5.19.09 The Conrad Group is Quoted in Bloomberg

June 4, 2009 · Filed Under Articles, News & Media · Comment 

“India elections a game changer” William Nobrega is quoted saying!

Morgan Stanley on India Trumps Goldman on China
Commentary by William Pesek

May 20 (Bloomberg) — India’s stock market almost lost control this week, and it was a great thing for the nation.

So intense was the euphoria over Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s election triumph that trading had to be halted for the rest of the day for the first time. The record 17 percent surge in the Sensitive Index said it all: India now has a unique opportunity to get its act together.

The question is, will it? The odds are that India will do so now that Singh has a clear mandate free of the small-party bosses that have stymied India’s reform process.

India’s election is notable on many levels relevant to investors. It showed that the country remains an oasis of stability in a reeling global economy. It also indicated that India’s so-called demographic dividend is affecting politics. The role of Rahul Gandhi, 38, in rallying the ruling Congress party to victory marks him as a prime minister-in-waiting.

India also proved it can confound expectations about the trajectory of its $1.2 trillion economy. Anyone betting last week that China was way ahead in the race to be Asia’s next economic superpower now has reason for pause.

Here, Morgan Stanley’s prediction for India’s economy may prove more reasonable than Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s on China. Morgan Stanley made headlines this week by boosting its India growth forecast for next year to 5.8 percent (matching Goldman Sachs’s call), from 4.4 percent previously. Goldman Sachs did the same last month when it raised its China forecast for next year to 10.9 percent from 9 percent.

Global Optimists

If the optimists are right and the global recovery is beginning, then China may be safe. Investors haven’t made a lot of money betting against China with its double-digit growth and soaring stocks. That may change if highly export-dependent China has to adjust to a world of weak demand and sluggish growth.

Not that India can thrive if many economies embark on a multiyear process of spending less and saving more. India doesn’t have a China-like pile of cash to throw at its economy. India’s reserves are $246 billion, compared with almost $2 trillion in China.

India has a bad-neighborhood problem, too. It borders Pakistan, Nepal, Myanmar, Bangladesh and, of course, China. Toss Sri Lanka into the mix and India is located in a pretty challenging part of the world. Singh will have his work cut out to keep the peace both economically and diplomatically.

A key difference, though, is that India isn’t the slave to exports that China has become. And William Nobrega, the co- author of “Riding the Indian Tiger,” isn’t exaggerating when he calls India’s election “an absolute game changer.”

Change Coming

Singh, an Oxford-trained economist, is a former central- bank governor and mastermind of the 1990s market changes propelling India’s rapid growth. He has made little progress since 2004 in attacking an inefficient and often corrupt administrative system that keeps prosperity from reaching those who most need it.

That may be about to change. Until now, Singh needed to win support from the communist allies who choked his market-opening efforts. It has been like running a massive and complicated economy with two or three limbs tied behind your back. Now, Singh has two forces in his favor: a mandate for change and a sense of urgency to unshackle an economy with vast potential.

If ever there was a time for India to stand and deliver, it’s now. Good news on India’s macro-economy can only be sustained by major changes to the micro-economy. Improving infrastructure and reducing corruption must be priorities. India ranks behind Albania, Burkina Faso and, perhaps more importantly, China in Transparency International’s latest Corruption Perceptions Index.

Aim High

Singh and Congress party chief Sonia Gandhi should aim high and move India fully beyond junk status. This week, Moody’s Investors Service, which places India two levels below investment grade, indicated that the South Asian nation has a chance to improve its fiscal situation after the election.

Similar noises came from Standard & Poor’s, which assigns India a BBB- long-term credit rating, the lowest investment- grade level. Higher ratings will lower India’s bond yields and free up more money to reduce poverty and improve education.

And while Singh tends to the economy, there are signs that the next generation of Indian leaders is stepping up. Singh is 76 and the opposition-party leader he defeated, Lal Krishna Advani, is 81. Here, rising star Rahul Gandhi, son of Sonia Gandhi, marks a generational shift in Indian politics.

Rahul Gandhi personifies India’s future. About 30 percent of the nation’s 1.2 billion people are younger than 15, while less than 6 percent are older than 65. Economists call it India’s demographic advantage over China or Japan. The key, of course, is creating enough good jobs to utilize that vast workforce of the future.

