Monday 3 November 2008

RBI move may extend rally; all eyes on global cues

The sooner-than-expected measures by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to ease the money-supply crunch, including an interest rate cut, may ena
ble the bulls to stretch Friday’s rally into early next week. But as the week progresses, the domestic investors will look for directional cues from US and European markets.

The US market rose nearly 2% on Friday, as investors cheered JP Morgan Chase’s measures to stem the crash in America’s housing market. The Fed slashed the benchmark interest rates last week and indicated additional cuts to revive the economy, prompting other central banks to trim the rates in a co-ordinated manner. Equities across the world rallied strongly as a result. Investors in Indian equities took a special note of the decline in inflation, triggering hopes of interest rate cuts, and the Standard & Poor’s (S&P) statement that India’s investment-grade credit ratings is safe.

Investors expected RBI to cut rates next week, with the overnight inter-bank lending or call rates rising to a 19-month high of roughly 20%. “We expect more upsides in stocks early next week, as the much-needed interest rate cut was earlier than anticipated,” said Mirae Asset Global Investments senior fund manager Gopal Agrawal. “For any rally to sustain, it is important that there are no fresh issues in global markets and economies,” he added.

The liquidity-injecting measures initiated by several countries last week, following the free fall in equities to four-year lows, has improved investor sentiment world-wide. “In the past few days, we’ve received more requests for stock screens than usual. This may mark a shift in sentiment, from the relentless selling of recent weeks to finding buy ideas,” said UBS Securities in a report on Asian equities. Analysts are, however, unsure whether the bear market is nearing an end. Global investors remain averse to risky assets. Moreover, the credit crunch threatens to jeopardize the growth plans of companies in developing economies such as India. “We continue to believe that investors are underestimating the impact of the credit crunch on countries having current account deficits,” Nomura International Asia and emerging markets analyst Sean Darby said. Driven by high oil prices in recent years, India has a large current account deficit and this shows the extent to which a country’s consumption exceeds its production.

Source: EconomicTimes

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