Feb 11, 2008

Reliance Power- got listed on Stock Exchange - The Big Day

Reliance Power listing failed to light up the stock today. The country's biggest IPO fell flat on its face. Millions investing in the stock have had their hopes and dreams shattered. Reliance Power listed at Rs 430 versus its issue price of Rs 450; it showed a disappointing and unexpected opening. Investors sold off the stock in desperation as it ran even lower to almost Rs 390 before coming back to Rs 420.

SP Tulsian of sptulsian.com said, "I had never imagined that this would get listed below offer price, because of the kind of interest that we had seen, that the exuberance in the grey market could be wiped off. However, it will not bring it down below the offer price - which could be Rs 450, or in the worst-case scenario, it could be Rs 430. It has touched Rs 390, though that maybe a knee-jerk reaction or desperation on the part of investors to get out of the counter. But still that was never imagined. I don't think any fundamental analyst would have imagined that kind of price."

In a CNBC-TV18 poll, none of the brokers polled expected Reliance Power to list below its issue price. A staggering 53% expected it to list at Rs 550-600, 33% between Rs 500-550. Only 7% thought it would list at Rs 650-700.

As a sign of the euphoria it created earlier, SP Tulsian commented on how many new demat accounts were opened before the issue opened.

Is it a total disappointment?

Amitabh Chakraborty of Religare Securities does not think so. Chakraborty feels that it is too early to declare the listing a disappointment and the current discussions around REPL price are, at best, theoretical. Cues from global markets suggested that it expected the stock to stay between Rs 430-435, for the time being.

He is quite positive on the stock and would advise F&O investors to enter the stock at these levels.

According to CNBC-TV18's Udayan Mukherjee, "Just work with a ballpark number of Rs 300. At Rs 300, the company would have a market-cap of something like Rs 68,000 crore - that would be 40%-42% of NTPC's current market-cap. I think that is fair, the company does not have any power in the ground. NTPC has the entire capacity that Reliance Power wants to put up over eight years functioning, on ground today - not eight years forward. Give it 40% of that value today. At Rs 300, assuming Rs 80 of value, you are paying almost four times book for potential five years forward. You are paying 40% of a company's value, which has already got the capacity in ground; which you want to achieve over eight years and I think that is fair enough. So for my money, Rs 300 is fair value for Reliance Power, Rs 450 is expensive and overvalued; Rs 550 is certainly pushing it."

Retail Vs FII

SP Tulsian said that if the QIBs are eager to get out of the stock, then the situation could be bad. This is because the QIBs are more qualified and better informed about the fundamentals of the stock, than the retail investors. He expressed concern about the shortsightedness of the QIBs, the FIIs, since they were the ones who got the issues over-subscribed by almost 82 times.

Will retail investors get out now?

Technical Analyst Sudarshan Sukhani advises investors to go stock by stock. He said one should become long-term investors with a two-three year view. There is no short-term revenue generating opportunities in the power sector now, he said. Investors cannot expect to make money in a month in the power sector.

But retail investors are not selling the stock, he observes.

On the other hand, SP Tulsian believes, retail investors probably are in a mood to get out of the stock. They reckon that they will have a better opportunity to do that now. He expects around 15-20 lakh investors to get out.

Amitabh Chakraborty of Religare Securities said he heard that the price has come down to Rs 410 and that it is a good entry point from the F&O point of view. According to him, the price fall is not due to FIIs and retail investors as they form just a small portion of the investors, but more because of global problems.

According to Chakraborty, it is impossible to say who has sold and at what point, they sold at. He added that it was mostly the FIIs who sold, as they are very scared, both in the US and our markets too.

Ambareesh Baliga, Karvy Stock Broking feels that long-term retail investors will hold on to the Reliance Power stocks. From the retail side, I do not think there will be too much of selling happening at this point of time. Those who had to sell off - basically those who had bought only from listing gains point of view, were surely disappointed. They may have already exited and those who bought for long-term, will actually hold on because after all they have not bought a Reliance Power, they have bought Ambani Group Company," he said.

What should an HNIs do now?

Tulsian said, "I don't think that HNIs have any option. Their interest cost is close to Rs 125. And now since the issue is ruling at around the issue price, which is Rs 450, they have the option to book the losses and get out of the counter."

