Sunday, December 27, 2020

Echoes from the past

 


When 2020 appeared lonely as 1961, reimagining 1984, deviating from 1995, reliving 1999 and full of hope of 1969


28 December 2020

                                                          

Here comes the sun, do, dun, do, do/Here comes the sun, and I say/ It's all right

These lyrics by the iconic music band Beatles celebrated the imminent arrival of spring after months of a cold winter. As the sun sets on 2020, it does seem like 1969, when the resistance against rules broke free. After nine months of havoc wrought by a deadly pandemic, release from confinement looks possible in the New Year. History has a strange way to mutate over slices of periods. The Berlin Wall is a prominent example of physical demarcation to mark geographical boundaries. Countries transformed into clones of East Germany as they locked down their population in April, turning into ghettos after being flat, following the birth in 1995 of the World Trade Organization to demolish tariff barriers to ease inter-nation trade flows. If the restriction on free movement in 1961 was to insulate from the influences of fascism, the clampdown in the passing year was to contain the covid-19 outbreak. It took 27 years before the man-made edifice, executing social distancing in its worst form, was brought down. The battle to vanquish coronavirus has been shorter. The relief at the unification of people, who habituated the cyber world to bridge the separation in the real world, has been no less, with equity indices scaling new highs. The euphoric reception accorded to tech companies, which helped to remain connected, is an energetic replica of the 1999 dot-com boom.

The lapping of Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google’s parent Alphabet is reminiscent of the craze for Intel, Microsoft, Oracle and Cisco Systems two decades ago. The similarity between the IPOs of a room-rental aggregator and a cloud-storage provider now with internet properties then, such as Priceline.com, which bought airline tickets and sold them at prices passengers were willing to pay, extends not only to the 80%-100% pop over the offer price but also to their billion-dollar market cap on listing. If the tradition of romancing loss-making debutantes due to their outlook continues, so do rescue acts of failing institutions. Brining back from the brink two private lenders evoked memories of 2002, when the value of UTI’s underlying assets was lower than not only of its declared NAV but also of face value. The state-owned mutual fund-cum-financial institution was split into two entities to house rotten and performing assets. If social media seemed like a savior during the long spells of isolation, the dependence on these platforms thrust into reckoning the dangerous downsides. Their dominance and tracking of every move of the user seemed like reliving the chilling dystopian society conjured by George Orwell. The vivid portrait of life under surveillance in 1984 is coming alive 36 years later. Echoes of how data could be misused in the quest for information dominance reverberated in the recently concluded US president polls.  The scary control of a few American corporations on words capturing our thoughts, images of our best faces, snappy chats and snarky tweets have snowballed into a consensus that it is time for a break. The last time such a pervasive presence was chipped to size was, ironically, in 1984, when AT&T, a huge conglomerate that, once again in a bit of irony, controlled communications.

 

In India, another hulk was expanding its overarching influence, offering access to the internet, facilitating voice and data downloads, generating entertainment, enabling online- shopping and dotting outlets to pump fuel. RIL’s divestment of 25% stake in the digital arm to foreign investors to raise over Rs 1 lakh crore in less than two months and the Future Group’s subsequent clash with investor Amazon over sale of the retail business had shades of EM Forster’s 1924 classic, A Passage to India, depicting the tensions arising from the West’s fascination with a mysterious land set against the 1920 independence movement. Even as the Atmanirbhar Bharat packages and monetary support was infusing Rs 30 lakh crore to encourage Make in India, the US’ two fiscal stimuli of US$4.5 trillion and the near-zero interest rates were sending stocks soaring as green shoots of recovery sprouted on a landscape that appeared as desolate as Chernobyl after the 1986 nuclear meltdown. A resurgence of infections and the discovery of a new variant during the last lap of the old year did create doubts about surmounting the challenge like the skepticism greeting the idea of a manned mission in space. With the availability of over 90% efficient vaccines, the obstacles seem as conquerable as in 1969, when the images of  Neil Armstrong gingerly sidestepping the craters on the moon reaffirmed faith in future.


