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Time to Sell India Short and Go Long on Pakistan?

RiazHaq

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Haq's Musings: Time to Dump India Shares and Buy Pakistan and Hong Kong Equities?

Is it time to sell India short and go long on Pakistan?

Indian shares are highly overvalued while Pakistan and Hong Kong shares are trading at very attractive valuations, according to latest data published by Bloomberg. The Indian shares listed in Mumbai are trading at nearly 22 times earnings, more than twice the price-earnings multiples of Karachi and Hong Kong listed stocks.



Source: Bloomberg



Hong Kong's Hang Seng benchmark gauge for $4.3 trillion of shares was valued at 9.8 times reported earnings on Thursday, a 44 percent discount to the MSCI All-Country World Index, according to Bloomberg. That’s the cheapest level among developed markets worldwide and compares with a multiple of 10.2 for Pakistan’s KSE 100 Index. Russia’s Micex has the lowest valuation among major markets, trading at about 9.5 times profits.

Talking about Pakistan, Charlie Robertson, London-based chief economist at Renaissance Capital Ltd. told Bloomberg that “It (Pakistan) is the best, undiscovered investment opportunity in emerging or frontier markets...What’s changed is the delivery of reforms -- privatization, an improved fiscal picture and good relations with the IMF.” Pakistan is a reform story like neighboring India’s, but only better, Renaissance’s Robertson added.

The massive Chinese commitment to invest $46 billion in Pakistan's energy and infrastructure projects as part of China-Pakistan Economic Corridor has added to the excitement about Pakistan's brightening prospects.


CPEC Projects Map


China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is highly strategic for both China and Pakistan. It is expected to dramatically boost investment and trade activity in Pakistan via 29 industrial parks and 21 mining zones along the western, central and eastern routes.

This (China's $46 billion investment in Pakistan) can not be purely politically driven. Beijing is commercial: CEO’s, not think tank intellectuals, travel with politicians. Barron's Asia
Spurred by Chinese investment, the smart money is taking notice of Pakistan as an attractive investment destination. The investors are looking at the fact that Pakistani stocks have been outperforming both emerging and frontier markets for several years. The benchmark index of the Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE100) is up more than 20% in the last 12 months, according to NASDAQ.com.

Pakistani Shares in 2015:

After a dismal March, MSCI Pakistan rebounded strongly this month, returning 9.1% so far. In April, the iShares MSCI Frontier 100 ETF (FM) rose 4.3%, the WisdomTree India Earnings Fund (EPI) dropped 1.2%, the iShares MSCI India ETF (INDA) fell 1.9%, according to Barron's Asia.


Source: Economist Magazine
KSE-100 Performance:
In 2014, the KSE-100 Index gained 6,870 points thereby generating a handsome return of 27% (31% return in US$ terms), making Pakistan's KSE world's third best performing market. Total offerings in the year 2014 reached 9 as compared to 3 in the year 2013. After a gap of seven years, Rs 73 billion were raised through offerings in 2014 as compared to a meager Rs 4 billion raised in 2013. Foreign investors, that hold US$ 6.1 billion worth of Pakistani shares -which is 33% of the free-float (9% of market capitalization)-remained net buyers in 2014.
Pakistani Shares Valuation:
Even after outperforming both emerging and frontier market indices, Pakistani shares can be bought at deep discounts which make them very attractive, according to Renaissance Capital’s chief economist Charles Robertson. MSCI (Morgan Stanley Composite Index) Pakistan trades at only 8.4 times forward earnings, a 17% discount to MSCI Frontier Markets. For comparison purposes, fellow frontier south Asia markets Sri Lanka and Bangladesh trade at 13.4x and 21.4x respectively. India, included in the emerging market index, trades at 16.8 times.

Key Sectors:

Chinese investment in energy and infrastructure will help stimulate all sectors of Pakistani economy. But the sectors benefiting most from the $46 billion investment will likely include banks, energy and building materials, the sectors which are the favorites of Pakistani billionaire investor Mian Mohammad Mansha.

Being close to the ruling Sharif family makes Mansha the ultimate insider. Beyond his investments in banking, cement, energy and textiles, Mansha is also starting to invest in consumer products sector benefiting from rising incomes, growing middle class and increasing jobs created in Pakistan by the massive Chinese investment. Mansha owns a big chunk of Muslim Commercial Bank (MCB) share. He has recently been pumping more money into energy, cement and dairy businesses. Mansha's DG Khan Cements has announced plans to build a $300 million cement plant near Karachi. In additions, his Nishat Dairies has imported thousands of dairy cows for a dairy farm in Lahore.

