Thursday, June 30, 2011

Sensex ends 152 points up; FMCG, realty, IT gain

Indian markets ended June F&O series on a positive note on the back of inflows from institutional investors who bought equities worth Rs 4300 crore in just last four sessions. Benchmarks are just above crucial resistance levels and may consolidate before making a move.

According to experts the market will be taking cues from macro-economic factors like inflation, interest rates and June quarter results. Global crude oil prices and euro-zone worries are also likely to direct the market.

Meanwhile, there was some relief in term of food inflation back home. India's food inflation slipped a 7.78 per cent for the week ended June 18 against 9.13 per cent a week ago.

"The longer-term trend is still not clear in the market, but my sense is that the worst is over from short to medium term. Then the question is that will we remain stagnant at these levels or will we be slowly-slowly going up? My sense is that we will stagnate and consolidate around these levels and then slowly based on the corporate numbers and overall interest, inflation and oil price scenario, we will decide the course of the market direction," said Motilal Oswal, CMD, Motilal Oswal Financial Services to ET Now.

National Stock Exchange's Nifty ended at 5647.40, up 46.95 points or 0.84 per cent. The broader index touched a high of 5657.90 and low of 5606.10 in trade today.

Bombay Stock Exchange's Sensex closed at 18845.87, up 152.01 points or 0.81 per cent. The 30-share index hit a high of 18873.39 and low of 18723.72 intraday.

"Nifty future for the July series is currently trading at around 5 points premium at 5652 levels. Now it holds psychological support at 5600 levels, a close below this level may drag the market towards 5500 witnessing some liquidation of longs whereas on the upside. If Nifty sustains above 5620 levels with volume support it may see further momentum towards 5720-5750 levels," said Ashish Chaturmohta, Vice President - Derivatives and Technical Analyst, IIFL Private Wealth.

BSE Midcap Index was up 0.32 per cent and BSE Smallcap Index moved 0.57 per cent higher.

Amongst sectoral indices, BSE FMCG Index was up 1.83 per cent, BSE Realty Index gained 1.19 per cent and BSE IT Index moved 0.69 per cent higher. BSE Healthcare Index was down 0.03 per cent.

Jaiprakash Associates (3.79%), Hindustan Unilever (3.18%), Jindal Steel (3.13%), Tata Power (1.68%) and Hero Honda (1.63%) were amongst the top Sensex gainers.

ONGC (-1.62%), Maruti (-1.54%), Bharti Airtel (-1.52%), Wipro (-0.61%) and Hindalco (-0.58%) were the major losers.

Market breadth was positive on the BSE with 1507 gainers against 1337 losers.

Source: The Economic Times

Vivek Agrawal

Summer Intern-Fundamental Analysis

DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Indian Bank to file draft red-herring prospectus for FPO in a month

ndian Bank today said it would file a draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) for its proposed follow-on public offer (FPO) in the next 30 days. The public sector lender expects to raise Rs 1,500-1,600 crore through the FPO.

After getting an approval from the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), the FPO would hit the market within a year, depending on market conditions, Chairman and Managing Director T M Bhasin told reporters here after the bank’s annual general meeting.


“We are yet to decide on the quantum; it will be based on Sebi guidelines,” he said, adding that the fund-raising was to augment Tier-1 capital, when Tier-II capital is more costly.
Earlier, Bhasin had said the funds raised from the offering, coupled with ploughing back of profits, would give the bank an additional Rs 3,000-crore Tier-I capital and help it grow its loan book by Rs 20,000-25,000 crore.

The Chennai-headquartered bank also had the option of raising Rs 6,252 crore through Tier-II bonds, Bhasin added. The FPO would amount to a further 10 per cent stake dilution by the government.

According to the bank’s annual report for 2010-11, its authorised capital stood at Rs 3,000 crore. At present, the central government holds 80 per cent of equity capital in the bank. The paid-up capital comprises equity share capital of Rs 429.77 crore and perpetual non-cumulative preference share capital (PNCPSC) of Rs 400 crore.

In the context of the implementation of Basel III from 2013, taking into account the future scenario of business expansion and the projected profitability, it is felt that the bank should expand its equity capital base and have a sound capital adequacy ratio (CAR) for the next three years time period.

The bank had proposed to convert the PNCPSC of Rs 400 crore held by the government into equity capital so that the CAR would improve. The said conversion of PNCPSC into equity capital is also expected to improve the book value of the equity shares of the bank. The state-run lender had received the government’s approval to raise equity capital of Rs 61.40 crore through book-building process by an FPO comprising 61.4 million equity shares at Rs 10 each at a premium to be decided by the bank.

In an unrelated development, the public sector lender has decided to defer its plan to launch an insurance company, after a committee set up by the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (Irda) recommended that banks be allowed to tie up with two insurers.

“Initially, we thought we would float a company along with a domestic or foreign partner, but since Irda is now planning to allow banks to sell two insurers’ products, we have decided to continue with bancassurance. This way, we do not have to put capital in a new company,” he added.

Bank to be listed in Singapore in mid-July

Indian Bank would list bonds in the Singapore Stock Exchange by mid-July. The bank is planning to raise $1 billion (around Rs 4,400 crore) through the issue of medium-term notes (MTN) in two tranches.

The proposed fund-raising will increase the bank’s credit exposure by Rs 4,500 crore abroad. After the fund-raising, the bank’s overseas loan book would increase by around Rs 4,500 crore and bonds by about Rs 4,500 crore. Current overseas business of the bank stands at around Rs 3,500 crore.

Source: Business Standard

Thanks and Regards,
Sanchari Sinha,
Intern at DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Food inflation falls below 8%

Annual food inflation eased to a six-week low of 7.78% in the week to June 18, from 9.13% a week earlier, although the fuel price increase and its knock-on effects are expected to maintain pressure on the central bank to continue with monetary policy tightening.

However, fuel price inflation accelerated to an eight-week high in mid-June and the government's increase in diesel and other fuel prices is expected to put upward pressure on prices in coming weeks and push headline inflation towards double digits.


The fuel price index climbed to 12.98% in the week to June 18, before the fuel price rise took effect, from 12.84% a week earlier, government data showed on Thursday.

India's headline wholesale price index (WPI) inflation stood at an annual 9.06% in May despite continued monetary policy tightening by the central bank, which has increased interest rates 10 times since March 2010.

The government raised prices of diesel, cooking gas and kerosene last Friday, a politically unpopular move that adds to inflationary pressure, but gives relief to oil companies reeling from revenue losses on state-set fuel prices amid high global crude prices.

Diesel, cooking gas and kerosene comprise 6.4% of the total WPI basket and 70% of the fuel component of the WPI.

Standard Chartered expects the increase, which was effective June 25, to add about 70 basis points to headline inflation.

As the increase in diesel and other fuel prices was accompanied by duty cuts on crude oil and petroleum products, the price increase is not expected to help ease India's fiscal deficit, which the government has targeted at 4.6% of GDP in the current fiscal year.

Private economists widely view that target as optimistic, and traders expect the federal government to make more market borrowings than its budget target in the second half of the fiscal year.

The primary articles price index was up 11.84%, compared with an annual rise of 12.62% a week earlier.

The Reserve Bank of India is widely expected to raise rates by another 50 basis points in coming months.


Source: Business Standard

Thanks and Regards,
Sanchari Sinha,
Intern at DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Presentation of financial statements

There are a few differences between Ind AS-1, Presentation of Financial Statements, and IAS-1, which is the corresponding IFRS issued by the IASB. We shall discuss some of those differences.

Ind AS -1 mandates that an entity must provide analysis of expenses in the profit and loss account based on the nature of expenses. IAS 1 requires an entity to present an analysis of expenses recognised in profit or loss using a classification based on either their nature or their function within the equity. IAS-1 requires that if an entity decides to classify expenses by function, it shall disclose additional information on the nature of expenses.

I believe that carving out the option will better serve interest of investors and potential investors, and creditors, including lenders, who are the primary users of financial statements. Investors and potential investors are interested in the valuation of the company. They use information in ‘financial statements’ for forecasting cash flows that the entity will generate from year to year over a long period of time. Creditors use the information to evaluate credit risks.
Users of financial statements forecast cash flows based on the net profit, revenue and analysis of operating expenses based on their nature presented in the profit and loss account. They do not use gross profit or other profitability measures to forecast cash flows. This is the reason why IAS-1 requires all entities, which choose to analyse expenses based on functional classification, to provide analysis of expenses based on natural classification.

Finance literature has identified three value drivers, which determine the value of an entity. They are return on invested capital (ROIC), growth of ROIC and consequently growth of cash flows available for distribution to investors (free cash flow) and the cost of capital. ROIC is calculated using operating profit after tax in the numerator. Therefore, functional classification of expenses is redundant in the context of valuation of companies.

Presentation of an analysis of expenses based on functional classification could be misleading because allocation of expenses to different functions might be arbitrary and judgemental. IAS-1 observes “classification by function can provide more relevant information to users than the classification of expenses by nature, but allocating costs to functions may require arbitrary allocations and involve judgement”. Moreover, it involves cost, how so ever small it might be. Therefore, this “carve out” would benefit investors.

IAS-1 recognises the concept of comprehensive income and other comprehensive income. Other comprehensive income comprises of items of income or expenses, which accounting standards do not permit to recognise in profit or loss for the current period. For example, revaluation gain arising from the revaluation of property, plant and equipment is not recognised in profit or loss for the current period. Therefore, revaluation reserve is a component of other comprehensive income. Comprehensive income is the total of the profit (or loss) for the period and other comprehensive income. IAS-1 provides an option either to follow the single statement approach or to follow the two-statement approach. While in the single statement approach, all items of income and expense are recognised in the profit and loss account, in the two statements approach, two statements are prepared, one displaying components of profit or loss (separate profit and loss account) and the other beginning with profit or loss and displaying components of other comprehensive income. Ind AS-1 allows only the single statement approach. Carving out the option to adopt the two statement approach does not reduce the informative value of the profit and loss account.

