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Old id bhavin_mht deleted. January 17, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in NEW MAIL ID..
19 comments

Due To Technical Problems at Yahoo I as mentioned previously my id: bhavin_mht@yahoo.com have been disabled by yahoo. Hence would request you all to add my new id mehtastock@yahoo.com and backup id mehtastock1@yahoo.co.in for bulk messages.

Regards,
Bhavin Mehta.

New Blog at BLOGGER AGAIN. January 15, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
16 comments

I have created a new blog at blogger again as wordpress limits some of the features which BLOGGER offers. So do check it at http://investmentpark.blogspot.com

Also from last few days was busy in creating this blog and also net connection was not available. So I was unable to do any of the analysis as such. Keep Visitng.

Regards,
Bhavin Mehta.

Intraday 15-01-2007. January 15, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Intraday Calls.
10 comments

Buy:

GPIL for 105/= as target.

Welspun Guj for 109/= as a target.

Regards,
Bhavin

Eastern Silk. January 13, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
5 comments

According to a report released recently by brokerage firm Prabhudas Lilladher, Eastern Silk reported third quarter results, which were slightly better than expectations while its revenues grew by 5.3% yoy and 7.3% qoq to Rs 1,251m, profits grew at a much faster pace by 68.2% yoy and 13.8% qoq to Rs 184m. Topline growth appears muted due to the appreciating rupee.

The report further added that, at the CMP stock is trading at 9.4x FY07E and 6.7x FY08E EPS estimates of Rs 34.7 and Rs 49.1 respectively. Its competitor Himatsingka Seide is trading at 23.2x and 13.8x consensus EPS estimates of Rs 6.0 and Rs.10.0 respectively, when compared Eastern Silk appears to be significantly undervalued. We maintain buy recommendation on the stock.

KS Oil. January 13, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
13 comments


Prabhudas Lilladher recommends a buy on K S Oils at the current price.

At the current market price, the stock is quoting at 7.9x FY08E and 6.3x FY09E initial EPS estimates which appear attractive as compared to Ruchi Soya, which is trading at about 9.6x FY08E earnings.

The report further added that, K S Oil is expected to grow revenues from Rs.6bn in FY06 to roughly Rs.11bn in FY07 and Rs.17bn in FY08 and thereafter grow by 25-30% YoY. EBITDA margins are also expected to rise from about 4.8% to about 8.5% over the same period due to increased sales of branded retail products. Profits are expected to rise nearly three times to Rs.500m in FY07 and further to Rs.1bn by FY09.

Expert Picks. January 13, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
5 comments

SKP Research recommends a “Buy” on McNally Bharat Engineering Company Ltd at a price of Rs 146.25 with a target price of Rs 210. The stock trades at 10.3 times and 6.8 times its FY08 and FY09 expected earnings respectively.

The EV/EBITDA ratios for FY07 and FY08 are 12.37 and 6.93 times. McNally Bharat, which has interests in the areas of bulk material handling, ash handling, coal and mineral benefaction, water management, port handling, road construction and related activities, has a strong order position of Rs 680 crore to be executed over the next 18 months period apart from orders worth Rs 1916 crore under consideration.

The different areas of operations help the company to diversify the portfolio of projects and reduce the risk of concentration into a particular field. Large investments in the infrastructure sector over the next decade provides a promising fundamental base for the company’s growth.

ONGC

Motilal Oswal recommends a “Buy” on ONGC at a price of Rs 877 with a target price of Rs 967. The stock is valued at over 9.9 times and 10.7 times its expected FY07 and FY08 earnings.

The corresponding EV/EBITDA ratio is 4.8 times each for its estimated FY07 and FY08 earnings. The company’s recent discoveries in the KG basin, the increase in production by approximately 70 per cent for gas and about 33 per cent for oil at the Panna-Mukta-Tapti consortium and the growth emanating from its 30 per cent stake in Cairn Energy’s Rajasthan block are the rationale for the invesment in the company.

Meanwhile its its 100 per cent subsidiary, ONGC Videsh Limited (OVL), is expected to record a 43 per cent CAGR in net profit during FY07-09, raising its share in ONGC’s consolidated profits from 5.6 per cent in FY06 to 16.3 per cent by FY09.

Large reserve accretions from about five global discoveries are expected to be declared in the next 12 to 30 months by OVL along with commencement of operations at Sakhalin and Sudan in the near term.

Kewal Kiran Clothing Ltd

FINQUEST recommends a “Buy” on Kewal Kiran Clothing (KKCL) at a price Rs 217 with a target price of Rs 278. The stock trades at 12.7 and 9.8 times its estimated FY07 and FY08 earnings respectively.

FINQUEST expects Kewal Kiran’s bottomline to witness a CAGR of 53 per cent FY2006-FY2008E. The company, which is a significant player in the men apparel’s segment with brands like “Killer”, “Lawman”, “Easies” and “Integriti” plans to tap the branded women and kids wear segment as a de-risking strategy.

It is also doubling its apparel manufacturing capacity from 2 mn pieces to 4 mn pieces with an investment of Rs 67 crore. In addition to expansion of its present distribution reach, Kewal Kiran is adding a new distribution channel comprising of ‘K lounge’ stores.

KKCL is well positioned to capture the opportunity in the domestic apparel market thanks to healthy growth of organised retail and the textile and apparel segment.

RPG Transmission

Emkay – Private Client Research recommends a “Buy” on RPG Transmission at a price of Rs 196 with a revised target price of Rs 223 from the earlier Rs 205. The stock trades at 8.7 times its estimated FY08 earnings.

RPG Transmission has secured two orders worth Rs 193 crore from Power Grid Corporation of India to be completed by FY09 taking its order book position at a healthy Rs 450 crore. These orders reaffirm RPG transmission’s ability to undertake large-scale EPC projects in power transmission segment.

Emkay expects at least 30-35 per cent execution of the revenue to be booked in FY08E and margins to improve by 30-50 basis points. This trend is expected to continue with the company participating in all the big size high margin T&D projects.

At The Time Of Bulls…Technicals ROAR. January 13, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
5 comments

YEAR OF THE BULL

Milind Karandikar
Neowave Analyst

2006 was a good year for stock market investors, with key indices shattering several psychological barriers. Will 2007 be similar? In this article, The Smart Investor gets four technical analysts to predict what the markets will do this year.

While one of them is a gung-ho bull, the other three advise investors to tread cautiously. In terms of stocks, there seems to be a bias towards mid- and small-caps, and sectors that have not participated in the rally last year.

In my previous article in The Smart Investor dated October 23, 2006, I had mentioned that many investors were experiencing a fear of heights in the current bull run in the Indian stock markets. That same nervousness continues to prevail with the markets scaling new peaks.

This indicates that our markets are nowhere close to any major top. Those who have missed the boat have been expecting a sharp correction since long. But the market is supreme and doesn’t listen to anybody’s wishes. It is time to come out of this wishful thinking and look for new buying opportunities in this strong bull market.

In this article, I am presenting an alternate possible pattern developing in the position of X-wave mentioned in my last article. Earlier I was interpreting the X-wave to be a diametric formation carrying seven legs. The swift price action that was expected in last two months has not materialised and forced me to look for a different interpretation.

The BSE Sensex monthly and weekly charts show this entire rally from May 2003 to be zigzag that has three legs (a), (b) and (c). Wave (c) has subdivided into five parts labelled 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5. We are probably in the last part ie wave 5 of wave (c). Since waves 2 and 4 are overlapping, wave (c) has to be interpreted as a terminal impulse pattern within which wave 5 will be the longest wave.

According to Neowave theory, this wave 5 will usually cover 100 per cent to 161.8 per cent of the price action of waves 1 and 3 combined. On a logarithmic scale this calculation sets a target of 20,000-plus for the Sensex. And that could happen in the year 2007 itself.

The most optimistic forecasts by many analysts, for the year 2007, are not exceeding 16000. But that is what Neowave theory is all about. The predictions are based on certain rules and not on my personal desire.

Of course, the future course of the markets would resolve the validity of my pattern interpretation. But if it is right, then there is a great buying opportunity even today.

Many stocks in the small and mid-cap segments seem to be in a huge accumulation phase and are likely to give an upward break-out. Once such breakouts are confirmed one can buy these stocks on declines that follow the swift rallies and hold for at least 8-12 months.

Those who cannot overcome the general feeling of nervousness would miss a lifetime investment opportunity that year 2007 presents. My advice to small investors is to overcome this fear of heights and invest. They should take this opportunity; else the other wise men will take it away.

BE CONSERVATIVE

Mukul Pal
CEO, Or-phe-us Capitals

The Indian economic cycle is heading to the late expansion stage. Theoretically, there are five stages viz. early expansion, middle expansion, late expansion, early contraction and late contraction.

