Thursday, March 24, 2011

Volatile Trades on SGX

 Something unusual happened on Nifty Futures Traded at Singapore Exchange, There are couple of volatile trades can be seen from the high and low prices registered .As today is expiry for derivatives one can expect market to be volatile but +5% to -5% a swing of 10% on a normal day is bit abnormal. We will see if we can get any information from google on how those trades happened. I will be crossing my fingers as am having a one side position on market

SGX QUEST Trading Hours: Mon-Fri 9.00am - 6.15pm
SGX QUEST (T+1) Trading Hours: Mon-Fri 7.15pm - 1.00am
  Contract Month Last Chg From Prev Settle Bid Ask Open High Low Close Vol Open Int Prev. Day Settle Settle
E  Mar  11 5,538.50 +35.50 5,537.00 5,538.50 5,524.00 5,799.50 5,273.00 - 12,271 216,849 5,503.00 -
E*  Mar  11 - 0 5,483.00 5,650.00 - - - - - - - -
E  Apr  11 5,551.50 +29.50 5,556.00 5,559.50 5,539.00 5,587.50 5,500.00 - 1,602 1,521 5,522.00 -




































































































Sunday, January 2, 2011

Market Direction in the New Year

Markets went into New year in good move. Nifty started 2010 at 5200 and ended at 6134 primarily because of global recovery and its impact on domestic recovery (consumption,manufacturing,imports etc..) and Strong FII flows into EM's which gave an 18% Return.

Nifty Started Jan Option Series with a Good move on  Friday. A Lot of PUT Writing Happening at 6000 Levels and can safely say for now that 6000 is good support for the upmove which  started from last week.

Good amount of CALL Writing also happened at 6300 levels which clearly acts as resistance for now. Also on 31st December PCR value is 1.29 for Index Options which indicates a lot of PUT writing happening when compared to CALL writing and NIFTY is in upmove atleast in the near term say for the next 1-2 Weeks.


Another interesting thing in the current series is NIFTY Rollover seen at 61.2 % which is very low compared to previous month of  75 % and rollover numbers say that not many participants are taking the positions which they had in December. But overall JAN Market wide rollover is at 84.5% compared with 85.5% in DEC Rollover and that looks like a good sentiment in contrast to Index Rollover positions.




Once the inflation numbers comes up next week and if that is in uncomfortable range then RBI will be going for Rate Hike which might hamper the sentiment on the street.

Call writing is a branch of options trading strategy involving the selling of call options to earn premiums.
Put writing is a family of options trading strategies that involve the selling of put options to earn premiums.



Friday, December 10, 2010

Economic Growth and the Policy Imperatives--by Dr. K.C. Chakrabarty


A Very Good Article by Dr. K.C. Chakrabarty on Prospects for Economic Growth and the Policy Imperatives for India. Here he talks about the past,present and future growth of Indian economy.
  • The transformation to the high growth phase
  • The impact of the crisis & the V-shaped recovery
  • The near term growth prospects and the challenges 
  • The long-term growth prospects
  • Making growth process more inclusive.
I had a question for him..from 1991 BOP to 2007-08 Recession..by seeing at the instances of Rise and Fall of economy is it possible  for the Central Bank to Foresee the Problems in economy. If yes when are they likely to turn up...if not then when is that you people are going to create :)

The Last statement in reference to my conclusion of recession.. "Root cause of  Crisis in west is by investing money into Real Estate as if real estate prices never come down,,,,and now see what happened over there....And i believe the same thing is happening over here now.. people speculating that real estate value will always go up...and investing as if there is no tomorrow...and RBI is not interfering to arrest the up move" ..Will see how it turns up in coming years :)

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Jagdish Bhagwati on Free Trade



Jagdish Bhagwati can be called as The Globalization Guru Here are his views on Indian Economy in a Globalized World.  He talks about reforms in India and also distinguishes between Free Trade of Goods and Services with Free Trade in Capital Flows.He talks about financial innovation which is leading to creative destruction like forcing people to take more risks. What are the strucutral problems in the world economy?.

