Don't Invest In India Don't Invest In India: Farewell to India by Steve Sjuggerud The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, September 13, 2005 With the Indian stock market surging to unprecedent highs, Steve Sjuggerud tells us: Don't Invest in India. ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: The trusty old rule is, whenever a hot investment topic is on the cover of a handful of major magazines, it's a pretty good signal we're close to the time to bet against that hot investment. --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- FAREWELL TO INDIA By Steve Sjuggerud Indiabulls Financial Services went public last September at 19 rupees a share. Today - one year later - shares of Indiabulls closed at 225 rupees, up nearly twelve-fold. That's not even a new high. Five weeks ago the shares hit 271! What's so great about Indiabulls that makes it worth 12 times what it was worth one year ago? The answer is NOTHING... except that Indiabulls just happens to trade on India's stock exchange. Indiabulls is primarily a brokerage firm. It makes its money selling Indian stocks. The Indian stock market is hot, which makes Indiabulls look good. That's one reason for the run-up in the share price. Not content with the stock market bubble in India, Indiabulls has been taking its profits and buying up Indian real estate, which is also red hot. Indiabulls recently purchased an 8-acre former textile mill - for an astounding $101 million dollars. And this is the second one of these it has bought in just a few months. With stocks like Indiabulls as an example, the stock market in India couldn't be hotter. And therein lies the problem...When a financial market can't get any hotter, it can only cool down. $8 billion dollars in foreign money has poured into Indian stocks in 2005 alone - and $2 billion of it arrived last month! Of course, the Indian market could go higher from here. But I feel like I've seen this movie many times in my career before: A mountain of foreign money flies in on extreme optimism... and then that mountain of foreign money – or what's left of it - leaves in disappointment and disgust. A key point is that I'm not knocking the India story. It's just... the chances of foreigners making money in the stock market there over the next few years is close to zero. The hot money will get washed out, as it always does. Don't Invest in India: The Ultimate Contrarian Indicator I was stuck in an airport last week, so I wandered into the newsstand. And there it was... the ultimate contrarian indicator... laid out on a silver platter for us. Not one, but two major magazines carried the exact same cover story... "CHINA & INDIA: THE BEST WAYS TO INVEST IN THE WORLD'S FASTEST GROWING ECONOMIES." It's BusinessWeek's August 29, 2005 issue and Worth Magazine's September 2005 issue. Take a look: I can't make this stuff up. The trusty old rule is, whenever a hot investment topic is on the cover of a handful of major magazines, it's a pretty good signal we're close to the time to bet against that hot investment. BusinessWeek from a quarter century ago provides the perfect example. Back then BusinessWeek wrote in a cover story: "The death of equities looks like an almost permanent condition." It seemed logical at the time, as U.S. stocks had fallen from 1966 to 1979 (especially after factoring in the devastating effects of inflation over that timeframe). However, if you had listened to BusinessWeek back then, you'd have missed out on the greatest stock market boom in all recorded history. On the other hand, if you'd done the opposite of what BusinessWeek said, you'd be a very rich individual today. Instead of predicting the great bull market of the 1980s and 1990s, BusinessWeek predicted the exact opposite back then. The magazine went as far as to say: "Even if the economic climate could be made right again for equity investment, it would take another massive promotional campaign to bring people back into the market." Apparently BusinessWeek thought stocks were for old people who didn't understand that stocks were oh-so unfashionable: "Younger investors, in particular, are avoiding stocks. Only the elderly who have not understood the changes in the nation's financial markets, or who are unable to adjust to them, are sticking with stocks." You get the idea. Today, instead of predicting the Death of Equities, BusinessWeek and Worth magazine are showing you how to get rich in China and India. To me, it's as close as we get to a bell ringing to signal the top. So now you have the chance to go against BusinessWeek once again, by cashing out your red-hot Indian stocks. You might also make some money by selling short selected Indian stocks, as I am advising the subscribers of Sjuggerud Confidential. While I fully agree that these countries will be extremely important in the coming decades, I think their stock markets - India's in particular - could be in trouble in the coming years. You won't believe just how far these stock markets can fall when they get into trouble... Sign Up for The Rude Awakening Start your mornings off with a dose of Rude news. The Rude Awakening is dedicated to highlighting phenomena in the financial markets that others may not see. Let the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times "break news." Sign up FREE Today! We will not share your email address with anyone else, period. -Andrew Palmer, Director E-commerce Marketing We Value Your Privacy |
