Tuesday, December 14, 2010

India Stock Index Reaches Record on Foreign Buying

MUMBAI, India (AP) — India’s benchmark Sensex index closed at a record high Thursday, after the Federal Reserve’s decision to buy $600 billion in government bonds to shore up the United States recovery drove a surge of foreign investment into fast-growing India.

The Sensex closed up 2.1 percent, at 20,893.6 points, topping a January 2008 closing high of 20,873.33, according to Bombay Stock Exchange data. The index touched an intraday high of 20,917.0, 290 points shy of its record intraday high on Jan. 10, 2008.

“It’s the Fed’s quantitative easing,” said Nandan Chakraborty, managing director of institutional equity research at Mumbai’s Enam Securities. “It’s great for India.”

Mr. Chakraborty said the Fed’s announcement, against a backdrop of slow growth and near zero interest rates in the developed world, would continue to bolster emerging market stocks, commodities and the rupee. A rising rupee will help India’s importers, like engineering, infrastructure and telecom companies, but will hurt its software services exporters, like Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services, which get more than half their revenue from North America.

On Thursday, foreign investors poured $635.9 million into Indian equities and debt, bringing the year-to-date total to a record $36.3 billion, according to the securities regulator.

India’s central bank has been less concerned about the flood of foreign investment — and its export-bruising impact on the rupee — than other emerging Asian economies because India must finance a growing current-account deficit and an ambitious $9 billion government divestment program.
The central bank has warned that it will intervene if capital flows become disruptive.

India also suffers from higher consumer price inflation than any other major world econ
omy, which makes the Reserve Bank of India more tolerant of the rupee’s rise. The bank seems more concerned about the damage to export competitiveness from inflation than rupee appreciation.

Coal India touched a high of 344.75 rupees ($7.80) on the Bombay Stock Exchange before settling at 342.35 rupees compared with an offering price of 245 rupees a share.

The government sold 10 percent of its stake in Coal India, which controls about 80 percent of the nation’s coal market, raising $3.4 billion in India’s largest initial offering ever.

Reliance Industries, HDFC Bank, State Bank of India and Tata Motors all closed up 3 percent or more.

Courtesy : nytimes
URL: http://8bt.in/rHCkfm

Monday, December 13, 2010

Mutual funds to disclose assets on quarterly basis

MUMBAI: Local mutual funds need not compete with each other over the status of their assets under management (AUMs) every month end from now on.

The Association of Mutual Funds in India (Amfi), the lobbying arm of local domestic mutual funds, has done away with monthly disclosure of AUMs from October. This disclosure would be made every quarter.


“The average AUM (AAUM) for each quarter (90-day average) will be computed and uploaded on the Amfi website on the first working day of the fol-lowing month of every quarter, effective from quarter ending December 31, 2010,” Amfi said.

The move follows representations from the industry, which felt that monthly AUM disclosure did not serve the purpose because it put ‘undue pressure’ on mutual funds.

“Inflows and outflows are a normal part of the systemic activity. Sharp outflows result in a negative publicity and are interpreted wrongly,” said a chief executive of a private mutual fund.

The race for higher AUMs among mutual funds started in the previous bull run, when investors poured money into schemes. But after the bear phase starting January 2008 and the Sebi ban on mutual funds against charging investors fees to pay distributors in August 2009, flows into schemes are nowhere close to what they were in the previous bull run. Changes in valuation methods of some fixed income schemes and uncertainty in the debt market have also caused volatility in flows into mutual fund schemes.

“Every fall in AUM has been extensively reported in the media and it was putting unwanted pressure. This is not needed, given that the mutual fund industry is a long-term product,” said the sales head of a mutual fund, based in the South.


Courtesy : economictimes
URL: http://8bt.in/nLGLff

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