Friday, December 16, 2011

RBI keeps all rates unchanged in December policy review

The RBI kept repo rate, at which it lends to banks, constant at 8.5%, reverse repo rate at 7.5. Cash reserve ratio (CRR) which is the amount of cash the banks have to maintain with the Reserve Bank of India as a percentage of their net demand and time liabilities (NDTL) has been maintained at 6%.

Guidance is now biased towards growth if inflation continues on its projected downward trajectory; this indicates that if inflation threats are not further heightened, the RBI may start reversing its rate cycle after 13 consecutive increases in the policy rates, which have risen by 375 basis points since March 2010.


Thursday, December 15, 2011

RBI announces slew of measures to support the rupee

Business Line : Industry & Economy / Banking : To support rupee, RBI tightens forward contracts


Monday, December 5, 2011

India’s GDP Numbers Confirm Marked Slowdown

Indian economy expanded at its slowest pace in two years at 6.9% during the second quarter of fiscal 2011-12, compared with growth of 7.7% in Q1 of 2011-12 and 8.4% growth in Q2 of 2010-11. There was a significant downward revision in GDP growth rate of second quarter of 2010-11 from the earlier 8.9 per cent to 8.4 per cent. During the quarter, manufacturing sector growth slowed sharply to 2.7% in Q2 of 2011-12 compared with 7.8% for the previous year period. In Q1 of 2011-12, manufacturing sector grew at 7.2%.Agriculture growth also fell to 3.2% in Q2 of 2011-12 compared with 5.4% for the previous year period. It grew 3.9% during Q1 of 2011-12. Mining sector witnessed a drop of 2.9% during Q2 of 2011-12 compared with growth of 8% for the same period last year. It grew 1.8% during Q1 of 2011-12.Construction sector growth improved in Q2 of 2011-12 to 4.3% compared with 1.2% growth in previous quarter. However, Q2 growth was lower than 6.7% growth witnessed in last year period. Growth for electricity, gas and water supply registered a sharp rise of 9.8% in Q2 of 2011-12 compared with growth of 2.8% for the same period last year. It grew 7.9% during Q1 of 2011-12. Trade, hotels, transport and communication growth slowed to 9.9% in Q2 of 2011-12 compared with growth of 10.2% for the same period last year. It grew 12.8% during Q1 of 2011-12. Financing, real estates and business services growth improved in Q2 of 2011-12 to 10.5% compared with growth of 10% for the same period last year. It grew 9.1% during Q1 of 2011-12. Community, social and personal services growth improved in Q2 of 2011-12 to 6.6% compared with 5.6% growth in previous quarter. However, Q2 growth was lower than 7.9% growth witnessed in the similar period of last year.

Private final consumption expenditure (PFCE) at current prices was estimated at Rs. 12,436.81 billion in Q2 of 2011-12 as against Rs. 10,712.21 billion in Q2 of 2010-11. Government final consumption expenditure (GFCE) at current prices was estimated at Rs. 2,223.56 billion in Q2 of 2011-12 as against Rs. 1,964.98 billion in Q2 of 2010-11. Gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) at current prices was estimated at Rs. 5,842.36 billion in Q2 of 2011-12 as against Rs. 5,456.60 billion in Q2 of 2010-11. The slowdown in private consumption is worrying; as India’s growth is driven by domestic consumption if this shows signs of coming off, then fear of a protracted slowdown may become real. PFCF (at constant prices) grew at 5.9 per cent in Q2, compared to 8.9 per cent in the similar quarter of last year. What is also surprising is the fact that, while export growth has held up well despite the deteriorating global economic scenario, import growth has halved in the second quarter to 10.9 per cent compared with 23.6 per cent recorded in the previous quarter.

The GDP figures are a vindication of the weakness already apparent in the industrial sectors, according to the Confederation of Indian Industry; industrialists have been dealt the double whammy of a gloomy external scenario and increasing borrowing costs at home. Output growth in eight core industries, including steel, cement and coal, , with more than one-third weight in the Index of Industrial Production, dropped to near-zero in October, a sharp decline from 7.2% a year ago, signaling the possibility of a sharp deceleration in industrial growth. The uncertain global outlook has led to the shelving of several projects, while tougher credit conditions have eroded corporate profits mainly through interest outgoes. The weakness in the Indian rupee, which touched a historic low of 52.73 against the dollar in November, has contributed to the woes of several importers and corporates; in 2011 so far the rupee has depreciated by 14.8 per cent against the US dollar. India’s headline inflation has remained above the 9 per cent mark for 11 consecutive months; businesses are finding it increasingly difficult to pass on price pressures to the consumer, without losing out on sales.

On the other hand, the fiscal deficit for the first seven months (April-October) of the current fiscal has already hit 75 per cent of targeted deficit for the entire year, according to data released by the Controller General of Accounts (CGA); the Centre has pegged the fiscal deficit target for 2011-12 at 4.6 per cent of GDP. With industrial output slowing down, not much growth is expected in advance tax collections and thus the possibility of a slippage in the fiscal deficit is not ruled out. The Finance Minister, however, has cautioned that too much emphasis on meeting the fiscal deficit target may hurt economic growth—a pointer that the government may refrain from any aggressive tightening on the expenditure front in a falling growth scenario. Central banks across the globe have turned dovish as growth has stalled; even the central bank of China has decided to lower the reserve requirement ratio (RRR or the amount of cash that lenders must set aside as reserves) at China’s financial institutions by 0.5 per cent in order to ease credit crunch that is stalling growth. The RBI has already indicated a neutral bias unless the inflation situation spins out of control.

Have a closer look at the GDP figures and more data in our forthcoming monthly statistical bulletin—E-UpDates.