Deutsche Bank upbeat on IT, underweight on metals, auto, says Pratik Gupta

stocks

With the market expected to remain volatile for the next few months, Pratik Gupta, Head of Equities-India of Deutsche Bank has recommended that the investors be underweight on metals and auto stocks that have large global exposure. IT services remain their preferred bet, he said.

“It is a very narrow rally driven by couple of stocks and sectors and also partly driven by the environment we are in,” said Gupta, in an interview with CNBC-TV18.

“There are two major event risks to watch out for, on the global side there is the US-China trade war talk and Brexit. Locally, we have political situation. So one will have to be very careful in terms of portfolio construct,” he said.

“Locally, with elections round the corner, government spending on capex will be less so avoid companies that are overly dependent on government spending. However, consumer staples segment would continue to do relatively better irrespective of whoever comes to power because we will continue to see more tax break, more welfare programmes, etc.,” he added.

With regards to the RBI monetary policy, he said a change in stance to neutral is expected. A rate cut is unlikely but a window for 25 basis cut opens up from now to April.

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India steel sector outlook: Will metal prices lose sheen in wake of China slowdown?

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

For most part of 2018, the steel sector in India was very well placed with global prices and spreads hitting multi-year highs. Adding to the buoyancy was once-in-a-lifetime sale of steel assets in the country.

For the most part of 2018, the steel sector in India was very well placed with global prices and spreads hitting multi-year highs. Adding to the buoyancy was once-in-a-lifetime sale of steel assets in the country.

Domestic steel consumption rose to about 8.2 percent year-to-date, which is nearly the double of the average 4.3 percent rate seen over the past half-decade.

The sparkle in the domestic and global ferrous industry can be attributed to China’s move to shut its capacities. China has closed about 20 percent of steel making capacity since 2016, which includes closure of 140 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) of low grade induction furnaces and close to 130 mtpa of mainstream but outdated steel capacity.

Going into 2019, a lot is at stake with regards to the asset resolution plans. Three of the above five cases were resolved this year but remaining two more assets resolutions are still awaited.

Tata Steel On The Prowl 

Tata Steel paid Rs 35,200 crore for Bhushan Steel assets, which had a capacity of 5.5 mtpa. The assets didn’t come at cheap valuations and the market was worried if Tatas were trying to eat more than they can chew but the acquisition made strategic sense to Tata Steel as the plant highlights the scope for low-cost brownfield expansion and can aid group’s profitability as it can use low-cost captive iron-ore from Tata Steel mines.

Vedanta Forays Into Steel With Its Electrosteel Steels Acquisition 

Vedanta paid Rs 5,300 crore for the running capacity of 1.5 MTPA, which has the potential to expand to 2.5 MTPA. Billionaire owner Anil Agarwal said he is working on plans to raise Electrosteel’s capacity to 7 million tonnes in four years, which may require an investment of as much as $3-4 billion.

Aion-JSW Steel Consortium 

The consortium got 1.5 MTPA plant of Monnet Ispat for about Rs 2,500 crore. JSW steel was the favourite to get quite a few assets but had to settle for just Monnet. The positives for JSW Steel included its foray into a new geography, with the potential to add capacity to the plant.

China Growth

A lot is dependent on China’s growth and consumption pattern. In the final quarter of the year, a couple of concerns propped up with regards to steel exports, which contracted by 35 percent year-to-date to 4.33 MT. Imports, however, were marginally lower by 2 percent to 5.41 MT.

Also, sentiment got hit as China export prices corrected by 15 percent in the last two months. Meanwhile, domestic steel prices fell 4 percent in the past month and as per our calculations, a further 5-6 percent correction in January 2019 cannot be ruled out.

China steel price correction can be attributed to concerns of a demand slowdown and also on feared lower than expected winter production cuts.

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Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

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Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

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Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Metal prices could remain soft in 2019, says S&P Global Platts

The industrial metals are on course for posting yet another weak month. Weighed down by the weak economic data all the eyes are now on the G20 meeting in Argentina at the end of this month.

Senior managing editors of S&P Global Platts Paul Bartholomew and Keith Tan discuss the metals space.

“In China, we are seeing a lot of prices coming off, a bit of softness in the economy, particularly in some of the consumer-driven segments and manufacturing. So, we could start off a little bit sort of soft in 2019 as well” said Bartholomew.

