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Indian industrial output shrinks unexpectedly

NEW DELHI — India's industrial output shrank unexpectedly in March, official data on Friday showed, piling pressure on policymakers to act swiftly to bolster the economy and dispel deepening investor gloom.
Manufacturing, mining and electricity output in Asia's third-largest economy contracted by 3.5 percent in March from a year earlier, sending the Indian rupee falling to near life-time lows against the dollar.
"Growth risks have clearly gained prominence... industrial production fell flat on its nose," HSBC's chief India economist Leif Eskesen said.
The weak numbers could push the central bank to cut interest rates again soon, economists said, even though India's stubbornly high inflation remains a worry.
Manufacturing production shrank by 4.4 percent in March while output of capital goods such as factory equipment -- an important investment measure and portent of future activity -- contracted by 21 percent.
The weak numbers came as China's industrial growth slowed to 9.3 percent year-on-year in April, the lowest in nearly three years. The indicators from the emerging market giants undermined hopes they can help power a global recovery.
India's downturn has been fed by weakening domestic and international demand, especially from the crisis-hit euro zone, as well as investor concern about government policy paralysis and widespread corruption scandals.
For the financial year ending March 2012, industrial production expanded by just 2.8 percent, sharply below its 8.2 percent growth the previous year.
Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee voiced disappointment and conceded "investment recovery remains frail."
The central bank reduced borrowing costs in April for the first time in three years in a bid to spur growth but warned scope for more cuts is restrained by still strong inflation nudging seven percent.
However, "given the sharp fall in output growth and the dismal investment activity, the bank is likely to ease the policy rates further from June," said Arun Singh, economist at Dun & Bradstreet India.
The government has forecast 7.6-percent growth for this fiscal year, up from 6.9 percent last year, but economists' expectations are much lower.
"There is a near absolute belief of a sharp downgrade (by the government) in the estimated growth rate to between 6.5 percent to seven percent," Ajay Bodke, investment strategy head at Mumbai's Prabhudas Lilladher, said.
While such growth would be the envy of much of the world, experts say at least nine to 10 percent expansion is needed to reduce India's crushing poverty.
The economy grew by over nine percent for three years until 2007-08 and the government says it is confident of steering India back to a high growth path.
But the failure of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's government's to enact key reforms and regulatory flip-flops have deterred vital investment needed to boost growth.
Doubts are also mounting about India's ability to check a ballooning fiscal deficit amid populist subsidies to help the poor.
The worries have put further pressure on India's battered currency which fell by a fifth of a rupee following the output data to a near record low of 53.60 against the dollar.
The Bombay Stock Exchange's 30-stock Sensitive Index slid by nearly a percentage point to 16,292.98 points.
"A strong perception of policy paralysis has taken root among both local as well as foreign investors," Prabhudas Lilladher's Bodke told AFP. "A lot more needs to be done in terms of improving the economic environment."

AFP: Indian industrial output shrinks unexpectedly

In India, Slump in Production Puts Pressure on Rupee

MUMBAI — Indian industrial production unexpectedly contracted in March, according to government data released Friday, as weaker domestic demand and tumbling exports hurt the economy and undermined the central bank’s efforts to shore up a sliding rupee.

Production at factories, utilities and mines declined 3.5 percent from a year earlier, the Central Statistical Office said in a statement in New Delhi, compared with a 4.1 percent increase in February. Economists had predicted an increase of 1.7 percent.

The report may stoke concern that India’s outlook has worsened because of trade and fiscal deficits, political gridlock, inflation and the threat to global growth from the European debt crisis.

The risks have pushed the nation’s currency toward a record low, prompting the central bank, the Reserve Bank of India, to say Friday that exporters would have to convert half of their foreign currency earnings into rupees as the bank stepped up efforts to check the decline.

Manufacturing contracted 4.4 percent in March from a year earlier after a 3.9 percent advance in February, the data showed. Mining fell 1.3 percent, after a 2.7 percent gain the previous month. Electricity output rose 2.7 percent.

“The contraction in output data reconfirms weakening demand both domestically and externally,” said Radhika Rao, an economist in the Singapore office of Forecast, a financial market analysis company. “Even though growth is slowing, from the policy perspective, the focus will be more on inflation, especially due to the impact of the huge decline in the rupee on prices.”

The Indian currency has lost more than 16 percent of its value over the past year, the most among Asian currencies.

