Mumbai: The initial investor reaction to the Mumbai attacks suggests they 
expect India's traditionally resilient markets to take a bigger hit from this 
turmoil than from previous episodes in the city's violent history. 

With financial and commodity markets shut after gunmen killed 101 people, the 
only inkling of damage to sentiment came from a rise in India's risk premium on 
international credit markets and a drop in offshore Indian stock and rupee 
futures. 

The central bank said it would continue auctions to keep cash flowing through 
interbank lending markets, which seized up after the global financial crisis 
destroyed Wall Street banks in September. 

Mumbai is no stranger to political violence and markets have usually regarded 
previous bombings and other attacks with a degree of nonchalance. Wednesday's 
attacks though will put an additional strain on nerves frayed by global 
financial turmoil and a tide of cash pouring out of Indian assets. 

"Everyone is just hoping that it will be one of the short-lived episodes," said 
ING chief Asian economist Tim Condon. 

"People have seen this before although this is on an order of magnitude worse 
than what we have seen. That makes the usual comfortable assumption less 
comfortable, this Pakistanisation of Indian financial markets," he said. 

The capital markets regulator said the Bombay Stock Exchange and National Stock 
Exchange will be closed on Thursday as security forces battled militants who 
held hostages in two luxury Mumbai hotels. 

Coming at a time when foreigners have been heavy sellers of Indian assets, the 
attacks raised fears of a steeper fall in the rupee and a further blow to 
market confidence. 

"Clearly, it will be negative for the sentiment towards India at this point of 
time, the time when the world is already looking to be highly uncertain in term 
of its growth prospects," said Joseph Tan, chief Asian economist at Credit 
Suisse in Singapore. 

"When the equity market actually opens, it could probably be opening down as 
opposed to the rest of Asia." 

As traffic ground to a halt in south Mumbai, where the central bank and several 
financial institutions are located, it appeared the earliest indications of how 
deep those concerns run would be known only on Friday. 

Trading in offshore rupee forwards was thin but suggested the rupee could drop 
1.6 per cent within a month, more bearish than Wednesday's pricing of a 0.7 per 
cent depreciation. 

The risk premium for top Indian lender State Bank of India rose. The 
state-owned bank is a proxy in the debt market for the government, which has no 
sovereign bonds outstanding. 

Credit default swaps, which are insurance-like contracts, on the bank's five 
year bonds widened 20 basis points to 440 basis points after the attacks. 

Indian stock index futures fell 4 per cent in Singapore trade at their weakest, 
pointing to a likely steep fall in domestic shares. On Wednesday, the 50-share 
NSE index gained 3.7 per cent. India's main 30-share BSE index ended up 3.8 per 
cent. The rupee ended trading at 49.48 per dollar. 

"As the situation calms down, these attacks might be viewed as an isolated 
event," said Mumbai-based Amit Khurana, head of equities at the Indian unit of 
British broker Collins Stewart. 

UNFORTUNATE TIMING 

When suburban train bombings killed 180 people in Mumbai in 2006, the rupee 
barely blipped while the Bombay stock index fell 1.8 per cent but then rallied. 

There have been four bombings prior to Wednesday's attack this year. 

The stock index is already down 55 per cent this year -- Asia's fourth worst 
performer -- after having seen $13.5 billion of portfolio outflows from a 
market with a capitalisation of $266 billion. 

The rupee figures among the weakest currencies in Asia this year alongside the 
Indonesian rupiah and Korean won, having dropped 20 per cent against the dollar 
owing to capital outflows and a withdrawal of foreign credit lines from riskier 
markets. 

"This means that capital outflows will have a greater impact than they did in 
the past, though history suggests that any reaction to terrorist attacks in 
Mumbai will only be temporary," Nikhilesh Bhattacharya, an economist with 
Moody's Economy, said in a note. 

Mark Matthews, chief Asian strategist at Merrill Lynch, said this was also the 
time analysts were downgrading their forecasts for Indian corporate earnings 
rather dramatically. 

"That will continue to be a drag on the market because Indian analysts are 
behind the curve on earnings relative to the rest of Asia," Matthews said. 

Slowing growth and uncertainty about upcoming general elections in 2009 would 
also weigh down the market, at least until March, he reckons. Merrill predicts 
the index price-earnings ratio will drop to 9.1 in 2009 from 10.1 now. 

Currency analysts expect the rupee will weaken sharply when it opens for 
trading on Friday, but they also suspect any weakness will be knee-jerk and 
fleeting and that the central bank will jump to its defence as it always has in 
volatile spells. 

"Such terrorist attacks do not have a lasting impact on the market -- I don't 
think it will have a lasting impact on India," said Credit Suisse's Tan. 


http://www.financialexpress.com:80/news/mumbai-attacks-a-test-for-indian-markets/391397/
    To be feared is to fear: no one has been able to strike terror into others 
and at the same time enjoy peace of mind. 






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