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Monday, February 12, 2007

Stocks suffer another torrid session


The Sensex plunged sharply for the second straight day, today’s fall being more profound and painful compared to Friday's. The BSE benchmark traded in the red throughout on continued selling. All the BSE sectoral indices ended in the red.

The benchmark Sensex also suffered a bout of volatility, swinging sharply either ways. The 30-shares BSE Sensex settled 348.20 points (2.39%) in deficit, at 14,190.70, recovering some lost ground after plunging to a low of 14,146.22 on value-buying. The Sensex has thus breached a vital support level of 14,200. It had touched an all-time high at 14,724 on Friday (9 February).

The BSE Sensex began on a highly bearish note, as selling pressure spilled over into this week. The horror show had started on Friday, when the benchmark Sensex tumbled close to 113 points, as a lot of stop losses were triggered due to highly leveraged positions in the derivatives market. Its high for the day was 14,529.28. Traders and speculators exited long positions, and chose to sit on the sidelines before the Union Budget. Weak global markets also played spoilsport.

The S&P CNX Nifty lost 129.10 points (3.08%), to 4,058.30.

As the market tanked, the market-breadth, indicative of the overall health of the market, did not look good, as a host of small-cap and mid-cap stocks succumbed to selling. There were close to seven losers for every gainer on BSE. For 2,312 shares that declined on BSE, only 334 rose. Just 27 shares were unchanged.

The BSE clocked a turnover of Rs 3266 crore.

There was complete pandemonium in the market, and not even a single member from the 30-member Sensex pack was spared the rod.

Aluminium major Hindalco Industries plunged the most after its large all-cash acquisition of US-based Novelis raised concerns about a short-term strain on financials. It was down 14% to Rs 149.05 on high volumes of 72.81 lakh shares. Hindalco Industries and Novelis, on Sunday, signed a definitive agreement for Hindalco to acquire Novelis in an all-cash transaction, which values the US firm at approximately $6 billion, including approximately $2.4 billion of debt.

It may be worthwhile to recall a similar situation, when Tata Steel won the bid to acquire Corus, with analysts worrying about the high price paid by Tata Steel to acquire Corus. Novelis is the largest flat rolled products player in the world with a 19% share of the global market.

The Novelis-Hindalco deal will be financed through a recourse debt of $2.8 billion, Hindalco’s treasury contributing $450 million, and SL Iron Ore Mining, another group company, chipping in with $300 million as debt.

Following the transaction, Hindalco, along with Novelis, will be the world's largest aluminium rolling company, one of the biggest producers of primary aluminium in Asia, and India's leading copper producer.

Novelis posted a net loss of $102 million during the third quarter of 2006. The company has been plagued by high metal prices.

Reliance Communications (RCL) dropped 4.63% to Rs 453.55, on a volume of 21.23 lakh shares, after it lost the bid to acquire the fourth largest cellular services provider, Hutch Essar. Vodafone emerged the top bidder with a $19 billion bid.

RCL recovered from a low of Rs 448.15. Vodafone staved off bids from RCL, the Hinduja brothers and Essar itself, to buy Hutchison's 67% stake for $11.1 billion in cash, and $2 billion more in debt, an enterprise value of $18.8 billion. Vodafone's emergence as a top bidder has dashed Reliance Communications' hope of becoming the largest mobile operator in the country. Reliance Communications added 1.2 million subscribers in January 2007.

Bhel (down 6.25% to Rs 2348), Bharti Airtel (down 4.62% to Rs 718), and Gujarat Ambuja Cements (down 4.54% to Rs 132.50) were the other major losers.

Index heavyweight, Reliance Industries, settled at Rs 1,354, down 2.47% from the previous close of Rs 1,388.25 on a volume of 4.98 lakh shares.

Other heavyweight shares, Infosys (down 0.49% to Rs 2350) and ONGC (down 2.12% to Rs 865) also declined. ONGC is reportedly set to acquire up to 35% stake in a Congo oil block held by Italy's ENI in a swap for a similar stake in an Indian oilfield. The deal is expected to be signed on Wednesday.

Zee Entertainment Enterprises (ZEE) dropped 29% to Rs 257, on a volume of 17.66 lakh shares, after the stock went into a no-delivery period ahead of the de-merger of Dish TV, its direct-to-home TV service. The counter clocked 9.30 lakh shares on the BSE. The company has fixed 20 February 2007 as a record date for determining the shareholders of the company eligible for shares in ASC Enterprises, which will be later renamed Dish TV. ZEE will allot 23 fully paid-up equity shares of Re 1 each in ASC for every 10 equity shares held in ZEE.

Technocraft Industries India settled at 100.90 on BSE on its day of debut, notching up a volume of 98.63 lakh shares. It listed at Rs 125 on BSE, a premium of 19.04% over the IPO price of Rs 105. The scrip also touched an intra-day low of Rs 97.35, and an intra-day high of Rs 130. The company raised around Rs 87.36 crore at the upper end of the price band of Rs 95 - 105 per share in the IPO concluded recently. The IPO was oversubscribed 10.67 times.

All the BSE sectoral indices were in the red. The BSE Metals index was the top loser, down 497.62 points (5.46%), to 8,616.43. Ispat Industries (down 7.64% to Rs 13.90), Sterlite Industries (down 4.42% to Rs 439), SAIL (down 5.43% to Rs 107.20), Hindustan Zinc (down 5.05% to Rs 630) and Jindal Stainless (down 4.06% to Rs 115.75) declined.

Shares from the real estate sector declined sharply extending their recent fall. Mahindra Gesco Developers (down 4.24% to Rs 618), Akruti Nirman (down 19% to Rs 450), Peninsula Land (down 10% to Rs 412.95), Unitech (down 10% to Rs 420.95), Parsvnath Developers (down 10.70% to Rs 302.60) and Sobha Developers (down 9.48% to Rs 826.80). Real estate stocks have been correcting in the past few days, as market players turned cautious due to fear of rising interest rates in India, and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) tightening bank credit to the real estate sectors.

Gail India lost 1.30% to Rs 288.75, off its day’s high of Rs 301.95, after it informed that a joint venture, Brahmaputra Cracker and Polymer, was formed on 8 January 2007. GAIL India holds 70% equity and Numaligarh Refinery, Oil India & the Government of Assam hold 10% equity each.

Suzlon Energy plunged 12.62% to Rs 1089, on concerns about a short-term strain on its financials due to plans for a big acquisition overseas. It offered $1.33 billion for REpower Systems AG, trumping the offer by Areva of France by 20%. Suzlon Energy is bidding in consortium with Martifer, Portugal, a steel construction company operating across Europe, and the second largest shareholder in REpower holding 25.4% stake.

Suzlon and Martifer will establish a special purpose vehicle to give effect to the bid in which Suzlon will own 75% and Martifer 25%. REpower Systems was founded in 2001, and operates in the wind-energy sector, specialising in high output turbine technology particularly suited to offshore turbines. It is a leader in 5 Mw turbines.

Fairfield Atlas rose 4.42% to Rs 88.40, after OC Oerlikon Corporation AG, Pfaffikon, Switzerland & TH Licensing Inc., USA, decided to acquire all its equity shares at Rs 81 per share. All the shares that are validly tendered as per terms of the offer up to a maximum of 54.64 lakh equity shares of the face value of Rs 10 each, representing in aggregate 20% of the paid up equity share capital of the target company. The open offer will open on 30 March 2007, while it is scheduled to close on 18 April 2007.

