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Vertigo On Dalal Street
It’s high blitz one day, bloodbath another. Is a sinister hand shaking
up the stock market? Is there cause for alarm? SHANTANU GUHA RAY
and VIVEK SINHA report
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| Sudeep
Chaudhari |
ON
JULY 25, 1990, the Indian stock market hit the 1,000 mark. It took two
slow years to climb to 2,000 on January 15, 1992. For three months then,
it rocketed dizzily — to 3,000 on February 29 and 4,000 on March
30. Then it stopped. It took seven full years to reach the 5,000 mark
on October 8, 1999. Another year to touch 6,000. And then five long years
before it climbed to 7,000 on June 20, 2005.
Compare
that to 17,000 last month; 18,000 a few days later; 19,000 even as this
goes to press. You don’t need to track the history of the Indian
stock exchange to know the graph has never run crazier. But it’s
not vertigo anyone’s complaining of in the market. The tensions
are about other things. How much higher is this run going? How far should
one ride it? Are corrections called for?
Real-estate
tycoon KP Singh reaped an astounding Rs 19,500 crore on a single day early
this October and DLF’s turnover touched the Rs 1,30,000 crore surpassing
its employees and stakeholders’ wildest dreams. The company had
listed itself barely four months earlier; its value has almost doubled
since then. If this streak continues, Mukesh D. Ambani, Chairman of the
Reliance Industries conglomerate could well jump ahead of Bill Gates,
Warren Buffet, Carlos Slim and Laxmi Mittal to the coveted number one
slot as the richest man in the world. Market pundits have already started
making mega announcements to this effect in the dailies.
These
are the conjectures on the market today. Excitement. Rumours. Dizzy calculation.
That’s the mood. In barely 21 days, the Sensex has soared 2,154
points (14 percent) and then it grew further to touch the magical figure
of 19,000. The Finance Ministry issued an instant note, so did the Securities
and Exchange Board of India (SEBI).
What’s driving this? FIIs have been pumping in loads of money in
the Indian market. Consider this one: the FIIs pumped in an unprecedented
$ 4.2 billion in a nine-day stretch. This is not all. Global financial
consultancies like Credit Lyonnais feel the Sensex could actually touch
a whopping 40,000 mark in just three years time. Others, like the London-
based brokerage Astaire and Partners, are more conservative: the 30,000
mark in the next four years is what they predict.
But
amidst all this euphoric hysteria, perhaps it would do well to go back
to the history of the stock market. When was the last time the graph escalated
so crazily? What are the lessons of 1992? Shouldn’t some alarm bells
be going off? Is the bull-run of the stock market so heady for everyone
— investors, corporates, brokers, government, media — that
no one is willing to pause and ask uncomfortable questions?HOW IRRATIONAL
is this exuberance? How justified is this optimism? What’s driving
the boom? Is there cause for caution? For those who are willing to disengage
from the euphoria and probe the truth, the first few cautionary voices
are starting to
come through.
“This
tsunami in the Indian market has followed after the US federal interest
rate cut on September 18 this year. But there is an element of a bubble
that’s built up because of this surge and it needs to be observed
closely,” says Abheek Barua, chief economist, HDFC Bank. Nimesh
Shah, director of Mumbai-based brokerage firm, VFC Securities agrees whole
heartedly: “I would say the sudden rise is definitely dangerous
and though the Sensex might hit new heights by the end of the year, it’s
important for investors to wait and watch.” And he is not alone
is issuing the warning signals.
Last
week, Finance Minister P. Chidambaram himself finally began to caution
retail investors. Speaking at a conference in New Delhi, he said unprecedented
foreign
investment flows into the rapidly growing economy had pushed the rupee
higher and New Delhi was having trouble handling the rush of funds. “The
rupee is an uncomfortable zone and we must find ways to manage a competitive
exchange rate without hurting investments.
We
cannot let the rupee suffer under pressure,” he warned. But are
FIIs the only trigger for this unprecedented bull-run? Or is there something
more shadowy, and, consequently, more unpredictable and sinister working
behind the scenes? How would a sudden crash impact the mad rush of investors?
What would be the magnitude of the damage? For those who have their ear
to the ground, the market is agog with dangerous rumours. We have been
here before. The hushed talk — in confidence, offthe- record —
is that the Indian stock markets’ current ultra-run is uncomfortably
similar to earlier bull-runs that ended in disaster.