There are some differences, which are trivial in nature, but avoid a change from the present practice for the sake of change only.

Ind AS-1 (and IAS-1) requires companies to disclose, among other things, sources of estimation uncertainty and information on the capital structure that enables users of its financial statements to evaluate the entity’s objectives, policies and processes for managing capital. Both the information will be very useful to both investors and creditors. Information on estimation uncertainty will help analysts to formulate their judgement on how to build those uncertainties in the valuation model. Information on capital will help analysts to estimate the target capital structure, which is used to estimate the discount rate. Discount rate is an important variable in DCF valuation models.

Ind-AS -1 will definitely improve the informative value of financial statements without creating undue hardship to entities.

Source: Economic Times

Thanks and Regards,
Sanchari Sinha,
Intern at DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Credit-deposit growth gap narrows

Higher deposit growth, owing to attractive interest rates and a slower pace of loan disbursements, led to narrowing of the gap between credit-deposit growths. If the trend continues, banks’ liquidity would improve, facilitating the easy pass-through of the government’s borrowing programme, without stoking yields.

Despite advance tax payments resulting in a dip in bank deposits in the fortnight ended June 17, the growth rate, at 18.2 per cent, was marginally higher compared to the year-ago period. The central bank had estimated banks’ deposit growth at 17 per cent in 2011-12. The growth in bank advances continued to decline, with an annual growth rate of 20.7 per cent as on June 17.

The difference in the credit-deposit growths has narrowed to 2.5 percentage points from eight percentage points in December 2010. Economists at Nomura expect this trend to continue. “The widening gap between inflows (deposits) and outflows (credit) bodes well for banking system liquidity,” said Sonal Varma and Aman Mohunta, economists, Nomura. Banks would not need to raise funds through high-cost deposits if the liquidity improved, they added.

Another outcome of improved liquidity would be a higher demand for government securities. “Given the moderation in credit growth, banks may be forced to deploy higher incremental funds in government securities, thereby keeping the demand for bonds high and positively impacting the bond market,” said Deepali Bhargava, economist, ING Vysya Bank. The yield on the 10-year benchmark government bond has hardened by about 50 basis points since April. Today, the yields closed at 8.31 per cent, compared with Tuesday's close of 8.28 per cent.

Source: Business Standard

Thanks and Regards,
Sanchari Sinha,
Intern ar DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Stocks, euro hit 3-week highs on Greek vote hopes

World stocks and the euro hit three-week highs on Thursday after Greece took a step closer to avoiding a default in the short-term.

Greece's parliament is set to approve a final austerity bill needed to secure 12 billion euros ($17 billion) of international aid later in the day after Wednesday's success in passing the first hurdle.

Athens's latest efforts helped remove some near-term uncertainty in the market, offering some respite to a quarter when global equities and commodities suffered losses.

Concerns that the U.S. and Chinese economies are slowing also weighed on financial markets this quarter, with world stocks measured by the MSCI All-Country World Index .MIWD00000PUS down 1.2 percent in April-June -- on track for the benchmark's first quarterly loss in a year.

U.S. Treasuries, however, were boosted by the uncertainty despite the Federal Reserve's plan to end its bond buying program. Yields on 10-year U.S. Treasuries have fallen about 38 basis points so far this quarter.

On Thursday, the MSCI All-Country World Index advanced 0.6 percent. In Asia, Japan's Nikkei average .N225 ended 0.2 percent higher on the day to post a 0.6 percent rise for the second quarter after losing 4.6 percent in January-March.

Investors, however, will be closely watching whether Greece can successfully implement those harsh and unpopular austerity steps.

"The main focus will shift to the implementation of the austerity plan and whether Greece is reaching its target," RBS said in a note.

"It is likely that Greece will not meet the very strict austerity budget and reform targets and so the markets will be focused on how Greece reacts to the very likely demands for remedial measures at some point -- with eyes then obviously on the quarterly IMF review, next due in September and December."

Europe's FTSEurofirst 300 index .FTEU3 added 0.3 percent on Thursday after surging 1.7 percent the previous session, while Greece's share benchmark .ATG put on 0.8 percent and the Thomson Reuters Peripheral Eurozone index .TRXFLDPIPU gained 1.3 percent.

"Greece is just avoiding one default, it is going to be difficult to sell-off (state-owned) assets and the public is against what the government is doing and sometime down the line that has got to come to a head," said Will Hedden, sales trader at IG Index in London.

Reflecting such concerns in the markets, Greece's 10-year government bond yields rose 30.8 basis points to 16.852 percent, though they were off their peak of 18.90 percent hit two weeks ago.

Yields on Portugal's 10-year government bonds added 2.8 basis points to 12.373 percent.

FIRM EURO

"In the short term, at least, a Greece default is unlikely, and this is positive for the euro and also other risky assets," said You-Na Park, currency strategist at Commerzbank in Frankfurt.

"In the course of the next week or so, a second aid package should be decided, so there is room for the euro to rise more."

The euro was up 0.4 percent at $1.4506 and has risen 2.3 percent so far this quarter, taking its first half gain to more than 8 percent, boosted by the euro zone's interest rates outlook differential to the United States.

European Central Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet scotched speculation on Thursday that the bank may delay interest rate rises because of Greece's plight and the contagion threat it poses.

The ECB is expected to raise interest rates next week from the current 1.25 percent.

The dollar .DXY fell 0.4 percent against a basket of currencies.

Boosted by the Greek vote and a soft dollar, copper prices put on 0.6 percent, though the metal is down 0.8 percent so far in the second quarter.

Gold eased 0.2 percent to trade above $1,500 an ounce, hurt by some improvement in sentiment, though the precious metal is up 5.5 this quarter, on track for its 11th straight quarter of gains.

Brent crude held steady at above $112 a barrel after three straight session of rise. Brent crude is down 4.4 percent this quarter, on track for its first quarterly loss in a year.

Source: www.reuters.com

Ravi Jhawar
Summer Intern-Technical Analyst
DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

As QE2 ends, market debates Fed's next move

The Federal Reserve ends its $600 billion bond-buying program, known as QE2, on Thursday and has yet to offer any hints of more monetary easing to come.

That hasn't stopped investors from wondering what new tricks the central bank may have in its repertoire should the U.S. economy's struggles continue in the second half of 2011.

Bill Gross, manager of PIMCO, the world's largest bond fund, said last week the Fed may signal as soon as August that it stands ready to print more money if the economy worsens and recession starts looking like a real possibility.

"I'm surprised at how quickly talk has turned to QE3. It began even before QE2 had ended," said Gregory Whiteley, who manages the government debt portfolio at DoubleLine Capital, a Los Angeles-based fund with some $12 billion in assets.

"But it's a bit like automakers who offer incentives to buy. People get hooked on them, and before one program ends, they're thinking about when the next one will come along."

Not everyone thinks the Fed will act quite so quickly. Including QE2, the central bank's unprecedented policies in recent years have pumped $2.3 trillion into the financial system.

After a recent run of weak economic data, Fed chief Ben Bernanke said last week that "a little bit of time to see what happens would be useful" before taking more policy decisions.

In a Reuters poll of 24 fixed income strategists this month, the median probability of QE3 was 20 percent. A poll of 46 economists in May had even longer odds of 15 percent.

But timing for the Fed has not been ideal. The end of QE2 comes just as the U.S. economy is losing steam. Growth slowed sharply in the first quarter and data has yet to signal a quick recovery. The jobless rate remains above 9 percent.

"Part of the Fed's mandate is to support full employment, so they will have to stay involved," said Quincy Krosby, investment strategist at Prudential Financial, with $859 billion in assets. "They will have to get more imaginative."

GRADING QE2

How the Fed would do that depends largely on whether one thinks QE2 and all its side effects were worth the trouble.

The policy was launched late last year to keep a fragile U.S. economy that had just endured the worst recession since World War II from falling back into recession.

The risks at the time were real. Recovery had stalled, prices were falling, the jobless rate was rising and stocks had gone into a multi-month swoon.

"QE2 was an extraordinary policy tool designed to stave off deflation and it has clearly worked," said Alan Wilde, who helps manage $50 billion at Baring Asset Management in London.

"I'm surprised central bankers have not tried to take more credit for getting some inflation back into the system. They should be shouting this from the rooftops."

But while all that cheap money sparked a stock market rally -- the benchmark S&P 500 is up some 25 percent since August 26, 2010, the day before Bernanke hinted QE2 was coming -- it also helped boost oil prices, which hurt consumers and did little to encourage job growth or revive a moribund housing market.

It weakened the dollar, which makes U.S. exports cheaper and theoretically helps growth. But that has stoked inflation abroad and, some say, threatens to raise U.S. prices as well.

Greg Michalowski, chief currency analyst at FXDD, said the mixed results may make the Fed think twice about another round.

"I think maybe one of the reasons why they're not doing QE3 is because, well, you know, (QE2) didn't work." he said. "Oil prices went up. Money went into speculative things. It (hasn't) gone to lending. It's going to speculation."

Source: www.bloomberg.com

Ravi Jhawar
Summer Intern-Technical Analyst
DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Aditya Birla Nuvo expects to hit $10 billion by 2015

Aditya Birla Nuvo Ltd (ABNL), part of the $30 billion (Rs.1.3 trillion) textile-to-telecom Aditya Birla Group, expects to more than double revenue over the next three years to $10 billion as several businesses that it has incubated have matured and are poised for growth.

