The Sunday Guardian

NalCO STOCk maY appRECiaTE bY 30%

- RAJIV KAPOOR

also seen in new areas such as defence (e.g. building of aero structures, military helicopter­s) automobile (body, components) sector, etc. Opportunit­ies also exist in the downstream and valueadded product segment, e.g. sheets, extrusions and castings. The domestic market size is likely to show considerab­le increase in the near future, in view of large infrastruc­ture requiremen­ts and other expanding enduser segments in the country. Future growth prospects for aluminium in the country are strong in products like cookware, beverage cans, foils, alloy wheels, railway coaches, etc. There also appears to be considerab­le potential for increased usage of aluminium in the housing sector, in view of the emphasis on sustainabl­e growth and limiting environmen­tal degradatio­n. NALCO has achieved remarkable growth in production in all fronts, with bauxite production at 18.81 lakh tonnes, registerin­g a 10.4% growth, while alumina production was also higher at 5.26 lakh tonnes for the last quarter. Analysts are betting on NALCO stock for a 30% price appreciati­on in the next 6-9 months. Indian equity benchmarks extended their southward journey for the fourth straight session, breaching their crucial 9,850 (Nifty) and 31,600 (Sensex) levels on escalating tensions between the United States and North Korea. Markets started the session on a pessimisti­c note and traded sluggish throughout the day, as geopolitic­al worries continued to weigh on the sentiments. In the latest escalation of tensions between Washington and Pyongyang, the isolated Asian country threatened a missile strike on the US territory of Guam. Back on regional turf, traders remained concerned with the report that India’s retail inflation is expected to have picked up slightly in July after cooling in the previous three months, but should remain well below the Central bank’s 4% medium-term target. Sentiments also remained downbeat on a report that India’s agricultur­al exports have declined significan­tly over the last two years. The primary reasons for a decline in the export of agricultur­al commoditie­s are low commodity prices in the internatio­nal market, which have made exports uncompetit­ive. Positive news such as contractio­n in refund outgo, rich dividends from “Operation Clean Money” and more people coming under the income tax net post demonetisa­tion failed to ignite the traders. Investors also ignored the view that despite certain teething problems under the new tax regime, the Goods and Services Tax (GST) should lead to considerab­le increase in the GDP in the next few months. Traders are expecting the markets to be on a downward swing next week on the back of profit booking and bear selling pressure. Rajiv Kapoor is a share broker, CErtIfiED MutuAL FuND ExPErt and MDRT insurance agent.

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