Sensex

Friday, December 11, 2009

[SPAM detected Spam-Test: True ; 5.8 / 5.0] Re: [sharetrading] Diabetes

 

That was amazing
You have converted a non trading mail into a trading mail
Cheers

--- In sharetrading@yahoogroups.com, Jayant Prabhu <jprabhu007@...> wrote:
>
> dear sharat,
> i agree with you. diabetes is a menace which we all will have to face. and probably therefore shares of companies like Glenmark who have been making advance reasearch in developing a new molecule, are slowly and steadily making new advances.
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Sharat Sinha
> To: sharetrading@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Monday, December 07, 2009 7:47 PM
> Subject: [sharetrading] Diabetes [1 Attachment]
>
>
>
> [Attachment(s) from Sharat Sinha included below]
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>
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> Dear Friends,
> India is fast becoming Diabetes Capital of the world. According to one estimate over 6 cr. Indians are affected b
>
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>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> The INTERNET now has a personality. YOURS! See your Yahoo! Homepage.
>

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[sharetrading] Anagram's Daily Market Review

 

Anagram's Daily Market Review 11/12/2009

 
 
 
 

 

Markets could not close above the 17300/5180 hump as lesser-than expected Industrial Production data pushed them back. Sensex closed at 17119, down 70 points, while Nifty lost 17 points to end at 5117. BSE Mid-cap and Small-cap indices lost 0.6% and 0.7% respectively. Index of Industrial Production (IIP) for the month of October came in at 10.3% as against market expectation of about 12%. The IIP for the month of September was revised from 9.1% to 9.6%. On weekly basis Sensex and Nifty have closed almost flat, up 0.2% and 0.1% respectively. BSE Capital Goods and Teck indices were the top gainers among the sectoral indices, putting on 4% and 2.8% respectively over the week, while Metal and Healthcare indices lost 2.7% and 2.1% respectively. European markets were trading higher by about 1% while US stock indices futures were up by nearly 0.5% ahead of Retail Sales and University of Michigan Confidence report.

 

BSE Bankex and Realty indices were the top losers among the sectoral indices for the day, shedding 1.2% and 0.9% respectively, while Capital Goods and Power indices gained 0.6% each. BHEL surged 3.1%, becoming the top gainer among the Sensex stocks, followed by NTPC that gained 0.4%. Bharti Airtel and ICICI Bank lost the most, shedding 3.2% and 1.5% respectively. BSE advance-decline ratio stood at 1:1.6.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
To View Our Daily Market Review for 11th December, 2009 Please CLICK HERE
 
 
 
 
 

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[sharetrading] New poll for sharetrading

 


Enter your vote today! A new poll has been created for the
sharetrading group:

How many of us Trade for Living. I mean whose trading is the first profession.

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To vote, please visit the following web page:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/sharetrading/surveys?id=12970035

Note: Please do not reply to this message. Poll votes are
not collected via email. To vote, you must go to the Yahoo! Groups
web site listed above.

Thanks!

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[sharetrading] Market Activity 11-12-09 [1 Attachment]

 
[Attachment(s) from Sharat Sinha included below]




The INTERNET now has a personality. YOURS! See your Yahoo! Homepage.

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Attachment(s) from Sharat Sinha

1 of 1 File(s)

Please use your discretion before acting on the ideas expressed in the group.
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[sharetrading] Nifty Avtivity 11-12-09 [1 Attachment]

 
[Attachment(s) from Sharat Sinha included below]




The INTERNET now has a personality. YOURS! See your Yahoo! Homepage.

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Attachment(s) from Sharat Sinha

1 of 1 File(s)

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[sharetrading] Market Today

 

News Details

Category : Market & Rupee News
Headline : Markets continue to slide; Sensex down 62 points
Date : 11-Dec-2009 01:45 PM



Lower-than-expected growth in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) for the month of October continued to take its toll on the local equity markets. After witnessing sharp fall from the fresh 52-week high, the S&P CNX Nifty was just 6 points away from breaching the crucial support level of 5100. The double digit growth in IIP has also raised concerns of sooner than expected corrective steps from the central bank. Banking, healthcare and realty counters were beaten down in trade while consumer durables and information technology counters were witnessing some buying interest from investors. The market breadth on the BSE remained weak; the losers thrashed the gainers in a ratio of 1529:1177 while 91 shares remained unchanged in trade.

The BSE Sensex slipped 62.38 points or 0.36% to 17,126.93. The index touched a high and a low of 17,351.71 and 17,105.97, respectively.

The BSE Mid-cap and Small-cap indices declined 0.38% and 0.31%, respectively.

In the BSE sectoral space, Consumer Durables (CD) up 0.51%, Information Technology (IT) up 0.40%, Capital Goods (CG) up 0.20%, Power up 0.19% and Auto up 0.12% were the main gainers.

On the other hand, Bankex down 1.06%, Healthcare (HC) down 0.72%, Realty down 0.64%, Fast Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) down 0.61% and Oil & Gas down 0.40% were the main losers in the BSE sectoral indices.