Sunil Hitech Engineers declined 7.31% to Rs 88.70, even as it bagged new orders to the tune of Rs 62.88 crore, the execution period for which is about two years. Two projects are for structural steel works for RINL, Visakapatnam, worth Rs 25.32 crore, marking its foray into infrastructure development for steel plants. One of the projects is worth Rs 11.95 crore from Bhel for erection work of a boiler. Sunil Hitech Engineers said its current order-book is a robust Rs 512.53 crore.

GHCL slipped 4.48% to Rs 165.25, in an overall weak market despite the company acquiring the assets of US-based Best Manufacturing Group for $ 35 million. Best Manufacturing's annual sales stand at $160 million. Best is a leading manufacturer of home textiles and related items for the hospitality and healthcare sectors in the US.

Subhash Projects & Marketing dropped 5% to Rs 229.95, even as the company said it had bagged two orders worth Rs 63 crore. Subhash Projects has bagged orders - one is worth Rs 23 crore from Karnataka Power Transmission Corporation and the other is Rs 40 crore worth from Haryana Vidyut Prasaran Nigam. Both projects have to be completed in 12 months.

The scope of work for both projects on partial turnkey basis includes construction of 220 Kv sub-station and 220 Kv transmission lines, supply of all matching materials / equipments (excluding power transformer) and erection of all materials / equipments as well as testing and commissioning of the same. Subhash Project’s order-book position is Rs 2800 crore.

Meanwhile, Indian industrial output growth in December slowed from its fastest pace in more than a decade, but its persistent strength and rising inflation kept the prospects of further monetary tightening burning. Output rose 11.1% in December from a year earlier, data showed on Monday, in line with a median estimate of 10.9% of analysts, but slower than the upwardly revised annual growth of 15.4% in November. Manufacturing rose 11.9% in December from a year earlier, Capital goods production rose an annual 20.2%, while consumer goods output rose 7.4%. The government estimates the economy will grow 9.2% in 2006/07, backed by rising industrial output and services.

Most of the Asian and European markets finished in the red, on selling pressure. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 84.25 points (0.41%), at 20,593.41, Taiwan's Taiwan Weighted was down 83.17 points (1.06%), at 7,776.36, Singapore's Straits Times plunged 50.43 points (1.57%), at 3,170.46, while South Korea's Seoul Composite index was down 13.39 points (0.94%), to 1,414.29.

US stocks closed lower on Friday after an extensive sell off in stocks inspite of new upgrades announced by Ford Motor and General Motors. The sell-off was prompted by a rise in crude futures, remarks by Federal Reserve officials leaving open the possibility of more rate hikes and concern by Micron Technology executives about memory chip demand and pricing. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed lower by 56.8 points at 12,580.83, and Nasdaq lost 28.85 points, to 2,459.82.

FIIs were net sellers to the tune of Rs 560 crore in index-based futures on 9 February, the day when the Sensex lost 113 points in a broad decline after a surge in inflation to a more than two-year high. Concerns of a further rise in interest rates grew after the inflation data was released last week. Data released on 9 February 2007 showed that the wholesale price index rose 6.58% in the 12 months to 27 January 2007, the biggest rise in more than two years fanning concerns of a further rise in interest rates.

Net buying by FIIs stood at $153.7 million on 8 February 2007. Mutual funds net sale was Rs 193 crore (Rs 1.93 billion) on the same day. NSE F&O open interest was down by Rs 815 crore (Rs 8.15 billion) at Rs 60,052 crore (Rs 600.52 billion).

Oil prices climbed briefly above $60 a barrel on Friday for the first time since the first trading day of the year, as an unrelenting winter across the US led to belief that heating fuel demand will not wane anytime soon. Light, sweet crude for March delivery rose $0.18, to settle at $59.89 a barrel by afternoon trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after rising as high as $60.80.

Meanwhile, gold jumped above $668 an ounce on Monday to its highest in seven months, before losing some of the gains to weakening oil prices. Spot gold hit an intraday high of $668.20 an ounce, its best since mid-July on short-covering, before slipping to $665.75/666.50 an ounce, slightly lower than $666.50/667.20 late in New York. Firm oil prices raise gold's appeal as a hedge against inflation.

Heavy volumes accompany post Novelis acquisition setback in Hindalco


Worries that Hindalco will not reap the benefits of the $5.9 billion deal to buy Novelis Inc for some time, knocked down its shares nearly 14% today to Rs 149.05.

The stock declined on a heavy volume of 72.8 lakh shares on BSE, much higher than the average daily volume of 15.4 lakh shares in the past one year.

Hindalco's scrip was relatively firm over the past few weeks despite weak global copper prices. The stock moved between Rs 173 and Rs 183 since late-January 2007.

Hindalco said on Sunday, the deal will make it the world's largest aluminium rolling company, doubling its turnover to $20 billion, but it will boost earnings only by 2010. Hindalco will pay $3.5 billion in cash and take on debt of $2.4 billion under the agreement. Novelis is the largest flat rolled products player in the world, with a 19% share of the global market.

Novelis has entered into certain `can body’ (material for beverage cans) contracts that do not allow it to pass on commodity price rises to such customers. These contracts expire in January 2010, which in turn will impact the profitability of Hindalco’s consolidated financial performance. Novelis posted a net loss of $102 million during the third quarter of 2006.

Hindalco said it will fund the Novelis acquisition through a recourse debt of $2.8 billion. Hindalco’s treasury will contribute $450 million, while SL Iron Ore Mining, another group company, will contribute $300 million as debt.

Market men were also concerned about the impact of the debt on Hindalco's balance sheet, although the company said on Sunday it would maintain its debt-equity ratio at a "comfortable" level.

Hindalco’s net profit jumped 92% in the December 2006 quarter to Rs 643.90 crore, on 62% growth in net sales to Rs 4656.20 crore.

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Sensex sheds 348pts, Hindalco slumps 14%


The Sensex opened marginally (10 points) lower at 14,529, and continued to drop as the day progressed.

Concerns over rising inflation, coupled with profit-taking following a seven-week rally, saw the index plunge to a low of 14,146. The Sensex finally settled with a huge loss of 348 points (2.4%) at 14,191.

The Metal index plunged 5.5% to 8616. The BSE Bankex, Auto, Healthcare and Oil & Gas indices also declined sharply today.

While the BSE Mid-cap index dropped 4% to 5821, the Small-cap index slipped nearly 5% to 7127.

Declines beat advances 7:1, i.e there were seven declining stocks for every advancing share. Out of 2,668 stocks traded, 2,303 declined, 338 advanced and the rest were unchanged.

INDEX MOVERS & SHAKERS

Hindalco tumbled nearly 14% (Rs 24) to Rs 149 after agreeing to a $6 billion deal to buy US-based Novelis. BHEL plunged 6.5% to Rs 2,345, and Gujarat Ambuja slumped nearly 5% to Rs 132.

Reliance Communications shed over 4% to Rs 455, and Reliance Energy dropped nearly 4% to Rs 535.

Tata Motors, Bajaj Auto, Larsen & Toubro, HDFC, Bharti Airtel and Maruti slipped over 3% each to Rs 874, Rs 2,944, Rs 1,659, Rs 1,757, Rs 729 and Rs 912, respectively.

ICICI Bank and TCS were down around 2.7% each at Rs 965 and Rs 1,254, respectively.

Grasim, Reliance, Tata Steel, Wipro and ONGC declined over 2% each to Rs 2,760, Rs 1,356, Rs 444, Rs 629 and Rs 866, respectively.

