Sunday, August 31, 2008

Intervention

For the second time this year, the authorities saw it fit to intervene in the capital market. The market was in a free fall as the All Share Index (ASI) was down 35% from its peak and down 25.5% for the year as at 26th August. The measures taken were effective 27th August.

One positive measure was the reduction in transaction fees. This is a welcome development as the fees charged are rather too high compared to other exchanges. One very negative measure which had an immediate impact was the capping of downward movement of price of all stocks to a maximum of 1% daily. Upward movement was retained at 5% daily. A similar measure was enforced in early June when prices were not allowed to fall for 1 week. No date has been announced for the removal of the 1% cap.

This one way cap is disturbing as it amounts to manipulation. Any capping should be the same both ways. The last time a cap was applied and then removed, the ASI went on a free fall loosing 28% resulting in this new cap. So when will this temporary fix end?

Since the cap, the ASI has gained 10.6% in just three days. Most stocks have suddenly become scarce. Just a day earlier there were no takers but now everybody wants to get in on the action.

I see this capping as an opportunity to exit some weak stocks as prices move up to break even territory. Some stocks showed serious weakness during the bear run and one would be better off selling them.

On the other hand, this is not the time to buy assuming one can even get anything to buy. The constant changing of the rules of the game erodes confidence and discourages long term investing. The authorities have shown they have no appetite for a declining market. Who knows whether they might decide in the future to peg upward movement during a bull run?

My approach is simple. Sell off weak stocks and buy nothing until sanity returns.

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