Benchmark indices are likely to trade volatile next week as investors will
rollover their positions in the August derivatives series to the next month
due to the expiry of current month contracts on Thursday. Markets expect
the National Stock Exchange's 50-scrip Nifty to trade between 5300 and
5480, but they are unsure of where the August contract will expire.

While some expect the expiry to be in a range of 5350-5400, others expect
it to be closer to 5450 as there are a lot of long positions in Fifty’s
August contract, which will get rolled over to September. Spot Nifty
yesterday ended at 5386.70, down 28.65 points or 0.5% from Thursday, while
the August contract closed at 5407.00, down 20.15 points or 0.4%. BSE's
30-stock Sensex closed at 17783.21, down 67.01 points or 0.4%. In the week
to date, the spot indices have risen by a mere 0.4%, with the Nifty
swinging between 5340 and 5450 due to a lack of any triggers. Yesterday,
total turnover in the cash segments of the BSE and the NSE stood at around
108 bln rupees versus 120 bln rupees on Thursday.

Overseas markets will remain on the radar, especially amid an absence of
any major domestic events. The market will particularly eye a meeting of
Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and German Chancellor Angela Merkel,
due on yesterday, where in the former will seek an extension on the
deadline given to debt-troubled country to meet its budget austerity
requirements. Germany's Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has already
contested the idea of giving Greece the additional time and said that doing
so will only raise the cost to creditors. Samaras will meet French
President Francois Hollande on Saturday to discuss the issue.

Next week, US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's address to an annual
gathering of central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, will also keep
investors clued in. The market will eye the Central Statistics Office's
data of India's gross domestic product growth for Apr-Jun, due on Aug 31.
If the government does not very soon speed up policy reforms and improve
foreign investments and economic growth, then this sideways (rangebound)
movement in the market could break and equities could face a risk-off
downward rally.

The Parliament was stalled for a fourth straight day yesterday due to an
uproar over the Comptroller and Auditor General of India's report on coal
block allocation. Among sectors, market participants are bullish on
pharmaceutical, consumer goods, automobile, and private-sector banking
stocks. Investors of telecommunications companies will eye the outcome of a
Supreme Court hearing on a Department of Telecommunications plea on Monday,
seeking extension of the deadline for conducting 2G spectrum auction to Nov
12 from Aug 31.


 By RUPEE DESK  [email protected]

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