India's industrial production continues to remain strong, hitting a double digit number for the second time in three months and suggesting that the economic recovery was going on unrestricted. Index of Industrial Production (IIP) registered a growth of 10.3% in the month of October, compared with 9.6% in the previous month and 0.1% in the same month last year.

The number however was somewhat below the market expectations. Most analysts were eyeing a figure around 12% owing to poor base last year and high double digit growth witnessed in China. Nonetheless, the figure is strong enough to indicate that India's industrial output continues to be in good shape and the sharp recovery that was witnessed in September output numbers should continue going forward.

The major gainers on the Sensex were BHEL up 1.82%, Infosys up 1.03%, Wipro up 0.24%, Grasim Inds up 0.23% and NTPC up 0.12%.

The major losers on the Sensex were Bharti Airtel down 2.34%, Jaiprakash Associates down 1.70%, M&M down 1.27%, ICICI Bank down 1.11% and HDFC Bank down 1.01%.

A day after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) tightened the norms for availing foreign loans, chief of the Indian monetary authority D Subbarao said that RBI was comfortable with the capital inflows and there was no immediate plan to take measures to curb inflows.

The RBI had on Wednesday tightened the guidelines for external commercial borrowings by withdrawing relaxations provided to companies last year in wake of the global financial crisis to raise money from overseas debt markets. It restored the ceiling on interest rates that Indian companies pay for external commercial borrowing, which would mean lesser inflows in terms of loans raised by India Inc. However, the measure may also be aimed at forcing some of the excessive liquidity persisting in Indian financial system by pre-empting some of the external commercial borrowings.

The S&P CNX Nifty shed 0.56% to 5106 from its previous close of 5134.65. The index touched a high and a low of 5182.55 and 5102.85, respectively.

The top gainers on the Nifty were BHEL up 1.93%, ABB up 1.67%, Jindal Steel up 1.01%, Infosys up 0.57% and SAIL up 0.56%.

The top losers on the Nifty were Idea down 2.82%, Bharti Airtel down 2.58%, Suzlon down 1.82%, Cipla down 1.56% and Axis Bank down 1.45%.

Asian markets were trading mostly higher. Hang Seng soared 0.66%, Nikkei 225 gained 2.48%, Straits Times added 0.32%, Seoul Composite rose 0.25% and Taiwan Weighted advanced 1.53% while Shanghai Composite declined 0.021%.







The INTERNET now has a personality. YOURS! See your Yahoo! Homepage. http://in.yahoo.com/

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Please use your discretion before acting on the ideas expressed in the group.
Happy Trading,
United we grow!!!
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DG - A (slightly) different cycle - ascent of the emerging world

 

A (slightly) different cycle – ascent of the emerging world

24/11/2009

One of the most dangerous phrases in the investment world is “this time it’s different”. It usually gets wheeled out near the end of a bull market to explain why the bull market will continue forever due to a new era of permanent prosperity, or near the end of a bear market to explain why the bear market will continue forever due to fundamentally negative forces such as a day of reckoning being upon us.

Key points

  • No matter how much economic and investment issues change, there will always be a cycle. In other words, history may not repeat but it does rhyme.
  • However, the constrained outlook for the US and other developed countries and the relatively strong outlook for emerging countries, along with the emerging world becoming a greater proportion of global gross domestic product (GDP) than the developed world, make this cycle a bit different.
  • This has significant implications for investors, pointing to a strategic bias towards emerging markets/Asian shares, commodities and Australian shares.
  • It also suggests the next big asset bubble may be in emerging markets or related themes – but it has a long way to go yet.

Introduction

One of the most dangerous phrases in the investment world is “this time it’s different”. It usually gets wheeled out near the end of a bull market to explain why the bull market will continue forever due to a new era of permanent prosperity, or near the end of a bear market to explain why the bear market will continue forever due to fundamentally negative forces such as a day of reckoning being upon us. Usually when it is uttered en masse, it marks the turn in the cycle and makes those who uttered it look foolish. Therefore, the phrase should be used with caution.

However, while the fundamental drivers of the investment cycle – such as human psychology, the tendency for economic growth and asset prices to revert to a long-run mean and the countervailing forces of fiscal and monetary policy – remain alive and well, it does need to be recognised that there are subtle differences in each cycle, making them different enough to be of relevance to investors.

There are certainly differences in the current economic and investment cycle that investors should be aware of. This was apparent during the downturn phase, with a financial catastrophe, the likes of which had not been seen in the post-war period, combining with the impact of earlier monetary tightening, an energy crisis and a normal inventory downturn to result in the first slump in global GDP in the post-war period. Moreover, typical cyclical recoveries have seen the US drag the rest of the world out of recession. This time around, it looks a little different.