The $4 billion enterprise, which has in its portfolio businesses as diverse as financial services, manufacturing, telecom, fashion and back-office processing, expects to reach this figure by 2015, contributing to chairman Kumar Mangalam Birla’s vision of clocking $65 billion revenue for his group.

“We grew from $3 billion to $4 billion in the last fiscal and the growth is more than 20% but it’s still the tip of the iceberg in terms of unlocking the real value,” managing director Rakesh Jain said in a recent interview. An employee of GE for two decades, Jain has been inspired by his previous employer in building the ABNL business model.

Despite the consistent rise in revenue, ABNL posted a Rs.430.52 crore loss in the fiscal ended March 2009 in the wake of the global financial crisis. It made a profit of Rs.84 crore in the next year, rising ninefold to Rs.752 crore in the fiscal ended March.

The turnaround over the past eight quarters was three-pronged, led by the commercial success of its financial services, apparel and business process outsourcing businesses.

“Aditya Birla Nuvo today is like a mirror image of India’s growing economy,” Jain said. “Our growth drivers will be very similar to India’s growing sectors like infrastructure, financial sector inclusion, telecom with value-added services like data and video, fashion and lifestyle, knowledge process outsourcing and the agri sector.”

He sees each of the incubator’s various businesses growing to a billion dollars or more, organically and inorganically, and becoming a leader in its market segment.

The outsourcing and the carbon black business have the potential to clock a billion dollars in revenue annually in a few years time, said Santanu Chakrabarti, an analyst who tracks ABNL for India Infoline Ltd. But there are headwinds in the insurance and telecom sectors.

“As the biggest value drivers of Aditya Birla Nuvo’s business, these two will be the most important movers of its destiny,” he said. “So, if we see an improvement in the larger markets in which these operate, then strong growth in both revenues and profitability is possible.”

The only listed entity in its portfolio, Idea Cellular Ltd, has seen a near 47% erosion in its market capitalization since January 2008, during which time the benchmark Sensex has dropped about 14%, despite a rise in revenue. The sector has seen intense competition, with several new entrants cannibalizing profit by cutting down tariffs.

ABNL holds a 25.35% stake in Idea, a late entrant into the world’s second largest mobile market by customers.

Biswajit Subramanian, managing director of Providence Equity Advisors India Pvt. Ltd, which owns a 9.99% stake in Idea Cellular, said although the company was doing well operationally, the stock price had unexpectedly taken a hit due to competition—something that wasn’t factored in when the fund made its investment in October 2006.

“What we didn’t expect was that so many new players would be introduced,” Subramanian said in an interview last week. “What we hope is that when the new telecom policy comes in there will be more sanity in the sector and the sector over-capacity will go away.”

Jain expects that the next couple of years are when the parent will reap the benefits of remaining patient with Idea Cellular during the tough years.

Since launching mobile number portability services in late November, Idea’s subscriber share in the wireless market has risen slightly to 11.12% in April 2011—the latest data available—from 10.80% in November 2010.

Idea Cellular also has a 16% stake in Indus Towers Ltd—a mobile phone tower joint venture with Bharti and Vodafone launched in December 2007— which currently has about 110,000 towers.

Jain said that there were no immediate plans to unlock value from the stake in Indus Towers but expects Idea to make more money for its parent over the next two to three years.

Financial services, dominated mostly by the insurance business but now expanding across the rest of the space, is the largest chunk of the company’s operations by revenue. The life insurance business, which contributed nearly a third of revenue in the last fiscal, finally turned earnings before interest and taxes (Ebit) positive in the last fiscal after being incubated for a decade.

“It still needs a lot of capital but you need to look at further growth,” Jain said. “We continue to look at how we can further incubate the non-banking financial company, private equity and our ambition and hope is that the government will come up with clarity on the banking licence.”

The Reserve Bank of India has drafted guidelines on granting new banking licences for the first time in seven years but is now in the process of fine tuning these with the finance ministry.

On the consumption side is fashion apparel business—Madura Fashion and Lifestyle— acquired from Madura Coats. in 1999, primarily as a contract manufacturer for western labels but that has since shifted focus to the India growth story. The local apparel market is tipped to grow from $26 billion in 2009 to $37 billion by 2014, according to a study by Crisil.

Driving growth are four brands—Peter England, Allen Solly, Van Heusen and Louis Philippe—each catering to different income groups, coupled with a recent entry into men’s formal shoes. It also has a distribution tie-up with American lifestyle brand Espirit and also retails some other international brands. Revenue in the last fiscal grew 45% to Rs.1,809 crore, while earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (Ebitda) swung to Rs.137 crore from a loss of Rs.4 crore in the previous year, even as like-to-like store sales—a key measure of volume— rose 30%.

“As a company I see it as more than a couple of billion dollars in the next five years,” Jain said. “We’re slowly transferring from export to domestic market. When the market in India is going to grow, why only be a contract manufacturer where the margins are razor thin.”

This strategy makes sense, according to Arvind Singhal, chairman of Technopak Advisors Pvt. Ltd, a consultancy firm that focuses on retail.

“The company is built on good systems, processes and values, has reached a level of maturity to grow rapidly with the financial backing of the Aditya Birla Group,” he said. “Along with Arvind Brands, it is the best positioned to be a leader in the Indian apparel space.”

In the agricultural sector, Indo Gulf Fertilizers is expanding across the chain from urea to seeds to pesticides. Part of the strategy is to move up the value chain with branding.

“Even if it’s a commodity you’re selling, if you add value, it means you understand the customer’s needs and the customer’s customers’ needs, which is very important,” Jain said.

Another reason to be bullish about the business is the location of its urea plant, currently operating at full capacity utilization. The factory is in Jagdishpur in the middle of the Gangetic plains, serving the markets of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal, which together account for 35-40% of urea consumption in India.

“As soon as that sector frees up (from regulations) it has a lot of potential to not only double the capacity but do much more than that because in that region there is huge potential and limited supply,” Jain said.

On the manufacturing side, the company is the world’s largest producer of carbon black with a 37% domestic market share. Catering mainly to the tyre industry, carbon black is used as a pigment and reinforcement in rubber and plastic products.

It has plants at Renukoot in Uttar Pradesh and Gummidipoondi in Tamil Nadu, apart from units in Egypt, China and Thailand. Besides expanding capacity at Patalganga last year, it acquired Atlanta-based Columbian Chemicals Co. in January for $875 million, giving it access to the North and South American markets. The company has no plans to sell shares in individual businesses, Jain said.

“GE didn’t list all its units. For 20 years, the sum of the parts was higher than individual parts. It (ABNL) may currently look very diversified with (disparate) businesses but that’s the beauty of it,” he said. “Do we need to list for the sake of listing? I don’t think so. If we have a strong balance sheet, we don’t need to list.”

This is part of a deliberate strategy, based again on what GE did by making its own balance sheet strong with contributions from the industrial side of the business that gave its debt an AAA rating. This allowed it to raise money at very competitive rates.

“There are several companies like Hewlett-Packard and IBM that follow this approach of a constant growth strategy that’s nurtured by new business initiatives supported by organic or inorganic growth or a mixture of the two,” said Sunny Mukherjea, head, performance and technology, for global consultants KPMG. Still, after eight quarters of consistent growth, Jain is concerned that the business is “highly undervalued”.

“Before 2009, it was still struggling in terms of the balance sheet, higher leverage, and each of the businesses was smaller. But now, most businesses are standing on their own without any support and the only capital required is capex for individual growth,” he said.

A foreign brokerage, which recently initiated coverage on the company with a target price of Rs.950, has a 30% “conglomerate discount” on the stock. This refers to the tendency of the stock market to undervalue the shares of such businesses.

It arises from the sum-of-parts valuation and is the reason why many conglomerates divest subsidiary holdings. The discount is calculated by adding up estimates of the intrinsic value of each business in a conglomerate and subtracting the market capitalization.

On Wednesday, ABNL’s shares gained 0.58% to Rs.898.30 on the Bombay Stock Exchange. The benchmark Sensex rose 1.09%.

Even as ABNL’s various units succeed in their respective fields, “my biggest challenge is to effectively balance our portfolio”, Jain said. “How do I continue to ensure that there is proper balance, close enough to a similar ratio because it’s a mirror of the Indian economy?”

KPMG’s Mukherjea said this will involve combining the best of Indian and overseas practices.

“Marrying the nimbleness and urgency of growth of an Indian organization along with infusing a degree of maturity in managing growth will be key,” said Mukherjea. “The three main factors are smart people managing the business, a focus on innovation and a governance model that works with the right processes, methodologies and matrices.”


Source:-

http://www.livemint.com/2011/06/29201149/Aditya-Birla-Nuvo-expects-to-h.html?atype=tp


Thanks
Ankit Wani
Intern @ DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

ICICI Prudential FMP Series 57 - 1 Year Plan C

We are pleased to launch ICICI Prudential FMP Series 57 - 1 Year Plan C with following features:



Please click on the image for better view.

Thanks & Regards,
Monindro Saha
Summer Intern @ DENIP Consultants Pvt Ltd.

FMP details as on 30th June 2011

Please find below FMP details as on 30th June 2011.





Note: Kindly click the image above for better view


Thanks
Ankit Wani
Intern @ DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Retail investors should be allowed to tag along when promoters exit at high prices.

For public shareholders, the takeover code has to deliver on two key promises: price that is better than what is available in the stock market and/or a full exit, which may not be possible due to poor liquidity in the stock market. As the Takeover Regulatory Advisory Committee (Trac) addressed both these issues, the Trac recommendations were widely welcomed by the financial community. Investors have been disappointed by the delay in implementation of Trac recommendations, but it now appears that there is light at the end of the tunnel.

