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Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Besides being a CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT from Institute of Chartered Accountants of India,SAP certified consultant(FICO) and A Director in an advertising Company,I am a BSE certified stock analyst(technical) and I trade regularly on Bombay stock exchange.Do you like to have some free reliable stock trading tips ??? Visit my blog daily and follow my research.

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THIS BLOG IS A FRIENDLY EFFORT TO ENABLE USERS TO MAKE PROFIT BY PUTTING MY KNOWLEDGE TO THEIR USE. STOCK PICKS GIVEN HERE ARE FOR TRADING, THEY ARE REAL TIME AND MOMENTUM STOCKS I.E. THEY WILL RISE / FALL VERY FAST GIVING QUICK PROFITS. USERS SHOULD MAKE THEIR TRADING STRATEGY AND ENTER THE STOCK IMMEDIATELY AND EXIT AS PER THEIR PRUDENCE WHEN TRADE FETCHES 15-20% RETURN.

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

Good morning

Hi frenz,

None of the global indices are in green today!! Global cues are very bad and as the folllowing report from Bloomberg suggests our market is likely to suffer today. 

India Stocks May Suffer 'Blip' on Elections, HDFC's Gajri Says

May 14 (Bloomberg) -- Indian stocks may halt their second- quarter rally unless the next government attracts foreign investment to revive the economy, according to HDFC Standard Life Insurance Co., the country's sixth-largest private insurer.

The ruling Congress party-led coalition may have won the most seats without securing enough votes to form a government, based on exit polls after a five-week election that ended yesterday. Indian stocks traded in the U.S. sank as the Bank of New York Mellon India ADR Index fell the most in two months.

"The election outcome will only be a blip," Prasun Gajri, chief investment officer at HDFC Standard Life, which manages $1 billion in equities, said in an interview in Mumbai yesterday. "It isn't the only determinant for the market. It may impact the markets for a month or two but nothing beyond that."

The Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index, or Sensex, was the worst performer in the first quarter among the so-called BRIC markets that also include Brazil, Russia and China. The gauge rebounded 24 percent in the second quarter, beating benchmark indexes in Brazil and China.

"The rally has been too fast, too soon," Gajri, 37, said. While the economy has shown signs of an improvement, investors will need to watch for more data, he said.

The International Monetary Fund expects India's economy to grow 4.5 percent in 2009, while Reserve Bank of India Governor Duvvuri Subbarao said April 21 that government stimulus and monetary easing could help the economy grow 6 percent in the year that started April 1. The $1.2 trillion economy expanded 5.3 percent in the three months to Dec. 31, the weakest pace of expansion since the last quarter of 2003.

Biggest Drivers

Investments by Indian insurance companies will be the biggest drivers of the equity market, Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, ranked a billionaire by Forbes magazine last year, said in an interview last month. Insurers could invest about $50 billion a year in the next two to three years, he said.

Gajri estimates insurers will invest more than $10 billion this fiscal year ending March 31.

"We are cautiously optimistic," Gajri said. "If the second half shows signs of a recovery, we will remove the word cautious from our stance."

The measure more than tripled since 2004, before dropping 52 percent last year after a global credit crisis wiped out more than $30 trillion from the value of global equities.

Liquidity flows into the market are very strong as investors' aversion to risk has receded, Gajri said. Insurers are moving from defensive stocks such as consumer companies and utilities to growth industries such as banks and engineering firms.

Stocks Drop

Indian stocks fell the most in three weeks in New York trading yesterday on concern the election exit polls show no clear mandate. The Bank of New York Mellon India ADR index dropped 5.5 percent to 557.22, the most since March 5. The Sensex slid 1.1 percent in Mumbai.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's Congress Party-led United Progressive Alliance is competing with the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance and a group of communist and regional parties known as the third front. Votes will be counted on May 16 to elect 543 lawmakers to the Lok Sabha, or lower house of parliament.

The Sensex plunged 11 percent on May 17, 2004, the most in more than a decade, on investor concern a government formed by Sonia Gandhi's Congress Party and communist allies would slow the pace of reforms.

To contact the reporter on this story: Pooja Thakur in Mumbai at pthakur@bloomberg.net

More on market opening,

Jagruti. 



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