Tag: india economy

  • Uptick in financial exercise expenses up energy consumption

    The nation’s energy consumption recorded at 4.5 per cent rise in December at 110.34 billion models (BU), over the year-ago month, as per Power Ministry information. In December 2020, consumption was 105.62 BU, in opposition to 101.08 BU in December 2019.
    Experts are of the view that energy consumption in addition to demand has grown at a gentle tempo in December with enchancment in financial actions throughout the nation.
    However, they expressed issues over rising circumstances of COVID-19 within the nation which can compel states to impose native lockdown restrictions, which will have an effect on industrial and industrial energy demand in addition to consumption as had occurred after the second wave hit the nation in April 2021.
    Peak energy demand met or highest provide in a day rose to 183.39 GW in December 2021 in comparison with 182.78 GW in December 2020 and 170.49 GW in December 2019.
    In November this 12 months, the facility consumption grew by 2.6 per cent to 99.37 BU. Last 12 months in November, energy consumption stood at 96.88 BU and in the identical month in 2019, it was at 93.94 BU.
    The nation’s energy consumption had grown by 3.3 per cent in October this 12 months to 112.79 BU, in comparison with 109.17 BU in the identical month final 12 months.

    Many states had imposed lockdown restrictions after the second wave of the pandemic hit the nation in April this 12 months and affected the restoration in industrial and industrial energy demand as states began imposing restrictions within the latter a part of the month. Curbs had been progressively lifted because the variety of COVID circumstances fell.
    Power consumption witnessed 6.6 per cent year-on-year development in May this 12 months at 108.80 BU, regardless of a low base of 102.08 BU in the identical month of 2020.
    In June, it grew almost 9 per cent to 114.48 BU, in comparison with 105.08 BU in the identical month final 12 months. In July, it rose to 123.72 BU from 112.14 BU in the identical month a 12 months in the past.
    WITH PTI

  • Navratri to Diwali: Credit stream this festive season hit a four-year excessive

    SIGNALLING a revival in client sentiment on the again of an uptick in financial exercise and brisk vaccination throughout the nation, the incremental credit score disbursement through the festive season this yr surpassed credit score disbursement seen within the final three years.
    According to RBI knowledge, credit score disbursement within the two fortnights from October 8 to November 5, 2021 — this covers Navratri, Dussehra and Diwali — amounted to Rs 150,278 crore, considerably larger than that in 2020, when it amounted to Rs 81,361 crore within the two fortnights protecting Diwali and Dussehra.
    Indeed, credit score disbursement this yr was even larger than within the two corresponding pre-pandemic competition fortnights of 2018 and 2019 when it amounted to Rs 118,050 crore and Rs 70,799 crore respectively.
    During the Diwali fortnight ending November 5, 2021, credit score offtake jumped by Rs 118,951 crore to Rs 111.63 lakh crore. Diwali credit score demand boosted the general credit score development by 7.1 per cent. When in comparison with this, the Diwali fortnight ended November 20, 2020, witnessed simply Rs 15,279 crore credit score demand. In 2018 and 2019, within the Diwali fortnight, that stood at Rs 77,350 crore and Rs 49,154 crore respectively.
    What has fuelled this development is the decline in Covid instances from September this yr. With the anticipated third wave remaining muted, companies opened, and lockdown curbs have been lifted throughout the nation. Simultaneously, pent-up demand additionally rose sharply, resulting in extra footfalls in malls and markets.

    According to digital cost agency PayU, cost by bank cards noticed a 66 per cent improve in spends and 30 per cent improve in variety of transactions. However, cost by debit playing cards noticed a decline as each spends and variety of transactions decreased by 13 per cent and 18 per cent respectively. UPI was the subsequent hottest mode of cost and witnessed 104 per cent improve in complete spends and 72 per cent improve in complete variety of transactions.

