Friday, March 13, 2009

45 percent of world's wealth destroyed: Blackstone CEO

Private equity company Blackstone Group LP (BX.N) CEO Stephen Schwarzman said on Tuesday that up to 45 percent of the world's wealth has been destroyed by the global credit crisis.

"Between 40 and 45 percent of the world's wealth has been destroyed in little less than a year and a half," Schwarzman told an audience at the Japan Society. "This is absolutely unprecedented in our lifetime."

But the U.S. government is committed to the preservation of financial institutions, he said, and will do whatever it takes to restart the economy.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner plans to unfreeze credit markets through a new program that will combine public and private capital in a fund that would buy bank toxic assets of up to $1 trillion.

"In all likelihood, that will have the private sector buy troubled assets to clean the banks out in terms of providing leverage ... so that we can get more money back into the banking system," Schwarzman said.

He expects the private sector to end up making "some good money doing that," but added there were complex issues on how to price toxic assets.

He put part of the blame for the financial crisis to credit rating agencies.

"What's pretty clear is that, if you were looking for one culprit out of the many, many, many culprits, you have to point your finger at the rating agencies," he said.

Rating companies have been the focus of intense criticism for their role in granting top "AAA" ratings for complex bonds that later plummeted in value, resulting in subsequent rating cuts, in many cases to junk status.

"Once you bought into ... the Triple A paper and it turned out to be paper that was in many situations going to end up defaulting, then you really had the makings of a global problem," he said.

Schwarzman said problems were then exacerbated by mark-to- market accounting rules. Those rules ask banks and other financial institutions to price assets at a value related to how they would be sold in the open market.

Blackstone reported a quarterly loss in February after writing down the value of its portfolio and eliminated its fourth-quarter dividend.

Asked where was a good place to invest, Schwarzman said it made sense to buy cyclical names, which are less exposed to the economic cycles.

He said investors also may find value in debt products, including "senior layers of certain securitizations," where investors can see 15 percent to 20 percent returns, he said.

Geographically, he said there were "pockets of strength" in China, which is committed to getting to an 8 percent growth level, and in India, where the economy is slowing but banks are in good shape.

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Monday, March 9, 2009

SpiceJet, GoAir in talks for consolidation

Budget airline SpiceJet Ltd is in talks with the Wadia group-ownded GoAir for either a merger or to acquire a controlling stake, the Business Standard reported on Monday.
SpiceJet chief executive Sanjay Aggarwal met GoAir managing director Jeh Wadia to discuss a deal late last month, the paper said, citing unnamed sources.
In February, Aggarwal had said SpiceJet would look at buying opportunities and expects consolidation in the Indian airline industry over the next two years.
GoAir currently flies to smaller cities such as Jaipur, Ahmedabad and Kochi and has applied for slots to several more.
SpiceJet reportedly plans to set up a regional airline to connect smaller cities, the paper said.
GoAir was looking at increasing its fleet to 20 aircraft by 2011 from five at present, the report added.
SpiceJet’s Aggarwal on Monday told Business Standard he could not “comment on anything relating to a deal at the moment”. GoAir’s Wadia also refused to comment, the paper said.
SpiceJet’s Aggarwal could not be reached immediately for comment by Reuters.
SpiceJet and GoAir spokespersons declined to comment immediately.

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Monday, March 2, 2009

Highlights of RIL-RPL merger

he Board of Directors of Reliance Industries on Monday approved the merger of Reliance Petroleum Ltd with the former. The swap ratio stands at 1:18 and each RPL shareholder stands to get 1 RIL share held.

Here are the highlights of the merger

RIL-RPL
RPL shareholders to get 1 Share of RIL for every 16 shares held
RIL to cancel holding in RPL
RIL to extinguish 13% treasury stock
Merger effective retrospectively from April 1, 2008
Merger ratio in favour of RPL

RIL-RPL
Outstanding shares: 157.4 cr shares
Additional Shares to be 6.92 cr shares
New share capital: 164.3 cr shares
Dilution: 4.2% on fully diluted basis
Post merger, RIL promoter holding to come down to 47% from 49%

RIL-RPL
Management sees merger to be tax neutral
Merger P&L neutral for RIL
Merger will help effective utilization of RPL’s $1.5bn operational cash flow
SEZ benefits to continue for merged entity

RIL-RPL
FY10E net sales of merged entity seen at Rs 210,000cr
FY10E net profit of merged entity seen at Rs 21,000cr
Earnings increase higher than 4.4% stake dilution in FY10
Merger 3-5% EPS accretive for RIL
FY10E EPS of combined entity at Rs 127-135

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Rupee at all-time low at 51.80/$; Citi sees 54/$ ahead

India’s rupee slid to a record low as mounting global stock losses added to concern investors will pull money out of riskier emerging-market assets.

The currency extended a two-week slump on speculation Standard & Poor’s will soon cut the nation’s debt rating to junk. The rupee also fell on concern the current-account deficit will widen from a record as exports decline amid a deepening global economic slump. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped 3 percent after the U.S. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 11 percent last month.

“There’s a lot of pressure on the rupee as portfolio investments are falling amid the worsening global equity prospects,” said Sanjay Arya, Mumbai-based treasurer at state- owned Bank of Maharashtra. “A rating downgrade by S&P is feared. In addition, the outlook for exports looks quite bleak.”

The rupee slid 1.3 percent to an all-time low of 51.81 per dollar as of 9:55 a.m. in Mumbai, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Offshore contracts indicate traders bet the rupee will trade at 52.00 to the dollar in a month, compared with expectations for a rate of 51.44 on Feb. 27. Forwards are agreements in which assets are bought and sold at current prices for future delivery. Non-deliverable contracts are settled in dollars rather than the local currency.

Dumping Equities

Funds based abroad sold $1.65 billion more Indian equities than they bought this year, adding to 2008’s record $13.3 billion in net sales, according to data released by the Securities and Exchange Board of India. The Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensitive Index has dropped 7.8 percent this year, following a record 52 percent slide in 2008.

