Short-covering, global cues trigger
recovery<http://latestequityresearchreports.blogspot.com/2009/03/short-covering-global-cues-trigger.html>
http://latestequityresearchreports.blogspot.com/2009/03/short-covering-global-cues-trigger.htmlThe
much-awaited cut in benchmark interest rates by the Reserve Bank of India
(RBI), after trading hours on Wednesday, may spark a rally in Indian
equities <http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=7950274338194775518#> on
Thursday. But fund managers are sceptical of a sustained uptrend, as
concerns about the global economy and the financial system will resurface
once euphoria about the rate cuts wanes. “The RBI move is expected to boost
sentiment in the short-term, but this is certainly not the critical trend
reversal trigger for the medium-term,” said SBI Mutual
Fund<http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=7950274338194775518#>
fund
manager-equity Jayesh Shroff. The central bank reduced repo and reverse repo
rates by 50 basis points each, in line with street expectations. Repo is the
rate at which the
centralbank<http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=7950274338194775518#>
lends
to banks, while reverse repo is the rate at which it borrows from them.
However, the timing of the rate cuts have surprised some market
participants. “The way in which the rupee has been falling and is expected
to fall further, the rate cuts at this juncture have come as a bit of
surprise,” said Birla Sun Life Mutual Fund CIO A Balasubramanian. “There
could be a pullback rally in equities, led by
banks<http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=7950274338194775518#>,”
he added. Though equity benchmarks rebounded on Wednesday, after closing at
a three-year low on Tuesday, much of the rise was led by short-covering in
the later part of the session. BSE’s 30-share Sensex closed at 8,446.49
points, up 19.2 pts, or 0.2%. NSE’s 50-share Nifty ended at 2,645.20 pts, up
22.6 ps, or 0.87%. Bears retained their grip in the broader market, with
losers outpacing gainers 1440:993. Stock gains on Wednesday were in line
with trend globally after China, the world’s third-largest economy, hinted
at unveiling another fiscal stimulus package on Thursday to revive the
economy’s fast growth rate. The news sparked a rally in the global commodity
prices, too. Back home, shares of metal producers led gainers on Wednesday
on expectations that a boost to the Chinese economy could spur demand for
metals. Banking shares were the biggest losers, with traders continuing to
add their short positions in these stocks. Traders expect a lot of these
short positions to be covered on Thursday on account of the interest rate
cuts.

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