VALUE & VOLUME TOPPERS

Global Broadcast topped the value chart with a turnover of Rs 247 crore followed by Hindalco (Rs 112 crore), debutant Technocraft (Rs 101 crore), Akruti Nirman (Rs 108.50 crore) and Reliance Communications (Rs 97.20 crore).

IFCI led the volume chart with trades of around 2.20 crore shares followed by Technocraft (98.65 lakh), Pochiraju Industries (78.60 lakh), Hindalco (73 lakh) and Cambridge Tech (72 lakh).

Fall steepest in two months


The Sensex today registered its biggest one-day fall by points since 12 December 2006.

On this day, the barometer index had lost 404.41 points (3%) after data showed a lower-than-expected 6.2% growth in industrial production for October 2006, sparking concerns of an economic slowdown. The 404-point slide came on the back of a 400-point fall a day before (11 December 2007) caused by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)’s surprise hike of 50 basis points in the cash reserve ratio (CRR) after trading hours on 8 December 2006.

The Sensex today plunged 348.20 points (2.39%) to settle at 14,190.70. Data showing substantial FII inflow of Rs 560 crore in index-based futures on 9 February 2007, concerns about rise in interest rates and weak Asian markets spooked the bourses. Data released on 9 February 2007 showed that wholesale price index rose 6.58% in the 12 months to 27 January 2007, the biggest rise in more than two years fanning concerns of a further rise in interest rates.

Another major fall happened on 19 December 2006, when the Sensex had lost 349.08 points (2.54%) in a sell-off across Asian emerging markets after Thailand’s central bank adopted currency controls, heightening worries about emerging markets.

A sharp market fall was also witnessed early January 2007, when the Sensex had lost 652.76 points (4.6%) in five trading sessions, to 13,362.16 on 10 January 2007 from 14,014.92 on 3 January 2007. Caution before the start of the Q3 earnings season was behind the fall.

The current market fall has materialized after a solid surge that took the benchmark to all-time highs. From 14,090.92 on 31 January 2007, the Sensex had spurted 561.17 points (3.9%), to a lifetime closing high of 14,652.09 on 8 February 2007. Strong Q3 results and the stepping up of buying by FIIs, following an upgrade in India’s rating to investment grade by Standard & Poor's, triggered this solid surge.

The market-breadth was extremely weak today. For 2,312 shares that declined on BSE, 334 rose. Just 27 stocks were unchanged. Losers outpaced gainers by a ratio of nearly 7:1.

Sensex hurtles 348 points lower


The Sensex plunged sharply for the second straight day, today’s fall being more profound and painful compared to Friday's. The BSE benchmark traded in the red throughout on continued selling.

The BSE benchmark also saw a bout of volatility, swinging sharply either ways. The 30-shares BSE Sensex settled 348.20 points (2.39%) in deficit, at 14,190.70, recovering some lost ground after plunging to a low of 14,146.22 on value-buying. The Sensex has thus breached a vital support level of 14,200.

The BSE Sensex began on a highly bearish note, as selling pressure spilled over to this week. The horror show had started on Friday, when the benchmark Sensex tumbled close to 113 points, as a lot of stop losses were triggered due to highly leveraged positions in the derivatives market. Its high for the day was 14,529.28. Traders and speculators exited long positions and chose to sit on the sidelines before the Union Budget. Weak global markets also played spoilsport.

The S&P CNX Nifty lost 129.10 points (3.08%) to 4058.30.

As the market tanked, the market-breadth, indicative of the overall health of the market, did not look good, as a host of small-cap and mid-cap stocks succumbed to selling. There were close to seven losers for every gainer on BSE. For 2,312 shares declining on BSE, only 334 rose. Just 27 shares were unchanged.

The BSE clocked a turnover of Rs 3266 crore.

There was complete pandemonium in the market, and not even a single member from the 30-member Sensex pack was spared the stick.

Aluminium major Hindalco Industries plunged the most after its large all-cash acquisition of US-based Novelis raised concerns about a short-term strain on financials. It was down 14% to Rs 149.05 on high volumes of 72.81 lakh shares. Hindalco Industries and Novelis, on Sunday, signed a definitive agreement for Hindalco to acquire Novelis in an all-cash transaction, which values the US firm at approximately $6 billion, including approximately $2.4 billion of debt.

It may be worthwhile to recall a similar situation, when Tata Steel won the bid to acquire Corus, with analysts worrying about the high price paid by Tata Steel to acquire Corus. Novelis is the largest flat rolled products player in the world with a 19% share of the global market.

The Novelis-Hindalco deal will be financed through a recourse debt of $2.8 billion, Hindalco’s treasury contributing $450 million, while SL Iron Ore Mining, another group company, chipping in with $300 million as debt.

Following the transaction, Hindalco, along with Novelis, will be the world's largest aluminium rolling company, one of the biggest producers of primary aluminium in Asia, and India's leading copper producer.

Novelis posted a net loss of $102 million during the third quarter of 2006. The company has been plagued by high metal prices.

Reliance Communications (RCL) dropped 4.63% to Rs 453.55, on a volume of 21.23 lakh shares, after it lost the bid to acquire the fourth largest cellular services provider, Hutch Essar. Vodafone emerged the top bidder with a $19 billion bid.

RCL recovered from a low of Rs 448.15. Vodafone staved off bids from RCL, the Hinduja brothers and Essar itself, to buy Hutchison's 67% stake for $11.1 billion in cash, and $2 billion more in debt, an enterprise value of $18.8 billion. Vodafone's emergence as a top bidder has dashed Reliance Communications hope of becoming the largest mobile operator in the country.

Bhel (down 6.25% to Rs 2348), Bharti Airtel (down 4.62% to Rs 718), and Gujarat Ambuja Cements (down 4.54% to Rs 132.50) were the other major losers.

Index heavyweight Reliance Industries settled at Rs 1,354, down 2.47% from the previous close of Rs 1,388.25 on a volume of 4.98 lakh shares.

Other heavyweight shares, Infosys (down 0.49% to Rs 2350) and ONGC (down 2.12% to Rs 865) also declined.

Zee Entertainment Enterprises (ZEE) dropped 29% to Rs 257 on 17.66 lakh shares, after the stock went into a no-delivery period ahead of the de-merger of Dish TV, its direct-to-home TV service. The counter clocked 9.30 lakh shares on the BSE. The company has fixed 20 February 2007 as a record date for determining the shareholders of the company eligible for shares in ASC Enterprises, which will be later renamed Dish TV. ZEE will allot 23 fully paid-up equity shares of Re 1 each in ASC to every shareholder for 10 equity shares of Re 1 each held in ZEE.

Technocraft Industries India settled at 100.90 on BSE on its day of debut, notching up a volume of 98.63 lakh shares. It listed at Rs 125 on BSE, a premium of 19.04% over the IPO price of Rs 105. It touched an intra-day low of Rs 97.35, and an intra-day high of Rs 130. The company raised around Rs 87.36 crore at the upper end of the price band of Rs 95 - 105 per share in the IPO concluded recently. The IPO was oversubscribed 10.67 times.

Meanwhile, India's industrial production (IIP) surged 11.1% in December, more than expected, adding pressure on the central bank to raise interest rates. Economists were expecting a rise of just 10.5%.

Most of the Asian and European markets finished in the red, on selling pressure. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 84.25 points (0.41%), at 20,593.41, Taiwan's Taiwan Weighted was down 83.17 points (1.06%), at 7,776.36, Singapore's Straits Times plunged 50.43 points (1.57%), at 3,170.46, while South Korea's Seoul Composite index was down 13.39 points (0.94%), to 1,414.29.

