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	<title>India Stock Research</title>
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	<description>A contrarian view of Indian stocks</description>
	<pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2008 16:06:15 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>No surrender</title>
		<link>http://www.indiastockresearch.com/?p=50</link>
		<comments>http://www.indiastockresearch.com/?p=50#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2008 02:24:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>India Stock Research</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[News commentary]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The attacks on Mumbai are abominable. They are also unacceptable. The people of India and the community of people that support India should not accept it.
A country is not a country until it can provide security to its citizens. Since acquiring power in 2004, the Congress party led coalition&#8217;s record on security is terrible, pathetic [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The attacks on Mumbai are abominable. They are also unacceptable. The people of India and the community of people that support India should not accept it.</p>
<p>A country is not a country until it can provide security to its citizens. Since acquiring power in 2004, the Congress party led coalition&#8217;s record on security is terrible, pathetic and disgraceful. How can a government claim to be governing when it obviously cannot provide its citizens security?</p>
<p>V.S. Naipaul in his first book on India, &#8220;India: An Area of Darkness&#8221; captured the essence of the problem of India: India&#8217;s willingness to simply look past the sufferring of the people right in front of them and revel instead in its ancient culture and that culture&#8217;s historical significance. That was then.</p>
<p>The India of today is as much about the modern and the new as the old. The India that Naipaul looked at was a &#8220;A Wounded Civilization,&#8221; (and the title of his second book on India) still decrepit from the relatively recent British colonization experience and an older, ancient hurt stemming from Muslim rule. India has finally left those experiences behind and is pursuing a future that is modern, pluralist, democratic and capitalist. In its ambition and scope, there is nothing to compare it to except the United States of America.</p>
<p>However, those ambitions are meaningless if India cannot provide the most rudimentary benefit that a modern country offers its citizens: personal security.</p>
<p>What good are the astonishing successes of the Ambanis or Tatas or the extraordinary changes wrought by Wipro and Infosys if their employees and their customers walk in fear of being gunned down as they sit down for lunch or dinner?</p>
<p>The trust entrusted by the people in the government is at minimum a trust to maintain a citizen&#8217;s right to exist. Without the right to exist, there is no need to worry about the right to vote, the right to free speech, the right to vote or the benefits of a multi-ethnic, multi-religious, pluralistic country.</p>
<p>What good are the great ideals of the past and the newer ideals of prosperity, generational progress and opportunity without the prospect of living to enjoy them?</p>
<p>Personal security is the first ideal of a modern country, especially one that aspires to be a great power. Without it, nothing can follow.</p>
<p>India has taken the first tentative steps to refashion itself into a global power. Should not its citizens and the global community of businessmen, diplomats, tourists, expatriates and the vast Indian diaspora that is helping facilitate this transformation be accorded the security that follows from that status?</p>
<p>Our answer is Yes.</p>
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		<title>A time for great optimism</title>
		<link>http://www.indiastockresearch.com/?p=1</link>
		<comments>http://www.indiastockresearch.com/?p=1#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Oct 2008 05:12:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>India Stock Research</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Market commentary]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Just like the hero in a Bollywood masala movie, investors in Indian stocks have been crushed, stomped on, then beaten into pulp and then in final ignominy, is arrested by inept policemen who then imprison him until he is rescued by his long lost brother and now grown up son.
The rescue is at hand. The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just like the hero in a Bollywood masala movie, investors in Indian stocks have been crushed, stomped on, then beaten into pulp and then in final ignominy, is arrested by inept policemen who then imprison him until he is rescued by his long lost brother and now grown up son.</p>
<p>The rescue is at hand. The first cause for optimism is the collapse in energy prices and commodity prices in general. The price of oil has halved. Agricultural commodity prices have moderated and inflation is no longer a concern. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) after appearing to being tone deaf to the implications of the US financial crisis, is now responding aggressively by <a href='http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122554808055290861.html' >cutting rates,</a> adding liquidity to the system and removed its hawkish anti-inflationary stance. The Indian government we believe will add some fiscal stimulus to stabilize sentiment and confidence in the financial system, joining worldwide campaign by national governments from the US to China.</p>
<p>Indian stocks are cheap. By many estimates, Indian markets trade between 10 - 11 P/E which is very attractive when one considers that India&#8217;s long-term economic growth is likely to average 8% - 9%. India has many attractive characteristics that put its economy and markets in a favorable light even when being compared to China. Critically with respect to the current crisis, India&#8217;s trade with the US is small, perhaps as low as 3%. The impact of a collapse in consumer spending in the US will be visible but not substantial. The most affected parties are companies like Infosys, Tata Consulting and the business process outsourcing providers. However, even these companies could benefit, if the US accelerates cost cuts, and pushes more non-essential business activities offshore.</p>
<p>For the vast majority of the companies that trade on Indian exchanges, the most critical factors are banking system liquidity, consumer confidence, investor confidence and internally driven economic growth. India, unlike most emerging markets holds its own fate in its own hands. If the RBI and the Indian government&#8217;s actions are successful in ending the cycle of panic causing depositors in Indian banks from pulling funds out of the banking system in fear, Indian markets should begin to stabilize soon. If banks begin to lend, not just between themselves but to consumers and businesses, in response to the RBIs highly stimulative monetary policy, India could be on the road to recovery by mid-2009. With a recovery will come investor confidence which in turn will drive consumer confidence.</p>
<p>Markets are discounting mechanisms. Stock markets will sniff a recovery well before the numbers show up in macro-measurements like GDP or production growth. One of the ways to determine what stocks to buy is to look at 5-year historical returns on equity in the types of sectors and industries that we highlighted in our About us section and look to purchase these in equal installments over the next 3 or 6 months, relative to the amount the reader has to invest.</p>
<p>Many commentators and market pundits believe that the Indian market is dead and that it is doomed to repeat the failures of previous booms. We disagree. India today is in much better shape than in any previous economic crisis. India has substantial reserves and while its current account deficit is not small, it&#8217;s not large enough to cause a crisis. The Indian economy after nearly two decades of reform runs on lots of small engines of growth that represent the fastest growing areas of the economy. Government spending is an important feature of the Indian economy and will play an important role in maintaining the trajectory of expenditures in critical areas like infrastructure. In our opinion, the Indian growth story beat goes on. The recent decline in stock prices must be seen within the context of a long-term rise and as an opportunity to participate in the emergence of a future economic powerhouse.</p>
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