S&P last week lowered its outlook on India’s credit rating to negative from stable, saying government spending plans to shield the economy from the global recession and win voter support in elections were “not sustainable.” The company rates India’s debt BBB-, the lowest investment grade.

Asia’s third-biggest economy expanded 5.3 percent last quarter from a year earlier, the slowest pace in five years, a government report showed on Feb. 27.

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Sunday, March 1, 2009

Buffett Says Oil Will Rise, He Made ‘Mistake’ on ConocoPhillips

Warren Buffett said crude oil will rise far above its current price and that he made a mistake when he purchased ConocoPhillipsstock last year for his Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

“I still believe the odds are good that oil sells far higher in the future than the current $40-$50 price,” Buffett wrote in his yearly letter to shareholders. He also said he made a “major mistake” when he bought a “large amount of ConocoPhillips stock when oil and gas prices were near their peak.”

Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway today posted a fifth-straight profit drop, the longest streak of quarterly declines in at least 17 years, on losses from derivative bets tied to stock markets. Fourth-quarter net income fell 96 percent to $117 million, or $76 a share, from $2.95 billion, or $1,904 a share, in the same period a year earlier, the Omaha, Nebraska-based firm said in its annual report.

In 2007, Berkshire reported record earnings as Buffett booked a $3.5 billion profit cashing out of a $500 million investment in oil producer PetroChina Co.

Buffett wrote today that “the terrible timing” of his ConocoPhillips purchase cost Berkshire “several billion dollars.” According to figures given in the letter, Berkshire Hathaway purchased the ConocoPhillips stock for $7.01 billion. As of Dec. 31, the stake was valued at $4.4 billion.

Crude oil for April delivery fell 46 cents, or 1 percent, to settle at $44.76 a barrel at 2:50 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange yesterday. Prices are up 7.4 percent this month and 0.4 percent so far this year. Futures have dropped 70 percent from the record $147.27 a barrel reached on July 11.

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Friday, February 27, 2009

India's Q3 GDP growth drops 2.3 per cent QoQ

India's economy grew a slower than expected 5.3 per cent in the December quarter from a year earlier, slowing sharply from the previous quarter's 7.6 per cent as the global economic crisis cut demand and exports.

The annual growth for India's fiscal third quarter was lower than a median forecast of 6.2 per cent in a Reuters poll of economists and also lower than a upwardly revised 8.9 per cent annual expansion in the same quarter a year ago.

Farm output in the December quarter fell an annual 2.2 per cent vs a rise of 2.7 per cent in July-Sept quarter.

Manufacturing fell an annual 0.2 per cent in Oct-December vs a growth of 5.0 per cent in the July-September period.

Construction grew 6.7 per cent in Oct-Dec vs 9.7 per cent in July-September.

Trade, hotels, transport and communication grew 6.8 per cent in Oct-Dec vs 10.7 per cent in July-Sept.

Financing, insurance, real estate and business services grew 9.5 per cent in Oct-Dec vs 9.2 per cent in July-September.

"The only factor which seems to be growing strongly is the community and social services sector. But seeing that other sectors have slowed down significantly, we expect the government's advanced estimate to be revised to closer to 6.3 per cent, and we maintain this as our forecast," said economist Anubhuti Sahay.

The partially convertible rupee fell slightly to 50.73/74 per dollar from 50.68/69 just before the data. It had closed at 50.45/47 on Thursday, and hit a record low of 50.78 on Friday morning.

The 2018 bond yield fell to 6.41 per cent from 6.43 per cent just before the GDP data. It had ended at 6.51 per cent in the previous session.

The 30-share BSE index extended losses to be down 1.6 per cent at 8,815.52 points. It was trading down about 0.9 per cent before the data.

India's economy, Asia's third-largest, is largely driven by domestic demand and strong growth of 9 per cent or more in the past three fiscal years has attracted global attention.

But the impact of the global financial crisis is now being felt and growth is officially estimated to slow to 7.1 per cent in 2008/09 from 9.0 per cent in the previous year.

The government has rolled out a slew of steps to tackle the slowdown, including aggressive interest rate cuts, tax and duty cuts and extra spending.

Annual inflation has slowed to below 4 per cent in mid-February from a peak of nearly 13 per cent in August, and the central bank estimates it to fall to 3 per cent by end March.

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Rupee hits record low of 50.69 against US dollar

The Indian rupee on Friday depreciated to an all-time low of 50.69 against the US currency in early trade on continued capital outflow by foreign funds and increased dollar demand from importers.

At the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) market, the domestic currency was quoted at 50.69 against the dollar, down 23 paise from its previous day's close.

The rupee yesterday depreciated by 52 paise to 49.46/47 against the greenback.

Dealers said concerns of capital outflows by funds and increased demand for dollar from importers caused the rupee to weaken.

They added, the dollar's gains against other major currencies also weighed on the domestic currency.

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Investment bankers recommend 51 pc stake sale in Satyam

Goldman Sachs and Avendus, investment bankers to Satyam Computer, are learnt to have proposed 51 per cent stake sale-- 31 per cent via preferential equity and 20 per cent through open offer-- in the IT company to a strategic investor.

According to a source associated with the process, the Satyam board which met today in Hyderabad, is understood to have discussed the proposal and would approach market regulator SEBI on Monday on the pricing issue with regard to both preferential as well as open offer routes.

After getting the green signal from the market regulator, the Satyam Board would issue Expression of Interest (EOI) to the prospective bidders, the source said.

According to the source, the investment bankers during their presentation said it would be better for the company to dilute 51 per cent equity, which should include 31 per cent preferential equity and 20 per cent open offer, to a strategic investor.

Suitors Hinduja Group and B K Modi-promoted Spice Group had said they would prefer taking 51 per cent in Satyam.

"It will be preferred if somebody can get 51 per cent..." Hinduja Group CFO Prabal Banerjee had said.

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Wednesday, February 25, 2009

How Harvard's investing superstars crashed

Stocks were tumbling last fall as the new school year began, but at Harvard University, it was as if the boom had never ended.

