Sunday 30 June 2013

Double Trouble

To maintain forex stability at the time of QE withdrawal and maturation of external debt is going to be a tough call for Government.

Reserve Bank of India recently reported that India’s external debt i.e. loans borrowed from foreign lenders has reached to as much as 21.2% of the GDP ($390bn) as of March end. The news has come in the backdrop of depreciating rupee which has already crossed the psychological 60 due to dearth of dollars in the country and might even go up given the series of internal and external structural challenges. Though the recent Current Account Deficit data standing at 3.6% of GDP for Jan-Mar quarter as compared to 6.7% of the previous quarter has rekindled the hope of strengthening rupee but rising external debt and their soon-to-come maturation period certainly spills water on this hope as repayment of these debts has to be made in dollars, thus causing upward pressure on rupee.

External debt mainly consists of External Commercial Borrowings (ECBs), NRI deposits and short-term credit. Worryingly, the share of short-term debt stands at 44.2% of the total debt which has to be repaid in the next one year. By the same time American Federal Reserve will also be tapering off quantitative easing (QE) as announced by Fed Chief Ben Bernanke few days ago. During American recession, under its QE policy, Fed was pumping $85 bn dollars in the economy on monthly basis which is going to be rolled back as American economy is back on the recovery path. India being the biggest beneficiary of American QE will now turn out to be the biggest loser as its major source of capital inflows i.e. Foreign Institutional Investment (FII) is likely to be ended by mid 2014. In fact, impact of this announcement is already palpable given the free fall of rupee for the past few weeks as many foreign investors have been selling out their bonds and stocks from Indian market. To maintain forex stability at the time of QE withdrawal and maturation of external debt is going to be a tough call for Government.

While Govt. has no say in decreasing or increasing FIIs inflow but it must try to control external borrowings. Cheaper foreign money prompts India Inc to borrow funds from other countries while lending rates in India are skyrocketing with no sign of coming down due to high inflation. Although external borrowings has a positive side too as it stimulates dollar inflow in the economy but relying on ECBs, short-term credit or NRI deposits etc. for forex stability is dangerous due to its being highly volatile. Now that the value of rupee against dollar has been sharply falling, it might lead Indian companies to pay their foreign debts sooner than later as their repayment amount in dollar terms is piling up due to exchange rate vulnerability towards rupee. Their dollar-demand for repayment will further cause rupee to weaken against dollar. Considering this, RBI along with Finance Ministry would better adopt measures to maintain internal stability rather than becoming victim to external sector vulnerability. Yet RBI recently eased ECB norms in order to attract dollar-inflows. It can be temporarily acceptable for short-term boost to rupee but certainly not a viable option given the risk factor associated with it.

India’s heavy dependence on imports is the root cause of its weak currency which is also the bedrock of rising inflation i.e. the prime cause of economic slowdown. India stands at fifth position among countries having largest coal reserves yet it is one of the biggest importer of coal due to poor coal-mining in the country. Also more than 80% of India’s oil demand is met via imports. It is also the biggest importer of gold which had raised India’s CAD to unprecedented level. However, gold import could be curbed by bumping up import duty on the same but it is difficult to divert people’s attention from this yellow metal for its being a sure hedge against inflation. Stringent measures have to be taken by Finance Ministry and RBI to mitigate India’s heavy reliance on imports as direct and indirect impact of rising commodity prices and services chargers not only surge inflation but also raise production cost thus making export products costlier leading India to lose in competitive export market from other countries offering cheaper products.

India is stuck in a gruesome vicious cycle. Solution of one problem works as the catalyst for another. In this backdrop, finding a balanced solution and thus shifting to virtuous cycle is a herculean task for Government. Tough times for Indian economy and the lesson must be learnt that heavy dependence on precarious global economy while being in throes of weak domestic economy is not prudent. A robust, domestically sustained economy can only bear the brunt of sudden emergence of internal and external turbulence.


Sunday 9 June 2013

Glittery Gold Jittery Government

Instead of cynically hiking import duty, Govt. would do well if it paves way for either virtual trading of gold or it should launch gold-indexed bonds instead of inflation indexed bonds.

Unmindful of its earlier failed efforts of controlling gold-import and discouraging its demand, Govt. once again resorted to the same trick by ratcheting up gold import duty to 8% from 6% (fourth hike within two years) disregarding the speculative undertone it might generate. Reserve Bank of India (RBI), in the vein of Govt., levied more stringent restrictions on banks to import gold and provide loans to public. Given the ballooning Current Account Deficit and badly depreciating rupee against dollar, curbing gold purchase seems the only viable step to Govt. to tame the imbalance of payment but it is highly unlikely if it would discourage the people to invest in gold as its being the safe and lucrative haven is a widely popular notion in the country challenging which is a tough nut to crack.

