Gold, Equities, Oil, Bonds: What next for these assets after Fed rate cut?

Gold, Equities, Oil, Bonds: What next for these assets after Fed rate cut?



Investment strategy after US Fed’s rate cut: The US Federal Reserve’s jumbo rate cut of 50 basis points — a first since early 2020 — triggered volatility across various asset classes. The US equities, for instance, ended lower on Wednesday, as did the Spot Gold in the international market.

 

Asian equities, however, saw meaningful gains Thursday morning where Indian equities hit fresh record highs.


The diverse trend, analysts said, was on account of the contradiction by Fed Chair Jerome Powell where he began the easing cycle with an outsized cut but maintained that the US economy is in good shape. This, they said, may keep investors cautious in the near-term.

 

 


While the US is nowhere near recession, there are signs of a significant slowdown. The pace of this slowdown, they added, will dictate the pace of rate cuts going ahead. 

 

“Markets are pricing in around 60bps of easing for 2024 and 150bps for 2025 – significantly more than the Fed’s projections. Most asset classes gave up their gains overnight, as Powell cautioned against expecting larger cuts going ahead,” noted Emkay Global Financial Services.


So, how will the US Fed’s outsized rate cut of half a percentage point affect each asset class ahead? And how should investors tweak their portfolios?

 


US Fed’s rate cut impact on equities

 


According to Unmesh Kulkarni, managing director and senior advisor, Julius Baer India, US equity markets have, historically, performed well if the Fed’s rate-cutting cycle is accompanied by a strong economy.  

 


“The global macroeconomic environment is currently favourable for equities. However, volatility in equity markets is likely to stay elevated, given the uncertainty around the upcoming US elections, ongoing concerns of an economic slowdown / recession in the US, as well as other geopolitical factors,” he added.

 


Gains in emerging market equities, too, will depend on whether the US economy is heading for a soft landing or into a hard landing (recession).

 

“While the Indian economy in, itself, is on a solid footing, valuations are rich and may limit the near-term upside. Indian equities could witness higher volatility if the probability of a global hard landing rises,” Kulkarni cautioned.


US Fed rate cut impact on bond market

 


According to analysts, the US Fed’s 50 bps rate cut may lead to a global rally in debt markets, improving liquidity and making it cheaper for businesses and consumers to borrow.  

 


The rate cut may also weaken the US dollar, and increase foreign demand for US bonds.

 


Back home, however, bond market trackers don’t expect the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to immediately follow suit. Having said that, an immediate shift in stance cannot be completely ruled out, they added.

 


As a strategy, analysts at Fisdom recommend investors to increase their exposure to long-duration bonds to take advantage of the potential capital appreciation as bond prices rise with falling yields.  

 


 “It is also wise to maintain some allocation to shorter-duration bonds or high-quality corporate bonds for stability, helping to offset any risk related to the future interest rate changes or shift in economic conditions,” they added in their note.  

 


Impact on Gold

 


Contrary to expectations, Gold came under slight pressure after the US Fed’s rate cut decision. After hitting an all-time high of $2,618 per ounce on Wednesday, the yellow metal was quoting at $2,587/oz on Thursday.  

 


Typically, Gold glitters when rate cut cycles are accompanied with a recessionary environment.

 


“A 50 bps cut could weaken the US dollar, negatively impacting the IT sector and benefiting gold. Post the decision, a pair trade strategy involving ‘long on gold and short on IT’ could be considered,” said Vikram Kasat, Head – Advisory, PL Capital – Prabhudas Lilladher.

 


Impact on Oil prices

 


Even as the US Fed has assured investors of a strong economy, analysts see the 50-bps rate cut as the first step by the US central bank to fight recession. Oil demand, thus, is expected to stagnate in the Western world, they said.

 


“Amid China’s increased oil production, the petro-nations will likely phase out their curtailments as competitionfor market share heats up. Geopolitics-driven price spikes are usually short-lived, and in absence of an extreme flare-up in geopolitical conditions, the current downtrend in oil prices might just extend a bit more,” said Unmesh Kulkarni of Julius Baer India.

First Published: Sep 19 2024 | 10:54 AM IST



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Spicejet share price: SpiceJet shares fly high after Rs 3000 crore QIP oversubscribed

Spicejet share price: SpiceJet shares fly high after Rs 3000 crore QIP oversubscribed



SpiceJet shares surged over 8 per cent and registered an intraday high of Rs 74.7 per share. The stock surged after reports said the airline has received a good response for its Rs 3,000 crore-worth sale of shares to qualified institutional buyers.