Singh’s to-do list is a daunting one and markets shouldn’t necessarily expect a smooth ride. Now that India is free to make tough decisions, the economy is poised to take off.

 

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?sid=aeQOCxKk_lU0&pid=20601039

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5.18.09 The Conrad Group is Quoted in Business Week

June 4, 2009 · Filed Under Articles, News & Media · Comment 

India: Fresh Opportunities for Investors
The promise of long-awaited reform and less stringent investment and ownership rules in India will benefit Western companies as well as Indian ones
By David Bogoslaw

Until a game-changing election on May 16, India had been a laggard among Asia’s markets, which have been advancing at a fairly strong clip since earlier this year. The victory of a coalition led by a recharged Congress Party, which won 262 of 543 legislative seats, brings the promise of long-awaited economic reforms, reduced corruption, and a younger, more vigorous leadership. The news drove the Indian equity benchmark Sensitive Index, or Sensex, up 17.3% on May 18 and has people taking a closer look at investment opportunities on the subcontinent.

Those opportunities are abundant, ranging from financial services to infrastructure to consumer goods and private education, says William Nobrega, a managing partner at Miami-based Conrad Group, which provides business consulting and investment banking services.

India’s economy has had investment pros worried, with recent reports showing the country experiencing its biggest production decline in 16 years, and declines of 33% for both imports and exports, in the first three months of 2009. The International Monetary Fund said it expects the economy to grow by 5.1% in calendar 2009, vs. a rate of nearly 9% between 2003 and 2008. India needs to keep gross domestic product growing at 8% or more in order to continue to eradicate poverty, says Nobrega; he estimates current growth at 4% to 5%.

Business Reforms Expected
Just 10 seats short of a majority of 272 seats, the Congress Party-led United Progressive Alliance doesn’t need the support of the Hindu Nationalist or Communist parties, both of which have long blocked the Congress Party’s attempts at economic liberalization, says Nobrega. The new government should have the smaller centrist parties clamoring to join and fill the remaining 10 seats needed to form a majority and push through reforms, such as removing caps to foreign investment in and ownership of Indian businesses. “This shows that Indian democracy has finally come of age,” says Nobrega. “In the past, it’s just been coalition after coalition or radical right or radical left, like the Hindu Nationalists and the Communist Party,” whose corruption had become a growing frustration to the electorate.

Another much-needed area of reform will be private education, which has become entrenched as part of Indian society but couldn’t expand due to opposition to for-profit alternate providers from outside the Congress Party.

However encouraging the political signs, Nobrega sees the surge in the stock indexes as overdone. “The earnings don’t support it. I think there’s a little exuberance going on,” he says.

A Chance to Catch Up
Over the longer term, however, he expects the more liberal government that was voted in to provide a major push for India’s business fundamentals and growth trajectory. After years of frustration among the Indian populace about its progress compared with China, “this will help India begin to achieve the type of gains that China has done in the areas of infrastructure and foreign investment,” says Nobrega.

A big driver of that will come from all the new faces coming into government, including some key cabinet posts, he says. He expects to see the first tangible results from this generational shift in the next three to six months, but others are more conservative. “This isn’t something that’s going to change overnight,” says Nick Beecroft, a portfolio specialist at T. Rowe Price International (TROW) in London. But led by a government with a much stronger mandate, “there’s a possibility that over the next few months and years we could start to see a real benefit to some sectors” of the economy.

Beecroft expects the banking and insurance industries to be among the first to benefit, as large capital inflows into the country start to reverse the “massive withdrawals of foreign capital in 2008.” The return of foreign investments will provide the high liquidity that the financial-services industry needs to flourish, he says. Capital inflows will probably also be a boon to infrastructure and real estate companies. There are many domestic investors who took refuge in cash during the runup to the election and will now be ready to jump back into the stock market, he says.

No Quick Fixes
But Beecroft is prepared for a slight pullback in stocks over the next few weeks as people come to realize there won’t be a quick fix for India’s economic woes.

Not least of those woes is the country’s poor public finances, which RBC Capital Markets (RBC) agrees will be hard to repair. While a greater mandate for the prime minister to pursue economic reforms should boost the economy and the value of the rupee, RBC’s Emerging Markets Research Group warned against excessive optimism.