The unprecedented fall in gold prices in the month of April somewhat provided sense of relief to Government but unfortunately the impact of price-fall substantially got counterbalanced by surge in demand due to wedding and festival season in the country with gold imports touching 162 tonnes in May. Rising gold imports also pushed the trade deficit to $17.7 billion in April. Further trouble befell with the consistent depreciation of rupee which has now surpassed 57 against dollar bricking the prospect of even more widening CAD leading to even higher inflation which is already at an intolerant level.

It is in this backdrop that the Govt. has hiked gold import duty and RBI asked banks and nominated agencies to not import gold on a consignment basis for domestic use. Also, RBI disallowed import of gold on credit and advised banks to dissuade people from parking their savings in this glittery metal. Co-operative banks have been told to only lend against gold ornaments, gold jewellery and gold coins weighing up to 50 grams, amount of which must be within the Board approved limit. Though these measures might serve the purpose of Govt. in the shorter term but considering the fact that steps of similar kind have already been exercised earlier for no avail, it would not provide a medium term solution let alone long-term. The vicious cycle of yawning CAD, rising inflation, falling rupee and sputtering growth is the result of structural deficiencies but Govt. is hell-bent to put onus on Indian’s lure of Gold and fuel subsidies.

Considering the dearth of inflation-hedged investment options, Govt. has though launched the first tranche of Inflation Indexed Bonds but the fact that its coupon rate and principal amount are indexed against Wholesale Price Inflation (WPI) not Consumer Price Inflation (CPI), returns on these bonds would not be much profitable as its latter not former which directly affects the consumers. On the other hand Gold, despite its price-fall provides favourable return against rising inflation. Also, the ease of purchase, as against IIBs for which one has to go through the tedious system of opening bank accounts, filling up litany of forms, understanding complex formula etc, makes it handy and an obvious choice for investors over any other financial instruments.

Gold-frenzy is a global phenomenon. Only difference is that Government worldwide has channelled this frenzy into paper-based trading of Gold. Given this, instead of cynically hiking import duty, Govt. would do well if it paves way for either virtual trading of gold or it should launch gold-indexed bonds instead of IIBs. It is well past time to understand that it doesn’t matter how many hurdles or challenges being put up in the gold-game, Indians will bravely and enthusiastically sustain but would not give up till the end.



Sunday 2 June 2013

Rupee's Rout

Rupee meltdown has now become a structural problem and has put the country in a danger zone, coming out of which anytime soon is a herculean rather near-impossible task. 

Rupee-meltdown against dollar reached to its 10-month low this week, extinguishing every glimmer of economic-revival-hope emerging out of recent green shoots. In an import-driven country having skyrocketing inflation, rupee-depreciation brings multi-pronged negative outcomes with very little or no means to roll back to tolerant level of INR against USD. Recent GDP data, released by Central Statistical Organization, coming at a decade’s low of 5% for the last fiscal year i.e. 2012-13 has aggravated the disturbing repercussions of falling rupee denting the hope of Reserve Bank of India (RBI) going for policy rate cuts during its next monetary review. The current economic sentiment has led the rupee to fall in a vicious-cycle trap, coming out of which demands rigorous policy measures.


Though global factors like Eurozone recession, Euro weakness, monetary easing in Japan etc. , to some extent, led to rupee-deflation but failure at home to revive exports and to control its headlong inflation are primarily responsible why the value of rupee is going down. Immediate impact of this value-erosion resulted into petrol and diesel price rise by 75 paise and 50 paise respectively though global crude oil price is less than 100 Barrel. In the aftermath, inflation will certainly move upward which has been taking a downward route for last three months.

It is peculiar that 1.3 billion dollar has come to Indian shores via portfolio investment since the beginning of this calendar year yet the imports are rising unabatedly due to Indians’ lure of gold and oil import which results into ballooning Current Account Deficit and imbalance of payment.  Economy cannot rely on this so-called ‘hot money’ which can anytime be drawn out of the market. India requires huge amount of foreign capital which is invested in its core economy weeding out the prospect of capital flight. Foreign Direct Investment on sustained basis can very well serve the purpose. India has already allowed FDI in multi-brand retail and aviation yet attracting foreign investors is a pipe-dream given the domestic uncertainties like lowering growth, higher interest rates, policy-paralysis, archaic laws, political logjam and upcoming Lok-Sabha election etc. Also, global rating agency Standard and Poor’s retaining its negative outlook for India has added into the misery of beleaguered Government trying to impress foreign investors to invest in Indian Economy. Adequate foreign investment seems impossible in near future as domestic investors themselves are shying away from investing in India something which foreign investors will surely pay heed to.

Thus, if INR is perceived as a depreciating currency amidst high inflation and low growth, it will dry up Foreign Institutional Investment and Foreign Direct Investment at a time when India’s exports are not up to the required level and imports are rising with no sign of decrement, leading to severe balance of payment crisis. This currency meltdown has now become a structural problem and has put the country in a danger zone, coming out of which anytime soon is a herculean rather near-impossible task.