At around 9:18 AM, shares of SpiceJet were up 3.44 per cent at Rs 71.48 per share. In comparison, the BSE Sensex traded 584.12 points higher at 83,532.35, around the same time.


As per a PTI report, the qualified institutional placement has been oversubscribed, with participation from various investors, including family offices and institutional funds.

 


Some of the investors include the family offices of Madhu Kela, Akash Bhansali, Sanjay Dangi, Rohit Kothari, and Bandhan Bank.


“Due to our financial constraints, our company has not been able to fulfill the statutory liabilities accruing on us on a month to month basis,” the airline said in the preliminary placement document related to raising Rs 3,000 crore.


The carrier’s statutory dues totalled Rs 601.5 crore as on September 15 and net proceeds from the placement will also be utilised towards clearing the dues.


Of the total amount, Rs 297.5 crore is towards the deposit of Tax Deducted at Source (TDS), Rs 156.4 crore is related to the deposit of employees’ provident fund, and Rs 145.1 crore pertains to Goods and Services Tax (GST).

The proceeds will also be used for settling the liabilities of creditors, including aircraft and engine lessors, engineering vendors, and financiers. READ MORE


SpiceJet had set a floor price of Rs 64.79 per share for the sale of securities to qualified institutional buyers through which the budget carrier aims to raise up to Rs 3,000 crore.


Last week, shareholders approved a proposal to raise up to Rs 3,000 crore.


According to the preliminary placement document, a copy of which has been submitted to the BSE, the floor price has been set at Rs 64.79 per share.


“Our company may offer a discount of not more than 5 per cent on the floor price in accordance with the approval of the shareholders by way of a special resolution pursuant to the postal ballot dated on September 13, 2024, and in terms of Regulation 176(1) of the SEBI ICDR Regulations,” it said.


In the past one year, SpiceJet shares have gained 81.6 against BSE Sensex’s rise of 22.7 per cent.

First Published: Sep 19 2024 | 9:46 AM IST



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Asian stocks and dollar gain as Fed Reserve charts 'soft landing' path

Asian stocks and dollar gain as Fed Reserve charts 'soft landing' path


The Fed’s cut is expected to support spending and the US economy.


The dollar bounced, long-dated bond yields were up and Asian stocks mostly rose after the US Federal Reserve began its easing cycle with a large rate cut, though it tempered that with a balanced outlook as it seeks to keep the economy ticking over.


The S&P 500 hit a record high overnight, before closing slightly lower. Futures rose 0.6 per cent in the Asia day and Nasdaq futures were up 0.9 per cent. Japan’s Nikkei jumped 2 per cent and Australian shares hit a record high. [.T][.AX]


The Fed lowered its window for the benchmark policy rate by 50 basis points to 4.75-5 per cent, where markets had been leaning before the decision. The dollar immediately hit a two-and-a-half-year low on sterling, but then recoiled sharply.[FRX/]

 


It was up nearly 1 per cent to 143.55 yen early on Thursday and well off lows on the euro at $1.1081.


Ten-year Treasury yields have climbed nearly eight basis points from a day earlier to 3.719 per cent, while gold shot to a record high just shy of $2,600 an ounce, before easing back to steady at $2,559. [US/][GOL/]


The Fed’s cut is expected to support spending and the US economy.


“The key was never going to be about 25 or 50, it’s all about the path forward and I think they’ve outlined a view where the economy is still doing pretty well,” said BNZ strategist Jason Wong in Wellington. “This wasn’t a panicked 50 (bp) cut.”


Policymakers’ adjusted their median rates projection downwards, compared with their outlook in July, but Fed chair Jerome Powell emphasised the next moves would be data driven.


“I do not think that anyone should look at this and say, oh, this is the new pace,” Powell told reporters after the outsized cut was announced.


“We’re recalibrating policy down over time to a more neutral level. And we’re moving at the pace that we think is appropriate, given developments in the economy.”

 


MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.4 per cent in early trade, pressured as South Korean markets returned from holidays with heavy falls in the chipmaking sector following a downbeat Morgan Stanley note.