Take
1992. The market had climbed 3,000 points in just three months. Investors
were euphoric. Then came the slump. Big Bull Harshad Mehta’s securities
scam triggered a crash that destroyed investor confidence for nearly six
years. Rs 5,000 crore worth of market capitalisation was eroded in a few
days. No one today remembers what happened to thousands of retail investors
who suffered because they did not have the luxury of employing stock market
advisors. As a result when the slump happened and Mehta went behind bars,
they lost it all.
In
March 2001, that happened again. Stockbroker Ketan Parekh, working through
a network of brokers, ramped up the shares of select companies in collusion
with their promoters, driving up the stock market index to dizzy heights.
When his scam was busted, panic sales wiped out an estimated Rs 1,25,000
crore of investor wealth in a month. Thousands of small players who had
invested in good faith suffered severe losses. Remember statements by
Ramesh Gelli, the then chairman of Global Trust Bank which bore the brunt
of Parekh’s madness? Gelli told investors that the bank had not
sanctioned more than Rs 100 crore to Parekh despite issuing Rs 250 crore.
Big
Bull 1 died in custody in 2001. Big Bull 2 — Ketan Parekh —
was also arrested and debarred from the market. But he is now out of jail
and pursuing a bewilderingly lavish lifestyle. He is known to park himself
in suites of exorbitant super-deluxe hotels — out of bounds for
even top corporate honchos. The Finance Ministry and investigating agencies
like the Enforcement Directorate have reports of him travelling business
class and even hiring private jets for travels. On ground, his preference
is Merc-taxis. His parties are always thrown at the most expensive pubs
in five-star hotels. All this when he is banned from the stock market,
his bank accounts and assets remain seized by Income Tax authorities,
and he needs to clear debts touching a whopping Rs 250 crores. Much of
the market’s current buoyancy is probably legitimate. A majority
of listed companies, touching the high water mark, may well be the
beneficiaries of a
genuine and congratulatory growth spurt. The trouble is, when the panic
comes, everybody suffers. Distinctions between genuine and artificial
are drowned in the chaos.
But
that the big boys are at play again is evident on the Bombay Stock Exchange,
the NCDEX and the MCX. Those who care to listen are again whispering about
a dangerous shadow falling across the market operations on Dalal Street.
The man is old and familiar, but he now has a new sobriquet: brokers are
calling it the new proxy game of “Mr India”.
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Bull
in net Ketan Parekh's
arrest in 2002 caused the last big crash |
LIKE
BEFORE, “Mr India’s” modus operandi seems to be the
use of a host of front companies and a cartel of brokers from outside
Mumbai. Speaking of him, a top finance ministry source says, “He
has been aggressive in commodities for the last three years through a
clutch of brokers on both NCDEX and MCX. In fact, the sharp rise in prices
of menthol in the commodities exchanges was attributed to a bull-run triggered
by him. He is high on commodities such as sugar and crude. But since he
is currently operating through a band of brothers who act as his front,
no one can touch him.” The gameplan is simple: do things without
proof, do not keep even a shred of paper with you.
“He
remains completely in the background, does not trust anyone and keeps
changing his mobile numbers every three weeks. The numbers are given to
a very selected clientele,” says the source, adding: “A number
of medium level companies have already started queuing up to him to pick
his razor-sharp brain.”
The
Bull Effect
If the bull rise
continues, Reliance
chairman Mukesh D.
Ambani, currently
placed behind Carlos
Slim, Bill Gates, Warren
Buffett, and Laxmi N.
Mittal, could take the
No 1 slot
Real estate tycoon
KP Singh reaped $5
billion on a single day
of stock fury and
touched the $33
billion mark
An estimated $4.2
billion was pumped in
by FIIs in just nine days
Finance Minister
Palaniappan
Chidambaram
wants markets to
find a competitive
exchange rate for the
rupee and is worried
about such
unprecedented FII
inflow
London-based
brokerage firm Astaire
and Partners predicts
the Sensex touching
30,000 by 2011
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The
unprecedented, almost astronomical, market spiral has raised the antenna
of several regulatory agencies, but the trail is impossible to pin down.
“We have reacted to a number of government and intelligence reports
that some of these banned players are playing the market again. And they
are not playing small or medium level, they are playing big and that is
a matter of concern because of steady rise of the commodities market.
