Nervous markets

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| The short answer is that no one knows. While the immediate impact has been on stock prices, the more substantial effect could well be on leveraged buyouts""which some Indian firms have used in recent months to acquire companies overseas. With the failure to sell debt linked to two buy-outs, global companies that had been planning to hawk assets are already announcing postponement of plans. The result could be slowing down of activity in the mergers and acquisitions market. |
| As for stock prices, speculation at this juncture will be focused on how deep and wide the "correction" in prices will be. Indian stock prices are high (with price-earning multiples for index stocks ruling near 21), especially when seen in the context of a slowdown in profit growth. To the extent that India's market takes its cues from global trends, and since stock prices dipped quite sharply in late Friday trading in New York (after Indian trading hours), the expectation will be that today's market will open with a downtick. Whether that will prompt the smart money to pick up stocks at the new lower prices, or whether it will stay away from the market to see whether further dips occur, is hard to tell. If the FIIs (which probably own close to 15 per cent of total Indian stock, and a larger proportion of floating stock) were to get really nervous and start serious disinvesting, it would immediately affect the rupee""which ironically would make India's software companies look like good investment bets again! What can be said with some confidence is that the "real" world economy is in good shape. The latest quarterly data on American GDP and the strong performance of Europe in recent months, coupled with record growth numbers in both India and China, tell of a buoyant global system, and this should give confidence that any drop in stock prices should logically be corrected before long. |
First Published: Jul 30 2007 | 12:00 AM IST