Share Trading Centre
Search

HOME

CFD CENTRE
CFD news
Compare CFD brokers
CFD expert panel
Market reports
ABC of CFDs
Vote for the best broker
FOREX CENTRE
Forex news
Compare forex
Forex expert panel
Market reports
ABC of FX
Vote for the best broker
SHARE TRADING
Compare brokers
Trading news
Shares expert panel
Market reports
ABC of shares
Vote for the no.1 broker
MARGIN LENDING
Margin lending news
Compare lenders
Margin lending panel
ABC of margin loans
Vote for the no.1 lender
FUTURES CENTRE
Compare brokers
Trading news
Futures expert panel
ABC of futures
Vote for the no.1 broker
WARRANTS CENTRE
Warrant news
Compare brokers
Warrants expert panel
ABC of warrants
Vote for the no.1 broker
OPTIONS CENTRE
Trading news
Compare brokers
Options expert panel
ABC of options
Vote for the no.1 broker
ETFs & INDEX FUNDS
ABC of Index funds
News & views
ABC of ETFs
SOFTWARE CENTRE
Compare software
ABC of software
STOCK FORUMS
Compare forums
ABC of forums
Vote for the no.1 forum
EDUCATION
Compare books & mags
Smart Investing
  NEWS

International
India on the move

Karin Derkley - August 13, 2007

As anyone who has spent anytime there would know, India is a crazy, chaotic, but strangely alluring place. Between the extremes of poverty and great wealth, there’s an amazing resilience and resourcefulness that, given the opportunity, translates into admirable entrepreneurship. I remember one market stall in an Indian city that was devoted entirely to restoring umbrellas that we would have tossed into a bin.

What may be a surprise however for many Australians is the idea that the Indian sharemarket might be a worthy destination for a long term investment. Sure it’s had a few remarkable years - growing roughly 30% a year for the past five years. But that only contributes to the sense of it as a sharemarket best approached with caution – at any moment it could head south. It’s not that long since the hopes and dreams of the Asian Tigers, crashed and burned in the Asian crisis of 1997.

Indeed the Indian sharemarket’s fall of 4 per cent, along with the rest of the global sharemarket, looked to many like the first stumblings of a market that has overreached itself. The Bombay Stock Exchange Sensex index is trading at a PE ratio of 20 times, and even Indian investors are becoming sceptical as to whether there’s more upside after that kind of performance.

But there’s a good argument that the India sharemarket may still have further to run, and that instead of a speculative punt, it could actually in time become a solid growth story. Stuart James of Aberdeen Asset Management, for one, likes India as a long term investment better than China, with which it is often lumped. “It has a good business and legal infrastructure and a conservative banking system,” he says. Companies are conservatively managed and moderately geared, and earnings growth is very strong, with estimates of more than 30% for 2007, compared to just 7% for the US.



While India’s surging sharemarket owes as much to the enthusiasm of domestic shareholders as to the strength of the nation’s economic growth story, it is not based purely on short-term euphoria, James argues. India’s sharemarket is more sophisticated than China, even if it is not as broadly based. “Many investors in China have this sense that investing in a the sharemarket is a bit of a gamble, whereas in India there is an understanding that this is a long term investment.” Indians are more prepared to take up rights issues, for instance, understanding that companies use the sharemarket to raise capital to grow their businesses.

Unlike China, India’s economic and business growth has been driven not so much by the government, but by Indians themselves. While China’s government has thrown millions of dollars into building infrastructure and developing its manufacturing sector, India’s government has been relatively hands-off in terms of dictating how businesses should grow. Indians have had to be more entrepreneurial, tapping into their knowledge and expertise and their English language skills. The service sector has been India’s big success story. It’s not just the call centres that plague us here at dinner times, Indians are also running remote IT systems for overseas companies, carrying out business processing and data-base management, and conducting legal work for legal firms in the US and the UK at a fraction of the cost.

All this is pumping millions of dollars into India’s economy. But if the economy was just relying on the health of the global economy it’d be on shakier ground. The fastest growing companies are those catering to domestic demand from a burgeoning monied population. Personal disposable income grew by 12% last year, compared to just 4.7% for Australia. That’s driving the growth of companies like Reliance Industries, which are in the process of rolling out 2000 hypermarkets and 2000 supermarket; Hero Honda, which produces two-wheelers to a newly mobile population and HDFC Bank, which is ready to cater to a very under-geared populace keen to buy their first home.

“The Indian economy is relatively closed - making it less vulnerable to a weakening global economy,” says Jan Wim Derks, the director of Emerging Markets Equities at ING Investment Management. Given the strength in domestic demand, ING-IM is overweight India, even though Derks believes the Indian stock market is currently expensive.

With 6500 companies listed on the Indian sharemarket, James says though it’s essential to be selective. After a series of heady years, there are few bargains to be had so the trick now is to find companies that are going to deliver strong steady growth over the long term. “Don’t buy a company just because it is cheap,” he says. Aberdeen’s Indian Fund, which is based in the UK, and makes up a portion of its Asian Opportunity and its Emerging Opportunity Funds here in Australia, invests in just 40 shares.

And there are bound to be plenty of hiccups along the way. Much of India is still desperately poor and ill-educated, and that makes it vulnerable to political and social upheaval. Lack of government investment in infrastructure like transport is holding back development in many areas, as is the endless red tape that put India 116th in a 2006 World Bank survey of 155 countries on the ease of doing business 2 places below Iraq and 25 places below China.

* You can invest in India through:

- Abderdeen Funds, Fidelity’s India Fund, available via platforms
- the Macquarie-Globalis BRIC Advantage Fund, which also invests in Brazil, Russia and China
- the India Equities Fund, listed on the ASX.



Whatever your views, you can discuss this article - or any of Karin's articles - on our message board Your 2 Cents.

More articles from this week's CompareShares newsletter:

Markets: Share correction insights
Smart Investing: The best of times, the worst of times
International: India on the move
Companies: Unloved offshore miners
Carbon exchange: A beginner's guide to carbon trading
Markets: Central banks pump in cash to calm fears
Investing: Wealth funds to overcome fears
Stock of the week: Regional Express Holdings
US: Uranium stocks bull run
Resident Trader: Riding the bucking bull
Forum of the Year: Battle heats up for top spot

Karin Derkley is the former deputy editor of Personal Investor magazine, and continues to write for The Age and AFR Smart Investor. She is author of “Buying & Selling Your Home for Dummies,” published by Wiley Australia.


    Email to a friend
     Print this article

Email to a friend
Print this article

More News

Commodities: Nuclear power here to stay
Resident trader: Revenge trading
Lottery winners: The perils of sudden wealth
Superannuation: Getting behind the wheel
CFDs: Volatility highlights strengths and weaknesses
Politics: Backing a winner
Smart Investing: Rising debt levels an issue
Shares: Market depth explained
Stock of the week: ASB
Investing: Oil rising to the top… again
Gold: Gold vs the dollar

Go to library

Site sponsors

MF Global

CommSec

GFT

CWA

IG Markets

Sonray

E*TRADE

OptionsXpress

Bell Direct

FP Markets

ForexCT

Home | About us | Contact us | Media enquiries | Advertise | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use