Secondly, barring us, not many agencies are focused on the commodities
market,” says Kewal Ram of the Forward Market Commission (FMC),
a regulator for the commodities market. “We’ve tried to put
up lots of fencing so that these players cannot take huge positions and
we are ultra careful now. But on record, we have no names to offer. And
unless that happens, no one is going behind the bars.” Does that
put the ball back into the ministry’s net? Perhaps yes.
The
SEBI, on the other hand, is confronted by exactly the same problem. “We
are tracking a lot of movements because there’s definite information
that a number of banned players are back in the market. We have reports
on a whole range of players who are active through fronts. It seems to
be the latest trend,” says G. Anant Raman, wholetime member, SEBI.
“But please remember we work with certain restrictions. It’s
a Herculean task to crack down on those who are banned but
still operating. Just because a banned broker is having a party or travelling
in private airplanes, we cannot touch him. It’s for the investigating
agencies to look into his source of income. We are not here to find out
who’s travelling business class and hiring Mercs and entertaining
friends in plush hotels. We can only ban people and recommend to the ministry
that their accounts are frozen,” adds Raman, in an obvious clue.
IN
THE wake of all this, the finance ministry has reportedly been furnished
a detailed note on old operators like Nirmal Kotecha, Manish Marwah and
Ketan Parekh. In fact, both Marwah and Kotecha have already beenindicted
by SEBI for manipulating the shares of Atlanta, a real estate firm. A
top SEBI official admits tracking the surge in stocks like IFCI and a
few other index heavyweights that have contributed to the bourse’s
on-going bull-run.
What
raises all this beyond the realm of idle conjecture is the fact that the
finance ministry itself is keeping tabs on “Mr India” and
a list of his suspected operatives. Among them are:
• A prominent financial sector company with a large investment portfolio
in real estate which has had its price skyrocketing over the last two
years.
• A Mumbai-based real estate company whose share price has increased
three times in the last two months.
• A Mumbai-based infrastructure companywhose share has increased
ten times after its listing in the last 14 months.
• A Mumbai-based IT company whose fluctuating share has increased
five times in less than six months.
Yet,
the ministry’s hands are tied. Referring to the masterful, almost
intangible, operations of Mr India, the official says on condition of
anonymity, “It’s hard for SEBI, the ministry and security
agencies to establish a direct link between the banned player (Mr India)
and price manipulation because tracking surrogate ownership, benami transaction
and financial layering in the market is always tough.”
So
how exactly does “Mr India” manipulate the market and create
his bull-runs? It seems he meets promoters of companies across India.
Several promoters still have faith in his capabilities and his web of
front entities. They give him the mandate to rig their share prices. “Mr
India’s” front entities then start buying the shares of these
specific companies. The buying is funded, partially or largely (depending
upon the deal with him) by the promoters of the companies themselves.
This is very hard to track as the payments to these brokers are normally
made in hard cash. Payments are made all over the country, at all strange
places. Interestingly, this is a trend which was synonymous with the two
crashes that happened with Mehta and Parekh.
Simultaneously,
the company makes positive announcements to fuel a bull-run in its share
price through various newspapers and magazines. After the stock price
is rigged up to a desired level, mutual funds, foreign institutional investors
and hedge funds are roped in to buy large quantities from the market.
The shares that these funds buy from the market are the very shares that
have been cornered by “Mr India’s” front entities at
much lower prices.
“The
huge illegitimate profits made in the entire exercise are shared between
‘Mr India’, his front men and the promoters of the companies,”
says a prominent Mumbai broker.
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High
rise Brokers and stock analysts
will be reined in by SEBI |
“The
media’s role in the stock market movement is a matter of intense
debate. We have already asked for certain regulations that needs to be
imposed instantly. Once it comes into force, we will — hopefully
— have more serious reporting,” adds Anant Raman. There are
chances that even stock market advisories would come under the SEBI dragnet
because of countless complaints received by the market regulator on their
illegal movements, especially those relating to their connivance with
promoters and regulating shares in a specified period so as to push the
price of the stock. This increased transaction shows that the scrip is
in demand, as a result of which a gullible investor moves in and purchases
the stock. Once the price goes up, the promoter-broker duo quickly takes
the escape route. This, in turn, leaves the small time, retail investor
in complete mess. And it happens only because the small investor continues
to remain at the mercy of the promoter-broker cartel.