    Experts say the bounce in credit score this festive season is a results of each low-interest fee situation and rise in client sentiment.
    Festive season 2021 was distinctive in a number of methods. After conservative sentiments following the brutal second wave, companies and shoppers confirmed a extra sturdy and optimistic consumption surroundings. “Online shopping festivals organized by leading e-retailers, positive recovery in markets, and relaxed guidelines on travel and public events spurred digital payments across key sectors. Also, what we are seeing across categories is greater confidence in spending large amounts which is a great sign for the economy and takes us closer to becoming Digital India,” stated Hemang Dattani, Head, Data Intelligence, PayU.
    In festive season 2021, common spends have elevated by 52 per cent. Travel and hospitality noticed a rise of 105 per cent within the variety of customers transacting in festive season 2021 in comparison with final yr. This could possibly be attributed to rest of journey norms and optimistic affect of mass vaccination. This festive season, complete spends and complete variety of transactions in journey grew by 61 per cent and 67 per cent respectively, in comparison with festive season 2020. For airways, complete spends elevated by 109 per cent, Dattani stated.

    With the financial system on the comeback path and the house shopping for market anticipated to stage a development within the forthcoming competition season, banks began the race to woo residence mortgage prospects with rate of interest cuts in September forward of the competition season.
    Although RBI stored coverage charges unchanged at 4 per cent within the final seven evaluate conferences, banks led by State Bank of India, Kotak Mahindra, PNB and others slashed the house mortgage charges. “The sector is further poised for even better growth which is evident by the property registration at just the start of the November first week. We are distinctively in a much better place owing to the proactive measures taken by the government like the recent robust vaccination programme crossing the billion-mark, home loan interest rates offered by the banks as low as 6.5 per cent and the festive offers leading to a rise in demand for the housing sales,” stated Rohit Poddar, Managing Director, Poddar Housing and Development Ltd.

  • India’s GDP prone to develop 8.1% in Q2 FY22: SBI report

    The nation’s GDP progress is prone to be round 8.1 per cent within the second quarter of the present monetary 12 months and within the vary of 9.3-9.6 per cent throughout fiscal 2022, in accordance with an SBI analysis report.
    In the primary quarter of FY 22, the economic system grew 20.1 per cent. For the fiscal 2022, RBI has estimated actual GDP progress to be at 9.5 per cent — 7.9 per cent in Q2, 6.8 per cent in Q3 and 6.1 per cent in This fall.
    “As per SBI’s Nowcasting Model, the forecasted GDP growth for Q2 FY22 would be 8.1 per cent, with an upward bias. The full year (FY22) GDP growth is now revised upwards to 9.3-9.6 per cent from our earlier estimate of 8.5-9 per cent,” the analysis report, Ecowrap, mentioned.
    The projected 8.1 per cent progress charge in Q2 FY22 is the very best progress throughout all economies, it mentioned.
    The common GDP progress of 28 chosen economies has decelerated to 4.5 per cent in Q3 (2021) as towards 12.1 per cent.
    Also at an annual charge of 9.3-9.6 per cent, the nation’s actual GDP progress would now be 1.5-1.7 per cent increased than the pre-pandemic degree of FY20.
    On November 19, Prime Minister Narendra Modi introduced the federal government will repeal the three farm legal guidelines. He additionally mentioned {that a} committee can be set as much as determine on issues, together with promotion of zero budgeting farming, scientifically change the crop sample protecting in thoughts the altering necessities of the nation and make MSP (Minimum Support Price) more practical and clear.
    The report additionally mentioned that 5 agricultural reforms that would act as enablers even with out these payments.
    “First, instead of MSP as a price guarantee that farmers are demanding, the government could insert a quantity guarantee clause for a minimum period of five years that procurement to production percentage of crops (being currently procured) should at least be equal to last year percentage,” the report mentioned.
    It additionally advised exploring changing the MSP to Floor Price of public sale on the National Agriculture Market (eNAM).Further, the report mentioned that efforts should proceed to strengthen APMC market infrastructure and set up a contract farming establishment in India that can have the unique proper to supervise value discovery in contract farming.It additionally proposed guaranteeing a symmetric procurement throughout states.

