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Links

Linkfest: July 31,2015

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

How Vishal Sikka has put his stamp on Infosys (Mint)

Will the real Indian inflation rate please stand up? (Bloomberg)

SEBI probing UBS on round tripping (BS)

Lessons from 50% fall in home sales in Delhi (Firstpost)

Worst investment/retirement mistakes (Subramoney)

Castex Technologies goes from 40 to 360.Then… (Capital Mind)

ICICI Research Report:Dabur (MyIris)

Anxious investors (A VC)

Momentum is price breakout (Price Action)

Actually gold rises after FED rate hikes begin (TRB)

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Image

Munger on two kinds of businesses

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Video

Aberdeen on China Vs India

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Categories
Links

Linkfest: July 30,2015

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

Would you make a donation to help a poor real estate developer? (VRO)

How much do I need to retire early in India? (Freefincal)

Scary retirement statistics (Subramoney)

Tax implications of bonus shares, stock splits (Calculated Wagers)

Nomura Research Report:Union Bank (MyIris)

The multi-faceted Ramesh Damani (ET)

Pick a valid strategy.Stick with it (Aleph Blog)

Behavioral finance trumped (Swedroe)

Gold is only going to get worse (Bloomberg)

Communication lessons for the RBI governor (Mint)

Categories
Excerpts

Fearful China Investors look to India

With global emerging markets again under pressure, India might seem an unlikely port in the storm. Promises of far-reaching economic reforms under Prime Minister Narendra Modi are still to be delivered, while hopes of a rapid investment-led recovery under his leadership remain unfulfilled.

But with China’s equity market convulsed by a painful sell-off, India finds itself the happy recipient of investment searching for safety in the developing world.

The benchmark Sensex index has lost more than 2 per cent over the past two days, reflecting investor unease over much larger falls in China. But the index has eked out a 0.6 per cent increase over the past three months. Though not likely to set pulses racing, this makes India the only country in Asia to see markets rise over that period.

Since the Chinese sell-off began on July 15, the Shanghai index has dropped nearly 30 per cent. Indian stocks, meanwhile, are up around 5 per cent.

“There was some reallocation out of India and towards China earlier this summer. That has now stopped, and some of it seems to be coming back,” says Rashesh Shah, the founder of Edelweiss, a Mumbai financial services group. “Investors I speak to see China as a lot riskier now.”-from FT