US stocks closed lower on Friday after an extensive sell off in stocks inspite of new upgrades announced by Ford Motor and General Motors. The sell-off was prompted by a rise in crude futures, remarks by Federal Reserve officials leaving open the possibility of more rate hikes and concern by Micron Technology executives about memory chip demand and pricing. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed lower by 56.8 points at 12,580.83, and Nasdaq lost 28.85 points, to 2,459.82.

FIIs were net sellers to the tune of Rs 560 crore in index-based futures on 9 February, the day when the Sensex lost 113 points in a broad decline after a surge in inflation to a more than two-year high. Concerns of a further rise in interest rates grew after the inflation data was released last week. Net buying by FIIs stood at $153.7 million on 8 February 2007. Mutual funds net sale was Rs 193 crore (Rs 1.93 billion) on the same day. NSE F&O open interest was down by Rs 815 crore (Rs 8.15 billion) at Rs 60,052 crore (Rs 600.52 billion).

Oil prices climbed briefly above $60 a barrel on Friday for the first time since the first trading day of the year, as an unrelenting winter across the US led to belief that heating fuel demand will not wane anytime soon. Light, sweet crude for March delivery rose $0.18, to settle at $59.89 a barrel by afternoon trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after rising as high as $60.80.

Meanwhile, gold jumped above $668 an ounce on Monday to its highest in seven months, before losing some of the gains to weakening oil prices. Spot gold hit an intraday high of $668.20 an ounce, its best since mid-July on short-covering, before slipping to $665.75/666.50 an ounce, slightly lower than $666.50/667.20 late in New York. Firm oil prices raise gold's appeal as a hedge against inflation.

Market battered amid mega acquisition woes


The market was not prepared to accept the fact that Indian corporates can absorb the huge debts they are creating to acquire companies larger than their own size. The rising inflation and profit taking on every upmove also kept the market in negative territory. The Sensex began the trading session in negative territory at 14529 and fell sharply under sustained selling pressure. In the afternoon the Sensex plunged 357 points, but buying at lower levels saw the Sensex pare some losses. Profit booking dragged down the Sensex to an intra-day low of 14142. It closed the session at 14191, down 348 points. The Nifty shed 129 points and closed at 4058.

All the sectoral indices were battered on relentless selling pressure. The BSE Metal index dropped 5.46% at 8616, the BSE CG index lost 5.17% at 9426, the BSE CD index shed 3.80% at 3777 and the BSE Auto index fell 3.41% at 5554. The broader market was weak. Of the 2,668 stocks traded on the BSE, 2,307 stocks declined, 337 stocks advanced and 24 stocks ended unchanged. Among the major losers Hindalco tanked 13.74% at Rs149, BHEL tumbled 6.36% at Rs2,345, Gujarat Ambuja declined 4.79% at Rs132, Reliance Communications slumped 4.32% at Rs455, Reliance Energy fell 3.74% at Rs535, Tata Motors plunged 3.47% at Rs874, Bajaj Auto dropped 3.39% at Rs2,944, L&T slipped 3.30% at Rs1,659, HDFC was down 3.28% at Rs1,757 and Bharti Airtel lost 3.19% at Rs729. The other front-line stocks were down 1-3% each.

The metal and consumer goods stocks slipped sharply. SAIL tumbled 4.81% at Rs108, Hindustan Zinc slumped 4.17% at Rs636, Jindal Stainless dropped 4.14% at Rs116, Nalco declined 3.76% at Rs222, Sterlite Industries dipped 3.74% at Rs442, Jindal Steel fell 3.66% at Rs2,349 and JSW Steel was down 3.26% at Rs432. Among the consumer goods stocks Alstom Projects, Areva, Laxmi Machine Works, Kalpataru Power Transmission, Reliance Industrial Infrastructure and Bharat Earth Movers slipped 6-8% each.

Hindalco witnessed volumes of over 72.93 lakh shares on the BSE followed by IDBI (43.92 lakh shares), Cairn India (23.13 lakh shares), Reliance Communications (21.28 lakh shares) and Gujarat Ambuja Cements (18.89 lakh shares).

Value-wise Hindalco registered a turnover of Rs111 crore on the BSE followed by Reliance Communications (Rs97 crore), Tata Steel (Rs80 crore), Reliance Industries (Rs68 crore) and Suzlon Energy (Rs52 crore).

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Value-buying offers some respite


The Sensex recovered some lost ground after plunging to a low of 14,182.34 on value-buying. At 12:36 IST the 30-shares BSE Sensex was down 247.39 points, to 14,291.55.

The BSE Sensex began on a highly bearish note, as selling pressure spilled over into this week. The horror show had started on Friday, when the benchmark Sensex tumbled close to 113 points, as a lot of stop losses were triggered due to highly leveraged positions in the derivatives market. Its high for the day is 14,529.28.

The market-breadth was quite weak. There were close to 10 losers for every single gainer on BSE. For 2,260 shares declining on BSE, only 272 rose. Just 15 shares were unchanged.

The BSE clocked a turnover of Rs 2077 crore.

All members of the Sensex pack were trading in the red.

Aluminium major Hindalco Industries plunged after its large all-cash acquisition of US-based Novelis raised concerns about a short-term strain on financials. It was down 12% to Rs 152.40 on high volumes of 43.81 lakh shares. Hindalco Industries and Novelis, on Sunday, signed a definitive agreement for Hindalco to acquire Novelis in an all-cash transaction, which values the US firm at approximately $6 billion, including approximately $2.4 billion of debt.

It may be worthwhile to recall a similar situation, when Tata Steel won the bid to acquire Corus, with analysts worrying about the high price paid by Tata Steel to acquire Corus. Novelis is the largest flat rolled products player in the world with a 19% share of the global market.

The Novelis-Hindalco deal will be financed through a recourse debt of $2.8 billion, Hindalco’s treasury contributing $450 million, while SL Iron Ore Mining, another group company, chipping in with $300 million as debt.

Following the transaction, Hindalco, along with Novelis, will be the world's largest aluminum rolling company, one of the biggest producers of primary aluminium in Asia, and India's leading copper producer.

Novelis posted a net loss of $102 million during the third quarter of 2006. The company has been plagued by high metal prices.

Reliance Communications dropped 3.87% to Rs 457.50 on 12.38 lakh shares, after it lost the bid to acquire the fourth largest cellular provider, Hutch Essar, with Vodafone emerging as a top bidder with its $19 billion bid.

ICICI Bank (down 3% to Rs 962), Tata Motors (down 3.20% to Rs 877), and L&T (down 3.38% to Rs 1658) were the other losers.

Index heavyweight Reliance Industries was trading at Rs 1,368, down 1.46% from the previous close of Rs 1,388.25 on a volume of 1.88 lakh shares.

Other heavyweight shares, Infosys (down 0.90% to Rs 2340.50) and HLL (down 0.44% to Rs 201.70) declined.

Zee Entertainment Enterprises (ZEE) dropped 27% to Rs 263.25 on 10.01 lakh shares after the stock went into a no-delivery period ahead of the de-merger of Dish TV, its direct-to-home TV service. The counter clocked 9.30 lakh shares on the BSE. The company has fixed 20 February 2007 as record date for determination of members of the company eligible for issuing shares by ASC Enterprises, which will be later renamed Dish TV. The company will allot '23 fully paid-up equity shares of Re 1 each in ASC to every shareholder for 10 equity shares of Re 1 each held in ZEE.

