Following a sharp recovery in the equity markets, Indian stocks have emerged as the second best performers as compared to their peers in three other BRIC nations -- Brazil, Russia and China, giving close to 20% return in April.
According to an analysis of MSCI Barra indices, a measure of returns from various stock markets across the world for foreign investors, Indian stocks have given the second highest return after Russia among the four BRIC countries during last month.
Indian stocks have provided a return of nearly 19.54% in April, while China and Brazilian markets have given 10.87% and 18.89% respectively.
However, Russian equities have managed to outperform the Indian stocks in the month as it provided investors with a positive return of over 21%, as per the analysis of performances of Morgan Stanley Composite Indices (MSCI) for various nations.
The 30-share benchmark index of Indian stocks, Sensex, gained close to 1,700 points in the month of April to settle at 11,403.25 points on April 29.
Indian stocks have even outperformed the MSCI Barra's emerging market index, which includes all the developing world markets, giving returns to foreign investors to the tune of 16.28% in the month.
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Indian stocks second best performers among BRIC in April
DLF to hive off wind power business
The country's largest real estate developer, DLF, today said it will hive off wind power business, one of its non-core businesses, to a wholly-owned subsidiary.
"The board of directors of the company at its meeting held on April 30, 2009, inter alia, has approved to transfer company's wind power business, as a going concern on slump basis, to a wholly-owned subsidiary," DLF said in a filing to the Bombay Stock Exchange.
DLF would seek shareholders' nod for the same, it added.
While declaring its financial results, regarding exiting from non-core assets, DLF yesterday said: "Wind Power has met with a good response from strategic partners wherein the due diligence of the assets is currently underway."
Besides, the company was contemplating making an exit from long gestation projects such as hotels. It had already withdrew from large township projects at Bidadi and Dankuni.
DLF reported 93 per cent plunge in consolidated net profit for the fourth quarter of 2008-09 at Rs 159.05 crore. Its profit stood at Rs 2,176.82 crore in the year-ago period.
For the whole of 2008-09, DLF's net profit decreased by 41 per cent at Rs 4,629 crore compared with Rs 7,812 crore in the previous fiscal.
Siemens net up at Rs225 cr, bags Rs1380 cr order from Adani
Engineering major Siemens Ltd, which today announced to secure an order worth Rs1380 crore from Adani Power, has posted a net profit of Rs225.5 crore for the quarter ended March 31, 2009, as against just Rs1.7 crore net profit booked last year for the corresponding period.
Sales for the quarter grew by 11 per cent to Rs2368.2 crore, compared to Rs2142.4 crore for the corresponding period in the previous year.
“We have achieved profitable growth in tough market conditions. Our focus on operational excellence and internal measures such as cost optimization and process rationalization supported the results. We also continued with our investment programs to support our growth,” said Dr Armin Bruck, managing director, Siemens.
The sales and profit figures are strictly not comparable to corresponding quarter of last year as the substantial completion of certain large projects has resulted in significant savings in estimated costs and consequential recognition of additional revenue and profits, said a Siemens press release.
In a market weighed down by deferred investments plans, the company booked new orders worth Rs 1859.4 crore for the quarter, 21 per cent less than the orders in the corresponding period of the previous year, said Siemens.
For the half-year period ended March 31 2009, new orders registered a drop of 10 per cent and stood at Rs3839.1 crore as compared to Rs4254.2 crore in the corresponding period last year.
For the half-year ended March 31, 2009, net profit for Siemens increased by 179 per cent to Rs556.1 crore as compared to Rs198.7 crore in the corresponding period of the previous year.For the half-year period, sales remained steady at Rs 3997.1 crore as compared to Rs4056.8 crore in the corresponding period last year.
Today Adani Power, part of Adani Group, awarded Siemens a contract to install a 500-kilovolt High-Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) transmission system of 2500 MW capacity to transmit electricity from over a distance of approximately 1000 kilometers from Mundra power plant in Gujarat to Mohindergarh in Haryana. The Rs1380 crore project will be executed together by Siemens AG, the German parent of Siemens India and the Indian arm. The first phase of the project is scheduled to be commissioned in February, 2011 and the second phase in July, 2011, said Siemens officials.
The project is to evacuate power from Adani Power's 4620 MW thermal power plant at Mundra in Gujarat.
Siemens scope of work for the project will include the turnkey execution of complete HVDC terminal stations at Mundra in Gujarat and Mohindergarh, Haryana, associated electrode stations and a repeater station mid way. The major scope of delivery covers 500 kV converter transformers, thyristor valves, filter equipments, switchgears and other mechanical auxiliaries. In addition Siemens will also undertake marine and inland transportation, civil works, installation and commissioning of the entire HVDC transmission system, said the officials.
