Indian shares could correct sharply in coming  weeks after hitting a series of record highs on unprecedented overseas fund  flows, analysts say.
 Lifted by a tide of foreign money, Indian shares  have climbed 25.4 percent this year to hit a record 17,291.1 points last  Friday.
 The rise 'has been too dramatic,' said Atul  Mehra, capital markets head at Mumbai brokerage JM Financial. "Share valuations  definitely appear stretched," he said. Indian shares have risen by over 10  percent just since September 18 when the US Federal Reserve cut interest rates  by a surprise 50 basis points, resulting in a flood of money into emerging  markets as investors sought better returns. A key signal of a potential looming  correction in the Indian market is that so-called 'market breadth' has weakened,  analysts said.
 More shares have lost ground than gained in a  rising market for five consecutive trading sessions, suggesting weakness ahead,  they said. "This is the excitement before a climax," key independent Mumbai  equity broker Rakesh Jhunjhunwala said. "The markets may rise a bit more   towards 18,000 or even 19,000 points  but there is a huge correction  coming."
 Also price-earnings (PE) ratios  a common  measure of whether a share is overvalued that divides the price of a stock by  its earnings per share  are looking high, analysts say. Right now the average  price-earnings ratio is 16.8 times which represents "a 15 percent premium to the  long-term average of 14.6 times," UBS analyst Manishi Raychaudhuri said in a  report.
 UBS has its Sensex target for end 2007 at 16,300  points while HSBC Securities is more bearish with its target at 14,250  points.
 Foreign funds have invested 12.23 billion dollars  in Indian equities in 2007, lured by record economic expansion, beating the  previous record of 10.7 billion dollars set during full-year 2005. India logged  first-quarter growth of 9.3 percent  the world's fastest after China. Investor  bullishness on India has been bolstered by the view that the country should  escape major fallout from the US subprime credit turmoil thanks to its largely  insulated economy.
 While the nation of 1.1 billion people has been  gradually easing rigid state controls on trade and investment and opening up its  economy, analysts say it remains far less exposed to global financial upheaval  than many countries. Indian shares have risen nearly 18 percent since July when  significant credit concerns surfaced in the United States. Andrew Holland,  strategic investment director at DSP Merrill Lynch in Mumbai, forecast that 2008  would be "a difficult year for equities, including India. "We could see greater  flows in the form of foreign direct investment (FDI) rather than overseas fund  flows (into shares)," he said. Political uncertainty also hangs as a question  mark over the market, analysts said. The ruling Congress party and its communist  allies are locked in a standoff over a civilian nuclear technology deal with the  United States which the Left says makes New Delhi's foreign policy subservient  to Washington.
 "The strongest catalyst to uncertainty in 2008  could be an early general election. Election outcomes are usually sources of  significant volatility in Indian markets," UBS's Raychaudhuri said. "In that  event, not only could valuations suffer, but the capex (capital expenditure)  cycle could also slow temporarily," she said. afp
 
 



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