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Friday, December 28, 2007

Bharti tower co to divest up to 9% for $1 billion

Tower infrastructure company Bharti Infratel, a wholly owned subsidiary of telecom services provider Bharti Airtel Limited, today agreed to divest 7.5 to 9 per cent to a clutch of international investors for $1 billion (Rs 4,000 crore).

While Singapore-based Temasek Holdings will be the largest investor, the other players include the Investment Corporation of Dubai (ICD), Goldman Sachs, Macquarie, AIF Capital, Citigroup and India Equity Partners (IEP).

Temasek also holds a stake in Bharti Airtel.

The deal puts the tower company’s enterprise value at $10 billion to $12.5 billion (Rs 40,000 crore to Rs 50,000 crore), but the final valuation will be determined on the basis of Bharti Infratel’s actual operating performance in FY 2008-09.

Bharti Infratel owns close to 20,000 sites in seven circles and holds approximately a 42 per cent stake in Indus Towers, the recently announced joint venture between Bharti, Vodafone and Idea, which has over 70,000 sites.

As part of the joint venture Bharti Infratel had recently transferred 30,000 towers in 16 circles to Indus recently. Indus plans to scale up to 20,000 towers in the next two to three years.

With the market for mobile services growing at 3 million subscribers a month, tower infrastructure companies have seen their valuations soaring in recent months.

Indus Towers is valued at around Rs 150,000 crore and controls over 70,000 towers. Reliance Communications was able to divest 5 per cent in its tower company to seven investors for Rs 1,400 crore, giving it an enterprise value of Rs 27,000 crore.

The company controlled over 13,000 towers when the deal was struck. It is looking at another divestment of 5 per cent but this time it is looking at an enterprise value of $9 billion on 16,000 towers.

Even the Ruias have got into the business and have floated a separate tower company with 4,000 towers. The Tatas have also set up an independent tower company.

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Understanding Short Term Trading

Before I begin, this blog is not for intraday traders. My definition of short term implies duration of around 2 to 3 months.

Short Term stock picking is no rocket science, but rather a visual interpretation of technical charts. A basic moving average on a time frame chart will show the direction of the securities movement.

Moving averages is a mathematical results calculated by averaging a number of past data points. Moving averages (MA) in it's basic form is calculated by taking the arithmetic mean of a given set of values on a rolling window of timeframe. Once the value of MA has been calculated, they are plotted onto a chart and then connected to create a moving average line. Typical moving averages used for short term trading are 50 MA and 100 MA.

Types of Moving Averages

1) Simple Moving Average (SMA)

SMA is calculated by taking the arithmetic mean of a given set of values on a rolling window of timeframe. The usefulness of the SMA is limited because each point in the data series is weighted the same, regardless of where it occurs in the sequence. Critics argue that the most recent data is more significant than the older data and should have a greater influence on the final result.

2) Exponential Moving Average (EMA)

EMA overcomes the limits of SMA, where more weight is given to the recent prices in an attempt to make it more responsive to new information. When calculating the first point of the EMA, we may notice that there is no value available to use as the previous EMA. This small problem can be solved by starting the calculation with a simple moving average and continuing on with calculating the EMA.

The primary functions of a moving average is to identify trends and reversals, measure the strength of an asset's momentum and determine potential areas where an asset will find support or resistance. Moving averages are lagging indicator, which means they do not predict new trend, but confirm trends once they have been established.

A stock is deemed to be in an uptrend when the price is above a moving average and the average is sloping upward. Conversely, a trader will use a price below a downward sloping average to confirm a downtrend. Many traders will only consider holding a long position in an asset when the price is trading above a moving average.

In general, short-term momentum can be gauged by looking at moving averages that focus on time periods of 50 days or less. Looking at moving averages that are created with a period of 50 to 100 days is generally regarded as a good measure of medium-term momentum. Finally, any moving average that uses 100 days or more in the calculation can be used as a measure of long-term momentum.

Support, resistence and stoploss can be infered by referring the closet MA below or above the market price. The other factor that is used in short term momentum is the trading volume. The moving averages along with the trading volume can provide a better insight to short term movement.

Markets are moved by their largest participants - I believe this is the single most important principle in short-term trading. Accordingly, I track the presence of large traders by determining how much volume is in the market and how that compares to average. Because volume correlates very highly with volatility, the market's relative volume helps you determine the amount of movement likely at any given time frame--and it helps you handicap the odds of trending vs. remaining slow and range bound.