Thursday, March 31, 2011

Smartlink Network Systems

Smartlink Network Systems has said it will sell its Digilink business to Schneider Electric India for Rs 503 crore in cash.

The Digilink operations consist of passive networking business including the manufacturing, marketing, and sale of structured cabling products.

Aashish Tater of Fort Share Broking in an interview on CNBC-TV18 spoke about SmartLink Network and the latest buzz surrounding the stock.

He clarified that this was not a stake sale but more a business sale on a slump sale basis. This means that SmartLink promoters are selling out their key business but are not selling any stake of the company to Schneider Electric which would warrant an open offer. So there is no open offer deal coming from minority shareholders.

Below is a verbatim transcript of his interview with CNBC-TV18’s Udayan Mukherjee. For complete details watch the accompanying video.

Q: It is not the entire company which has been sold at a premium. It is a business which accounts for 90% of the revenues. What does it mean for shareholders because there will probably not be any open offer? Do you think the cash which is coming in will find its way to the shareholders of SmartLink?

A: This particular move from the promoters to sell their flexi brand Digilink is not going to benefit the small shareholder in larger terms because the small shareholder might get a special dividend of close to Rs 8-10. That is why we have actually downgraded the stock. When I recommended the stock around the Rs 70 mark I had a target of Rs 150 for the stock from a two-year perspective.

But now we feel that this will not reward any open offer and not reward small shareholders. I feel for an Rs 8-10 dividend, the profit should be booked from current levels. People should move to some other interesting stories.

Q: We do not know clearly how much stake is up for grabs from Schneider Electric. How would you approach the company if indeed someone like Schneider comes in as a majority partner in SmartLink?

A: I was always bullish on this particular company. But I don’t think the company promoters would sell their stake but are only going to sell Digilink. The recent announcement that the company has made is clear that they are going to exit the business. Now shareholders will be left only with the cash in the balance sheet.

Apart from the marketcap, they are going to get Rs 503 crore. They also own Rs 90 crore of mutual funds. That means a cash equivalent of Rs 600 crore on a marketcap of close to Rs 270 crore. But the promoters need to come and clarify as to what kind of business they are trying to enter into.

If I see the latest annual report that was available in the public domain, they wanted to foray into voice data and internet cable. They have been procuring orders from government and the education space under their flagship brand Digilink which will now go to Schneider. I do not think that Schneider will participate with SmartLink promoters but they would foray into the company separately.

Smartlink Network to sell Digilink to Schneider Electric

AP Paper deal

Paper stocks are in the limelight post the deal between AP Paper Mills and the US paper and packaging company International Paper. The deal is touted to be lucrative not only for the company but is being read by market analysts as a way to see consolidation in the paper industry. Amol Rao analyst with Antique Broking shares his detailed view on this recent deal in an excusive interview with CNBC-TV18’s Udayan Mukherjee and Mitali Mukherjee.

What was feared as a flash in the pan for the sector, Rao confirms that the deal is rerating the paper sector. “The pricing power is returning to suppliers, namely, manufacturers are seeing a recent round of CAPEX being absorbed easily, returns on capital employed and returns on net-worth are most likely to improve over the next two to three years,” Rao observes.

He believes with companies that have a robust operational set up, good distribution network, and a healthy balance sheet, under such a deal, “all International Paper has do is to take over the management and continue business as usual.”

Below is a verbatim transcript of Amol Rao’s interview. Also watch the accompanying video.

Q: Is the deal leading to rerating of the paper sector?

A: The paper sector is one where a lot of mispricing is happened on an asset basis. You have a huge gross blocks of Rs 3000 crore to Rs 4000 crore being valued at a market cap of around Rs 600 crore to Rs 800 crore. A company like BILT being valued at market cap of close to Rs 2000 crore is obnoxious.

However, the International Paper deal with AP Paper Mills has triggered off kind of a rerating in the sector. The pricing power is returning to suppliers, namely, manufacturers are seeing a recent round of CAPEX being absorbed easily, returns on capital employed and returns on networth are most likely to improve over the next two to three years. The paper sector looks like for a rerating and this deal has just proved it.