According to the Trac report, about 80% of the 395 open offers during 2006-10 were only for the mandatory minimum 20% of the company's equity. Over 40% of these open offers were in companies where the shares were poorly traded: i.e., where public shareholders were stuck and could not have exited easily. However, only in 42 transactions was there over-acceptance, i.e., public shareholders were rushing to exit. In all other transactions, public shareholders found the offer price unattractive or wanted to stay invested.

Data is not available on how many open offers were the result of preferential allotment to private equity (PE) funds. Often, when PE funds acquire significant shareholding through preferential allotment to finance growth projects, stock prices climb significantly above the mandatory offer price after the company announces the transaction.

In most takeover regimes, when the mandatory offer price is below market price, it would be possible to call a shareholder meeting that would waive the open offer (whitewash waiver). However, domestic takeover regulation does not allow whitewash waivers, and the funds have no choice but to make offers, incurring significant expenses to buy a few thousand shares from uninformed investors who should have known better.

The primary purpose of the takeover code is to promote the interests of public shareholders during takeovers. However, under the pretext of promoting takeover activity, the Indian takeover regime has compromised public shareholder interests and benefited the promoters. Allowing promoters to cut sweetheart deals where they get a 100% exit while minority investors get neither the same price nor 100% exit undermines the integrity of fair market.

The purpose of the code isbest served by providing a tag-along right enabling minority investors access promoters' sweetheart deals to sell all at prices available to promoters. As the Trac points out, the current code has led to a large number of unattractive open offers. Mandating open offers that would have secured whitewash waivers is a waste of time and money.

Unlike the US, where shareholding is dispersed, shareholding is concentrated in India, similar to the way it is in Europe. Given that promoter families owning significant 'control' blocks is a situation similar to that in European companies, Indian regulation is evolving in the direction of European rules. Trac proposals are modelled on European regime: open offer threshold to increase from 15% to 25% and minority investors to have 100% access to promoters' sweetheart deals.

While the proposals are far-reaching, Trac recommendation to raise the open offer to 100% without providing for whitewash waivers has turned out to be unfortunate. The promoter lobby that was unable to persuade the Trac has now got sympathy from North Block officials. There are two points of contention: financing requirement for 100% open offers and whether public should get price parity with promoters.


Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/policy/retail-investors-should-be-allowed-to-tag-along-when-promoters-exit-at-high-prices/articleshow/9045684.cms

Thanks & Regards,
Monindro Saha
Summer Intern @ Denip Consultants Pvt Ltd.

Government may approve benami property act changes today to fight against black money

The union cabinet is expected to approve amendments to the law on benami property law on Thursday to demonstrate its seriousness in fighting the menace of black money. The amendments to the Benami Transaction (Prohibition Act) will give the government the power to confiscate any property that is declared as benami, or held in the name of a person who has not paid the consideration for the property.

Although the Parliament had passed a law in 1988 prohibiting benami deals , it was never implemented, as the rules were not framed. The government had accelerated the process of framing rules to tighten the provisions in the old legislation after facing outcry over the issue form various quarters. It is believed that a substantial portion of the black money generated is parked in real estate in the names of friends and family.

The new law will set up an authority and empower it to confiscate an asset deemed to be benami if the owner fails to provide proven source of earning to acquire that property. The old law had also provided for setting up such an authority, but it was never notified. Under the new law the government will seize benami property, auction them and pass on the proceeds to states, where the property is located, for development activities. The act will also make it mandatory for all property deeds to be verified by a CA.

"This will reduce black money and boost government revenue and requirement for a mandatory audit will make it simpler for the authorities to keep track of deals," an official said. Benami transactions are primarily prevalent in the real estate sector, but the 2G scam has revealed that the possibilities exist in other sector as well. Some of the companies that received telecom licenses in 2008 were actually doing so for other undisclosed companies.


Source:- http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/real-estate/news-/government-may-approve-benami-property-act-changes-today-to-fight-against-black-money/articleshow/9045436.cms

Thanks
Ankit Wani
Intern @ DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

NSE gets Sebi nod to launch S&P 500, Dow Jones futures

The National Stock Exchange (NSE) has got regulatory approval to launch futures contracts on benchmark US indices S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), paving the way for Indian investors to bet on the world’s most influential stock market.

India’s leading stock exchange also plans to seek approval from the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) to launch options contracts on these two US indices.

Source: Business Standard

Thanks and Regards,
Sanchari Sinha,
Intern at DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

ICICI Prudential MF launches Visa debit card payment service

ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund has launched Visa debit card transactions facility for its investors.

This feature will provide easy accessibility to investors by facilitating mutual fund purchase on their website through Visa debit cards, a company statement said.

ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund plans to introduce Visa PoS (Point of sales) terminals in seven cities including Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata, Bangalore, Pune and Ahmedabad offering investors the convenience of purchasing mutual fund schemes by swiping their Visa Debit card, the release said.

ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund has enabled this unique facility for investors across India in association with the ICICI Merchant Services powered by First Data across 40 banks.

Source: Economic Times

Thanks and Regards,
Sanchari Sinha,
Intern at DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Sensex ends above 18400; ONGC, M&M, Maruti gain

Indian markets extended gains for third straight session and closed above intermediate resistance levels on the back of sharp gains in oil&gas space. Sentiments in the sector turned positive after the Empowered Group of Ministers hiked diesel prices by Rs 3 per litre, kerosene by Rs 2 per litre and LPG by Rs 50 per cylinder. The decline in global crude oil prices also provided support.

"What the government did, day before yesterday, in terms of both hiking prices as well as removing the customs duty and reducing the excise duty on petrol, diesel and other oil products, was a good step. Circumstances have also been a little fortunate for us because the IEA is releasing 60 million barrels of oil. Oil prices have also corrected by something like $6-7, which means good news for us. If oil comes down to something like $95 a barrel, a large part of the under-recoveries will go," said Sashi Krishnan, CIO, Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance to ET Now.

Bombay Stock Exchange's Sensex ended at 18409.32, up 168.64 points or 0.92 per cent. The 30-share index touched a high of 18494.11 and low of 18132.70 in trade today.

National Stock Exchange's Nifty closed at 5529.90, up 58.65 points or 1.07 per cent. The broader index touched a high of 5552.65 and low of 5434.25 intraday.

BSE Midcap Index was up 0.80 per cent and BSE Smallcap Index moved 0.78 per cent higher.

BSE Capital Goods Index was up 1.75 per cent, BSE Bankex gained 1.60 per cent, BSE Auto Index moved 1.50 per cent higher and BSE Oil&gas Index advanced 1.31 per cent.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch has raised its target price on state-run oil marketing companies Indian Oil, Hindustan Petroleum and Bharat Petroleum. HPCL target price is increased to Rs 500 from Rs 441 per share, Oil India to Rs 1,756 from Rs 1,583, while BPCL's target price was raised to Rs 739 Rs 650.

Citigroup has said that the price hikes were well ahead of its expectations and upgraded state-run oil marketing companies including Indian Oil Corp , Hindustan Petroleum Corporation , Bharat Petroleum Corporation and Oil India to "buy" citing these companies stand out as clear near-term beneficiaries due to the sharply reduced under-recovery burden.

ONGC (4.11%), M&M (3.21%), Maruti (2.93%), Larsen & Toubro (2.70%) and SBI (1.63%) were the major Sensex gainers.

Reliance Infrastructure (-1.22%), DLF (-0.95%), Hero Honda (-0.70%), ITC (-0.64%) and Wipro (-0.34%) were the top index losers.

Market breadth was positive on the BSE with 1641 gainers against 1185 losers.

(All figures are provisional)

Source: Economic Times

Thanks and Regards,
Sanchari Sinha,
Intern at DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Government puts ceiling of $10 bn on QFIs investments

The government has put a ceiling of $10 bn on overall investments by qualified foreign investors, which will include individuals and bodies such as pension funds, in domestic mutual funds.

The move comes after the Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee in his budget speech for 2011-12 had said that the government will liberalise the portfolio investment route and registered mutual funds will be allowed to accept subscriptions from foreign investors.

"This class of investor called Qualified Foreign Investors (QFIs) but not Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) can invest money into domestic mutual funds through Unit Confirmation Receipts (UCR) or Depository Participant (DPs) route," said Thomas Mathew , joint secretary (capital markets) in the Finance Ministry. The government may review the ceiling of $10bn depending on the response, added Mathew.

At present only FIIs and sub-accounts registered with the market regulator SEBI and NRIs are allowed to invest in mutual fund schemes in the country. Market regulator, Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) will regulate all investments made by QFIs under both routes and will issue necessary notification and framework by August 1.
"Only KYC (know-your-customer) compliant retail foreign investors would be allowed to invest and the DPs will ensure proper KYC of QFIs as per the norms prescribed by SEBI," said Mathew, adding that mutual funds would also undertake KYC of QFIs.

As per the new guidelines one QFI can open one account in one of the qualified DPs and only QFIs from jurisdictions which are FATF (Financial Action Task Force) compliant would be eligible to invest in the MFs under the scheme. The minimum paid up capital requirement will be Rs 50 crore for DPs looking to open demat accounts of QFIs.

The average assets managed by the Mutual Fund industry, consisting of 40 players, stood at Rs 7,00,538 crore as of March 31, 2011. The government is of view that since it is going to be retail investment, the move will help in moderating volatility in the capital market.

"Adequate marketing will be required to generate interest among retail investors. It will be interesting to see how pension funds will look at this avenue," said an asset manager with a leading Mutual Fund.

Source: Economic Times

Thanks snd Regards,
Sanchari Sinha,
Intern at DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

All about deductibles in insurance plans

'Deductibles' is a word that appears in many medical insurance policies . In some policy wordings it appears as 'excess'.

