Saturday, October 9, 2010

SAIL achieves best ever Q 2 sales

The July-September quarter of 2010 has been the best-ever Q2 for Steel Authority Of India with sales of 3.17 million tonnes (MT) achieved during the period, sources in Rourkela Steel Plant said Saturday.

In comparison to sales in Q1 SAIL achieved a growth of 30 percent. The previous best Q2 in respect of sales was 3.08 MT achieved in 2009-10, they said.

During this year's Q2 SAIL sold 8.5 lakh tonnes of special and value-added steel products, showing a growth of 10.1 percent over the corresponding period last year. Special steel constituted 30 percent of the total domestic sales achieved in Q2.

Sales growth in Q2 was mainly due to higher intake by construction and manufacturing sectors. This was reflected in higher sales of products such as wife rods, rounds and bars, structurals, CR sheets/coils and galvanised items, the sources added.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Career Point Infosystems, debutes 104% up

Tutorial services provider Career Point Infosystems which listed today has registered a massive gain of 104%, or Rs 322.35 to close at Rs 632.35 on the BSE. It listed at Rs 461.10 as against issue price of Rs 310. The company raised Rs 115 crore through the issue, which opened for subscription during September 16-21, 2010. It was subscribed 47.39 times. Career Point's market capitalisation stands at Rs 1,146.64 crore.

The company intends to use issue proceeds for construction and development of an integrated campus facility; expansion of classroom infrastructure and office facility; acquisitions and other strategic initiatives; and to meet expenses towards general corporate purposes.

In an exclusive interview Pramod Maheshwari, CMD and CEO of Career Point today said that the company will continue to grow at its historical run-rate of 25% year-on-year. He said in terms of the revenues, the company would end the current fiscal with Rs 80-85 crore. He is also hopeful that the company would post Rs 25 crore in profits for the fiscal. He added that Career Point would be adding facilities for about 2,000 students as part of its capacity expansion plans in FY12.

IMF projects India's economic growth at 9.7% in 2010

The International Monetary Fund has projected the Indian economy will grow by 9.7 percent in 2010 and 8.4 percent in the next fiscal, driven by robust industrial production and macro-economic performance.

However, neighbouring China is expected to grow at an even faster rate of 10.5 percent in 2010 and 9.6 percent in 2011, driven by domestic demand, the IMF said in its latest World Economic Outlook report.

Advanced economies, on the other hand, are projected to grow by just 2.7 percent in 2010 and 2.2 percent in 2011, the IMF report said, adding that global trade is forecast to expand by 4.8 percent in 2010 and 4.2 percent in 2011, with a temporary slowdown during the second half of 2010 and the first half of 2011.

"India's macroeconomic performance has been vigorous, with industrial production at a two-year high. Leading indicators -- the production manufacturing index and measures of business and consumer confidence -- continue to point up," the IMF said.

"Growth is projected at 9.7 percent in 2010 and 8.4 percent in 2011, led increasingly by domestic demand. Robust corporate profits and favorable external financing will encourage investment," it said.

"Recent activity (10 percent year-over year growth in real GDP at market prices in the second quarter) was driven largely by investment and the contribution from net exports is projected to turn negative in 2011 as the strength in investment further boosts imports," the IMF said.

According to the World Economic Outlook report, growth in emerging Asia economies stands at about 9.5 percent, with robust demand from China, India, and Indonesia benefiting other Asian economies.

In China, a major fiscal stimulus, a large expansion of credit and a number of specific measures to boost household income and consumption increased domestic demand growth to almost 13 percent in 2009, contributing to a large decline in the current account surplus.

The recovery is now well established, and a transition from public stimulus to private-sector-led growth is underway, it said.

Latin America has also recovered strongly, with real GDP growth at about 7 percent.

The recovery in Latin America is being led by Brazil, where real GDP growth has been close to 10 percent since the third quarter of 2009 and the economy is now showing signs of overheating, the report said.

A number of other economies have also returned to solid growth. However, Mexico is lagging behind, partly because of its strong trade linkages with the United States.

Growth in Mexico recently picked up on the back of strengthening exports to the United States, but the output gap remains large.

The World Economic Outlook projects that the output of emerging and developing economies will expand at a rate of 7.1 percent and 6.4 percent, respectively, in 2010 and 2011.

"The global recovery remains fragile, because strong policies to foster internal rebalancing of demand from public to private sources and external rebalancing from deficit to surplus economies are not yet in place," it said.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

See Nifty hitting 6300-6400 soon- KR Choksey

Barring few wrinkles, the bourses have been steadily moving up and Deven Choksey of KR Choksey Securities feels that it is definitely planning for a new high and that is where he sees larger amount of actions coming into the some of the frontline stocks. “We will soon touch 6,300-6,400 very soon. The market has the appetite for buying some of the heavyweight stocks. You should be seeing more actions there.”