FIIs were net sellers to the tune of Rs 560 crore in index-based futures on 9 February, the day when the Sensex lost 113 points in a broad decline after a surge in inflation to a more than two-year high. Concerns of a further rise in interest rates grew after the inflation data was released last week. Net buying by FIIs stood at $153.7 million on 8 February 2007. Mutual funds net sale was Rs 193 crore (Rs 1.93 billion) on the same day. NSE F&O open interest was down by Rs 815 crore (Rs 8.15 billion) at Rs 60,052 crore (Rs 600.52 billion).

Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 54.29 points (0.26%), at 20,623.37, Taiwan's Taiwan Weighted was down 83.17 points (1.06%), at 7,776.36, Singapore's Straits Times plunged 51.60 points (1.60%), at 3,169.29, while South Korea's Seoul Composite index was down 13.39 points (0.94%), to 1,414.29.

US stocks closed lower on Friday after an extensive sell off in stocks inspite of new upgrades announced by Ford Motor and General Motors. The sell-off was prompted by a rise in crude futures, remarks by Federal Reserve officials leaving open the possibility of more rate hikes and concern by Micron Technology executives about memory chip demand and pricing. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed lower by 56.8 points at 12,580.83, and Nasdaq lost 28.85 points, to 2,459.82.

Oil prices climbed briefly above $60 a barrel on Friday for the first time since the first trading day of the year, as an unrelenting winter across the US led to beliefe that heating fuel demand will not wane anytime soon. Light, sweet crude for March delivery rose $0.18, to settle at $59.89 a barrel by afternoon trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after rising as high as $60.80.

Scrambling for Control of Hutch Essar (OLD)


Hutch deal is done, here is a report on Valuations by Raghuram Iyengar of Wharton


It's hard to say where valuation math ends and acquisitive ego begins with the current high bidding levels for Hutch Essar, India's second largest mobile phone services provider, which currently has 22.3 million subscribers and Rs. 5,800 crore in revenues ($1.3 billion). Active bidders include the world's largest mobile telecommunications company Vodafone, the Anil Ambani-led Reliance Communications and the Hinduja Group. Verizon Wireless of the U.S. is also said to be kicking the tires of a potential deal.

Others in the fray are Japan's NTT DoComo, Egyptian telecom operator Orascom and other big-name investment banks, including Goldman Sachs, Blackstone and Texas Pacific. In the past month, Hutch Essar's valuation has doubled to $20 billion -- the enterprise value that Hong Kong parent Hutchison Whampoa likes for its 67% stake with partners. The other 33% is owned by the Ruias of the Mumbai-based Essar group, who seem open to either running the entire company themselves or in partnership with others.

At first sight, it seems obvious why Hutch Essar's valuations climbed so rapidly to such high levels. India's current high economic growth makes it an attractive market for foreign investors. Also, it is not every day that one gets to control a big player in a tightly-regulated policy environment where entry barriers are high.What's more, the country's mobile phone subscriber base is adding six million new subscribers each month and fast approaching 200 million, or a tenth of the world's subscribers. India Knowledge@Wharton interviewed faculty members at Wharton and the Indian School of Business, and other experts to get closer to the valuation metrics and see what's in store for a new owner at Hutch Essar.

At least two theories are floating around as to why Hutchison Whampoa wants to sell its stake in Hutch Essar. One is that the company badly needs the cash since it has committed up to $30 billion in investments across Europe. The other is that Li Ka-Shing, the Hong Kong-based shipping and real estate baron who controls Hutchison, wants to cash out. "He is a fairly astute entrepreneur and, in the past, he has been known to sell when he thinks valuations have maxed out," says Saurine Doshi, partner at consulting firm A.T. Kearney in Mumbai. India's FDI regime prevents Hutch from buying out the Ruias of Essar and gaining complete ownership. Hutchison, however, would have to settle a dispute with Essar that recently arose and now seems headed for the courts. Essar claims that under its partnership agreement with Hutchison, it has the "right of first refusal" in case the latter sells its stake in Hutch Essar. Hutchison says that right of refusal is not a blanket agreement, and is good only in specific circumstances.

Of the several possible configurations under consideration, the two most popular are first, a Vodafone-Ruia partnership and second, Reliance Communications buying out both Hutchison and the Ruias, and merging it with existing operations. India's policy regime doesn't allow much elbow room in those scenarios: FDI rules require Vodafone or any foreign player to have a local partner holding at least 26%; and Reliance or any other company cannot own more than a 10% stake in two different operators.

GSM and 3G

The quicker tempo being set in the race for Hutch Essar is a testimony to the appeal of the Indian opportunity, says Ravi Bapna, professor and executive director of the Center for Information Technology and the Networked Economy at the Indian School of Business in Hyderabad. "This is as strong a signal as you can get -- for the valuation to double in six months [to more than $20 billion] is totally unprecedented; it was $10 billion in June [2006]. Part of what people are responding to is the growth rate of mobile phone subscribers in the market as a while. No country in the planet is adding six million customers a month, and the cost of handsets is going down."

Those higher valuations could be justified only with a couple of significant assumptions, says Bapna. "The key for the underlying valuation is the hypothesis that the Internet is going to be played on the mobile phone in India. This implies higher average revenue per user (ARPU) for the mobile operators, which, coupled with the explosive growth and potential in the subscriber base, is a deadly combination." He says Hutch Essar's new owner will expect the subscriber base to double in two to three years, and also a doubling of the ARPU from current levels of between $10 and $20 a month.

Two other big attractions for international players in Hutch Essar are the opportunity to gain a significant presence on the GSM technology platform, and a 3G opportunity that is coming up soon, says Doshi. GSM is the fastest-growing and most popular wireless standard, with penetration in more than 200 countries, according to the GSM Association, a trade group based in London. Third generation (3G) services on the GSM platform would be made possible when those licenses are issued by the Indian government next year. "Part of the reason the [Hutch Essar] valuation is high is you are [getting] an option to buy 3G licenses in 2007-08 when preference will be given to the existing operators," says Doshi, adding that while the 3G market has been slow to take off in Europe, this technology is the way to go in the future, especially with the convergence of voice, data and video.

A Skeptical View

Wharton marketing professor Peter Fader senses serious disconnects between what he calls the "base behavior of our species" and the valuation assumptions made by both bidders and sellers of companies such as Hutch Essar. The revenue promise held out by Hutch Essar's existing and projected subscriber base is often seen as crucially linked to how the service is priced and the functionalities it offers. Here is where the deal makers may be off-key, says Fader. "When it comes to, 'Should I keep this contract or not?' often it's the silly little things that make you stick around or leave. They are not necessarily big, major, obvious factors like the pricing policy." He says it is precisely because the swings could take place due to seemingly small issues in a mobile phone service -- like "a goofy design aspect" -- that it is difficult to pinpoint specific drivers.

"When you boil it all down to individual behavior, whatever the device is that they are holding in their hand, their tendency to stick with it or switch to a new one -- and other kinds of very basic behavioral patterns -- will still be largely the same in 10 and 20 years as it is today, even though the functionality being delivered is different," says Fader. "That's a point I'm willing to stand by, and it's a fairly radical point."

