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Pakistan's Karachi Stock Exchange to Perform Well in 2011

RiazHaq

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"The bottom line is that Pakistan is not going to go away. We want to buy stocks that look cheap as prices come down as a result of the flood."
Mark Mobius, Head, Templeton Asset Management Ltd

Pakistan's main shares index KSE-100 rose 28% (26% in US dollar terms) in year 2010, as profits registered 14% growth and dividend yields of 5.2% in the companies making up the index.

The market gains were driven by significant foreign buying, particularly by insitutional investors after the massive summer floods in KP, Punjab and Sindh provinces. Foreign institutional investors bought $1.2 billion worth of shares, and sold about $687 million, with the net FII capital inflow of $522 million during the year. One example of renewed foreign institutional buying after the post-floods market is Mark Mobius of the Templeton Asset Management Ltd, as reported by Businessweek. “There will be an impact on growth but company valuations are very, very attractive now and therefore we continue to invest in Pakistan despite all the negatives,” Mobius said in an interview in Singapore. “The bottom line is that Pakistan is not going to go away. We want to buy stocks that look cheap as prices come down as a result of the flood.”

The highest performing sectors were food and beverage (65%), oil and gas (40%), chemicals (30%) and personal goods(20%). These were followed by smaller gains in electricity, fixed-line telecom, automobiles, and construction materials, according to JS Global research. Oil and gas shares now make up 36% of KSE's total marke cap, a major shift from 2007 when financial services made up 31% of the Karachi Stock Exchange market cap of about $40 billion.

Even with lower than historic average gains in a challenging year, KSE-100 easily beat the performance of Mumbai(+17%) and Shanghai(-14.3%) key indexes. Among other BRICs, Brazil is up just 1% for the year, and the dollar-traded Russian RTS index rose 22% in the year, reaching a 16-month closing high of 1,769.57 on Tuesday, while the rouble-based MICEX is also up 22%.

After the 26% gain in 2010, the KSE-100 shares still trade at PE ratio of just 8, significantly discounted relative to KSE's historic price-earnings multiple of 10, and other regional markets of Shanghai and Manila at 15, and Mumbai at about 20.

While the big interest rate hikes by Pakistan's central bank (SBP) to fight inflation have dramatically reduced liquidity for local investors, the massive economic stimulus (aka quantative easing policy to jumpstart the US economy) by the US Federal Reserve has unleashed a torrent of US dollars looking globally for good returns on investment. This is likely to continue to push shares in the emerging markets higher through at least 2011.

The problem with the foreign institutional investment (FII) is that it can be very destabilizing for an emerging economy. It is often described as hot money, and it can leave as quickly as it comes in. Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Laureate Columbia University economist, has argued that India is more vulnerable to an asset bubble than China, saying that “strong economies that don’t yet have capital control become the focal point” for the liquidity injected by the US Federal Reserve. Stiglitz thinks that India, more than China or Brazil, should watch out for the tidal wave of money made available from the Fed’s quantitative easing.

In Pakistan's case, however, the amount of FII has so far been very small relative to its market capitalization and the size of the country's GDP. If foreign portfolio investment dollars continue to come in at the same or even a bit higher rate in 2011 as they did last year, it will likely result in a healthy situation in providing necessary liquidity and help push the market up again this year.

Other factors that will the affect the KSE market performance this year include:

1. Continued rise in exports, overseas Pakistanis' remittances, and other inflows for a healthy current account balance which ended in surplus of $26 million in 2010.

2. Enhanced domestic liquidity expected from the launch of new leveraged financial products in 2011.

3. Movement toward better manangement of the energy crisis leading to fewer blackouts and brownouts.

4. Progress on balancing the budget, with better tax collection and higher tax receipts in 2011.

5. Implementation of the IMF program, stabilization of prices, reduction in interest rates, and rising foreign exchange reserves.

6. Improvement in the overall security situation with perceptible reduction in violence.

Haq's Musings: Will Karachi Stock Index Continue its Advance in 2011?

Haq's Musings: Pakistan Shares Exceed BRIC Gains in 2010
 
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After precipitous drop in FDI, FII inflow into India is also petering out.