The central bank cut interest rates last month for the first time since 2009 to bolster spending at home. The bank cited price pressures from the fiscal deficit, energy costs and the weaker rupee.

“We are in a scenario where the tendency for interest rates is going to be downwards,” Subir Gokarn, a deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of India, said in Bangalore on Friday. “The pace and the magnitude is obviously going to be determined by how inflation goes, but the direction is now fairly evident.”


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/12/b...ump-in-production-puts-pressure-on-rupee.html
 
FDI in 2011-12 rises to a new high $46.8 billion​

As stock valuations dipped, overseas investors were eager to pick up stakes in Indian companies last fiscal. London-listed Vedanta acquired a controlling stake in Cairn India for $9 billion. British major BP paid $7.2 billion for a stake in oil and gas fields operated by Reliance Industries and Vodafone Group purchased partner Essar's shares in their telecom joint venture.

FDI inflows were less than $10 billion prior to 2005-06. They improved thereafter and the country received $34.8 billion in 2010-11.

Taking a detour

Mauritius chipped in with the maximum funds in 2011-12, putting in a third of the FDI. But its share declined from 36 per cent in 2010-11. In contrast, FDI from Singapore shot up almost three-fold and accounted for 17.8 per cent of all FDI inflows during the period. The fear that the tax authorities might take a closer look at funds flowing from Mauritius could have resulted in incremental flows being routed through Singapore.UK investments more than trebled and fund flows from Japan shot up by 83.6 per cent. FDI from the US declined by 16.5 per cent.


Which sectors?

In terms of sectors, services attracted the maximum investment this fiscal as per Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) data (April-February). However, in terms of growth, it was drugs and pharmaceuticals that saw the maximum jump, with an over 15-fold increase. In contrast, the automobile and housing and real estate sectors saw FDI decline. Investment in the petroleum sector jumped significantly too.

Portfolio flows lag

In contrast to the upbeat FDI sentiment, foreign institutional investor (FII) flows fell by around 43 per cent to $16.8 billion vis-à-vis the year-ago period. Investment in Indian Global Depository Receipts (GDRs) and American Depository Receipts (ADRs) also fell sharply to $597 million.

FDI in 2011-12 rises 34%, a new high:tup:
 
India March industrial output down an unexpected 3.5 pct, on weak investment and manufacturing

MUMBAI, India — India’s March industrial output fell 3.5 percent from a year ago, the government said Friday, worse than expected on weak manufacturing and investment.

Manufacturing activity fell 4.4 percent and capital goods production — a sign of crucial investment activity — plunged by 21 percent, burying hopes of a quick recovery for Asia’s third-largest economy.

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For the year ending in March, industrial output grew 2.8 percent, sharply lower than 8.2 percent during the prior fiscal year.

The weak growth complicates matters for India’s central bank, which faces enormous political pressure to stoke growth, despite persistent inflation and soaring deficits.

“It is very disappointing,” Chakravarthy Rangarajan, chairman of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, told reporters. “One had not expected such a sharp decline.”

A CNBC-TV18 poll had forecast March industrial output growth of 1.5 percent.

Disappointed investors drove the benchmark Sensex index down over 1 percent on the news.

The Reserve Bank of India and the International Monetary Fund, among others, have both said that India is not growing as fast as it could. The RBI has blamed supply bottlenecks, especially in infrastructure, energy, minerals and labor, for the economy’s diminished potential, while the IMF has warned that concerns about governance and policy uncertainty are weighing on investment.

India’s twin current account and fiscal deficits have also alarmed economists and punished the rupee. The central bank on Thursday ordered exporters to convert half their local foreign exchange holdings into rupees within two weeks, a move designed to bolster the falling currency.

New Delhi’s failure to enact big ticket reforms, like easing foreign investment restrictions in retail and aviation, has disappointed investors. Investors have also been spooked by corruption and punishing regulatory shifts in India’s telecom sector and a retrospective change in tax law that could cost companies like Vodafone billions of dollars.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

India March industrial output down an unexpected 3.5 pct, on weak investment and manufacturing - The Washington Post
 
Futuristic Skyline of rural India


Aralvaimozhi (also spelt Aralvoimozhi) is a small settlement in Kanyakumari District, Tamil Nadu. Located north of Kanyakumari, Aralvaimozhi possess one of the largest wind farms in the world. Once it was a barren land with very less annual rainfall and now the wind-farms have totally changed the landscape of this area, and we need more such growth stories in which even the remotest places of India contribute to overall growth...


