Friday, 4 November 2016

How US Fund Managers Changed Strategies before, during and after the Financial Crisis -The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

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4 November 2016
 
Financial Crisis (The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions)
Do fund managers consider momentum/contrarian strategy in their trading? Do these strategies remain constant or are they dependent on the market conditions? Does financial crisis make them behave differently? Do fund managers really make good decisions on strategy selection, to respond market change? To explore these issues, Luyue Jin, Cheng Zhen, Mengyao Xu, Xiaoyu Wang, Yaolin Wang conducted a study, “Mutual Fund Managers’ Choice of Momentum Strategy- Pre/During/Post Financial Crisis”. They studied the US data from September 2003 to March 2013 which was divided into three periods: pre-crisis (September 2003 to September 2007), during the crisis (October 2007 to February 2009) and post-crisis (March 2009 to March 2013). The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

September 2003 is chosen as the starting point of sample period to exclude any influence from the previous dot-com crisis. From 2003 March, the stock market moved up until September 2007, when the market index reached its all-time high. The ending point of the sample period, March 2013, is the month when the market index went up as high as it was in September 2007, for the first time after the crisis.

The study involved a total of 207 mutual fund schemes, selected on three criteria: the offer date before September 2003, the scheme should be a growth or a value fund and its total net asset should be higher than $10 million. An alternate way in which the samples were divided was through their market-capitalisation. Also, UMD (up-minus-down), SML (security market line), HML (high-minus-low) historical monthly data and historical benchmark rates, excess market returns and risk-free rates, were collected from Kenneth R French Data Library. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

The writers of the paper picked all the schemes and tested each scheme for the whole period to check the significance of the coefficient of UMD to see whether the fund managers take momentum or contrarian strategy in their trading. The fund managers were then classified into three groups, momentum strategy (significantly positive coefficient), contrarian strategy (significantly negative coefficient) and no momentum (not significantly different from zero) consideration. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

Momentum in a stock is described as the tendency of the stock price to continue rising or to continue falling, based on the direction it initially is in. Thus, momentum strategy aims to capitalise from the continuing trends in the market. Contrarian strategy follows a method where purchasing and selling is done in contrast to the prevailing market sentiments. ‘No strategy’ refers to the mutual fund schemes whose managers didn’t follow either of these two strategies. By comparing the percentage of each strategy being followed, its popularity is gauged. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

Since the schemes are divided into three categories on the basis of the strategy, alpha can be estimated for each of the category and, if there is significant difference in returns by one strategy from the other two, that particular strategy has some significance. Which strategy produced the highest alpha under what situation was also determined. After dividing the mutual funds into various groups and segments, it was found that fund managers preferred momentum strategy before the financial crisis and shifted to ‘no strategy’ during crisis and moved to contrarian strategy after the crisis. The contrarian strategy usually becomes significant in the long run; thus, there is a fair question whether the fund managers realised this and adopted it during the financial crisis. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions


The paper concluded that the strategies opted by fund managers are dependent on the market and they shift their strategies along with the changes in situation. The study explored a combination of 27 different ways by taking three different sub-periods during which the dominant strategy changed as well. Lastly, the shift in strategy influences a fund’s performance. Managers, who shifted to no strategy during crisis or to contrarian strategy after crisis, had an improved performance, to a large extent. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

Surge in global yields to keep Indian bond markets cautious -The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

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4 November 2016
 
Bond (The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions)
Emerging global risks will keep the Indian debt markets on the defensive and limit gains, given that domestic corporate bond spreads have already narrowed to near a one-year low, says India Ratings and Research (Ind-Ra). The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions 

The ratings agency says it believes that an uptick in global yields and several upcoming high-impact events globally will limit the softening of domestic bond yields and keep the rupee volatile. 

According to Ind-Ra, Indian corporate bonds are in a sweet spot presently (generic one-year bond spread over Government securities (G-sec) averaged at 37 basis points (bps) in October 2016, while five-year spread averaged 39bps -lowest in 2016)- limiting the scope for incremental outperformance from hereon. 