The very fact that we are heading to the late expansion stage suggests that we are still away from a top and 2007 might see a new high above Sensex 14,000 points before the real slowdown starts.

We at Or-phe-us still see the immediate preferred direction sideways to down with a potential upward break-out probably after the March 2007 quarter. We had highlighted broad market divergence in November 2006, which still stand firm.

Barring Sensex, BSE Bankex, CNX IT and BSE Capital Goods Index, and the other indices (Healthcare, Small-Cap, Mid-Cap, BSE Oil, BSE FMCG, BSE PSU, BSE Auto) are still below May 2006 lows.

Historically, such divergences do not guarantee that markets may turn down or remain sideways, but if you look at it from the inter-market perspectives and add in a few technical aspects, we have enough reasons to validate our case.

The capital goods sector has exhibited a clear leadership since 2004 with average returns over the last three years near 80 per cent. This was the only sector to churn up more than 100 per cent ever in a year.

Capital goods, representing the industrial sector growth, marks the best run of the economic cycle. Materials and energy sector should assume leadership from current levels. And the effects should be visible starting this month.

Materials and energy: Though we are still negative on zinc and other base metals on the intermediate term, the materials sector (chemicals, construction materials, glass, paper, forest products, metals) is a mixed bag, and steel and aluminium still seem to have upside left. Integrated aluminium companies are still trended up.

On the energy front, we do not see oil falling substantially below $50. After oil hits a base, the respective sectors should assume leadership. Till then we can see some negativity in both the energy and materials sector. Energy is also a late expansion sector and seems in sync with our preferred wave count on market.

BSE Bankex was the next best performing index after capital goods sector. Credit expansion is the highest in late expansion stage.

This boosts banking profitability on one side and makes banking sector very vulnerable to corrections. We are near our price targets on the sector and sector components and recommend pre-Budget reductions on the sector.

Technology: Despite the noise that Indian tech companies generate abroad, the sector has under-performed every other sector in 2006. This under-performance should continue.

Technology is in a middle expansion sector and does not do well in late expansion sectors (current). We still believe the technology sector prices should correct sizeably from current levels. We will not be surprised if technology gives negative returns in 2007.

The automobile sector should see negative surprises. The index and its constituent stocks should decline further from here. This push and pull of various sectors should result in sideways to net negative movement till the first quarter of 2007.

Banks and technology alone cannot sustain the markets at current levels. And with the capital goods story being more than three years old, we need smart sector allocations as we head into late expansion. Energy and materials should start ticking from this quarter. Let’s be conservative in 2007.

CORRECTION AFTER THE MARCH QUARTER

Devangshu Datta
Technical Analyst

Since April 2003, the Nifty has climbed some 324 per cent. Despite several corrections, and the sheer unlikely length of the bull run, the upwards trend has got even steeper since April 2005.

By definition, any long-term bull run should lead to new record highs. But the Indian market has never before seen a rally of this length or recorded this type of sequence of successive highs for months on end. By definition, there’s been a paradigm shift in the market–this mirrors a broader situation where GDP growth has been excellent for a four-year period.

Can this bull market last through 2007 or is it time for a big correction? Well, since May 2005, the Nifty has risen along a steep 50 degree trendline (monthly charts). Volumes have been good and other breadth signals have not been particularly negative. At first glance, there’s no reason why the bull run cannot continue indefinitely.

There are some signs of a possible market top. Despite generating good volumes, the Nifty hasn’t been able to break decisively past the 4000-point level. There’s a very strong resistance above 4000.

Momentum signals such as the RoC have been weak for several months now–that’s a negative divergence. Intra-day volatility has also been low–this is usually a sign of a nearing top. Advances have frequently been outnumbered by declines–another warning signal.

Nevertheless, one of the oldest rules of technical analysis is not to bet against an existing trend until and unless the price line confirms indicator divergences.

It’s perfectly possible for a price line to continue rising even if there are negative divergences. We cannot trade in the hope of a correction until such time as the price line reacts and confirms divergence.

I do think that a major correction sometime in 2007 is extremely likely. We may see a repeat of the situation that occurred in May-July 2006. The market dropped by 30 per cent before it made a recovery. If such a deep correction occurs, it will have one of the following potential fundamental triggers:

Interest rates are getting tighter – that automatically makes a correction more likely. Another rate hike in the next RBI review could trigger a sell-off.
The Budget could fail to satisfy the market which is, as usual, making miraculously optimistic consensus estimates about reform possibilities.
There may be some global event that adversely impacts all stock markets and leads to an FII pull-out. (The foreigners have been strong buyers in the first week of 2007).
The current highly optimistic earnings estimates for 2006-07 and 2007-08 may not be met if there’s even a minor dip in economic demand

In technical terms, there are three possibilities – the obvious one is that market will continue to run up.

This would involve breaking the Nifty 4000 resistance and continuing to ascend along the steep trend line that is being maintained (this is incidentally nearly coincident with the 10 month/200-day moving average on monthly and daily time frames respectively). We do have target projections in the range of 4150-4200 on the chart patterns and these could be exceeded if the market crosses 4000 with volume expansion.

The second possibility is that the 4000 resistance will hold. But the market will find support somewhere around 3600 and proceed to range-trade through most of 2007 between say, the range of 3600-4100.

The third possibility is a large collapse, which will drive the market down below the 3000 mark. Even then, the overall trend would be reckoned positive unless the lows of June 2006 (2600-levels) were broken. The market has successive support levels at 3750, 3600 and 3500 in case of serious corrections.

Short-term traders should watch the 10-DMA closely. The first danger signal of a short-term correction will be the piercing of this support line.

They should also watch for situations where the put-call ratio of open interest in the near-term Nifty drops below 1.1 or rises above 2. Below 1.1, it is very likely to signal an overbought market while ratios of above 2 are also very likely to be unsustainable. The third signal to watch for is a time-period where the domestic mutual funds and the FIIs simultaneously turn sellers.

My prognosis would be that volumes are very likely to expand until the Budget is announced. That in turn, means that the intermediate trend would stay positive until late February. If the Budget is acceptable, that would be great. I would expect a correction, and a deep one at that sometime in 2007. But it’s not likely to occur until March and maybe even later.

WHERE TO INVEST AND WHEN?

Rajat K Bose
Technical Analyst

Are we headed for another year of stellar performance by the equity markets? But isn’t valuation a point of concern? What if interest rates spike further? If the global economy were to show some signs of cooling off then how would our market fare? These are some of the questions that keep haunting the minds of Indian investors now.

However, the moot question is where to put our money and when. Before we move in to specifics of sectors that look attractive, let’s put things in perspective so that we can come up with some low risk ideas.

This current bull run is already nearly four years old. Getting popular large-cap stocks at cheap valuations is a tall order. We should rather look forward to the broader universe of mid- and small-cap stocks and any sector that has so far been overlooked.

To answer the timing part, we need to take a cue from past instances. Since the early 1990s we have seen that except 1991 there hasn’t been a single year when the market moved up throughout the year.

Our market, as represented by the major indices, has gone up in the initial months of any year when the second half of the previous year has seen some sustained correction.

For the early months to show a good upswing, generally the market would have gone through a significant corrective swing in the last quarter or for most part of the second half of the previous year.

On the other hand, if the market showed a heady upswing lasting for several months starting any time between May and July we observe marked volatility and a protracted downswing during the first quarter of the very next year.

While our data, in this case, is limited to the last sixteen years beginning 1991, is not really a statistically significant population, it does throw some pointers. Going by this trend, we are likely to see a lot of volatility and a probable downward bias during the first three or four months of 2007. This seems highly probable given the meteoric rise of our market in the last six months or so, after the sharp downswing in the middle of 2006.

The scenario may not pan out only if the current surge of liquidity continues just as it has for last several months. However, it seems somewhat unlikely that the deluge of liquidity is going to continue if the allocations to India by some prominent global investors are any indication.

Thus, if the above scenario really gets repeated this time around, we might get better opportunities to invest a few months later.

One thing needs to be mentioned here, while the market participants may be obsessed with the Union Budget, it has not produced any lasting upswing except for 1991. Even the “pathbreaking” 1997 Budget saw market peaking out in less than a week’s time after its publication. Normally, Budget causes a lot of volatility rather than any sustained directional swings.

Any study done on the basis of the major indices of our market is likely to miss out some reality on the broader universe of stocks. While bull and bear swings in large-cap popular stocks continue to happen periodically with some cyclical regularity; the mid- and small-cap universe does not exactly replicate the same behaviour.