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Futuristic Skyline of rural India


This part of Tamil Nadu is one of the driest region in India with very less rainfall, and most of the lands given for wind farms are barren lands, the development of wind mills started some 18 years back, and initially farmers happily gave their land for very less price because they thought they are getting great value for their unused land, but later when many windmill companies came the price per cent of land increased considerably and those farmers who had not sold their land initially benefited immensely by selling their land at a very high price. Also once there was a competion to buy land many farmers realised the value for thier land and they stopped selling their land and instead they gave it for 10 or 20 years lease, and this made them use their land for farming activity even after giving a portion of land for wind mills. The windmills have brought lots of good things to the entire district, many youths from the villages are now employed in wind forms to do technical jobs, below is one such youth from a nearby village employed in a wind farm, and photo captured in the wind farm control room...

Eighteen years back no body even in their wildest dreams would have imagined such high tech job reaching their village!!!

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Global manufacturers go local in cost-wary India

http://www.khaleejtimes.com/biz/insi...ection=biztalk

India should encourage the below model, where the foreign companies are encouraged to source products locally and encouraged to setup their R&D centers in India, this will refine the existing manufacturing sector, also it will automatically lead to a strong base for our defense industry and will lead to self reliance and tremendous scope for further job opportunities...

Below are some of the pictures of Daimler Chennai Plant:-

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At the opening ceremony for Daimler AG’s $850 million India factory, Chairman Dieter Zetsche stepped down from the cab of a gleaming yellow 25-tonne truck with scaled-down horsepower, a stripped-back gearbox and no sign of the iconic Mercedes-Benz three-pointed star on its grille.
Daimler has been assembling high-end trucks in India for years, but its recently launched cut-price BharatBenz line has joined a trend by global heavy equipment manufacturers to compete in India’s high-volume, high-growth - but cost-conscious - mass market.

The potential is huge. Truck sales alone grew 18 percent in the year to March 2012 to over 800,000 vehicles, and are expected to double to 1.6 million by 2017. This eclipses the United States, where just over 300,000 commercial trucks were sold in 2011.

But it’s a market where being best isn’t good enough. To target the low end of India’s engineering markets, which accounts for over 70 percent of sales, manufacturers need to offer the best value, and to do that they need to go local.

The BharatBenz 2523, a 25-tonne truck, will likely cost around 1.75 million rupees ($33,300) before tax. That’s less than half the price of a comparable Mercedes-Benz Axor 2529 that retails in Europe for 61,000 euros ($81,000).

“If customers can get gear manufactured by the global firms at lower or equal price points compared to the domestic manufacturers, then naturally there will be serious demand for international kit,” says Bharti Momaya, chief manager at distributor firm, Ajisons, which sells locally-made switchgear in Mumbai.

Car makers have been localising their products for years, sourcing materials and making cheap, India-tailored vehicles. India-made cars from companies such as Ford or South Korea’s Hyundai which poured billions of dollars into India in the 1990s now command 75 percent of the market.

By comparison, foreign truckmakers have less than 10 percent of India’s domestic market, while overseas manufacturers of substations - a market targeted by local units of Germany’s Siemens AG and Swedish-Swiss rival ABB Ltd - have just over 20 percent of the local market.

European manufacturers of heavy-duty equipment ranging from haulage trucks to power systems and machinery are now racing to offer stripped-down, locally sourced and built products.

“In India there is definitely a need for international players to go beyond a premium strategy and to find local ways to develop a typically Indian product that really suits the market,” says Nikolaus Lang, partner and managing director at the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) in Munich.

“In the truck industry in emerging markets, the next decade will be the decade of localisation ... that is the next challenge,” he says.

It’s a strategy that has worked well in Brazil, where foreign manufacturers dominate the truck market. And with restrictive foreign ownership rules in China and Russia, India is a key market for growth-hungry global manufacturers.

Affordable solutions

Global manufacturers producing in India can keep down costs by outsourcing some production to local vendors, by using local materials and labour, and by designing for local conditions, scaling back on size or added frills.

Daimler isn’t alone. Engineering conglomerate Siemens is ramping up production of its low-cost SMART range in India. ABB, one of the world’s biggest power and technology suppliers, has invested in local production plants and research and development centres.

They are taking on entrenched local manufacturers, such as Tata Motors and Ashok Leyland in trucks, and Larsen & Toubro and Crompton Greaves in power gear.

Siemens, which operates through its listed subsidiary Siemens Ltd, says products from its locally tailored SMART brand are up to 40 percent cheaper than in Europe.

