Lots of liquidity waiting to flow into market: Ramesh Damani
15 Jan 2007
There is a large amount of liquidity waiting to flow into the market, says Ramesh Damani, member, BSE.
Damani
says there is a lot of complacency among players and there
are no signs of froth in the market as yet.
Though
he is bullish on companies betting on domestic consumption
and on oil marketing and refining companies, while valuations
in real estate stocks are too high. CNBC-TV18 shares
with domain-b Damani's views.
What
have you been making of this manic strides made by the
markets?
I think it has been the par for the course. If you can
look around the globe to start of with global perspective,
in the first week of this year Vietnam was up of almost
14 per cent because they are opening up the economy, getting
into the WTO.
Venezuela
was down 19 per cent in a single day. Why? Because the
government is going to nationalise some industries and
frame some bad economic policies.
So
it is given that we are fairly on stable ground in India
compared to Vietnam or Venezuela.
The important thing is that yesterday we seem to have made a Bar Reversal on the chart - we went lower than the lows and closed higher than the highs, whch is a sign of a trading bottom at least.
Yesterday's
low should then be considered in effect a stop-loss for
the market.
Could
the market show significantly new highs in the run-up
to the Budget since these two months have been good but
somehow the mood seems quite circumspect this time in
the run-up to earnings and the Budget?
I think it will. I think typically we start of a bit slow
in January. I remember if I recall correctly, early last
year it was the same way. It started of slow then ended
up very strongly and powered right through after the Budget.
So
my sense is that the market's just two-day snap that proves
that there is huge amount of liquidity waiting to flow
in and any correction has been used by players as buying
opportunity.
I
think the fear in the market from my perspective is more
one of complacency. I think there is a lot of complacency
across the spectrum of players who believe the markets
will only go up and that generally shakes people out.
So
I think the last five-day correction was probably one
of those shake-outs more than anything else.
Do
you think that opportunity to deploy all that cash is
going to come for the market by the time we are done with
earnings and get into the Budget?
I think so, but it's not going to be easy. People like
me who like to find value, like to find things very cheap,
are not going to find the pickings as easy as they were
say in 2003-04. But if you look across the mid cap universe,
I think there are quite alluring ways of bargains there.
You
just have to look at it differently, don't look necessarily
for market leaders but look for small market caps, interesting
businesses. Try and understand some theme. The theme that
I have been expressing to my clients is a domestic consumption
theme and that pans out in three ways.
In
the Budget, the government is going to allocate more money
to many more programmes whether it is defence or
agriculture. So you can benefit from that trend. For example,
consumers are on an absolute buying spree. I think the
Indian consumer is going to be the big story in next couple
of years.
There
will be companies that can benefit from that while the
leadership in that sector is obvious. If you think below
the radar, you might find some other bargains.
Globally
though are you comfortable with the way things have panned
out at the start of this year because of the interest
rate bogie and commodities having quite a wild swing?
If you look at global indices, the Dow made a record high
yesterday. As I told you, Vietnam is on a tear; China
is on an unbelievable tear and just an interesting sideline
as setting the agenda for our own Budget that comes in
February end.
The
Chinese government reduced corporate tax rates in China
and the market went up 5 per cent that day. So if there
is some talk on that, the finance minister, because of
the buoyancy in tax collections, will actually reduce
the corporate tax rates, which will augur well.
Whenever
we have a high earnings season and markets with a good
multiple, and you cut corporate tax rates, it will be
extremely beneficial to the stock market.
So
I think yes, the market has serious challenges and will
have serious challenges but it has shown amazing amount
of resilience in the last three years; there is no evidence
to suggest that the resilience has deteriorated.
The
first signs of a crack might come once the big IPOs like
DLF start opening up. But markets look very stable. This
bull market will end in a huge bang and not in a whimper.
The
last few times the Sensex went to 14,000 and Nifty to
4,000, they struggled to clear it as some people are prone
to booking profits and moving to cash out at these levels.
Would you do that ahead of the Budget, or would you just
let your positions ride?
I am a very long-term and patient investor and think this
bull market has taught us one thing that any one
who had conviction and believed in the India story and
held on to the stocks for whatever reason has made out
and anyone who has tried to time the market, has actually
been wiped out of the market and the gains have been very
notional.
There
is nothing sad in the bull market to get out with a 20-point
gain in the stock when the stock ultimately goes by 5x,
10x or 15x. I am going to be patient; we have seen many
huge corrections in May, October, May-2004, but as long
as the basic story holds true that India's GDP
is growing at 9 per cent and that the Indian consumers
are on a better footing, Indian businesses have new found
confidence.
I
think it is shortsighted to try and time this market and
make a few bucks just trading in and out.
We
are seeing a move in the financials after a long time
part of that domestic demand theme. How
are you feeling about that pocket of the market?
I'm quite excited about it actually and I read a very
inspiring story on the Chandler brothers in New Zealand;
they started with $10 million in 1986 and have run up
to $6 billion; the primary part of their money came-in
as investments in Japan in the financial sector.
But
in the last couple of years, they made huge investments
in the Indian financial sector, the banking sector, with
all the leading market names.
And having read through and trying to understand what they are doing, I think it makes a lot of sense. I think the Indian financial sector, if one looks at the floatation of say ICBC in China or the insurance company that floated two days back, a $120 million market cap, this sector is right for picking.
I
think if this bull market continues and if the Indian
consumers continue to spend, I think this sector will
have strong growth ahead. We are well invested in that
sector.
The
sector that ended with a bang and started 2007 with a
bit of a whimper was with some real estate stocks. Do
you think there is still appetite for not just new issues
like DLF but some of the listed entities as well?
To set the record straight, I missed the entire bull run
in the realty stocks and so I am not the guy to talk about
it too much. But having said that, the valuations seem
extremely frothy to me; so I have not been comfortable
recommending any of these stocks.
I
think the problem will occur not necessarily in the built-up
land area where prices will fluctuate a little bit, but
in the land-bank type
of schemes, where promoters are passing off land-banks
at P / Es on extremely high leverage terms. So the part
of the real estate sector that is leveraged the most will
have the sharpest fall out whenever that takes place.