When the surge happens in them, in any particular year, they tend to show parabolic upswings only to taper off equally sharply ending in a stupor that may last for anything between two to four years.

For instance, the broad market upswing in mid- and small-caps came to an end in October 2005. This reality is corroborated by the large multitude of investors but may not be so apparent when you look at the so called mid- and small-cap indices.

Another feature of our current bull market is to take on fancy for different sectors and/or industries in different years. We initially saw a craze for retail stocks in 2003-04 while the next year it was the surge in commodities and capital goods stocks, which shifted to realty and construction last year. Expecting an encore would most likely lead to disappointments.

Thus, it makes sense to look at stocks belonging to sectors that have not been fancied like consumer durables, pharmaceuticals, paper, energy-related sectors (except power equipment manufacturers).

Most of the stocks belonging to these sectors are either at the bottom or have been range-bound for a considerably long length of time. Some of them are really good businesses with good earnings potential.

Some of these stocks are also showing accumulation signs over the last few months. These stocks could probably turn out to be low-risk decent-return bets for 2007. However, they may test your patience before they produce any good gains for you.

Chinese BHEL. January 13, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
2 comments

If Credit Suisse is to be believed, the Elephant (or should we say Tiger?) will soon overtake the Dragon as the world’s fastest-growing major economy on rising consumer and government spending.

We don’t know though if that’s going to make any difference to our 350 million poor, but the Chinese are definitely taking notice. Mao’s The Little Red Book and revolutionary ideals seem to have been overtaken by `How to Make a Million $’ and expansionist zeal.

During the recent international film festival in Goa, the lone Chinese delegate Chi (`Call me Jack’) He (pronounced Hay) wanted to know why Indians communicated in English, how rural India lived, how we knew Arunachal was ours and so on and so forth.

After answering his queries as best as one could, I in turn asked him why the Chinese were learning English, and flooding the world with cheap (disposable) products.

Over the past few weeks, the country has received a couple of large trade delegations from mainland China, not to speak of a lively 36-member delegation (not counting the wives) from Taiwan led by the affable Lin Chin-Chao, Chairman, Taiwan Importers & Exporters Chamber of Commerce. The Taiwan delegation comprised CEOs of leading companies representing sectors like lumber, carbon steel, electronic components, ozone power supply, PVC plastic raw material, furniture, Chinese bean, coal, gypsum, iron slag, bauxite, agricultural chemicals, fertiliser, aluminium electrolytic capacitors, semiconductors, raw cotton/ blended yarn, marble, hardware and health food.

The All India Association of Industries, the Indian Merchants Chamber and the Guandong Sub-Council of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade have signed MoUs on the sidelines of the fourth China Products Exhibition organised by AIAI to enhance trade links.

Enter the delegates

More than 170 delegates and 150 companies from various provinces of Mainland China showcased their products across 40 categories. This government-backed exhibition of Chinese products in India is believed to be a significant step towards consolidating bilateral economic relations in the `India-China Friendship Year’.

The event featured a diverse portfolio: adhesive products, agricultural machinery, building, construction, interiors, chemicals, cosmetics, diesel engines and generator sets, electrical products, embroidered sarees, food and beverages, furniture, gifts, health and hygiene products, home appliances, industrial goods, leather products, shoes, toys, handicrafts, pottery, porcelain ware, carpets, lighting products, massage bathtubs, microscopes, motorcycles, scooters, pearls, pharmaceuticals, plastic machinery, plastic, rubber and telecom products, pumps, sanitaryware, sports goods, stationery, textiles and garments.

Guandong Sub-council chairman Yang Guo-cai hoped the exhibition would enable Chinese entrepreneurs to explore the vast Indian market potential and facilitate mutually beneficial partnerships.

The huge Guandong delegation was followed by a modest (six-member) delegation from the Council for the Promotion of International Trade, Hebei Province, which spoke very little English. But that seems to have mattered little given that China has become the fourth largest US export market, and run up record trade surpluses with that country.

The Hebei delegates were accompanied by a translator from New Delhi, a young Sardar who spoke wondrously fluent Chinese after barely a year’s intensive study of the language at the University of Delhi. We are told that tremendous opportunities await Indian companies for close cooperation with Hebei in textile and construction machinery, pharmaceuticals, chemicals and so on.

Telling numbers

Jianjun Liu, Secretary General, Hebei Enterprise Directors Association, had some interesting facts to share. First, bilateral trade reached $13.65 billion in January-July 2006, representing an increase of 26.8 per cent over the same period last year. Second, India registered a trade deficit of $1.24 billion during January-July 2006 against a trade surplus of $1.42 billion a year ago. The trade deficit was on account of a massive increase in India’s imports by 59.47 per cent to reach $7.45 billion during this period. India’s exports at $6.2 billion registered a marginal increase of 1.81 per cent.

The recent visit of Chinese President Hu Jintao seems to have pushed Sino-Indian relations to a new high. Clearly, the two countries have a historical opportunity to accelerate their development, given Hu’s five-point proposals for promoting bilateral trade. The first proposal is to promote trade diversification. Accordingly, India and China have set a goal of $40 billion bilateral trade by 2010.

Vijay Kalantri, President, AIAI says China is the second largest partner of India in the world. Over the years, AIAI has signed MoUs with not just the folks from Hebei and Guandong but also the Guangzhou Export Processing Zone, the China International Trust and Investment Corporation, the China Enterprise Management Association, Hong Kong Association of International Cooperation of Small and Medium Enterprises, the Yunnan Province Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation Bureau, and the Yunnan Council for the Promotion of International Trade.

Which brings us back to Chi (Jack) who said he’d like to see Indo-Chinese cinematic co-productions get off the ground. That sounds like chana in China to me, but since Mumbaikars have invented a heady dish called Chinese bhel, why not?

Simple lessons of success! January 13, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
6 comments

Management students and young executives have role models. They are people who are visible, successful and iconic even. And not all of them need to be film stars like Brad Pitt or cricketers like Rahul Dravid. It is people like N. R. Narayana Murthy, the Ambani brothers, Vijay Mallya, Sunil Mittal and Kishore Biyani who matter to today’s young Indians, who could well be tomorrow’s leaders. Young Indians admire their achievements, carefully study their actions and secretly yearn to be like them.

And yet, when you are just starting out on a career selling detergents or credit cards even to aspire to reach the level of many of these leaders seems a distant dream and on occasion a pipe dream even. Why is this? The reason for that is simple. Every day, these iconic leaders smile at you from the business pages of English newspapers. Their photos are frequently plastered on the cover pages of business magazines. Their family pictures feature in lifestyle media. Their wealth is widely reported and often envied. And every business television channel features their sound bytes. Quickly, naturally and (almost too) easily they assume a larger than life status . This seems quite unreachable to ordinary mortals like you and me. After all, we do not have talented PR professionals (or is it spin doctors) advocating our merits to the media. And yet, I have a contrarian view. While there is no denying the capability or visibility of these giants of Indian industry, we might wish to analyse these successful brands (as they are precisely that) instead of being overawed by them. So what makes these people tick? And more significantly, what can we learn from them that can be internalised and become a part of our persona as well.

Simple things done consistently

Reams have been written about Glenn McGrath’s bowling ability. What makes him the most successful fast bowler of all time? It is his consistency and phenomenal ability to land the kookaburra in the same zone ball after ball, over after over, match after match.

It’s not a one-off surprise. It depresses opposing batsmen whether it was Mike Atherton or Brian Lara then or Alastair Cook now, and thrills his captain whether it was Mark Taylor and Steve Waugh then or Ricky Ponting now. And it is this consistency that sets him apart.

Let’s digress a little to the world of brands. Why do people prefer brands? It is for their consistency. A can of Pepsi tastes the same wherever it is consumed. A spoon of Kissan jam will taste the same whether it is consumed in Kashmir or Kanyakumari. Personal brands have the same consistency in their behaviour and actions. Let me give you some real live examples of these celebrities, which will quickly demonstrate that you and I can get there too, at least on a few critical characteristics.

Be responsive

Usually, one of the characteristics of really successful people is that they are almost inaccessible. They never ever respond to messages unless they want to. They are forever travelling or in board meetings. They also have ogres who double up as secretaries. And as we move up the corporate ladder, we think that these are the traits of success. Hardly. I have talked about this before and written about it as well, but it is still worth repeating.

A couple of years ago, the IIM fee imbroglio was creating waves and needless controversy. Everybody who was involved — and many who were not — had a point of view including the IIM-B alumni association. The alumni association, which I was a part of, felt it was necessary to express its solidarity and support to the board members of all the six IIMs. They were probably around 80 of them (though I must confess that my memory has been increasingly treacherous) and we sent out individual letters to all the directors. Our eloquence, probably, was found wanting as we got one solitary reply. No prizes for guessing that the person who wrote back was N.R. Narayana Murthy in his capacity as Chairman of the Board of IIM Ahmedabad. A simple act you say.