SK Hynix shares tumbled 9.6 per cent and Samsung fell 2.6 per cent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose slightly while the mainland benchmark CSI300 fell 0.4 per cent. Oil prices fell and benchmark Brent crude futures were last down 0.3 per cent at $73.42 a barrel. [O/R]


Around the region lower US rates in theory leave room for emerging markets to cut their policy rates and support growth.


Bank Indonesia had already moved a few hours before the Fed, with a 25-basis-point cut on Wednesday. Chinese bond yields fell in early trade on Thursday in anticipation of fresh easing from Beijing to prop up China’s increasingly sluggish economy.


The Bank of England meets later on Thursday and is seen holding rates at 5 per cent, especially after inflation figures showed services inflation picked up in August. The Bank of Japan sets policy on Friday, and is expected to stand pat but line up future hikes, perhaps as soon as October.


 


 

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sep 19 2024 | 8:17 AM IST



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Stock Market LIVE Updates: GIFT Nifty signals higher open for India, after Fed's 50bps rate cut

Stock Market LIVE Updates: GIFT Nifty signals higher open for India, after Fed's 50bps rate cut



Stock Market LIVE Updates, Thursday, September 19, 2024: The Indian stock markets were expected to open higher on Thursday, following the US Federal REserve’s decision to cut policy rates by a widely expected 50bps. 




At 7:25 AM, GIFT Nifty futures were trading at 25,408, modestly higher than Nifty futures’ last close at 25,396. 




That apart, benchmark equity indices BSE Sensex and Nifty50 had pulled back from their respective record highs on Wednesday to close in the red.


The 30-stock BSE Sensex closed at 82,948.23, down 131.43 points, or 0.16 per cent, while the Nifty50 ended at 25,377.55, down 41 points, or 0.16 per cent lower. 

In the run up to the US Fed’s announcement late on Wednesday, information technology stocks in India had posted their sharpest drop in over six weeks on Wednesday.

The Nifty IT Index closed 3.1 per cent lower at 42,089 on Wednesday, its biggest single-day decline since August 5. Its constituents Mphasis dropped by 5.6 per cent, followed by TCS closing lower by 3.5 per cent. L&T Technology Services, Persistent Systems, Infosys, and HCLTech also fell by over 3 per cent each.




Markets in the Asia-Pacific region were being led higher by Japan’s Nikkei 225, with Nikkei and Topix up about 2 per cent each. 




Meanwhile, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index futures pointed to a flat open for HSI, as they would return to trade after being closed for a public holiday on Wednesday. 




The Taiwan Weighted Index was up 0.12 per cent, and South Korea’s blue-chip Kospi slipped 0.51 per cent after opening higher. The small-cap Kosdaq was up 0.25 per cent. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.15 per cent on open.




Futures of mainland China’s CSI 300 stood at 3,191 slightly lower than its Tuesday close at 3,195.76.




Major stock indices had closed with modest losses and the dollar gained ground in choppy trading on Wednesday after the US Federal Reserve opted for a supersized cut in its first move to borrowing costs in more than four years.




The central bank cut its overnight rate by half a percentage point, more than the quarter-point that is customary for adjustments, citing greater confidence that inflation will keep receding to its 2 per cent annual target.




The benchmark S&P 500 rose as much as 1 per cent after the announcement before retreating to close down 0.29 per cent at 5,618.26.




The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 0.25 per cent, at 41,503.10, and the Nasdaq Composite shed 0.31 per cent, to end at 17,573.30.




Rates had been parked at their highest levels in more than two decades since July 2023.




MSCI’s index of world stocks rose to a record high during the session before turning south. It was last quoted down 0.29 per cent at 826.29.




The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, weakened after the announcement before rising 0.07 per cent to 100.98.




In the market for US government debt, yields on rate-sensitive 2-year Treasuries, rose 3.8 basis points to 3.6297 per cent, from 3.592 per cent late on Tuesday.




The yield on benchmark 10-year notes rose 6.6 basis points to 3.708 per cent, from 3.642 per cent late on Tuesday.




Attention quickly turned to what the Fed would do next as it seeks to fulfil its two-part mandate to promote maximum employment and stable prices.




Chair Jerome Powell said he saw no sign of a recession, citing solid growth, lower inflation and “a labor market that’s still at very solid levels”. He also said the Fed might have started cutting sooner, on the back of a surprisingly weak July jobs report, if it had seen that data earlier.




Markets are now fully pricing in a cut of at least 25 basis points at the central bank’s next meeting in November, with a roughly 40 per cent chance for another 50 basis point cut.