The unethical connivance
does not just stop there. Nor is this the only money the conspirators
make. Many of the companies collaborating with Mr India are able to raise
fresh capital at high premium, justified by the artificially raised high
price of their shares. This fund raising is often done through another
round of public offer, a foreign currency convertible bond (FCCB) issue,
a preferential allotment of shares or any other convertible instruments
to foreign or domestic institutional investors. Sources say many of Mr
India’s present associates are those who were involved with him
in the past. The regrouping of old associates has been a win-win situation
for all, ostensibly because Mr India owed them crores of rupees from his
earlier game.
There
are two alleged front entities that are particularly in the eye of investigating
agencies. These are headed by brokers who were small-time fringe players
in “Mr India’s” earlier game. One of them, a 40-something
Punjabi stock market operator, shifted his base from New Delhi to Mumbai
a few years ago. He has been involved in the IPOs and subsequent price
rigging of at least a dozen companies, including a pharma company from
the north and a Mumbai based infrastructure company.
The SEBI has already nailed him for rigging the price of this infrastructure
company and has come out with highly adverse interim orders against both
him and the promoters of the company. No one, of course, knows how he
is back in the market and active as ever.
The
second person, say ministry sources, is from Gujarat and has a short Gujarati
surname. He and his Punjabi cohort used to work together till they parted
ways around four years back. This Gujarati has been in the news recently
for successfully manipulating the price of a diamond jewellery company.
SEBI had information of the same but before it could move it, the deal
was struck and the money made.
These
are the fronts. “Mr India” himself remains tantalisingly elusive.
The only trail he leaves are unexplained binges in posh hotels, a battery
of 13 cell phones he changes every month, and a surging stock market index
reminiscent of the dangerously galloping bull.
Expert
Opinion
ALOK
CHURIWALA
Investment Advisor
It’s been a dream run at the Sensex. The FIIs are building
their portfolio
from scratch so they would definitely go in for the frontline stocks
like Reliance and Infosys as they are safer. This is one of the
major reasons for the frontline stocks being the leaders in the
bull-run. But over the longer time even the medium and smaller stocks
would come into fray. If the FIIs were to pull out all their money
at this moment the market in all likelihood would crash. Thankfully
in all likelihood this is not the possibility in near future. The
insulation of the country from global economic tremors has further
instilled confidence among foreign investors who have of late begun
to think that money parked in India would not only be safe but ensure
good returns as well.
PARAG
PARIKH
Certified Financial Planner, PPFAS
Nobody knows whether the Sensex is overvalued at the moment or not.
For its FII-driven rise is all too well known, but beyond that it
is anybody’s guess. The domestic mutual funds not indulging
in active trading are just being cautious about the rampant bull-run.
But what worries me is the increasing trend of young investors who
are resorting to reckless trading on the bourses. These are the
people who consider the bourses as the place to make a fast buck.
Investing and trading should always be based on informed decisions.
A frenzied market, such as the one right now, in due course does
shed some flab. And if that happens in the present scenario, I am
afraid these gullible and reckless traders might end up burning
their fingers
HEMEN KAPADIA
Investment Advisor
The emerging markets like India and China have become the darlings
of global investors. The countries have gained faith of investors
due to the ongoing pace of economic reforms. But relatively more
transparency has made India a preferred choice over China. Also,
the Chinese economy relies more on foreign markets as it is basically
export driven and exports comprise around 65 percent of its demand.
The Indian economy, on the other hand, derives bulk of its demand
from domestic needs. This provides
cushion to our economy from global financial turmoil, which is lucrative
for the foreign investors. The ongoing journey of Sensex is due
for a correction but a step-by-step correction rarely happens in
India, rather they go for an unfortunate crash
SP TULSIAN
Investment Advisor
Huge influx of money from the foreign shores is driving the Sensex.
These investors, for want of a safe haven to park their funds, have
zeroed in upon India and are taking the Sensex to newer highs. Moreover,
it is expected that the Federal Reserve Bank in the US will further
slash the interest rate some time late in October. This will put
more money into the hands of
global investors and, in all probability, it would find its way
into the Indian bourses. In fact, the recent weeks have seen FIIs
bring in $5 billion. However, though the fundamentals are positive
yet a correction at the market is long overdue and it might shed
some 1,000 points. The market in near future may stabilise at the
strong bottom of 16,500.
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WRITERS’
E-MAILS
shantanu@tehelka.com
vivek@tehelka.com
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