To me these simple acts define your personality and get noticed. And the more successful you are, the more difficult it is to find time to do simple things regularly and consistently.

Responding to mails, text messages, sending out simple thank you messages for little acts of kindness… Another example, not surprisingly, from Infosys is that of Nandan Nilekani. Nandan has an amazing ability to respond to e-mails. Despite his phenomenal and extensive travel, he still finds the time to respond promptly. Even a one-liner, but a response nevertheless.

How do these movers and shakers manage to do something that people who are far less successful than them are unable to? They have got it into their style of functioning. They have internalised it. T

hey manage their time better. And they have realised that simple courtesies matter. And are remembered. Like the former Vice-President (VP) of OBM (as it was called then) who sadly is no more. He was the head of the Chennai (Madras) office.

That was a big job in the 1980s. In the 1980s most certainly, and probably even today, media representatives or space sellers were not respected, often bullied and quite often treated badly. (Agencies get treated so badly by their clients that they returned the favour to unsuspecting media reps).

And yet, this senior VP would treat even the lowliest media rep so well that he would be floored. Imagine the VP of the large agency escorting you to the lift! Simple? Basic? Yes, but do you and I do these simple, basic things? Not me maybe you!

So what’s in it for me?

All around us are examples of success and failure. Success is what we want.

And yet there is a price to be paid for this. More so for those who wish to emulate it.

The starting point is observation. Keep your eyes and ears open. Absorb the good habits that you see.

Internalise them. Practice them and some day someone will perhaps write a column about how a simple thing you did, a basic courtesy you extended and describe it as something earth shattering. Your time will come, but remember your time starts now.

Valecha Eng- Buy. January 13, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Fundamental Analysis.
3 comments

Valecha Engineering’s strong order book, improved balance sheet and plans for diversification augur well for its earnings growth. An investment can be considered in the stock with a 2-3 year perspective. At the current market price the stock trades at eight times its expected earnings for FY08 and is at a significant discount to peers.

Valecha is an engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractor for roads, piling works and airport runways. The company’s order book of over Rs 800 crore is over four times its FY06 revenues. Road projects account for 70 per cent of the orders. While road projects are low-margin in nature, the company has managed to maintain its operating margins at 7-8 per cent on the back of better margins from piling projects. Until 2005, the company was unable to ramp up its order size as its diminutive net worth acted as a constraint in bidding for larger projects. In 2006, it managed to expand its net worth by 3.5 times. The company now appears well placed to bid for larger orders given its technical qualification and the improved capital adequacy. Increase in the size of orders may also pep-up operating margins. The company has executed airport runways in cities such as Mumbai and Chennai. With the airport privatisation activity gathering steam, the company appears well placed to bag similar orders from developers of airports.

While Valecha is less diversified than bigger players such as IVRCL Infrastructures, it now plans to diversify to BOT annuity, real estate and hydropower projects through special purpose vehicles. We expect real estate to play an active role in revenue contribution in the long term while the proportion of road projects may come down. The risks to the investment stem from the fact that Valecha is a small-cap stock with a market capitalisation of about Rs 140 crore and may be quite vulnerable to a corrective phase. The stock has declined by about 45 per cent since May in line with market trends and concerns about margin pressures on smaller construction companies. However, Valecha could contain such pressures through price escalation clauses built into its contracts. Moreover, the stock’s decline has made valuations more attractive.

The Next Big Investment Boom.- Book. January 13, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
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If you don’t like to read a book on investment written by a drummer who `once played with a well-known 80s pop group’ you can skip this. For the rest of us, though, here is The Next Big Investment Boom, by Mark Shipman, from Kogan Page (www.vivagroupindia.com).

The book is on `the secrets of investing’ and on `how to profit from commodities,’ and it begins with an exhortation that you take responsibility for your money. “The majority of the working population will spend over 75,000 hours at work and, even on average earnings, will earn over £1 million in wages. However, when it comes to retiring there is a high probability that very little of this money will be left.” It’s a sad fact that most people never achieve their true potential for building wealth, rues the author.

Take control

The bulk of wealth is created from investment rather than employment, says Shipman. Therefore, “it makes sense to focus more of your time on where you are going to invest your money than on how you can earn more of it,” he argues. “You owe it to yourself to take control of your financial planning and your financial future,” rather than “burying your head in the sand when the subject of finance or investing comes up.”

Successful investing doesn’t require above-average intelligence, assures the author. “It is not an intellectual challenge; it is an emotional one.” All you need is “a certain mental attitude and the discipline to follow an approach that exploits major long-term trends whenever they occur.” The path of `trend following’ that the author outlines is about `buying assets that are rising in price and selling assets that are falling in price.’

Explains Shipman: “As a trend follower, I never set price targets or attempt to predict how far the market will move. Instead, I am just happy to sit and wait for the market to make its first moves and then jump on for the ride — just as surfers look to ride a good wave.”

Investing is a mental game, notes a chapter on the psychology involved. “Successful investing is more about maximising your profits when you’re right rather than the number of times you are actually right,” instructs a section titled `get used to losing.’ For, it is a fallacy that a successful investor has to be correct all the time, as Shipman declares. “The only true measurement of our skill is how much money we make.”

An essential mental attribute is discipline — “to remain with your investment strategy regardless of what you may hear or read to the contrary.” A testing time can be the final stage of a bull market — “when everyone is talking about it and participating in it and the media are giving publicity to anyone who is making wild predictions of `just how high prices could go’.” If your strategy finally indicates that you should liquidate your investment and cash in, that’s when you’ll need the discipline actually to instruct the broker to sell, counsels the author.

What happens to those who lose their discipline at such a juncture and choose, instead, to remain invested? “Having already abandoned their plan and now without a clear strategy to guide them, they become mentally paralysed, as they can’t believe what’s happening to their investment and the profits they once had.”

And something more gruesome happens: “Stuck like rabbits in car headlights they often take to staring at their market quote machines, market data websites or the financial television channels in disbelief, hoping and praying that prices will recover to their previous levels so they can close their positions without too much damage.” Enlightening read, about how timing works, as much for investors as for drummers.

Expert On Small Cap. January 13, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Fundamental Analysis.
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Sundaram BNP Paribas Mutual Fund is shortly rolling out two new closed-end funds — Select SmallCap and Equity Multiplier. Both products have a cap on fund size (Rs 330 crore for the SmallCap Fund and Rs 550 crore for the Equity Multiplier) and will follow a more concentrated approach to investing than existing funds from the stable. The fund manager, Mr Anoop Bhaskar, explains the rationale for the new launches and discusses the proposed investment strategies in depth.

Excerpts from the interview:

What is the rationale for the Select SmallCap Fund and where will it invest?

Sundaram Select SmallCap will invest in stocks of small-cap companies. We define small-cap stocks as those with a market capitalisation below that of the 100th stock in the CNX-500 index. Currently, this threshold is at Rs 5,000 crore. The BSE Smallcap index has been in bearish mode over the past year; peaking in September 2005 and lagging the market since.

We believe this is one segment where, even if the market is at 14000 levels, the valuations are compelling. There are several companies that we like, trading at price earnings multiples of just 7-8 times, half the levels for large-cap stocks. We believe there are several companies whose sales will double in 3-4 years time and so should their market value. The top ten stocks in this fund will make up 35-40 per cent of the corpus and we hope to maintain the average market cap at about Rs 1,000 crore. We will try to have 20-25 per cent of the portfolio in companies with a market cap of less than Rs 1000 crore, 25-30 per cent the Rs 1000-2000 crore range and the balance in over Rs 2000 crore.

Though a purely small-cap fund should focus on stocks below the Rs 1000 crore threshold, there are practical constraints to doing that. One problem with going for very small-cap companies is that the regulators and the stock exchanges tend to be very stringent in shifting stocks to the trade-for-trade segment and that leads to very low liquidity. This is one of the reasons why we adopted a more flexible definition for this fund.

Sundaram BNP Paribas already runs S.M.I.L.E fund, which targets small-cap stocks. Isn’t there a high degree of overlap with that fund?

Not really. The S.M.I.L.E was a multi-cap fund that aimed to have a sizeable allocation to small-cap stocks. But there are certain practical constraints to operating a small-cap fund with an open-end structure. If you are an open-end fund, your performance tends to get rated on the same basis as all other open-end funds, with investors making no distinctions between mid-cap, small-cap and large-cap funds.