Fader and Bruce Hardie, a marketing professor at the London Business School, did capture some of those behavioral patterns in a June 2006 study titled, "Customer-Base Valuation in a Contractual Setting: The Perils of Ignoring Heterogeneity." They say in their paper that M&A deal makers have, in recent years, relied increasingly on extending the concept of customer lifetime value (CLV) to value a customer base. "The application of standard textbook discussions of CLV sees us performing such calculations using a single aggregate retention rate," the researchers write. But these retention rates typically increase over time due in large part to a "sorting effect" in a heterogeneous population. "Failure to recognize these dynamics yields a downward-biased estimate of the value of the customer base," they suggest

In making such flawed assumptions, Fader feels sellers are "just being naïve; they're only hurting themselves and they are leaving so much money on the table when they do these valuations." Mobile phone customers are no different in their behavioral patterns than purchasers of other consumer products like magazine subscriptions, he adds. "There is enormous heterogeneity among customers in every contractual database I've ever seen. In other words, for every person who's going to churn the instant he is able to do so, there's another person who's completely, blindly loyal and foolishly will keep his contract forever. And so the real key here is to capture the variability across customers. Too often, what these firms are doing when they make their calculations is they are assuming an average customer. In doing so, and in ignoring the variability across customers, they end up systematically undervaluing the future value of the customer base, which is really what it is all about."

Wharton marketing professor Raghuram Iyengar has closely studied the impact of pricing strategies in the U.S. mobile phone services market. He says the concept of CLV, which combines profits per customer and the retention rate, gained currency as a valuation tool during the tech boom of the late 1990s. At that time, "a lot of companies in this space were not making profits, but they had big customer bases."

The key factors in analyzing the enterprise value of a mobile phone services provider include the ARPU, the retention rate of customers, the cost of capital and the costs of customer acquisition. With a natural limit on the number of minutes each customer could conceivably use each month, the best opportunity to increase revenue per subscriber is in providing value-added services that command a premium. Having said that, it is the retention rate that has the maximum impact on the company's valuation, says Iyengar.

Pointing to a November 2006 report from Verizon for its latest quarter, Iyengar says the company is "extremely happy about the fact that its churn rate is 1.3% per month -- one of the best in the industry -- because it ensures that their customer lifetime value will be high." Verizon had posted the fourth consecutive quarterly drop in its churn rate, which measures defecting customers. The churn rate in the U.S. wireless phone services market is between 1.5% and 2% per month. Cingular Wireless last quarter reported a churn rate of 1.8%, up slightly from 1.7% in the prior quarter; T-Mobile's churn rate also edged up, from 2.2% to 2.3%, over the past two quarters.

Keeping Customer Churn Low

A. T. Kearney's Doshi says that, as with other global majors, customer retention will be the top challenge Hutch Essar's new owners will face. "Customer churn is high across the world for mobile users, but higher in India," says Doshi. "The only way [mobile phone services companies]do it globally is by strengthening customer relationships; price becomes a factor, in addition to service levels and dropped calls. Once you have parity on those dimensions with all others, you need to adopt an end-to-end customer touch model." Doshi says at that stage, the key issues include convenience in the billing and payment cycle, the resolution of customer problems and "customer reach" -- how companies proactively reach out to customers on an ongoing basis with new options and offers. "In sum, the big challenges facing Hutch Essar will be how to reverse the ARPU decline and how to put in place a leading end-to-end customer relationship model," says Doshi.

He tempers an optimistic outlook with other, more sobering considerations. In the short term, he says, the challenges a new owner faces will be in customer retention and ARPUs. "While everything started with a bang [a few years ago], most operators have seen a decline in their ARPUs," he says. Hutch Essar's ARPUs of Rs. 375 a month ($8.50) compares with industry averages of Rs. 325 ($7.30), according to Doshi, who adds that Hutch Essar's current ARPU levels have actually fallen from levels of Rs. 450 about 18 months ago, and that they have declined at a faster rate than those of others. "Initially, customers were thrilled with the mobile phone, but now they have started optimizing their use," says Doshi. "That is one thing that [any potential buyer] will have to deal with."

If trends in the U.S. mobile phone services industry could point to things to come in the Indian market, a simple expression that Iyengar employs to arrive at customer lifetime value is useful: 'M' multiplied by 'R,' divided by 1+I-R, where 'M' stands for the margin per customer, 'R' for the retention rate and 'I' for the cost of capital. The ARPU in the U.S. market is currently around $50 a month, Iyengar says. Assuming a margin of 45% and the churn rate at 1.5% a month (or 18% annually, meaning a retention rate of 82%), Iyengar arrives at $790 as the customer lifetime value.

If one applies those ARPU numbers, profit margins and retention rates to Hutch Essar's 22.27 million existing customer base, the total value works out to $17.6 billion. That, incidentally, is close to the $17.4 billion that Goldman Sachs believes is the appropriate break-even price its client Vodafone should keep in mind. Goldman Sachs further said that Vodafone would be overpaying if it valued Hutch Essar at more than $20 billion. Hypothetically, if one assumed a higher customer retention rate of 90% (instead of 82%), the enterprise value shoots up to $26.75 billion. In contrast, with other things being equal, a lower capital cost of say, 7%, pushes up the enterprise value to $19.5 billion.

Doshi feels Hutch Essar's price tag is on the high side: "At $20 billion, that's almost $1,000 a user," he says. He points to China Mobile's failed bid last July to acquire Millicom International Cellular SA of Luxembourg, a provider with then about 10 million subscribers across Latin America, Africa and South Asia. (Its current subscriber base is closer to 13 million, and like Hutch Essar, it, too, is adding about a million subscribers a month.) By the time the deal talks failed, China Mobile had offered $5.3 billion for Millicom, or about $500 a customer. The company had the added attraction of licenses in 16 countries including Chad, Bolivia, El Salvador and Cambodia, with a combined market of 400 million people.

Hutch, Hunch, IRR or Instinct

Fader suspects the valuation math in deals like Hutch-Essar is far from scientific, basing his assessment on statements in corporate financial documents. "I've never seen a case where a company has estimated customer retention -- or at least admitted to doing it -- in a manner that their shareholders should insist upon," he says. "They are using very crude estimates of retention; they are assuming that they are constant across customers or over time rather than capturing the huge dynamics that take place there."

India's mobile phone services market is quite different from that in the U.S., says Bapna, and he points to India's higher growth in data traffic as one example. "Voice usage levels aren't likely to increase dramatically; you can make more money from data and multimedia applications and from residential middle-class and enterprise users," he says. "Startup businesses are developing software for seamless video conferencing and other applications for the mobile phone. It's like taking a salesforce.com application and pushing it on the mobile phone."

Fader agrees that the mobile phone industry is in "a time of unique change," but is equally skeptical about the long-term projections floating around. "People who sit around and say what the landscape will look like, say, 10 years from now are fooling themselves," he suggests. "I think a lot of people have placed the wrong bets, if you look at the U.S. side. People talking about the nature and speed of convergence have been way off. It's really, really hard to say how it's going to play out."

Sharekhan Daring Derivatives for February 12, 2007


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Sharekhan Highnoon dated February 12, 2007


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Karvy - Varun Shipping


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Small-caps, mid-caps in troubled waters


Small-cap and mid-cap shares declined for the second day in a row today.

Some major losers in this space were Aptech (down 11% to Rs 187), Entertainment Network India (down 10.9% to Rs 306), Peninsula Land (down 9.5% to Rs 415.80), Unitech (down 8% to Rs 429.80), Spanco Telesystems (down 9% to Rs 186), Max India (down 7% to Rs 1101), Mahindra Gesco Developers (down 8% to Rs 591.80), Adani Enterprises (down 7.9% to Rs 208), Srei Infrastructure Finance (down 7.5% to Rs 61), Suzlon Energy (down 7% to Rs 1149), Jyoti Structures (down 6% to Rs 159), India Infoline (down 7% to Rs 332.90), and Escorts (down 6.7% to Rs 131).