Q: What do we know about AP Paper in specific? What do you know about its own holdings and how that should be added on?

A: AP Paper on a capacity basis is a 2 lakh, 50 thousand ton paper company that recently commissioned capacity of around Rs 17,000. On an Enterprise Value (EV) basis, if you look at the transaction, it is been valued steeply at around Rs 94,000 or Rs 95,000 a ton, and what is surprising is the replacement cost is usually for a green field natural fibre based paper mill is around Rs 55,000. Hence, this makes the question about Rs 40,000 premium that has been paid for AP Paper.

Nevertheless, it makes sense for a company like International Paper to pay such a hefty premium for a simple reason that the business has no restoration period. The linkages are there for the wood; the business is up and running with distribution in place. Hence, all International Paper has do is to take over the management and continue business as usual. So this boards well for companies with a robust operational set up, a good distribution network, and a healthy balance sheet.

Q: Who are potential candidates in the paper space? Who do you think gets top rating by way of making these or being part of these consolidation moves?

A: The uniqueness about the paper industry in India is that there are no green field plants been put up in the country, land and water being major issues here. Therefore, everybody is fair game in this country right now and it would be speculative comment which companies are targeted for acquisitions. However, AP Paper was one of the top six in the country, so anybody in the top 10 is practically on the radar right now for any international company that wants to enter market and is most likely to double in 8 to 10 years.

Q: Do you think the excitement in paper sector is warranted?

A: I don’t think this would open the floodgate for deals or acquisitions or consolidation on a mass scale, but I would be inclined to believe that like cement, the valuations will wear towards this. The company valuations will over medium-term to long-term wear towards the AP Paper deal for sure. The reason for this is that it is practically impossible to set up a paper plant in the country, if you do not have one up and running. Hence, the lack permissions, space, resources would entail consolidation within Indian paper players or takeovers by foreign players.

There is no other way you can expand in India. The market is pretty exciting, which is why International Paper has come here. You do not have a market that is doubling its size in seven to eight years where probably almost 15% of the capacity has been absorbed; incremental capacity has been absorbed within six months of being commissioned. Hence, it really looks exciting but I would say this is more of short-term phenomena, over the long-term you will see valuations gradually wearing towards this deal.

I-Pru's Kumar bets on auto, metals

Manish Kumar chief investment officer at ICICI Prudential Life Insurance is betting on metal and auto shares to deliver superior returns even as the broader market is likely to remain range-bound for a while. As on February 28, 2011, his firm had a little over Rs 38,000 crore invested in equities, making it the second biggest equity investor among domestic players, next to only the Life Insurance Corporation of India.

"Market will remain range-bound for another six months, though that range may change a bit on either side," Kumar said in an interview with Moneycontrol.com.

"We had a similar view six months ago, but that was for a different set of reasons. Then the earnings momentum was strong, but valuations were expensive. Also, robust foreign funds were neutralised by too many share issuances by companies.

Right now, valuations appear fair, but there are headwinds in the economy that could eventually impact earnings growth. We are seeing a slight easing in the economic growth and the investment momentum.

In addition, inflation has remained high despite the efforts to tame it. "Because of these factors, earnings growth for FY12 (April 2011-March 2012) could be in the low- to mid-teens. We are cautious on the economic growth for the coming fiscal and expect it between 7.5-8.0%, even though the government has guided (8.75-9.25%) much higher," Kumar said.

Insurance companies are normally big buyers of shares during the January-March quarter, which is when they collect maximum premium as people invest in insurance schemes to save on tax.

But this time, inflows into insurance schemes—especially unit-linked investment plans—have fallen, with the result that insurance companies have not been very active in the stock market.

Kumar says that perception is not entirely correct.

"Domestic insurance companies have invested roughly USD 2.5 billion in shares in the current quarter, which is not a bad number in the context of the regulator changes that became effective from September 1 (2010)," he says.

After the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority changed the rules for unit-linked insurance plans (ULIPs) from September last year, companies had to scrap most of their existing ULIP schemes and introduce plans that were compliant with the revised guidelines. The new rules included, among other things, a higher level of life cover.