  • Fitch retains ranking with damaging outlook on ‘higher debt levels’

    Fitch Ratings on Tuesday affirmed India’s sovereign ranking at ‘BBB-’ with a damaging outlook, arguing that the ranking motion balances a still-strong medium-term progress outlook and exterior resilience towards excessive public debt and a weak monetary sector.
    Even as greater debt ranges pose constraints, India’s robust medium-term progress outlook relative to friends is a key supporting issue for the ranking, it mentioned.
    “The medium-term debt trajectory remains core to our rating assessment, as higher debt levels constrain the government’s ability to respond to shocks and could lead to a crowding out of financing for the private sector, in our view. General government debt rose to 89.6% of GDP in FY21, the highest of ‘BBB’ emerging-market sovereigns. We forecast the ratio to decline slightly to 89.0%, still well above the 60.3% ‘BBB’ median in 2021,” the ranking company mentioned in its evaluation.
    Risks related to India’s excessive public debt are partly offset by the flexibility to finance its deficits domestically, which is a energy relative to most ‘BBB’ friends, as international foreign money authorities debt includes solely 6 per cent of complete debt towards BBB friends median fee of 33 per cent, it mentioned. The authorities has additionally made headway on the nation’s potential inclusion in world bond indices, which might be constructive from a credit score perspective, as it might open up various sources of financing.

    “We forecast robust GDP growth of 8.7 per cent in the fiscal year ending March 2022 (FY22) and 10 per cent in FY23 (ending March 2023), supported by the resilience of India’s economy, which has facilitated a swift cyclical recovery from the Delta Covid-19 variant wave in 2Q21,” Fitch mentioned.
    Last month, Moody’s Investors Service had affirmed India’s sovereign ranking and upgraded its outlook to ‘stable’, from ‘negative’ citing receding draw back dangers to financial system and monetary system.

  • Stocks soar in India, luring traders at residence and overseas

    Until the pandemic, India’s inventory market was like one other world that Dilip Kumar by no means had a cause to go to. But like so many different folks all over the world who had been caught at residence, he started to see it because the place to be.
    Kumar, a proposal administrator at an engineering firm in New Delhi, arrange a free inventory buying and selling account by way of Zerodha, India’s largest on-line brokerage agency. He plowed a few of his financial savings into Indian Railways in addition to a clothes retailer and a cinema chain.
    “I invested in all the things I was using daily,” he stated. Since then, he’s gotten “a big return in quick time” — greater than doubling his cash in just a little over a 12 months.
    Plenty of others need in on the motion.

    India’s booming inventory market is drawing each native novices and world traders to shares of the monetary, industrial and expertise firms that dominate its listings. The MSCI India index is up about 30% this 12 months — practically twice the return of the worldwide index — whereas India’s benchmark 30-share S&P BSE Sensex is up roughly 25%. Both have notched a seemingly relentless string of document highs, hovering on elements together with easy demographics, governmental and financial coverage and geopolitical modifications.
    The enthusiasm is evident from the preliminary public providing this week for the father or mother firm of Paytm, the digital funds platform. The firm hit its goal of elevating $2.5 billion — making the providing the largest within the nation’s historical past and valuing the corporate at greater than $20 billion. The providing underscored the momentum of the monetary and tech sectors in a rustic with a predominantly younger inhabitants embracing digital startups.
    At the identical time, the federal government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi is making an attempt to make India extra self-reliant, a boon to home companies providing on a regular basis items and providers, whereas making an attempt to deliver extra residents — and their cash — into the formal financial system. And this spring, the Indian central financial institution launched into a bond-buying program that’s a smaller model of the type that has lifted shares all over the world.
    Combine these elements and it’s a recipe for a retail investor growth: According to the Securities and Exchange Board of India, new securities-holding accounts have risen to an all-time excessive.
    “There is pent-up demand among the upper middle class, who have been rushing to the market,” stated Jiban Mukhopadhyay, a company economics professor emeritus on the SP Jain Institute of Management and Research.

