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NBFC wounds need salve
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Top Stories |
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Arun Kejriwal | 10 Jun, 2019
Markets began the week on a strong note and registered new lifetime
highs on June 3. They surrendered some of the gains on the same day and
all of it and a little more by the end of the week to register minor
losses. The four-day trading week saw BSE Sensex close at 39615.90
points a loss of 98.30 points or 0.25 per cent, while NIFTY closed at
11,870.65 points a loss of 52.15 points or 0.44 per cent.
The
closing levels do not give the sense of trading volatility that happened
during the week. The high made during the week was 40,312.07 points and
the low 39,279.47 points. The swing was 1,033 points and the close
reflected a mere change of 98 points. Similarly, on the NIFTY, the high
was 12,103.05 points and low 11,769.50 points, a range of 334 points and
the net change 52 points.
The broader indices saw the BSE100,
BSE200 and BSE500 lose 0.52 per cent, 0.59 per cent and 0.68 per cent
respectively. BSEMIDCAP lost 1.26 per cent and BSESMALLCAP lost 1.41 per
cent. Dow Jones had a stellar week with it gaining a massive 1,168.90
points or 4.71 per cent to close at 25,983.94 points. The US FED has
indicated that they would be cutting interest rates and they could go
down all the way to zero in time to come.
RBI cut interest rates
on expected lines by the customary 25 basis points. Repo rate is now
5.75 per cent and it is at its lowest level since 2010. What is
important to note is that the stance has been changed from neutral to
accommodative and this indicates that more cuts could follow.
It
is on the NBFC front that not much has happened and while the
contentious circular struck down by Supreme Court maintains its spirit,
the same looks mildly different in reading. The crux of the problem
being faced by NBFC's is that they have been lending to riskier
propositions and charging higher rates of interest and trying to
maximise profits. In this process they have been taking risks far
greater than what even banks would take when lending to lower rated
borrowers. When issues emerge in the market place, it first affects the
lower rated clients and this is what has happened.
Another issue
that has cropped up with the housing finance NBFC's is their exposure to
bulk loans and developers. With a slowdown in the realty space, they
are stuck with no rotation of their loans and the developer not able to
pay up as he is not having sales of property. It truly is a ‘catch 22'
situation.
A piece of good news for the market it that monsoon
has hit Kerala coast on Saturday. It would take maybe 7 to 10 days to
hit the financial capital of the country, but the event is now on
course. The progress of the monsoon would now be a talking point and one
would see the electronic media using this as a discussion point on a
daily basis. They then talk of sectors the monsoon would impact and so
on.
Most fund managers are advocating that the next leg of rally
would see midcap and Smallcap stocks outperforming the large cap stocks.
While this may seem logical, the current scenario is such that action
continues in the large-cap stocks only. It is yet to percolate to the
small and midcap sectors. With results season over, cabinet formation
completed, focus would now be on the budget to be presented in less than
a month. While the government has made overtures to the opposition on
conducting business and the smooth passage of bills in the house, it
needs to be soon how they reciprocate.
Coming to the week ahead
one would see markets remaining choppy and volatile. There would be
sharp bouts of rise and fall as a significant segment of people believe
everything is priced in and there is no reason for markets to rise. When
there is buying, this leads to short covering and bulls have their say.
Similarly, when nothing happens and markets become listless, they tend
to fall. This is when bears take the upper hand. This would continue
with markets remaining in a broad range. Buy on dips and sell on
rallies. There will be plenty of such opportunities.
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Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
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84.35
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82.60 |
UK Pound
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106.35
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102.90 |
Euro
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92.50
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89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
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