Revelations of fraud, evidence of insider trading
and a consequent collapse of investor interest have led to an almost
unstoppable downturn in India's stock markets since the presentation
of the budget. This link with the presentation of the budget is not
coincidental. Judging by the coverage of recent budgets in much of the
print and electronic media, there is a widely prevalent belief that
budgets are best assessed by financial market spokesmen and by their
impact on financial markets. This premium on 'market responses'
(meaning thereby purely financial market responses), even if
overdone, is a fall-out of economic liberalization.
One of the much-emphasized benefits of liberalization
was to be the positive impact it would have on financial inflows into
the country. The reason why speculative financial investments, as opposed
to greenfield foreign direct investment, should be inherently positive
is of course unclear. But let us drop such skepticism for the moment.
The point to note is that the concern with attracting foreign capital
flow has been reflected in the government's fiscal, monetary and
financial policies in recent years. Financial liberalization has not
just permitted, but eased and rendered more attractive foreign financial
investment in India. And budgets have been framed with the intent of
not just satisfying financial investors from abroad but of attracting
them by keeping financial markets buoyant. The spoken responses of financial
agents and the activities as reflected by market indices were therefore
seen even by the Finance Ministry, and not just by the media, as an
indicator of success in budget formulation. This has meant that the
pressure to please financial players has played a major role in shaping
recent budgets though, given the whimsical demands of finance, success
is never guaranteed.
Paradoxically, for the speculator in the stock market
this has provided another counter to bet on. Would the budget trigger
a sharp rise in financial markets, however short-lived or would it not?
Differing answers to that question would elicit different speculative
responses. This was the question which Ketan Parekh, the most recent
incarnation of the perennial 'big bull' in India's stock
markets, had set himself and answered in the positive in February this
year. What ensued is now history.
Expecting to be able to offload stocks of a select
set of companies at higher prices in the wake of the budget, Parekh
built up large positions in these scrips. In normal circumstances, this
very act of investment by a market-mover like Parekh should have provided
a spur to the Sensex. It in fact did. Both just before the budget was
presented and immediately thereafter prices did rise. But that very
signal, gave cause for a bear cartel to turn suspicious. Allegedly consisting
of stock-market insiders, including the BSE chief himself, who in violation
of SEBI norms checked out from the surveillance department who was making
large purchases and of which stocks, this cartel discovered that the
rise in the index was the result of speculative purchases of select
shares. In a world where financial gain, however garnered, is the indicator
of success, the cartel chose to offload large volumes of the very same
stocks acquired at prices much lower than those prevailing in the market
driving prices down.
There must have been a brief period when Parekh struggled
to keep prices of his favourite stocks buoyant in the wake of the bear
hammering. But if he did, his effort obviously failed, paving the way
for the downward descent of all stock market indices. This simple tale
of a speculative bout between bulls and bears in he market turns more
complex and bizarre when a set of related questions begin to be asked
and the consequences of the market collapse begin to be assessed.
Let's begin with the related questions. What
explains the fact that a few operators, who in one way or another are
market insiders, can make and break India's much celebrated financial
markets? Analysts attribute this to the fact that markets in developing
countries like India are thin or shallow in at least three senses. First,
only stocks of a few companies are actively traded in the market. Second,
of these stocks there is only a small proportion that is routinely available
for trading, with the rest being held by promoters, the financial institutions
and others interested in corporate control or influence. And, third
the number of players trading these stocks are also few in number. According
to to the Report of the SEBI's Committee on Market Making, The
number of shares listed on the BSE since 1994 has remained almost around
5800 taking into account delisting and new listing. While the number
of listed shares remained constant, the aggregate trading volume on
the exchange increased significantly. For example, the average daily
turnover, which was around Rs.500 crore in January 1994 increased to
Rs.1000 crores in August 1998. But, despite this increase in turnover,
there has not been a commensurate increase in the number of actively
traded shares. On the contrary, the number of shares not traded even
once in a month on the BSE has increased from 2199 shares in January
1997 to 4311 shares in July 1998. The net impact is that speculation
and volatility are essential features of such markets. According to
one analyst, the role of speculation is visible in the high ratio (3:1)
of trading volumes to market capitalization in what is otherwise a shallow
market.
These features of the market have a number of implications.
To start with, Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs), whose exposure
in Indian markets is an extremely small share of their international
potfolio, making India almost irrelevant to their international strategies,
have an undue influence on the performance of markets in India. The
sums they invest or withdraw can move markets in the upward and downward
direction, as recent experience has amply demonstrated. This forces
government's keen to have them constantly making net purchases
and driving markets upwards to bend over backwards in appeasing them.
A corollary of this influence of the FIIs is that any market player
who is able to mobilize a significant sum of capital and is willing
to risk it in investments in the market can be a major influence on
market performance. This explains the importance of operators like Harshad
Mehta and Ketan Parekh, the big bulls of the 1990s, who rose from being
small traders to become crorepatis and were lionized for their
resource mobilization and risk-taking abilities, which made them movers
of markets. Ketan Parekh is reported to have risked his investments
on a few sectors (the so-called technology stocks) and few firms, and
till the recent debacle, always seemed to come out rights in terms of
his judgements. He had, it now appears, a major role to play in rigging
share prices, as he allegedly did in the case of Global Trust Bank shares
prior to the aborted merger of UTI Bank and GTB.