In an insurance policy, a deductible is the portion of any claim that is not payable by the insurance company. It is generally quoted in fixed terms. For example, you may have seen an overseas travel insurance policy stating that in case of loss of passport the insured will get $500, subject to deductible of $50. So, if the policyholder's passport is lost and the loss assessment process conducted by insurer arrives at a loss of $250, the insurer will pay $200. Put simply, the maximum an insurer will pay for a loss of passport is $500, provided the policyholder pays the first $50 towards the loss.

In a typical general insurance policy insuring car, home, health or overseas travel, a deductible clause will be applicable to claims arising from damage to or loss of the policyholder. The deductible applies irrespective of the cause and with no bearing on whether the policyholder is responsible for such a loss. As a rule, higher the amount of deductible, lower the premium and the other way round.

Third party covers, however, do not have a deductible clause. Third party covers offer protection to the policyholder up to a sum assured for the harm or loss he causes to a person other than himself. For example, a person is held liable to pay for the loss caused by him if while driving, he happens to dash other person's car. An individual who has met with an accident or suffered due to a wrongful act of others typically tries to recover any loss, no matter how small, and the policyholder is liable to pay in such cases. This is the main reason why there is no deductible in third party covers.


Source: Economic Times

Thanks and Regards,
Sanchari Sinha,
Intern at DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

BSE Sensex at 2-month closing high; rise for 5th day

The BSE Sensex rose for a fifth straight session on Wednesday, to its highest close in nearly two months, riding on world markets which gained on expectations that Greece will ward off bankruptcy and avert the euro zone's first sovereign default.

But dealers believe that the rally has no legs and see the gains as temporary, as worries over India's inflation and rising interest rates continue to plague the outlook.

Financials led the gains, in an attempt to catch up after a poor performance this year. The sector index firmed 0.9 percent, but is still down 5.4 percent year to date.

The 30-share BSE index gained 1.09 percent, or 201.41 points at 18,693.86, its highest close since May 2, with 22 of its components gaining ground.

The benchmark had gained more than 5 percent in the previous four sessions on short-covering and buying to boost portfolio values before the quarter draws to a close.

"Market is rising on hopes Greece will have a solution to its woes soon," said Nilesh Doshi, president of equities at brokerage Techno Shares.

Foreign funds bought around $732 million of shares in three sessions to Monday, latest data from the market regulator showed, after dumping $688 million over the previous nine days.

"It is not a new bull trend. It can remain rangebound for a while. Big gains are ruled out due to our domestic issues," said Doshi.

Persistently high inflation and slowing economic growth have deterred investors from pumping money this year into India -- one of the most preferred investment destinations until recently.

"The economy is slowing down, and there is nothing that can turn around the economy overnight," said Doshi.

The index is down nearly 9 percent so far in 2011, making it one of the world's worst performers.

Greece's parliament looked increasingly likely to approve an unpopular austerity measures on Wednesday, despite violent protests, to secure international funds to prevent a sovereign default of the country.

Top lender State Bank of India firmed 1.6 percent, while rivals ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank rose 0.4 percent and 2.7 percent respectively.

Mortgage lender Housing Development Finance Corp gained 0.9 percent.

Cigarette-to-hotels firm ITC firmed 2.9 percent on optimism over the outlook of its non-cigarette businesses, dealers said.

Export-driven software companies rose, lifting the sector index 0.7 percent and trimming the year-to-date loss to 12.3 percent.

Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys and Wipro firmed between 0.4 percent and 1.4 percent.

The 50-share NSE index gained nearly 1 percent to 5,600.45 points.

Advancing shares outnumbered declining ones in the ratio of 1.9 to 1 on the NSE. Around 631 million shares changed hands on the exchange, higher than its 5-day daily average volume of 603 million shares.

The MSCI all-country world stock index gained 0.7 percent by 1017 GMT, while the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares rose 1.4 percent.

STOCKS THAT MOVED

* Sugar producers such as Shree Renuka Sugars, Dhampur Sugar Mills and Bajaj Hindusthan gained between 4.4 and 7.9 percent.

India's sugar futures rose to their highest level in more than a month on lower supplies for July and the government's decision to allow exports of 500,000 tonnes in the current season, traders said.

Welspun Corp rose 2.9 percent to 174 rupees, after it said private equity fund Apollo Global Management LLC will invest about $500 million in the Indian steel pipe manufacturer Welspun group.

TOP 3 MAIN STOCKS BY VOLUME ON NSE

* Lanco Infratech on 33.9 million shares

* KS Oils on 23 million shares

* Unitech on 19.6 million shares

Source: in.reuters.com

Ravi Jhawar
Summer Intern-Technical Analyst
DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Trichet Urges New Vision for Europe

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet urged policy makers to revitalize the vision of an integrated Europe.
“These days, ‘Europe’ and the benefits it brings have come to be taken for granted,” Trichet said in a speech in Brussels last night, according to a text provided by the ECB. “Thanks to the success of European integration, the threat of war has become a memory of the past for many Europeans, in particular the younger generation. This makes it all the more urgent to develop a renewed vision of the kind of Europe we want and indeed need -- a vision that is easily understood and shared among European Union citizens.”
Trichet spoke just hours after police fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators in Athens as Greek lawmakers prepared to vote on austerity measures aimed at averting the euro area’s first sovereign default. Greece’s debt crisis is threatening to undermine the euro, Europe’s common currency now shared by 17 nations.
“Each generation needs to affirm its commitment to Europe,” Trichet said. “Revitalizing Europe means” ensuring that “the burdens of today’s adjustments are not shifted onto future generations.”
Trichet said the euro has enriched Europe by reducing companies’ transaction and hedging costs, boosting trade and creating over 14 million jobs since its 1999 launch.

The ‘E’ in EMU
He praised the ECB’s record on inflation, saying no other major central bank among euro-area countries had been so successful in the past 50 years.
“The ECB has a clear assignment: to deliver price stability, which is defined as an annual inflation rate below but close to 2 percent over the medium term,” Trichet said. “And over the 12 years since the launch of the Economic and Monetary Union, the average annual inflation rate in the euro area has been 1.97 percent. It is the ‘E’ of the EMU where progress is needed.”
He called on governments to improve economic governance and strengthen rules to prevent unsound policies.

“In the short-term, we have to tackle the most urgent issues by implementing the structural adjustment programs that are currently underway,” Trichet said.
For the longer term, he referred to a proposal he made earlier this month for the establishment of a euro-area finance ministry

Source: www.bloomberg.com

Ravi Jhawar
Summer Intern-Technical Analyst
DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Tata, SAIL JV to set up Rs 200 cr coal washery in Jharkhand

Tata Steel and SAIL's equal joint venture, S&T Mining Company, will set up a 1.8 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) coal washery at Bhelatand, in Jharkhand, through an investment of Rs 200 crore.
S&T Mining Company was formed with the ambit of joint acquisition and development of mineral deposits and mining of minerals, including exploration, development and beneficiation of identified coking coal blocks.

Washed coal has higher calorific value than unwashed coal and helps improved power generation efficiencies.

A source close to the development said a detailed project report has also been prepared for the proposed washery.

The SAIL-Tata Steel joint venture had earlier proposed to set up the washery at Malkera, but was forced to shift the site to Bhelatand because of the high investment cost.

S&T Mining Company was exploring the possibility of installing a 1.5-mtpa coal washery at a Rs 196 crore investment. The Terms of Reference for an environmental study on the potential impact of the project were also received from the Ministry of Environment and Forests.

Coal is washed to reduce the ash content and improve its calorific value. The average ash content in Indian coal is 35-38 per cent and washing helps reduce it by 7-8 per cent.

S&T Mining Company has also submitted a tender to Bharat Coking Coal for setting up a coal washery at Dugda.

The joint venture company is attempting to acquire and develop coal assets in India. It has been short-listed among 10 parties by Coal India for reviving the Navratna firm's abandoned coal mines.

It is also making attempts to develop Bharat Coking Coal's Bhutgoria mine. An investment of Rs 42 crore for development of the mine has been approved by the SAIL Board.

India does not have enough reserves of coking coal in qualities required for iron and steel making. Only 30 per cent of SAIL's requirement is met from indigenous sources and the remaining 70 per cent is met through imports.

State-run Coal India (CIL) recently said it plans to invest around Rs 2,500 crore to set up 20 new coal washeries with a combined capacity of 111.10 million tonnes to unlock the value of its sizeable, but poor quality reserves in the country.

CIL currently operates 17 coal washeries, out of which 11 are coking coal washeries and six are non-coking coal, with a total capacity of 39.40 MTPA.


Source:- http://www.financialexpress.com/news/tata-sail-jv-to-set-up-rs-200-cr-coal-washery-in-jharkhand/808884/0

Thanks
Ankit Wani
Intern @ DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

GSPC, Adani hike prices of CNG

State run oil and gas PSU Gujarat State Petroleum Corporation (GSPC) hiked the price of compressed natural gas (CNG) by Rs 3.25 per kg, impacting industry and households in the state.
“The hike of Rs 3.25 per kg in CNG prices comes into effect from today. CNG shall now be available at Rs 40.25 per kg at our 110 gas stations across Gujarat," a GSPC official said.

Earlier in May, the state PSU had raised prices of CNG from Rs 34.45 per kg to Rs 37 per kg, citing non-allocation of gas by the Centre from KG-D6 reserves as the reason for hike.

In the past one year, CNG prices in Gujarat have risen by over 35 per cent, industry sources said. Another city gas distributor (CGD), Adani Gas, that has operations in Ahmedabad and Vadodara, has also raised the prices of natural gas.

“Adani gas has hiked the price of CNG by Rs 2.50 per kg taking the price of natural to Rs 40.50 per kg. The hike comes into effect from today,” a top company official said.

“The company operates with a network of 54 CNG stations, 47 in Ahmedabad and seven in Vadodara,” he said.