Summary:

The $46 billion Chinese investment in energy and infrastructure has brought attention to tremendous investment opportunities in Pakistan, a nation of nearly 200 million people with rising middle class and growing consumption. Pakistani military's recent successes against the terrorists and China's massive investment commitments are expected to boost investor confidence in the country. Higher confidence will help draw other significant investors to invest in Pakistan over the next several years.
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Pakistan Bolsters 2nd Strike Capability With AIP Subs

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China-Pakistan Industrial Corridor

US-Pakistan Ties and New Silk Route

Haq's Musings: Time to Dump India Shares and Buy Pakistan and Hong Kong Equities?
 
Not sure if its good news or bad, finding hard to understand that even Indian shares are been priced 22 times over valuation still we are getting so many investors and although Pakistan as per above data if is so good, then why international investors are running away?

Probably global investors are fool and they should take classes from OP....
 
Not sure if its good news or bad, finding hard to understand that even Indian shares are been priced 22 times over valuation still we are getting so many investors and although Pakistan as per above data if is so good, then why international investors are running away?

Probably global investors are fool and they should take classes from OP....
Its not OP butt hurt its Bloomberg & Reuters.

If only Indians were educated enough..............................
 
Well I don't want to demean Pakistani friends here, but KSE is like a tiny stock shop in front of NSE and BSE. As of today, combined worth of BSE and NSE is 3.65 trillion USD and that of KSE is a mere 72 billion USD.

Same as what China and India was. But after the huge crash of Chinese markets where they lost 3.5 trillion USD, Today China's stocks are valued at around 6 trillion USD as compared to ours 3.6 trillion USD.

Obviously, Pakistan has more potential than Indian stocks, as the base is very low. Like US GDP growth hardly reaches 1% but look at Uganda or Nigeria. They have even grown at 13 or 14% an year since 2005-6.

Infact, market caps of top 10 Bluechip stocks of Indian companies like TCS/ HDFC/ SBI are like many times of KSE let alone the Sensex 100 or NIFTY 50
 
Well I don't want to demean Pakistani friends here, but KSE is like a tiny stock shop in front of NSE and BSE. As of today, combined worth of BSE and NSE is 3.65 trillion USD and that of KSE is a mere 72 billion USD.

Same as what China and India was. But after the huge crash of Chinese markets where they lost 3.5 trillion USD, Today China's stocks are valued at around 6 trillion USD as compared to ours 3.6 trillion USD.

Obviously, Pakistan has more potential than Indian stocks, as the base is very low. Like US GDP growth hardly reaches 1% but look at Uganda or Nigeria. They have even grown at 13 or 14% an year since 2005-6.


That said, Indian equity markets need a correction. Specially stocks in certain sectors.
 
That said, Indian equity markets need a correction.

It has already corrected in the past month. Sensex is below 27800 and Nifty will surely stabilise around 8200. In the mid to short term... expect Sensex to touch 29000, led by Banks , Pharma and a resurgent infra stocks.
 
It has already corrected in the past month. Sensex is below 27800 and Nifty will surely stabilise around 8200. In the mid to short term... expect Sensex to touch 29000, led by Banks , Pharma and a resurgent infra stocks.

Have bought Astra. Couple of their early investing directors have exited. They had provided early capital. Another chap who was with ICICI Ventures and Kuwait Investments has joined as director. I think, there is something happening there. And axiscades. Monitor both.
 
It has already corrected in the past month. Sensex is below 27800 and Nifty will surely stabilise around 8200. In the mid to short term... expect Sensex to touch 29000, led by Banks , Pharma and a resurgent infra stocks.

Banks are a red herring. NPA data is highly dubious being manipulated by massive restructuring and ever-greening of loans.

Recent statement by RBI on real - estate sector is indeed illuminating but they can't do much except give hints because letting the cat out of the bag will surely tank our economy as most of our marquee industrialist are so far in red that it beggars belief.

Accounting wizardry noth withstanding, slow and painful reforms are the way out instead of filling air into empty balloons.
 
Its not OP butt hurt its Bloomberg & Reuters.

If only Indians were educated enough..............................

Bloomberg released the data article is composed by OP. Go and read the bloomberg and try to figure out if word "India" even comes in the article text.

Only if people like you could had common sense....education would not had been that tough....
 
How China’s recent stock market pain is proving to be India’s gain | The Financial Express

India stock markets total cap-3.35 trillion dollar, stock exchange in pakistan -75 billion

3350/75= Almost 45 times larger
A better equation will be

Market Cap of Reliance Industries + TCS > Market Cap of KSE ... :)

The Pakistan stock exchange does not have the depth to absorb the liquidity created by dumping just these 2 markers by FIIs. Let alone the wet dream propagated in the OP
 
A better equation will be

Market Cap of Reliance Industries + TCS > Market Cap of KSE ... :)

The Pakistan stock exchange does not have the depth to absorb the liquidity created by dumping just these 2 markers by FIIs. Let alone the wet dream propagated in the OP

Welcome back to the forum after a long ban for nth time.Looks like obsession is still going strong so bans don't matter. :)
 

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