It says, "The focus for the Indian DebtFX markets will shift from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)'s accommodative monetary policy to two major drivers, global developments and consequent risk appetite and incremental G-sec purchases through open market operations (OMOs).

Surge in Global Yields Signals Caution, Rupee to be Conduit of Transmission
The ratings agency says, the scope for G-sec yields to soften incrementally is limited, as globally government bond yields inch higher. The narrow spread between G-sec and developed market yields will keep the domestic debt market circumspect, as globally, economies brace for a potential reversal in yields from the June 2016 lows. Central banks of major developed economies expanded their monetary policies, as the countries battle deflationary pressures amid the fragile growth outlook. The low-rates phenomena pushed global bond yields to multi-year lows in June 2016. However, as central banks are left with fewer policy tools, the need for fiscal support has resurfaced. This has unsettled global bond investors - leading to a sharp surge in government bond yields, it added. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
 
Benchmark Yield (The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions)
Ind-Ra says it believes that, in event of risk aversion resurfacing, the rupee will emerge as the first line of transmission of global risks to domestic financial markets. The potential resurgence in risk aversion and as a fallout a fall in investment flows will keep the rupee vulnerable and it may come under mild depreciation.

Plateauing of Rates

The 175bps repo rate cut since the start of 2015 translated into G-sec yields softening by 110bp-140bp across the yield curve. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

With a benign inflation trajectory, Ind-Ra says, the RBI will have room to ease rates by another 25bp by end-FY17. "However, with a large part of the easy monetary policy cycle already underway, incremental softness in bond yields will be reined in. The bond market will shift focus from the central bank's policy actions and the two major drivers hereon will be RBI's liquidity operation through OMOs and global developments and outcomes of several high-impact events - upcoming US presidential election, US Federal Reserve's timing of imminent rate hike, Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) meeting will force investors to reassess their risk appetite and fund allocations.

Corporate Debt Market Spreads Narrow

Corporate bonds are currently in a sweet spot, though Ind-Ra says it believes that the room for spread compression going forward is limited and will largely be a function of the recovery in the corporates' financial health, along with an improvement in the earnings outlook.

Generic AAA rated public sector undertaking (PSU) yield spreads over the corresponding G-sec are hovering in range of 40bps-60bps across the curve, while State Development Loan (SDL) spreads too are in same range. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions


"The narrowing differential in spreads of SDLs and corporate bonds, pickup in issuance of SDL in 2HFY17 and the proactive debt management by states suggest that corporate bonds will be impacted by the trends and quantum of SDL issuance, going forward," the ratings agency concluded.The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

India to develop own gold standard called Bharatiya Nirdeshak Dravya -The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

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4 November 2016

The Indian government has decided to develop the country's own standard for gold. The first Indian gold standard will be called as the Bharatiya Nirdeshak Dravya (BND 4201). The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions 

India Government Mint, a unit of Security Printing and Minting Corp of India Ltd, has signed an agreement with Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) and CSIR-National Physical Laboratory (NPL) to develop the first gold standard. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions  

Gold reference standard is indispensable in gold and jewellery hall marking and assumes greater importance in the gold monetisation scheme of the Indian government. "Gold reference material being developed under the agreement will be useful for collection and purity testing centres (CPTC) to certify the purity of gold deposits under the Scheme. This development thus will be beneficial to consumer to ensure purity of gold," a release from the Government Mint says. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions


At present, the gold reference material is imported. Development of this reference material indigenously will add to the Make in India campaign and will save foreign exchange as well as minimise dependency on foreign countries, the release adds.The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

AICBEC complaints against Central Bank of India management to Standing Committee-The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

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4 November 2016

The All India Central Bank Employees' Congress (AICBEC) has appealed to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Human Resource Development to take action against top management of Central Bank of India for suppressing employee union. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

The AICBEC, in a memorandum submitted to Satyanarayan Jatiya, the Chairman of the Standing Committee, shared specific incidents where the Bank management had allegedly tried to depute more employees to zones other than Mumbai, withdrawn or not followed several employee welfare measures and deprived the Union from fees paid by members. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