Next up on a busy policy calendar is a Bank of England meeting on Thursday, which financial markets anticipate will keep interest rates on hold. The Bank of Japan is expected to do the same on Friday.




Gold fell 0.62 per cent to $2,553.67 an ounce, having touched record highs earlier this week.




Oil prices fell, as the rate cut was seen as a response to unease about the US labor market. Brent crude settled at $73.65 a barrel, losing 5 cents.



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Jigar S Patel of Anand Rathi recommends buying these three stocks today

Jigar S Patel of Anand Rathi recommends buying these three stocks today



Lodha Developers


After reaching a peak near the Rs 1,590-mark on July 10, 2024, the stock has experienced a significant decline, shedding nearly 450 points, which translates into an approximate 28 per cent drop in price. 


This substantial correction has brought the stock down to a crucial technical level, where it has now formed a triple bottom pattern near the 200-day Exponential Moving Average (DEMA). 


A triple bottom typically signals strong support and suggests a potential reversal from a bearish to a bullish trend. Additionally, the presence of a Bullish Bat pattern, combined with the violation of a bearish trendline, further strengthens the outlook for a positive shift in momentum. 

 


These technical indicators suggest that bullish momentum could build in the coming weeks. Therefore, from a strategic perspective, investors could consider buying or accumulating the stock in the price range of Rs 1,250-1,300, targeting an upside of Rs 1,540. However, it’s crucial to implement a stop-loss at Rs 1,140 on a daily closing basis to manage risk in case of any unfavourable movements.


IDFC First Bank




Over the past few months, IDFC First Bank has consistently maintained a strong support level between Rs 70-71, despite several challenges from downward market trends. 


This price range has been tested multiple times, showcasing its ability to hold firm against selling pressure. Recently, a bullish divergence has emerged on the daily chart, which is a key technical indicator suggesting a potential upward reversal in the stock’s price. The importance of this support level is further emphasised by the fact that it aligns with the 0.618 Fibonacci retracement level of its previous upward move. This alignment strengthens the case for the stock being an attractive buy at the current price levels.


Based on these technical signals, we recommend traders and investors consider initiating long positions in IDFC First Bank within the Rs 72-73 price range. Our analysis indicates a potential upside target of Rs 90, highlighting a positive outlook on the stock’s growth prospects. 


However, to mitigate potential risks, we advise placing a stop-loss order at Rs 64 (on a daily closing basis). 


Allcargo Logistics

 


Recently, Allcargo Logistics has formed a bullish Bat pattern, which is a harmonic chart pattern known for indicating potential reversals. This pattern emerged after the stock created a triple bottom structure near its historical low of Rs 61, which is a strong sign of price support. 


The triple bottom pattern typically signifies that the stock has tested a key support level multiple times, failing to break below it, which suggests that the downward momentum is weakening. Additionally, a bullish divergence was observed just before the stock reversed from the Rs 61 level, where the price made a lower low, but the momentum indicator (such as the RSI or MACD) showed a higher low. 


This divergence is a classic signal that the downtrend might be losing steam, hinting at a potential upward reversal. Based on these technical indicators, it is advised to buy the stock on dips until it reaches the Rs 65 level, with an upside target of Rs 78. To manage risk, a stop-loss is suggested at Rs 59, based on a daily closing price, which would limit potential losses if the stock breaks below this key support level.


(Disclaimer: Jigar S Patel is a senior manager of equity research at Anand Rathi. Views expressed are his own.)

First Published: Sep 19 2024 | 6:27 AM IST



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NTPC Green Energy files draft papers for around Rs 10,000 crore IPO

NTPC Green Energy files draft papers for around Rs 10,000 crore IPO



India’s largest power generating company, the state-owned NTPC Limited, has filed IPO papers for its green energy arm. The company plans to raise close to $1.2 billion or approximately Rs 10,000 crore through the public issue of NTPC Green Energy Ltd (NGEL).


Senior management of the company confirmed the development, but the spokesperson declined to comment.


NTPC launched NGEL in 2021 as the dedicated arm for its green energy and energy transition projects. The company chose to go public after efforts to find a strategic investor failed due to below-optimum valuations offered by foreign investors.

 


Apart from solar and wind power projects, NTPC is looking to invest in green hydrogen and green methanol—cleaner fuels that are manufactured at units powered by renewable energy.

First Published: Sep 18 2024 | 11:10 PM IST



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