How is Outsourcing jobs to India and china is helping the world economy?Is US really taking a protectionist position related to International Trade.?Not much but to some extent ,cause it has to protect the incomes of people over there. He says "If income falls ..Trade falls and sometimes it will lead to financial collapse". I guess that's is what is worrying uncle helicopter Ben

 

Note: I am reading few of his works..so expect couple of posts on Trade related stuff and also if anyone finds this please share it with me

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Five Frontier Issues in Indian Banking...by Dr. Duvvuri Subbarao

Excellent address by RBI Governor to  bankers at  the BANCON 2010, here he talks about the way indian banks withstood during crisis and regulatory change which is going to happening in form of BASEL 3 accord.
He put forward some ideas and asked banks to discuss on it .
First Issue : Are Indian Banks Prepared for Basel III? 
The building blocks of Basel III are by now quite well known: higher and better quality capital; an internationally harmonized leverage ratio to constrain excessive risk taking; capital buffers which would be built up in good times so that they can be drawn down in times of stress; minimum global liquidity standards; and stronger standards for supervision, public disclosure and risk management. 
 The Basel III package includes capital buffers to contain the pro-cyclicality of the financial sector. Building capital buffers will entail additional costs for banks with consequent implications for investment and hence for overall growth.
Building Buffers will make the capital ideal and will not add anything into productive, it is meant to use at bad times(its like putting more money in savings deposit(RBI) for interest rate...there by curtailing the lending power of banks to some extent.
To effectively deploy countercyclical measures, we also need to improve our capabilities to predict business cycles at the aggregate and sectoral levels, and identify them in real time. This will require better quality of economic and financial data as well as improved analytical capabilities.
 In India the data collected from Ministry of Statistics is sometimes inadequate to predict the right conditions across the economy as well as markets, we need a more reliant  streamlined data from each  sector across the eonomy . I guess this can be done only when government makes a regulation for mandatory data submission from each  department where it works...example:Collect all the land registrations across Pan India to get a feel of real estate sector pricing, collecting pricing from companies which manufacture the products etc..
Estimates show that the leverage in the Indian banking system is quite moderate. Notwithstanding the fact that the SLR portfolio of our banks will be included in computing the leverage ratio, Indian banks will not have a problem in meeting the leverage ratio requirement since the Tier 1 capital of many Indian banks is comfortable (more than 9%) and their derivatives portfolios are also not very large
 Indian banks will not have problem in meeting the ratio as long as real estate value goes up,but once it starts coming down, we might feel the pinch.Though the derivatives positions of banks are not large our banks show significant revenue from trading.
Second Issue:  Should Indian Banks Aim to Become Global?
The second issue I want to address is one that comes up frequently - that Indian banks should aim to become global. Most people who put forward this view have not thought through the costs and benefits analytically; they only see this as an aspiration consistent with India’s growing international profile.
 Are our banks ready to become global and ready to meet the demands of global citizens..( Can Mittal bank on Indian bank to fund a major acquisitions across the globe?). Though SBI missed the boat of acquiring Citi Bank when it was trading at 1$ at the hieght of finanacial crisis due to government inefficient bureaucracy.
Can Indian banks aspire to global size?
As per the current global league tables based on the size of assets, our largest bank, the State Bank of India (SBI), together with its subsidiaries, comes in at No.74 followed by ICICI Bank at No.145 and Bank of Baroda at 188.  It is, therefore, unlikely that any of our banks will jump into the top ten of the global league even after reasonable consolidation.
 Should Indian banks aspire to global size?
Opinion on this is divided. Those who argue that we must go global contend that the issue is not so much the size of our banks in global rankings but of Indian banks having a strong enough global presence. The main argument is that the increasing global size and influence of Indian corporates warrant a corresponding increase in the global footprint of Indian banks.
The opposing view is that Indian banks should look inwards rather than outwards, focus their efforts on financial deepening at home rather than aspiring to global size
Third Issue: Should We Mandate Foreign Banks to Come in Only as Subsidiaries?
 Here he talks about the subsidiaries role in indian context
Fourth Issue:  Why Do We Need to Rewrite Laws Governing the Banking Sector?  
Infact banking laws helped us to maintain a orderly banking system during crisis. 
Requirement of minimum paid up capital and reserves, restrictions on payment of dividend, transfer of a percentage of profits to reserves, maintenance of SLR, restrictions on connected lending, maintaining a percentage of domestic liabilities as assets in India have all helped the Reserve Bank in preventing crises and maintaining financial stability.
 Fifth Issue : Where Do Indian Banks Stand on Efficiency Parameters?
There has been a particularly discernible improvement in banks’ operating efficiency in recent years owing to technology upgradation and staff restructuring 
 One such is Core Banking System which helped banks to offer more services and reduced the time lag in delivering the services
He advised the banks to raise the interest rates offered to depositors and reduce the lending rates charged on borrowers - in other words, reduce their intermediation costs, or in technical terminology, reduce the net interest margin (NIM).
This will lead to decreasing margins for banks and i beilive this lead to Bank Sector tanking down 3%  in today's market.