PEN-L
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
Re: BBC NEWS | Business | Indian stocks rebound after pause
- To: PEN-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Re: BBC NEWS | Business | Indian stocks rebound after pause
- From: Jim Devine <jdevine03@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 06:55:32 -0700
- Domainkey-signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=beta; d=gmail.com; h=received:message-id:date:from:to:subject:in-reply-to:mime-version:content-type:content-transfer-encoding:content-disposition:references; b=rw2Kw9YNXsw+pbSCi21PNhxEZKcHgQd1pc38sO79wLECMOQi87+/YdJhZaCsg/lyEAMHn4muY3C5QqiE9JFhO6iXYYUTGPZ3FeKQq3G5pxlcg/zJs6qztgwQBRW5MzgFUKXCHlq/XikKptGlZRW5hNeGyKFPchycJEZ+2KO8DZE=
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-global23may23,1,1837266.story?coll=la-headlines-business
From the Los Angeles Times
Global Cooling in the Markets
Stocks in emerging nations plunge from giddy heights largely on fears
of a U.S. recession.
By Tom Petruno
Times Staff Writer
May 23, 2006
Foreign stock markets, which have attracted billions of dollars from
American investors over the last two years amid dramatic gains,
suffered a wrenching sell-off Monday on deepening worries about the
global economy.
Russian stocks plummeted 9% — the equivalent of the Dow Jones
industrial average diving 1,000 points. Brazil's main market index
slid 3.3%.
In India, the market sank 10% before trading was suspended for an
hour. Authorities said they feared suicides by Indian brokers and
their customers, some of whom had gone into debt to buy stocks as they
rocketed.
Many analysts cautioned against panic, noting that smaller foreign
markets were prone to wild swings. Even so, major European markets
also were hit hard Monday.
The losses are certain to be felt by U.S. individual investors, who
pumped a net $105 billion into foreign stock mutual funds last year,
more than three times their net new investment in U.S. stock funds,
according to the fund industry's trade group. Much of that cash was
invested through 401(k) plans and other retirement programs.
The selling wave Monday, which slammed shares on every continent, also
weighed on the U.S. market. Wall Street's decline was relatively
modest, however. The Dow index eased 18.73 points, or 0.2%, to
11,125.33.
The worldwide downdraft in stocks started with U.S. markets on May 11,
a day after the Federal Reserve raised its key short-term interest
rate for the 16th time in two years and disappointed investors by
signaling that it might continue to tighten credit to curb inflation.
The Dow has lost more than 500 points over the last eight trading days
on fears that higher rates will derail the economy.
The U.S. market sell-off spread overseas on concerns that rising rates
could choke off U.S. consumer spending and trigger a global recession,
analysts said.
"If interest rates keep going up and we have a steep falloff in U.S.
consumption, one question is how the global economy would handle
that," said Mark Headley, president of Matthews International Capital
Management in San Francisco, which has about $7 billion invested in
Asian stocks.
"That's on every Asian executive's mind and on every Asian stock
investor's mind," he said.
Another fear is that higher interest rates on relatively risk-free
investments, such as bank savings certificates, could attract
investors who otherwise might pour cash into stocks.
Foreign stock markets, particularly those of so-called emerging
nations, have benefited as investors put safety concerns aside in the
search for more lucrative returns on their money over the last few
years.
Boosted in part by foreign money, the Mumbai Stock Exchange's index of
30 major Indian companies zoomed 178% in the three years ended Dec.
31. It tacked on an additional 34% through May 10 of this year.
In those same periods, the U.S. Dow index was up 28% and 9%, respectively.
"Pretty much all of these emerging markets got pushed up beyond where
you would expect, because there has been so much money out there with
nowhere else to go," said Cameron Brandt, head of research at
EmergingPortfolio.com in Cambridge, Mass., which tracks investment in
foreign markets.
Americans who rode the bull markets in emerging economies such as
India, Brazil, Russia and Turkey were joined by local investors, many
of whom were thrilled by a surge in share prices on par with the
performance of U.S. technology stocks in the late 1990s.
Strong fundamentals had underpinned the emerging-markets rally,
experts say. One was that stocks of many smaller countries had
languished while U.S. stocks soared in the 1990s, so the foreign
issues were relatively cheap as the decade began.
What's more, China's economic boom began to lift prices of raw
materials such as oil, copper and nickel about three years ago. That
delivered a windfall to many emerging nations that export those
commodities, strengthening their economies and generating local wealth
that partly flowed into stock markets.
