India ETFs Slump on Weak GDP Forecast - ETF News And Commentary
February 08 2013 - 6:21AM
Zacks
Only a few days back, India ETFs prospered when the RBI, or the
Reserve Bank of India, embarked on another rate cutting campaign,
slashing the rate in order to infuse liquidity in the economy. This
step was seen as a solid attempt to reinvigorate growth in an
economy that was seeing the slowest growth rate in a decade India
ETFs after Central Bank Rate Cut).
However, the GDP growth rate forecast for the economy paints a
different picture for the economy. The Indian government’s outlook
for the country could be a sign that the economy is just not on a
good growth track.
On Thursday, the Indian government made an announcement that the
economy will possibly register annual GDP growth of just 5% in the
fiscal year ending in March. The rate is much lower than the growth
of 6.2% recorded in the preceding fiscal year (India ETFs: Trouble
On The Horizon?).
This implies that the once booming economy that was accustomed
to record growth rates in the vicinity of 9% is on the verge of
delivering the slowest growth rate in a decade this fiscal
year.
The GDP growth rate forecast also comes in worse than India's
finance ministry’s previous projection. The ministry had perceived
that the economy would expand at the rate of 5.7–5.9% for the
current fiscal year. While the Reserve Bank of India anticipated
that the economy would grow at the rate 5.5% this fiscal year.
It should also be noted that India’s service sector output
accounts for 60% of India’s GDP. So this possibly adds to the
apprehension of the economy as the service sector output growth is
expected to fall to the level of 6.6% this fiscal year compared
with an 8.2% increase last year (Can India ETFs Continue Their
Solid Run?).
The disappointing growth forecast does not seem to end here as
manufacturing output for the economy is also expected to follow the
decelerating path. Manufacturing output growth is expected to turn
up at 1.9% as against 2.7% growth reported last year.
So with these sluggish numbers from the Congress-led coalition
government, India ETFs had no choice but to react negatively on the
growth expectation for the economy. All India equity based ETFs
tracking the economy tumbled following the news, including the
following funds:
One of the Zacks Top Ranked ETFs for the region,
WisdomTree India Earnings Fund (EPI), lost 1.46%
in the last trading session. EPI is by far the largest ETF in terms
of asset base and also the most liquid fund tracking Indian
equities (Zacks Top Ranked India ETF: EPI).
The fund offers a broader play in Indian equities as it holds a
portfolio of 196 securities and appears to be moderately
diversified in the top 10 stocks where it has invested 37.93% of
its assets.
Among individual holdings, Reliance Industries, Oil and Natural
Gas Corporation and Infosys form the top line of the fund and
together account for almost 21.7% of the allocation. The fund
charges an expense ratio of 83 basis points on an annual basis.
Another Zacks top ranked ETF, iShares S&P India
Nifty 50 ETF (INDY), suffered 1.29% on news. The product
has amassed a net asset base of $427.3 million. The fund’s asset
base is spread across 51 Indian securities which does little to
reduce company-specific risk as more than 55% of the asset base go
towards the top ten (Zacks Top Ranked India ETF in Focus:
INDY).
ITC Limited (8.83%), Reliance Industries Limited (7.68%) and
ICICI Bank Limited (7.12%) are the three top elements in the
basket.
Among sector allocations, banks take the first spot in the fund
and make up a substantial portion of the basket with a share of
20.9%. The ETF is extremely pricey with an expense ratio of 92
basis points a year.
Yet another ETF that dwindled on the tepid growth expectation of
the economy is PowerShares India Portfolio (PIN).
The fall in the PIN ETF price was comparatively less than the other
two ETFs discussed above. The fund closed the day after falling
0.83%.
The fund has built an asset base of $399.3 million since its
inception and provides exposure to 51 Indian securities. These 51
securities are mainly from energy, financials and information
technology sectors in which the fund assigns more than 60% of the
asset base in total (Does Your Portfolio Need An India ETF?).
Among individual holdings, Infosys (10.23%), Reliance Industries
(9.92%) and Oil & Natural Gas Corp (8.86%) occupy the top line
of the fund. The fund appears to be a bit reasonable than INDY,
charging a fee of 79 basis points from investors.
Indian Economy in 2013
Despite the gloomy projection, the Indian economy seems to be
poised for positive growth in 2013 as the government engages in
several reform measures to revitalize the economy (India ETFs:
Getting Back On Track?).
It seems that the effect of the measure will only be visible in
the second half of the year thereby leading the economy to end the
year on a better-than-expected note.
Notwithstanding the restrained economies of the other BRIC
nations, there are global factors at play that would likely boost
the Indian economy against all odds. Government actions in the form
of implementation of the goods and services tax in addition to
power sector improvement would be a catalyst for the Indian economy
this year.
If these end up having their desired impact, it could help India
to get out of its current slump and return to high growth rates
once again in the near future.
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WISDMTR-IN EARN (EPI): ETF Research Reports
ISHARS-SP INDIA (INDY): ETF Research Reports
PWRSH-INDIA POR (PIN): ETF Research Reports
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