Hence, if the market is oriented towards large-cap stocks, if you are running an open-end fund, you too have to have an allocation to large-caps to ensure performance. This is why we thought a closed-end structure is better for a small-cap fund. In a closed-end fund, you have the luxury to take long-term calls which can turn out to be multi-baggers, without daily pressures.

Closed-end funds launched earlier have not delivered good performance. Doesn’t a closed-end fund give an undue advantage to the fund manager?

We are aware of that. That is why we have set a cap on fund size, which we believe offers comfort to investors. Setting out how much we plan to raise in advance will help us deploy the funds quickly and stick closely to our mandate.

We thought that a time period of 3-5 years would give investors enough time to earn healthy returns from their investment. Also, provided the fund fares well, we will be aiming to declare dividends from the third year onwards so that we return cash to investors as and when good returns accrue. This should help work around the constraint of the lock-in period, for investors.

Who are the target investors for this fund?

We are not targeting first-time investors. This fund is for experienced younger investors who already have an equity investment. Such investors can allocate 10-15 per cent of their portfolio to small-cap stocks through this fund and expect a reasonable return over a 5-year period.

We feel that very few retail investors have really benefited from staying invested through the entire rally of the past five years. This fund, by being closed-end, instils the discipline to stay invested for a five-year period. Unless we are really unlucky, we should be able to deliver with this fund, especially given the fund size.

Where will the Equity Multiplier Fund invest and who are its target investors?

This is a select focus fund with a closed-end structure; the top ten stocks may account for about 35-40 per cent of the assets. We found that investors often shell out relatively high fees to portfolio management services to acquire a concentrated portfolio.

The Equity Multiplier Fund will offer such investors a concentrated portfolio within the fee structure of a mutual fund. We will invest across sectors and market capitalisation ranges, with a larger weight to large-cap stocks. We will try and target absolute returns; with clear profit triggers on each stock which we will stick to, irrespective of market conditions. We may take concentrated stock and sector calls (within SEBI limits, of course). This fund could have a high churn, with certain portions of the portfolio set aside for say, six-month and one-year calls. While this will be an aggressively managed fund, the Select SmallCap fund will be a buy-and-hold fund.

IPO and Prices!! January 13, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Fundamental Analysis.
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Imagine if you had invested Rs 9500 (100 shares at an issue price of Rs 95) in the public offer of Infosys Technologies in 1993. After adjusting for all the stock splits and bonuses over the years, your investment would now be worth Rs 29,440,000, an appreciation of a staggering 3,000 times in the 14-year period, not including the dividends that the company has paid. A host of such successful IPOs such as Bharti Tele-Ventures (issue price of Rs 45), Indiabulls (issued at Rs 19), including recent ones such as Everest Kanto Cylinders (issue price of Rs 160), Educomp Solutions and Tech Mahindra have turned in stupendous returns over the years.

Though investors often look upon initial public offerings (IPOs) as a moneymaking exercise and focus on listing gains, it pays to evaluate IPOs from a long-term perspective. A look at the factors that should be considered while buying into an IPO.

Don’t go by subscriptions alone: More often than not, investors base their decisions on the subscription figures received by the offers. Given the IPO stampede that we are seeing now, the subscription figures do tend to influence listing gains, but may not be a good guide to the long-term prospects of a company. Subscription numbers are often a function of market conditions at the time of the offer. Even a good IPO may flounder in a declining market, while a fly-by-night company may rake in the money if the market is in good shape. As a long-term investor, you need to evaluate an IPO from the point of view of whether you would like to buy into the business for which funds are being raised.

Don’t go by absolute price: Do you believe that an IPO priced at Rs 10 is a safer bet than one priced at Rs 1,000? Not really. In fact, focussing only on IPOs with a low absolute price may leave you with a portfolio of companies with barely any credentials. Companies with a track record of good financial performance would already have a reasonable level of earnings and are likely to price their IPOs at a high absolute price. When evaluating IPOs, try and get an idea of the valuations, or how the offer price discounts the company’s potential earnings, rather than its absolute price. If the overall outlook for a sector and a detailed assessment of the company’s prospects vis-à-vis its peers appear positive, even high-priced IPOs could turn out to be a good bargain. Offers of companies such as Suzlon Energy, AIA Engineering or even the recently listed Info Edge or Sobha Developers have been among the top-performing ones in recent times, but none of them would have caused a blip on your radar if you were looking for IPOs priced below Rs 100! In hindsight, these offers were a steal at their issue price, given that they listed at a substantial premium and have never touched the offer price levels again!

The business at a good price: IPO investing is based on the belief that investing during the offer gives you an opportunity to get a bargain price for that company. After all, why park money in the public offer at a fixed price, when the same stock would be available on the tap in the secondary market in about a month’s time. Thus, valuations should play an important role in influencing the decision to invest in an IPO.

For instance, consider a company X, which is slated to make an IPO. Assume you are convinced about the company’s business model and the management’s ability to successfully steer its progress. In other words, you believe that investing in the company could provide good returns. At such a stage, the only factor that might influence your decision would be the valuation of the price. Is the offer priced at a discount, at a par or at a premium to its peers? If at a premium, do you think the business really offers something new or unique that justifies the premium? Answers to questions such as these should influence your assessment. If you feel that the offer is priced stiffly, you can safely stay way and consider investing through the secondary market at a later date.

Don’t base decisions on listing performance: Like subscription numbers, a stock’s returns on the day of listing are also often a function of short-term factors such as market conditions at the time of listing and the near term results expected from the company. Investing in any IPO locks your money for nearly a month. If during the lock-in period (the time from application until listing), the market crashes, your stock’s debut could be lacklustre. If you have bought into an IPO because you believe that the project has the potential to deliver healthy growth over the long term, have the conviction to stick with your choice. Bharti Air-Tel, which saw its stock plunge below its offer price on listing, has turned out to be one of the strongest wealth creators in recent years.

Investing in IPOs, much like investing in the secondary market, requires considerable effort on your part. But if you are worried about missing out on such offers as that of Infosys Technologies, you can be rest assured that the chances of such a miss are now minimal, in the light of an improved market efficiency and the coverage most offers get from various analysts and brokerage houses, which can supplement your own efforts.

With IPOs becoming more frequent and institutions getting more selective in choosing between them, listing gains on every IPO are no longer a given. Therefore, every investor must be aware of the general market trends and the nuances of basic research. For, in the world of investments, if such ignorance were considered bliss, then bliss could be very expensive!

Intraday 05-01-07. January 5, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Intraday Calls.
5 comments

Buy:

Unitech,

HCC

Buy at downfall only as market can correct 400 points in a few days. Trend not clear or expect downtrend to continue till Monday. Be very stock specific.

Regards,
Bhavin.

News. January 5, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Stock In News.
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Top News:

1) Nicholas Piramals Wellspring, the chain of Pathology Laboratories and Diagnostic Centres acquires majority stake in Jankharia Imaging, a radiology and imaging centre in Mumbai. New entity would be renamed as Wellspring-Jankharia Imaging. Wellspring has ambitious investment plans in the next two years during which the Company would offer tele-radiology solutions requiring expert radiology opinions across India and abroad-(imjwire)

2) Mercator Lines denies the news of rig sale and private placement, and the Company clarifies that it does not have any such i.e. either Rig sale and/or placement at Rs. 60-(imjwire)

3) Mirza International clarifies on the news that Mirza Tanner may buy European Shoe Company. Company said Though company was looking for acquiring a retail / distribution company and / or a shoe manufacturing company overseas earlier, as of now the company does not have a concrete proposal & Mirza International plans to increase its manufacturing capacity by 1 mn pairs-(imjwire)

4) Asian Electronics denies the news that it will buy back shares by month end-(imjwire)

5) Hindustan Zinc increased lead prices by Rs 1500/tonne upto Rs 86300/tonne & Hindustan Zinc cuts prices by 4.2% upto Rs 9300/tonne to Rs 212200/tonne -(imjwire)

6) JSW Steel Galvanised Steel prices rose by Rs 1500 per metric tonne-(imjwire)

7) Wockhardt receives USFDA approval for Ondansetron Injection, generic version of GlaxoSmithKline Plcs nausea treatment Zofran-(imjwire)

8) Dr.Reddys Labs receives USFDA approval for Ondansetron Hydrochloride Tablets, generic version of Zofran-(imjwire)

9) Suven Life Sciences denies the news of receiving a major contract manufacturing order. Company also denies the news of going for private equity placement-(imjwire)

10) Hindujas on Thursday announced their interest to acquire Hutch Essar Ltd, joining Reliance Communications and British telecom giant Vodafone in the race for the country’s fourth-largest mobile operator-(BL)