It says, "Recently the bank inducted 1,712 as clerks nationally. Highest grosser Mumbai region was not given a single new hand. Seven were allocated to Goa. Here, is an interesting fact - Mumbai that had 1,343 clerks in 2012 saw the figure drop to 900 in 2016, a reduction of 443 clerks. Yet no fresh allocation out of the new recruits." The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
 
Mumbai Zone (The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions)
The Union also alleged that the Bank management withdrawn subsidy given for canteen facility. The Bank management, despite a direction from Financial Services Secretary, is not posting women employees to the place near their residence or choice, the AICBEC said in a statement.

According to Subhash S Sawant, General Secretary of AICBEC, the Central Bank management even decided not to deduct members' fee and deposit it in the Union account. "That was unilateral in action, discriminatory in nature, an action invoked by the management with sole purpose to choke up the finances of the Union. The management stopped collecting 'subscription to the Union' on our behalf. This newfound wisdom was employed only on the Mumbai Zone of the Bank. All other Unions and all the constituents of our Union across the country continue to receive contribution from members that is collected by the Bank" he says.


The Bank employee union also submitted the Memorandum to Sharad Pawar, who is member of the Standing Committee.The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

Nifty, Sensex to remain under pressure – Weekly closing report -The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

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4 November 2016

I had mentioned in last week’s closing report that Nifty, Sensex continue to lose momentum. The major indices of the Indian stock markets suffered a correction on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Monday and Tuesday were market holidays. The trends of the major indices in the course of the week’s trading are given in the table below: The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
Weak global cues dragged the Indian equity markets on Wednesday. The key indices closed the day's trade with losses of more than 1% each, as selling pressure was witnessed in healthcare, oil and gas, and automobile stocks. The market was spooked with the possibility of Donald Trump winning the US presidential elections and the possibility of a rate hike in the US soon. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
 
Weekly Reports (The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions)
Car-maker Ford India Pvt Ltd on Wednesday said it closed last month selling a total of 22,043 vehicles, more than it sold in October 2015. In a statement issued, the company said its combined domestic wholesales and exports grew to 22,043 vehicles in October, in comparison to 20,420 vehicles in October 2015. October domestic wholesales stood at 7,508 vehicles against 10,008 vehicles in the same month last year, while exports grew to 14,535 vehicles compared to 10,412 units in October 2015, Ford India said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday chaired a meeting to discuss a roadmap to reduce the country's dependency on import of oil and gas, sources said. They said the Petroleum Ministry presented strategies at the meeting to achieve the objective of reducing oil and gas imports. The strategies included increasing production of crude oil and gas, promoting bio-fuels and renewables, energy efficiency and promoting conservation. Home Minister Rajnath Singh, Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan and Environment Minister Anil Madhav Dave attended the meeting. Others present included NITI Aayog Vice Chairman Arvind Panagariya, NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant, Cabinet Secretary Pradeep Kumar Sinha and senior officials from PMO, Petroleum Ministry, External Affairs Ministry, Home Ministry, Finance Ministry and Defence Ministry. Indian Oil Corporation shares closed at Rs315.60, down 2.91%.

Indian equity markets on Thursday were pulled lower on the back of global cues, such as the US Fed's interest rate decision and uncertainty over the upcoming US presidential election. The barometer 30-scrip sensitive index (Sensex) of the BSE hit its lowest level in over 16 weeks. The BSE market breadth was skewed in favour of the bears -- with 1,775 declines and 1,174 advances. On Wednesday, the benchmark indices had closed on a lower note, depressed by weak global cues. Initially on Thursday, the key equity indices opened on a flat note in sync with their Asian peers. The global markets remained cautious over the US Fed's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meet decision on Wednesday, which indicated a possible rate-hike in December on the back of economic recovery, while keeping its short-term interest rate intact for the current month. A hike in the US interest rates can potentially lead foreign portfolio investors (FPI) and funds away from emerging markets such as India. It is also expected to dent the business margins of corporates as access to capital from the US will become expensive. Besides, positive domestic macro-economic data -- the Nikkei India Services PMI (Purchasing Manager's Index) -- released earlier during the day, could not cheer the equity markets. The data showed a rise of the index to 54.5 in October from 52 in September, indicating a healthy growth in the services sector. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions


