Knowledge@Wharton

Reading the Future of India's Economy

05/02/08 - 04:03 PM EDT


Reliance Industries, India's biggest company by market capitalization market-capitalization, on April 21 announced its fourth quarter and annual results. The company reported a net profit (excluding exceptional items) of Rs.15,261 crore ($3.8 billion) on annual revenues of Rs. 139,269 crore ($34.4 billion). "Reliance beats Street estimates," said Thomson Financial News. "Reliance misses estimates," said Bloomberg.

Estimates can, of course, vary. But, at a time when nobody seems to know how to read the future of India's economy, such mismatched interpretations of corporate performance just add to the confusion. "The market has decoupled from reality," says Nandan Chakraborty, head of research at financial services provider Enam.

It seemed so simple a few months ago when the BSE (Bombay Stock Exchange) sensitive index (Sensex) touched an all-time high of 21,207 on 10 January. Finance minister P. Chidambaram spoke optimistically about a 9% rate of GDP gross-domestic-product-gdp growth. Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Y.V. Reddy was reported to be considering an interest rate cut to boost investment. And stock analysts were gung-ho about the so-called decoupling theory: How the stock markets in rapidly-growing economies like India and China would be unaffected by the impending recession in the U.S.

China Watch: India vs. China

Today the Indian markets have crashed. The first quarter of calendar 2008 was the worst since 1992. Market indices have fallen 28% in dollar terms. Some stocks are down more than 50%.

Now opinions vary widely on GDP growth in 2008-09. The Delhi-based Oxus Research & Investments is perhaps the most optimistic; it toes the Chidambaram line of "9% is still possible." Deutsche Bank DB estimates it at 8.4% and UBS 8.2%. Occupying the middle ground are the Asian Development Bank (8.0%), the International Monetary Fund (7.9%, for calendar 2008) and Lehman Brothers LEH (7.6%). Bringing up the rear are HSBC HBC, JP Morgan Chase JPM and Morgan Stanley MS (all 7%). Meanwhile, rating agency Crisil (a Standard & Poor's company) has reduced its estimate to 8.1% from its earlier forecast of 8.5%.

Raising Interest Rates

Chidambaram, too, has tempered his GDP growth estimates. "The choice is clear," he told the Indian Merchants' Chamber at the end of March. "If we want to check inflation inflation, we must be prepared for a slightly lower rate of growth... If the RBI decides to raise the CRR (cash reserve ratio) and interest rates to counter inflationary trends, it would certainly affect the rate of GDP growth."

The RBI has already raised the CRR, the percentage of their deposits banks must park with the central bank, from 7.5% to 8%. This will be done in two phases by May 10. In its credit policy statement of 29 April, the RBI left interest rates unchanged. However, it raised CRR by another 0.25%. Banks will have to maintain a CRR of 8.25% from May 24.

The acknowledged villain of the piece is, of course, inflation. The RBI, which says that its prime mandate is to contain rising prices, had earlier indicated that its comfort zone was 4.5% to 5%. Over the past few weeks, the numbers have risen way past that limit. In January 2008, the wholesale price index inflation was 3.8%. By March 29, it had risen to 7.41%. It then dropped to 7.1% for the week ending April 5 but rose again to 7.33% the following week. No one expects prices to go down any time soon. According to a recent survey by global management consultants McKinsey & Co, 64% of the Indian executives polled believed that inflation would go up in the next six months.

"The most immediate concern at present is inflation," says Rajesh Chakrabarti, a professor of finance at the Hyderabad-based Indian School of Business (ISB). "There is no denying that inflation has gone up much more than what the government would have wanted. In recent years, the government has been very specific in saying that it wants to contain inflation to less than 5%, and now it has gone to 7%.

"The trouble with inflation management seems to be that the government will resist raising interest rates because the interest rate differential with the U.S. is already quite large and they wouldn't want to widen it further," Chakrabarti explains. "One of the things that the government is trying to do is put in price ceilings and quantitative controls, which have historically not worked, not just in India, but elsewhere also. These are difficult to administer. This is a 1970s-80s kind of solution. But one can understand the government's need to do this as they don't want to touch the monetary policy at this point in time because of foreign investments, etc. The government is constrained by what is called the impossible trinity of international finance (the perceived irreconcilability of the three objectives -- capital capital freedom, exchange rate maintenance and independence of monetary policy)."

The solutions that Chakrabarti is talking about are manifesting themselves everywhere. The government has been squabbling with cement and steel manufacturers, arm-twisting them to hold down prices. "It is my view that cement manufacturers and, to some extent, steel producers are behaving like a cartel," Chidambaram told Parliament in late April. "We are looking at the legal and administrative provisions that are available." Steel companies, on their part, point to rising input costs. An uneasy truce has been reached with manufacturers agreeing to hold prices for a couple of months. But this could break down if companies see themselves slipping into the red.

The government has taken several other steps, including various export bans and import duty cuts. Even the annual export-import policy was revised. For example, this year, what made headlines was a total ban on cement exports and the withdrawal of all incentives on the export of primary steel. The export target for 2008-09 has been increased to $200 billion -- an increase of 23% over the $155 billion achieved in 2007-08. This was short of the $160 billion target for the year.

Increase in steel and cement prices leads to pressure on user industries. Two-wheeler manufacturer Hero Honda has announced a price hike. Car manufacturers are being forced to the wall. And the Tata group's TTM Rs. 100,000 ($2,500) Nano, the inexpensive car due to roll off the assembly lines soon, may be impossible to manufacture at such a low price.

Soaring Food Prices

But this is not where the crisis is most acute. The price increases that hurt, especially in an election year, are those of food grains. "Another big concern is that in India and also globally there seems to be somewhat unbalanced growth (in the composition of the growth itself)," says Chakrabarti of ISB. "This seems to put pressure on food prices internationally. Food exports are also being limited, and Vietnam and other countries are not exporting as much rice as they did in the past. Given India's income distribution and poverty levels, rising food prices are of particular concern here. Food prices going up will mean a significant reduction in the standard of living for a very large part of the population. Normally, the stopgap arrangement has been through imports. But this time it will not be so easy because the rising food prices seem to be global."

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