The S&P BSE Sensex Index posted its third day of losses on Tuesday, ending a surge since the Sept 20 announcement of the tax cuts.
Business
Standard : India’s shadow banking crisis has sucked in more
financial firms this week, eroding a stock
market rally that’s been driven by a surprise $20 billion tax
cut package.
The
S&P BSE Sensex Index posted its third day of losses on Tuesday,
ending a surge since the Sept. 20 announcement of the tax cuts.
Financial stocks, which account for 45 per cent of the benchmark
index, contributed the most to the declines since late last week,
according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Debt
concerns at lenders including Indiabulls Housing Finance Ltd. and a
co-operative bank, and worries a cleanup in corporate debt could be
prolonged, have spooked the financial markets. The sight of
depositors lining up to pull their money from Punjab &
Maharashtra Co-operative Bank Ltd., after the central
bank put limits on lending, has also been unsettling.
The
Reserve Bank of India on Friday tweeted the “banking system is safe
and stable and there is no need to panic.” The nation’s stock
markets will reopen Thursday after a one-day holiday.
Banking
Troubles
Punjab
& Maharashtra Co-operative Bank concealed large exposures from
RBI since 2008, a former managing director said
Central
bank put restrictions on Lakshmi Vilas Bank Ltd., which Indiabulls
Housing plans to acquire
Yes
Bank Ltd.’s shares plunged almost 34 per cent in two days on
concerns a cleanup in corporate debt could drag on
Here
is what the analysts are saying:
Stay
Selective
Negative
news flow around lenders has “overshadowed the recent tax cut
tailwind, bringing focus back on sector issues: liquidity issues and
contagion risks,” Jefferies Financial Group Inc. analysts including
Bhaskar Basu wrote in a note on Tuesday.
Basu
said he likes non-bank lenders with a strong liability base, low
asset quality risks and good earnings visibility. He prefers stocks
including Bajaj Finance Ltd. and Mahindra & Mahindra Financial
Services Ltd.
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