    Their confidence has been buoyed by the large stakes that institutional traders abroad are taking in firms which have gone public this 12 months. Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund, the Texas lecturers’ pension fund and the University of Cambridge have invested a complete of greater than $1 billion in Paytm.
    One cause: Foreign traders have currently soured on China, lengthy the vacation spot for these searching for highflying returns, as progress there slows and a strong central authorities cracks down on massive tech firms.
    “India really stands out this year, with China decelerating,” stated Todd McClone, a portfolio supervisor at William Blair’s Emerging Markets Growth Fund.
    His fund sharply minimize its allocation to China, shifting a lot of that cash into Indian shares together with the conglomerate Reliance Industries, the paint producer Asian Paints and the specialty chemical firm SRF.
    “With accelerating growth, lots of good companies and all the demographics that stand behind it, I think it gave people a lot of confidence to come back to that market,” he stated.
    It stays to be seen how sustainable the rally can be. Emerging markets like India can usually be on the mercy of choices made by traders on the opposite facet of the globe. Oil costs are surging, which is a selected problem for India, a serious importer.
    Economists additionally level to an uneven restoration from the pandemic that has pushed many Indians again into poverty. The financial system plunged 21% throughout India’s first lockdown, the small and mid-size companies that make use of most of India’s workforce proceed to falter, and the federal government is spending billions of {dollars} to mop up banks’ rising variety of dangerous loans.

    But traders stay optimistic: Wall Street analysts anticipate Indian firms to extend their earnings greater than 22% over the subsequent 12 months — calculated in {dollars} — a sooner tempo of progress than benchmark indexes in both China or the United States.
    “Stock prices follow earnings, and Indian corporates have the strongest fundamental momentum,” stated Brian Freiwald, an emerging-market portfolio supervisor at Putnam Investments in Boston.
    Part of the rationale for the Indian market’s fast ascent could be traced to 2016 and a coverage of demonetisation. Meant to tamp down cash laundering, the coverage banned essentially the most broadly circulated forex notes and worn out the financial savings of households and small companies in a single day. But it additionally bolstered firms like Paytm, a sector that benefited additional because the pandemic disrupted face-to-face transactions.
    Adding to the momentum are market-friendly measures delivered by Indian policymakers. In February, Modi’s authorities proposed a price range that referred to as for extra spending on well being care and infrastructure. Then, two months later, the Reserve Bank of India started the identical type of quantitative easing packages that the Federal Reserve and different central banks instituted to help their home economies. Although it began its bond-buying program greater than a 12 months after the Fed’s started, India loved an analogous stock-market response: Shares took off.
    For world traders, it was a stark distinction to what was occurring in China, which had already loved a fast restoration from its pandemic shutdowns. Chinese policymakers started withdrawing a few of their help for the financial system early this 12 months. Growth started to sluggish — it was down to simply 4.9% within the third quarter — placing strain on debt-laden companies that depend on constantly quick progress to pay their collectors. At the identical time, the Chinese authorities, underneath the more and more centralised energy of President Xi Jinping, has begun to rein in among the nation’s most outstanding tech firms.
    It has been an unappealing backdrop for traders, and Chinese markets have posted among the worst returns on the planet this 12 months.
    “India tends to do well when there’s an issue in China,” stated Divya Mathur, an emerging-market portfolio supervisor on the cash administration agency Martin Currie in Edinburgh.
    As fast because the Indian market’s good points have been, they continue to be fragile, specialists stated.
    Emerging markets like India can whipsaw as world traders who poured in cash can pull it out shortly, significantly when central banks increase rates of interest and appeal to investor capital. India was slammed by such a scenario in 2013: When the Federal Reserve started to step again from low-interest fee insurance policies after the 2008 monetary disaster, traders pulled their cash from India. Its forex, the rupee, plunged to a brand new low in opposition to the greenback and pushed the nation to the brink of a monetary disaster.
    There are additionally basic demographic challenges forward. The younger individuals who have helped pace the nation’s embrace of recent applied sciences will put strain on the federal government to maintain up the fast financial enlargement. Over 1 / 4 of India’s inhabitants — greater than 360 million folks — are youthful than 15, in accordance with the World Bank.
    “As this young population comes of age, can India provide enough job opportunities?” requested Ajay Krishnan, a portfolio supervisor who specialises in rising markets at Wasatch Global Investors in Salt Lake City.
    The pandemic additionally stays a risk: Roughly 1 / 4 of India’s inhabitants is totally vaccinated, leaving it susceptible to a different surge in instances that might trigger extra financial injury and push extra residents into poverty.
    Mukhopadhyay, the economics professor, stated these dynamics are an indication that market returns aren’t an indicator of broader prosperity.
    “The Indian stock market behaves like a pampered kid,” he stated. “It has hardly any relationship with the movement of the economy.”
    This article initially appeared in The New York Times.

