Markets began on a strong note on Monday and that probably was one of the two good news last week. The other good news was that we had a holiday on Tuesday for the Father of the Nation’s birthday. Markets fell on the remaining three days and they were days of big falls. BSESENSEX lost 1,850.15 points or 5.38% to close at 34,376.99 points. NIFTY lost 614 points or 5.95% to close at 10,316.45 points. Broader markets saw the BSE100, BSE200 and BSE500 lose similarly between 5.50% to 5.72%.
Dow Jones was virtually flat losing a mere 11.26 points or 0.04% to close at 26,447.05 points. The Indian Rupee was under pressure and lost Rs 1.29 or 1.75% to close at Rs 73.77 to the US Dollar.
Friday saw RBI keep interest rates unchanged and this was contrary to what most people on the street thought. Consensus indicated a rate hike of 25 basis points but was held unchanged with a 5-1 vote in favour of unchanged rates. Markets tanked even after this surprise announcement because of what it understood about NBFC’s. Deputy Governor was highlighting the mismatch between short term borrowings with long term lending and the impact it had on ILFS while markets misunderstood the same and just hammered the entire NBFC sector.
Government reduced excise duty on petroleum products and has asked the OMC’s to bear a rupee of the Rs 2.50 price cut. While the market should have taken it positively and appreciated that finally something is being done on this front, they thought this is going back on the oil sector reforms and stocks from the OMC pack lost about a fourth to a third in value in just a mere two days. Downgrades in earnings have been announced and many brokerages believe there could be more cuts in prices which would have to be absorbed by the OMC’s.
Election dates have been announced for elections to five states starting from 12th of November to 7th of December. Chhattisgarh would have a two-phase poll on 12th and 20th November. Madhya Pradesh and Mizoram would go to polls on 28th of November and Telangana and Rajasthan would have polls on 7th December. Counting and results would be declared on Tuesday the 11th of December. While opinion polls would start emerging, market would form a view closer to polling and observe how the campaign proceeds. One is not sure whether the present opposition would be able to present a united front against the ruling BJP or not.
In primary market news, the issue from Aavas Financers Limited would list on Monday followed by the one from Garden Reach Ship Builders and Engineers Limited. Both issues are expected to list below their issue price. In the case of Aavas Financers it would be interesting to see who the sellers on day one is, as the retail and HNI participation was a mere 0.26 and 0.25 of the issue. The bulk of the subscription was by QIB’s who had subscribed their portion 2.77 times. The overall issue was just about subscribed at 0.97 times.
The current meltdown has claimed its first victim in the form of Dinesh Engineers Limited which had tapped the capital markets with its primary issue of I crore shares in a price band of Rs 183-185. The issue was open from Friday the 28th of September to Wednesday the 3rd of October. The issue did not receive a single bid from QIB’s and saw subscription of 0.30 and 0.10 from HNI’s and Retail respectively. The overall issue was subscribed 0.08 times and was withdrawn blaming poor market conditions. One wonders what the need was to open the issue in these conditions. It could easily have done so with June audited results and opened a fortnight later.
Markets have lost 4,000 points on the BSESENSEX and 1,270 points on NIFTY in the last four weeks. It’s a steep correction and has broken the back of the markets. There have been various factors which contributed to the same including valuations, rising crude oil prices and depreciating rupee. The ongoing trade war contributed to it as well. If this was not enough, a chain reaction with falling prices led to margin calls and liquidation of positions which led to further selling pressure.
Is this the end of the markets or the beginning of uncertainty? I believe markets will get to consolidate shortly and we should see reasonable valuations bringing back investors to the market. Hold your horses and do selective buying only. Avoid shorts at any cost.