Keith Tan said when the first shots of the trade war were fired, steel and aluminium clearly were the first victims.

“We know China does not export that much of steel to the US. So, we are now looking at what is happening in the downstream segments and we are seeing actually consumption growth for white goods in China, it is still growing but it is at a slower pace,” said Tan.

Globe Capital expects metals to witness some corrections going forward

In an interview to CNBC-TV18, Himanshu Gupta of Globe Capital, said that a very strong technical recovery rally was seen in most of the metals.

However, he said, “When China joins after a break for this week on Monday, there is a very high possibility that after a sharp rally, we see some kind of profit booking and shorting at higher levels. So I expect some metals to witness some corrections hereafter and therefore would be looking to go short at higher levels.”

On aluminium, Gupta said, “We have seen some sharp sell-off in the late evening on Thursday. So I do not think these gains will sustain Friday’s session.”

“Metals like zinc and copper, they are the metals that have seen a very strong sharp run up over the last couple of sessions. I think some profit booking is on the cards and I would be looking to go short on both the counters,” he added.

Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts on CNBCTV18.com are their own and not that of the website or its management. CNBCTV18.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.

Government panel mulls import curbs in 5 sectors to stem fall in rupee

Trade

In a bid to stem the fall in the rupee, a government task-force is looking at import substitutions across five sectors such as defence, electronics, telecom, metals, petroleum and solar.

The government will look at five sectors and see how it can substitute import by promoting domestic industry in this sectors. Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) is leading the effort by carrying out government to government consultation.

The broad idea is to look if domestic manufacturing capacity exists in these five sectors and if not then what are the constraints which are prohibiting domestic capacity in these five sectors.

The task force will play an important role in ensuring that the domestic industry will be able to give output in the selected sectors when imports are restricted.

Yes Securities bullish on corporate banks, metals and UPL

USA-STOCKS

Yes Securities on Friday said the house is bullish on corporate banks, metals and agrochemicals maker, United Phosphorus Ltd (UPL).

In an interview to CNBC-TV18, Prasanth Prabhakaran, senior president and chief executive officer, said, “Yes Securities is bullish on large corporate banks on back of good sales growth and operating margin growth on both manufacturing and servicing side.”

With regards to metals, Prabhakaran said the house like the space, because Yes Securities see lot of projects getting awarded from the government side.

According to Prabhakaran, UPL s a stock of future and will give sizeable returns for the next couple of years.

Global acquisitions by UPL has given the company value in period of 12-18 months and is EPS (earnings per share) accretive.

Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts on CNBCTV18.com are their own and not that of the website or its management. CNBCTV18.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.

Commodity Champions: Gold needs a catalyst to get moving, says Jonathan Barratt

Precious metals have come under significant pressure. The international gold and silver prices hit their lowest level in 12 months. In fact the silver prices have declined for the seventh straight week in a row.

It is not good news for platinum group metals (PGMs) as well. The platinum prices continue to decline and are trading at a discount to the gold prices in the global markets. It is also trading at the lowest level in last 10 years.

Some of the key reasons the precious metals continue to decline and remain under pressure are tensions over global trade war that have eased and the premium that the precious metals saw going off. Also there has been a positive conversation between the United States and the European Union where they could be coming to an agreement as far as the trading concerns which has not been favourable.

Apart from that, the other assets classes and equities have continued to gain. So, a lot of money is not coming in for the precious metals. Strength in US dollar, decline in the Chinese yuan for straight seven weeks, all of that has been putting pressure as well.

In an interview to CNBC-TV18, Jonathan Barratt, CIO at Probis Securities, Sandeep Kulhalli, Sr. VP – Retail & Marketing at Tanishq, Vijay Jain, CEO at ORRA, and Suvankar Sen, Executive Director at Senco Gold & Diamonds discussed on what is the way forward in case of gold and other commodities.

Jonathan Barratt said, “Generally when you look at the way gold has been trading, you had a very bullish start to it and then all of a sudden we saw some renewed strength in the dollar. Also the market shied away from any form of geopolitical risk for seeing gold as more of safe haven type of currency. When you look at that, people just lost faith in the metal and that is why we are seeing it under a lot of pressure. We have got those geopolitical risks there, but it really needs a catalyst in order to get it moving.”

