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Sensex
likely to touch 4,400 by March, says US brokerage
Sharad Mistry
Mumbai, Aug 24: THE Indian stock markets are seen
bouyant during the months ahead by a couple of foreign brokerages,
one of which even predicts an over 30 per cent jump in the
BSE 30-share Sensex to 4,400 by March 2002. The Sensex has
been hovering around 3,300 points since the last two months.
“We are positive on the Indian equities
and recommend overweight India in a regional context,” says
US-based Salomon Smith Barney (SSB) India Research and country
head Ratnesh Kumar in the recently released Equity Research
Strategy: IndiaPictures. SSB is a member of Citigroup Inc
and is affiliated with Citibank NA, USA.
However, Mr Ratnesh Kumar feels, concerns
remain due to reduced liquidity after trading practices changed
from July 2, probe into various shady deals and the UTI imbroglio.
“But the market may have already priced in some of these,”
he adds.
Amidst all too gloomy scenario for the
Indian economy — sharply falling credit offtake, declining
foreign direct investments, sluggish portfolio investments
and general earnings gloom from equity investments — the SSB
outlook should cheer up market participants, observers say.
Reasoning the optimism in India’s investment
scenario, Mr Ratnesh Kumar says: “Overall corporate earnings
have been holding up well. In the first quarter of fiscal
2002, earnings for the top Indian companies were up 21 per
cent year-on-year, and we expect a 20 per cent earnings CAGR
over FY01 estimates-03 estimates. Cost cuts, lower tax rates
and interst cost savings have helped counter industrial slowdown
for the old economy sectors, which mostly depend on domestic
demand.” Further, a good monsoon has raised hopes of revival
in domestic demand, led by the agriculture sector...Also,
since the beginning of the year, there have been potholes
aplenty, many self-inflicted...but the corporate earnings
have shown remarkable resilience, pulling valuations down
to their most attractive in the past decade.”
The India overweight is primarily based
on domestic-demand plays — automobiles, capital goods, and
consumer and media stocks.
Even the pharmaceutical sector is seen as overweight, as “leading
players are successfully capturing niche generic export and
research and development opportunities and are not affected
by a slowdown in their export markets”.
Reiterating neutral stance on the information
technology sector, SSB recommends a more aggressive posture
on selected front-liners because of their growth prospects
and value. Even for cement, it is neutral again as “the sector’s
best outperformance seems to be behind it”.
Among other sectors that are categorised
as underweight are: metals, petrochemicals, telecom and banks
— “we expect no further interest rate cuts in India, and credit
demand remains anaemic.”
Ignore the skeptics, rural sector recovery
is in the offing, says SSB. One of the major reasons for this,
Mr Ratnesh Kumar feels is that the prospects of normal (or
better) rainfall are very bright this year. “After two years
of negative growth, agricultural production volumes could
bounce back with nine per cent growth in FY02...higher growth
in cash crops and political compulsion to keep farm prices
up will be enough to revive rural demand significantly. That
should help
domestic demand and corporate earnings, probably with a 6-12
month lag.
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