El Nino, Lost crops, La Nina, IMD,
We didn't start the fire
No we didn't light it
But didn't try to fight it
A possible drought and the consequent food grain price inflation will be textbook whipping boys for raising or retaining key benchmarks. Fair enough! But coupled with a lame government, this is a disaster that India is waiting for and walking into with a devil may care attitude. Reduced industrial activity, thanks to high borrowing costs and zero-luster reforms, will ensure that our RIP as an attractive investment destination is written in glowing letters.
Oh, and since we are on the topic of governance, the only policy action that got some sound bites recently is the Karnataka government's decision to spend 17 crores on poojas (prayer ceremonies) to appease the gods of rain. Seriously? I prefer the central government's inaction to this paleolithic state intervention!
In all of this, our currency will continue to fall. Unless crude falls substantially, I do not think there will be any real kicker for global growth. The only Au lining in this otherwise dark cloud is the deluge of superhero movies. I think they are some kind of a leading indicator of the markets bottoming out - too much pessimism- the paranoia being overdone. I would like to believe that, but if I had to put my money where my mouth is, I would short our currency, our government, and our central bank.
As for tomorrow, look at the way our benchmark indices moved today - big rallies with the Sensex rising about 300 points and the Nifty a 100 points, anticipating positive cues from the RBI. They're setting us up for something. Like I said before, I could be wrong, but (I'm gonna stick my neck out) the indices will see red tomorrow.
We didn't start the fire
No we didn't light it
But didn't try to fight it
A possible drought and the consequent food grain price inflation will be textbook whipping boys for raising or retaining key benchmarks. Fair enough! But coupled with a lame government, this is a disaster that India is waiting for and walking into with a devil may care attitude. Reduced industrial activity, thanks to high borrowing costs and zero-luster reforms, will ensure that our RIP as an attractive investment destination is written in glowing letters.
Oh, and since we are on the topic of governance, the only policy action that got some sound bites recently is the Karnataka government's decision to spend 17 crores on poojas (prayer ceremonies) to appease the gods of rain. Seriously? I prefer the central government's inaction to this paleolithic state intervention!
In all of this, our currency will continue to fall. Unless crude falls substantially, I do not think there will be any real kicker for global growth. The only Au lining in this otherwise dark cloud is the deluge of superhero movies. I think they are some kind of a leading indicator of the markets bottoming out - too much pessimism- the paranoia being overdone. I would like to believe that, but if I had to put my money where my mouth is, I would short our currency, our government, and our central bank.
As for tomorrow, look at the way our benchmark indices moved today - big rallies with the Sensex rising about 300 points and the Nifty a 100 points, anticipating positive cues from the RBI. They're setting us up for something. Like I said before, I could be wrong, but (I'm gonna stick my neck out) the indices will see red tomorrow.