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Friday, November 30, 2012

Indian Stocks Climb to 19-Month High on Reforms, Growth Outlook By Rajhkumar K Shaaw - Nov 30, 2012


Indian stocks climbed to a 19-month high on optimism the government will extend an economic-policy overhaul to bolster investment after growth slowed last quarter to match a three-year low.
The BSE India Sensitive Index (SENSEX), or Sensex, rose 0.9 percent to 19,339.90 at the close, taking this month’s advance to 4.5 percent. Volumes on the measure were almost triple the 30-day average, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Housing Development Finance Corp. (HDFC), the biggest mortgage lender, extended gains from a record. Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd. (BHEL) and Jindal Steel & Power Ltd. (JSP) jumped more than 5 percent each.
Data today showed gross domestic product grew 5.3 percent in the three months to Sept. 30 from a year ago, in line with the median of 42 estimates in a Bloomberg survey and down from 5.5 percent in the previous quarter. The government yesterday agreed to opposition demands for a vote on its plan to allow overseas companies to set up supermarkets, paving way for the functioning of parliament after four days of adjournments.
“The market is playing for the next fiscal year and the measures the government is trying to push will bear fruit going forward,” said Shishir Bajpai, senior vice president at IIFL Wealth Management Ltd. in Mumbai. “There is intent from the government on economic reforms.” IIFL has $1.8 billion in stocks under management and advisory.

Foreign Fund Purchases

The Sensex has increased 25 percent this year, driven by foreign flows and economic policy measures. Offshore investors bought $360 million more local stocks than they sold yesterday, the most in two months, taking monthly inflows to $1.7 billion, exchange data show. They have purchased a net $19.8 billion of shares this year, the highest among 10 Asian markets tracked by Bloomberg, excluding China, the data show.
The flows propelled the local currency to its first weekly gain since October. The rupee advanced 2.3 percent this week to 54.2650 per dollar, paring its loss in November to 0.8 percent.
Housing Development Finance, the biggest mortgage lender, soared 2.6 percent to 843.50 rupees. ICICI Bank Ltd. (ICICIBC), the No.3 lender by value, added 1.7 percent to 1,099.85 rupees. State Bank of India, the second-largest by market value, added 1.8 percent to 2,170.3 rupees. The 14-member Bankex index increased 1.5 percent to its highest level since December 2010.
“If the economy improves then the stress on their balance sheets comes down,” IIFL’s Bajpai said. “Banks’ earnings will further improve if non-performing assets come down.”

Metal Producers

Sterlite Industries (India) Ltd. (STLT), the biggest copper and zinc producer, surged 3 percent to 108.55 rupees, extending this week’s rally to 12.5 percent, the best performer among the 30 Sensex stocks. Aluminum maker Hindalco Industries Ltd. (HNDL) rose 3.1 percent to 116.6 rupees. Tata Steel Ltd. (TATA), the largest producer of the alloy, gained 2.5 percent to 386.2 rupees.
Bharat Heavy, the biggest power-equipment maker, jumped 5.5 percent to 234.35 rupees, its steepest climb since Oct. 4. Jindal Steel rallied 5.8 percent to 403.05 rupees. Oil & Natural Gas Corp. (ONGC), the largest state-owned oil explorer, soared 4.4 percent to 264.95 rupees, erasing this year’s loss.
The Sensex is the second-best performer since Jan. 1 among global benchmark gauges with at least $1 trillion in market value, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The measure has fallen in December only once in the past nine years, the data show.
“The momentum is with the market and there are a lot of tailwinds like reform expectations and foreign inflows,” Dilip Bhat, joint managing director of Prabhudas Lilladher Pvt., told Bloomberg TV India today.

Moody’s, Goldman

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government, striving to avert a credit-rating downgrade, snapped months of paralysis in September by curbing fuel subsidies and giving retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. the chance to set up stores.
Opposition led by the Bharatiya Janata Party accused the government of reneging on a promise to win legislative support for the retail policy. Singh’s administration gave ground after talks with allies and regional parties that have signaled they are unlikely to vote against the ruling bloc.
Moody’s Investors Service maintained its stable outlook on India’s investment-grade credit rating and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. yesterday raised local shares to overweight.
The S&P CNX Nifty Index (NIFTY) on the National Stock Exchange of India Ltd. added 0.9 percent to 5,879.85. The 50-stock measure will reach 6,600 by December next year, Goldman said, joining Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase & Co. in predicting a positive outlook for Indian equities for 2013.
The Sensex may rally to 23,069 by December 2013, Morgan Stanley analysts led by Ridham Desai wrote in a Nov. 26 report. JPMorgan said Nov. 19 that Indian stocks are its top selection among the so-called BRIC nations next year.
The Sensex is valued at 15.8 times estimated earnings, compared with the MSCI Emerging Markets Index’s 11.7 times, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
To contact the reporter on this story: Rajhkumar K Shaaw in Mumbai at rshaaw@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Darren Boey at dboey@bloomberg.net

