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Air strike on Pakistan positive for the markets: Analysts

Analysts commented that air strike on terror camps in Pakistan is positive for the markets.

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Published : Feb 26, 2019, 4:49 PM IST

Mumbai: The air strike on terror camps in Pakistan is positive for the markets as it illustrates a "decisiveness" in foreign policy and increases the chances of Narendra Modi to retain power after the forthcoming polls, say analysts.

The comments come in the wake of concerns shown by investors in the immediate aftermath of the strikes in Pakistani territory which markets opening with a huge gap down.

"We see this panic gap down and any further slide as a buying opportunity which has been the case in past such events as well. And this gives higher odds to the Modi government staying on post-elections," Sameer Kalra, an equity research analyst and founder at Target Investing, said in a note on Tuesday.

Read more:Lot of headway being made in IL&FS matter: Corporate Affairs Secretary

Economists at SBI said the markets is likely to gain after the strikes as they will look at the action as the one which builds a positive deterrence illustrating a decisiveness in our foreign and national security policy.

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In a note, SBI economists gave an account of how the markets reacted to the earlier armed conflicts like after the cross-border action by India following the Uri attack in 2016 and also the Kargil conflict, where Pakistani intruders were pushed back.

It said during the Kargil conflict between May and July 1999, leading stock indices showed an initial decline but strong recovery thereafter, while after Uri action, the Sensex gained 100 points and so was the rupee.

It can be noted that the markets opened in the red on Tuesday, after the strikes that were reported to have been carried out in the wee hours. There was some recovery in the indices later and the BSE benchmark was trading 0.60 percent down at 1510 hrs.

(Inputs from PTI)

Mumbai: The air strike on terror camps in Pakistan is positive for the markets as it illustrates a "decisiveness" in foreign policy and increases the chances of Narendra Modi to retain power after the forthcoming polls, say analysts.

The comments come in the wake of concerns shown by investors in the immediate aftermath of the strikes in Pakistani territory which markets opening with a huge gap down.

"We see this panic gap down and any further slide as a buying opportunity which has been the case in past such events as well. And this gives higher odds to the Modi government staying on post-elections," Sameer Kalra, an equity research analyst and founder at Target Investing, said in a note on Tuesday.

Read more:Lot of headway being made in IL&FS matter: Corporate Affairs Secretary

Economists at SBI said the markets is likely to gain after the strikes as they will look at the action as the one which builds a positive deterrence illustrating a decisiveness in our foreign and national security policy.

undefined

In a note, SBI economists gave an account of how the markets reacted to the earlier armed conflicts like after the cross-border action by India following the Uri attack in 2016 and also the Kargil conflict, where Pakistani intruders were pushed back.

It said during the Kargil conflict between May and July 1999, leading stock indices showed an initial decline but strong recovery thereafter, while after Uri action, the Sensex gained 100 points and so was the rupee.

It can be noted that the markets opened in the red on Tuesday, after the strikes that were reported to have been carried out in the wee hours. There was some recovery in the indices later and the BSE benchmark was trading 0.60 percent down at 1510 hrs.

(Inputs from PTI)

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Air strike on Pak increases Modi chance to return: Analysts
         Mumbai, Feb 26 (PTI) The air strike on terror camps in
Pakistan is a positive for the markets as it illustrates a
"decisiveness" in foreign policy and increases the chances of
Narendra Modi to retain power after the forthcoming polls, say
analysts.
         The comments come in the wake of concerns shown by
investors in the immediate aftermath of the strikes in
Pakistani territory which markets opening with a huge gap
down.
         "We see this panic gap down and any further slide as a
buying opportunity which has been the case in past such events
as well. And this gives higher odds to the Modi government
staying on post-elections," Sameer Kalra, an equity research
analyst and founder at Target Investing, said in a note
Tuesday.
         Economists at SBI said the markets is likely to gain
after the strikes as they will look at the action as the one
which builds a positive deterrence illustrating a decisiveness
in our foreign and national security policy.
         In a note, SBI economists gave an account of how the
markets reacted to the earlier armed conflicts like after the
cross-border action by India following the Uri attack in 2016
and also the Kargil conflict, where Pakistani intruders were
pushed back.
         It said during the Kargil conflict between May and
July 1999, leading stock indices showed an initial decline but
strong recovery thereafter, while after Uri action, the Sensex
gained 100 points and so was the rupee.
         The SBI report also deemed to suggest that just like
the previous actions, conflicts are "more localised in
nature".
         It can be noted that the markets opened in the red
Tuesday, after the strikes that were reported to have been
carried out in the wee hours. There was some recovery in the
indices later and the BSE benchmark was trading 0.60 percent
down at 1510 hrs.
         In a swift and precise air strike following the
Pulwama attack, India bombed and destroyed Jaish-e-Mohammed's
biggest training camp in Pakistan early Tuesday, killing a
"very large number" of terrorists, trainers and senior
commanders.
         The operation, described as a non-military,
pre-emptive strike, was welcomed by the entire political
spectrum and military experts who had been advocating
retribution after the February 14 suicide attack on a CRPF
convoy in Pulwama, killing 40 jawans, and claimed by JeM. PTI
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