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Storm clouds over Indian market grow darker
The going will get harder for Indian shares this week as soaring inflation raises the prospect of higher interest rates, which could burn a hole in the pockets of consumers, slow down demand and hurt corporate earnings.
Mumbai: The going will get harder for Indian shares this week as soaring inflation raises the prospect of higher interest rates, which could burn a hole in the pockets of consumers, slow down demand and hurt corporate earnings.
Throw in volatile commodity prices and the outlook gets more worrisome. With fears the global credit crisis could worsen there is little comfort for investors, who have already suffered big losses this year.
"The talk on the street is about the risk of a downside," said equity trader Kevin D'Souza. "It's making investors nervous and many funds are sitting on cash." Large investors have moved to the sidelines on mounting expectation that shares will decline in the near term and throw up opportunities for bargain hunting, he said.
Annual wholesale price-based inflation (WPI) in early August shot up to 12.6 per cent, the most in 16 years, strengthening fears the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will hike interest rates and tighten money supply again.
"We expect the final WPI inflation to peak in October-November at around 13.5-14.0 per cent, but to stay above 10 per cent until February 2009," said Sonal Varma, economist at Leh-man Brothers in Mumbai.
A steep increase in salaries for some five million civil servants announced this month, ahead of national elections due by May, is expected to fuel inflation.
"The whole objective of monetary policy at this point in time, which is to contain and manage demand, is going to face hurdles," said Shubhada Rao, an economist with Yes Bank.
"The pay revision is going to add to demand pressures on inflation."
Last week, New Delhi-based National Council for Applied Economic Research (NCAER) cut its outlook for economic growth to 7.8 per cent in 2008-09, saying high inflation and a global slowdown were major threats. In its forecast in May, the economic think-tank had forecast growth of 8.5-8.8 per cent.
Forecast revision
A week earlier, the prime minister's economic advisory panel had lowered its growth forecast to 7.7 per cent, slower than 9 per cent expansion in 2007-08. Last month, the RBI pegged down its growth projection to 8 per cent from 8-8.5 per cent forecast earlier.
"The brakes on growth have been brought about by the slowdown in global growth and high inflation," NCAER said in a report.
It said industrial output growth was expected to moderate to 8.4 per cent in 2008-09 from 8.6 per cent of last year, while farm output growth would slow to 2.5 per cent from 4.5 per cent. Services sector was seen up 9.1 per cent, slower than 10.8 per cent of last year.
Foreign funds, which usually set the trend for the stock market, have been voting with their feet as the economic situation worsens. Overseas portfolio investors dumped shares worth $775 million over the past six days, data from the Securities and Exchange Board of India showed.
D'Souza said the withdrawals were likely to pick up momentum and push the market down this week, with the expiry of monthly derivatives contracts on Thursday making prices more volatile.
The Sensex fell 2.2 per cent last week to 14,401.49, its second weekly drop in a row. The marker has dropped 29 per cent this year, with foreign funds pulling out $7.2 billion during the period.
Crude oil's 5.4 per cent slide on Friday, the biggest single-day tumble in four years, to about $114.6 a barrel should bolster sentiment when trading starts tomorrow, but the sharp swings will keep investors cautious, D'Souza said.
Although oil prices have dropped more than a fifth since hitting a record high above $147 in mid-July, the outlook is marred by geopolitical tensions between the US and Russia and concerns Opec may decide to cut output when it meets in Vienna in September.
Energy-starved India imports more than 70 per cent of its oil, the price of which has a heavy bearing on domestic inflation.
In July, Merrill Lynch strategist Mark Matthews said that if oil prices fell below $120, inflation eased and the US banking crisis ends, Chinese and Indian stock markets could rebound. For that to happen, it will take a few more months, D'Souza said.
The writer is a journalist based in Mumbai.
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