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Indonesia Poised to Top India as World’s Largest Palm Oil User By Yoga Rusmana and Ranjeetha Pakiam - Nov 28, 2012


Indonesia, the world’s biggest producer of palm oil, is set to surpass India as the largest user next year as economic growth boosts demand.
Consumption may climb 13 percent to 8.5 million metric tons from 7.5 million tons this year, Indonesia’s Deputy Trade Minister Bayu Krisnamurthi said by text message. That exceeds U.S. government estimates of 7.95 million tons for India and 7.87 million tons for Indonesia in the 2012-2013 year.
Rising demand for palm used in everything from instant noodles to candy and fuel may curb exports that rose 2.9 percent in October from a month earlier. The economy expanded at more than 6 percent in the past eight quarters as President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono raised spending, luring investors such as Unilever (UNA) and L’Oreal SA. Palm use in the world’s fourth most populous country jumped 51 percent in the past four years as wheat climbed about 21 percent and sugar rose about 15 percent, U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates show.
“We’ve seen very strong demand growth from Indonesia,” said Erin Fitzpatrick, a London-based analyst at Rabobank International. “You certainly can see that story continuing,” she said by phone Nov. 27.
The country may surpass Germany and the U.K. by 2030 to be the world’s seventh-largest economy, generating $1.8 trillion in sales for agriculture, consumer and energy companies by that year, McKinsey & Co. said in September. McKinsey estimates consumer spending in urban areas will rise 7.7 percent a year to $1.1 trillion by 2030, according to the report.

L’Oreal, Unilever

L’Oreal (OR), the world’s largest cosmetic maker, expects to boost sales in Indonesia by as much as 35 percent in the next five years, Vismay Sharma, the company’s country head, said Oct. 29. The Paris-based company is investing $128 million to build its largest factory globally in West Java province.
Unilever plans to spend $150 million building a factory in Sei Mangkei, North Sumatra, that will produce ingredients for soaps and shampoos, said Sancoyo Antarikso, a Jakarta-based director at the unit of the second-largest consumer-goods maker.
Consumer-product companies like Unilever and noodle-maker PT Indofood CBP Sukses Makmur (ICBP) will benefit from a government plan to raise minimum wages, according to John Rachmat, an analyst at PT Mandiri Sekuritas, in a Nov. 22 report.
The Jakarta province will increase the minimum by 44 percent to 2.2 million rupiah ($229) a month in 2013 from this year, said Mandiri Sekuritas. East Kalimantan will boost the wage by 49 percent to 1.75 million rupiah, while Papua, the eastern most province, will raise it by 8 percent to 1.71 million rupiah, according to the report.

Blending Rate

Consumption will increase as Indonesia raises the blending rate of palm-based biofuel in petroleum diesel to 7.5 percent from 5 percent, said Sahat Sinaga, executive director of the Indonesian Vegetable Oil Industry Association, said by phone Nov. 27. Demand from oleochemicals is also increasing, he said.
Palm-oil refining capacity may climb to more than 30 million tons next year, exceeding output, as companies step up investments following tax changes, Andreas Bokkenheuser, a Singapore-based analyst at UBS AG said last month. Investors are planning $1 billion of investments following the duty reduction, Sinaga said then.
Capacity has gained “significantly” this year, said Krisnamurthi on Nov. 27, without specifying the increase.
The government cut taxes in October last year to boost processed exports as it seeks to raise the value of commodity shipments to spur growth and create jobs. Indonesia, which is rich in minerals such as nickel, bauxite and copper, also started a ban on ore exports by some miners in May, with exemption for companies planning smelters. Those shipments are subject to a 20 percent tax.
To contact the reporters on this story: Yoga Rusmana in Jakarta at yrusmana@bloomberg.net; Ranjeetha Pakiam in Kuala Lumpur at rpakiam@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Poole at jpoole4@bloomberg.net

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Telenor Said to Hold Talks to Merge India Unit With Tata By George Smith Alexander and Ketaki Gokhale - Nov 27, 2012


