It is quite amazing but true that
the year 2011 has been the second worst year in the history of Indian markets with
a decline of 25% in the Nifty and 35% in the Mid cap indices(since the 1980s at
least). No prizes for guessing which was the worst year i.e. 2008. In USD terms
the performance was even more disastrous with losses of 44% given the 19%
decline in the value of the INR. The year began with cautious optimism after
the fall that the markets had seen post peaking off in November 2010. However a
sequence of events, foreseeable and unforeseeable made this a disastrous year
for equity investors. A lot will be written on the year ahead and I have
touched on some subjects in my previous articles a few weeks back. However
sentimentally one thing is very apparent from all the strategy reports that I
read today, as well as the commentary in various media.
- 2012 will be a
very tough year for equity investors and it is unlikely that there will be
significant returns during this year.
- India will
continue to underperform given concerns on inflation, high interest rates
and poor governance.
I have infact not read more
pessimistic commentary on India
for a very long time as we see today. The same brokerages/research houses that
were predicting Sensex at 23-24000 by the end of 2011 a year back are now
forecasting markets at 12000 (at the lower range) to 18000 (at the median of
the upper range). There are some who, albeit apologetically are predicting
a move above 20,000 levels this year. However this is being done with a lot of
caveats. The funniest are those reports where there are bull case, base case
and bear case views where the difference between the bear case and the bull
case is over 50-60%.
My take on the markets in 2012 is
that we will see the Nifty/Sensex return anywhere between 15-25% and the
broader markets by 25-35%. I believe that sentimentally the markets
have bottomed out and the bottoming out, value wise will happen over the next
few days or weeks. This should lead to a durable bottom being formed for the
markets. I have touched on the logic for the same to a large extent in my
article on the 5th of December, an updated version of which I will
present in brief and then more on the domestic situation and the markets.
The Euro zone Crisis – The Euro zone crisis and the debt
issues related to Greece , Italy and Spain have been the main
contributory factors to the nervousness in the global equity markets over the
last several months. The crisis has got accented by a lack of faith in the
political system and its ability to resolve the issues. This issue has been
discussed a lot so I will not go into the details of all of this, however I do
have a contrarian view on the future direction of news flow from Euro zone. We
now have new governments in Italy , Spain and Greece i.e. all the troubled
countries. Two of them are lead by technocrats and one by the right wing party.
As such, in my view the worst of the news flow from Europe is
now in and we might not get incremental negative news flow over the next 4-5
weeks. This is likely to be similar to the negativity due to news out of
the US around
3-4 months back, which suddenly died out as the economic data started to
improve. The entry of the IMF in the entire discussion combined with greater
urgency to resolve the issues is also encouraging. Overall I do not
expect Europe to create any deep
cuts in the markets going forward. This
was the view that I had put out a few weeks back and seems to have played out
well. It seems clear now that although Euro zone will go through a cycle of
deleveraging, slow growth, intermittent issues related to fiscal issues of
troubled countries etc, the probability of a Euro zone breakup seems remote at
this stage. Intermittent occasions of bond issuance of Italy and Spain will create volatility on
those days. Infact if investors were so concerned on the Euro it would not have
fallen by just 2-3% against the USD in the year 2011. As I wrote a couple of weeks back
“Europe has clearly avoided its Lehman Moment”
Infact US has not only created conditions
for a down move, but it has actually supported global markets due to
continuously improving economic data, especially related to employment numbers.
Technically too the movement of the key indices above 200DMA’s and the
breakdown of the similarity of the move from 2008 indicates further gains for
US equities. The breakdown of VIX below 23-24 levels also indicates reduced
risk aversion and greater confidence. Typically such breakdowns are followed by
multiweek up moves.
GOLD – As I have written in detail in my previous article I expect
2012 to be a difficult year for gold. I expect a 20-25% correction before
prices come to a level where actual demand rather than pure investment demand
can support prices. Since I have written in detail earlier I will not repeat,
however the most fancied asset class will have a tough time holding on.
The Indian markets had to make do
with not only global issues but also several domestic issues in the year 2011
making it one of the most turbulent years in recent memory. Although 2008 was
challenging for India ,
it was generally perceived at that stage that the factors are largely external
and as such should not have a lasting impact on the performance of the economy.
We had also started giving lesser importance to the government as the economy
became more and more open. However 2011 was a year which showed the importance
of governance in promoting and sustaining economic growth as well as
macroeconomic stability. The year 2011 was a year of high inflation, high
interest rates, lack of policy making as well as the most challenging year for
the Indian rupee since 1992 (ex of 2008).