11) Varun Shipping acquires its third modern Aframax crude oil tanker having cargo carrying capacity of approximately 105,000 DWT. With this additions, the Company will now be operating a diversified fleet of 18 vessels-(imjwire)

12) Metal Bulletin reports, China to import 355mnt of iron ore in 2007 up from 325 million tonnes in 2006-(imjwire)

13) Indian government partially lift the ban on sugar exports as domestic prices falls. Director General of Foreign Trade would allow exports against advance licences that stipulates re-export of white sugar against import of raw sugar. This would apply to advance licence holders who could not meet export obligations before July 4, 2006 as the government then banned sugar exports to augment domestic availability-(imjwire)

14) Southern European bank choses Polaris Cash Management software. It is Next-Generation, SOA based Intellect Cash and Liquidity Management Platform. The solution enables banks to offer liquidity products, letting their customers have rule-based optimisation of their cash-(imjwire)

15) ICSA India receives order from Eastern Power Distribution Company of Andhra Pradesh Ltd on 100% Turnkey basis under JBIC 2006-07 worth of Rs 15.28 cr-(imjwire)

16) Dabur Pharma today launched a new indigenously developed anti-cancer drug delivery system, Nanoxel, and plans to introduce it in the highly lucrative US and European markets within the next 18-36 months-(BS)

17) Indian government approves 20 FDI proposals worth of Rs.27.92 bn-(BS)

18) India cabinet exempt ready made garments from Textile Committee Cess and it is levied at 0.05% on manufacturers of textiles and textile machinery to raise funds for research and technology improvements-(imjwire)

19) Plethico Pharmaceuticals accepts the news of plans to acquire a contract manufacturing company and a retail pharmacy chain in the US- (IMJ Wire)

Sobha Developers. January 4, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
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Normally analyst community and investors would talk about the PE at which the company will trade after equity dilution and the fundamentals when a company comes out with an IPO. But, I would rather like to talk about the company itself and keep the financials for the analyst to talk about.

Sobha Developers Ltd. (SDL) is a leading player in the residential and contractual projects having vast land reserves of approximately118 million sq. ft. The land reserves of the company are approximately amounting between Rs.39717 million to 43898 million (net of developers margins).The company primarily focuses on Southern Indian region for its business.

Source: Sobha Developers Limited.

The company specializes mainly in residential properties such as presidential suites, lands, villas, row houses, luxury and super luxury apartments including swimming pool, clubhouses and shopping complexes. On the contractual front the company has developed corporate block for Infosys Technologies and likes.

SDL is a one stop shop which provides not only development of property but has resources to provide services right from conceptualization to completion of the project.This has been possible due to its backward intergration model which includes architectural and design studios, concrete block making machines (imported from Germany), wood working and interior division, metal working and glazing factory, mechanical,electrical and plumbing division.

Skilled labour, trained tradesmen and qualified management and architectural team which works on scalable, modular and versatile project delivery model enables timely and cost efficient delivery of projects. And its German consultants and technologically advanced German tools ensure that the quality standards of the projects stay up to the mark. All processes and methodologies are documentated to create a standardized criteria for every project execution and completion.

Due to above mentioined reasons the company has been able to complete asthetically appealing architectural beauties from palaces in Oman to pyramidal and geodesic dome- shaped structures in Southern India.

The key strategies that the company would like to follow for its growth expansion are:

1. Geographical diversification of its projects.

2. Portfolio diversification

3. Maintain high standards of quality

4. Engage in more contractual projects.

5. Broaden its products offering by including retail products like furnishings and interiors.

FII How Many? January 4, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
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Source Business Standard (India):

The number of foreign institutional investors (FIIs) registered with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) crossed the 1,000 mark.

The total number of FIIs having their offices in India has now increased to 1,030. In the beginning of calendar year 2006, the figure was 813.

As many as 217 new FIIs opened their offices in India during the current calendar year. This is the highest number of registrations by FIIs in a year till date. The previous highest was 209 in 2005.
The net investments made by the institutions during 2006 was $9,185.90 million against $9,521.80 million in 2005.
In 1993, Pictet Umbrella Trust Emerging Markets’ Fund, an institutional investor from Switzerland, was the only FII to enter the Indian market.

While in 1994, no new registrations were reported,
Between 1995 and 2003, an average of 51 new FIIs opened their shops in the country each year.

The break up of FIIs in India is as follows:

US – 368

UK – 167

Luxembourg – 73

Singapore – 51

Australia – 35

Hong Kong – 35

Canada – 32

Ireland – 29

Netherlands – 27

Mauritius – 25

Switzerland – 22

France – 20

With the Indian economy looking strong in the coming years, I am sure the numbers will increase to look better.

Real Estate Boom To Continue!! January 4, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
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Source The Hindu:

The real estate boom of 2006 is set to gain further momentum in 2007 to get India foreign capital of over Rs. 8,000 crore with leading international investors establishing their presence, providing employment opportunities for over two lakh skilled and unskilled people.

According to Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (Assocham), overseas real estate giants such as Royal Indian Raj International, Blackstone Group, Goldman Sachs, Emmar Properties, Pegasus Realty, Citigroup Property Investors, Lee Kim Tah Holdings, Salim group, Morgan Stanley and GE Commercial Finance are likely to bring in all capital of $8 billion with the opening up of India’s real estate sector to 100 per cent foreign direct investment (FDI).

Morgan Stanley has already forayed into India’s booming real estate sector in March 2006 through its real estate investment arm, Morgan Stanley Real Estate, investing Rs. 300 crore (around $68 million) in Mantri Developers Pvt Ltd. of Bangalore.

Morgan Stanley plans to invest more than $1 billion over the next four-five years in the Indian real estate sector.

Tishman Speyer of the U.S. tied up with ICICI Bank to invest $1 billion
Efficient regulatory framework and simpler tax regime for the sector are imperative to boost public-private participation and bring in managerial and technical expertise.

The biggest U.S. pension fund, CalPERS, hedge fund Farallon Capital Management, US-based developer Tishman Speyer and NRI fund Trikona Capital too have drawn up plans to invest in the booming market.

Domestic funds including Kotak Realty Fund, HDFC India Real Estate Fund, Pantaloon Retail’s Kshitij Real Estate Fund and UTI Venture Fund are also active.

With the rules relating to investment and repatriation relaxed to a large extent, an estimated 25 million non-resident Indians (NRIs) living in 125 countries, are investing in immovable property in India.
Strong economic growth, rising income levels, growing middle class, increasing urbanisation and improving transparency brought resurgence for the Indian real estate sector in 2006 which will continue to grow further in 2007 with easy availability of financing facilities.

The chamber forecasts that investment in real estate will go up from $12 billion in 2005 to $90 billion by 2015.

Greater integration with the global economy and the increase in domestic as well as foreign investments are encouraging demand for real estate. Despite ill-founded doubts of a bubble, foreign investors are lining up, it observed.

With ever increasing prices of Indian real estate, no better day than today to get hold of a property. The era is very similar to that of mid-90s. It is a builders market again. So if one is looking for a reasonably priced property, chances are it will get even more expensive tomorrow.

Who Is Evil!!! January 4, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
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Here is the list of army operations carried out by the USA since the WW2 till afghanistan war…. a long list…. so who is the greater evil by the way ???

( list is in german, but you can make out the dates and the places invaded )