Workers were digging across the river from Harvard's Cambridge, Mass., home, the start of a grand expansion that was to eventually almost double the size of the university. Budgets were plump, and students from middle class families were getting big tuition breaks under an ambitious new financial aid program.

The lavish spending was made possible by the earnings from Harvard's $36.9 billion endowment, the world's largest. That pot was supposed to be good for $1.4 billion in annual earnings.

Behind the scenes, though, a different story was unfolding.

In a glassed-walled conference room overlooking downtown Boston, traders at Harvard Management Co., the subsidiary that invests the school's money, were fielding questions from their new boss, Jane Mendillo, about exotic financial instruments that were suddenly backfiring.

Harvard had derivatives that gave it exposure to $7.2 billion in commodities and foreign stocks. With prices of both crashing, the university was getting margin calls--demands from counterparties (among them, JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs) for more collateral. Another bunch of derivatives burdened Harvard with a multibillion-dollar bet on interest rates that went against it.

It would have been nice to have cash on hand to meet margin calls, but Harvard had next to none. That was because these supremely self-confident money managers were more than fully invested. As of June 30, they had, thanks to the fancy derivatives, a 105 per cent long position in risky assets. The effect is akin to putting every last dollar of your portfolio to work and then borrowing another 5 per cent to buy more stocks.

Desperate for cash, Harvard Management went to outside money managers begging for a return of money it had expected to keep parked away for a long time. It tried to sell off illiquid stakes in private equity partnerships but couldn't get a decent price. It unloaded two-thirds of a $2.9 billion stock portfolio into a falling market.

Now, in the last phase of the cash-raising panic, the university is borrowing money, much like a homeowner who takes out a second mortgage in order to pay off credit card bills. Since December, Harvard has raised $2.5 billion by selling IOUs in the bond market. Roughly a third of these Harvard bonds are tax exempt and carry interest rates of 3.2 per cent to 5.8 per cent. The rest are taxable, with rates of 5 per cent to 6.5 per cent.

It doesn't feel good to be borrowing at 6% while holding assets with negative returns. Harvard has oversize positions in emerging-market stocks and private equity partnerships, both disaster areas in the past eight months.

The one category that has done well since last June is conventional Treasury bonds, and Harvard appears to have owned little of these. As of its last public disclosure on this score, it had a modest 16 per cent allocation to fixed income, consisting of 7 per cent in inflation-indexed bonds, 4 per cent in corporates and the rest in high-yield and foreign debt.

For a long while, Harvard's daring investment style was the envy of the endowment world. It made light bets in plain old stocks and bonds and went hell-for-leather into exotic and illiquid holdings: commodities, timberland, hedge funds, emerging-market equities and private equity partnerships.

The risky strategy paid off with market-beating results as long as the market was going up. But risk brings pain in a market crash. Although the full extent of the damage won't be known until Harvard releases the endowment numbers for June 30, 2009, the university is already working on the assumption that the portfolio will be down 30 per cent, or $11 billion.

The strain of market turmoil is visible in staff turnover at the management company, which axed 25 per cent of its staff recently and is on its fifth chief in four years. Mendillo, 50, came to Harvard last July after running Wellesley's small endowment.

She declines to comment. But how much blame she should get is unclear; the big bets on derivatives and exotic holdings were in place before she got there. The bad bet on interest rates--a swap in which Harvard was paying a high fixed-interest rate and collecting a low short-term rate--goes back to a mandate from former Harvard President Lawrence Summers.

Jack R. Meyer, 64, a revered money manager who headed Harvard's endowment until 2005, offers a few guarded comments. "The liquidity thing most concerns me--that should not have happened," he says. Though he wasn't there at the time, Meyer says Harvard Management bought the commodity and foreign stock derivatives as a way to get exposure to those asset classes while freeing up cash to put to work elsewhere. The strategy, he says, "drained liquidity" from the endowment in recent months. "Many endowments stretched too far, and I think Harvard did as well," he says.

The endowment will remain stretched. Harvard has been counting on it to fund more than a third of its $3.5 billion operating budget. Assuming the fiscal year ends with around a $24 billion endowment value, the university will be drawing down half again as high a percentage of its assets as it did in 2004, the last time the endowment was around that size.

That can't go on forever. The strain on liquidity will continue, as the private equity partnerships compel Harvard to meet billions in capital calls in future years. Why not just unload those partnerships along with the liabilities that stick to them? Because no one wants to buy them. Private equity stakes like Harvard's are selling at 40 per cent to 60 per cent discounts in various markets. "Endowments will be shocked at the valuations of their (private equity) portfolios," says Stewart Massey, an endowment consultant at Massey Quick. "It's going to be an absolute bloodbath."

Harvard's woes are in some ways no different from those at other universities or in the market generally (the S&P 500 is down 37 per cent since last July 1). "A loss in these kinds of markets is inevitable," says Michael Eisenson, a former HMC staffer who now runs private equity firm Charlesbank. The average endowment is down 23 per cent in the five months through November, according to a university trade group.

But Harvard was supposed to be different. In the 15 years through last June, it returned an annual 15.7 per cent versus 9.2 per cent for the S&P. Meyer landed at Harvard in 1990 after scoring big investment returns at the Rockefeller Foundation.

In an unorthodox move for an endowment chief, Meyer built a Wall Street-like trading operation and managed most of HMC's money in-house. It looked like a giant hedge fund, and it had paychecks to match. A high-level HMC manager would make as much as $35 million in good years.

Those sums triggered what became an annual Harvard tradition: first, the disclosure (compelled by tax laws applying to nonprofits) of the HMC bonuses, followed by an outcry led by the late William Strauss and a group of Harvard alumni from his class of 1969.

HMC not only became a place to make big bonuses, it was also where you could make a name for yourself and become a "crimson puppy," meaning launching your own private equity firm or hedge fund with Harvard's backing. One of the puppies, Jeffrey Larson, left in 2004 to start Sowood Capital. That pile of smart money cratered in 2007, losing $350 million for Harvard.

