equitiesResearch

Monday, 10 September 2007

Sub prime market in the US.........as simple as it gets

The Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index fell by 643 points recently. Various stock market experts have blamed the subprime crisis in the United States. So what is this subprime crisis? And why is it having such a decisive impact on the Indian stock market? To know more read on.

Essentially it all starts with an American wanting a home loan. But there is a slight problem. He doesn't have a great credit rating. So a bank will not give him a home loan. Enter a second American who has a good credit rating and is willing to take on some amount of risk. Given his good credit rating the bank is willing to give him a loan. The bank gives the second American a loan at a certain rate of interest.

The second American divides this loan, into a lot of small trenches and gives it out as home loans to lots of other Americans like the first American, who do not have a great credit rating and to whom the bank will not give a home loan.

He gives out a loan at a rate of interest at a higher rate of interest than the rate he has borrowed from the bank. This higher rate is referred to as the subprime rate and this home loan market is referred to as the subprime home loan market. Also by giving out a home loan to lots of individuals, he ensures, that even if a few of them default, his overall position is not affected much.

The question that crops up here is, if this home loan market is subprime, what is prime? The prime home loan market essentially refers to individuals who have good credit ratings and to whom the banks lend directly.

Now back to the subprime market. The individual giving out loans in the subprime market does not stop here. He does not wait for the principal and the interest on the subprime home loans to be repaid, so that he can repay his loan to the bank, which has given him the loan.

What does he do? He goes ahead and securitizes these loans. Securitization essentially involves, converting these home loans into financial securities, which promise to pay a certain rate of interest.

These financial securities are then sold to big institutional investors. And how are these investors repaid? The interest and the principal that is repaid by the subprime borrowers through equated monthly installments is passed onto these institutional investors.

The individual giving out the subprime loans, takes the money that he gets from selling the financial securities and passes it on to the bank, he had taken the loan from, thereby repaying the loan. And all ends well? Not really.

The subprime home loans were given out as floating rate home loans. A floating rate home loan as the name suggests is not fixed. As interest rates go up, the interest rate on floating rate home loans also go up. As interest rates to be paid on floating rate home loans go up, the EMIs that need to be paid to service these loans go up as well.

The higher EMIs hit the subprime borrowers hard. A lot of them, given their poor credit rating, defaulted. Once, more and more subprime borrowers started defaulting, payments to the institutional investors who had bought the financial securities stopped, leading to huge losses.

Well, that still does not explain, why stock markets in India, fell?

Institutional investors, who had invested in securitized paper from the subprime home loan market, saw their investments turning into losses. Most big investors have a certain fixed proportion of their total investments invested in various parts of the world.

Once investments in the US turned bad, more money had to be invested in the US, to maintain that fixed proportion. In order to invest more money in the US, money had to come in from somewhere.

And this money came in from emerging markets like India, where their investments have been doing well. So these big institutional investors, to make good of their losses on the subprime market, have been selling their investments in India and other emerging markets. Since the amount of selling in the market, far overweighs the amount of buying, the Sensex has been on a falling spree.

Thursday, 6 September 2007

Indices end higher on SBI, ITC support

Equities ended higher on Thursday led by automobile and banking stocks. FMCG majors Hindustan Unilever and ITC also pushed indices higher.

The National Stock Exchange’s Nifty closed at 4518.60, up 43 points or 0.96 per cent from the pervious close.

The Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensex finished 170 points or 1.1 per cent higher at 15,616.31.

Biggest Sensex gainers were Reliance Energy (up 4.5%), Grasim Industries (3.97%), Ranbaxy Laboratories (3.53%), HDFC (2.82%), State Bank of India (2.35%) and Ambuja Cements (2.10%).

Hindalco Industries (down 1.27%) and Bharti Airtel (0.23%) were the only losers on the 30-share index.

The market breadth on BSE showed 1683 advances and 1015 declines, while on NSE, 730 shares advanced and 433 declined.

Tuesday, 4 September 2007

Mutual funds witness Rs 18,500-cr dip in Assets under Management

Continued volatility in Indian stock markets over the US subprime mortgage crisis all through August has led to a fall in assets of mutual funds in the country by over Rs 18,500 crore during the month.

The total Assets under Management (AUM) of 32 fund houses have decreased to Rs 4,67,623.44 crore from Rs 4,86,129.22 crore in July, latest data from Association of Mutual Funds in India showed.

Reliance MF remains the country's largest fund house with its AUM increasing to Rs 67,597.65 crore in August as against Rs 66,420.03 crore in July.

ICICI Prudential MF is at the second rank with AUM of Rs 50,611.89 crore in August, increasing from Rs 48,688.55 crore in July. However, state-run UTI MF witnessed a dip in its AUM to Rs 41,698.56 crore in August from Rs 42,574.60 crore previous month.

Other fund houses in the top league are HDFC MF and Franklin Templeton MF with AUM of Rs 40,871.49 crore and Rs 29,992.14 crore respectively.

The BSE benchmark index Sensex had witnessed a sharp volatility during the past month on concerns related to the US subprime mortgage crisis. The index had dipped below the 14,000 mark in the month, but managed to bounce back to 15,000 level in the last two days of the month.

Analysts, believe the decline in the assets of fund house may be due to the redemptions by investors on concerns of a market meltdown and utilisation of cash pile of mutual funds for making purchases in the bearish markets.

Overall, mutual funds have made net purchases worth Rs 4,093.90 crore in August in equity markets. In sharp contrast, foreign institutional investors have been on a selling spree in the domestic markets after the global meltdown. They made net sales worth aroud Rs 7,770 crore in August.