APL is also developing a 1980 MW coal based thermal power project at Tiroda near Gondia in Maharashtra through its subsidiary, Adani Power Maharashtra Ltd. (APML). Additionally, APL is planning to develop two thermal power stations at Dahej and Kawai totaling to about 3,300 MW, said company officials at a press meet in Mumbai, today.
Friday, May 1, 2009
March exports slump by a third, outlook bleak
India's exports declined by a third in March to $11.5 billion, its sixth straight fall, and analysts said the global economic slump would further hurt overseas sales by Indian firms in the months ahead.
Imports fell by 34 percent to $15.56 billion in March from a year earlier due to a slowdown in Asia's third largest economy and moderate global crude prices , narrowing the trade deficit to $4 billion in March from $6.32 billion a year ago.
"The impact of global economic crisis on India is going to be higher in 2009/10 compared to (the) previous year," said N.R. Bhanumurthy, an economist at the Institute of Economic Growth.
"After achieving a robust growth for four consecutive years, India's export growth started showing negative trend since October 2008 and is expected to continue for the rest of the year due to recessionary situation in most industrialised nations," he said.
India's exports stood at $168.7 billion in the fiscal year to March, up a paltry 3.4 percent from 2007/08, while imports grew 14.3 percent to $287.8 billion in 2008/09, official data showed on Friday.
Exports, which account for nearly 16 percent of India's gross domestic product, were a notch below a downwardly revised 2008/09 fiscal year target of $170 billion.
The trade deficit widened 34 percent to $119 billion in 2008/09, from $88.5 billion in the previous year.
Last month, the International Monetary Fund slashed global growth forecasts and said emerging markets were dealing with a sharp drop in capital flows and a collapse in global trade.
While growth is expected to pick up in emerging nations, including China and India, a recovery to previous healthy levels will depend on a pick-up in advanced economies, the IMF said.
The United States and Europe, which consume about 35 percent of India's exports, are yet to show signs of recovery and this has dampened prospects for an early recovery in factory output and exports from jewellery to textiles.
NO IMMEDIATE REBOUND SEEN
Since October, India's central bank has cut its key lending rate by 425 basis points while the government has increased incentives for exporters to make their products competitive.
But government officials and economists say these steps would not help in an immediate rebound in exports.
"I don't think exports are going to pick up unless advanced global economies recover. Imports are also going to take a hit. A recovery can be expected not before the second half of 2009/10," said D.K. Joshi, principal economist at ratings agency Crisil.
Last month, Trade Secretary G.K. Pillai said exports were likely to extend their decline until September, and then stage a mild recovery.
Non-oil imports, a key measure of domestic economic activity, fell 18.9 percent in March from the year ago period, signalling that factory output was still sluggish.
IEG's Bhanumurthy said the swine flu outbreak that started in North America was expected to dampen global business through decline in movement of goods and labour.
"For India, this could affect both services and tourism sectors, and hence could delay the upturn in the growth of industrial output."
Tata Motors to launch Jaguar, Land Rover in India
Tata group company, Jaguar Land Rover, on Friday said it will launch its premium saloon cars and utility vehicles in the Indian market later this year.
Jaguar Land Rover has reached an agreement with Tata Motors to be an exclusive importer of these premium saloon cars and utility vehicles, the British company said in a release.
"It is an important strategic move for Jaguar Land Rover and will enable us to realise our competitive potential in this significant market," Jaguar Land Rover's CEO, David Smith, said.
Tata Motors has created a new division called Premier Car Division to handle the distribution of Jaguar and Land Rover.
The first showroom for the British brands would be in Mumbai. Tata Motors has appointed Rohit Suri to handle the premier car division.
"This is a natural move for both businesses and will allow Jaguar and Land Rover to establish a strong and deserved presence in India," Tata Motors' Managing Director, Ravi Kant, said.
The Tata group bought these premier brands last year for $2.3 billion.
DLF Q4 net plunges 93% to Rs 159 cr
The country's largest realty firm DLF on Friday said its net profit has plunged by 92.69 per cent to Rs 159.05 crore for the quarter ended March 31, 2009.
The company's profit stood at Rs 2,176.82 crore in the year-ago period.
Net sales dipped by 73.94 per cent at Rs 1,122.32 crore for the fourth quarter of 2008-09 fiscal as against Rs 4,306.54 crore in the corresponding period of the previous fiscal, DLF said today in a filing on the National Stock Exchange.