By September 2005, Meyer himself decided it was time to go. Some people say it was because of the persistent criticism about bonuses, which were reduced near the end of his tenure; others say he had run-ins with former US Treasury Secretaries Lawrence Summers and Robert Rubin, who assumed Harvard leadership positions at the start of the decade. Meyer denies both reasons and says 16 years at Harvard was simply enough.

Meyer formed his own hedge fund, Convexity Capital, which seems to have held up well in the current market. He took with him the Harvard heads of domestic and international fixed income and both their staffs, as well as the chief risk officer, chief technology officer and chief operating officer. The survivors were demoralized. "You walked onto the trading floor, and it was just 10 per cent full," says someone who was there at the time. "There was a sense that if you were good, you left."

Five months later, Mohamed El-Erian, now 50, took over. The son of an Egyptian diplomat, he had risen to deputy director of the International Monetary Fund before joining giant bond manager Pimco. He seemed perfect for smoothing relations between HMC and the university. Filling the hole that Meyer left was another matter.

One solution: Don't even try, just hand over all of the endowment to outside money managers. But El-Erian insisted on keeping things intact. He talked of the "structural advantages" of investing a big endowment backed by an AAA-rated university, such as allowing you to borrow at low rates when making leveraged bets. The former Pimco emerging-market superstar also believed that the developing countries offered big profits to smart investors like HMC because they had become less risky thanks to ample dollar reserves and a growing middle class.

So El-Erian upped HMC's exposure to emerging-market stocks, which rose from 6 per cent of assets when Meyer left, to 11 per cent two years later. He also used total return swaps to bet on developed world stocks and commodities on the cheap, freeing up money for other investments. Tapping former Stanford endowment staffer Mark Taborsky (an "important hire," El-Erian would later write in a book), El-Erian also took money from hedge funds he didn't like and redirected it to ones he thought were winners, putting hundreds of millions into funds in Latin America, Asia and the Middle East.

The moves looked brilliant. For the year ended June 2007, Harvard returned 23 per cent versus 17.7 per cent for 151 other big institutional investors (and 20.6 per cent for the S&P 500). Fearing all markets could soon fall, El-Erian injected what he referred to as "Armageddon insurance" into HMC's portfolio for the first time by buying interest rate floors, or a wager that rates would fall, and betting, via credit default swaps, that companies could soon struggle to pay their debts.

For the following year, through June 2008, Harvard gained 8.6 per cent, versus a 13 per cent fall in the S&P. El-Erian's insurance accounted for much of HMC's outperformance. Hedge funds, however, were sucking up cash--HMC had increased investments in those areas to 19 per cent from 12 per cent a year earlier. The returns were flat. It's unclear how much of the results--good or otherwise--were El-Erian's doing. He left at the end of 2007, six months before the results came in, citing a desire to move back near his wife's family in California and return to Pimco as heir apparent to founder Bill Gross.

Since July, emerging-market shares have been a disaster, falling 50 per cent, as measured by the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, worse than US stocks. Another problem: El-Erian's insurance has been partly taken off since he left, leaving HMC vulnerable when markets plunged this fall.

The total return swaps, which easily could have been terminated, were left alone. The EFG-Hermes Middle East North Africa Opportunities Fund, a hedge fund launched in September 2007 with some $200 million of HMC cash, was down 35 per cent in 2008. El-Erian's big hire, Taborsky, left HMC in September. He's since joined El-Erian at Pimco. El-Erian and Taborsky decline to comment.

By the time Jane Mendillo walked into HMC's offices in July 2008, she figured some changes needed to be made. A former consultant who worked for years at HMC under Meyer, Mendillo got the HMC gig partly as a result of Meyer's recommendation.

She had spent the last six years running the $1.6 billion Wellesley College endowment, which was completely outsourced to external managers. Her detractors say that she was ill prepared for Harvard's liquidity crisis and slow to take cognizance of the swap exposure. But they concede that the crisis came fast on the heels of her arrival.

Mendillo did move quickly to deal with the private equity portfolio. One of her first moves at HMC, which she initiated before the markets started to fall in earnest, was to sell between $1 billion to $1.5 billion of Harvard's private equity assets in one of the biggest such sales ever attempted.

The high bids on such assets have recently been 60 cents on the dollar, says Cogent Capital, an investment bank that advised Harvard on the sale. Cogent says the big discounts are due to "unrealistic pricing levels at which funds continued to hold their investments" and "fantasy valuations."

Defenders of Harvard's portfolio argue the secondary market is discounting private equity stakes too much. The market is made up of a dozen secondary funds with at most $15 billion available, says Bryon Sheets, a partner at San Francisco secondary firm Paul Capital.

That makes it a buyer's market, given the slew of desperate banks, pension funds and endowments looking to unload assets to meet obligations. So what are Harvard's private equity stakes worth? Most private equity investors like Harvard have been waiting for their money managers to finish marking down their assets following a brutal 2008. It is a slow process that lags the public markets by as much as 180 days, says William Frieske, a performance consultant at Northern Trust, which administers endowment accounts.

But one clue to what may be coming can be found in Harvard's own portfolio. It owns units of Conversus Capital, a publicly traded vehicle that holds slices of 210 private equity funds. Conversus has cut its net asset value by 21 per cent since last summer to make a "best estimate."

Yet stock investors think things are a lot worse. Conversus shares have fallen 67 per cent since June 30 and are trading at a 62 per cent discount to the net asset value. The Conversus stock drop translates into a potential $168 million loss for Harvard, which, as of Jan. 31, was still listed as a "strategic investor."

Conversus is run by Robert Long, a former Bank of America exec who went to Boston and got $250 million from El-Erian to help him set up the firm and buy $1.9 billion of Bank of America's private equity assets. Harvard also owns a piece of Garnett & Helfrich Capital, a $350 million fund opened in 2004.

Garnett has purchased six companies but, five years later, is yet to realize any returns. The value of one of those investments, software maker Ingres, has been reduced by its minority owner to nothing "as a result of reported losses." Then there is Tallwood Venture II, a $180 million fund raised in 2002 to invest in semiconductors. It has hardly exited any of its portfolio companies, according to Thomson Reuters and SEC filings.