ICICI Prudential Life Insurance collected Rs 40.55 crore in premium for the October-December quarter, almost the same as in the same period the previous year.

After a sharp drop in inflows into ULIP schemes in September and October, things have been gradually looking up, says Kumar.

Choosy About Bank Shares

Kumar is bullish on metals, auto, and is neutral-to-underweight on banks.

Banking shares have rallied the sharpest from their recent lows, but Kumar says analysts may have not fully factored in the pressure on net interest margins that will arise from high deposit rates. Net interest margin is the difference between the rate at which it lends money and the rate at it which borrows.

"Lending rates will start softening in a few months, but it will take some more time for deposit rates to soften. So while the net interest margins may look healthy for some a couple of quarters, the pressure due to high deposit rates will inevitably catch up," he says.

But Kumar is not bearish across the banking sector.

"Banks with a good CASA (current account, saving account) will do well because their cost of funds will be much lower," he says.

Kumar’s schemes have significant exposure to HDFC Bank and Axis Bank. Other key holdings include Oriental Bank of Commerce and Punjab National Bank.

Auto and Metal Bets

In the metals space, Kumar is betting on companies' operating efficiencies more than on a recovery in the global economy that leads to higher demand for commodities like steel and aluminium.

Key holdings in Kumar’s portfolio include Tata Steel, JSW Steel, Sterlite Industries and Steel Authority of India.

“We are focussing on companies with the lowest cost of production, because we expect good volume growth. So even if metal prices are depressed, the companies will be able to show good profit growth on higher volume sales,” Kumar said.

At the same time, Kumar is bullish on automobile companies, even as their margins are getting squeezed because of rising metal prices.

"Right now the economy and so the auto sector, is still in a growth phase. I see strong demand for passenger vehicles and two-wheelers persisting for a while. Besides, operating margins of most auto companies are below their five-year average, because of which valuations too are reasonable. We are quite comfortable buying into auto stocks at these levels," Kumar says.

Stocks in Kumar's Negative List

"We are avoiding companies with high debt/governance issues/low margin NBFCs/banks with low CASA," says Kumar.

He is cautious on capital goods/infrastructure stocks where he sees few opportunities despite share prices having fallen sharply.

"We did buy some infrastructure stocks, but not very aggressively," says Kumar, adding "…the political environment around the sector is not very good. Also many companies have ended up winning projects at unviable prices, which will soon start showing up in their earnings."

"The investment climate will take some time to change, and the government has to contribute a lot towards that. But more importantly, interest rates will have to soften. It is not possible to make good returns when you borrow money at 12-13% to execute projects," says Kumar.

Medium-Term Interest Rates May Rise

Kumar agrees with the widely-held view that the government will exceed its net borrowing target of Rs 3.43 lakh crore for FY12 announced in the Union Budget.

"Though the 10-year (government bond) yield has been steady around 8%, I expect it to rise by another 25 basis points," Kumar says, pointing to inflation that refuses to ease despite the Reserve Bank of India’s persistent efforts.

"At the very short end, there could be some softening of interest rates. But the medium-term rates could rise some more," Kumar says.

Vodafone to pay $5 billion in cash for buying out Essar in India

LONDON: Vodafone, the world's largest mobile operator by revenue, said on Thursday it had agreed to pay $5 billion in cash to buy out the Essar Group from its Indian joint venture.

Vodafone will take control of Essar's 33 per cent of the Vodafone Essar Limited company, giving it 75 per cent of the Indian operator overall.

The move comes after the two firms repeatedly clashed in recent months and as Vodafone cleans up its portfolio of assets.

The group, which bought in to the Indian market in 2007, said a final settlement was expected no later than November of this year.

Vodafone's published net debt figure already includes this $5 billion.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Black Thursday

Black Thursday

October 24, 1929. The day the famous stock market crash of 1929 began, when the stock market began its plummet. The stock market was very unstable for the subsequent few days. This uncertainty led up to Black Tuesday, October 29, the day which experienced the largest percentage decrease in stock prices and is considered to be the start of the Great Depression.