On standalone basis, DLF's net profit dipped sharply by 95.32 per cent at Rs 29.86 crore for the quarter ended March 31, 2009 compared to Rs 638.55 crore in the year-ago period.
Net sales fell by 96.56 per cent to Rs 55.53 crore for the fourth quarter of 2008-09 fiscal against Rs 1,613.32 crore in the corresponding period of the previous fiscal.
Maruti sales jump 15% in April
The country's largest passenger car manufacturer Maruti Suzuki India Ltd on Friday reported 15 per cent growth in its sales, at 71,748 units sold in April as compared to 62,336 units in the corresponding period previous year.
"This is the fourth consecutive month of sales crossing the 70,000 units mark," a company statement said. The figures include 6,891 units exported.
Maruti Suzuki's volume in the domestic A2 segment (Alto, Wagon-R, Zen, Swift, A-Star) grew by nine percent while in the A3 segment comprising of SX4 and D'Zire, the sales volume grew by 69 per cent during the month as compared to sales in April 2008.
However, sales for Maruti's 800 model dipped 47 per cent to 2,345 units sold in April this year as against 4,458.
The eye-catcher has been the multi-utility vehicle (MUV) sales of the company - Gypsy and Grand Vitara - recording a whopping 1,231 per cent growth. About 905 units of MUV were sold this April as compared to 68 in April last year.
Total domestic sales surged nine per cent with 64,857 units of sale as against 59,539 units in the same period a year before.
Chrysler files for bankruptcy
Chrysler LLC filed for bankruptcy on Thursday after talks to restructure its debt with lenders broke down.
Despite intense negotiations over the past few weeks, Chrysler failed to gain the full support from its lenders to avoid the first-ever bankruptcy filing by a major U.S. automaker.
At the same time, Chrysler as expected entered into an alliance with Italian automaker Fiat SpA where it sold a stake starting at 20 percent and in which Fiat can become the majority owner once the government loans are repaid.
The Chapter 11 filing, in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, will send shock waves through the entire industry -- including Chrysler's rivals, suppliers, dealers and the hundreds of thousands who rely on the industry for their livelihoods.
As part of the filing, the U.S. government will provide up to $3.5 billion in debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing and up to $4.5 billion in exit financing. Obama said he hopes the entire bankruptcy process will take only 30 to 60 days.
The bankruptcy signals that Obama is prepared to play hardball with holdout lenders rather than knuckle under to their demands and will likely set the tone for similar discussions with bondholders of General Motors Corp -- which is now on the clock to restructure its operations by the end of May.
While Obama voiced his support for Chrysler and the deal with Fiat, he was pointed in his criticism of the investors who did not agree to this deal.
"I don't stand with them. I stand with Chrysler's employees and their families and communities," the president said. "I don't stand with those who held out when everybody else is making sacrifices. That's why I'm supporting Chrysler's plans to use our bankruptcy laws to clear away its remaining obligations."
This is not the first major government action with Chrysler. In 1980, U.S. President Jimmy Carter signed a bill providing Chrysler with more than $1 billion in loan guarantees.
Once again, the state of Michigan -- and in particular the Detroit area -- will be disproportionately hurt by the auto industry's woes.
"The industry's current crisis, with the potential for bankruptcy or consolidation, represents a fundamental shift in the state's economic base, rather than a simple cyclical downturn," Moody's said in a recent report.
"Bankruptcy is what they have been headed for in the past several months," said Mirko Mikelic, portfolio manager at Fifth Third Bank. "The biggest concern now is that the different stakeholders will be able to make the tough decisions they need to make."
Chrysler Chief Executive Robert Nardelli will leave the automaker following the emergence from bankruptcy. The U.S. government will place six members on the new company's board and Fiat will appoint three.
Investors reacted positively to the news as the broader market was marginally higher. GM shares were up 6.6 percent and Ford Motor Co was up 7.7 percent in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
FIAT: A DONE DEAL
The bankruptcy filing did not preclude the Fiat deal.
Chrysler has been seeking a rescue deal from the Italian automaker while also trying to finalize its debt agreement.
The debt restructuring talks have been spearheaded by the Obama administration's autos task force and former investment banker Steve Rattner.
In a bid to win over three fund firms that had spurned an offer to accept $2 billion in cash in exchange for writing off all of Chrysler's $6.9 billion in secured debt, U.S. officials sweetened the terms by throwing in another $250 million, people familiar with those discussions said.