Indian equity markets on Friday traded in the negative territory as there was global uncertainty over the result of the forthcoming US presidential election. Selling pressure was witnessed in healthcare, metal and capital goods stocks. The US non-farm payrolls data is expected later in the evening, which will also signal if there will be a rate-hike in the mid-December, pointed out market analysts. Friday’s trading ended with moderate losses of around 0.50% in the major indices over Thursday’s close.The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

Thursday, 3 November 2016

Nifty, Sensex may head lower – Monday closing report-The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

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3 November 2016

I had mentioned in Wednesday’s closing report that Sensex, Nifty were precariously poised. The major indices of the Indian stock markets suffered a minor correction on Thursday and closed with small losses. The trends of the major indices in the course of Thursday’s trading are given in the table below: The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
 
Major Indices (The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions)

Indian equity markets on Thursday were pulled lower on the back of global cues, such as the US Fed's interest rate decision and uncertainty over the upcoming US presidential election. The barometer 30-scrip sensitive index (Sensex) of the BSE hit its lowest level in over 16 weeks.  The BSE market breadth was skewed in favour of the bears -- with 1,775 declines and 1,174 advances. On Wednesday, the benchmark indices had closed on a lower note, depressed by weak global cues. Initially on Thursday, the key equity indices opened on a flat note in sync with their Asian peers. The global markets remained cautious over the US Fed's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meet decision on Wednesday, which indicated a possible rate-hike in December on the back of economic recovery, while keeping its short-term interest rate intact for the current month. A hike in the US interest rates can potentially lead foreign portfolio investors (FPI) and funds away from emerging markets such as India. It is also expected to dent the business margins of corporates as access to capital from the US will become expensive. Besides, positive domestic macro-economic data -- the Nikkei India Services PMI (Purchasing Manager's Index) -- released earlier during the day, could not cheer the equity markets. The data showed a rise of the index to 54.5 in October from 52 in September, indicating a healthy growth in the services sector. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

IT (information technology) and media-entertainment stocks witnessed selling pressure at higher levels from traders, while pharma, auto and oil-gas stocks traded with mixed sentiments due to short covering. Textile, aviation, and FMCG stocks traded with mixed sentiments, while power stocks traded down on selling pressure. Volatile USD/INR futures prices brought volatility in the Indian equity markets in the intra-day session. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

The top gainers and top losers of the major indices are given in the table below:
 
Top Gainer (The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions)


The closing values of the major Asian indices are given in the table below: The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
Asian Indices (The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions)

Economic growth: Great for everyone but investors?-The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

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3 November 2016
Economic Growth (The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions) 

By 2050 the world's population is projected to reach 9.7 billion, up from 7.4 billion today. Nearly all of that growth will come from emerging markets, where living standards are rapidly improving.

Although these markets have experienced large capital inflows, they still have a long way to go to match developed countries' levels of capital, productivity, and wages. Consequently, emerging markets will likely continue to grow faster than developed markets for the foreseeable future. While this growth may lift hundreds of millions out of poverty and spur investment and innovation, evidence suggests investors may be left behind. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

Jay Ritter, a professor at the University of Florida, documented a negative relationship between economic growth and stock market returns in his seminal research paper, "Economic Growth and Equity Returns," published in 2005. Ritter's findings are no fluke. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

Using real gross domestic product data from the World Bank and the gross return version of each market's MSCI country index, I found a weak negative correlation between GDP growth and stock market returns across 41 countries from 1988 to 2015 (data for seven of these countries--China, Colombia, India, Israel, Peru, Poland and South Africa--was not available until 1993, while data on Russia started in 1995). This relationship is plotted in this chart, where each country represents a separate point. Excluding China--the outlier at the bottom right of the chart--results in a slightly positive, though still very weak, correlation between GDP growth and stock market performance.