Don't Invest in India: 90% Falls Are Not Uncommon in Emerging Markets China, Thailand, Russia, Indonesia, and Argentina... What do these stock markets all have in common? At some point in the last few years, they've all lost over four-fifths of their July 1997 values in terms of U.S. dollars (based on MSCI's indexes). Yes, they've all fallen by over 80%. Indonesia was hit the worst, losing well over 90% of its value. Ouch! Let me stress, these losses weren't even that long ago... Argentina lost 90% of its value between 2000 and 2002. Sure, the long-term promise of emerging markets can be alluring. But my point is, promise or not, the stock markets in emerging market countries can really get obliterated. The obliteration comes when there's something that spooks the hot money. The hot money will leave India too, just like it left all the others. It always does. [Ed. Note: O.K., O.K...So stories flogged by the mainstream media are already pumped dry. Where to look for the uncovered riches then? Steve has found a little gem that could see you in the profits BIG time. BusinessWeek subscribers need not click here: www.agora-inc.com/reports/SCF/WSCFF902 --- Advertisement ---
Six Times Better Than Owning Stock in Google.com...Guaranteed! When Google went public, even the luckiest public investors made no more than 253%, as the stock soared from a pre-set price of $85 to today's price of about $300. Meanwhile, other investors got the same shares months in advance... for as low as $35, $9, and even 50 cents a share! How? They were insiders. But now you can invest like an insider too, snapping up some of America's best companies at insider prices. This works so well... I guarantee you'll make at LEAST 253% doing this, not once but six times this year. Find out more... |
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Did You Notice...? By Eric J. Fry On April 2, 1997, your editor nervously took the podium of the Grant's Spring Investment Conference to present an argument for BUYING Indian stocks. The audience of professional investors seemed more amused than interested, which piqued my contrarian instincts all the more. To make the case for buying Indian, I delivered a 40-minute speech entitled, "Intel vs. India – The Quest for Value." After issuing a few tongue-in-cheek comparisons between the two – "One makes D-RAMs; the other makes ashrams." – your editor proceeded to offer a series of more substantive comparisons and contrasts. For starters, your editor remarked, "One is expensive and widely adored; the other is inexpensive and routinely ignored." He then identified key aspects of the bullish case for Indian stocks and predicted, "The long-tem investor will fare much better by selling the popular tech stock and buying out-of-favor Indian stocks." Over the ensuing four years, the beloved Intel easily outdistanced India Fund. India Fund's slow and steady gains were no match for the tech-stock mania of the late 1990s. By January of 2000, every investor on earth, it seemed, wanted to own Intel, Cisco and thestreet.com. Few bothered to examine Indian investments. But today, eight years after your editor dared to admire Indian stocks in public, we see that the India Fund has delivered a gain of 400% since April 1997, compared to a gain of only 50% for Intel. In other words, the India Fund delivered a whopping 22% annualized return over the last eight-years-and counting, compared to Intel's paltry 5% annualized return. Although we still trust the Indian stock market to excel over the long-term, we'd rather buy Indian stocks when the readers of Business Week and Worth are SELLING them. Patience works miracles in the financial markets. [Ed. Note: The epitome of contrarian think tanks has only just become available to the general public. Perhaps it's time to jump into the real gains nobody else is reading about. Learn how to employ the world's leading contrarian thinkers for life right here: www.agora-inc.com/reports/AFR/WAFRF970/ ------------------------- And the Markets... | Monday | Friday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,683 | 10,679 | 4 | -0.9% | S&P | 1,241 | 1,241 | -1 | 2.4% | NASDAQ | 2,183 | 2,176 | 7 | 0.3% | 10-year Treasury | 4.18 | 4.13 | 5.00 | 4.14 | 30-year Treasury | 4.45 | 4.40 | 5.00 | 4.40 | Russell 2000 | 681 | 678 | 3 | 4.5% | Gold | $449.15 | $449.20 | -$0.05 | 2.6% | Silver | $7.03 | $7.02 | $0.01 | 3.2% | CRB | 319.98 | 323.32 | -3.34 | 12.7% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $63.09 | $64.08 | -$0.99 | 45.2% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 110.33 | JPY 109.68 | -0.65 | -7.6% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2283 | $1.2413 | 130 | 9.4% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8187 | $1.8393 | 206 | 5.2% |
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