Word: sensex
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Dates: during 2005-2005
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...seem foolhardy, but everyone these days seems to be groping for a way to get rich off India. Foreign institutional investors poured $8.5 billion into Indian equities in 2004 and $2.6 billion so far this year, up from $750 million in 2002. Awash in cash from overseas, the Sensex?India's main stock index?has doubled in two years, hitting an all-time high in March. As Udwadia puts it, "astute foreign investors" now realize that India's rise is "a unique opportunity." He's right, of course. On a recent visit to Bombay, I quickly found myself as intoxicated...
...past, India has often been a terrific place in which to lose money. If you'd bet on the Sensex in 1992, say, you'd have been 30% poorer by 2003. But investors have short memories, and financial firms create whatever products are suddenly in demand. Today, that means a new generation of India-focused mutual funds and hedge funds, often with wonderfully alluring names like (my favorite) the Monsoon India Inflection Fund. The most voguish vehicles of all are mid-cap funds that bet on riskier Indian companies that may one day grow up to be blue chips...