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Barclay’s Top 3 Picks from India

Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL), HDFC Bank and Dr Reddy’s Laboratories are the only three Indian firms to figure in Barclays’ top 111 stock picks from across the world for 2015.

In its ‘Global Top Picks’ report, Barclays has said more than six years into the recovery, the key drivers of the market rally – low inflation, moderate growth and unprecedented monetary support – are set to have a reduced impetus.

“We are entering the next phase of the business cycle where valuations in equities and fixed income are relatively expensive and evidence is accumulating that the recovery is becoming self-sustaining, suggesting that monetary policy will be less supportive going forward,” it said.

RIL was the only stock pick in energy segment in Asia, while HDFC Bank is featured with China Taiping and China Resources Land in the Financial Services sector. Dr Reddy’s Laboratories also is the only stock pick in healthcare segment in Asia.

On RIL, it said it expects earnings to grow 47 per cent over 2015-18 even if oil prices remain low and volatile, helped by the completion of $16 billion in downstream projects that are all slated to come online over the next 6-15 months.

“We believe this provides one of the strongest growth outlooks among the global energy stocks Barclays covers,” it said.

Higher output from select offshore India gas projects that raises upstream production and a credible path to profitability in its ambitious data-centric telecom project (launch expected in December 2015) should drive earnings growth thereafter.

On HDFC Bank, Barclays said the bank was ideally placed to benefit from a macro recovery, owing to its strong low-cost deposit (CASA) franchise, clean balance sheet and increased investment in the network.

“It remains a leader in key retail lending segments and is strong in transaction processing, giving it access to float (CA income).

“The recent pickup in network investments and its focus on digital transactions should help it maintain its leadership position in CASA and grow loans 3-6 per cent faster than the system,” it said.

Dr Reddy’s (DRL), Barclays said, was a strong play on niche therapeutic areas (injectables and oncology) driven by a robust Para-IV pipeline in the near term and a significantly differentiated R&D strategy for Proprietary products and Biosimilars.

“We forecast revenue and earnings CAGR of 15 per cent and 20 per cent, respectively, over FY15 to FY17 along with a 440 basis points increase in ROIC. DRL is the least expensive large-cap stock in our Asia ex-Japan Healthcare & Pharma coverage,” it said.-from NDTV

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Greece’s message to IMF

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Links

Linkfest: July 01,2015

Some stuff that I am reading today morning:

Greece defaults (Bloomberg)

Its pouring IPO offers (FE)

Cafe Coffee Day IPO:The cup looks half empty (Mint)

Nirmal Bang Research Report:Nandan Denim Ltd (RJ)

Long term investing and trading (Prashant)

Rising equities in retirement? (Subramoney)

Letting go of the why in the markets (Common Sense)

When gold is declared illegal (Bill Bonner)

Value investing is dead,long live value investing ! (Alpha Architect)

Basant Maheshwari’s goodbye note (TED)

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Tweets

ADAG Stocks,anyone?

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Interview

Ruchir Sharma: India is a quality regime

I feel that in India, it is a quality regime and that is one of those things which has frustrated many investors which is that they all though that as you get this big hope and you get this big revival in India, a lot of the junk will also rally Instead what we are seeing in India is that the quality regime has continued and all these advocates of buying these low quality stocks in India has got burned over the last few years and particularly over the last year. And I do not see a change in that regime. I still feel that quality is the way to go as far as India is concerned because the recovery is in the works but it is a gradual recovery.

 So, in that case the story for the last 20-30 years has been that always be short on what the government does and be long on what the private sector does in India because the government systematically disappoints. I do not see that changing too much. Sure, we have been offered a so called cleaner government and stuff but in terms of execution it always lags what has been promised and we get excited periodically about what is going to be delivered and we systematically get disappointed and yet the private sector in many ways the quality people in the private sector continue to march ahead.

I still feel that regime is in place in India despite all this hype which takes place every few years.-said Ruchir Sharma,Head-Emerging Markets,Morgan Stanley