Saturday, March 19, 2011

Tackling the blight of misgovernance

By Minhaz Merchant, Chairman, Merchant Media


Global business abhors uncertainty. The ministerial-level corruption in UPA-II has slowed FDI and FII inflows. The stock market, despite double-digit corporate profit and 8.6% GDP growth, reflects the anxiety of Indian and foreign investors. To take India's growth story forward in the 20th year of economic reforms, political reforms must catch up. Misgovernance won't do in a globalised, interconnected world.

Two kinds of political corruption blight India: episodical and ongoing. Episodical corruption - from 2G spectrum to rice exports - has cost the public exchequer possibly over Rs 1,00,000 crore this year. The sum could have wiped out a quarter of India's 2010-11 fiscal deficit of Rs 4,12,000 crore. Ongoing corruption is more insidious and, therefore, more damaging. For example, over 10% of India's installed power capacity of Rs 1,61,000 mw is stolen every year with government connivance. At least 25% and possibly up to 50% of funds allocated to MGNREGS are siphoned off by district-level officials - an estimated loss of around Rs 20,000 crore per year. Illegal mining, water theft and land allotment frauds skim several thousand more crores of public funds.

All this public theft needs a nexus: politicians, businessmen and bureaucrats form the core and an army of district officials, contractors and middlemen form the base. Judicial oversight has replaced ministerial oversight in matters that lie firmly in the domain of the executive. The Supreme Court cannot - as it has been compelled to - play the role of the PMO.

The government must implement three urgent institutional reforms. One, enact legislation to give the Lokpal at the Centre and Lokayuktas in the states suo motu powers to prosecute ministers, MPs, MLAs and IAS officers. The proposed Lokpal Bill is eyewash. It gives the Lokpal advisory powers. He cannot prosecute a minister or MP accused of corruption without government approval. The alternative civil society Lokpal Bill, which gives the Lokpal independent authority to prosecute ministers and other public servants, is the only way to attack corruption at its root. Activist Anna Hazare has launched a nationwide campaign to revise the Lokpal Bill before it is legislated in the current session of Parliament.

Two, pass a special Act of Parliament to vest the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) with autonomous powers like the Election Commission (EC), freeing it from government control. The CBI director should be appointed by a constituted panel of three members: the newly empowered Lokpal, the leader of the largest Opposition party in the Lok Sabha and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. This will allow the CBI to investigate and prosecute without fear, favour or fetter.

Three, end through a constitutional amendment the practice of 'political' governors and speakers. The moment a governor or speaker is appointed, he or she should forfeit for life the right to serve in any other public office and also cease immediately and permanently to be a member of a political party. The Bhardwaj-Buta Singh model of governership must be buried for good.

The new anti-corruption ordinance being examined by the empowered group of ministers under finance minister Pranab Mukherjee must allow for prosecution of ministers, bureaucrats and other public officials by an independent CBI and Lokpal. Land, mining and other natural resources - from spectrum to gas - must be taken out of discretionary government hands (state and central) by law, not words. Nitish Kumar's Bihar has effectively combated corruption by introducing special courts under the Bihar Special Courts Act. Under the Act, such courts headed by a sessions judge with high court approval have the power to confiscate property and cash of government officials accused in corruption cases.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Crude Oil Price

India Infoline News Service / 10:48 , Mar 18, 2011

Crude for April delivery gained as much as US$2.24 to US$103.66 a barrel, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, and was at US$102.95 at 12:22 p.m. Sydney time.

Crude oil prices rose on Friday in New York after the United Nations Security Council voted in favour of a resolution to impose a 'no-fly-zone' in Libya besides allowing the US and allies to launch military action against Muammar Qaddafi’s forces.


Crude for April delivery gained as much as US$2.24 to US$103.66 a barrel, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, and was at US$102.95 at 12:22 p.m. Sydney time.


Yesterday, it jumped US$3.44 to US$101.42, the highest close since March 10.


Oil prices are up 1.8% for the week and 25% higher than a year ago.


Brent crude oil for May settlement climbed US$1.15, or 1%, to US$116.05 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. Yesterday, the contract advanced US$4.30, or 3.9%, to US$114.90.


United Nations on Thursday authorized the use of “all necessary measures” to protect civilians in Libya, opening the door to air and naval attacks against Gaddafi's men.