Korea-Krieg: 27. Juni 1950 bis 27. Juli 1953
Suez-Krise: Ägypten, 26. Juli 1956 bis 15. November 1956
Operation “Blue Bat”: Libanon, 15. Juli 1958 bis 20. Oktober 1958
Taiwan-Straße: 23. August 1958 bis 1. Juni 1963
Kongo: 14. Juli 1960 bis 1. September 1962
Operation “Tailwind”: Laos, 1970
Operation “Ivory Coast/Kingoin”: Nordvietnam, 21. November 1970
Operation “Endweep”: Nordvietnam, 27. Januar 1972 bis 27. Juli 1973
Operation “Linebacker I”: Nordvietnam, 10. Mai 1972 bis 23. Oktober 1972
Operation “Linebacker II”: Nordvietnam, 18. Dezember 1972 bis 29. Dezember 1972
Operation “Pocket Money”: Nordvietnam, 9. Mai 1972 bis 23. Oktober 1972
Operation “Freedom Train”: Nordvietnam, 6. April 1972 bis 10. Mai 1972
Operation “Arc Light”: Südostasien, 18. Juni 1965 bis April 1970
Operation “Rolling Thunder”: Südvietnam, 24. Februar 1965 bis Oktober 1968
Operation “Ranch Hand”: Südvietnam, Januar 1962 bis Januar 1971
Kuba-Krise: weltweit, 24. Oktober 1962 bis 1. Juni 1963
Operation “Powerpack”: Dominikanische Republik, 28. April 1965 bis 21. September 1966
Sechs-Tage-Krieg: Mittlerer Osten, 13. Mai 1967 bis 10. Juni 1967
Operation “Nickel Grass”: Mittlerer Osten, 6. Oktober 1973 bis 17. November 1973
Operation “Eagle Pull”: Kambodscha, 11. April 1975 bis 13. April 1975
Operation “Freequent Wind”: Evakuierung in Südvietnam, 26. April 1975
bis 30. April 1975
Operation “Mayaguez”: Kambodscha, 15. Mai 1975
Operationen “Eagle Claw/Desert One”: Iran, 25. April 1980
El Salvador, Nikaragua: 1. Januar 1981 bis 1. Februar 1992
Operation “Golf von Sidra”: Libyen, 18. August 1981
US-Multinational Force: Libanon, 25. August 1982 bis 11. Dezember 1987
Operation “Urgent Fury”: Grenada, 23. Oktober 1982 bis 21. November 1983
Operation “Attain Document”: Libyen, 26. Januar 1986 bis 29. März 1986
Operation “El Dorado Canyon”: Libyen, 12. April 1986 bis 17. April 1986
Operation “Blast Furnace”: Bolivien, Juli 1986 bis November 1986
Operation “Ernest Will”: Persischer Golf, 24. Juli 1987 bis 2. August 1990
Operation “Praying Mantis”: Persischer Golf, 17. April 1988 bis 19. April 1988
Operation “Just Cause”: Panama, 20. Dezember 1989 bis 31. Januar 1990
Operation “Nimrod Dancer”: Panama, Mai 1989 bis 20. Dezember 1989
Operation “Promote Liberty”: Panama, 31. Januar 1990
Operation “Ghost Zone”: Bolivien, März 1990 bis 1993
Operation “Sharp Edge”: Liberia, Mai 1990 bis 8. Januar 1991
Operation “Desert Farewell”: Südwest-Asien, 1. Januar 1992 bis 1992
Operation “Desert Calm”: “Südwest-Asien, 1. März 1991 bis 1. Januar 1992
Operation “Desert Shield”: 2. August 1990 bis 17. Januar 1991
Operation “Desert Storm”: Irak, 17. Januar 1991 bis 28. Februar 1991
Operation “Eastern Exit”: Somalia, 2. Januar 1991 bis 11. Januar 1991
Operation “Productiv Effort/Sea Angel”: Bangladesh, Mai 1991 bis Juni 1991
Operation “Fiery Vigil”: Philippinen, 1. bis 30. Juni 1991
Operation “Victor Squared”: Haiti, 1. bis 30. September 1991
Operation “Quick Lift”: Zaire, 24. September 1991 bis 7. Oktober 1991
Operation “Silver Anvil”: Sierra Leone, 2. Mai 1992 bis 5. Mai 1992
Operation “Distant Runner”: Ruanda, 9. April 1994 bis 15. April 1994
Operationen “Quiet Resolve”/”Support Hope”: Ruanda, 22. Juli 1994 bis 30. September 1994
Operation “Uphold/Restore Democracy”: Haiti, 19. September 1994 bis 31. März 1995
Operation “United Shield”: Somalia, 22. Januar 1995 bis 25. März 1995
Operation “Assured Response”: Liberia, April 1996 bis August 1996
Operation “Quick Response”: Zentralafrikanische Republik, Mai 1996 bis August 1996
Operation “Guardian Assistance”: Zaire/Ruanda/Uganda, 15. November 1996 bis 27. Dezember 1996
Operation “Pacific Haven/Quick Transit”: Irak – Guam, 15. September 1996 bis 16. Dezember 1996
Operation “Guardian Retrieval”: Kongo, März 1997 bis Juni 1997
Operation “Noble Obelisk”: Sierra Leone, Mai 1997 bis Juni 1997
Operation “Bevel Edge”: Kambodscha, Juli 1997
Operation “Noble Response”: Kenia, 21. Januar 1998 bis 25. März 1998
Operation “Shepherd Venture”: Guinea-Bissau, 10. Juni 1998 bis 17. Juni 1998
Operation “Infinite Reach”: Sudan/Afghanistan, 20. bis 30. August 1998
Operation “Golden Pheasant”: Honduras, ab März 1988
Operation “Safe Border”: Peru/Ekuador, ab 1995
Operation “Laser Strike”: Südafrika, ab 1. April 1996
Operation “Steady State”: Südamerika, 1994 bis April 1996
Operation “Support Justice”: Südamerika, 1991 bis 1994
Operation “Wipeout”: Hawaii, ab 1990
Operation “Coronet Oak”: Zentral- und Südamerika, Oktober 1977 bis 17. Februar 1999
Operation “Coronet Nighthawk”: Zentral- und Südamerika, ab 1991
Operation “Desert Falcon”: Saudi Arabien, ab 31. März 1991
Operation “Northern Watch”: Kurdistan, ab 31. Dezember 1996
Operation “Provide Comfort”: Kurdistan, 5. April 1991 bis Dezember 1994
Operation “Provide Comfort II”: Kurdistan, 24. Juli 1991 bis 31. Dezember 1996
Operation “Vigilant Sentine I”: Kuwait, ab August 1995
Operation “Vigilant Warrior”: Kuwait, Oktober 1994 bis November 1994
Operation “Desert Focus”: Saudi Arabien, ab Juli 1996
Operation “Phoenix Scorpion I”: Irak, ab November 1997
Operation “Phoenix Scorpion II”: Irak, ab Februar 1998
Operation “Phoenix Scorpion III”: Irak, ab November 1998
Operation “Phoenix Scorpion IV”: Irak, ab Dezember 1998
Operation “Desert Strike”: Irak, 3. September 1996; Cruise Missile-Angriffe: Irak, 26. Juni 1993, 17. Januar 1993, Bombardements: Irak, 13. Januar 1993
Operation “Desert Fox”: Irak, 16. Dezember 1998 bis 20. Dezember 1998
Operation “Provide Promise”: Bosnien, 3. Juli 1992 bis 31. März 1996
Operation “Decisive Enhancement”: Adria, 1. Dezember 1995 bis 19. Juni 1996
Operation “Sharp Guard”: Adria, 15. Juni 1993 bis Dezember 1995
Operation “Maritime Guard”: Adria, 22. November 1992 bis 15. Juni 1993
Operation “Maritime Monitor”: Adria, 16. Juli 1992 bis 22. November 1992
Operation “Sky Monitor”: Bosnien-Herzegowina, ab 16. Oktober 1992
Operation “Deliberate Forke”: Bosnien-Herzegowina, ab 20. Juni 1998
Operation “Decisive Edeavor/Decisive Edge”: Bosnien-Herzegowina, Januar 1996 bis Dezember 1996
Operation “Deny Flight”: Bosnien, 12. April 1993 bis 20. Dezember 1995
Operation “Able Sentry”: Serbien-Mazedonien, ab 5. Juli 1994
Operation “Nomad Edeavor”: Taszar, Ungarn, ab März 1996
Operation “Nomad Vigil”: Albanien, 1. Juli 1995 bis 5. November 1996
Operation “Quick Lift”: Kroatien, Juli 1995
Operation “Deliberate Force”: Republika Srpska, 29. August 1995 bis 21. September 1995
Operation “Joint Forge”: ab 20. Juni 1998
Operation “Joint Guard”: Bosnien-Herzegowina, 20. Juni 1998
Operation “Joint Edeavor”: Bosnien-Herzegowina, Dezember 1995 bis Dezember 1996
Operation “Determined Effort”: Bosnien, Juli 1995 bis Dezember 1995
Operation “Determined Falcon”: Kosovo/Albanien, 15. Juni 1998 bis 16. Juni 1998
Operation “Eagle Eye”: Kosovo, 16. Oktober 1998 bis 24. März 1999
Operation “Sustain Hope/Allied Harbour”: Kosovo, ab 5. April 1999
Operation “Shining Hope”: Kosovo, ab 5. April 1999
Operation “Cobalt Flash”: Kosovo, ab 23. März 1999
Operation “Determined Force”: Kosovo, 8. Oktober 1998 bis 23. März 1999

Intraday 04-01-07. January 4, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Intraday Calls.
3 comments

Buy:

India Bulls,

HCC,

Binani Zinc(With S.L. ),

Zuari(In small qty not more then 50),

Nagarjuna Cons,

HOVS,

Ess-Dee,

Sterlite Opt,

Era Cons.

Regards,
Bhavin.

Medical Prescription!! January 3, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
add a comment

A lady walked into a drug store and told the pharmacist she needed some cyanide.

