Market Updates

Industrials Drive Sensex in India

123jump.com Staff
14 Sep, 2007
New York City

    Sensex in Mumbai edged higher on sharply higher trading volume. The total turnover on two exchanges reached $4.5 billion or 18,000 crore rupees. The elevated level of trading reflected strong demand for stocks both from domestic and international investors. Record number of construction contracts industrial expansion kept stocks rising. Ess Dee Aluminium entered the race to acquire packaging business of Alcan. Larsen & Toubro was selected for Steel Authority of India sinter plant expansion.

[R]10:00AM New York - 7:30PM Mumbai – Ess Dee Aluminium is in race to acquire packaging business of Canada based Alcan for $1 billion or more.[/R]

Sensex in Mumbai trading declined 10.64 or 0.70% to close at 15,603.80. CNX Nifty lost 0.24% or 10.95 to close at 4,518.95. Sensex had jumped at mid-day more than 200 points but was dragged lower at the close on worries in the European markets. Rupee recovered to 40.60 against dollar from 40.65 in Friday trading. Market indexes opened higher at the opening but closed lower in a familiar pattern in the last three months of trading. Political worries dogged traders.

Of the stocks trading on BSE, 1,753 declined, 999 gained, and 61 closed unchanged. Daily turnover on the exchange increased to 6,120 crore rupees ($1.5 billion) compared to 5,286 crore rupees a day ago. In trading on National Stock Exchange volume increased to 12,509 crore rupees ($3 billion) from 11,075 crore rupees a day ago.

Of the 30 stocks in the Sensex 11 rose and 19 fell. ICICI Bank led the gainers in the index with a rise of 2.6% to 907 rupees. NTPC led the decliners with a loss of 3.1% to 185 rupees. The most active stock on the BSE, Infrastructure Development Finance declined 4.2% to 129 rupees with trading volume of 2.7 crore shares and 325 crore rupees.

Ess Dee Aluminium soared 4% to 495 rupees after the company showed interest in acquiring packaging business of Alcan, Canadian aluminum maker. Alcan has agreed to be acquired for $38 billion by UK based Rio Tinto.

Larsen & Toubro jumped 1.1% to 2,596 rupees on the news that the company in collaboration with Germany based Outotec GmbH for Steel Authority of India. The company is awarded 630 crore rupees contract and its German partner will handle 22 million euro project to build a sintering plant. Era Constructions declined 2.5% to 564 rupees after its subsidiary received an order of 285 crore rupees from Aravali Power Company. Unity Infraprojects lost 2.1% to 598 rupees after receiving an order of 134 crore rupees to build a shopping center in Pune.

Reliance Industries increased 8 rupees or 0.4% to 2,033 rupees on the news that the company is planning to invest in partnership with two companies and enter ship building and port dredging business. Earlier, Reliance Industries and a group of ministers appointed by the Government of India agreed on natural gas purchase price of $4.20 Mbtu for five years. The natural gas from Krishna Godavari basin will be distributed by government agencies. Reliance had asked for $4.33 Mbtu and negotiations between the government and the company had dragged for more than a year.

Alok Industries soared 6% to 73 rupees after receiving approval to build special economic zone for textile industry in Silvasa, Gujarat.

Ispat Industries jumped 5.2% to 20 rupees after the news that the company is planning to invest 10,000 core rupees ($2.5 billion) to expand steel production capacity. Aftek soared 12% to 82 rupees on the news that the company, minority investment of 25%, Seekport AG was listed in Germany with a market cap of 475 million euros.

House of Pearl Fashions added 5% to 278 rupees after Reliance Mutual Fund purchased 400,000 stocks for 278 rupees from Morgan Stanley. In another deal, Reliance purchased from Citigroup 428,000 stocks of CCL products at 250 rupees.

[R]7:00AM New York, 8:00 PM Tokyo - Japanese stocks spike for the second day, with exporters buoyed by weakened yen. Thawing concerns of continued worsening of the global credit markets also lifts financial stocks. Oil and metal prices continue to rise. Toyota plans to invest 100 billion yen to build new car factory in 2009 in Japan to meet rising global demand. [/R]

Japanese stocks rose for the second day led by exporters buoyed by the weakening yen against a basket of major currencies. Financial markets were also on the rebound owing to fading concern of further turmoil in the global financial markets. Japan close up at 1.9%. Of the 225 Nikkei index stocks, 177 rose, 42 declined and the remaining 6 traded unchanged.

In Tokyo trading, the Nikkei 225 advanced by 1.9%, or 306.23 to 16,127.42. The broader Topix index gained 1.4% to 1,544.71. Export oriented stocks rallied after yen slipped to 115.10 to the dollar. A rally stocks prompted the slump in bonds. Japan’s 10-year bonds declined the most in two months. The yield on the benchmark 10-year bond rose 4.5 basis points to 1.575%. However, gains that were recorded by stocks largely offset the Wednesday’s tepid trading that was weighed down by news that Japan’s economy shrank by an annualized 1.2% in the second quarter. Core consumer prices, which are a measure of inflation, also fell by 0.1%.

Commodities and oil prices also continued to scale record highs lifting stocks in the sectors. Zinc soared 4%, copper rose 1.6% and oil touched a second day high of $80.09 a barrel.

Of the Nikkei 225 index stocks, beer producing company Sapporo Holdings paced gainers, rising 7.85% on news that U.S. hedge fund Steel Partners is still pursuing bid for the company. Toyo Seikan soared 6.85%, while Sumitomo Metals Mining gained 6.84%, boosted by an increase in nickel prices by 3% and increased income forecast by 46% to 89 billion for the six months ending September 30. Tokai Carbon Company and Sanyo Electric completed the top five gainers, adding 6.05% and 5.71% respectively.

Of the Nikkei 225 index stocks, Inpex Holdings led decliners, shedding 3.42%, while pulp and paper companies Mitsubishi Paper and Nippon declined by 1.82% and 1.66% respectively. Sumitomo Chemicals retreated by 1.32% followed by OJI Paper Company, which lost 1.26%.

News that US biggest mortgage lender Countrywide Financial Corp had secured $12 billion of financing and that the Bank of England had extended an additional 4.4 billion pounds to calm the credit markets by promoting interbank lending also helped spur financial stocks. Japan’s biggest bank Mitsibishi UFJ Finanacial Group led the lenders edging 4.45%. Mizuho, the second biggest bank, and Sumitomo Mitsui closed at 4.45% and 3.92% in that order.

News report in Japan suggested that Toyota plans to fund a domestic plant in Japan, for the first time in 17 years, with an investment of 100 billion yen to meet surging global demand for its models. Toyota closed up 2.35%.

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