In a 10 to 0 vote, with five abstentions, the UN Security Council called for an immediate cease-fire in Libya, and approved the establishment of a no-fly zone over Libyan territory.


It also cleared the interdiction of ships carrying supplies to Gaddafi’s government.


The UN Security Council called for end to military strikes against civilian populated areas, including Benghazi.


Oil had climbed yesterday on concern that violence in Bahrain will spill into Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil producer and exporter.


Bahrain declared a state of emergency on March 15 and called forces from neighboring Gulf countries to help quell a month of protests driven by majority Shiites.


On March 16, about 1,000 people in Al-Qatif protested, seeking an to Saudi Arabian army's incursion into Bahrain.

Share Market Blog: Subex

Share Market Blog: Subex: "Subex bags multi-million dollar order; stock rises 6% Subex touched an intraday high of Rs 52.55 and an intraday low of Rs 49.50. At 09:57 h..."

Subex

Subex bags multi-million dollar order; stock rises 6%


Subex touched an intraday high of Rs 52.55 and an intraday low of Rs 49.50. At 09:57 hrs the share was quoting at Rs 52.50, up Rs 3.15, or 6.38%.

The company has bagged multi-million dollar order from West Asian Company, reports CNBC-TV18.

It was trading with volumes of 378,506 shares. In the previous trading session, the share closed down 2.66% or Rs 1.35 at Rs 49.35.

Share Price Movement During The Last 12 Months
PeriodPriceLatest PriceGain/Loss (Rs.)% Gain/Loss
3-Days50.7552.501.753.45
5-Days52.8552.50-0.35-0.66
7-Days54.4552.50-1.95-3.58
15-Days57.9052.50-5.40-9.33
1-Month61.4552.50-8.95-14.56
3-Month73.4052.50-20.90-28.47
6-Month52.5052.500.000.00
9-Month54.5052.50-2.00-3.67
1-Year61.2552.50-8.75-14.29

India Infoline

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Reliance Infra

eliance Infrastructure has bagged an engineering, procurement and construction order worth Rs 7200 crore from group company Reliance Power for its 2400 megawatt, gas-fuelled Samalkot Power Plant in Andhra Pradesh.

Ranbaxy

Ranbaxy Laboratories will outsource two hypertension drugs to an Ahmedabad-based company in a deal which the pharma industry feels has highlighted innovation prowess of small-sized companies.

Japan EarthQuake Crisis

BEIJING: The World Health Organisation believes the spread of radiation from a quake-crippled nuclear plant in Japan remains limited and appears to pose no immediate risk to health, the WHO's China representative said on Friday.

"At this point, there is still no evidence that there's been significant radiation spread beyond the immediate zone of the reactors themselves," Michael O'Leary told a group of reporters.

"At the same time, we know that the situation is evolving and we need to monitor closely and see what happens over time. Things can obviously change, and have changed, over this last week."

Japan has been battling for nearly a week to bring under control the overheating Fukushima nuclear plant after it was battered by a massive earthquake and tsunami .

Experts and officials fear a major leak of radioactive substances from the plant could pose a serious health risk, and China and nearby countries have stepped up monitoring of radiation levels.

O'Leary suggested that the impact of such an event on China would be small, but said other factors mattered too.

"The reactors, of course, are quite far from China. The risk of spread depends on several factors. One is obviously the amount of radioactive material, or radionuclides, that are released from the reactor itself. Beyond that are weather and wind conditions that determine," he said.

"As with anything that spreads or can spread out, the farther away you are, the more dispersed it is."

The emergency has sparked panic buying of iodised salt in China, based on the misunderstanding that the iodine it contains could prevent the body's intake of radioactive iodine that could be released in the event of a major explosion at the plant.

But O'Leary said iodine should not be taken indiscriminately or treated as a substitute for supplements administered before or shortly after radiation exposure to reduce the risk of long-term cancer.

"It should not be taken indiscrminately. It does have potential side effects," he said.

"The amount of iodine in salt is very small. It wouldn't be possible to consume enough salt to get a protective dose. In the end, not many people will need iodine supplements."