01 September 2011

ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank up 2-3%


Indian ADRs closed higher. In the banking space, ICICI Bank rose 3.36% to USD 39.36 and HDFC Bank went up 2.14% to USD 33.36 a ADR.
In the technology space, Infosys moved up 1.26% to USD 51.62. Wipro gained 0.71% at USD 9.98 and Patni Computer closed at USD 12.83, up 2.72%.
Among others, Sterlite Industries ended at USD 11.59, up 3.76% and Tata Motors was up 1.46% at USD 16.63.
Dr Reddy's Labs ended at USD 32.85, up 1.14%.
In the telecom space, MTNL rose 2.45% to USD 1.67 and Tata Communication went up 0.11% to USD 8.80.

Food inflation at 10.05% on Aug 20 YoY


India's Food price index rose 10.05%, its highest in nearly six months, and the fuel price index climbed 12.55% in the year to August 20, government data on Thursday showed.
In the previous week, annual food and fuel inflation stood at 9.80% and 13.13% respectively.
The primary articles index was up 12.93%, compared with an annual rise of 12.40% a week earlier.
India's central bank has raised interest rates 11 times since March 2010 to tame headline inflation , which stood at 9.22% in July.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) continues to expect inflation to start easing by November-December and was watching for signs of moderation in demand, Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn had said last week.

Maruti posts third consecutive drop in monthly sales


New vehicle sales in Japan plunged by more than a fifth in August as production remained disrupted from the March earthquake, while South Korean brands kept growing thanks to solid gains overseas.
Excluding 660cc minivehicles, sales in Japan dropped 25.5% to 216,510 vehicles, marking the 12th consecutive month of declines and the second-biggest fall on record for August, the Japan Automobile Dealers Association said on Thursday.
The sharp decline came from difficult comparisons from a year earlier, when consumers rushed to replace old cars and take advantage of government subsidies before they expired last September. Compared with August sales from 2009, sales grew 9.5%, an official said.
"It was the first time since the (March 11) disasters that sales grew from 2009 levels, so there's a silver lining," said Michiro Saito, general manager at the association. "Automakers are planning to ramp up production from now on to make up for the losses, so we'll see how that helps."
Sales at top-ranked Toyota Motor Corp, which started make-up production on Thursday, fell 22.7%. Nissan Motor Co's sales, excluding minivehicles, dropped 24.7%.
Honda Motor Co, the slowest to recover from the supply disruptions, suffered the biggest decline, of 49%.
Maruti Suffers
In India, top carmaker Maruti Suzuki posted its third consecutive drop in monthly sales as high interest rates and rising vehicle prices deterred customers. Maruti's sales fell 12.7% in August after a record 25% drop in July.
An ongoing labour dispute at its Manesar plant also hit sales for the month, Maruti said in a statement.
Earlier this week, Maruti halted production at its plant in the northern Haryana state after it dismissed some workers and asked all others to sign a "good conduct bond." The plant, which produces about 1,200 cars a day, did not make any cars on Monday and Tuesday and made just 60 cars on Wednesday.
Maruti, 54.2% owned by Japan's Suzuki Motor Corp, expects to post single-digit sales growth this fiscal year, a far cry from the 25% rise last year.
Total car sales in India fell almost 16% in July, marking the first drop in two-and-half years, as borrowing costs rose following multiple rate hikes by the central bank.
Hyundai, Kia stretch winning streak
South Korea's Hyundai Motor and Kia Motors stretched their current winning streak with Hyundai's global sales climbing 5%, driven by strong shipments from its overseas plants in China, India and the United States.
Affiliate Kia saw its global sales jump 27%, although domestic sales slipped.
Analysts said however, the Koreans may struggle to maintain the momentum in the face of an uncertain global economy and rising price competition from Japanese rivals.
Toyota last week unveiled its all-new Camry in the United States, aiming to recover lost momentum with price cuts and a high-powered ad campaign for America's best-selling car.
"The market expected solid sales for Hyundai and Kia for August. What's important are their sales in the coming months," said Park In-woo, an analyst at LIG Investment & Securities.
"Hyundai and Kia have comfortably increased market shares and profits, but competition will be tougher next year with new model launches (by Japanese rivals)," he said.
Analysts are watching for US sales data due later on Thursday to gauge their resistance to rising competition.

Yahoo shares no reason to buy


Yahoo shares have climbed more than 5% over the last month, but there's still no reason to be a buyer as the Internet company continues to face a handful of problems, said Colin Gillis, senior tech analyst at BGC Financial.
"We`re going to be in a declining-revenue environment in the September to December quarter," Gillis told CNBC. "We've been saying this trade is stuck in a trading range until 2012-[Yahoo] has got to get this search deal with Microsoft sorted out."
Microsoft and Yahoo agreed to a 10-year search deal in 2009 to better compete against market leaderGoogle, but stopped short of combining their display advertising businesses.
Meanwhile, Gillis has a "hold" rating on Yahoo stock, saying that he expects the firm to "grind sideways" for the rest of the year. He also added that the company`s display revenue growth remains under pressure.

Asian markets trade higher; Hang Seng up 297 points


At 10 hours IST, Asian markets were trading higher. Hong Kong's Hang Seng was trading at 20,831.65, up 296.80 points or 1.45% and Japan's Nikkei 225 Average rose 125.94 points or 1.41% to 9,081.14.
Straits Times went up just 1.88 points to 2,887.14 and Seoul Composite shot up 36.97 points or 1.97% to 1,917.08.
Taiwan Weighted rallied 65.14 points or 0.84% to 7,806.50. However, China's Shanghai Composite was trading at 2,562.52, down 4.82 points.
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