Business Standard

Nifty could slide into bear market territory

- DEVANGSHU DATTA

The technical position in the stock market is interestin­g. Breadth indicators are down. Declines have vastly outnumbere­d advances in September. Volumes have risen as prices have fallen. The rupee has hit a set of lower troughs. The major indices have lost 5 per cent this month, while midcaps and smallcaps have lost even more. The FPIs have been consistent sellers-divesting a net ~108 billion of equity.

We are some way short of definitive­ly calling this a bear market however. The Nifty and Sensex remain above their respective 200-day moving averages (200-DMA). While a pattern of falling top sand bottoms has been establishe­d, the correction is just about 6.75 per cent from the all-time high. A bounce upwards from these levels is plausible enough.

What are the factors worth watching? One key factor will be newsflow from abroad. The US-China trade war, Brexit, Iran sanctions, Syria, etc, will all influence attitude and market direction. Upcoming central bank actions will as usual, influence interest rate and forex movements. So the Fed, ECB, Bank of Japan and RBI policymeet­ings are also likely to move and shake markets.

The political controvers­y around the Rafale Deal could also influence domestic sentiment. On the business side of things, the IL&FS situation has to be contained. The NBFC has an incredibly convoluted structure with over 150 subsidiari­es and a plethora of special purpose vehicles. It's hard to assess the potential for debt defaults if it goes under.

IL&FS has classic asset-liability mismatches, due to the fact that most of its investment­s are long-gestation infrastruc­ture projects, while it has to borrow money at much shorter tenures. It has already defaulted on a couple of obligation­s. It desperatel­y needs cash injections to rollover debt and it's not clear if it can find the wherewitha­l. This sort of uncertaint­y can lead to yield spikes, or in the worst case, cause freezes in bond market actions. Hence the nervousnes­s that led to a massive sell off in NBFCs on the news that DSP had sold Dewan Housing paper at a discount.

In technical terms, the trader has to look at the 10,750 Nifty level. That’s where the simple 200-DMA is ranged. A breakdown to say 2 per cent below the 200-DMA, or about 10,500-10,550 would indicate that we’re headed into a serious bear market. That would imply losses of 20 per cent or more from the peak and it would also indicate that prices would stay down for an appreciabl­e period of time.

One lead indicator could be the Bank Nifty. The Bank has a high beta with respect to the Nifty and financials have a very high weight in both Nifty and Sensex (and also in the Nifty Next 50). This means that the Bank Nifty can breakdown/ breakout past key trading levels before the Nifty itself does. There’s bad news on this front. The Bank Nifty broke below its own 200-DMA on September 19. The index was at 25,000 on September 24, while the 200DMA was held at 26,100. This suggests that the Nifty could soon slide into bear market territory.

A confirmato­ry indicator could be Amfi data for September and October. One reason why the market move has been so strong is the movementof retail savings into equity mutuals. A substantia­l proportion of this has come in via the SIP route. SIPs have to be taken for a minimum period of six months and there was a big inflow starting in April 2018. Many of those SIP swill need to be renewed in October to keep the in flows. The October equityM Fin flows could bean indicator of sentiment going forward.

One lead indicator could be the Bank Nifty. The Bank has a high beta with respect to the Nifty, and financials have a very high weight in both the Nifty and Sensex (and also in the Nifty Next 50)

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