Midcap stocks too may lead participation. “Probably between 6,300-6,400 you would have majority of the upside completed in some of the index heavy constitutes and thereafter you should probably seeing those funds which are sitting on sidelines starting to pick up in some of the midcap stocks”

Join the rally...

One of the TV Channel spoke to Radhika Gupta, Director, Forefront Capital Management for her fundamental view and Hemen Kapadia of chartpundit.com for his technical view on various stocks and sectors.

Here are the expert views on various stocks/sector:


On Sesa Goa
Gupta is positive on the stock. “We are bullish on Sesa Goa and I think it’s a sector and a stock to be invested in for the long term if the investor has that kind of horizon. We are very bullish on the commodity space and on the metal space within that so we read that as a positive development and within that space Sesa Goa has consistently been in a favorable position so bullish on the stock overall.”

Kapadia is in sync with Gupta on this one. He says, “The stock looks good. We had a protracted decline. We are out of that, it’s stabilized and now it’s looking good. I would have a buy on the stock. It looks good from a medium to longer-term point of view.”


On Bharti Airtel
Gupta says if you have a longer-term horizon on telecom and Bharti then it’s not such a bad space to be in. She says, “We were fairly bearish on telecom but now we have become a little more neutral on the sector and Bharti is the best bet within the telecom sector. It has the highest growing market share, a good outlook ahead with the Zain deal that they have strong operations, but you need to have a longer term outlook in Bharti, maybe a year or two years to really reap the benefits. In the shorter-term we would be little bearish or neutral.” She also adds that she doesn’t see a major recovery coming back into the sector or into Bharti in the three-six months horizon. She says if the investor is looking at a shorter-term, he should probably exit and deploy that investment into more attractive sectors so like power, auto’s or pharma, something where he will see a shorter term gain.

Kapadia agrees with Radhika’s viewpoint. He says, “It’s going to take a long time. We have moved from Rs 260 to Rs 380 almost. I have a hold on the stock because it’s a technical weakness but it is getting heavy. The upside is getting tightly capped so six months I am not sure. Stock doesn’t look bad but the cream has been lost. We could be just walking into a correction, not yet but we are probably on the anvil of walking into a correction and that could take a few months or so.” He says to hold the stock and needs to extend his time horizon from six months to about two years or more.


On auto space:
Gupta says, “I think that perspective on Maruti is that while auto is growing sector, Maruti has seen fair amount of strong volume growth. If the investor has to be in the auto sector there are other individual names within autos where he is likely to see better growth in the prices because Maruti while the topline has been good because of the royalty payments, the bottomline has been hit and is likely to continue being hit. So, something like a Tata Motors or even a Mahindra and Mahindra in the similar space are probably more attractive investments.

On Maruti Suzuki:
Kapadia says, “I think the auto sector looks good, but I think most of the stocks have had run ups, no exceptions there. But I think Maruti will be a hold. I am not sure of the investor’s idea of selling now and buying back later can be practically implemented. Sounds good, but sometimes you could miss out on stocks in markets like these. So, yes, Maruti have moved up for seven weeks in a row. Its ripe for a correction, its overdue, it’s likely overbought. But since the investor has got a longer term investment outlook, I think it we will have a hold on Maruti. Maruti is in a longer term uptrend and we have just finished a 14 month-12 month correction so to speak and we will be back on track again. So, longer term point of view I would have a hold. Shorter to medium-term yes Maruti is probably susceptible to a correction.”


On Tata Steel
Gupta is bullish on the metal space. She adds, “We like the metals and within that the steel space as a whole. Tata Steel is actually one of the strongest plays within that space. Given the companies focus on cleaning up its balance sheet, managing debt, the news that we have seen coming out of Corus, management’s ability to execute over the last couple of years, in general Tata Steel is on very strong footing within this space.”

Kapadia finds Tata Steel a good bet in the long-term. He says, “We are back with a longer-term uptrend but currently the stock has moved from Rs 490 to Rs 680 in eight weeks or so and it’s also overbought. Maybe there is still some more upside till Rs 700 but if I were to buy for the slightly longer-term I will wait till it comes down to Rs 640 or below. I would avoid buying it at current levels because it’s had a run-up, so we could be walking into a correction which is probably overdue for the market as well as for Tata Steel.”