Here are some excerpts from an Indian Financial Express story headlined "More FII money to Pak than to India":

Mumbai: Whether Dalal Street likes it or not, India is now the worst-performing market in the world as dark clouds have started cluttering the economic, investment and political horizons. Worried foreign institutional investors (FIIs), who came to India in droves last year, have been pulling out funds with such alacrity this year that even a much smaller — and significantly more volatile and unstable — market like Pakistan has got more foreign inflows in the last six months.
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As per figures of the Securities and Exchange Board of India, FIIs have already pulled out $497 million (including GDRs, primary market, stock markets etc) from India from January to June 22 this year. This has come as a big blow to the market which witnessed an inflow of $29.36 billion in the whole of calendar 2010. FIIs took out Rs 14,387 crore (around $3.2 billion) from the secondary market in 2011, bringing the Sensex down from 21,108 on November 5, 2010 to 17,727.49 on June 23, 2011.

Across the border, Pakistan received a portfolio investment of around $230 million in the last six months. That, too, when the Karachi Stock Exchange, its largest, has a market cap of only $35 billion whereas the Bombay Stock Exchange has a market cap of $1,500 billion.
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The latest worry of FIIs is the possibility of tightening in rules governing the tax treaty with Mauritius. If both the governments tighten the regulations governing the treaty, the fund flow through this route will come down drastically. “Funds using this route will go elsewhere. India has got minuscule funds FIIs this year,” said a fund manager with a foreign investment firm.

A large chunk of FII investment in the stock market comes through Mauritius as companies registered there are exempted from tax in India under the treaty. The government had recently indicated about reviewing this tax treaty to tighten registration norms and making the fund flows more transparent.

More FII money to Pak than to India
 
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Bombay Stock Exchange is 10th largest in the world with a marketcap of $ 1.8 trillion, while Karachi Stock exchange is just $ 54 billion. How can anybody in his rigth mind Compare BSE to Karachi Stock Exchange
 
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Sorry to burst your bubble Mr. Haq, but since you are comparing FII inflows between India and Pakistan I thought you should know this :


FII inflows touch record $39bn in 2010
AGENCIES Dec 2, 2010, 05.48am IST

NEW DELHI: Mirroring their faith in the Indian economy, overseas funds have infused a staggering $4.78 billion in the capital market in November, taking the year-to-date total to $39 billion.

With an investment of $4.78 billion in November, the total inflows of foreign institutional investors (FIIs) so far in 2010 have crossed the record $38.76-billion mark.

According to data available with Sebi, FIIs have made investments worth $4.11 billion in equities and poured $667.71 million into the debt market. According to analysts , FIIs have been pumping funds into emerging markets like India because of growth potential.
 
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Indian equities may see record FII inflows in 2011

MUMBAI: Indian stock purchases by foreign funds in 2011 could exceed this year's record inflows as the nation's robust economic and corporate earnings expansion lures investors, according to the local partner of Ageas, the insurer that groups the remains of Fortis.
"The stage is set for it," Aneesh Srivastava, who manages about $352 million in assets as the Mumbai-based chief investment officer at IDBI Federal Life Insurance, said in an interview on Wednesday. "Money chases growth. Returns in foreign economies are small and they have no other option but to look at growth opportunities outside."
Foreign inflows into Indian equities have climbed to a record Rs 1.3 lakh crore ($28.8 billion ) this year, according to data on the website of the Securities and Exchange Board of India, driving the Bombay Stock Exchange's Sensex, up 15% in 2010, the most among key indexes in the world's 10 largest stock markets. "We are substantially underestimating the appetite and desire of foreign investors to buy Indian assets."

Indian equities may see record FII inflows in 2011 - Economic Times
 
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Bombay Stock Exchange is 10th largest in the world with a marketcap of $ 1.8 trillion, while Karachi Stock exchange is just $ 54 billion. How can anybody in his rigth mind Compare BSE to Karachi Stock Exchange

It is just 11b only. Out of that 2/3 controlled by military.
 