Chrysler, majority-owned by Cerberus Capital Group, has been among the car industry's laggards, but its plight reflects a slump in demand facing an industry whose $2.6 trillion annual revenue is equivalent to the GDP of France and which employs more than 9 million people.
HISTORY-MAKING
The bankruptcy marks a key moment for the automaker and for the struggling American manufacturing sector.
In 1925, Walter P. Chrysler established Chrysler Corp. Three years later, the company laid the cornerstone for the Chrysler Building, briefly the world's tallest building and still an unmistakable part of the Manhattan skyline.
On Wednesday, Obama said concessions by Chrysler's unions and its major bank lenders had made him more hopeful than a month ago that the struggling automaker could be made viable.
The automaker has won cost-cutting concessions from its unions in the United States and Canada and was on the brink of closing its deal with Fiat on Wednesday, a person involved in those negotiations told Reuters.
Putting the two car producers together should give the combined group annual sales of some 4.16 million vehicles, making it equal with Hyundai and behind Toyota, General Motors, Volkswagen and Ford
Monday, April 13, 2009
Tech Mahindra wins Satyam bid: Report
Tech Mahindra on Monday outbid L&T and others and won the Satyam bid, TV reports said.
According to Times Now sources, Tech Mahindra will pay Rs 1757cr for 31% stake in Satyam. It will pay Rs 58 per share of the company. The face value of Satyam shares is Rs 2 per share.
Meanwhile engineering firm L&T reportedly made an offer of around Rs 49 for each Satyam share.
L&T, Tech Mahindra and Wilbur Ross had all put in technical and financial bid for Satyam Computer Services earlier on Monday.
BK Modi's Spice Corp did not submitted a bid for Satyam. "We have not submitted bid for Satyam. Our board wanted e-auction and since there is no e-auction, so we decided not to participate in the process," Spice Corp chairman B K Modi said.
According to PTI sources, Cognizant Technologies also did not put in its bid to acquire stake in the firm.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Fishing Village Kollam's dollar dream gets sour
It's election time and political parties are promising everything under the sky, but the situation on the ground is grim. The reverse migration has affected people in various parts of Kerala, for instance, in a fishing village in Kollam, about 1000 people who were working in the gulf have lost their jobs and are now struggling to survive.
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
For every 5 US bank failures,2 Indian banks collapsed in FY'09
When banks were falling like ninepins in the US, India too was not far behind with two Indian lenders going belly up.
As many 19 Indian co-operative banks collapsed for the 12 months ended March 2009 against 44 American entities failing during the same period.
Consequently, the Reserve Bank's credit insurance arm had to pay over Rs 142 crore to depositors to cover the liabilities of 19 banks.
Under the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the RBI, insurance norms, a maximum of Rs one lakh is paid to a depositor in case the bank goes insolvent.
From April 2008 till March 2009, a whopping 44 lenders in America were shut down by the authorities as the country continued to grapple with worsening financial meltdown.
Most of the bank failures happened after Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy on September 15 last year, with 35 entities going bust.
Meanwhile, this year, seven US banks are collapsing on an average every month, taking the total to 21 entities so far.
As far as India was concerned, the 19 co-operative banks, including six from Karnataka, have failed to repay deposits to customers during the last fiscal.
The DICGC paid the maximum amount of Rs 45.4 crore to District Cooperative Bank Ltd of Gonda in Uttar Pradesh. This was followed by The Maratha Co-operative Bank of Karnataka (Rs 17.7 crore), Parivartan Co-operative Bank of Maharashtra (Rs 16.7 crore), Ravi Co-operative Bank (Rs 16.2 crore) and Indira Priyadarshini Mahila Nagrik Sahakari Bank of Chhattishgarh (Rs 13.1 crore).
The other five lenders from Karnataka are Varda Co-operative Bank (Rs 2.4 crore), Harugeri Urban Co-operative Bank (Rs 3.1 crore), Kittur Rani Channamma Mahila Pattana Sahakari Bank (Rs 2.2 crore), Challakere Urban Co-operative Bank (Rs 3.2 crore) and Basavakalyan Pattana Sahakari Bank (Rs 0.24 crore).
Four banks each in Maharashtra and Gujarat went bankrupt, while two cases were reported in Uttar Pradesh.
During 2007-08, as many as 22 cooperative banks closed operations.
Spoof FT hits London ahead of G20
A group of anti-capitalism protesters have distributed a mock copy of London's famous Financial Times newspaper.
Anti-capitalism protesters are vowing to make their voices heard when world leaders gather in London next week for the G20 summit.
A group of them have distributed a mock newspaper to commuters urging them to join their protest against the great and the good.
