28 July 2011

Stocks stuck in shadows


The US debt ceiling standoff looms like a ghoul over the market, suppressing animal spirits and encouraging investors to seek the comforting glow of gold.
The yellow metal has crept to another record, at USD 1,625.20 an ounce, dragging silver above USD 41 an ounce in its wake, while the dollar remains under pressure.
The FTSE All-World equity index is flat following a meek session in Asia and S&P 500 futures suggest Wall Street will open little changed. The FTSE Eurofirst 300 has lost of 0.4%, with banks leading the declines as widening eurozone peripheral spreads speak to continuing fiscal angst.

Nikkei falls on US economic data


The Nikkei stock average fell for a second straight day on Thursday to break below its 200-day moving average, hurt by weak US economic data and a deadlock in talks to raise the US debt ceiling.
While top US lawmakers worked behind the scenes on a compromise, looking to salvage a last-minute deal from rival debt plans, investors grew increasingly jittery ahead of the August 2 deadline for the United States to avoid a default.
"Increasingly concerned about the possibility of a US credit downgrade, foreigners are cutting back on risk positions," said Fumiyuki Takahashi, managing director at Barclays Capital.
"The standard view that 'America is strong' could be in jeopardy and if confidence in the US is damaged, the stock market may not be able to avoid a serious sell-off."
The three main ratings agencies have all warned the United States' coveted AAA credit rating status would be in serious jeopardy if the White House and Congressional Republicans cannot reach a deficit reduction agreement.
Takahashi said the Nikkei could fall by 200-300 points if United States' AAA credit rating status was lowered, but the benchmark is expected to be supported above 9,500.
Adding to US-related woes, concerns remain about a recovery in the US economy with new orders for long-lasting U.S. manufactured goods falling unexpectedly in June, weighed down by weak receipts for transportation equipment.
The benchmark Nikkei fell 1.1% to 9,935.07 by the midday break after breaching its 200-day moving average of 9,919 earlier while the broader Topix index was down 1.0% at 850.84.
Hopes for more strong quarterly results from the Japanese corporate sector lent some support to the Tokyo market, with companies like Hitachi Construction Machinery outperforming after robust earnings.
"Buying on dips in companies with good earnings may continue, but exporters may not fare well for the time being as long as there are concerns about the US economy," said Hideyuki Okoshi, general manager at Chibagin Securities.
Hitachi Construction Machinery rose 4.6% to 1,759 yen after saying its April-June net profit surged 65% on the year to 2.3 billion yen (USD 29.5 million) while operating profit climbed 91% to 8.2 billion yen.
Panasonic rose 2.0% to 942 yen after sources said the company will sell its Sanyo Electric unit's washing machine and refrigerator operations in Japan and Southeast Asia to China's Haier Group Co for about 10 billion yen (USD 130 million).
Fujitsu General was up 5.6% at 626 yen, hitting a three-and-half year high of 636 yen at one point after the air-conditioner maker revised up its first-half profit 44% to 6.5 billion yen (USD 83.4 million), citing strong sales.
But Advantest, the world's No 2 maker of equipment to make chips, plunged 7.0% to 1,399 yen after the company said quarterly operating profit fell 57% from a year earlier and warned that orders could level off in the current quarter.

Ford to build billion dollar plant in Gujarat


Ford Motor Co plans to invest USD 1 billion to build a factory in Gujarat to gain a greater share of one of the fastest-growing car markets, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday.
The US automaker plans to announce its plans on Thursday, according to the report, which cited Ford's head of Asia-Pacific and Africa Joe Hinrichs.
The factory in Gujarat, expected to be up and running by 2014, will employ 5,000 people and is expected to have an initial annual capacity of 240,000 vehicles, the newspaper reported.
Ford's largest single investment in India follows the success of its India-built Figo model, which helped the group nearly triple its sales last year, the FT reported.
Hinrichs was quoted as saying that Gujarat had been selected over other states for its pro-business reputation and geographical location and ports from which to export cars to other emerging markets.
Ford's shares closed down 4.3% at USD 12.37 on Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.

L&T Finance IPO subscribed 0.46 times on Day 1


The Rs 1092-crore IPO of L&T Finance Holdings , a subsidiary of engineering & construction companyLarsen and Toubro , has been seen nearly 50% subscription on day 1, with receiving support from all investors. The issue has received bids for nearly 10 crore shares against approximate issue size of 21.45 crore shares.
Reserved portion of qualified institutional buyers, non-institutional investors and retail investors has been subscribed between 0.4 and 0.6 times.
Experts believe that L&T Finance Holdings issue will get good response as it has a brand name of L&T behind it and company successfully raised about Rs 483 crore via pre-IPO placement and anchor book.
It is  a financial holding company offering a diverse range of financial products and services across the corporate, retail and infrastructure finance sectors, as well as mutual fund products and investment management services, through direct and indirect wholly-owned subsidiaries.
L&T Finance Holdings plans to use issue proceeds for augmenting the capital base of L&T Finance and L&T Infra to meet the capital requirements arising out of expected growth in their assets, primarily the loan portfolio

Weak global cues drag Nifty down to 5500


The benchmark Nifty started the trade below the 5500 mark on expiry day, reacting to weak global cues. US debt ceiling talks failed to make progress yesterday; there were reports that debt deadline may be postponed to August 10 from August 2.
The 30-share BSE Sensex was trading at 18,283, down 149 points and the 50-share NSE Nifty lost 48 points to 5,498.
N Krishnan of CLSA said he continued to remain cautious on the markets amid earnings downgrades. He has maintained March 2012 Sensex target of 19,500 offering a 5% upside.
Among frontliners, HCL Tech, Sterlite Industries, Wipro, Infosys, SBI, IDFC, PNB, Jaiprakash Associates, HUL, Bharti Airtel, L&T, DLF and Reliance Industries were putting pressure on the market.
However, ONGC and ITC gained marginally ahead of numbers today.
Kotak Mahindra Bank too was up.
Idea Cellular lost 1% as Providence sold 8.34 crore shares (9.9% equity) of the company via block deal.
The CNX Midcap fell 43 points to 8,071.
Results reaction: EID Parrry was up 1.6%. Manappuram Finance and Karur Vysya Bank declined over 1.2%.
Cox & Kings went up over 2% post company bought UK-based Holidaybreak for £ 312 million.
SKS Microfinance tumbled 7%.
Lanco Infratech, HCC (ahead of numbers) and GVK Power too were down 1-2%.
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