22 January 2011

Goldman Sachs: No end in sight to India's growth boom (Reuters)

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No end in sight to India's growth boom - Goldman

By Christoph Steitz
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Indian stocks remain a clear buy for the next few years
because inflation fears and concerns about overvaluation are unjustified, Goldman
Sachs Asset Management's chief investment officer for India said.
Thomson Reuters StarMine showed Indian equities trade at 13.5 times estimated
12-month forward earnings, the highest multiple among high-growth emerging
markets dubbed BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China).

This has fuelled concerns that parts of the Indian equity landscape -- such as the IT
sector -- may be overvalued, a view not shared by Prashant Khemka.
"Indian equities have always traded at higher relative multiples. But I believe a
premium does not equal an overvaluation. In fact, I see more value in the country
given the prospects going forward," he told Reuters in an interview.
A Reuters poll in December showed India's benchmark 30-share Bombay Stock
Exchange index benchmark index is seen rising nearly 20 percent by the end of this
year, boosted by a fast-growing economy and strong corporate earnings.
"I believe we are at the early stages of what could be a long and strong earnings
cycle, hence the market multiple -- which is in line with historical averages -- is at a
reasonably attractive level."
Khemka reckons Indian companies' earnings could post annual growth of up to 20
percent over the next three to four years, adding he favoured stocks catering to the
country's buoyant middle class.
INDUSTRIAL STRENGTH
The $90 million GS India Equity Portfolio is almost 10 percentage points overweight
industrials compared with the MSCI India IMI Index.
"This is partly due to the fact the sector has a more domestically oriented exposure,"
Khemka said.
"The same goes for the consumer discretionary sector -- including auto companies,
auto components and retail -- which all benefit from the secular strength of
domestic demand."
Top holdings include carmaker Tata Motors, engineering companies Larsen &
Toubro and Thermax Ltd as well as Infosys Technologies, India's second-largest
outsourcer, the fund's biggest position.
Khemka said the Indian IT sector also benefited from low capital expenditure and
high returns, making it an attractive investment opportunity.


"In other emerging markets, mainly Asia, which have a more hardware-oriented
focus in their tech sector, the situation looks different."
Asked whether high inflation could curb capital inflow into Asia's third-biggest
economy, Khemka said he expected it to subside to 5-6 percent in the second half of
2011.
A Reuters poll this week showed inflation in India is seen at 8.8 percent, up from 8.3
percent expected in the October poll, while the prospect of further fiscal tightening is
unnerving foreign investors.
Khemka also shrugged off fears of a spill-over of the European sovereign debt crisis
into India's economy, which is set to grow 8.7 percent in the year to March, before
slowing to 8.5 percent in the following year.
"This is certainly on the radar but is not a major concern. In fact, sluggish growth in
the U.S. or Europe is good for India for two reasons: first, exports as a percentage of
the economy is much smaller for India compared with most countries; second, it
helps to keep in check commodity prices, mainly crude oil."
(Editing by David Hulmes)

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