Market Updates
ICICI and Sterlite Offerings Lift Sensex
Ivaylo
19 Jun, 2007
New York City
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The benchmark index rallied Tuesday buoyed by the FPO of ICICI Bank which was fully subscribed within an hour of sale opening. Intense buying in large-caps ONGC, Reliance Industries, Tata Steel also aided the rally. Infosys led IT stocks lower on further appreciation of the rupee. SBI was the top performer on the market, while Satyam was the worst. Sterlite Industries sold $1.75 billion of stock through the issue of American depository shares.
[R]7:30AM NY-6:30PM Mumbai Sensex surges 215 points Tuesday, on banks, oil.[/R]
The Sensex on BSE finished Tuesday 215.36 points, or 1.53%, higher at 14,295.50.
The market-breadth was positive with 1,403 stocks gaining, 1,144 stocks declining and only 82 stocks were unchanged. Of the 30 stocks in the Sensex, 23 advanced, while the rest declined. The turnover on BSE was Rs 4,326 crore, compared with Rs 3,795 crore on Monday. On NSE, the turnover was Rs 8,350 crore, higher than Rs 7,064 crore on Monday.
Economic news
Copper and zinc producer Sterlite Industries raise over $1.75 billion of stock through the issue of American depository receipts at $13.44 apiece, the biggest by any Indian company. One ADR is equal to one local share.
A government official announced today that the Indian textile industry is targeted to reach $115 billion by the year 2012 and accelerate its growth rate to 16% from 9%.
Trading highlights
Time Technologies was the most-active stock with a turnover of Rs 180.41 crore followed by HTMT Global and Nitin Fire.
Advancers
Bank stocks were buoyed by the strong sale of ICICI Bank’ secondary offering. ICICI Bank made its record sale in 20 minutes. The simultaneous offering in New York and Mumbai is expected to raise $4.3 billion.
State Bank of India surged over 4% to Rs 1,372 and was the best performing stock listed among stocks listed in the Sensex index. SBI is set to raise $225 million from the overseas market this year by issuing perpetual bonds.
Other banks also followed suit. Bank of India was up 6.7% to Rs 204, Bank of Baroda gained 1.9% to Rs 265, and Kotak Mahindra Bank advanced 4.8% to Rs 589. Engineering & construction large-cap L&T advanced 3.6% to Rs 1996. The company won an order worth Rs 610 crore for a residential building project in Dubai.
Auto makers jumped on the announcement from the minister for petroleum and natural gas Murli Deora that the government does not intend to raise the price of petrol or petroleum products, auto makers extended their gains. Tata Motors gained 2.8% to Rs 663, Bajaj Auto rose 2.1% to Rs 2125, Maruti Udyog added 1.1% to Rs 752 and Hero Honda Motors gained around 2% to Rs 666.
Grasim, Reliance Communications, ONGC, and Gujarat Ambuja surged near 3% each to Rs 2,450, Rs 504, Rs 915, and Rs 113, respectively. Index heavy Reliance Industries advanced 3.3% to Rs 1,727.
Decliners
IT large-caps declined the most today, as the Indian rupee hit a one-week high against the dollar. Satyam slipped 1.8% to Rs 468, and Infosys declined 1.6% to Rs 1,957. Hindalco Industries also lost 0.3% to Rs 162.
[R]6:30 AM European markets edged higher on Bayer and oil companies.[/R]
European markets advanced on Tuesday morning. The U.K. FTSE 100 index rose 0.2% at 6,715.10, the German DAX Xetra 30 index increased 0.4% at 8,064.23 and the French CAC-40 index advanced 0.3% at 6,104.14.
Advancers
Oil and gas companies were strong as BP and Royal Dutch Shell gained more than 0.5% each while other commodity sector companies. Potential mining sector deals were back in the spotlight early Tuesday, with the resource sector in focus after reports that mining giant BHP Billiton planning a bid for Alcan of Canada. BHP Billiton added 0.7%.
Bayer also advanced with shares up 1.4% after the German pharmaceutical company, at its investor day presentation, upped its earnings forecast for 2007 and 2009. Bayer announced that the integration of Bayer Schering Pharma is proceeding more quickly than planned and its consumer health business has had a strong performance.
Vivendi rose 1.2% after Goldman Sachs upgraded the media and telecommunications conglomerate to buy from neutral.
Decliners
Retailers were weak. Tesco dropped 3%, the biggest decline since September 2005. The retailer announced first-quarter sales, excluding gasoline revenue, gained 4.7% in same-store sales. That is the slowest pace in a year and less than the median estimate of 5%.
Marks & Spencer also declined 1.3% in sympathy and Carrefour, the world second-largest retailer, dropped 2%. J Sainsbury, the U.K. third-largest supermarket chain, slid 0.7%.
Commodities
Crude oil declined from near a nine-month high in New York as investors speculated recent gains that followed unrest in Nigeria were unjustified. Crude oil for July delivery fell 35 cents, or 0.5%, to $68.74 a barrel in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude oil for August settlement fell 40 cents, or 0.6%, to $71.78 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.
Gold fell in London for the first time in five days as the dollar decline against the euro came to a stop, reducing demand for the metal as an alternative investment. Silver also declined. Gold for immediate delivery dropped $1.70, or 0.3%, to $654.65 an ounce. Silver fell 1 cent to $13.21 an ounce.
Currencies
The U.S. dollar was mixed against other major currencies in European trading Tuesday morning. The euro traded at $1.3389, down from $1.3411 late Monday in New York. The British pound traded at $1.9836, down from $1.9837. The dollar bought 123.66 Japanese yen, up from 123.61.
[R]5:30AM Gold and copper gain Monday on dollar weakness, Treasury yields.[/R]
Gold for August delivery advanced $1.40 to settle at $660.10 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange. August silver, though, shed 2.4 cents to finish at $13.296 an ounce, declining after traders made profits from last week gains. Platinum for July advanced $12 to close at $1,299.50 an ounce after production was halted at a major mine in South Africa, a country where strike threats are also lifting prices.
On the Nymex, July copper futures gained 0.10 cent to end at $3.4220 a pound. Lead on the LME advanced 1% to a new record high, while zinc dipped 1.5%, nickel shed 4% and aluminum fell 1%.
Labor unions in Nigeria called for a general nationwide strike to protest a government price raise on automobile fuel. Mounting political tensions in the Middle East and tight gasoline supplies and refinery glitches in the United States also boosted energy prices. Crude oil futures for July delivery gained $1.09 to settle at $69.09 a barrel. July gasoline futures added 0.42 cent to settle at $2.2643.
Grain prices were mixed on the Chicago Board of Trade. July wheat futures slid 5.5 cents to close at $6.01 a bushel on the CBOT, still trading near levels unattained in over 10 years after heavy rains hurt the U.S. wheat crop. July corn shed 3 cents to close at $4.16 a bushel.
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