He added, "A majority of them (HNIs) would be cutting their losses and get out of the counter. However, I do not equally see the prices bouncing back beyond Rs 500 at least in the next 15 days or so; because on every rise, you will see investors getting out of the counter. There are over 41 lakh investors, of which closer to 40% have gone purely from the listing gain. And since they got the allotment at Rs 430, it would always be tempting for them to get out of the counter even at Rs 450-460."

Few brokers think there are value picks still available from a poll carried out by CNBC-TV18. Out of the 15 brokers polled, 20% fell in the above group. 40% were willing to bet long term on power stocks. Although, 7% still thought Reliance Power is not overvalued and 33% think there are better picks outside of power.

Most comfortable price of Reliance Power would be Rs 350-400, 33% thought.
Source: moneycontrol

Mercer plans advisory service on mutual funds

MUMBAI: Consultancy firm Mercer plans to offer advisory services on Indian fund managers and investments in Asia's third-biggest economy, a top official said on Monday.

The firm has appointed two analysts and expects to hire four more this year to track India's 33-member fund industry and will roll out the service by May, Rashmi Mehrotra, business leader for investment consultancy in India, told reporters in an interview.

"We will start studying the Indian managers. Once we work out that this story makes sense, then we will start advising our overseas clients on how much to invest in here," she said.

Mehrotra said her team would identify investment themes on the basis of their interactions with fund managers and advise clients on their allocation to that particular theme.

India's five-year bull run backed by record fund inflows and strong corporate earnings has lead to good performance by local equity funds and has attracted global investors, channelling big flows into the Rs 5.5 trillion domestic mutual fund industry.

As many as 40 Indian equity funds were part of the list of the world's 100 top-performing stock funds of 2007, as per global fund tracking firm Lipper. Over the 10-year period ended December 2007, seven of the world's top 10 funds were from India.

"Everyone in the market knows that China and India you can not ignore. We now need to have presence on the ground to start studying the market personally," she said, adding Mercer already provided intelligence on emerging market managers. Going forward, the firm would also advise Indian clients on overseas managers. Mercer, which is involved in consulting, outsourcing and investment services, is a subsidiary of Marsh & McLennan Cos Inc.

Source- Economic Times

Market on 11th Feb, 2008

After opening on a weak note in the morning, the markets continued to slip through the day to finally end near the lows of the day. Selling pressure was witnessed across the board. While the Sensex was down 833.98 points or 4.78% at 16,630.91, the Nifty lost 263.35 points or 5.14% to close at 4857. Broadmarket indices underperformed the frontline indices. The BSE Midcap and Smallcap index closed down 5.42% and 4.84% respectively. The market breadth was pathetic, as A/D ratio was 1:11 on the BSE. NSE cash turnover was Rs.19724.57cr vs. Rs.13650.93cr on Friday.

Barring the BSE IT index that closed on a flat, all the BSE Sectoral indices ended in the red. The worst hit were the BSE Oil & Gas and Power, which lost 7.07% and 8.61% respectively. Gainers from the index pivotals include IT majors Satyam, Infosys, TCS and Wipro and Maruti Suzuki. Reliance Energy that lost 19.40% was the worst hit of the BSE-30. Other losers include Rel Comm, HUL, M&M, NTPC and Ranbaxy.

The market sentiment was hit by a dismal debut of Reliance Power and weak global markets. Based on an issue price of Rs. 450, Reliance Power ended with a sharp cut of over 17% on its maiden trading day. Further, annual inflation based on the WPI came in at 4.11% for the week ended 26 January 2008. The markets have broken crucial support levels today, i.e. 17,450 on the Sensex and 5,080 on the Nifty. It appears that the worst may be over for the Indian markets, we recommend investors to take small exposure to large caps.