Telenor ASA (TEL), the Nordic region’s biggest phone operator, is in talks with Tata Teleservices Ltd. to combine their operations in India, three people with direct knowledge of the matter said.
Japan’s NTT DoCoMo Inc. (9437), which owns a 26 percent stake in Tata Teleservices, is likely to remain a shareholder in the merged entity, said one person, who asked not to be identified because the information is private. Any deal will depend on new takeover rules currently being considered by India’s telecom regulator, the people said.
The combination would create India’s fourth-largest operator by users and may give Telenor access to airwaves in all areas of the world’s second-biggest mobile phone market. Mobile- phone companies including Telenor, which had its spectrum canceled, and Tata Teleservices are struggling to revive growth in a nation where 13 competitors have driven call rates to a penny a minute.
“Some type of merger there would help, if it’s allowed, as they could utilize their size to get a better position in the market,” said Thomas Nielsen, an analyst at Pareto Securities ASA in Oslo. “India has been a challenging market for Telenor for years with tough pricing competition and a more difficult regulatory environment than the carrier may have been hoping for.”
Telenor shares fell 1.3 percent to 114.8 kroner at the close in Oslo yesterday, paring this year’s gain to 17 percent.

Russian Snag

Telenor agreed to buy a 60 percent stake in India’s Unitech (UT) Wireless for $1.07 billion four years ago before getting embroiled in a dispute with partner Unitech Ltd.
Telenor’s international expansion has also faced snags in Russia, where it has a 43 percent holding in VimpelCom Ltd. (VIP) Russia, which didn’t want Telenor to be the largest owner, agreed to withdraw legal claims against Telenor last week after VimpelCom co-owner Altimo increased its stake in the Russian mobile carrier to 47.9 percent.
Running the combined operation in India may be tough as the management will have to deal with three owners, according to Abhishek Anand, an analyst at Centrum Broking Pvt. in Mumbai.
“Telenor Group never comments on rumors or speculation,” Telenor spokesman Glenn Mandelid wrote in an e-mail. Tata Teleservices doesn’t comment on market speculation, the company said in an e-mail.
“We are going to maintain our stake for the time being,” Junpei Toya, a spokesman for NTT DoCoMo, said by telephone. Toya declined to comment on the prospect of a merger between Tata Teleservices and Telenor.
Under an agreement, Telenor may have the option of buying out the Japanese company in a few years, one person said.

New Rules

NTT DoCoMo paid 130.7 billion rupees ($2.4 billion) for its stake in Tata Teleservices in 2009, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The two companies sell mobile-phone services under the Tata DOCOMO brand.
The nature of any agreement between the companies depends on whether new guidelines in India require a merged entity to return startup spectrum, or the airwaves used for mobile communications, to the government, the people said.
The new rules will be placed before the Cabinet for approval, Telecommunications Minister Kapil Sibal said on Nov. 1, without specifying when the government may take a decision.
Tata Teleservices, part of India’s biggest business group, had 78.4 million mobile connections and Uninor, Telenor’s Indian brand, had 42.2 million connections at the end of September, according to data from the nation’s telecommunications regulator.

Sun Pharma

A merger between the companies would create India’s largest operator after Bharti Airtel Ltd. (BHARTI), Vodafone India Ltd. and Anil Ambani’s Reliance Communications Ltd. (RCOM), the data show.
Telenor agreed to sell a 26 percent stake in the Indian operations to Lakshdeep Investments & Finance Pvt., controlled by Sudhir Valia, executive director at Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. (SUNP), it said last month.
The company’s venture with its former partner, Unitech, a New Delhi-based real estate developer, was terminated after its spectrum licenses became invalid on Sept. 7. The licenses were revoked by India’s highest court over a corruption scandal.
In the auction of 2G mobile spectrum that ended Nov. 14, Telenor secured licenses and spectrum to operate in six of India’s 22 telecom zones -- Maharashtra, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh west, Uttar Pradesh east and Bihar. Telenor’s Indian unit, Telewings Communications Pvt., spent 40.2 billion rupees at the auction, outspending Bharti and Vodafone.
Tata Teleservices dropped out of an auction of CDMA airwaves scheduled to begin after the GSM auction.
To contact the reporters on this story: George Smith Alexander in Mumbai at galexander11@bloomberg.net; Ketaki Gokhale in Mumbai at kgokhale@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Philip Lagerkranser at lagerkranser@bloomberg.net

Monday, November 26, 2012

India Bets on Troubled Kashagan to Restart Oil Expansion Abroad By Rakteem Katakey - Nov 26, 2012


