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Hopes on Modi government makes India best performing equity market in Asia-Pacific

BSE Sensex rose more than 1 percent to become the best performing equity market

Mumbai: The BSE Sensex rose more than 1 percent on Friday to become the best performing equity market in Asia-Pacific for 2014 in dollar terms, on continued hopes the incoming Narendra Modi government would unveil substantial economic reforms.

Gains were also helped as State Bank of India surged after reporting bad loans fell in January-March, sparking a rally in other state-run lenders.

Modi will be sworn in on Monday, ushering in the new Bharatiya Janata Party government, and investors will first focus on his cabinet appointments, especially the finance ministry portfolio. The administration would then need to unveil a new budget by early July.

Still, not all analysts are as optimistic. Deutsche Bank downgraded Indian stocks to "neutral" from "neutral/overweight" relative to other global emerging markets, saying valuations, appeared "very stretched."

"Earning multiples look a little stretched for short term. July budget would be the next check point for this rally," said Alok Roongta, chief financial officer at Bharti AXA Life Insurance.

The BSE Sensex rose 1.3 percent, or 318.95 points, to end at a record closing high of 24,693.35, although the index is still around 3 percentage points away from the all-time high hit last week.

This brings the Sensex's gain so far for the year in dollar terms to 23.71 percent in 2014, compared to the next best performer, Indonesia's IDX Composite which gained 22.7 percent. The Sensex rose 2.4 percent for the week, marking its third consecutive weekly gain. The broader Nifty rose 1.25 percent, or 90.70 points, to end at 7,367.10, posting a weekly gain of 2.3 percent.

SBI surged 9.6 percent, after earlier hitting its highest since May 2011. The state-run lender said net non-performing loans as a percentage of total assets fell to 2.57 percent in the March quarter from 3.24 percent in the preceding quarter.

SBI's share gain was its biggest single-day advance since Sept. 5, 2013. The results at SBI sparked gains in other state-run banks, with Punjab National Bank rising 5.4 percent. Also, hopes of reforms in the power sector by the new government continued to drive shares in the sector.

NTPC Ltd rose 3.9 percent and Tata Power Co gained 6.4 percent. Ashok Leyland Ltd surged 13.7 percent after the company's January-March operating profit of 1.84 billion rupees ($31.5 million) beat some analysts estimates.

Reliance Communications rose 4.2 percent after the Financial Times reported that the company was in talks with China's Citic Telecom over an undersea cable joint venture, citing unnamed people familiar with the talks.

Among decliners, Motherson Sumi Systems Ltd fell 1.5 percent adding to Thursday's slump of 2.3 percent after operating margins at its European unit Samvardhana Motherson B.V. lagged some analysts estimates in the January-March quarter.

ITC Ltd, India's largest cigarette maker, ended 0.8 percent lower despite Jan-March earnings beating estimates as traders continued to move out of defensives to domestic cyclicals.

( Source : reuters )
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