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Goldman Sachs has refreshed its conviction list of top stocks in Asia Pacific this month, adding some names and removing others. Here are two additions to Goldman Sachs' Asian conviction list, and two removals: China Resources Beer Goldman analyst Leaf Liu said he was positive on the outlook for Chinese beer manufacturer and distributor China Resources Beer . Goldman Sachs has a 12-month price target of 51 Hong Kong dollars ($6.51) on the stock, giving it potential upside of around 46%. NTPC India's power generation company NTPC — formerly the National Thermal Power Corporation — was another addition to Goldman's conviction list. Shionogi, China Medical System Meanwhile, the Wall Street bank removed two pharmaceutical players — Japan's Shionogi and the China-headquartered China Medical System — from its conviction list.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, China Resources Beer, Leaf Liu, CRB, , National Thermal Power Corporation —, Apoorva Bahadur, Bahadur, Goldman, — Japan's Shionogi, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: MSCI Asia, China Resources, China Resources Beer Goldman, China Resources Beer, Brands, Star, Heineken, Hong, Franklin FTSE, National Thermal Power Corporation Locations: Asia Pacific, Japan, China, ,, Tianjin, premiumization, Hong Kong, Franklin FTSE China, Shionogi
"India has been the best performing Emerging Market in terms of USD returns at 8%, surpassing Brazil at 6%," they wrote. In terms of asset allocation, AllianceBernstein is overweight on financials, while allocating a small portion of this weight to utilities. Delhivery is another favorite stock, with a price target of 460 Indian rupees, giving it around 5% upside. Electricity generation company NTPC made the list for its opportunities in thermal, renewables and green hydrogen, the analysts wrote. The asset manager is overweight on the stock at 274 Indian Rupees representing an upside of almost 15% from its Oct. 11 close.
Persons: AllianceBernstein, Venugopal Garre, Zomato, NTPC, Paytm, it's, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Stock, HDFC Bank, Jio Financial Services Locations: India, Brazil
"We believe India's electricity sector is going through a generational shift as the country looks to balance the economic growth with decarbonization," Goldman Sachs analyst Nikhil Bhandari told CNBC's "Street Signs Asia". Bhandari also told CNBC that India has a unique opportunity in green hydrogen thanks to the viability of round-the-clock renewable electricity. "This is unlike China, where we feel around the clock renewable electricity will be more economical towards the end of the decade." Goldman has a 12-month price target of 265 Indian rupees ($3.24) on NTPC, representing more than 30% upside from the current share price. Shares of SJVN have already risen past Goldman's price target of 55 Indian rupees and now carry a downside risk of 6%.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, NTPC, Nikhil Bhandari, CNBC's, Bhandari, Goldman, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: CNBC, Tata Power Locations: India, China, NTPC
REUTERS/Niharika Kulkarni/File photoBENGALURU, July 19 (Reuters) - Indian shares trimmed gains on Wednesday, as information technology stocks reversed early gains and offset the broad sectoral rise, ahead of the June-quarter earnings of top companies. The Nifty 50 (.NSEI) index rose 0.18% to 19,784.25, with the S&P BSE Sensex (.BSESN) in toe at 66,921.20, as of 12:56 p.m. IST. High-weightage IT stocks (.NIFTYIT) erased 0.5% gains and are on course to snap a four-day winning streak. Among individual stocks, NTPC (NTPC.NS) rose over 4%, topping the Nifty 50 after brokerage Goldman Sachs identified it as the top pick in the power sector. Several other Nifty 50 constituents, including Infosys (INFY.NS), Ultratech Cement (ULTC.NS), Reliance Industries (RELI.NS), and ICICI Bank (ICBK.NS) will report their quarterly earnings later this week.
Persons: Niharika Kulkarni, Narendra Solanki, Anand, Goldman Sachs, Bharath Rajeswaran, Sonia Cheema, Dhanya Ann Thoppil Organizations: Bombay Stock Exchange, REUTERS, BSE, TV18, U.S . Federal Reserve, Investment Services, IndusInd Bank, Hindustan Unilever, Infosys, Ultratech, Reliance Industries, ICICI Bank, Thomson Locations: Mumbai, BENGALURU, U.S, Europe, Bengaluru
NEW DELHI, April 10 (Reuters) - Torrent Power (TOPO.NS) has pipped Reliance Industries (RELI.NS) to emerge as the lowest bidder for supply of 1,100-megawatts of gas-based power supply sought by the Indian government to meet anticipated record demand in the summer, two sources said. "The government is likely to award contracts for 1,100-megawatts to Torrent Power," one of the officials said. NTPC, Reliance Industries and Torrent Power did not reply immediately to Reuters' request for comment. NVVN Ltd, acting on the power ministry's directions, had invited bids for 5,000-megawatt power supply from gas-based power plants. However, about 24-gigawatts of its gas-based power generation capacity remains underutilised due to a lack of fuel.
