Following are various data points to conclude how the various companies and markets have evolved over the past decade.
Is it a lost decade, as far as the Western World is concerned? What will be the next mega trend over the next 5-10 years? India? China? Gold? Gold in EUR? Is indexing in India and China a great investment strategy? Finding the next Apple is impossible, so which will be the next best trend? Let's analyze....
Share Price of UBS, World's largest Private bank
On 8 Dec 2000 was CHF 38.61
Today 5 Dec 2011 is CHF 11.44
Decline of 70.3% over 10 years
Citibank, Another Largest Bank in the world
On 8 Dec 2000 was USD 479
Today 5 Dec 2011 is USD 28.17
Decline of 94.11% over 10 years
HSBC, Another World's Largest Bank
On 8 Dec 2000 was GBP 13.05
Today 5 Dec 2011 is GBP 5.12
Decline of 60.76% over 10 years
S&P 500 Index Largest 500 companies of USA
On 8 Dec 2000 was at 1,369
Today 5 Dec 2011 it is at 1,244
Decline of 9.13% over 10 years
UK FTSE 100 Index of Largest 100 companies of UK
On 8 Dec 2000 was 9,104
Today 5 Dec 2011 it is 5,558
Decline of 38.95%
Apple, the best performing US stock and the darling of everyone for last few years.
On 8 Dec 2000 was USD 7.53
On 5 Dec 2011 is USD 389.70
A Gain of 5,075% !!!!
However, most other US stocks are down, as indicated, by S&P 500 and Citibank etc above. Some conglomerates like 3M and Johnson and Johnson and IT companies like Microsoft and Oracle have not declined but neither have they risen. GE has declined despite being a conglomerate and stellar medical companies such as Merck and Pfizer have gone down because they operate in a competitive environment and also have high value of sales in Emerging Markets where the costs are high but FX reduces their margins as well so Merck is down from USD 80 to USD 35 over 10 years and Pfizer is down from USD 45 to USD 20 over the past 10 years.
Let's talk about our bank, Axis Bank, for a moment.
Axis Bank's stock price being the 9th largest Bank across India and second largest private sector bank in India.
On 8 Dec 2000 our stock price was INR 45.50
Today Axis Bank stock price is INR 1,019 on 5 Dec 2011
A Gain of 2,139% over 10 years.
We are listed in London exchange too, who wish to buy our stock being non Indian, which is currently down about 34% from peak of last year and is one of the most robust stocks in the current climate and could be accumulated on dips.
Indian Stock Exchange SENSEX
On 10 Dec 2000 was 4,156
On 5 Dec 2011 it is 16,819
Gain of 304% over 10 years
State Bank of India, India's largest bank
On 10 Dec 2000 was INR 185
On 5 Dec 2011 is INR 1,893 (despite being 50% down from its peak 6m ago)
Gain of 923% over 10 years
Our closest rival, ICICI Bank, which is the largest Private Sector bank and second largest bank in India
On 10 Dec 2000 was at INR 169
On 5 Dec 2011 is at INR 782
Gain of 362% over 10 years
ICICI was 8 times larger than Axis Bank in 2008 as per balance sheet size, however, since then until today, not only our stock performance is better from the same start date in 2000 or since our birth in 1995 or over the last one year and we are now about 60% the size of ICICI bank (from 12.5% in 2008).
In terms of safety and growth, Axis has been a steady and solid performer, whether by employee strength at 35k employees and rising at 6-7k per annum forlast few years, growth in India or abroad (70% growth in 2009, 40% in 2010 and 27% in 2011), number of branches (over 1,500 and 400 branches opened in 2010), profits or asset size or lowest non performing loans!
And recently, S&P has altered its rating methodology due to which most Western banks were downgraded last week and 2 Chinese banks were upgraded, while our Bank has been reaffirmed at same ratings.
S&P also indicated that Govt of India will provide support if required and they do not see any decline in profits or any risks in the near future.
Please read the report for your information.
Axis Bank Ltd: 'BBB-/A-3' Ratings Affirmed ; Outlook Is Stable
S&P has affirmed 'BBB-/A-3' rating on Axis. The outlook is stable.
The rating on Axis reflects the bank's 'bbb-' anchor, "strong" business
position, "moderate" capital and earnings, "adequate" risk position,
"above-average" funding, and "adequate" liquidity. The rating also factors
in potential extraordinary government support in the event of financial
distress as Axis has "moderate systemic importance.".
Axis' "strong" business position represents the bank's strong retail
franchise, stemming from its brand equity, good geographic and income
diversity, and adequate management strategy.
The bank's funding profile is "above-average" and its liquidity position
"adequate."
Axis is the ninth-largest bank in India, in terms of deposits, and
accounts for about 3.2% of system deposits.
The stable outlook reflects the expectation that Axis will maintain its
strong business position and adequate asset quality.
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