-Mohan Sule

 

Sunday, December 13, 2020

The winner takes it all

 


An orderly market rally is spreading out to encompass stocks of different sizes, sectors and ages

 

14 December 2020

A striking feature of the record-breaking market rally is its democratic characteristic. There is order instead of chaos. Unlike in the past bull runs, when buying would be concentrated in frontline stocks in some flavor-of-the- season sectors, investors are spreading their benevolence across the board. Doomsday predictors, true to form, are not impressed. They are out with their usual warnings of bubbles as viewed from different angles such as the market cap-to-GDP ratio, historic valuations and divergence between economic health and trading optimism. Expressions of pessimism amid the giddy euphoria can be irritating. The toll taken by the pandemic has no like-to-like comparison. There was no roadmap to tackle the emergency. The plunge in consumer confidence was not due to runaway asset prices. The fear of an uncertain future without any timeline for a concrete resolution cannot be on par with seven-year cycles of boom and busts. Pumping cash had to be accompanied by progress in containing the outbreak. Supplementing monetary agencies’ determination to keep interest rates zero and buy bonds, which were effective in pulling out the economy from the 2008 mortgage blowout, is the realization by law makers to periodically come out with newer editions of fiscal stimuli. Instead of the one-size-fits-all solution of cheap money and tax concessions that is dusted and brought out during a downturn, the Reserve Bank of India and the clever Modi government have directed resources to the vulnerable, with the potential to become GDP multipliers.

Matching the large-caps’ rebound from the bottom initially, side counters raced past the leaders by the middle of July. Small scrips’ returns more than doubled as against the giants recovering three-fourths and the in-betweens about 85% by early December from the March lows. The mid- and lower-rung players climbed back to growth in 2020 by the third week of October. The mainline indicator managed to swim to the shore the next month. Due to preference for high float and index constituents, it is unlikely entrepreneur-driven entities are a craze among overseas fund managers, who have been net buyers of equities for six of the seven months since April.  With domestic institutions’ shopping restricted to May, reports of bumper profit and enrolments by brokers in the last two quarters point to retail investors occupying vacant spots in the trading ring. The resolves of central banks and governments to support the weak till the pandemic is capped is likely to have emboldened risk-averse individual participants in believing the diminishing downside of volatile bets. Besides profit-booking in big players trickling down the pecking order, percolation is also from segments that stood to benefit from the disruption to those, such as consumption and infrastructure, devastated from the stoppage of cash flow due to lockdowns but eager to roar back on unlocking. The Nifty Pharma index’s January-to-date gains had soared from 14% early May to 50% after five months as the focus on treatment for covid-19 patients shifted to developing candidates to prevent infections. After a slow start, the Nifty IT index had galloped 42% by the beginning of December as businesses rushed to transit into the digital era for contactless transactions.

 

 If drug makers got discounting on actual sales, tech solutions providers’ wealth creation was due to revenue visibility on the premise working from remote locations will persist in some form. The Nifty Energy index’s tanking 39% in the calendar year till early April and eventually bouncing back 6% so far pivoted on the prospect of normalcy in the medium term. The Nifty Auto index’ turnaround, from being a loser after the urban population was confined to work from home to advancing 13% as the year was setting, factored the present and future. Sales of low-end cars and two-wheelers spurred by the desire for personal mobility and the expected expansion of productivity from the December quarter is tipped to lift commercial vehicles. The dispersion of attention is not only between companies of varying shapes and sectors. Legacy and emerging plays are attracting eyeballs simultaneously. If the IPO of new-age Happiest Minds Technologies was subscribed 151 times, that of veteran Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders received bids 157 times, traditional specialty chemical manufacturer Chemcon 147 times and hard-hit consumption play Burger King 150 times the size. It is becoming clear that no industry is going to get shunned. Big and small enterprises, value and growth picks, and innovative and proven technologies will coexist. Policy assistance will be a mix of loose and calibrated measures.

 

-Mohan Sule