India’s largest oil explorer is attempting to revive a stalled overseas expansion plan by buying into a $46 billion project that’s eight years behind schedule and cost twice as much as expected.
Oil & Natural Gas Corp. (ONGC) announced the company’s biggest overseas acquisition yesterday, the $5 billion purchase of ConocoPhillips (COP)’s 8.4 percent stake in Kazakhstan’s Kashagan project. Touted as the biggest find since the 1960s when it was discovered in 2000, the field beneath the Caspian Sea is expected to produce 370,000 barrels a day from next year.
For ONGC, as the state-controlled producer is known, the deal signals an acceleration in overseas acquisitions as the New Delhi-based producer spends 11 trillion rupees ($200 billion) by 2030 to increase production at home and abroad. Deals slowed after the $2.6 billion purchase in 2008 of Imperial Energy Corp., a U.K. company with fields in Siberia where production started to decline quickly.
“The worst for the Kashagan field, including the delays, is behind everyone,” D.K. Sarraf, managing director of ONGC Videsh Ltd., the company’s overseas unit, said in an interview. “The future of this really large field is good. We’re fully prepared to participate in the field, including expansion.”
After completing the first phase of the project, the Kazakh government and partners in Kashagan, including Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) and Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA), must decide on whether to expand the project to 1 million barrels a day, a commitment that would costs tens of billions of dollars. Drilling at the field is complicated by winter temperatures that freeze the Caspian and an oil reservoir that contains lethal gas.

Size Challenge

“Fields of Kashagan’s size are always a challenge and ONGC’s experience from Imperial hasn’t been the best, so hopefully they’ve learnt from that,” said Kamlesh Kotak, Mumbai-based vice president of research at brokerage firm Asian Markets Securities Pvt. “Running the field at full potential is going to be a challenge. Having been beaten by the Chinese in the past, ONGC has to do all it can to get what it can now.”
In September, ONGC agreed to spend $1 billion to buy Hess Corp. (HES)’s 2.7 percent stake in Azerbaijan’s largest oil field and an associated pipeline. BP Plc, the operator of the Azeri- Chirag-Guneshli fields, has been criticized by the Azeri government for a faster-than-expected decline in production.
ONGC scrapped a plan to revive production for Imperial’s fields just months after completing the purchase of the company because the fields didn’t perform as expected. The Indian company this year backed away from buying a 25 percent stake in a second Russian producer, OAO Bashneft, because they couldn’t agree on a price.

Cash Flow

“One wrong experience with Imperial should not stop ONGC from sourcing other deals, provided utmost care is taken,” said Niraj Mansingka, a Mumbai-based analyst with Edelweiss Securities Ltd. “Their cash flow is positive, hardly any debt and they plan to raise production overseas to meet India’s energy demand.”
China has been more aggressive than India in pursuing overseas oil and gas acquisitions as the world’s most populous nations look for oil fields to meet soaring energy demand.
China’s Cnooc Ltd. offered $17 billion for Canada’s Nexen Inc. this year. China Petrochemical Corp. bought Addax Petroleum, based in Canada and focused on Africa and the Middle East, in 2009 for $8.9 billion. By contrast, India’s biggest prize before yesterday’s deal was Imperial Energy.

India Investing

ONGC produced 8.75 million tons (about 175,000 barrels a day) overseas in the year ended in March. The company wants to produce 60 million tons by 2030 by investing in fields outside India.
India consumed 3.5 million barrels of oil a day in 2011, up 3.9 percent from the previous year, according to BP Plc (BP/)’s Statistical Review of World Energy. Only the U.S., Japan and China consumed more.
ConocoPhillips and ONGC Videsh expect to close the deal for a stake in the North Caspian Sea Production Sharing Agreement in the first half of next year, according to a statement yesterday. The Kazakh government and project partners including Exxon Mobil have the right of first refusal on the sale, according to the statement.
North Caspian Sea Operating Co. BV operates Kashagan. The partners include Eni SpA (ENI), Exxon Mobil, KazMunaiGaz, Shell and Total SA (FP), each with 16.8 percent, according to ConocoPhillips’ website. Japan’s Inpex Corp. (1605) has 7.6 percent.
The budget for the first phase may almost double to $46 billion by the time oil is exported, a person with knowledge of the matter said in January. An early cost estimate put the tab at about $24 billion and the first production was originally expected in 2004.
To contact the reporter on this story: Rakteem Katakey in New Delhi at rkatakey@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Will Kennedy at wkennedy3@bloomberg.net

Sunday, November 25, 2012

India Pledges to Cut Deficit, Cap Debt to Avert Downgrade By Kartik Goyal, Pradipta Mukherjee and Jeanette Rodrigues - Nov 25, 2012


