Analysts say FII-backed rally likely to lose steam soon

Indian equity benchmarks continued their rally on Thursday, with the
National Stock Exchange’s Nifty crossing the 5,500-mark during trading
hours, after two-and-a-half years. The index closed the day at 5,540, a
shade below its intra-day peak.

 The 30-share Bombay Stock Exchange Sensex traded at a 30-month high, as
flows from overseas investors provided strong support. Foreign institutional
investors (FIIs) have been net investors to the tune of '55,000 crore in
equity markets this year so far. In contrast, domestic institutional
investors have been net sellers over the past three months.

But will the party last? According to experts, the FII-backed rally may lose
steam in coming sessions. According to Nomura Financial Advisory and
Securities, the recent system-wide squeeze on liquidity and emerging signs
of an easing in economic activity — evident from the index of industrial
production, imports, railway freight and import traffic at ports — “lead us
to think that we might be heading into a period of market consolidation,
especially after the recent market rally from the 'local' bottom on May 25.”

Anita Gandhi, whole-time director, Arihant Capital Markets, says the market
is driven by liquidity from FIIs, even as domestic funds have been sellers.
“How long the inflows continue needs to be seen. As FIIs have deployed most
of their funds, the rally may slow down in coming days. One needs to be
stock-specific at current levels. Sectorally, some movement may be seen in
oil and gas, and technology stocks," she said.

At the moment, there aren't many triggers in place, say analysts. The
earnings season received only a mixed response. Analysts at Morgan Stanley
say that the “earnings growth upgrades have definitely slowed down in recent
weeks, although our estimates remain a tad ahead of the consensus”.

The lowering of growth rates and inflation targeting by the central bank is
expected to see the strong pace of growth take a breather.

“We expect the growth pace to ease a bit and moderation is most likely,”
says Rahul Bajora, regional economist with Barclays Capital, who oversees
Southeast Asian markets.

Indian equity markets received almost half of the fund inflows that Asian
emerging markets received. In July, the flows were at $3.5 billion, compared
with the $2.4-billion inflow in South Korea and $2.12-billion in Taiwan.
Analysts say the monsoon has been positive and this will provide the market
some support, but will not trigger a climb. According to Kotak Institutional
Equities, “We do not see any major triggers for the Indian market in the
short term (next three months), unless the government provides impetus to
reforms.
Earnings upgrades look doubtful and growth stocks are expensive.” J P Morgan
says that it does not expect to see the FII inflow dry up completely, but
the pace would slow down. And domestic institutional investors that have
been providing support to the markets will be looking at a defensive
strategy, say analysts.

http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/indices-onrollblips-seen/405173/

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