GSPC is among the seven city gas distributors along with Gujarat Gas Company, Adani Gas Limited, Charotar Gas Sahkari Mandli, Sabarmati Gas, Vadodara Municipal Corporation, HPCL (has CNG stations only), operating in Gujarat.

Source:- http://www.financialexpress.com/news/gspc-adani-hike-prices-of-cng/809426/0


Thanks
Ankit Wani
Intern @ DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd.

Get insured early, it will save you big bucks and ensure peace of mind

How many of you have received a call from an insurance company or an agent trying to sell you a policy? I am sure that every professional in their 20s or early 30s would have received such a call. But have you ever stopped and thought whether you have adequate insurance cover, especially if you are a young working professional with financial liabilities? In most cases, I would assume the answer is a big 'No'. Insurance in the early years of professional life may sound a waste of money when other lifestyle and personal expenses take priority.


 

Young professionals today, anywhere in their 20s or early 30s, are financially independent. Many manage their own finances and investments like paying off education loans, buying own cars and investing in property - mostly first homes. The last decade has also seen a major shift in the lifestyle of young professionals with more working hours, higher stress levels and an alarming rise of related lifestyle diseases like diabetes, obesity and cholesterol. In such a scenario, insuring oneself becomes as essential as other expenses.


 

Additionally, many of these young people provide financial support to their families, either partially or totally. In such a scenario, life insurance as well as health insurance is absolutely critical so that in case of any unfortunate event like an accident or a sudden demise, the family doesn't go through a financial trauma as well. Even if one is not contributing towards family income, a health cover or a rider is a must so that in time of need, the cost of treatment is covered and the family doesn't face a financial setback.


 

There are various insurance options young professionals can choose from, depending on their needs. From retirement, health to pure protection - there is an insurance cover for all of these. It is advisable to invest earlier than later in insurance products - for example, if you are investing for retirement, the earlier you begin investing, larger the corpus would be on maturity. Term insurance is pure insurance and is very cost-effective. A term plan, coupled with an additional health rider, can give you a 360-degree protection in any exigency. Many insurance companies have also launched online term insurance products that are cheaper and easier to buy. You can log on to any comparator site like policybazaar.com or apnainsurance.com and compare the rates of term plans offered by all the insurance companies.


 

Another reason why some of you do not buy insurance earlier in life is because your company (in most cases) covers you under a group life and health plan. The key thing to remember is that the group cover may not be sufficient in your case or aligned to your income. Secondly, when one is young and healthy, you are a better risk; hence, insurance companies can offer you a life cover at lower rates. If you apply for a personal life insurance later in life, your application may be rejected or you may end up paying higher premiums depending on your medical history.


 

Investing early in insurance will also help you save tax and instill in you the habit of saving and financial discipline that ensures peace of mind in the long run. So, if you are a young professional and have not insured yourself yet, the next time you come across any material on insurance or a call from an insurance company, hopefully you will give it a serious thought.

Source: The Economi c Times

Vivek Agrawal

Summer Intern-Fundamental Analysis

DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd

Greek parliament starts austerity debate ahead of vote

The Greek parliament began debating a sweeping austerity plan on Wednesday after signs that the government will succeed in passing the deeply unpopular package, which has been demanded by its international creditors.

With Greece risking bankruptcy if the measures are blocked, parliament is expected to vote in the early afternoon on the mix of spending cuts, tax increases and privatisations agreed under a massive bailout by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund .

Late on Tuesday, the government of Prime Minister George Papandreou received a boost when one of three rebel deputies from his ruling PASOK party backtracked on his previous opposition and said he would vote for the package.

"I have made the decision to vote for the plan because national interests are more important than our own dignity," the deputy, Thomas Robopoulos, told Reuters.

Greece'scentral bank governor, George Provopoulos, warned that a "no" vote would be catastrophic for Greece. "For parliament to vote against this package would be a crime - the country would be voting for its suicide," he told the Financial Times. A parliamentary official said the vote would probably take place between 2 and 5 p.m. (1100-1400 GMT). There were violent clashes in Athens on Tuesday between police and demonstrators against the austerity plan, and the sting of tear gas hung in the air over the debris-strewn Syntagma Square early on Wednesday.

Source: The Economi c Times

Vivek Agrawal

Summer Intern-Fundamental Analysis

DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd

China Heading for a Hard Landing

China is hoping to cool its white- hot economy without precipitating a recession. Doing so will be extremely difficult: Inflation fears are growing, the government's ability to respond is quite limited, and China's economic model, which leaves bureaucrats guessing about the market effects of their directives, is ultimately untenable.

Inflation worries start with housing. With Chinese exports curtailed by U.S. consumer retrenchment, capital spending threatened by government restraints and excess capacity, and domestic spending less than robust, housing has been China's big generator of economic growth in recent years. By some estimates, half of Chinese GDP is linked to real-estate activity.

The government is fearful of rising prices, and has moved to prevent speculation. Buyers must now put down 60 percent of the purchase price on second homes, and 30 percent on first homes. The government is pressing banks to contain mortgages, and some have raised interest rates. In January, the mayor of Shanghai announced a new tax on property transactions that may be copied nationwide as other officials attempt to cool prices.

With these restraints in place, and with supply starting to catch up with demand, housing sales have slowed. But this has not fully curtailed China's real-estate bubble: Housing starts rose about 40 percent last year. Developers are rushing to build while they try to support faltering prices by delaying completions and creating artificial shortages. Of course, these efforts are difficult to maintain because they tie up capital in uncompleted houses. Houses are now being built at about twice the rate they're being sold, well above earlier norms.

Huge Loans

A report this week by China's National Audit Office found that a significant chunk of bank loans made to provincial- government financing vehicles were improperly funneled into property investments, contributing to a debt load equal to some 27 percent of GDP. Other huge loans to state-owned enterprises, intended to finance infrastructure, also reportedly went into real estate and may be at risk.

With inventories soaring while demand softens, and the government clamping down on speculation, a collapse of the housing bubble seems increasingly likely.

Prices Rising

Housing isn't the only area where signs of inflation are popping up. In May, consumer prices increased 5.5 percent versus a year earlier. In December, Chinese leaders agreed to "put stabilizing the overall price level in a more prominent position" in their ranking of economic priorities. In a country where many live at or below the poverty level, food costs are obviously a major concern, and they jumped 11.7 percent in May from a year earlier.

The government appears increasingly worried about social unrest. In November, it said it was ready to impose price controls to reduce inflation, especially on food and energy, and said it would help the poor with higher welfare payments. The unrest continues and, significantly, has moved from rural areas to the cities.

Income inequality also remains a problem. The flow of Chinese to more prosperous urban areas has increased average living standards, but the difference between the rich and the rest continues to widen. In 2010, annual per-capita income was about $2,900 in cities and about $900 in rural areas. (Adjusting for lower costs in rural areas reduces this gap.)

Limited Response

China's ability to respond to these worries is extremely limited. The central bank relies on adjusting reserve requirements and limits on bank lending to implement monetary policy. Since January 2010, it has raised reserve requirements 12 times (to 21.5 percent), while only increasing the one-year lending rate four times (to 6.31 percent), to accommodate inefficient state-enterprise borrowers, which provide a lot of jobs.

Finally, implementing any policy in an economy that is partly government-controlled, partly market-driven is very difficult. In a completely controlled economy, as China's used to be, government leaders might have made economically inefficient decisions, but their authority wasn't disputed. In an open economy, as in Singapore, the markets make the decisions, and politicians have little involvement.

But under China's current arrangement, officials making major decisions have to guess what market reactions will result, then try to mitigate the unintended consequences of their actions.

Unintended Consequences

With a managed floating exchange rate, for example, officials have to estimate how much hot money will enter China in anticipation of a stronger currency, and then determine how to neutralize the undesired effects of this flow. Government policies that encourage exports and trade surpluses have pushed China's foreign-currency reserves to more than $3 trillion. Until recently, all the foreign-currency earnings of Chinese exporters had to be traded in for yuan, but then the central bank was forced to issue securities to sop up that money to avoid depreciation.

Similarly, the Chinese government sets yearly limits on bank loans in advance, but leaves it up to the banks and demand to determine the monthly lending pattern. So the banks rush to make loans early in the year for fear that the government will reduce the limit in a midcourse correction.

I suspect that such a hybrid market system is too unwieldy to allow the Chinese government to manage a soft landing for its economy. By my reckoning, the Federal Reserve has tried 12 times in the post-World War II era to cool an overheating economy without precipitating a recession. It succeeded only once. Can the politically controlled Chinese central bank, and the government leaders who really call the shots, be more successful than the independent Fed?

That seems unlikely. And the consequences, for China and the world economy, could be unfortunate.

Source: Bloomberg

Vivek Agrawal

Summer Intern-Fundamental Analysis

DENIP Consultants Pvt. Ltd

Emami rises on aiming to invest Rs 400 crore for healthcare acquisitions

Emami is currently trading at Rs 472.00, up by 3.05 points or 0.65% from its previous closing of Rs 468.95 on the BSE.

The scrip opened at Rs 476.95 and has touched a high and low of Rs 477.00 and Rs 468.00 respectively. So far 1775 shares were traded on the counter.

The BSE group 'A' stock of face value Rs 1 has touched a 52 week high of Rs 512.00 on 13-Oct-2010 and a 52 week low of Rs 313.20 on 10-Dec-2010.

Last one week high and low of the scrip stood at Rs 479.60 and Rs 440.05 respectively. The current market cap of the company is Rs 7187.31 crore.

The promoters holding in the company stood at 72.74% while Institutions and Non-Institutions held 17.12% and 10.15% respectively.

Emami is exploring for acquisitions in the healthcare space to expand the footprint of its hospitals business in the country. Emami and Shrachi Groups’ AMRI Hospital, is also in the process of investing Rs 400 crore to increase the number of beds it operates to around 1,500 this fiscal from 900 at present. Currently Emami’s presence is only in the eastern region now it is looking to acquire hospitals to expand in the rest of the country.

