Over the last few days we have seen stock markets globally correct sharply. This fall started with news flow from
All this has created a huge uncertainty in the markets and we have seen them coming off. I wrote a few days back on the likelihood of increasing volatility after the great degree of complacency that had set into the markets with VIX falling to very low levels. The bump up in the value of the US dollar has also led to some risk being taken back and there has been some selling in the commodity and equity markets.
I believe that the excessively loose monetary policy of
The biggest positive of the Chinese intent will be to control the runaway rise in commodity prices, especially of commodities like Copper, Aluminum, and Steel etc where prices have moved up despite growing inventories. Given the fact that economic growth numbers from most Western economies are muted at best, moves by the Chinese will lead to a stabilization if not a fall in the prices of industrial commodities. This combined with (hopefully) better weather conditions in the current year for agri commodities will lead to a lowering of inflation in the later part of the year and thus reduce pressure on Central banks to tighten.
We have already seen that for some crops like Wheat, Soybeans and Tea the production seems to be bouncing back now and is leading to prices coming down. Going forward prices of commodities like Rice and Sugar etc. should also stabilize with increasing production. Sugar is likely to be a bumper crop (specifically in
Specifically for
The results season is moving along pretty well with most companies across sectors except for the Capital goods companies delivering strong results. Results of companies in other parts of the world also continue to beat expectations. Key positive surprises in the Indian context have come from Banking, Technology and Auto sectors.
Over the last one month I have traveled to meet a lot of investors all over the country and the degree of skepticism about the market rally and the economy. A large majority of investors are facing a huge reinvestment risk today after deploying a vast majority of their financial savings in various kinds of fixed income or debt instruments in the last quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of 2009. The 9 months from March – Dec 2009 has seen investors pull out money from domestic mutual funds, PMSes and also selling out a lot of their equity investments and today after having done that at levels much below the current levels there is a clear resistance to invest in the markets. However as the confidence on economic growth prospects grow over the next few months flows are likely to come back. The next two months are also likely to see huge flows into insurance companies which should provide a liquidity support of USD 8-10 billion to the markets.
Fundamentally the markets seem to be well positioned to continue the uptrend and the downside seems to be restricted to 4-5% after the 6-7% correction we have already seen.
When I was young I thought that money was the most important thing in life; now that I am old I know that it is – Oscar Wilde