Saturday, April 18, 2015

WHY LONG-TERM INVESTORS SHOULD LOOK AT THE BIG PICTURE ?

With the Sensex and Nifty indices stuck within trading ranges for more than a month, small investors are in a quandary. What to do next? Two days of sharp bounce from a bottom, and the urge to jump in and buy is almost uncontrollable. Three days of correction from a resistance level, and every one is worried about a 2008-like crash.

Getting worried and disturbed about short-term index gyrations only increases your blood pressure and clouds your decision making. Times like these are true tests of your investment mettle. In life, unplanned action is some times better than planned inaction. But, for building wealth through successful investing in the stock market, you should practice the discipline of planned inaction.

The inaction refers only to buying and selling of stocks. Reading annual reports, books and preparing buy/sell lists are part of the daily ritual of  long-term investors. What then is the big picture referred to in the headline? I’m not an economist, but here is my take on what is happening around us.

Thanks to the Internet and FIIs, our stock market is fully integrated with global markets. All the nonsense about decoupling because of our strong domestic market is just that – nonsense. So, keep an eye on what is happening in global markets. To keep readers updated, I regularly post about stock indices in the US, Europe and Asia. If you are not reading those posts, ask yourself: Why not?

Europe is in quite a mess due to a unified currency that is not helping profligate nations - like Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal - that are deep in debt and have very little capabilities (or even intentions) of repaying that debt. They neither can print their own currencies, nor can they devalue their currencies. The only options are that a financially stronger economy like Germany, and perhaps the IMF, will bail them out to stop them from defaulting. But that is postponing the problem – not solving it.

Many Indian companies – particularly IT services companies – switched their export focus from the USA to Europe post the dot.com crash in 2001. Some have built up significant businesses in Europe, including acquisition of European companies. The economic mess in the Eurozone is going to affect their bottom lines for the next few years.

China is a wild card. For years, they have been far ahead of India in building world-class infrastructure and an export-led high-growth economy. But with global economies slowing down, China is desperately trying to re-focus on their domestic market. There is strong suspicion about their reported growth figures, and that is reflected in their sliding stock market. If they start cutting back on their commodity purchases, which has been sustaining the global commodities market and shipping businesses, a big crash in global stock markets may follow.

The USA is not on the verge of collapse – like they were three years back. The situation is grim, but not hopeless. There will be a lot of pain before their economy eventually turns around. But thanks to two rounds of quantitative easing, and significant belt-tightening, US corporations are sitting on a lot of cash. They haven’t curtailed spending on existing IT services, and there are signs that they may be spending more on new services. The strengthening dollar will add to the bottom lines of IT services and export companies.

Our over-dependence on oil imports will further add to our balance of payments problem. The government had introduced several populist measures to help the rural poor. Subsidies on diesel, kerosene, fertilisers have added to the fiscal deficit. Rampant corruption and scams, as well as high inflation are keeping FIIs away. Their inflows partly help in reducing the deficit.

However, our GDP continues to grow. Not at 8-9% but more like 6-7%, which is much better than almost every one else except China. That pretty much rules out a 2008-like crash in the Indian stock market. But it could take a while before we see new highs on the Sensex and Nifty.

The sensible approach will be to cut out the daily noise emanating from the business TV channels, and concentrate on companies that have capable and trustworthy managements, and have records of several years of good performances through bull and bear cycles. If they produce goods or services that find buyers regardless of the state of the economy, so much the better. Companies that sell toothpaste, cigarettes, soaps and detergents, biscuits, life-saving drugs, drugs for chronic diseases, tractors, power tillers, tea and coffee will continue to do well.

Just remember that the stocks that don’t fall much during a down trend, don’t rise much during the subsequent up trend. The ones that fall more, tend to rise more. Of course, this ‘rule’ works only for well-managed companies.

SOURCES : EMAIL

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