The fact that a fifth of HMC's portfolio is in private-equity-like investments makes it vulnerable to the kind of problems HMC faced this fall. HMC has made $11 billion of capital commitments to investment partnerships through 2018, says Moody's. HMC used to make good on those commitments with income generated by the existing private equity portfolio. "Endowments are afraid capital calls will come quickly and far ahead of any liquidity from private equity funds," says Colin McGrady, managing director at Cogent Partners.

Watching all of this, the group of 10 Harvard alumni from the class of 1969 feel vindicated. "The events of the last year show that the whole procedure of rewarding people so handsomely based on increases on paper value of the endowment was deeply flawed," says a spokesman for the group, which recently sent a letter to the Harvard president suggesting HMC staffers return $21 million of their latest bonuses. "Even now, we don't really know how well it has done in the last 10 years."

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Friday, February 20, 2009

Sensex cracks below the 9,000 on weak global cues

Key benchmark indices faltered in opening trade on weak cues from global markets. The barometer index BSE Sensex fell below the psychologically vital 9,000 level. The Sensex was down 186.30 points, or 2.06%, to 8,856.33. Global cues were weak.

Asian markets declined today, 20 February 2009, after Wall Street tumbled to six-year low on Thursday, 19 February 2009, as a gloomy US unemployment data reinforced fears the world`s largest economy is in a severe slump. Key benchmark indices in Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan were down by between 1.47% and 4.07%. However, China`s Shanghai Composite rose 0.58%.

US markets tumbled on Thursday, 19 February 2009 on mounting concerns about the fate of major banks and signs that the recession is deepening, pushing the Dow to its lowest level in more than six years. The Dow Jones industrial average lost 89.68 points, or 1.19%, at 7,465.95. The Standard & Poor`s 500 Index fell 9.48 points, or 1.2%, at 778.94. The Nasdaq Composite index shed 25.15 points, or 1.71%, at 1,442.82.

US government data showed a record number of continuing unemployment claims, at nearly 5 million, and a surprisingly sharp drop in manufacturing in the mid-Atlantic states.

Closer home, Commerce minister Kamal Nath is likely to announce an export booster package later this month which would address some of the crucial concerns of the exporters. The sops under consideration include simplification of rules for service tax refund, extension of time given to exporters to meet export obligation and an increase in rates of input duty reimbursement schemes like drawback and DEPB for some sectors.

At 10:25 IST, the BSE 30-share Sensex was down 186.30 points, or 2.06%, to 8,856.33. The Sensex opened 98.85 points lower at 8,943.78, also its day`s high. At the day`s low of 8,829.57, the Sensex lost 213.06 points in early trade.

The S&P CNX Nifty slumped 55.85 points, or 2%, to 2,733.50

The market breadth, indicating the overall health of the market, was weak on BSE with 600 shares declining as compared with 269 that advanced. A total of 29 shares remained unchanged.

BSE clocked a turnover of Rs 389 crore by 10:25 IST.

All the members from the 30-share Sensex pack were trading lower. Mahindra & Mahindra (down 3.53%), HDFC (down 3.13%), and Reliance Infrastructure (down 2.65%), were among the major losers from the Sensex pack.

Realty shares declined as margins of realty firms are under pressure due to falling property prices. India`s largest realty developer by market capitalisation DLF fell 3.68% to Rs 150.70 and was the top loser from the Sensex pack. Foreign brokerage Goldman Sachs in its recent research report lowered DLF`s 12-month target price to Rs 124 post weak Q3 December 2008 results.

Unitech (down 2.45%), Omaxe (down 1.60%), HDIL (down 2.72%), and Parsvnath Developers (down 1.33%), fell.

India`s largest private sector company by market capitalization and oil refiner Reliance Industries (RIL) fell 2.18% to Rs 1265.50 on fears the worsening global economy will hit demand for petrochemicals.

Banking stocks fell as fears of rising defaults in a weakening economy and overnight fall in American Depository Receipts (ADRs), offset hopes of rate cuts from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). India`s second largest private sector bank by net profit HDFC Bank lost 3.09% to Rs 857.50 as its ADR fell 0.26% on Thursday, 19 February 2009. India`s largest private sector bank by net profit ICICI Bank slipped 4.14% to Rs 346.55 on a 1.36% fall in its ADR on Thursday, 19 February 2009.

India`s largest bank in terms of assets and branch network State Bank of India shed 1.75% to Rs 1039.65.

Inflation rose at the lowest level in 13-months at 3.92% in the year through 7 February 2009, much lower than previous week`s annual rise of 4.39%, data released by the government on Thursday, 19 February 2009, showed. Falling inflation provides room for the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to cut interest rates further to shield the domestic economy from the global financial sector crisis and recession in key global economies.

Only on Wednesday, 18 February 2009, the Reserve Bank of India Governor D Subbarao said that there is room to cut interest rates further. The statement comes at a time when the market is expecting further action from the central bank.

Market men see a bigger role for RBI to shield the domestic economy from the global financial sector crisis and recession in key global economies in the coming months as election code will be in force by the end of the month which means that there cannon be any policy action from the government.

IT pivotals fell as fears a weak global economy would cut the amount firms spent on technology offset a weak rupee. India`s third largest software services exporter, Wipro slipped 3.43% to Rs 212.80 despite a 1.12% rise in ADR on Thursday, 19 February 2009. India`s second largest software services exporter Infosys Technologies lost 2.26% to Rs 1181.80 as its ADR fell 1.71% on Thursday, 19 February 2009. India`s largest software services exporter by sales TCS slipped 2.41% to Rs 477.95 and India`s fifth largest IT exporter by sales HCL Technologies declined 2.93% to Rs 105.95.

However Satyam Computer Service galloped 3.03% to Rs 47.50 at 10:18 IST after it won approval to bring on board a strategic investor needed to ensure the survival of the scam-tainted software outsourcer.