The market-breadth was quite. For 2006 shares declining on BSE, 263 rose. Just 24 shares were unchanged. Losers outpaced gainers by a ratio of 7.6:1.

The CNX Nifty Junior Index, which comprises small-cap and mid-cap shares, was down 207.20 points (2.8%), at 7,138.95. It has lost 368.40 points (4.9%) in the past two trading sessions from 7,507.35 on 8 February 2007.

A surge in inflation to its highest level in more than two years, which has raised concerns of a further rise in interest rates, has damaged small-cap and mid-cap shares in the last two days.

There was a solid recovery by small-cap and mid-cap shares since mid-December 2006. From a low of 6,931.25 on 10 January 2007, the CNX Nifty Junior Index surged 578.50 points (8.3%) in about a month, to 7,509.75 by 7 February 2007.

Nifty Junior currently trades at a PE multiple of 20.24 (based on its closing of 7507.35 on 8 February 2007) compared to Nifty’s PE multiple of 20.31.

PowerYourTrade Trading Calls


Ashwani Gujral

Sell Parsavnath Developers with a stop loss of Rs 400 for target of Rs 250

Buy GSFC with stop loss of Rs 190 for target of Rs 250

Deepak Mohoni

Buy Network18 Finance below Rs 398 with stop loss of Rs 388. This is a day-trading recommendation

Short sell TVS Motors above Rs 75.25 with stop loss of Rs 77. This is a day-trading recommendation.

Rajat K Bose

Sell Aurobindo Pharma around last close with stop loss above Rs 761 for target of Rs 732

Sell Canara Bank around last close with stop loss above Rs 235.50 for target of Rs 223.

Citigroup - Tata Power


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From the Research Desk


Dishman Pharmaceuticals and Chemicals Limited.

Dishman Pharmaceuticals and Chemicals Limited’s (Dishman) Q3 FY07 results were in line with expectations. Sales recorded a growth of 181% to Rs1.7bn driven by CRAMS which includes the full impact of Carbogen Amcis (CA-sales Rs820mn) for the first time. Sales for EM (Eposartan Mesylate) to Solvay are back on track after a sluggish H1 FY07 and on target to record Rs1bn for FY07. Operating profit margin (OPM) declined by 110bps to 28.2% as CA has lower margins as compared to other business segments of Dishman. Consolidation of CA which has led to higher depreciation and interest outgo restricted PAT growth to 25% to Rs244mn, translating into an annualized EPS of Rs12 on a fully diluted basis.

Post result conference call with the management has further reaffirmed our view that Dishman would be one of the best bets in the growing outsourcing space. Starting with Solvay as its only client in 2003, Dishman has made significant progress in this space, emerging as a preferred supplier for big pharma companies (GSK, Merck, Krka, AZN, Sanofi Aventis). CA business is gaining increasing momentum surpassing its own estimates for CY06. With capacity at Amcis nearing saturation, a few customers have expressed an in principle approval to shift operations to Dishman India. This we believe is a very positive sign for both Dishman and the industry at large as it shows confidence in Dishman’s IPR adherence.

Apart from CRAMS, Dishman has also made significant progress in the Electrolyte QUATs business and has signed a couple of long term contracts with global majors. One contract with Ferro Corporation worth US$6mn annually is progressing smoothly. In addition, Dishman has broadened its top management by appointing a COO and a CFO, which indicates robust growth in the years to come.

We are very positive on Dishman’s CRAMS strategy and believe Dishman will be able to leverage strongly on the relations developed with big pharma companies in CRAMS. At Rs236, the stock is trading at 22.7x FY07E EPS of Rs11 and 14.9x FY08E EPS of Rs16.8. We maintain BUY with a target price of Rs286 based on 17x FY08 earnings.

Intra-day Stock Ideas


NIFTY (4187) SUP 4153 RES 4205

BUY NELCO (128.75)
SL 124 T 136, 138

BUY NAGARCONST (220.35)
SL 216 T 228, 230

SELL GDL (185.90)
@ 187 SL 191 T 177, 175

SELL POLARIS (220.30)
@ 223 SL 227 T 214, 212

SELL CORPBANK (301.9)
@ 304 SL 309 T 295, 293

STRATEGY INPUTS FOR THE DAY


Daily Market Strategy - Choke off waste

The secret of all power is - save your force. If you want high pressure you must choke off waste.

Looks like its going to be the year of mega deals involving Indian companies, be it inbound or outbound. After the Tata-Corus blockbuster, we now have the Hindalco-Novelis deal and the Vodafone-Hutch Essar thriller. As far as stock market is concerned Hindalco shares could come under pressure just like Tata Steel owing to worries about the high debt component of the transaction. But, for those who have the patience to wait can look at buying the stock at lower levels. Reliance Communications and Bharti Airtel are likely to gain, as Vodafone has valued Hutch Essar at 24.6 times EBIDTA. The Idea Cellular IPO also opens today. So keep an eye on the telecom counters.

Coming to the broader market, we expect a subdued opening, as worries about inflation and fears of more rate increases could offset the resurgence in FII inflows and strong economic numbers. The government will release the latest industrial production data at noon today. Though there may be some cooling, overall numbers are expected to be strong, further fanning the fears over more rate hikes by the RBI. Global cues are not encouraging either. US stocks closed in the red on Friday. Barring the Nikkei in Japan, most Asian markets are trading weak. Oil remains above $59 per barrel.

We would advise investors to be cautious as the near-term outlook has turned weak on the back of the sharp spike in inflation and its fallout on interest rates. The budget too may not have too many triggers for the market. Valuations are already quite high. The F&O segment also doesn't hold too much promise. The Nifty February futures are trading at a discount. The Put-to-Call (PCR) is pretty high as is the cost of carry. A stock specific approach is the order of the day as volatility has increased and some correction is imminent. Keep your portfolio at manageable levels and your cash position high. You may just be able to pick your counters at lower levels.

India Infoline’s report on the Indian Transformer Industry will be mailed to you today. The Rs55bn Indian transformer industry will benefit from the strong demand expected from reforms in the power sector. We expect the industry to witness a CAGR of 30% plus in value terms over the next five years against approximately 17% CAGR in the past three years. Improved realizations and higher volumes will largely drive this growth. The government intends to add massive capacity to the generation side and create a National Grid for distribution of this power, both of which should boost demand for transformers. The funding issues for the same have been taken care by the World Bank (WB) and Asian Development Bank (ADB).

Our top picks: Indo Tech Transformers Ltd (ITTL) – BUY, Target price Rs375; EMCO Ltd (EMCO) – BUY, Target price Rs1,067; Voltamp Transformers Ltd (VTL) – HOLD, Target price Rs816; Bharat Bijlee Ltd (BBL) – HOLD, Target price Rs1,675.

A summary note with a link to the entire report will be mailed to you during the day.

FIIs were net buyers of Rs3.18bn (provisional) in the cash segment on Friday. However, in the F&O segment they pulled out Rs5.72bn. On Thursday, foreign funds pumped in Rs6.99bn in the cash segment. Mutual Funds were net sellers of Rs1.93bn on the same day.