The company holds 66% stake in AMRI, Kolkata-based developer Shrachi has a 30% stake and the West Bengal government holds the remaining stake. It currently has three hospitals in West Bengal, while one more is coming up in Orissa. It is also looking to set up hospitals at Siliguri, Rajarhat, Ranchi, Patna and Raipur.

By next fiscal the firm expects to achieve a turnover of Rs 1,000 crore from the hospitals business, up from Rs 300 crore at present. There were reports earlier that the firm is looking to raise up to Rs 100 crore through private equity funding to expand its footprint.

Source:- http://money.livemint.com/News/Home/EQUITY/MOVERS-TODAY/141992.aspx

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Lagarde set to win IMF post as US offers support

The US formally offered its backing on Tuesday for French finance minister Christine Lagarde to take over the top job at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), ensuring a win for her over Mexico’s central bank governor Agustin Carstens.

IMF’s 24-strong board meets later on Tuesday to go through the formalities of picking a successor to former managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who resigned in May after being charged with sexually assaulting a New York hotel maid.

But the 55-year-old Lagarde was set to continue the tradition of having a European head the global lender while also becoming the first woman to lead IMF.

Announcing the support to Lagarde, US treasury secretary Timothy Geithner nodded to emerging markets’ unhappiness at the tradition—of having a European head IMF and an American leading its sister institution, the World Bank— by saying he was pleased that Lagarde had received “broad support...including from emerging countries”.

“Minister Lagarde’s exceptional talent and broad experience will provide invaluable leadership for this indispensable institution at a critical time for the global economy,” Geithner said in a statement.

The US, which holds the most voting power at IMF, had refused until the final stage of the process to say who it was supporting, although it was widely assumed it would swing its weight behind Lagarde.

In the end, the backing that Carstens garnered from Latin America, Canada and Australia was too thin to break Europe’s 64-year hold on the IMF post.

IMF board directors, who represent the fund’s 187 member countries, want to try to reach a consensus deciding on a successor that would let them avoid a formal vote.

The race has been one of the most hotly contested succession battles in IMF history.

In a convention dating back to the creation of IMF and World Bank after the World War II, Europe has always held the top IMF job, while the World Bank’s top post has always gone to an American.

Developing countries have warned against another US-European stitch-up, but some potential candidates from emerging markets decided not to step up because they did not feel they had a fair chance.

Although a long-shot candidate, Carstens vigorously campaigned on his experience as a former IMF official who had first-hand knowledge of developing world economic crises.

Washington holds close to 17% of the vote at IMF, while European nations account for around 40%. China and Russia, two of the so-called BRICS emerging market countries, have already said they back Lagarde, with Russia announcing its formal support on Tuesday. Brazil also announced on Tuesday its support to Lagarde. The two other BRICS nations—India and South Africa—have been quiet on who they support.

Fears of contagion over an escalating debt crisis in Greece have played in Lagarde’s favour over the last several weeks because of her political punch across Europe, IMF board officials said.

Assuming Lagarde gets the official nod, she will have to immediately deal with further IMF-EU financing to keep Greece afloat and focus on potentially thorny IMF “spillover reports” that analyze the economic and policy actions of the world’s major economies. REUTERS

Source:-
http://www.livemint.com/2011/06/29002626/Lagarde-set-to-win-IMF-post-as.html?atype=tp


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Pitfalls loom in mine chase Down Under

An ongoing legal wrangle signifies just one of the many pitfalls that Indian companies could face in Australia as they rush into that country to seek coal and other minerals.

On Monday, Australia’s Perdaman Chemicals and Fertilizers Pty Ltd said in a press release it had taken legal action against India’s Lanco Infratech Ltd in the Supreme Court of Western Australia. Earlier Lanco, in press advertisements, suggested the dispute was over long-term coal supply from Lanco’s Australian mine Griffin to Perdaman.

But analysts said the legal dispute was an exception and investors could face other risks in Australia such as high valuations, tight deadlines to develop mines, labour shortages, a likely imposition of carbon tax and increasing costs, in what could slow big companies involved in negotiations and deter smaller ones from setting foot in the country.

“Current assets are highly valued due to the state of the global coal market,” said Neil Bristow, consultant, H&W Worldwide Consulting Ltd, from Beresfield in Australia. “The big problem could be the possible lack of understanding on how long it could take to get the necessary regulatory and environmental approvals and to get the mine developed and physical product out onto the market.”

Indian companies including NMDC Ltd, Coal India Ltd, GMR Group and GVK Group and consortium International Coal Ventures Pvt. Ltd are among those eyeing Australian minerals such as coal, iron ore and phosphate. A few others have already acquired assets.

Mundra Port and Special Economic Zone Ltd, the Adani Group company that manages and operates India’s biggest private port, acquired the rights to develop and operate the Abbot Point Coal Terminal in Queensland on a long-term lease in an all-cash deal worth A$1.83 billion (Rs.8,689 crore today) in May.

Before that, Adani Mining Pty Ltd, a subsidiary of Adani Enterprises Ltd, acquired Galilee coal tenement, now known as Carmichael coal project, with 7.8 billion tonnes of resources in Australia.

Adani proposes to establish a 60 million tonnes per annum coal mine in the Galilee basin in central Queensland with a mine life of more than 100 years, the company’s website said.

“I don’t think litigation could be a big issue in Australia,” said Shubhranshu Patnaik, senior director at Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu India Pvt. Ltd in Delhi.

“Australia’s legal and regulatory system is clean. It is a resource-rich country and it gives out assets for its own economic growth.”

Patnaik said the two biggest pitfalls that could bother Indian companies could be developing the deposits within a fixed time to justify investments and developing allied infrastructure such as roads and ports.

“There could be three-four years of time frame for developing the mines. And the problem with developing infrastructure is that you have to collaborate with other mines who will use it,” Patnaik said.

Typically, many of the deposits being offered are greenfield assets in remote areas that take several years of exploration and development and need infrastructure support.

Bristow said the scarcity of workers and domestic politics are issues that mining firms making acquisitions need to be aware of.

“There are emerging labour shortages in Australia of skilled miners, engineers and there are potential trade union labour issues, as illustrated by the current ongoing dispute involving BHP Billiton,” Bristow said. “Lastly, there is political uncertainty in Australia—the minority government and the recent changing of the balance of power in the Senate giving way to the Greens in July, which will be less favourable to the coal industry.”

New taxes could also be bad surprises.

“There might be a carbon tax to be imposed as this is under consideration by the current government. Any carbon tax is likely to be negative for the industry,” Bristow said.

India has a shortage of coal owing to its growing industries and by 2015 would need to import 200 million tonnes (mt) of coal from about 80 mt this fiscal year.

Source:-http://www.livemint.com/2011/06/29011747/Pitfalls-loom-in-mine-chase-Do.html?atype=tp


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Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Government puts ceiling of $10 bn on QFIs investments

NEW DELHI: The government has put a ceiling of $10 bn on overall investments by qualified foreign investors, which will include individuals and bodies such as pension funds, in domestic mutual funds.

The move comes after the Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee in his budget speech for 2011-12 had said that the government will liberalise the portfolio investment route and registered mutual funds will be allowed to accept subscriptions from foreign investors.

"This class of investor called Qualified Foreign Investors (QFIs) but not Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) can invest money into domestic mutual funds through Unit Confirmation Receipts (UCR) or Depository Participant (DPs) route," said Thomas Mathew , joint secretary (capital markets) in the Finance Ministry. The government may review the ceiling of $10bn depending on the response, added Mathew.

At present only FIIs and sub-accounts registered with the market regulator SEBI and NRIs are allowed to invest in mutual fund schemes in the country. Market regulator, Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) will regulate all investments made by QFIs under both routes and will issue necessary notification and framework by August 1.
"Only KYC (know-your-customer) compliant retail foreign investors would be allowed to invest and the DPs will ensure proper KYC of QFIs as per the norms prescribed by SEBI," said Mathew, adding that mutual funds would also undertake KYC of QFIs.

As per the new guidelines one QFI can open one account in one of the qualified DPs and only QFIs from jurisdictions which are FATF (Financial Action Task Force) compliant would be eligible to invest in the MFs under the scheme. The minimum paid up capital requirement will be Rs 50 crore for DPs looking to open demat accounts of QFIs.

The average assets managed by the Mutual Fund industry, consisting of 40 players, stood at Rs 7,00,538 crore as of March 31, 2011. The government is of view that since it is going to be retail investment, the move will help in moderating volatility in the capital market.

"Adequate marketing will be required to generate interest among retail investors. It will be interesting to see how pension funds will look at this avenue," said an asset manager with a leading Mutual Fund.

Source- Economic Times
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Bank fixed deposits still attractive than proposed rates of small savings

NEW DELHI: Bank fixed deposits would continue to remain more attractive for savers than long-term deposits under small savings schemes of post office despite the hike in interest rates proposed by the government panel.

At the current market condition, the term deposit rates are as much as 50 basis points higher than the returns offered by small savings scheme as recommended by the Committee headed by RBI Deputy Governor Shyamala Gopinath.

For instance, five-year fixed deposit rate under small savings scheme will fetch 8 per cent if the government accepts the suggestion of the panel. However, interest rates offered by the banks for same maturity period is about 8.5 per cent, 50 basis points higher than what has been recommended by the panel recently.

Currently, five-year term deposits in the post offices earn 7.5 per cent.

At the same time, 10-year National Savings Certificate (NSC), a new category proposed by the panel, will provide a return of 8.4 per cent to the depositors, compared to 8.75 per cent offered by the country's largest lender State Bank of India (SBI) for the same maturity.