On Kalyani Steel
Kapadia finds Kalyani Steel an interesting stock. The company underwent some restructuring, so the charts have been slightly twisted but currently they are in the last stages of what is possibly an eight-nine week intermediate correction. He says, “Very strong support comes in at around Rs 130, I think downside appears limited, it seems to be setting the stage for an up move. Once this correction gets over, this could end in the next week or two, if not the next couple of weeks. That would set the stage for resumption of its intermediate uptrend and frankly speaking I would stick my neck out and say we are setting a stage for a 20-25% move in the next three months or so.”

On IT sector
According to Gupta this is probably a good time to exit most of the IT names. “We are pretty bearish on software as a pack. Couple of reasons, 1) rupee fluctuation will hurt them; 2) rising employee cost have been a problem for most of these software names and 3) then most of them are trading at fairly rich valuations. So the kind of earnings they need to show to justify the valuations are something that we think is unlikely to come in the next round of earnings. So they are looking overvalued and seeing margin pressures so weak thing for software and Infosys within that is one of the weaker and more overvalued players,” she feels.

However, Kapdia feels there is some upside left for the IT pack. “If you look at the entire IT lot—I think the Wipro, HCL Technologies—have posted 10 year highs. Infosys is at a all time high—short-term, medium term, long term all time frames and all counts it is in an uptrend.

On Infosys, he suggests a hold. “There I some more upside to go before the move fizzles out and the entire IT pack, even a laggard like Tech Mahindra probably looks good enough for a bounce right now so I have a hold on Infosys, I think there is more upside. Probably a Wipro or a HCL Tech might do slightly better than Infosys but Infosys is still a hold.,” he says.

Commenting on other IT counters, Kapadia says, the prospects of the Patni aren’t that exciting right now. However, he is upbeat on Hexaware. “We have had a 10-12 month correction. The time retracement has been there but price retracement has been rather shallow. Simply put, it is looking good and its coiling up like a though the breakout comes in at Rs 90. Hexaware looks exciting enough to warrant a close look and may be even a buy. So Patni doesn’t look too exciting, Hexaware does. In terms of Foursoft—that’s also moving sideways for once again this 12-14 month point of view. Looks okay but out of the three stocks—Hexaware looks to be the best of the lot. I think one can expect 30% upside from here in the next six to nine months,” he adds.

On Reliance
Kapadia says Reliance has been a bad underperformer but to expect Reliance not to perform would be a folly. He adds, “I have been tracking Reliance since my school days. Yes, it hasn’t moved but I think it has the capacity to surprise very much on the upside. I am not sure that an investor should sell call options of Reliance after 17 months of a sideways momentum and if he does he will have to keep a very strict stop loss. If the investor does sell call options he will have to calculate his cost in a sense call option plus the premium gain and if that and the spot price and the futures price crosses that, he will have to hedge it by going long in futures. It’s highly complicated, and slightly dangerous. In fact if Reliance dips a bit I would suggest selling put options because I am bullish on Reliance and not bearish. But frankly speaking just to make up for the losses selling calls and puts are very dangerous. I think you would loose two years of money that you have made in futures and options when you take such dangerous strategy especially in the market open with a gap sometimes. I would suggest a hold on Reliance. I think by the time the bull market comes to an end Reliance should be Rs 1,300 or more.”

On Reliance Capital
Gupta finds the financial space well placed. She finds that Reliance Capital hasn't done much. “Fundamentally it's not a bad business. It is the largest asset management company (AMC) in India. One of the few that's profitable although the insurance side has suffered a loss. I think there are other players in this space like an IFCI or an LIC Housing Finance that have done a lot more and have a much sharper growth trajectory ahead of them. So I would advice the investor to look at that a little bit.”

Kapadia has a buy call on this stock despite the fact that the entire bull market of the last year or so has given Reliance Capital a complete miss. He adds, “Currently we are in the midst of what is possibly a rounding bottom on the week. Maybe it looks like an inverted head and shoulder. Simply put, there is a bullish formation at play. Maybe it takes some more time and at the risk of sounding silly maybe the bull market gets over by the time Reliance Capital moves. Technically speaking it looks great. We haven't had a deep price retracement so despite its deep underperformance I have a buy on the stock especially if you have a year or two investment horizon.”

On Banks
Kapadia doesn’t track the financial sector but agrees it looks good. “All time highs but no resistance levels so I would have a hold. I think we could be moving towards maybe Rs 450 or so in the next couple of months.”

“Bank of Maharashtra looks relatively better in the sense we have some more history in terms of an upside. There is headroom. There is resistance at Rs 74. If you take that out from a weekly point of view I think we could be moving towards Rs 85 or so. Like most banks it’s in an uptrend, looks good and I think one can expect further upsides. I also find Dhanlaxmi Bank looks good.”

Sunday, October 3, 2010

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