better clarity on earnings and policy priority,” she added.

INVESTMETN VIEW
Shasun Chem launches Streptokinase In India
 
 
 
Shasun Chemicals and Drugs Ltd. launches Streptokinase for Indian Market Shasun Chemicals & Drugs Ltd., a leading Indian CRAMS and API exporting pharmaceutical company, today announced that it is making a foray into Biotherapeutics by launching Streptokinase in the Indian Market.   

Streptokinase is an effective and inexpensive clot dissolving drug used in the treatment of myocardial infarction and pulmonary embolism and belongs to the category of fibrinolytics/clot busters which work by activating plasminogen to produce plasmin which in turn helps in dissolving the clot.   

The technology for the synthesis of this therapeutic protein was developed at Institute of Microbial technology (IMTech) by Dr. Girish Sahni, Director IMTech and his team. IMTech is a premier institute working on the frontiers of Science and Technology under the auspices of the Council of Scientific and Industrial research (CSIR), Government of India.   

The technology was subsequently licensed to Shasun Chemicals and Drugs Ltd. (Shasun) in the year 2002 and Shasun had undertaken enormous amounts of work to effect the transition of this technology from the labs in IMTech to the commercial market place.
 
IMtech guided Shasun on the nuances of the technology and played a pivotal role in the development of this drug. This development represents and endorses the importance of Public/Private partnerships to produce affordable medicines.
 
Speaking on this development Mr. N Govindrajan, CEO & MD, Shasun Chemicals and Drugs Ltd said “We have worked closely with the Institute of Microbial technology since 2002 to get
this technology commercialized and we are happy to announce today, that this launch of Streptokinase demonstrates the potential of public-private partnerships to develop economically viable treatment alternatives”.
 
“This medicine will provide immense benefit to the Indian population. Young patients with fewer clots can be treated. It will reduce mortality among patients, increase lifespan of the younger lot & the thrombolytic patients can avoid surgery and huge expenses now.” he further added.
 
Over the last decade, treatment mechanism for patients with AMI (Acute Myocardial Infarction) has been by intravenous thrombolysis using Streptokinase. This mode of treatment makes it highly critical for the medicine to be of absolutely best purity.

Shasun‟s Streptokinase being a recombinant protein will have not any traces of Streptolysin or Streptodornase (which are usually harmful) associated with natural streptokinase.
 
Further studies in the lab have also demonstrated that Shasun‟s Streptokinase has one of the best fibrinolytic activities amongst the products currently available in the market.
 
About Shasun Chemicals and Drugs Ltd (BSE: 524552, NSE: SHASUNCHEM) Shasun Chemicals and Drugs Ltd is leading pharma company focused on manufacture of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (API‟s), intermediates and finished dosages to global pharma majors.
 
Founded in 1976, Shasun offers an integrated business model by offering services in research, development and manufacturing (including Contract Research and Manufacturing Services). The company has four bulk manufacturing facilities, two in India and two in UK, which have been inspected successfully several times by various regulatory agencies including US FDA.
 
Its finished dosage facility has been inspected by US FDA, TPD Canada and MHRA, UK. With its maiden acquisition of business and assets of UK-based Rhodia Pharma through the wholly owned subsidiary Shasun Pharma Solutions Ltd (SPSL), Shasun has now become a multi national company.
 

(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