The Rupee - The fall in the rupee is being attributed to high
current account and fiscal deficits, which is true to some extent. However it
is more due to a lack of confidence in the economy in the near term as well as
cash flow mismatches on exports and imports. This aspect is extremely
important to understand. Given the way the rupee fell and the continuous
statements by policy makers that we are helpless in managing the rupee all
importers have run to hedge their positions and no exporter is hedging. This
creates a very huge mismatch in the short run. Let me try to explain. India has
exports of broadly USD 20 bn a year and imports of USD 30 bn. Now this is a gap
of USD 10 bn which is bridged by invisible flows, capital receipts, foreign
borrowings, FDI etc etc. Now in a situation where everyone believes that the
rupee can only fall all importers want to hedge, however no exporter wants to
do the same. This creates a huge mismatch in the short run till the export
proceeds flow in after a period of 90-120 days. This also creates a tendency to
delay export inflows in order to realize a better rupee value. This actually
makes me believe that the first quarter of 2012 can be a good period for the
INR as the panic fall period now seems to be over and export
realizations will start to come in. Other measures like reduction in holding
period of Government and Infrastructure bonds as well as higher interest rates
on NRI deposits should boost inflows. My base case view will be for a 3-4 % rupee
appreciation in the first quarter of 2012 unless and until there are huge
capital outflows.
Policy making – Initially we had a period in late 2010 and early
2011 when a large number of projects got held up on environmental issues. Later
on after the 2G issue we have seen a significant decline in project approvals,
takeoffs etc. This has got exacerbated by the continuous increase in policy
rates by the RBI which has made lot of projects unviable. Reform measures have
also got stalled. I believe that we are now at the absolute nadir of the
decision making cycle and things can only improve from here on. I expect this
to happen post election in February after which things would be much better.
Inflation would have come off
much more sharply had it not been for the decline in the rupee. However the
absolute correction in commodities and food prices combines with the strong
base effect will take inflation down to nearly 5% by March 2012. In case the
rupee also appreciates as I expect it too the overall scenario could be much
better in 2012. As such we should have improving liquidity and much lower
interest rates as we go through 2012 and this will provide a tailwind for
economic activity to pick up.
Markets
Taking most things into account
and also taking into account the market psychology as well as valuations I am
of the view that the current situation of the markets is akin to early 2009
where one could see only negativity and that was the time that markets
bottomed. Valuations, especially of the broader markets are today nearing
historic lows and the overall market is also trading at 12X 2013E earnings
which is very attractive. My view of the markets over the next one
year is that of a worst case of 14500-14800 for the Sensex (at 12X P/E) and
26000 as the best case (on a 20x P/E.)
The markets are today trading at
a Mcap/GDP of 50%; in the beginning of 2008 this had gone up to as high as
160%. The Profits to GDP ration of corporates goes through phases of
compression and expansion. Right now both gross margins as well as net margins
are suppressed due to the huge input cost pressure that we have seen over the
last 18 months as well as high interest costs. This is likely to reverse over
the next two years. Eventually the Market capitalization will move towards the
100% level to GDP, if not more. This will provide strong returns over the next
3-4 years.
Markets seem to have taken most
negatives in their stride as of now. The risk reward is strongly in favor of
investing into equities at this stage. As inflation falls and interest rates
come down there will be a revival in the economy and growth prospects will
start improving. The timing of the bottom formation is difficult to predict, however it will happen in weeks not months.
Markets should be able to return 15-25% at the middle of the
pessimistic/optimistic range over the next one year.
BEST WISHES TO EVERYONE AND HOPING FOR A GREAT 2012
Nicely put. Mcap @ 50% of GDP gives enough reason to believe its a great time to invest. Wishing you too a great 2012 with abundant success
ReplyDeleteWhat if GDP undergoes more n more downward revision? GDP was expected to be 90 Lacs Crore this Fy12... We are definitely not going see that GDP this FY12...
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year 2012 to you...I like your articles.
ReplyDeleteThought many would agree that markets do look cheap on p/e basis, that doesn't mean it can't get cheap any more...It might very well do...The situation is very fluid.
In all sincerity n honesty, you gave this same logic of Mkt Cap/GDP ratio in your earlier article/s (March 2011). However, as year 2011 progressed, markets kept on correcting more n more.. CNX 500
lost 28% in 2011...
I Hope, you present balanced view n not just Bullish View...
It is quite apt to compare MCap/GDP and it does look attractive at 50% as is the current situation.
ReplyDeleteThe point however is that interest rate cuts have actually not started materializing and history shows that it takes a couple of rate cuts, or may be more than a couple, before markets botton out.
I did a summary of all the factors that concern the markets in 2012 at http://www.investor-link.blogspot.com/
Shikhar
Hi Sir,
ReplyDeleteMissing your fresh article.No write-up since 30th Dec. :)