While the correlation between these two variables may change a little over time, the findings are fairly robust over long time horizons. It's clear that higher economic growth does not necessarily translate into superior stock market returns over the long run. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

Reasonable assumptions?

This result should not be surprising given the strong assumptions that would be required to link GDP growth to stock market returns. In order for this relationship to hold, publicly traded stocks' valuations and earnings as a share of GDP would need to remain stable over time. This means that private and public companies would need to grow at the same rate, and there could be no new enterprises or IPOs. Second, there could be no dilution from new share issuance. Finally, all publicly listed companies would need to generate substantially all of their revenue and profits from the domestic economy. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

The link between economic growth and profitability

In a closed economy, it would be reasonable to expect that corporate profits in aggregate would grow at a similar rate as the economy in the long run. Although the share of corporate profits relative to GDP fluctuates over time, it tends to revert to the mean. Profits cannot persistently grow faster than the economy because they would crowd out all other economic activity and attract new competitors. Similarly, total corporate profits should not grow slower than the economy in the long run, as firms exit unprofitable businesses, allowing those remaining to preserve margins. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

But most of the world's countries are not closed. The largest companies listed in most countries tend to be multinational firms that generate a large portion of revenue and income outside their host country. For instance, in 2014 the constituents of the S&P 500 generated about 48% of their sales outside the United States, according to data from S&P Dow Jones indexes. This international exposure means that profits can grow at a different rate than the domestic economy, even in the long run.
Even if aggregate corporate profits grow in sync with GDP, dilution can prevent shareholders from enjoying the benefits of growth. 

Creative destruction is essential to economic growth. In aggregate all companies that are publicly listed today will grow slower than the economy because new entrants drive much of that growth. Between the time these new companies are launched and publicly listed, their growth dilutes most investors' ownership interest in the economy. Flagrant dilution of corporate earnings through employee stock grants and seasoned offerings is also a very real risk, particularly in developing countries with a tradition of poor corporate governance. Additionally, earnings growth can only create value if it allows firms to generate returns that exceed their cost of capital. High reinvestment rates may enhance both corporate and domestic economic growth but destroy shareholders' wealth through inefficient capital allocation. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

Is growth already priced in?

Growth expectations influence stock market valuations. Valuations are rich when investors expect strong growth. However, as developing economies mature, their growth rates slow and valuations tend to decline. Consequently, even when countries realize their expected growth rates, their stock markets may not keep pace.

The impact of lofty growth expectations on valuations can create a treadmill effect, whereby fast-growing economies must realize high growth in order to generate a competitive rate of return. For example, in the mid-1980s the so-called "Asian tigers" had experienced two decades of rapid growth and investors had high expectations for future growth. In contrast, several countries in Latin America were facing severe inflation, a debt crisis, and low expectations for future growth. As a result, in 1986 Latin American stock markets were trading at 3.5 times earnings, while the Asian markets were trading at 18.3 times earnings.

Over the subsequent two decades, Latin American stock markets posted more than twice the annualized returns of the Asian markets, despite experiencing lower GDP growth over that horizon. Scholars argue that this was because Latin American countries implemented economic reforms that allowed them to exceed investors' low expectations. Conversely, the Asian markets performed in line with investors' high expectations, which were already priced in. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions

What's an investor to do?


In order to benefit from economic growth, investors must identify markets that have the potential to exceed expectations. Russia may fit the bill. At the end of September, the Russian equity market, as proxied by VanEck Vectors Russia ETF (0.67% expense ratio), was trading at a paltry 8.6 times forward earnings, making it the cheapest of any major emerging market. Corruption, sanctions and a taxing regulatory environment have stunted the country's growth and depressed valuations. Weak oil and gas prices and geopolitical risk haven't helped either. However, if (and this is a big if) Russia adopts structural reforms that investors aren't expecting (and they're not expecting much), it could offer high returns--albeit with high risk. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions