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Tag Archives: scam

No way! It can’t go higher! Sensex at 50k gets the same reactions as at 4k.

Posted on January 20, 2021 by monikahalan
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It’s happened. The Sensex has hit the big milestone of 50,000 points today, 21 January 2021. The Indian stock market, filled with money of global and domestic investors is celebrating the reviving economy, the vaccine roll-out and the big-bang budget signals coming from North Block. It can be said, the market is celebrating the re-rating of India in the minds of the world.

While I celebrate this milestone, I must tell you the stories of earlier milestones and how they were irrelevant as signals to investors to either enter or exit the stock market. My first job, in a business magazine, in Autumn of 1991 coincided with the Indian economic reforms and a big bull run on the Indian stock market. Markets doubled over the year and then doubled again in the next six months hitting almost 5,000 in April 1992. I remember hearing as a cub reporter: “how high will it go? This is a scam!” And it was. This unreal quadrupling of the market over under two years was based on loopholes in the Indian banking system that were used by operators to inflate stock prices. The subsequent crash lasted the full decade, all the way to the new millinium.

The 1990s saw the economic reforms settle down into some real on-ground economic changes. They also saw the birth of a new regulatory system for the Indian stock markets. The crisis was used to bring transparency, order and rules of the game to the wild west that used to be the Indian stock market. The creation of the National Stock Exchange that used screen-based trading instead of the open outcry system and the setting up of Sebi as the market regulator, depositories, settlement guarantees funds and a big infra upgrade gave the Indian markets a very strong foundation.

It took till September 2005 for the markets to double again, when they hit the 8,000 mark. Then another five months to breach the psychologically significant 10,000 point. I remember the party hats, the balloons and the cakes in TV studios as the Sensex party pointed to reflected a strong economy and growth ahead. I remember the wife of a stock market investor asking me wide-eyed – how high will this market go? I hear it will go to, gasp, 12,000! I remember telling her – your husband needs to diversify his risk – at 60 he is over-invested in direct stocks. At 12,000 investors thought they had missed the bus. That the markets were “too high”.

It took just another year and two months to zoom past 12k to rest at 15,000. And then six months later to fly to 20,000 in December 2007. This was just before the North Atlantic Financial Crisis of 2008. This was the era of the Greenspan put – the easy money unleashed on the world by the Ayn Rand acolyte who himself later admitted to holding policy rates too low for too long. I remember reading full page articles over 2007 and halfway to 2008 in respected US and UK newspapers as they told us that money managers had taken risk and “ground it into tiny particles”. They said the world was risk-free. They said, this time it is different. And of course, it was not. As the world discovered garbage in the triple A rated bonds made of securitized retail loans, the contagion threatened to grind the wheels of the global economy to a standstill.

FD investors finally tired of their risk-averseness, threw caution to the winds and rushed headlong to the market to get rich quick. But they saw their wealth shave off more than half its value over the next year as the index went into a free-fall to touch 9,800 in October 2008. Retail investors historically bought when the market had nothing but steam and kept holding the collapsed balloon, hoping for a reflation and getting back to the buying prices of the dud stocks they owned. 

But as the market digested the news that India had largely been isolated from the toxic products, other than a few high-profile private banks, markets took two years to recover to the 20,000 mark in January 2013. 

At 20,000, the question I was asked was again the same: “how high will this market go? I am too late to invest. This train has left the station”. It took another year and a half for markets to touch 25,000 as the Narendra Modi government took over the reins from a deeply corrupt and stagnant UPA II. The next milestone waited for NDA II, and that is when the Sensex hit 40,000 in mid 2019. Then came the Covid lock-down in March 2020 making the market slump all the way down to just over 26,000 – a heart-stopping drop over a week. The stock market nay-sayers got active again and told stories of how they have been right all along and the Indian stock market is a scam. How gold is the only safe spot. How people have got ruined by advice of people like me – who advocate an asset allocation route to building a mutual fund portfolio that has both equities and bonds. But the Indian retail investors had mostly learnt their lessons from the past crashes and used the opportunity to buy more. The market took just seven months to recover to the 40k mark. And two months later in December 2020 hit 45,000.

As we stand at 50,000 Sensex, the only learning is this: celebrate the milestones, but then ignore the Sensex when you invest. Investors along the ride that I have myself taken, from Sensex 1,800 to Sensex 50,000 over a 30-year period, have said the same thing: “how high will it go and I am too late to invest”. What they failed to understand that the Sensex is just reflecting the underlying growth of the Indian economy. It may crash from 50,000 in the next few months. But if you have used the rising markets to rebalance your portfolio – you are doing just fine. For those on the sidelines – please don’t rush in with all your money when markets are breaching an all-time high. Make a plan. Invest according to that. Then forget Sensex values. 

Monika writes on household finance, policy and regulation.

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Posted in Expense Account, Investments, Money, Personal Finance | Tagged 50000, Milestone, scam, Sensex | 1 Reply

The change we want is also the change we resist

Posted on September 30, 2020 by monikahalan
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The year is 1992. I am in my first job and I don’t know it yet, but as a rookie business journalist, I’m watching India’s stock market balloon and then burst in a huge (for that time)  ₹3,500 crore scam. As business journalists, we documented the setting up of India’s capital market regulator in 1992 and then its fight for teeth as the first chairman struggled to get powers to make the regulator effective. Setting up a new stock exchange to break the monopoly of the old one, moving to screen-based trading from the opaque open outcry system, getting brokers under some kind of regulation to demolish the closed club in which they operated and a whole universe of changes that really shook the way capital markets worked in India.

I remember having conversations with brokers and sub-brokers and arguing that corporatization was good and that transparency, rules of the game and investor interest would actually help the market grow. The insiders always resist change and the industry deeply believed that the business would end and everybody will lose. Investors will be orphaned in the new corporate system, went the argument. We resist in investor interest, they said.

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Posted in Consumer Rights, Expense Account, Financial Literacy, Mint, Narendra Modi | Tagged 1992, Agri bills, choice, Harshad mehta, hoarding, scam | Leave a reply

What is Initiative Q, why it seems attractive and should you sign up for it?

Posted on November 12, 2018 by monikahalan
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You may have already got this very enticing WhatsApp or email. It goes like this: “Initiative Q is building a new payment network and giving away significant sums of their future currency to early adopters. It is by invite only and I have a limited number of invites. Click this link to sign up…Initiative Q will succeed only if many people join. The more people invite their friends, the greater the likelihood of reaching the goal of each Q being worth around one US dollar.” You can see the site here: initiativeq.com.

What’s the deal? This start-up aims to replace the current payment systems (currency, credit cards, cash, wire transfers) because they are clunky and costly. There are newer technologies ready to replace them, says the material on the site, but this does not happen because not enough people switch to the new currencies. If a platform was created that enough people in the world on-boarded, then $20 trillion of transactions a year will flow on this new payment system. “Initiative Q is reserving this Q currency for people who join today—the earlier you join, the more Q you can reserve”. And then the killer line: “Think of this as getting free bitcoin seven years ago.”

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Posted in Expense Account, Financial Literacy, Let's Talk Money, Mint, Money | Tagged MLM, no free lunch, Q initiative, scam | Leave a reply

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