Savings in India have risen at a historic rate of 35 per cent on the growing GDP base; 17 per cent of this is in gold, commodities and real-estate while financial savings represent 18 per cent of GDP. Even this is skewed towards deposits — both banking and non-banking, while the percentage of savings in shares and debentures is a mere 6.3 per cent. If this percentage goes to 25 per cent, it would amount to $40 billion of incremental money being diverted to capital markets.
Assuming a GDP growth rate of 8 per cent, earnings growth of 28-30 per cent for Sensex companies and an interest rate of 7.5-8 per cent, the average earnings per share of Sensex companies can be estimated at Rs 1,300 for FY 2009 on a free-float basis. A price-earnings ratio of 18-20 on this EPS gives us a Sensex estimate of 23,400 to 26,000 for FY09.
WTF? There are so many issues built into these assumptions that I don’t even know where to start! All I can say is - good luck if your job depends on it!
. . . home prices were undervalued in the 1990s, but overshot equilibrium in 2000 and remain overvalued despite recent declines. In our best judgment, single-family home prices as measured by the OFHEO purchase-only index were around 14 percent above equilibrium in the first quarter of 2008, with a plausible range of 8 to 20 percent.
. . . found inventory-to-sales ratio to be the most important driver of changes in property values in the short run. Starts in foreclosures, which obviously add to inventory, seem to also exert additional downward pressure on prices.
. . . with the gap between actual and equilibrium home prices playing only a weak anchoring role, the downward momentum could well take home prices considerably below equilibrium.
Given that we have zero data on home prices, rents, inventory, sales, etc. for India, such analysis is impossible. Rely on your gut to estimate whether housing is a worthwhile investment at this point.
The ECB’s surprise rate hike to 4.25% is greasing the skids under the Dow Jones AIG Commodity Index, which has tumbled -15% below its historic high set on July 2nd, including an -18% slide in the agricultural sector. Nymex coal has plunged by $40 /ton. Most importantly, the year-over-year change in the DJ Commodity Index in US$ terms has dropped in half to 20% in just the past two weeks.
The Bank of Brazil is the world’s top inflation fighter, and has guided its currency, the real, 16% higher against the US dollar from a year ago. As a result, the Dow Jones Commodity Index is only 4% higher than a year ago, in local currency terms. “Having stable prices is the best path to economic growth,” said Henrique Meirelles, Brazil’s central banker. “It is important that the central bank take timely measures so that the country can continue in its course of growth with low inflation,” he said.
Perhaps it’s not the ECB but the markets telling us that there is a big slowdown coming worldwide that will reduce demand significantly for most (non-agricultural) commodities in the next few months.