Indian rupee slipped today on concerns of capital outflows following decline in global markets. The partially convertible rupee was at 49.75 per dollar against previous close of 49.62. A weaker rupee boosts operating margins of IT firms which earn a lion`s share of revenue from exports.

India`s largest power equipment maker by sales Bharat Heavy Electrical (Bhel) fell 1.24% to Rs 1365. The company reportedly plans to pump in around Rs 1000 crore in developing locomotive manufacturing facility.

India`s second largest cellular services provider by sales Reliance Communications (RCom) lost 3.5% to Rs 157 on reports the government on Thursday, 19 February 2009 reportedly informed the Parliament that it will do a special audit on the books of RCom and its subsidiaries over allegations that the telecommunications company had diverted revenues earned from its mobile services to a subsidiary to bring down the total amountit had to pay to the government as licence fee and spectrum charge.

Back home, key benchmark indices ended slightly higher on Thursday, 19 February 2009, in what was a lackluster trading session, in sync with range-bound activity in global markets. The BSE 30-share Sensex rose 27.45 points, or 0.30%, to 9,042.63 and the S&P CNX Nifty rose 13.20 points or 0.48% to 2789.35.

According to provisional data on NSE, FIIs were net sellers worth Rs 363.48 crore while mutual funds bought shares worth Rs 108.44 crore on Thursday, 19 February 2009.

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Rupee falls by 21 paise against USD to 49.03

The Indian rupee extended yesterday's weakness and depreciated by another 21 paise against the greenback in early trade today on fears of more capital outflows from the domestic bourses after Asian equity markets retreated.

At the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) market, the domestic currency quoted weaker at 49.03 against the US currency, a fall of 21 paise over the previous close of 48.82/83 a dollar.

The domestic currency has yesterday ended 15 paise lower at 48.82/83 against the dollar.

Dealers said concerns of capital outflows by funds on fears that domestic stock markets may open in the negative zone, in tandem with other Asian bourses, mainly put pressure on the Indian rupee.

They said dollar's strength against other rival currencies also had some impact on the domestic currency.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index fell 3.01 per cent, Japan's Nikkei shed 1.5 per cent and Singapore's Strait Times dropped 1.29 per cent in early trade today.

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Gold breaks records at Rs 15,712

Gold futures continued hitting a new high for the third day at Rs 15,712 per 10 gram in early trading on the Multi Commodity Exchange, on continued buying on speculations that the global recession will deepen further.

The far-month June contract for gold surged by Rs 138, or 0.88 per cent to touch a new high of Rs 15,712 per 10 gram at the MCX counter. The contract clocked business volume of 268 lots (one lot is equal to one kg) in early trade.

Similarly, gold for April month contract rose by Rs 145, or 0.93 per cent to Rs 15,706 per 10 gram, clocking a business turnover of 4,665 lots.

Market experts said firming trends in spot markets on account of marriage season also influenced metal prices at futures market here. At Chennai, gold opened Rs 235 higher to Rs 15,725 per 10 gram.

"Continued investment buying and break of 980 US dollar an ounce level, an important resistance level, supported the bull-run in the precious metal," Galipelli Harish of Karvy Comtrade told.

Meanwhile, in global markets gold touched a high of 988.40 dollar an ounce last evening.

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Inflation dipped to 3.92%

The rate of inflation dipped to 3.92%, the lowest in 13 months.

India's annual rate of inflation continued its descent during the week ended Jan 31 and fell to 4.39 percent from 5.07 percent for the week before, official data showed Thursday.

The inflation rate, based on the official wholesale price index (WIP) stood at 4.74 percent for the corresponding week of the previous fiscal, showed the statistics released by the Industry Ministry here.

The fall during the week under review was due mainly to a 3.1 percent decline in the index for fuels, as the result of a 21 percent drop in prices of lignite, 11 percent in petrol, 8 percent in cooking gas and 7 percent in high speed diesel.

While the index for primary articles fell 0.2 percent that for manufacturing also declined 0.1 percent.

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Satyam board to devise process for auction

Distressed IT firm Satyam's board is likely to discuss ways of taking forward the process of conducting a public auction for inducting one or more strategic investors, in its meeting on Saturday.

The Company Law Board today allowed the IT firm to conduct a public auction for inducting one or more strategic investors and to raise its equity base.

The government-appointed board of Satyam, which the company officials said is meeting on Saturday, is likely to discuss the ways for taking forward the process of auction.

In its order, CLB Chairman S Balasubramanian said that it was necessary for Satyam to bring in long-term funds by inducting a strategic investor and accordingly its board can pass a resolution to enhance the company's authorised equity capital to Rs 280 crore, comprising 140 crore shares of Rs two each, from Rs 160 crore currently.

Ahead of the meeting of Satyam's directors, one of the suitors, B K Modi-led Spice group is holding a board meeting tomorrow to decide on its bid for the IT company. Modi had earlier suggested an e-auction for the sale of stake in Satyam, where it is seeking preferential allotment of shares amounting to a controlling stake.

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Thursday, February 19, 2009

RIL to start gas supply from KG-D6 by April

Billionaire Mukesh Ambani-run Reliance Industries will start selling natural gas from its eastern offshore KG-D6 fields by April to ease fuel deficit at power and fertiliser units, the government has said.

"Supply of gas from KG-D6 is likely to begin by April 2009," oil minister Murli Deora has said at the meeting of Parliamentary Consultative Committee on Tuesday evening.

Reliance is likely to start gas production by the first week of March but the initial volume would go for testing the equipment and building pressure in the pipeline. The first sale may by early April.

Initial output may be 5-10 million standard cubic meters per day that would rise to 15-20 mmscmd by April and to 40 mmscmd by July/August.

"It has been decided to supply the first 40 mmscmd of natural gas to meet the shortfall in existing gas-based urea plants, LPG plants and power plants," Deora said.

KG-D6 gas would be a boon for the fuel-starved fertiliser and power companies, increasing production at cheaper rates.

