India

Brief India: US Lake Charles LNG Liquefaction Plant Tendering for Contractors: Positive for TechnipFMC and more

In this briefing:

  1. US Lake Charles LNG Liquefaction Plant Tendering for Contractors: Positive for TechnipFMC
  2. Gold May Rise on Lower Real Ylds; Canada Leads Fall in Real Ylds; Aust Inflation Expectations Slump
  3. RRG Weekly – Fed Highlights Headwinds – Greece Greases Growth – Thai Election Sun Too Close to Call
  4. India Monthly Report Feb’19 – Mar’19
  5. HDFC Ltd- It Deserves Its Premium Valuation Tag

1. US Lake Charles LNG Liquefaction Plant Tendering for Contractors: Positive for TechnipFMC

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Energy Transfer LP (ET US) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA LN) have signed a Project Framework Agreement to further develop a large-scale LNG export facility in Lake Charles, Louisiana and move toward a potential final investment decision (FID). They have started actively engaging with LNG Engineering, Procurement and Contracting (EPC) companies with a plan to issue an Invitation to Tender (ITT) in the weeks ahead. We look at the potential contract size and winners and also the other US LNG projects that could be negatively impacted. More detail on the LNG project queue for this year in: A Huge Wave of New LNG Projects Coming in the Next 18 Months: Positive for The E&C Companies.

2. Gold May Rise on Lower Real Ylds; Canada Leads Fall in Real Ylds; Aust Inflation Expectations Slump

  • The broad decline in global bond yields and curve flattening suggest that the market has become more concerned about weak global economic growth.
  • The fall in yields is at odds with the rise in equity and commodity prices this year, but the later may have lost upward momentum.
  • Safe haven currencies, gold and JPY, have strengthened this week and are likely to perform well if yields remain low.
  • US real yields have fallen more than nominal yields this year, with a partial recovery in inflation expectations from their fall in Q4 last year. Lower real yields point to weaker fundamental support for the USD, and further support safe havens like gold.
  • Canadian real long term yields have fallen more abruptly than in the USA, into negative territory, suggesting the outlook for the Canadian economy has deteriorated more than most. This may relate to concern over a peaking in the Canadian housing market. The fall in real yields suggests further downside risk for the CAD.
  • Long term inflation breakevens have fallen in Australia sharply since September last year to now well below the RBA’s 2.5% inflation target.
  • Australian leading indicators of the labour market have turned lower, albeit from solid levels, and may be enough, combined with broader evidence of weaker growth, for the RBA to announce an easing bias as soon as April.
  • Asian trade data and flash PMI data for major countries point to ongoing and significant weakness in global trade.

3. RRG Weekly – Fed Highlights Headwinds – Greece Greases Growth – Thai Election Sun Too Close to Call

  • US: Fed Sees Tailwinds from Global Growth Shifting to Headwinds from China and Europe.
  • Greece: Growth supported by ‘Golden Visa’ (5-year visa for investing 250,000 Euro) and strong tourism arrivals. 2.3% GDP in 2020.
  • Thailand: Sunday election between Shinawatra-linked Pheu Thai Party and military backed Palang Pracharat Party. Too close to call.
  • Brazil: Former Brazilian President Michel Temer has been arrested in São Paulo as part of the Car Wash corruption investigation. Brazil stocks fell on the news.

4. India Monthly Report Feb’19 – Mar’19

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Indian indices were the least performing among the select global indices with S&P BSE Sensex and Nifty 50 generating returns of negative 1.65% and negative 0.81% in domestic terms respectively. In Dollar terms, they fell by 0.81% and 0.09% respectively. Indian Rupee witnessed an appreciation of 0.85% during the period and has risen from 71.44 USD/ INR to 70.84 USD/ INR. Among the select indices, Dow Jones was the best performer with dollar returns of 3.4%.

Performance of Select Indices during Feb’19
IndexReturns in Domestic Currency Returns in USD
S&P BSE SENSEX-1.65%-0.81%
NIFTY 50-0.93%-0.09%
Nikkei 2252.87%1.17%
Dow Jones Industrial Average3.40%3.40%
HANG SENG2.51%2.49%
FTSE 1000.78%2.22%

Among the sectoral indices, Nifty Media was the highest gainer with a 17.56% return in domestic terms and 18.56% in USD terms. The worst performer has been Nifty PSU Banks with a decrease of 5.82% in domestic terms and 5.02% in USD terms.

Performance of Indian Sectoral Indices in USD 
INR Returns
USD Returns
NIFTY MEDIA
17.56%
18.56%
NIFTY METAL
1.99%
2.85%
NIFTY IT
0.05%
0.90%
NIFTY REALTY
-0.50%
0.35%
NIFTY PVT BANK
-0.59%
0.26%
NIFTY PHARMA
-0.94%
-0.10%
NIFTY AUTO
-1.02%
-0.18%
NIFTY BANK
-1.09%
-0.25%
NIFTY FIN SERVICE
-2.04%
-1.20%
NIFTY FMCG
-3.10%
-2.28%
NIFTY PSU BANK
-5.82%
-5.02%

5. HDFC Ltd- It Deserves Its Premium Valuation Tag

Deposits

In continuation of the Housing Finance Series (pleas click here and here for the earlier articles), this article provides a detail on HDFC, the largest Housing Finance Company (HFC) in the country. The company has a market share of 38% in the private sector. It is a AAA rated  with one of the best asset quality among its peers.

The key strength of HDFC is its ability to generate low cost funds from multiple sources that helps in maintaining its spread irrespective of the interest rate cycles.

Given a long term secular trend of the housing industry in India, we expect HDFC to remain a key beneficiary. A strong corporate governance standard, high management quality and a robust risk management may help in sustaining the return ratios as well as the asset quality that are among the best in class.

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