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India’s bulls relish China inflows
The
steep fall in the stock exchange after the high has not perturbed the
foreign institutional investors, including those from China, as all of
them are taking a long term view of the Indian economy and market.
During the next two years the sensex is expected to touch the dizzy
heights of 25,000 and that is what these investors are looking at.
Meanwhile the SEBI is all precautions to monitor the source of the
investment lest the economy is held to ransom by inimical forces.
by SIDDHARTH
SRIVASTAVA
Retail
and institutional investors staying bullish on Indian stocks despite
recent steep declines are pointing to the first clearance given to a
Chinese foreign institutional investor (FII) to invest directly in the
Indian markets as one reason for their optimism.
Market regulator the
Securities Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has given the go-ahead to the
Shanghai-based China International Fund Management (CIFM), with US$4
billion available for overseas investment, to buy into Indian stocks.
CIFM is managed by the
financial wing of the Shanghai Municipal government and China’s
third-biggest investment firm, Shanghai International Trust and
Investment Company, along-with US fund giant JP Morgan. It was among the
first few fund houses that the Chinese government permitted to invest in
international markets following relaxation in overseas investments in
June 2007.
Last October, CIFM raised
more than $15.5 billion from almost two million investors keen to ride
the Asian growth story when it launched the first Chinese fund to invest
in Asia-Pacific markets (excluding Japan). CIFM has identified
Singapore, Hong Kong, South Korea and India as key markets.
Chinese authorities have
so far allowed overseas investments of $19.5 billion by indigenous
Chinese funds. Media reports suggest that this quota will be raised to
$70 billion. Chinese investments in Indian stocks could scale $10
billion, if one also accounts for indirect routes from Hong Kong or
global private equity firms, according to predictions that have appeared
in some Indian financial papers. Net FII flows into Indian stock markets
more than doubled last year to pass $17 billion.
SEBI should also permit
China Investment Corporation (CIC), with an initial capital corpus of
over $200 billion, to pick up Indian stocks, according to reports in
India. The Chinese government formed CIC last year to invest in global
assets and help to invest the country’s rising foreign exchange reserves
and counter the impact on them of a falling US dollar.
CIC has bought a $3
billion stake in US-based private equity group Blackstone, whose
substantial investments in India include stakes in textile major
Gokaldas, Nagarjuna Constructions and the Eenadu group, one of the
largest media networks in southern India. In a recent research report on
the CIC’s wish list, international securities firm Credit Suisse said it
expects Indian software, pharmaceuticals and capital goods businesses to
be popular.
“It is highly unlikely
that CIC could get its hands on India’s resources companies [oil and
metals], considering that both countries are competing to acquire
resources around the world, and it would be politically too sensitive in
India for CIC to invest in Indian resources companies,” it stated.
Chinese funds may be kept
away from investing in telecom, oil and gas, and port ventures due to
Indian fears about security issues. Chinese firms have in the past been
prevented from investing in these sectors following decisions by the
federal Indian home ministry, but it is not yet clear how the government
stands on this issue as it seeks to attract China’s giant investment
funds. Certainly there appears a developing rapprochement between the
two countries regarding mutual investment flows. Beijing has put in
place statutes to enable Indian stock exchanges such as the Bombay Stock
Exchange (BSE) and the broader National Stock Exchange (NSE) to set up
offices in China to attract listings and investments by Chinese firms.
This follows an agreement
between SEBI and the China Securities Regulatory Commission in 2006.
SEBI has said that new statutes requiring overseas funds to register
before investing in local equities are aimed at increasing transparency
about the source of funds and improve the market.
Though the benchmark
Sensex measure of stocks listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange has fallen
steeply to 17,000-18,000 levels in the last couple of weeks from
historic highs above 20,000 amid weak global markets, the Federation of
Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) recently said the
30-share index should scale 25,000 within two years.
The Sensex surged over
45% last year and hit the 20,000 mark for the first time in October.
The stock market gains
will come despite some slowing in gross domestic product (GDP) growth to
below 9%, compared with more than 10% growth in the last fiscal year.
Finance minister P Chidambaram has underlined that the Indian economy
remains robust, with strong real indicators, including a fundamentally
good growth of over 8% growth, foreign exchange reserves of more than
$200 billion and a fast-growing services sector.
This optimism is shared
by overseas investors, according to Merrill Lynch, which in a year-end
analysis of the Indian economy, said: “Foreign investment in Indian
equities is bound to rise. Most global fund managers are taking a
longer-term shot on India.”
The strength of the
market is attracting more companies to list, with 95 companies raising
$8.3 billion through initial public offerings last year, ranking India
seventh in the world for IPOs, according to data by Ernst & Young.
Foreign institutional
investors continued to pour money into the country last year, encouraged
by rising stock values and also the strengthening rupee. According to
SEBI data for the third-fourth week of September, 2007, FII purchases
resulted in the quickest ever 1,000-point rise in the Sensex. Net
investment crossed $3.5 billion over eight trading sessions.
The strong market helped
at least 13 of the country’s 200 mutual funds to roughly double their
investors’ wealth last year, while more than 150 clocked returns of more
than 50%, according to the Association of Mutual Funds in India. Total
assets under management for the Indian MF industry have risen more than
sixfold over the past seven years to more than 5 trillion rupees (US$126
billion). |