  • RBI’s ‘State of the Economy’ report: ‘Manufacturing activity gradually turning around’

    With unlocks and vaccination drive gaining momentum, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) stated the manufacturing exercise is “gradually turning around, while contraction in services has moderated”.
    Reaffirming the traction that the financial system is gaining, the central financial institution stated, “The course of the economy over the month-and-a-half gone by has been altered by the slow retreat of the second Covid wave.”
    Aggregate demand circumstances are buoyed by the discharge of pent-up demand put up unlock, whereas the provision scenario is enhancing with monsoon catching as much as its regular ranges and sowing exercise gaining tempo, it stated in “State of the Economy” report.

    Spurred by snug liquidity circumstances, monetary circumstances keep benign and supportive of the restoration, it stated. “Aggregate demand conditions are buoyed by pent-up demand released by unlocks and vaccination. E-way bill collections rose to their highest level in the last four months,” the report stated.

    According to the report, yet one more signal of revitalisation of the financial system is the way through which Corporate India has confronted the second wave of the pandemic relative to the primary one. “1,427 listed non-financial companies have declared their earnings results so far and they account for 86.8 per cent of the market capitalisation of all listed nonfinancial companies in India,” it stated.
    So far, inflation is on monitor to staying inside the trajectory envisaged and it’s prone to stabilise throughout the remainder of the 12 months, it stated.

  • ‘Economic recovery picking up; 3rd wave to have lower impact’

    The third Covid wave is unlikely to be as devastating as the second, because the nation’s vaccination drive gathers velocity, however there’s a want to stay guarded in opposition to the virus, the Finance Ministry stated on Tuesday in its Monthly Economic Report for July. The receding of the second wave, together with speedy progress in vaccination, has set the stage to additional speed up financial restoration, it stated.
    With the second wave abating in most elements of the nation and states lifting restrictions in phases, there are seen indicators of financial rejuvenation because the second half of May, it stated. This resonates with the financial influence of the second wave anticipated to be muted.
    “India’s vaccination drive continues to gather speed and breadth with the number of days taken to achieve an additional 10 crore doses reducing significantly from 86 days during the initial phase to 20 days now … the IIT-Kanpur SUTRA model predicts that the third wave is unlikely to be as devastating as the second one with infections and hospitalisations expected to be much lower than that in the second wave,” the Ministry stated.
    Noting that inflation has remained above the band of 6 per cent in May and June, the report stated these pressures are more likely to smoothen out within the coming months, with easing of restrictions, progress of southwest monsoon, and up to date supply-side coverage interventions in pulses and oilseeds market. While systemic liquidity continued to stay in surplus in July, a decline in development of money in circulation mirrored a shift away from Covid-induced precautionary financial savings.
    Financial markets demonstrated buoyancy within the month, with post-second wave revival seen in mutual funds, company bonds and insurance coverage markets, and volatility in fairness markets persevering with its downward trajectory. However, G-sec yield curve steepened mildly owing to inflation pressures, it stated.

    “In sum, as 85 per cent of the most vulnerable 45+ (age) population has developed immunity against severe illness due to Covid, the impact of subsequent waves on hospitalisations and deaths may be limited even though these waves may cause increase in infections. The attention must therefore now be directed to similarly enhancing immunity among the children and adults in the 18-44 age groups,” it stated.
    “Delta variant accounted for nearly 8 of every 10 cases of Covid disease in India from May to July. This resurgence is a reminder of how critical it is to continue maintaining the guard against an unpredictable virus,” it stated.

  • ADB lowers India’s financial development forecast for this fiscal to 10 per cent

    The Asian Development Bank has downgraded India’s financial development forecast for the present monetary yr to 10 per cent on Tuesday, from 11 per cent projected in April, on account of the adversarial affect of the coronavirus pandemic.
    India’s GDP development recovered to 1.6 per cent within the final quarter of fiscal yr ended March 2021, narrowing contraction in the entire fiscal yr from 8 per cent estimated in April to a revised 7.3 per cent, the multilateral funding company mentioned within the Asian Development Outlook (ADO) Supplement.
    “Then a second wave of the pandemic induced many state governments to impose strict containment measures. New COVID-19 instances each day peaked at greater than 4,00,000 in early May, then fell to slightly over 40,000 in early July.
    “Early indicators show economic activity resuming quickly after containment measures eased. The growth projection for FY2021 (ending March 2022), downgraded from 11 per cent in ADO 2021 to 10 per cent, reflects large base effects,” it mentioned.