Uninspiring conditions in developed countries…

While the financial constraints in the US don’t appear to be stopping a recovery, they will likely constrain it after an initial bounce. Following the fi nancial crisis, US credit creation is likely to be impaired for some time and US households are likely to be more focused than usual on reducing their debt levels following the slump in the value of their assets. Notwithstanding the potential for a solid initial bounce as pent-up demand is unleashed, the result is likely to be constrained economic growth in the US for the next few years. This is likely to be reinforced as the US moves towards greater regulation which will increase the cost of doing business in America.

At the same time, structural problems and poor demographics make it is hard to see either Japan or Europe fi lling the void. Of course, most advanced countries will also need to deal with very high public debt to GDP ratios which will provide another constraint to growth and a potential source of volatility. Therefore, the overall picture for mainstream developed countries points to sub-par and unexciting growth over the next fi ve years or so. Also, given the substantial amount of excess capacity in the advanced world, combined with subdued credit growth, it’s hard to see inflation becoming a problem any time soon.

Sub-par growth and low inflation mean that monetary policy in developed countries is likely to remain fairly easy. We don’t expect the US and European central banks to start raising interest rates until the second half of next year and tightening in Japan may be two or more years away.

…but inspiring conditions in the emerging world

Much less public debt in emerging countries

Source: AMP Capital Investors

Emerging countries are not lumbered with the same debt problems as many advanced countries (see the chart above showing public debt), they tend to have far more favourable demographics and they have plenty of scope to boost their own consumption to make up for weaker growth in developed countries and are moving to do just that.

Reflecting this, the emerging world is leading the way out of the global recession with growth in many Asian countries rebounding earlier and much faster than has been the case in the developed world. Not only is the emerging world leading the recovery, but this is the first global economic recovery to occur with the emerging world actually making up a larger proportion of the global economy than the developed world (on a purchasing power parity basis).

Emerging economies bigger than developed economies

Source: AMP Capital Investors

What does it all mean for investors?

The greater importance of the emerging world and the constrained, more fragile, outlook for the US and other developed countries have a number of implications for investors. Firstly, investors need to move away from the concept of traditional international equity funds and, instead, allocate more to stronger-growth Asian and other emerging countries. Traditional international equity funds are benchmarked against indices that have an 80% or 90% exposure to slow-growth advanced countries. They are lagging way behind the reality that the emerging world is now playing a much larger role in the global economy, and that role is set to become even larger still.

Secondly, growth in the emerging world is commodity intensive as most emerging countries are still rapidly industrialising. For example, emerging countries now consume more oil than developed countries – see the chart below. This suggests an allocation to commodities should also be considered.

Emerging economies are now a bigger consumer of oil

Source: AMP Capital Investors

Thirdly, strong commodity prices are likely to be favourable for commodity currencies such as the Australian dollar which suggests a need to be aware of unhedged exposures to traditional offshore investment markets.

Fourthly, Australia’s strong exposure to high-growth Asia and commodities, and its rapid population growth provide a positive backdrop for Australian shares and suggest investors should have a bias towards Australian shares.

Fifthly, the greater fragility of US consumers, the risks associated with rising public debt levels (and measures to deal with them) in major advanced countries and the inherent volatility of emerging markets mean that the economic and investment cycle could be more volatile in the future.

Finally, it’s worth observing that bubbles are part and parcel of investment markets and they usually form from the ashes of the previous bust. It’s hard to see another bubble forming any time soon in the US – after all, the US has had a monopoly on major bubbles and busts over the last decade, having had both the tech boom and bust and the housing boom and bust. However, the combination of easy monetary conditions in the US and other advanced countries, positive fundamentals in the emerging world and the transition to a more China-centric world mean there is a good chance that the next bubble will be in or around emerging markets and related trades such as commodities. Officials in several Asian countries seem to recognise this and are making noises about the dangers of low US interest rates fuelling a bubble in their own countries. Of course the best way to minimise this is for emerging countries to let capital inflows simply drive up their currencies so that they are then free to tighten their monetary policies to deal with any asset bubbles. However, since the US is unlikely to set its monetary policy on the basis that it may contribute to bubbles in other countries (and why should it) and key emerging countries are unlikely to simply let their exchange rates float higher, the risk of bubbles forming in the emerging world is high. That said, asset bubbles take four or five years to form and it is still very early days yet.

Different enough to matter

Therefore, while there is always a cycle and there will always be bubbles, they are always slightly different. This time around, the rise in the relative fortunes of emerging countries versus developed countries is different enough to have significant implications for investors.

Dr Shane Oliver
Head of Investment Strategy and Chief Economist
AMP Capital Investors

Melbourne

 

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Regards

BigGains !!
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[sharetrading] STBT

 

STBT CENTURY TEXTILE FUTURE @ 498....SL 503...TGT 488


The INTERNET now has a personality. YOURS! See your Yahoo! Homepage.

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[stock_win_india] stock calls

 

for free and profitable stock calls, add my yahoo id STOCKSMSAGIC71. lots are getting benefits y r u not???????????

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[sharetrading] EU

 

Most of EU is in the green, with a rapid rise.

 

Shorters be careful

 

Abe

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Please use your discretion before acting on the ideas expressed in the group.
Happy Trading,
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