On the Indian gold prices, Sandeep Kulhalli said, “The understanding that we have on gold is actually the demand side has never impacted the gold rates. Gold rates have independent behaviours which are complicated by the various variables which go on the gold pricing. Therefore there has not been enough projections on gold rate behaviours over the history of the metal that has been traded on commodity exchanges because the complications and the nature of the influences to gold rate, especially the dollar rate.”

Expecting recovery in metals anytime soon, says CommTrendz Research

S&P BSE Metal | 2019 return: (-)17.32 percent | Level as on 31 Dec 2018: Rs 11,839.59 | Level as on 13 Dec 2019: Rs 9,788.75

T Gnanasekar, CommTrendz Research said we are expecting recovery in metals anytime soon.

Talking about metals, T Gnanasekar, CommTrendz Research said, “Things are more or less factored in, it has overdone the way they have seen the falls and it is making a yearly low. Technically, there is going to be recovery anytime soon but it would all depend on the news flows that continue in the coming months or coming weeks on the trade war situation.”

“I guess the market will get immune to it and would just start focusing back on the trade and on fundamentals which seems to be robust.  I expect some recovery from here and I think big list inclusive of copper, nickel, zinc, lead all of them could see a decent recovery of 5-7 percent or even 10 percent in the coming weeks,” he added.

Talking about crude oil, “Having stop loss is extremely important as you cannot take a mid-term to long term view. The overall situation right now is building up in such a way that US is trying to pressure on OPEC to increase supplies that might drag prices lower and people who have been long with the higher levels could start exiting positions. There is a fairly strong support near $70 and there is a lot of positive that can again take markets to higher levels. $69-70 is going to be a very strong level and should hold and back to $78-80.”

Initiate sell positions in copper at the current market price, says Choice Broking

markets

One can initiate sell positions in copper at the current market price, said Sumeet Bagadia, Choice Broking.

Talking about metals space, he said, “What we are seeing is a selloff in most of the commodities and there is possibility that we might see selloff in most of the metal stocks like copper, zinc, lead, nickel and aluminium.”

“Charts are looking weak. Looking at the charts,copper is the best commodity to trade in. If there is a bounce back of around Rs 1-2 from present levels then that should be used as a selling opportunity. On higher side one can maintain stop loss of around Rs 467 in Copper June contract for the downside target of Rs 457-455 in next couple of days,” said Bagadia.

Expect FY19 Sensex earnings to grow at 25-26%, says Credit Suisse

S&P BSE Metal | 2019 return: (-)17.32 percent | Level as on 31 Dec 2018: Rs 11,839.59 | Level as on 13 Dec 2019: Rs 9,788.75

Expect FY19 Sensex earnings to grow at 25-26%, although some cuts are likely but not at the pace seen in the March quarter, said Neelkanth Mishra, Managing Director and India Equity Strategist, Credit Suisse.

Speaking exclusively to CNBC-TV18, he said there has been a 3.5% cut to FY19 earnings per share after the March quarter result season. The year-on-year growth is 34% in FY19, which is high due to lot of one-offs in FY18 base.

“The earnings per share at Nifty or BSE 100 level is always tricky to call, given the significant global exposure we have in our narrower indices and also because there is a positive relationship to a weaker currency,” Mishra said.

The rupee has bounced back from precarious levels but there is still lot of risk to the currency, because the balance of payment situation remains negative. If the rupee continues to remain weak, the earnings for information technology, metal, pharmaceutical, and petrochemical get upgraded,” he said.

The house continues to remain overweight on information technology and metals in the portfolio, he said, adding that, information technology has done well this year and metals after having a good start have corrected.

He said metals corrected on concerns that global growth has remained slow for longer than expected and stress on emerging markets, which has resulted in their central banks raising rates to protect their currencies. So, although the stocks have corrected, the fundamentals remain intact.

However, the house has downgraded a few information technology names in the last couple of days, because of them being overbought and no fundamental improvement. So, remain selective on information technology, said Mishra.

According to him, the economic activity momentum may have peaked and there could be headwinds appearing for economic growth.

The house is underweight on consumer staples, but there are sectors where there is structural change happening like packaged food and so positive on it, Mishra added.