    The ADO was launched in April.
    The projection for FY2022 (ending in March 2023), by which era a lot of India’s inhabitants is predicted to be vaccinated, is upgraded from 7 per cent to 7.5 per cent as financial exercise normalises, mentioned the Manila-headquartered funding company.
    With regard to China, the ADB complement mentioned the growth within the People’s Republic of China continues to be projected at 8.1 per cent in 2021, and 5.5 per cent in 2022, as favorable home and exterior developments align with April forecasts.
    On South Asia, ADB mentioned the financial outlook for the subregion is dampened by new waves of COVID-19 hitting the subregion from March to June 2021.
    The adversarial financial affect of those new waves is predicted to be restricted, with companies and shoppers higher capable of adapt to the pandemic and containment measures now than they had been a yr in the past, it mentioned.
    “The GDP growth forecast for the subregion in 2021 is downgraded from 9.5 per cent in ADO 2021 to 8.9 per cent but upgraded for 2022, from 6.6 per cent to 7 per cent,” ADB mentioned within the complement.

    Recovery is beneath approach in growing Asia, however with the expansion projection for this yr revised down barely from 7.3 per cent within the Asian Development Outlook 2021 in April, to 7.2 per cent following renewed virus outbreaks in some economies.
    The projection (growing Asia) for 2022 is upgraded from 5.3 per cent to five.4 per cent, it added.

  • S&P affirms ‘BBB-’ score; ‘outlook stable’

    S&P affirms ‘BBB-’ score; ‘outlook stable’

  • Chidambaram targets Modi govt on value rise: Inflation gained’t disappear if you happen to fake it doesn’t exist

    Congress chief and former Finance minister P Chidambaram Tuesday hit out on the Narendra Modi-led authorities over the rise in costs of petrol, LPG and pulses, asserting that the Congress Party will elevate the difficulty of inflation within the upcoming Monsoon Session of Parliament.
    Accusing the Centre of ‘pretending’ that value rise is a ‘false concern’, Chidambaram expressed fear over the excessive fee of unemployment and wage cuts within the nation. “In such a situation of widespread distress, inflation has broken the back of the people, and we hold the central government under Narendra Modi directly responsible for the high inflation,” he stated.
    Chidambaram demanded a discount in gasoline costs and GST charges, and a evaluate of the import duties to cut back the “crushing burden of high inflation.”

    “Despite stout opposition, the government has continually increased the prices of petrol, diesel and LPG,” he stated, including that the worth of petrol had reached over Rs 100 in Mumbai and Delhi, whereas the worth of LPG is at Rs 835 per cylinder in Delhi and Rs 933 per cylinder in Patna. “None of these prices is justified by the price of crude oil which is around $75 a barrel. When crude oil price was $125, the UPA government was able to provide petrol at Rs 65 per litre and diesel at Rs 44 per litre,” Chidambaram stated.
    He blamed the cesses levied by the central authorities for the “exorbitant prices”, stating that it collects almost Rs 4.2 lakh crore yearly by means of them and “keeps all that money to itself.”
    Chidambaram went on to criticise the Modi authorities for growing import duties on a number of items, regardless of a “downward trend in the value of the rupee.” He additionally known as the Goods and Services Tax (GST) “a regressive tax” with “irrational” charges.

    Referring to NSO knowledge, Chidambaram stated the buyer value inflation has reached 6.26 per cent, which is above the higher restrict of inflation goal set by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

    “Will the government please tell the people what they should eat, how they should light their homes and how they should go to work?” Chidambaram requested. He added that the inflation was not attributable to an increase in demand or liquidity, however because of “the wrong policies of the government and its inept management of the economy.” “Let me caution the government: the issue of high inflation will not go away if you pretend it does not exist,” he concluded.