Reliance gas that is being priced at USD 4.20 per million British thermal unit -- at least 50 per cent cheaper than competitive domestic gas -- would increase supply of urea in the country and bring down fertiliser subsidy, he said. It would also increase power generation and reduce dependence on imported oil to meet energy needs.

Reliance, Deora said, had started crude oil production from its deepsea KG-D6 block in Krishna Godavari basin on September 17, 2008, with initial output of 8,000 barrels per day.

"With commencement of the first crude oil production from deepwater of KG Basin, the year 2008 has become a landmark in the history of exploration and production in the country," he said.

The initial volumes from KG-D6 would be sold to gas-based urea manufacturing plants and the Dabhol power plant in Maharashtra. Fertiliser plants with a cumulative consumption of over 14 mmscmd have been identified.

The 2,150-megawatt Ratnagiri power plant, erstwhile known as Dabhol project, would get priority equal to fertiliser units. It will initially get 1.4 mmscmd, which would rise to 2.7 mmscmd by May/June and finally to 8.5 mmscmd before year-end.

Next in the order of priority is power sector. Plant-wise allocation within a maximum outlay of 18 mmscmd for the sector would be decided at a meeting this week.

Power plants in Andhra Pradesh, the landfall point of KG-D6 gas, will get gas keeping 70 per cent Plant Load Factor (PLF) (or installed capacity) in mind, while those in the rest of the country would get gas at 60.8 per cent PLF.

India, the world's second-fastest growing major economy, imports 75 per cent of its energy needs and its domestic gas production is insufficient to meet the demand from fertiliser makers and power generators.

Output from the KG-D6 field will reach a peak of 80 mmscmd by 2012 and the decline starting five years later will continue until 2020.

Deora said with the commissioning of a 29 million-tonnes per annum refinery at Jamnagar by Reliance Petroleum, the refining capacity of the country has increased to 177.97 million tonnes.

"Out of this, 105.5 million tonnes is in the public sector and the balance 72.47 million tonnes is in the private sector," he said. "The country is not only self-sufficient in the refining capacity for its domestic consumption but also exports petroleum products substantially."

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The TV bubble is readying to burst

Is television media on the verge of a dotcom-type bust?

You bet, say the bigger media groups.

Optimists were hard to come by at Frames, the annual media industry conclave organised by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry.

Most, on the other hand, seemed to anticipate that a large number of the nearly 350 TV channels in India, most of which were launched in the last three years, will vanish from the screen in the next twelve months.

"In 2007-08, exorbitant amounts of money was spent on setting up new channels," said Monica Tata, who heads the entertainment division of the Turner International India, part of the world's largest media conglomerate, Time Warner.

Tata, who recently oversaw the launch of a general entertainment and a movie channel in India, expects the market to consolidate as media companies either sell out or fold their channels. "Many of them are struggling.. They were invested on the basis of lofty and unrealistic expectations, with an eye on cashing out through IPOs.. It is very similar to the dotcom bubble," she says.

Tata's opinions reverberated widely at the annual extravaganza, which sees the top guns of the media and entertainment industry put their heads together.

"Money will dry up for new channels that are launched," predicted Aroon Purie, chairman of the India Today group, which set off a craze in 2001 by launching the first Hindi news channel, Aaj Tak.

Purie believes the blind copying of successful formats without looking at the sustainability factor is leading to the ruin of the industry.

"If anyone becomes a success, everyone follows suit.. Everyone 'hopes' to make money. We are seeing the results now," he said.

India, the second largest cable and satellite market in the world by numbers, has seen the launch of a large number of entertainment and news channels that aim to operationally break even over 3 to 5 years. The appetite was fed by increasing ad spends by companies riding a wave of liquidity originating in the US and Japan.

Purie pointed also pointed out that the entry of a large number of new players had affected the sustainability of the entire sector.

"In the last one year, my distribution costs have gone up by 50%," he said, alluding to the 'carriage fee' charged by cable operators from broadcasters for carrying their channels.

"New channels come into the space offering more and more money to the cable operators to carry their channels.. It takes Rs 25 to 30 crore to get a national distribution today," he complained.

He also pointed out that the broadcasters have been made more vulnerable due to an unusually large dependence on ad revenues, which. "The consumers pay Rs 15,000 crore as subscription fees every year. The cable operators pay Rs 2,500 crore to the broadcasters, but out of that, the broadcasters again pay Rs 1,500 crore back to them as carriage fee. So, the final share for the broadcaster is 6% of the subscription fees, against 35 to 40% in developed countries," he pointed out.

Even representatives of advertisers, media buying agencies, agreed with the grim outlook.

Sam Balsara, chairman and managing director of Madison World, said overinvestment into the media sector has made it difficult for them to sell advertisements to companies who advertisers.

"The multiplicity of channels is destroying the value chain," he said.

The fragmentation of viewership has made returns on advertisements more difficult to track, leading to more cynicism among clients. "If they had more substantial viewerships, it would have been easier for us to get the advertisers to spend more, since the returns would have been more," he explained.

Experts concur. Jehil Thakkar, executive director for media and entertainment with the audit firm KPMG sees an impending shake out. "350 channels are possible only in a digital future, not in the current circumstances where the number of channels are limited," he said.

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'Buy gold. It'll only rise from here'

James Turk, founder and chairman of GoldMoney, firmly believes gold will rise to over $1,000 per ounce in the next month or two, and stay above $1,000 for the rest of the year (that could mean over Rs 18,000 in India).
James Turk, founder and chairman of GoldMoney, firmly believes gold will rise to over $1,000 per ounce in the next month or two.

It may stay above $1,000 forever if the Federal Reserve ends up printing dollars to fund the borrowing the US government is planning for this year, Turk, co-author of the investment bestseller The Collapse of the Dollar, told DNA. Excerpts:

Investors across the world now seem to be taking refuge in US government treasuries. Is that a safe thing to do?
No, for several reasons. First, interest rates on long-term paper in the US are starting to rise, so the price of government T-notes and T-bonds will likely fall from here. More worrying though is the risk of a US default.

