Riken Mehta
Moneycontrol.com
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
hit a five-year high to close at 14,296 on Wednesday, topping its
previous high of 14,164 made in October, 2007. The US market was hit
severely by sub-prime crisis in the late 2007. This was followed by a
financial melt down that started in 2008 leading to several people
losing their jobs.
So have things turned around? In recent past, ADP (Automatic Data
Processing Inc) data has consistently beaten the estimates, which
suggests a revival in the job market in the last six months. A string of
upbeat economic data from US has been a cause for rally in equities
with traders anticipating recovery in the market despite still
relatively high unemployment rate, says Jamal Mecklai.
As per US government data, private companies added 198,000 jobs in
February, beating analyst estimates, indicating that the labour market
is continuing to thaw. Economists had predicted the count by ADP and
Moody's Analytics to show 170,000 new positions, reports CNBC.
As the chart below suggests, the Nifty
has been moving in tandem with the US market. The outlook has turned
cautious after the rather bruising sell-off, but analysts valuations
have become reasonable and so should cushion further downside.
No comments:
Post a Comment