NEW DELHI, April 3 (Reuters) - The Indian government is considering selling state-owned NTPC Ltd's (NTPC.NS) two hydro power firms to NHPC Ltd (NHPC.NS) to create a single hydro power company that would improve efficiency and cut costs, power minister R K Singh told Reuters. One large hydro power company would help meet high demand at night when solar projects do not run, he said. We are thinking whether these hydro companies can come together as a hydro large PSU. Then it becomes a specialised hydro company," Power and Renewable Energy Minister Singh said in an interview on Monday. The power ministry's proposal to create a single company is aimed at better management and expertise, besides reducing costs and managing related challenges.
India on Monday invoked an emergency law to force power plants that run on imported coal to maximize output ahead of an expected record surge in power usage this summer, according to an internal power ministry notice seen by Reuters. Many of India's power plants that use imported coal, including those owned by Adani Power and Tata Power in the western state of Gujarat, have not operated at full capacity recently because they have found it difficult to compete with power generated from cheap domestic coal. Reuters reported last month on India's plans to use the law to maximize coal power output. In the notice sent to all imported coal-based power plants, the ministry said it expects them to operate at full capacity and sell power to buyers on exchanges. India's imported coal plants have a total capacity of 17 gigawatts.
"Modern connectivity is also a guarantee of national security," Modi said at an election rally at a border village in October, where he said the new transport links would bring development to remote regions. India's ministries of highways and railway, which own the state-run companies building the road and rail projects, also did not respond. Hundreds of homes have sunk and cracked in an Indian tourist town close to the Himalayan border with China. Eight of the families neighbouring Butola have now left the village, their homes riven with cracks, villagers told Reuters. Officials halted road construction work near the town, fearful of a bigger collapse.
The project led by Adani, will have Ballard supply the fuel cell engine, while Indian truck maker Ashok Leyland will provide vehicle and technical support for the project. If the devices that do that, electrolysers, are powered by renewable energy, the product is called green hydrogen. The Indian government had recently approved an incentive plan of 174.9 billion rupees ($2.11 billion) to promote green hydrogen and had set green hydrogen consumption targets for some industries earlier this month. Indian companies such as Reliance Industries (RELI.NS), Indian Oil (IOC.NS), NTPC (NTPC.NS), Adani, JSW Energy (JSWE.NS), ReNew Power (RENE.BO) and Acme Solar (ACMO.NS) have big plans for green hydrogen. Adani has a tie-up with French energy company TotalEnergies (TTEF.PA) as part of a deal to form a new green hydrogen project in India.
Reuters reported last month about India's plans for a green hydrogen incentive programme. "Our aim is to establish India as a global hub of green hydrogen," Thakur said. India also plans to build electrolyser capacity of 60 gigawatts to 100 gigawatts to help produce green hydrogen, Thakur said. To promote the use of green hydrogen, Thakur said obligations - such as mandatory targets for green hydrogen consumption - would be required of fertiliser units, petroleum refineries and city gas distribution networks. The United States and the European Union have already approved incentives worth billions of dollars for green hydrogen projects.
NEW DELHI, Dec 27 (Reuters) - India is planning a $2 billion incentive programme for the green hydrogen industry, three sources told Reuters, in a bid to cut emissions and become a major export player in the field. The United States and the European Union have already approved incentives worth billions of dollars for green hydrogen projects. GREEN AMMONIA, TOOThe Indian government expects industry to invest 8 trillion rupees in green hydrogen and its derivative green ammonia by 2030, said the industry manager and another government official. The green hydrogen proposal is likely to be called "Strategic Intervention for Green Hydrogen Transition (SIGHT)" and will be split into 45 billion rupees for electrolyser manufacturing for five years and the 135 billion rupees for green hydrogen and green ammonia production for three years, the manager and second official said. The incentive for making green hydrogen is likely to be 50 rupees per kg for three years, they said.
[1/3] Drivers push auto rickshaws in a line to buy petrol from a fuel station amid Sri Lanka's economic crisis, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, July 29, 2022. India's foreign ministry did not respond to questions from Reuters on its plans and strategic aims in Sri Lanka. New Delhi has long been concerned about China's clout in its neighbourhood, including Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. "And as far as Sri Lanka is concerned, we don't want to contribute to any escalation of tension between any countries." "Sri Lanka has clearly benefited from being the closest neighbour to the most powerful country in the region.
BENGALURU, Oct 19 (Reuters) - Indian shares surrendered some of their earlier gains to close slightly higher on Wednesday as Nestle India's strong earnings boost consumer stocks, though lingering fears of high inflation and interest rates on corporate profits capped the increase. The NSE Nifty 50 index (.NSEI) ended up 0.14% at 17,512.25, while the S&P BSE Sensex (.BSESN) climbed 0.25% to 59,107.19. The Nifty fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) index (.NIFTYFMCG) gained 0.4%, led by a 1.8% jump in Nestle India (NEST.NS) after the consumer giant reported a bigger-than-expected rise in third-quarter profit. Support for markets is seen coming from domestic investors buying, even as foreign institutional investors sold shares. Foreign institutional investors sold a net of 1.53 billion Indian rupees ($18.6 million) worth of equities on Tuesday, while domestic investors bought 20.85 billion rupees worth of shares, as per provisional data available with the NSE.
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