“Its weak fiscal position not only constrains the government from providing significant fiscal stimulus in a period of slower growth, but also represents the chief risk that India’s sovereign debt may be downgraded into subinvestment-grade status,” RBC said in a May 18 note. “For these reasons we think that the upside for the [rupee] coming from the election results will be limited.”

Government Has Limited Options
India’s current account deficit is expected to shrink from 3.5% of GDP in fiscal 2008-2009 to about 1.3% in the current fiscal year, a Goldman Sachs (GS) economist said in April. Official estimates of the total fiscal deficit, for the federal government plus the individual states, range between 9.8% and 11%, London-based Lombard Street Research said in a May 14 note. But Lombard puts the total deficit closer to 13%, since it adds in off-balance-sheet subsidies such as oil bonds.

With its finances so thinly stretched, the government has little flexibility to fund initiatives needed to fuel economic growth, such as expanded education for a growing middle class. One of the reforms people are expecting is the privatization of some of India’s state-owned and operated companies, says Beecroft.

With change on the horizon, where should India-focused investors be looking now?

Underrepresented in Indices
T. Rowe Price has broad exposure to Indian stocks, from infrastructure and real estate development names to television broadcasting companies, alcoholic beverage makers, and personal product manufacturers.

T. Rowe’s $2.0 billion New Asia Fund (PRASX), a dedicated Asian strategy that excludes Japan, held 36% of its assets in Indian stocks at the end of March, compared with a typical 9% weight in Indian stocks, says Beecroft. He expects that fund to benefit directly from the 17% bounce on May 18. The more geographically diverse Global Emerging Market Stock Fund (PRMSX) was 1% to 1.5% overweight in India in March.

T. Rowe’s large overweight position stemmed from a view that there are a lot of well-managed entrepreneurial companies in India and that the country’s stocks are generally “quite heavily underrepresented in indices that cover emerging markets,” he says.

Infrastructure Investment Expected
One of the New Asia Fund’s top five holdings is Container Corp. of India, a transport company. Another key holding is GMR Infrastructure, which builds and operates hydropower plants and airports and owns a 50% interest in InterGen, a global independent power producer based in the Netherlands.

Industrial-materials producers and financial services dominate the Eaton Vance All India Fund (ETGIX), with $421 million in assets. More than 25% of its assets were invested in the fund’s top five holdings as of Mar. 31, which included Reliance Industries, Bharat Heavy Electricals, and HDFC Bank.

Another way to gain access to India is through the Morgan Stanley India Investment Fund (IIF), an exchange-traded fund whose shares can be purchased fairly cheaply at the moment. On May 18, its closing net asset value was $19.03, down almost 58% from its 52-week peak NAV. The ETF’s largest holdings include tech-services provider Infosys Technologies (INFY), HDFC Bank, Bharat Heavy Electricals, and Bharti Airtel, an integrated telecom services company that’s a unit of Bharti Enterprises. The fund’s share price has risen 10.8% over the five years and is up 52% year-to-date after a 42% decline in 2008.

Big-Box Stores Could Benefit
In addition to the Indian equities, there are several U.S. and European stocks that will be better bets for investors as a result of those companies’ newfound access to Indian consumers, once proposed reforms have been passed. With publicly funded education unable to keep up with demand from such a large population of young people, there’s a great need for the private, for-profit education companies. India has some already, but all the major education companies in Europe and the U.S. will also be eager to enter the market, he says. Western insurance companies will also be more welcome.

Big retailers such as Home Depot (HD) and Lowe’s (LOW) will also start to see the market potential in India, says Nobrega.

And for investors who may have had qualms because of the mounting geopolitical risks between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan, not to mention the uncertainty in Afghanistan, there’s another bonus from having the Congress Party in power.

Political Thaw Possible
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and the people he has surrounded himself with will refuse to be “baited by pseudo-nationalist tendencies,” says Nobrega. “They don’t see Pakistan as an overt threat that the Hindu Nationalists see. They see terrorism as a threat and [they will] move forward on security reform.”

He also expects the new government to move forward with more international trade agreements and security arrangements, which should further the political thaw between India and its neighbors, he says.

Regardless of the scope and pace of change, the results of the Indian election will have investors around the globe looking for opportunities on the subcontinent for some time to come.

 

http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/may2009/pi20090518_580433.htm

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