Mutual Funds-New Fund Offers

New Fund Offers

Name of Scheme

NFO Dates

Theme

JM Core 11 Fund - Series 1

Jan 14 - Feb 05, 2008

A 3 year Close-ended equity oriented scheme

65-100% Equity and equity related securities

0-35% Debt and money market instruments

Lotus India AGILE Tax Fund

Nov 15, 2007 - Feb 15, 2008

A 10 year closed ended Equity Linked Savings Scheme

90-100% Equity and equity related instruments

0-10% Debt and money market instruments

Standard Chartered Small & Midcap Equity Fund

Jan 09 - Feb 15, 2008

A 3 year Close-ended equity scheme

65-100% Equities & Equity related instruments of small & midcap companies

0-35% Debt and Money Market instruments

Lotus India Mid N Small Cap Fund

Jan 07 - Feb 19, 2008

A 3 year Close-ended equity scheme

65-100% Equities & Equity related instruments of mid & smallcap companies

0-30% Debt and Money Market instruments

ICICI Prudential Fusion Fund - Series III

Jan 08 - Feb 21, 2008

A 3 year Close-ended diversified equity scheme

70-100% Equity and Equity related Securities

0-30% Debt and money market instruments incl. cash

HDFC Infrastructure Fund

Jan 08 - Feb 21, 2008

A 3 year Close-ended equity scheme

65-100% Equity & equity related instruments of infrastructure or related companies

0-35% Debt securities, money market instruments and fixed income derivative

HSBC Emerging Markets Fund

Jan 28 - Feb 25, 2008

An open-ended scheme

80-100% Units/securities issued by overseas MF or unit trusts of emerging markets

0-20% Domestic Debt & Money Market instruments

LIC MF Infrastructure Fund

Jan 31 - Feb 29, 2008

A 3 year Close-ended equity scheme

70-100% Equity & equity related instruments of infrastructure or related companies

0-30% Debt and money market instruments

Birla Sun Life Pure Value Fund

Jan 17 - Mar 01, 2008

A 3 year Close-ended equity scheme

85-100% Equity & Equity Related Instruments

0-15% Fixed income securities incl. Money market instruments

HSBC Small Cap Fund

Jan 19 - Mar 03, 2008

A 3 year Close-ended equity scheme

65-100% Equity & equity related instruments of small cap companies

0-35% Debt and money market instruments

SBI Tax Advantage Fund Series I

Dec 03, 2007 - Mar 03, 2008

A 10 year closed ended Equity Linked Savings Scheme

80-100% Equity and equity related instruments

0-20% Debt and money market instruments

Reliance Equity Linked Saving Fund - Series I

Dec 18, 2007 - Mar 17, 2008

A 10 year closed ended Equity Linked Savings Scheme

80-100% Equity and equity related instruments

0-20% Debt and money market instruments

UTI Long Term Advantage Fund - Series II

Dec 19, 2007 - Mar 19, 2008

A close-ended Equity Linked Savings Scheme

80-100% Equity and equity related instruments

0-20% Debt and money market instruments

JM Tax Gain Fund

Dec 24, 2007 - Mar 25, 2008

An open ended Equity Linked Savings Scheme

80-100% Equity and equity related instruments

0-20% Debt and money market instruments

Mutual Funds-Upcoming / Declared Dividends

Upcoming / Declared Dividends

Diversified Equity Funds

Dividend

Record Date

Div.Yield (%)

Franklin India Prima Plus

60%

13-Feb-08

14.35

HSBC Equity Fund

100%

8-Feb-08

24.05

HDFC Top 200 Fund

50%

7-Feb-08

9.99

HDFC Capital Builder Fund

35%

7-Feb-08

11.08

Principal Large Cap Fund

20%

5-Feb-08

8.65

Kotak Opportunities Fund

60%

25-Jan-08

20.97

DWS Alpha Equity Fund

40%

25-Jan-08

16.72

DSPML Equity Fund - Regular

70%

25-Jan-08

11.34

UTI Dividend Yield Fund

8%

23-Jan-08

4.9

ICICI Prudential Emerging Star Fund

20%

18-Jan-08

6.84

SBI Magnum Multicap Fund

25%

18-Jan-08

12.53

UTI Index Select Equity Fund

120%

14-Jan-08

33.85

Kotak 30

60%

11-Jan-08

11.44

JM Basic Fund

36%

11-Jan-08

10.52

HDFC Core & Satellite Fund

30%

10-Jan-08

10.29

Franklin India Bluechip Fund

70%

9-Jan-08

12.58

Tax Saving Funds

Dividend

Record Date

Div.Yield (%)

Kotak Tax Saver

35%

8-Feb-08

22.41

UTI Equity Tax Saving Plan

35%

4-Feb-08

15.48

DWS Tax Saving Fund

10%

31-Jan-08

6.3

Lotus India Tax Plan

15%

28-Jan-08

10.64

ICICI Prudential Tax Plan

20%

18-Jan-08

7.17

HDFC Long Term Advantage Fund

60%

10-Jan-08

10.42