Friday, August 27, 2010

Is market leading to bull market correction

Guys I am back with market gyan again...
Couple of times I wrote in last postings that in last one year market has witnessed...

--> 2Months Bull Run
--> 1 Months Bear Run

Now coming to today's topic, I am calling this correction as Bull market correction instead of just a profit booking. Just have look at below 2 charts...



So from these two charts you can notice following points...

--> Market closed below 20 DMA & just above 50 DMA
--> Market closed below psychological level of 5450 & 5420
--> RSI is in downtrend & not yet touched oversold zone.
--> Market has corrected more than 100 points in this correction. In 2nd chart you can see, 3 times profit booking has taken place. And all these time market has corrected exactly or less than 100 points. And also all these times market correction had found support @ 21DMA levels. But this time market has corrected more than 150 points in & also didn't found support @ 21/20 DMA level support.
--> And from world market perspective, our market is resilient in correction & is lagging the trend.

So looking at all these points, I feel market may find supports at 5250 levels & if corrects/breaks this level also then 5000 levels on Nifty would be ideal point for demand side. And also this 500 points correction leads to 10% correction which same as our previous 3-4 correction in this year.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Smallcaps & Midcaps outperforming broad market



Guys on August 1st I wrote about Market leading to consolidation & in bottom line I specifically mentioned that coming days "SMALL CAPS & MID CAPS will outperform"

And if you see the last 2 months chart

--> Broad market (BSE) has given 2% return on an average.

--> Whereas Small caps (BSE) & Mid caps (BSE) 9%-10% return.


And in August month you can see that

--> Market has not given any return & in fact it is down.

--> Small & Mid caps have given an average of 2.5% - 3%

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Thanks to my friends & blog!!!

Hi guys,

I started my this blog because, some of my friends forced me to share market updates & other economic activities on common platform. So I started my blog & initially it was meant for some of my close friends only. But after some time I also got interest in updating it regularly & readers also increased. So it has become my habit from hobby...

Today I FEEL because of my this blog, I got an offer from Thomson Reuters for the role of

"News Analyst in Reuters Editorials Dept."

So thanks to all my friends who encouraged me, given feedback/comments & etc.

So keep reading, commenting & encouraging.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Paul Krugman: Why Is Deflation Bad?

Couple of days back I was reading Paul Krugman's blog. He wrote about Deflation & thought it is very good. So here are the points what he has proposed...

There are actually three different reasons to worry about deflation, two on the demand side and one on the supply side.

So first of all: when people expect falling prices, they become less willing to spend, and in particular less willing to borrow. After all, when prices are falling, just sitting on cash becomes an investment with a positive real yield – Japanese bank deposits are a really good deal compared with those in America — and anyone considering borrowing, even for a productive investment, has to take account of the fact that the loan will have to repaid in dollars that are worth more than the dollars you borrowed. If the economy is doing well, all this can be offset by just keeping interest rates low; but if the economy isn’t doing well, even a zero rate may not be low enough to achieve full employment.

And when that happens, the economy may stay depressed because people expect deflation, and deflation may continue because the economy remains depressed. That’s the deflationary trap we keep worrying about.

A second effect: even aside from expectations of future deflation, falling prices worsen the position of debtors, by increasing the real burden of their debts. Now, you might think this is a zero-sum affair, since creditors experience a corresponding gain. But as Irving Fisher pointed out long ago (pdf), debtors are likely to be forced to cut their spending when their debt burden rises, while creditors aren’t likely to increase their spending by the same amount. So deflation exerts a depressing effect on spending by raising debt burdens – which, as Fisher also points out, can lead to another kind of vicious circle, in which depressed spending because of rising real debt leads to further deflation.

Finally, in a deflationary economy, wages as well as prices often have to fall – and it’s a fact of life that it’s very hard to cut nominal wages — there’s downward nominal wage rigidity. What this means is that in general economies don’t manage to have falling wages unless they also have mass unemployment, so that workers are desperate enough to accept those wage declines. See Estonia and Latvia, cases of.

Now, alert readers will have noticed that none of these arguments abruptly kicks in when the inflation rate goes from +0.1% to -0.1%. Even with low but positive inflation the zero lower bound may be binding; inflation that comes in lower than borrowers expected leaves them with a worse debt burden than they were counting on, even if the inflation is positive; and since relative wages are shifting around all the time, some nominal wages will have to fall even if the overall rate of inflation is a bit above zero. So the argument that deflation is a bad thing is also an argument saying that some economic problems get worse as inflation falls, and that too low an inflation rate may actually be economically damaging. That’s why the fact that inflation, while still positive, is below the Fed’s target is bad news; and it’s why respectable people like Olivier Blanchard (pdf) have suggested that a higher target, something like 4 percent inflation, might make sense.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Monday, August 2, 2010

Couple of interesting articles about inflation

Today I read couple articles related to Inflation in Business Standard & thought of sharing with you guys.

There is a very good article by name "Some inflation is good" by A V Rajwade

He has given very good instances like

--> Controlled inflation is good for long term growth, about which I was proposing many times as "if you are expecting growth then be ready for some kind of inflation"

--> Hyperinflation in Germany in 1920s, Stagflation in 1970s, Japan's Zero growth over two decades even after excessive liquidity.

--> One more imported phrase is "Certain minimum unemployment is necessary if inflation is to remain low & stable that is, policy should be aimed at keeping few millions unemployed for the benefit of rest of us"

and many more... I thought its very interesting article, so please go through the link provided above.

One more article by name "Politics of inflation" by Sanjay Baru...

Author has connected "Inflation & Manmohan Singh" very beautifully in many instances like

--> 1972-74 situation after Pakistan war & first oil shock
--> 1992 situation after devaluation & commodity price hike
--> 2006-07 situation due oil price hike
--> 2009-10 situation due to food articles price hike

in all these cases Manmohan Singh was & is one of the major positions (chief economic adviser, Finance minister & Prime minister) who can decide on monetary & fiscal polices...

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Is market leading to consolidation in near term?

This question came to my mind due to various reasons, both technical & fundamental point of view.

Fundamental point of view we can discuss later, coming to technical aspect which is my favorite section we will see how it is spanning!

You might remember my last but one posting about markets (I posted it on 11th July), where in I have given information about market leading to

-->Two months bull run
-->One month bear correction

from last one year.


From August 2009 to October market has moved from 4400 to 5200 which is almost 18% & then almost 11% correction from top 5200 level to 4600.

And then from November 2009 to January 2010 market has moved from 4600 to 5300 which is 15-16%% and from then again it corrected to level of 4700 which is 12-13% from top.

Then from February 2010 to April 2010 market moved from 4700 to 5400 levels which is 15% gain & corrected to 4800 levels which is 13% from top.

And from that level market moved to 5450 level which is again 13% gain.
So now correction is expected? May be, but I am not sure!!!

But couple things you can notice from above details are

1. Bottoms are getting better...
2. But tops are not getting better as compared to bottoms

So I feel tops & bottoms are converging & leading to short to medium term consolidation around 5250-5300 level.

So same thing will reflect in large caps & best example is Reliance which is biggest company by market cap, has not performed from last 3-4 quarters.

So traders & investors can look into some small cap & mid caps.