The IPOs of Indus Fila and Evinix Accessories will open for subscription today. Shares of Technocraft Industries India will get listed today.

Ansal Properties & Infrastructure's Board will meet today for considering a bonus issue. Syngenta India's Board will meet today to consider the audited accounts and recommend dividend for the year ended December 31, 2006. Federal Bank's Board will meet today to consider expansion of the bank's share capital by way of Public / Rights / Domestic / International share issue.

Insider Trades:
Century Textiles & Industries Ltd: Reliance Vision Fund - Scheme of Reliance Mutual Fund has sold in open market 100000 equity shares of Century Textiles & Industries Ltd on 1st February, 2007.

Market Volumes:
The turnover on NSE was down by 4.2% to Rs91.75bn. BSE Metal index was the major loser and lost 1.74%. BSE Pharma index (down 1.49%), BSE Capital Good index (down 1.36%), BSE Oil & Gas index (down 0.84%) and BSE PSU index (down 0.83%) were among the other major losers.

Volume Toppers:
Pochiraju Industries, IDBI, TTML, SREI Infrastructure, SAIL, Zee Entertainment, NTPC, R Com, Satyam Computer, SCI, ITC, Indiabulls, Autoline Industries, Hindalco, Shree Ashtavinyak, Hindustan Motors and Gujarat Ambuja.

Delivery Delight:
Bajaj Auto, EID Parry, Financial Technologies, GAIL, GTL, HDFC Bank, Infotech Enterprises, Maharashtra Seamless, NTPC, Nagarjuna Construction, OBC, Punj Lloyd, Tata Motors and UTI Bank.

Lower Circuit Filters:
Ansal Infrastructure, Goldstone Technology, PSTL, Saksoft Ltd, Radha Madhav, Swan Mills, Nesco Ltd, Aurionpro Solutions, Ansal Housing, Ganesh Housing, Heritage Foods and Nirlon.

Brokers Recommendations:
Gujarat Ambuja Cement – Buy from ABN Amro with target of Rs160
Punj Lloyd – Outperform from Macquarie Research with target of Rs1315.

Long Term Investment:
Bajaj Auto

Major News Headlines:
Inflation accelerates to 6.58%, the fastest pace in more than two years
ABB denies bonus news
Deccan Aviation plans to create separate helicopter unit
Tata Motors says report of bid for Punjab Tractors speculative
KEC International receives order worth Rs912mn
Moser Baer to enter Karnataka Home Video market
Suzlon join hands with Portuguese builder Mota-Engil SGPS SA to buy German windmill maker for 1.02bn euros

HOW MARKET FARED


Market likely to consolidate

Volatile markets ended flat with benchmark Sensex closing at a new all time high. The markets were in red throughout the trading session as volatility and selling pressure in the heavy weights like Bajaj Auto, Satyam Computer and Bharti Airtel dragged the benchmark index to hit a low of 14523.16. However, the markets recovered from their lows as blue chips like Infosys and L&T witnessed fresh buying. Also, PSU stocks attracted buying interest after Government announced plan to sell 7% stake in BEML. Finally, the BSE benchmark Sensex was flat at 14652. NSE Nifty was also flat at 4223.

L&T gained by 0.9% to Rs1756 after the company announced that they have signed a MoU with Boeing Company for the joint exploration of business opportunities in India's defense sector. The scrip touched an intra-day high of Rs1767 and a low of Rs1702 and recorded volumes of over 6,00,000 shares on NSE.

Global Broadcast News Ltd. made an impressive debut on the bourses. The stock listed at Rs425.10 as against the issue price of Rs250, and ended at Rs505 translating into a premium of 102%. The scrip touched an intra-day high of Rs518 and a low of Rs425 and recorded volumes of over 1,00,00,000 shares on NSE. The company entered the capital market with an Initial Public Offering ( IPO) of equity shares, totaling up to Rs1.05bn. The issue was subscribed 48.74 times.

Patni surged over 2.5% to Rs436 after the company announced its Q4 result with net group profit at Rs1.14bn (up 73%) and revenue at Rs6.841 (up 23%). The scrip touched an intra-day high of Rs459 and a low of Rs426 and recorded volumes of over 12,00,000 shares on NSE.

Reliance Industries also edged higher 0.4% to Rs1397 after the company won 7 Oil Exploration areas in India. The scrip touched an intra-day high of Rs1403 and a low of Rs1381 and recorded volumes of over 10,00,000 shares on NSE.

Metal stocks were the top losers as metal prices on LME slipped. Hindalco slipped by over 3.5% to Rs175, Sterlite Industries fell 2.15 to Rs479, SAIL was down 1% to Rs115 and Tata Steel edged lower by 0.5% to Rs462.

Telecom stocks were a mixed bag today. Bharti Airtel slipped 0.9% to Rs766 and VSNL was down 0.4% to Rs500. However, Reliance Communication gained by 0.7% to Rs489 and MTNL was flat at Rs164.

Banking stocks recorded smart gains. Heavy weight ICICI Bank advanced 1.7% to Rs999, SBI was up 0.9% to Rs1205 and HDFC Bank gained 0.7% to Rs1109. Among the Mid-Cap stocks OBC, Corp Bank and Bank of India were among the major gainers.

Capital Good stocks ended with gains. ABB, Punj Lloyd and BHEL were among the major gainers

Anagram - Daily Call


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Kotak - Cairn India


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Market may recover


The market may open upbeat with British telecom giant Vodafone winning the bid for a majority stake in the fourth largest cellular services firm, Hutch-Essar, for a stunning $19 billion. The large bid could boost shares of mobile service providers such as Bharti Airtel and Reliance Communications.

FII inflow remains strong. FIIs were net buyers to the tune of Rs 698.90 crore on Thursday (8 February 2007), the day when the Sensex had gained 9 points. The inflow of funds from FIIs for February (till 8 February) stands at Rs 2440.20 crore. As per provisional data, FIIs were net buyers to the tune of Rs 318 crore on Friday (9 February 2007), the day when the Sensex lost 113 points.

But foreign funds were net sellers to the tune of a substantial Rs 560 crore in index-based futures on 9 February. They were net sellers to the tune of Rs 202 crore in individual stock futures that day.

The latest inflation data raised concerns of a further rise in interest rates. The wholesale price index rose 6.58% in the 12 months to 27 January 2007, the biggest rise in more than two years, and higher than previous week's annual increase of 6.11% due to higher food prices. At its quarterly policy review on 31 January 2007, RBI had raised its key short-term rate, the repo rate, by 25 basis points. Recently, private sector ICICI Bank raised its benchmark reference rate on corporate loans and home loans by 100 basis points.

Asian stocks fell on Monday, with Samsung Electronics and other tech shares under strain after top US memory chip maker Micron Technology forecast bearish prices. Key benchmark indices in Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan were down between 0.5 - 1.4%. The Japanese markets were closed.

US stocks closed lower on Friday after an extensive sell off in stocks inspite of new upgrades announced by Ford Motor and General Motors. The sell-off was prompted by a rise in crude futures, remarks by Federal Reserve officials leaving open the possibility of more rate hikes and concern by Micron Technology executives about memory chip demand and pricing. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed lower by 56.8 points at 12,580.83, and Nasdaq lost 28.85 points, to 2,459.82.

Man Financial - Retail Sector


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Macquarie - Reliance Industries


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BRICS - IDFC


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Ashish Chugh - HIDDEN GEMS - Kernex


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[Click the star to watch this topic] Emkay Morning Notes - FAG Bearings, IDEA Cellular IPO


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