Interestingly, the difference of rates is wider when it comes to less than five-year fixed deposits.

SBI fixed deposit between three years and five years offers a card rate of 8.25 per cent as against 7.5 per cent to be offered by the product under the small savings scheme.

For two-year term deposits, banks are offering as much as 8.75 per cent as compared to 7.2 per cent proposed under the small savings scheme.

Lower returns provided by small savings scheme has resulted in the shift towards the bank fixed deposit schemes. This is evident from the fact that rate of growth of bank deposits are higher than the small savings scheme.

For example, bank deposit rate registered a growth of 17.2 per cent and the outstanding deposit stood at Rs 44,92,826 crore in 2009-10 as against 8.8 per cent growth witnessed under the small savings scheme in the same year.
The outstanding deposit was 7,28,447 crore at the end of March 2010.

"In the past, state governments used to also remunerate the agents. Most of the state governments have now abolished agency commission at their end," the report said.

The Committee had said that while the commission under PPF should be abolished, in case of Post Office Recurring Deposits Scheme it should be brought down from 4 per cent to one per cent within three years.

In the case of SAS, it recommended abolition of commission for Senior Citizens Savings Scheme, which currently stands at 0.5 per cent. For the other schemes, it recommended brining the rate down to 0.5 per cent from the existing one per cent.

The small savings schemes are operated through the countrywide network of about 1.5 lakh post offices, more than 8,000 branches of the public sector banks and select private sector banks.

About 90 per cent of the postal branches are located in rural areas. While post offices run all the schemes, the scheme of PPF and the Senior Citizens Savings Scheme are also operated through the banks.
Source- Economic Times
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IRDA not keen on introducing solvency II norms for companies in India

KOLKATA: The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA) is not too keen on introducing solvency II norms for covering companies in India although insurers the world over are moving over to the new regime.

Indian insurers are still following solvency I norms.

"Our country does not have the required statistical database to adopt solvency II norms that have been devised by the European community. Domestic insurers use factor-based process for arriving at solvency margins and we are comfortable with it. It has a set formula and there is no scope of variation while arriving at capital requirements," RK Nair, member IRDA (finance & investment) told reporters in Kolkata. He was here to attend the 4th Indian Chamber of Commerce Summit 2011.

IPO norms for life insurance companies are likely to be finalised in the next few months, said Mr Nair.

Solvency II is the new regime for all insurers and reinsurers in the European Union.It will come into effect from December 31, 2012. Solvency II aims to implement solvency requirements that they feel will better reflect all kinds of risks that companies face. It aims to ensure understanding by insurers of the inherent business risks in the industry and the allocation of sufficient capital to cover them.

"The challenge for India, however, is that evaluation of risk can throw up different figures for regulators, insurers and valuers because there are no proper systems of evaluation or calculation of such risks in India," said Mr Nair.

On IPO norms for general insurance companies, Mr Nair said: "The norms will be similar to life insurance companies but exposure norms will be different. The way business is done by general insurers is different from the methods used by life insurers, and therefore, a different set of exposure norms will be required."

He also said general insurers may have to complete 10 years of operations before accessing the capital markets. The embedded value of an insurer will also have to be double the equity based of the company. Embedded capital is the present value of future profits.

Mr Nair added that the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund are currently evaluating accounting rules laid down by IRDA for domestic insurers to find out if they adhere to international standards.

"They will be meeting us in 3-4 rounds and are likely to submit a report early next year. The last assessment by World Bank was done during 2001," he said.

Source-Economic Times
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Collectors' Circle: New network space for art collectors

NEW DELHI: Art collectors in India, unlike in the west, are still a fledgling tribe. Now a new initiative by the India Art Fair, formerly known as the India Art Summit, is helping collectors hone their knowledge and stay in the loop round the year.

The Collectors' Circle aims to increase awareness and nurture younger collectors through a series of talks, conferences, workshops and networking events to connect new buyers and institutional collectors in India with global art centres like London, New York, Dubai and Colombo, said Neha Kirpal, director of the India Art Fair.

Institutions like Tate Modern in London and the Guggenheim Museum in New York will help Collectors' Circle cast its net across the globe and host "education seminars", Kirpal said.

At least 30 museums, reputed art houses and institutions have confirmed their patronage of the initiative, Kirpal said.

"The Collectors' Circle is basically a yearlong membership programme that will bring the collecting community together and establish linkages with social networking events that will give buyers and collectors an idea of the market and the kind of art to buy. We will also put them on to the international community of artists, galleries, institutions, art critics and market experts for greater exchange and knowhow," Kirpal said.

The circle of collectors will sustain the momentum of art education and keep the information network running in the build-up to the fourth edition of the India Art Fair from Jan 25 to 29 in 2012, Kirpal said.

"The circle will technically become operational next month with its first meeting and a media interface. Admission to the Collectors' Circle is chargeable with a membership fee of nearly Rs 7,000 per person (for individual and couples)," Kirpal said.

"We have also moved institutions like the British Council , Max Mueller and Art Asia to help structure content of the symposiums every quarter - so that we have something new to offer to the members by way of knowledge," Kirpal said.

One of the objectives of the initiative is to increase the quantum of foreign participation at the India Art Fair, Kirpal said.

"For example, the government of Spain is offering a subsidy of 6,000 euros to galleries in Madrid to participate at the India Art Fair. The Collectors' Circle will be able to liaise with art houses in the Spanish capital to ensure the presence of more galleries with government subsidy," Kirpal said.

The initiative will also include participation of the numerous private archives that have sprung up across the country and government platforms like the Lalit Kala Akademi.

"India does not have a platform for collectors and art education where buyers, collectors, artists, institutions and art scholars and market honchos can exchange under one umbrella," Kirpal said, citing the need for the initiative. Each member of the Collectors' Circle will be provided a VIP pass (entry permit) to the fair in January.

The India Art Fair, which has re-christened itself to highlight its orientation to business, along with art awareness, has also restructured its functioning.

"I have brought in two new partners as co-owners of the fair this year, Will Ramsey , the founder of Ramsey Fairs , Pulse Art Fairs and Affordable Art Fairs , and Sandy Angus , the chairman of Montgomery Worldwide . Ramsey hosts art fairs in eight countries in four continents and both are the co-founders of Art Hong Kong," Kirpal said.

The fair is getting bigger and needs more aggressive management and promotion, she added.

"Last year 84 galleries from 24 countries exhibited at the fair and footfalls crossed 100,000 in four days. The last three editions of the fair together drew nearly 178,000 visitors," the director of the India Art Fair said.

Source- Economic Times
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Cairn, Vedanta lower deal value

NEW DELHI: The managements of Scottish explorer Cairn Energy Plc and Vedanta Resources of NRI metals tycoon Anil Agarwal, which are negotiating a $9.6-billion deal, on Monday announced major changes in the terms of their transaction that signal an acceptance of the fact that the new owner of Cairn India will have to take on a $2.5-billion royalty burden in the company's crown jewel—the Barmer oilfields in Rajasthan.
The "adjustments", as a Cairn Energy Plc announcement on its website euphemistically described them, reduces the value of the deal. It is to be seen whether the changes pass muster with the Cairn Energy board or its shareholders. These changes may also face challenge from minority shareholders who would see returns on their stocks decline. At home too, the changes would adversely impact shareholders of Cairn India. The Barmer royalty-share issue has been dogging the deal since its announcement in August last year. State-run ONGC, Cairn's 30% partner in Barmer, pays the entire royalty on crude from the field under a historical policy anomaly. ONGC, which has the pre-emption right, set the condition that it would clear the deal only after Cairn—or subsequently Vedanta—accepted to equitably share the Rs 18,000 crore royalty burden, to be borne through the fields' life at $70/barrel crude price, by allowing the outgo to be included in cost of operations before calculating profit. Cairn and Vedanta have so far opposed the condition. Cairn issued a number of deadlines—only to extend them each time—for the government to clear the deal.
It said the contract with the government did not allow such conditions which would suck out $2-2.5 billion out of the deal's valuation. But the oil ministry and a ministerial panel set up to examine the deal stood by ONGC and the Cabinet is expected to take up the deal on Thursday with the same conditions.
Monday's adjustments in the terms of the transaction, thus, come as a clear sign of a reality check on the two managements. These changes entail "removal of the non-compete arrangements and associated fee, which are expected to result in a 5.3% reduction in post-tax proceeds". Cairn and Vedanta have also agreed that "completion of the transaction will take place in two tranches: an initial sale of a 10% stake in Cairn India, and a subsequent sale of a 30% stake which remains subject to receipt of the necessary consents and approvals from the government of India". "The removal of the non-compete fee will result in a reduction in the effective sale price from $8.66 per Cairn India share to $7.85 per Cairn India share. This change in price applies to both the initial sale of 10% and the subsequent sale of a 30% stake in Cairn India. Gross proceeds for the sale of a 40% interest in Cairn India will amount to $6,023 million with net proceeds expected to be approximately $5,408 million in cash."
The sale and purchase of the first tranche of sale shares, being 10% of the fully diluted share capital of Cairn India, will be completed on or before 11 July 2011. The gross proceeds for the sale of the first tranche of sale shares will amount to $1,506 million with net proceeds expected to be approximately $1,365 million. The sale and purchase of the second tranche of sale shares will be 30% of the fully diluted share capital of Cairn India and remains subject to receipt of the necessary consents and approvals from the government of India. The gross proceeds for the sale of the second tranche of sale shares will amount to $4,517 million with net proceeds expected to be approximately $4,043 million.
The non-compete and associated fee had a premium iin the Cairn India stock which would now be bought by Cairn at Rs 255 instead of Rs 405 agreed initially. The impact of royalty share would further erode its value, which some market analysts said, could go down to around Rs 250 per share.

Source- Times Of India
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