The pharmacist asked, “Why in the world do you need cyanide?”

The lady then explained she needed it to poison her husband.

The pharmacist’s eyes got big and he said, “Lord have mercy, I can’t
give you cyanide to kill your husband!

That’s against the law! I’ll lose my license… They’ll throw both of
us in jail and all kinds of bad things will happen! Absolutely not! You can NOT have any cyanide!”

Then the lady reached into her purse and pulled out a picture of her
husband having dinner in a restaurant with pharmacist’s wife.

The pharmacist looked at the picture and replied, “Well, now… You
didn’t tell me you had a prescription”.

News. January 3, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Stock In News.
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Today’s Top Newspaper Headlines:- The Economic Times

Vodafone, Analjit may team up for Hutch

Max India chief Analjit open to the idea

Buzz over new Tata bid fires up Corus shares

Stock soar to 536.50 pence a share in intra-day deals

AV Birla joins retail rush, buys Trinethra

The Trinethra group has 172 retail outlets

The Hindu Business Line

Ranbaxy gets US FDA approval for hypertension drug

Company to manufacture and market Atenol

Equity markets greet New Year in style

Auto sales, institutional buying propel Sensex by 155 points

Direct tax collections up 42.74% in April-Dec

Corporate tax collections increase by 51.63%

The Financial Express

Airline leases may be taxed in Budget

Move will impact expansion plans and could raise fares

57% BSE companies yet to comply with Clause 49

Out of 4,143 companies listed on BSE, only 1,789 have complied

China bourses’ M-cap half of GDP

Shanghai & Shenzhen 300 index rose 121% in 2006, the largest rising rate in all global stock markets

Intraday 03-01-07. January 3, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Intraday Calls.
2 comments

Buy:

Unitech,

ROLTA,

ERA Const,

Mahindra Gesco,

Bombay Dye,

LITL,

GMR Infra,

DCB(Keep S.L. intact),

Daawat,

3i Infotech (Continue buying this till 220/=)

Auto sector remains in buying interests. Praj also looks good. Voltamp looks good.

Regards,
Bhavin Mehta.

Line Of Fire. January 2, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Not Stocks..
1 comment so far

Vivek Pradhan wasn’t a happy man. Even the plush comfort of the First Class air-conditioned compartment of the Shatabdi express couldn’t cool his frayed nerves. He was the Project Manager and still not entitled to air travel. It was not the prestige he sought; he had tried to reason with the admin guy, it was the savings in time. A PM had so many things to do! He opened his case and took out the laptop, determined to put the time to some good use.

“Are you from the software industry sir,” the man beside him was staring appreciatively at the laptop. Vivek glanced briefly and mumbled in affirmation, handling the laptop now with exaggerated care and importance as if it were an expensive car. “You people have brought so much advancement to the country sir. Today everything is getting computerized.”

“Thanks,” smiled Vivek, turning around to give the man a look. He always found it difficult to resist appreciation. The man was young and stocky like a sportsman. He looked simple and strangely out of place in that little lap of luxury like a small town boy in a prep school. He probably was a Railway sportsman making the most of his free traveling pass. “You people always amaze me,” the man continued, “You sit in an office and write something on a computer and it does so many big things outside.”

Vivek smiled deprecatingly. Naivety demanded reasoning not anger. “It is not as simple as that my friend. It is not just a question of writing a few lines. There is a lot of process that goes behind it.” For a moment he was tempted to explain the entire Software Development Lifecycle but restrained himself to a Single statement. “It is complex, very complex.”

“It has to be. No wonder you people are so highly paid,” came the reply. This was not turning out as Vivek had thought. A hint of belligerence came into his so far affable, persuasive tone. “Everyone just sees the money. No one sees the amount of hard work we have to put in.” “Hard work!” “Indians have such a narrow concept of hard work. Just because we sit in an air-conditioned office doesn’t mean our brows don’t sweat. You exercise the muscle; we exercise the mind and believe me that is no less taxing.”

He had the man where he wanted him and it was time to drive home the point. “Let me give you an example. Take this train. The entire railway reservation system is computerized. You can book a train ticket between any two stations from any of the hundreds of computerized booking centers across the country. Thousands of transactions, accessing a single database at a given time; concurrency, data integrity, locking, data security. Do you understand the complexity in designing and coding such a system?”

The man was stuck with amazement, like a child at a planetarium. This was something big and beyond his imagination. “You design and code such things.” “I used to,” Vivek paused for effect, “But now I am the Project manager,” “Oh!” sighed the man, as if the storm had passed over, “so your life is easy now.” It was like being told the fire was better than the frying pan. The man had to be given a feel of the heat.
“Oh come on, does life ever get easy as you go up the ladder. Responsibility only brings more work. Design and coding! That is the easier part. Now I don’t do it, but I am responsible for it and believe me, that is far more stressful. My job is to get the work done in time and with the highest quality. And to tell you about the pressures! There is the customer at one end always changing his requirements, the user wanting something else and your boss always expecting you to have finished it yesterday.” Vivek paused in his diatribe, his belligerence fading with self-realization. What he had said was not merely the Outburst of a wronged man, it was the truth. And one need not get Angry while defending the truth. “My friend,” he concluded triumphantly, “you don’t know what it is to be in the line of fire.” The man sat back in his chair, his eyes closed as if in realization. When he spoke after sometime, it was with a calm certainty that surprised Vivek.

“I know sir, I know what it is to be in the line of fire,” He was staring blankly as if no passenger, no train existed, just a vast expanse of time. “There were 30 of us when we were ordered to capture Point 4875 in the cover of the night. The enemy was firing from the top. There was no knowing where the next bullet was going to come from and for whom. In the morning when we finally hoisted the tricolor at the top only 4 of us were alive.”

You are a…”

“I am Subedar Sushant from the 13 J&K Rifles on duty at Peak 4875 in Kargil. They tell me I have completed my term and can opt for a land assignment. But tell me sir, can one give up duty just because it makes life easier. On the dawn of that capture one of my colleagues lay injured in the snow, open to enemy fire while we were hiding behind a bunker. It was my job to go and fetch that soldier to safety.
But my captain refused me permission and went ahead himself. He said that the first pledge he had taken as a Gentleman Cadet was to put the safety and welfare of the nation foremost followed by the safety and welfare of the men he commanded. His personal safety came last, always and every time. He was killed as he shielded that soldier into the bunker. Every morning now as I stand guard I can see him taking all those bullets, which were actually meant for me. I know sir; I know what it is to be in the line of fire.”

Vivek looked at him in disbelief not sure of his reply. Abruptly he switched off the laptop. It seemed trivial, even insulting to edit a word document in the presence of a man for whom valor and duty was a
daily part of life; a valor and sense of duty which he had so far attributed only to epical heroes. The train slowed down as it pulled into the station and Subedar Sushant picked up his bags to alight.
“It was nice meeting you sir.”

Vivek fumbled with the handshake. This was the hand that had climbed mountains, pressed the trigger and hoisted the tricolor. Suddenly, as if by impulse he stood at attention and his right hand went up in an impromptu salute. It was the least he felt he could do for the country.

PS: The incident he narrates during the capture of Peak 4875 is a true life incident during the Kargil war. Captain Batra Sacrificed his life while trying to save one of the men he commanded, as victory was within sight. For this and his various other acts of bravery he was warded the Param Vir Chakra – the nation’s highest military award. Live humbly, there are great people around us, let us learn!

Picture Above : This is 130 mm gun battery. This was used during Kargil war. The sound of the blast is ear defeaning. Range is 28-30 KMS.

Intraday 02-01-07. January 2, 2007

Posted by Bhavin in Intraday Calls.
2 comments

For day market likely to remain volatile.

Buy:

3i Info(As mentioned previously if it closes above 190/= we can see new highs.)

Torrent Power.

For delivery one can check JB Chem:

As per Religare Security Reports:
J.B.Chem, after improving for a period of 20 months
from a low of Rs.47.50 in July 2004 to a high of
Rs.139.50 in February 2006, has declined to a level of
Rs.71.20. At the current price of Rs90, it is trading in
2C ZONE i.e. short term average has moved below
the medium term average which in turn remains above
long term average and the current price is placed
between medium term and long term averages. Buy at
declines in the range of Rs.84-87 with a stop loss
below Rs81.50 for a conservative upper target of
Rs.106 and an optimistic target of Rs.118. Holding
period can be 3-4 months.

Watch out for positive moves on Praj Ind, Reliance Infr and Tata Steel.

On Shorting side one can consider GTL which has heavy resistance at 150-152/=.

Regards,
Bhavin Mehta.
HAPPY NEW YEAR 2007.