The US government owes over $110 trillion, when aggregating all of its commitments. It is very over-indebted, and the price of default insurance is rising because the market perceives a growing risk of default.

Also, it is likely the US government will need to borrow $2.5 trillion this year because its revenues will decline as the economy weakens and it's spending rises as a result of the weakening economy, which brings up another worrying point. The Federal Reserve will need to monetise much of this debt, which will further debase the dollar and cause more inflation.

The only solution the US government seems to have for all the financial troubles is borrowing more and throwing them at the problems. It also wants its citizens to borrow more...

It is not going to work. Too much debt is the problem. We had the boom, and now we are getting the inevitable bust. Because debt is the problem, it is impossible for more debt to also be the solution.

The US government is terribly misguided. Fortunately, people know better. They have therefore cut back on spending and increased savings in order to help prepare for the tough times the US - and indeed, much of the world - is facing in the months ahead.

What will be the repercussions of the planned fiscal stimulus and all the dollars that are being printed?
The most important repercussion will be that the price of gold will continue to climb. That is always the result when governments create currency out of thin air in order to give to politicians the money they want to spend.

The prevailing feeling among a lot of experts right now is that the US dollar and US treasuries are the biggest prevailing bubbles...
Yes, the US dollar is the biggest bubble, and US government debt instruments are the second-biggest bubble. People do things during a bubble that are not prudent. That reality unfortunately only appears after the fact - after the bubble has popped. The gold price is rising because of increased demand from people looking for a safe haven to protect themselves when these two bubbles pop, which I think may happen as soon as this year or possibly next year.

Can you visualise a catalysing event that will lead to the outright capitulation of the US dollar?
It's impossible to predict. It could be another major bank failure in the US. It could be when the Federal Reserve becomes the biggest buyer of US T-bonds. It could be when China or other trade surplus countries stop accumulating dollars and start spending them instead. The event causing the tipping point cannot be predicted, but once the tipping point is reached, history shows that the currency has less than a year before it totally collapses.

How soon do you see the world moving away from the US dollar as the reserve currency?
The world has been moving away from the dollar for years. In the 1960s, nearly 90% of world trade was conducted in dollars. Today it's about 55%. People are looking for alternative currencies, and I expect gold to emerge in the future in its traditional role as international money - in other words, the money that is used for global trade.
So, investing in gold is the right decision to make right now?

Gold is not an investment. It is money. Gold doesn't generate a rate of return like investments do. The price of gold is rising against all the world's currencies because currencies are losing purchasing power, while gold is preserving purchasing power. For example, one barrel of crude oil today costs about 2 goldgrams, which is the same it cost 50 years ago. So always calculate prices in terms of gold in order to see how badly currencies are being inflated by central banks.

What price do you see gold rising to over the next one year, three years and five years?
I believe that gold will rise to over $1,000 per ounce sometime during the next month or two, and then stay above $1,000 for the rest of the year. It may stay above $1,000 forever if the Federal Reserve ends up printing dollars to fund the borrowing the US government is planning for this year.

Within five years, gold will go much higher. It depends on how badly the Federal Reserve and US government debase the dollar. Remember, it is not that gold is going up; rather, it is that the dollar is going down because it is purchasing less and less because of inflation and other debasement.

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DLF slashes prices in Bangalore

DLF, the country's largest real estate player according to market capitalisation, has re-launched its Bannerghatta Road project in Bangalore with a revised price tag of Rs 2,100 per sq ft from Rs 2,775 a sq ft earlier.

The specifications have changed, too. The homes will now be 1,085-1,820 sq ft in size, down from the minimum size of 1,310 sq ft planned earlier. The project was first launched in October last year and DLF sold about 50% of the total 440 flats, said an analyst report.

The developer will compensate its existing customers who paid a higher price by adjusting the outstanding amount against future payments. Earlier, the cost of a 1,310-sq ft flat was Rs 36.35 lakh. Now, this cost has come down to Rs 27.51 lakh, a fall of Rs 8.84 lakh. A DLF spokesperson said, "We have launched our Bangalore project in 4 categories, where the base price ranges between Rs 1,800 and Rs 2,100 per sq ft."

This relaunch comes close on the heels of DLF's Hyderabad project launch at Rs 1,850 per sq ft last month, which received a fairly good response after a dismal December quarter. JP Morgan analysts Saurabh Kumar and Gunjan Prithyani, in a February 2 report, wrote, "Mid-income housing performance was most disappointing as the company booked just 77 units in the last two months against almost 400 units per month over the last two quarters. Expected rate correction and reducing unit prices may trigger a volume recovery at the earliest by second half of FY10."

Analysts, however, said developers who have already launched their projects would find it hard to compete with DLF's prices. The real estate firm's price cuts are to the extent of 40%, much more than what others are offering. This could hit competitors' sales as they are offering a minimum size of 1,445 sq ft with a base price of Rs 2,500 per sq ft.

DLF's rivals in Bangalore include the Prestige group and L&T Properties. Ravi Ramu,
director at another competitor Puravankara Projects Ltd, said, "We are selling projects at about Rs 2,750 per sq ft. We cannot go lower than this." Analysts warn that sticking to their pricing could cost developers volumes and hurt their topline. Sobha Developers, another major real estate player in the IT city, is offering a paltry 8% discount on its ready projects.

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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Rupee drops to 3-week low

The Indian rupee extended losses in afternoon trade on Tuesday dropping to three-week lows as banks bought the U.S. unit to arbitrage in the offshore non-deliverable forwards, while lower stocks also weighed.

* At 12:55 p.m., the partially convertible rupee was at 49.29/30 per dollar, its lowest since Jan. 23 and weaker than Monday's close of 48.84/85.

* One-month non-deliverable forward contracts PNDF were quoting at 49.52/62 per dollar, weaker than the onshore spot rate, providing a good arbitrage opportunity to banks.

* Indian shares fell more than 2.5 percent on Tuesday, with banks among major losers after a higher-than-expected government borrowing plan was seen as denting their outlook in the near term. See [.BO].

* A stronger dollar overseas also dampened sentiment for the rupee.

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