Jim Drury reports.
How Twitter plans to make Money
Hollywood movies escape recession
Despite the recession, the US box office is booming, thanks in part to a strong movie lineup.
Hollywood is hanging on despite the recession. Box office admissions are up so far in 2009, and a slate of big budget summer releases could help continue the trend. Bobbi Rebell reports. SOUNDBITES:
Carole Lieberman, media psychologist
Brandon Gray, President, Box Office Mojo
Soros sees recovery in 2010
Beer still recession proof?
The recession has caused a dip in beer volumes in the U.S., but analysts say beer is regaining market share as consumers shift to lower-cost drinking options.
Domestic shipments are down so far this year, but with consumers spending more time at the supermarket and less time dining out, analysts expect beer to fare better in the economic downturn. Speaker:
Peter Swinburn, chief executive,
Molson Coors;
Ann Gilpin, research analyst, Morningstar
Conway Gittens reports from New York.
Investors pause after surge
Wall Street struggled to build on the 7 percent rally seen in the prior session as investors paused to reflect on government efforts to stabilize the economy.
The execution of the Treasury's toxic asset relief program is sure to be a determining factor on whether the recent two-week rally holds, one investor outside of the New York Stock Exchange said ahead of the market open. Conway Gittens reports from New York.
Can the bulls hold on?
Since March 9 the S&P 500 has advanced about 20 percent, and after a big bounce Monday, Wall Street takes pause.
The question at hand: was it a classic bear market rally or the beginning of a bull market advance? Some analysts say it was not just a blip. Diane King reports from New York. SOUNDBITE: Philip Roth, Chief Technical Market Analyst, Miller Tabak.
Spotify seeks profit from free music
The Swedish digital music site has enjoyed a huge boost after opening its free, ad-supported music streaming service to all users in Britain.
The free service is available on an invitation basis in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Finland, Norway and Sweden.
Listeners also have the option to pay a monthly fee to use the service without hearing or seeing advertisements.
Reuters Technology Correspondent Matt Cowan reports.
Dr. Subbarao optimistic on India growth
Montenegro tourism slump
The Prime Minister says the country's tourism industry is facing its worst crisis in years.
With more than a million visitors every year, tourism makes up a quarter of Montenegro's Gross Domestic Product.
But with hoteliers and landlords reporting a sharp fall in summer bookings, analysts say the economy could go into recession by the end of the year.
Farmers happy over loan waiver
Gold fever in California
California's soaring unemployment has led some residents to pursue elusive golden nuggets along the riverbanks of the San Gabriel Mountains.
The new gold rush has been a boon for companies like Keene Engineering, a maker of mining equipment which has seen there business double over the past year. Jon Decker reports.
Amul group profits despite slowdown
Indian spice exports cross $1bln
eBay sees 'shopping neutral' rise
The online auction site eBay says a growing number of people on its site are 'offsetting' their spend by selling goods online.
The ecommerce site analysed millions of transactions involving casual home-sellers and says it has found that 200,000 British shoppers are making as much as five pounds per day by selling goods on the site.
Matt Cowan reports.
eBay sees 'shopping neutral' rise
The online auction site eBay says a growing number of people on its site are 'offsetting' their spend by selling goods online.
The ecommerce site analysed millions of transactions involving casual home-sellers and says it has found that 200,000 British shoppers are making as much as five pounds per day by selling goods on the site.
Matt Cowan reports.
IPO market sees signs of life
BSE holidays
The Exchange will observe the following Trading Holidays during theList of Holidays
Calendar Year January to December, 2009. Holidays Date Day 1 Moharram 8th January 2009 Thursday 2 Republic Day 26th January 2009 Monday 3 Mahashivratri 23rd February 2009 Monday 4 Id-E-Milad 10th March 2009 Tuesday 5 Holi 11th March 2009 Wednesday 6 Ram Navmi 3rd April 2009 Friday 7 Mahavir Jayanti 7th April 2009 Tuesday 8 Good Friday 10th April 2009 Friday 9 Dr. Ambedkar Jayanti 14th April 2009 Tuesday 10 Maharashtra Day 1st May 2009 Friday 11 Ramzan Id 21st September 2009 Monday 12 Dasera 28th September 2009 Monday 13 Gandhi Jayanti 2nd October 2009 Friday 14 Diwali ( Bhaubeez) 19th October 2009 Monday 15 Gurunanak Jayanti 2nd November 2009 Monday 16 Christmas 25th December 2009 Friday 17 Moharram 28th December 2009 Monday
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