Gulf News

Overseas investors bet on India rising, buy into firms big time

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oreign appetite for Indian assets is surging on the back of expectatio­ns for a strong rebound in corporate earnings, particular­ly for smokestack industries such as cement, steel and metals as government investment in infrastruc­ture-related sectors picks up momentum. This should augur well for stocks in the new financial year that begins on April 1.

Overseas investors have bought shares worth more than $3.2 billion (Dh11.75 billion) so far in March, fuelling a rally that lifted one benchmark index to a record high and another within sight of the peak. The underlying sentiment is bullish, buoyed by the country’s huge domestic market that would be a cushion in a world edging toward protection­ism.

A follow-on stock sale through qualified institutio­nal placement by Yes Bank, India’s fifth largest private-sector lender, for up to $750 million received bids for $2.2 billion from foreign investors.

Economic activity is picking up across the country, led by building of roads, flyovers, metro rail networks, airports and ports. New Delhi has budgeted $59 billion for infrastruc­ture spending in 201718 financial year, and by presenting the annual budget on February 1, instead of the traditiona­l last day of the month, the government is set to hit the ground running when the fiscal year begins.

Annual budgets usually were approved by parliament only by May after recess and debates, and allocation­s began only in June, robbing two months or more of inaction at the start of the financial year.

Foreign investors are also ploughing cash into debt, drawn by relatively better returns. Franklin Templeton Investment­s bought government bonds worth $1.2 billion over two days this week, Bloomberg reported.

Political risk diminishes

Strong popular support

for

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in provincial elections has lowered political risk, and fund managers believe the verdict will encourage more radical reforms in the coming months.

The stunning victory in Uttar Pradesh, the country’s biggest state with a population matching Brazil, gave the BJP four-fifths of the legislatur­e seats. It was a vote of confidence for Modi’s daring economic gambles, specifical­ly last November’s shock withdrawal of 86 per cent of the currency in circulatio­n.

Fund managers are coming around to the view that the currency shake-up may not have caused as much damage as feared. Economic growth lost some momentum, but was still robust. Government data showed the $2 trillion economy expanded 7 per cent in the three months to December, below the previous quarter’s 7.4 per cent but ahead of consensus forecasts of around 6.5 per cent and as low as 4 per cent projected by one brokerage house.

Though the latest figure is provisiona­l and can be revised downward there are signs the economy has withstood the shock and is poised for faster expansion.

“The situation has improved after an initial 50-day hiccup,” said Biju Dominic, who advises rich investors. “Cash supplies are back to normal and activity has picked up dramatical­ly.”

Tackling bad loans

New Delhi is working on proposals to resolve non-performing assets (NPAs), loans that borrowers are incapable of paying back, which some estimates as high as $180 billion.

The government and the Reserve Bank of India have been debating many measures, including creation of a private asset management company as well as a national asset management company with a minority government stake for companies that are more stressed.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley hinted last week that resolving stress assets of banks was a priority. Shares in state-run banks, which have some of the biggest sticky loans on their books, were among the gainers last week while the main indices dropped on profit-taking. State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, Bank of India and Central Bank of India rose. The top-30 Sensex and the NSE-50 dropped 0.8 and 0.6 per cent respective­ly, their first weekly decline in three weeks, to 29,421.40 and 9,108.

Sanjay Nayar, CEO of private equity firm KKR’s India unit, told a Bloomberg conference recently that New Delhi is seeking to assure bad loans are resolved in an unbiased manner and ensure private capital is not taking anyone for a ride. “We need a proper process to resolve the asset quality issues. We have provided them with some schematics and diagrams on that,” Nayar said.

IPOs find favour

Investors are lapping up initial public offers as well as fresh issues, betting on stocks as a preferred avenue for better returns. Falling interest rates have diminished the lure of bank deposits, while a resurgent stocks rally that took the Nifty-50 to a series of record highs recently have caught the eye of investors.

Last week an IPO by Shankara Building Products to raise Rs3.45 billion received bids for more than 41 times the shares on offer. Education services provider CL Educate Ltd’s Rs2.4 billion IPO that closed on Wednesday was subscribed nearly two times.

Earlier Avenue Supermarts, which runs the D’Mart retail chain, received bids for 105 times the shares on offer for its Rs18.7 billion IPO, and the stock doubled its value on listing rocketing the company’s founder, Radhakisha­n Damani, to the richest 20 billionair­es in India.

Cochin Shipyard, India’s biggest public sector ship builder, has filed papers for an IPO to raise up to Rs15 billion. The offer would be partly government divestment and issue of fresh shares.

State Bank of India, the country’s biggest lender, said on Friday it aims to sell a 10 per cent stake in its insurance arm, SBI Life, in an IPO later this year. While SBI would offer eight per cent, joint venture partner BNP Paribas Cardif would sell two per cent.

In December, SBI had agreed to sell a 3.9 per cent stake in SBI Life to affiliates of KKR and Temasek for Rs17.94 billion. ICICI Prudential Life Insurance Co Ltd raised Rs60.57 billion last year.

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