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The Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) Sensex snapped a three-session losing streak and rebounded 1% on Wednesday as investors returned to risky assets after China's economic growth data allayed some concerns over a global slowdown even as euro zone debt worries lingered.

Financials contributed the most to the gains on the BSE main index. The banking sector index advanced 1.1%, but is still down 5.5% in 2011, hurt by rising interest rates. The 30-share BSE index climbed 184.40 points to 18596.02 points, with 26 components closing in the green. It had declined 3.5% over the past three sessions. The 50- share NSE index gained 1.1% to 5585.45.

"For the moment, money is flowing into emerging markets like ours, when other options seem to have dried up for FIIs (foreign institutional investors)," said Gajendra Nagpal , CEO of Unicon Financial.

"But then, if globally things turn really worse, the overall risk appetite would come down sharply and we could be hit," said Nagpal.

Also, there was less conviction in the rally as persistently high domestic inflation and a slowdown in economic growth in Asia's third largest economy weighed. China's annual gross domestic product grew 9.5% in the second quarter of 2011, above a forecast by a Reuters poll, despite a spate of monetary tightening measures from Beijing.

"We tend to rise on somebody else's good news, and then fall because we lack the strength," said Arun Kejriwal, director of research firm KRIS.

"The issues in India are grave enough. Investors need to be cautious. Also, earnings season had a bad start with Infosys failing to impress," Kejriwal said. Infosys extended Tuesday's 4.4% decline and slid a further 0.5% to Rs 2,777.30, after the software bellwether narrowly missed quarterly earnings expectations and warned it faces a volatile global economy and a possible slowdown in client spending.

TCS, which reports earnings on Thursday, gained 0.3%. Wipro dropped 0.3%. Sugar makers rallied as world sugar prices shot up. Shree Renuka Sugar, Dhampur Sugar and Balrampur Chini rose between 3.7% to nearly 4%. State Bank of India , ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank firmed between 0.7% and 1.6%.

Sensex snaps losing spree, up 184 on China data - The Economic Times
 
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We know very well that Indian companies are defrauding forigen investors by manipulating their books of accounts and inflating the profits. have you forget the big scamms like sattyam computers how they defrauded their share holders. Indians are big liers and they show a very rosy picture to the foriegn institutional investors
 
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why do you compare with India in every article of yours ? People who compare themselves with others just to make themselves feel a bit better are prime examples of people burning in jealousy.
Because for relative performance you may have to look for another example in the region. Performance in absolute is notthing. For example, if I say, I have earned 20% then unless I dont know that someone is out there who has earned 25%, I can't say that i have performed better or worse. In the region, Bangladeshi,Bhuttani, Srilankan or Nepali Stock exchanges are not of the approperiate size and capitalization to be benchmarked. Chinese Stock exchange is evolving, so this effectively leaves Indian stock exchange for benchmarking. Have you seen S&P compared with EuroStox or FTSE? no, cuz the markets are geographically different. We can somehow compare DAX,EuroStox vs FTSE but not against S&P and DJIA. This is plain theory of benchmarking, dont make it a matter of national esteeme.
 
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We know very well that Indian companies are defrauding forigen investors by manipulating their books of accounts and inflating the profits. have you forget the big scamms like sattyam computers how they defrauded their share holders. Indians are big liers and they show a very rosy picture to the foriegn institutional investors

The CEO who manupulated the books Ramalinga Raju is in jail now. Satyam has become Mahendra Satyam and retained all its employees and was successful in providing all IT services for World Cup Soccer in South Africa. Sure there was fraud in satyam, and so was at Enron. Watch your words when you generalize all Indians based on one persons behavior.
 
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We know very well that Indian companies are defrauding forigen investors by manipulating their books of accounts and inflating the profits. have you forget the big scamms like sattyam computers how they defrauded their share holders. Indians are big liers and they show a very rosy picture to the foriegn institutional investors

watch your language, are you retarded that you have to generalize a country on the base of one company ? So will you call all Canadians a fraud based on Nortel or Call all Americans a fraud on the basis of Enron, well using the same logic all Pakistanis must be a fraud also when your own President is called mr.10%
 
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