In India, economic deregulation and an expanding technology-service
sector have spurred economic growth and empowered millions of new
investors, analysts say.
As occurred during the U.S. bull market of the 1990s, the lure of fast
gains encouraged some investors in emerging nations to borrow to buy
stocks in recent years. As share prices fall, the brokerages that lent
investors money often call in the loans, triggering more selling as
investors rush to raise capital to pay their debts.
That was a factor in Monday's losses.
"I borrowed money to trade in the market. I lost it all in the past
two days," 37-year-old Sanjay Joshi, a small investor in the western
Indian city of Ahmedabad, told the Reuters news service. "I don't know
how will I repay my loans."
Some professional investors rang warning bells in recent months,
saying emerging-market stock prices could not sustain their torrid
pace. Early this year, stock indexes in markets as disparate as Saudi
Arabia, Iceland and Vietnam began to look a lot like U.S. dot-com
indexes in early 2000 — heading nearly straight up as buyers poured
in.
"This market desperately needed a bucket of cold water poured on it,"
Headley said.
Russ Kinnel, director of mutual fund analysis at investment advisory
firm Morningstar Inc. in Chicago, cautioned against rushing into
emerging markets a few months ago. But it was understandable, he said,
that many Americans felt they were missing the party as the stocks
jumped amid optimism about the long-term growth of China and other
up-and-coming economies.
"People who got in late to emerging markets may have read one too many
'China's going to rule the world' stories," he said.
Investors also may have been betting that prices for oil and other
commodities would remain elevated, buttressing countries that export
raw materials. But worries about the global economy have pulled prices
of many commodities lower over the last two weeks.
Still, investors who can hold on to emerging-market stocks for the
next 10 to 20 years shouldn't be frightened away by the latest
turmoil, Kinnel and other analysts said.
Unlike in the late 1990s, governments of countries such as Russia and
South Korea are flush with cash, which should support their economies,
Headley said.
"We remain pretty bullish on the long-term story" of emerging markets,
said Larry Adam, an investment strategist at brokerage Deutsche Bank
Alex. Brown in Baltimore.
He noted that by traditional stock valuation yardsticks, such as the
ratio of share prices to earnings, most emerging markets do not
resemble the dot-com market of the late 1990s. In that overheated
environment, many stocks of fledgling technology companies sold at
prices hundreds of times underlying earnings — if there were earnings
at all.
"The price-to-earnings ratios are by no means as outsized as they were
in the tech world," Adam said.
Even with the losses they have suffered in recent days, many emerging
stock markets still are in the black for the year. The Russian market,
for example, is down 25% from its record high on May 6 but was up 17%
year to date as of Monday. The Indian market, which rebounded Monday
to a loss of 4% on the trading session, is up 11.5% since Dec. 31.
Among foreign stock funds popular with U.S. investors, the
$81-billion-asset Euro-Pacific Growth fund managed by the Los
Angeles-based American Funds group has fallen 9.3% since May 9 but
still is up 6.3% for the year.
Many of the largest foreign funds used by American investors have the
bulk of their assets in European and Japanese stocks, which haven't
fallen as hard as emerging markets.
But analysts warned that further declines could lie ahead in all
foreign markets if more investors try to lock in some of their paper
gains from recent years.
As for the U.S. recession worries that triggered the market rout, many
economists say those fears are overblown. Allen Sinai, who heads
consulting firm Decision Economics Inc. in New York, noted that stock
markets frequently fell on recession fears that proved groundless.
"Markets are much more volatile than economies," he said. [no shit, Sherlock!]
On 5/22/06, ravi <gadfly@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
At around 22/5/06 8:16 pm, Michael Perelman wrote:
> My first thought was ripples from the US market? Do you know much about what is happening
> there?
>
No, unfortunately I have no further information regarding this news.
--ravi
--
Support something better than yourself: ;-)
PeTA: http://www.peta.org/
GreenPeace: http://www.greenpeace.org/
--
Jim Devine / "These capitalists generally act harmoniously and in
concert, to fleece the people." -- Abraham Lincoln (attributed)
- Thread context:
- Re: World's largest dam completed on China's Yangtze River, (continued)
- BBC NEWS | Business | Indian stocks rebound after pause,
ravi Mon 22 May 2006, 15:39 GMT
- Re: What exactly is "development"?,
Jim Devine Mon 22 May 2006, 15:31 GMT
- Television and the witch hunt,
Louis Proyect Mon 22 May 2006, 13:07 GMT
- Re: Stiglitz: Compensation in Bolivia, yes!,
Max B. Sawicky Mon 22 May 2006, 11:57 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]