Indian officials pledged to cut the widest budget deficit among the world’s largest emerging markets and curb public debt, as a report this week may show the economy grew at close to the slowest pace in three years.
The government is “optimistic” it will rein in the shortfall for the year through March 31 to 5.3 percent of gross domestic product from the previous year’s 5.8 percent, and has no plan “at the moment” to increase its record borrowing program, Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram said in Pune, India, on Nov. 24. The deficit will be cut 0.6 percent annually for the next five years, Chakravarthy Rangarajan, chief economic adviser to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, said in Kolkata the same day.
Financial markets are pricing in an increasing likelihood that India’s credit rating will be cut to junk status, Credit Agricole CIB said last week. The threat of losing the nation’s investment-grade sovereign ranking prompted Singh to reduce fuel subsidies in mid-September to tackle the fiscal gap and to allow foreign investment in retailing and aviation.
“I would like to, with all the conviction and command, reiterate that the government is fully committed to contain the fiscal deficit within 5.3 percent,” Economic Affairs Secretary Arvind Mayaram said at a conference in Mumbai on Nov. 24. “We have a clear program of disinvestment and we are confident of meeting our targets.”
An auction of wireless spectrum this month helped raise 94 billion rupees ($1.7 billion), less than 25 percent of the target, straining state finances. The auction isn’t yet complete and the government is confident of meeting its goal of raising 400 billion rupees from the sale, said Chidambaram, the finance chief.

Credit Outlook

Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings lowered India’s sovereign credit outlook this year, citing a widening budget deficit and a slump in economic growth and investment in Asia’s third-biggest economy. Both companies rank India’s debt BBB-, the lowest investment grade.
The country’s $1.8 trillion economy will probably expand 5.5 percent in the three months through September, Chidambaram said, matching the preceding quarter’s expansion. Economists predict GDP will increase 5.3 percent from a year earlier, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists before data due Nov. 30. That would match the pace of the first quarter which was the weakest since the three months through March 2009.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. estimates full-year growth through March 2013 will be 5.6 percent, which would be the least in a decade. Expansion may pick up to 6 percent the following year “if the government can push ahead with reform and help revive the investment climate,” Sajjid Z Chinoy and Jahangir Aziz, JPMorgan analysts in Mumbai and Washington, wrote in a Nov. 19 report.

Current-Account Gap

“Fiscal consolidation is a necessary pre-requisite for sustained growth,” Rangarajan, the prime minister’s economic adviser, said Nov. 24. Policy makers also need to address the nation’s “high” inflation and the current-account deficit if growth is desired, he said.
The shortfall in the current account, the broadest measure of trade, widened to a record $21.8 billion in the quarter through March and was $16.6 billion in the three months through June, official data show.
That’s helped push the rupee down about 4.4 percent this year after a 16 percent plunge in 2011. A weaker currency raises import costs and fuels inflation in a nation which imports more than 80 percent of its oil requirements and is the world’s biggest user of gold.
Gold imports account for 80 percent of the current-account deficit, Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn said in Pune yesterday.

Gold Investment

The monetary authority last week issued guidelines prohibiting commercial banks from lending funds for purchases of gold, other than for jewelers’ working capital needs. The central bank is considering new gold investment plans, Gokarn said.
Central bank Governor Duvvuri Subbarao last month cut the RBI’s growth forecast for the current fiscal year to 5.8 percent from 6.5 percent. He raised the monetary authority’s estimate for increases in wholesale prices to 7.5 percent from 7 percent.
The RBI kept benchmark borrowing costs unchanged at 8 percent at its last four policy reviews to curb the worst inflation among the so-called BRIC nations, comprising Brazil, Russia, India and China.
Increases in the nation’s benchmark price index averaged 7.5 percent in the first 10 months of 2012, compared with 2.7 percent in China, 5.4 percent in Brazil, and 4.8 percent in Russia, according to official data.
Barclays Plc economists estimate a 100 basis-point reduction in India’s repurchase rate in the first half of 2013, according to a Nov. 15 report. Policy makers will probably cut the rate by 25 basis points to 50 basis points in the first quarter with further easing “contingent on inflation pressures moderating later in the year,” according to JPMorgan’s report last week.
To contact the reporters on this story: Kartik Goyal in New Delhi at kgoyal@bloomberg.net; Pradipta Mukherjee in Kolkata at pmukherjee7@bloomberg.net; Jeanette Rodrigues in Mumbai at jrodrigues26@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephanie Phang at sphang@bloomberg.net