It is selling power distribution gear which connects the grid to local circuitry that is “produced in Aurangabad on a low-cost base, for a country which needs low-cost solutions,” says Armin Bruck, managing director of Siemens Ltd.

Siemens sold $130 million (100 million euros) of its SMART gear in India in 2010 and expects it to account for 1 billion euros worth of revenue by 2020.

It estimates India’s total market for its low-cost line of equipment is about 21 billion euros, and now sells 30 products for industrial clients, ranging from baggage conveyor systems for small airports to X-ray machines.

“Customers in India ... demand products that are low on maintenance, are robust enough to withstand the tough environmental conditions and operate efficiently,” says Bruck.

Spanish wind turbine maker Gamesa expects to save about 18 percent on costs on its new G97 turbine, which will be 70 percent made in India by the end of the year and tailored to Indian conditions, says its country head, Ramesh Kymal.

The company is already applying lessons from its local research to its international operations, and is investing about 2 billion rupees in its third factory in the country.

Investment pay-off

Global makers of heavy equipment in India are also looking beyond the domestic market, eyeing cost-efficient research and development centres, global sourcing and potential export hubs.

Daimler, which employs 1,000 workers at its research operations in India, plans to source parts for its factories across the world from Indian suppliers.

“There are second order pay-offs for multinationals if they think about localising their business systems in India,” says Rajat Dhawan, director at McKinsey India and leader of the consultancy’s manufacturing practice in Asia. “They could leverage India as an export base,” he says.

Siemens’ India arm is its parent’s first choice for low-cost part sourcing, Bruck says. Others are seeing the potential for local manufacturing operations.

ABB said in April it would spend 2.5 billion rupees to expand its manufacturing base by setting up a new factory.

Daimler’s $850 million bet on India, the company’s biggest greenfield investment outside of Europe, employs 1,400 people and is testimony to Zetsche’s belief in localisation.


It is the only Daimler plant in the world that houses products which combine Indian engineering with German and Japanese DNA under a single roof, he said at last month’s plant inauguration, as hundreds of workers cheered.

Business - Global manufacturers go local in cost-wary India
 
At 54.51 rupees per dollar, India's GDP is smaller than Australia's!

In 2011 (at an average exchange rate of 46.667 Indian rupees per U.S. dollar), India's GDP was 1.676 trillion.

At the current exchange rate of 54.41 rupees per dollar:

1.676 trillion x (46.667 rupees / 54.41 rupees per dollar) = $1.437 trillion Indian GDP for 2011

qqAlI.jpg

After adjusting India's 2011 GDP to the current exchange rate ($1.437 trillion), it is smaller than Australia's GDP ($1.488 trillion)!

By the way, China's $7.298 trillion GDP is 5.08 times larger than India's $1.437 trillion GDP for 2011.

[Note: India's 2011 monthly average exchange rate link at Monthly Exchange Rate Average (Indian Rupee, American Dollar) 2011 - x-rates

The Indian rupee hit an all-time-low exchange rate of 54.41 rupees per dollar on Wednesday (May 16, 2012). Citation: Weak rupee to make polished diamonds costlier - The Times of India]
 
At 54.51 rupees per dollar, India's GDP is smaller than Australia's!

In 2011 (at an average exchange rate of 46.667 Indian rupees per U.S. dollar), India's GDP was 1.676 trillion.

At the current exchange rate of 54.41 rupees per dollar:

1.676 trillion x (46.667 rupees / 54.41 rupees per dollar) = $1.437 trillion Indian GDP for 2011

qqAlI.jpg

After adjusting India's 2011 GDP to the current exchange rate ($1.437 trillion), it is smaller than Australia's GDP ($1.488 trillion)!

By the way, China's $7.298 trillion GDP is 5.08 times larger than India's $1.437 trillion GDP for 2011.

[Note: India's 2011 monthly average exchange rate link at Monthly Exchange Rate Average (Indian Rupee, American Dollar) 2011 - x-rates

The Indian rupee hit an all-time-low exchange rate of 54.41 rupees per dollar on Wednesday (May 16, 2012). Citation: Weak rupee to make polished diamonds costlier - The Times of India]

That is a wrong analysis. That Income was earned in 2011 and has to converted at average rates that existed in 2011. Applying current exchange rate on last year's income doesn't solve any purpose. The GDP numbers for current year will be a lot higher than last years due to inflation and real growth, which must then be converted at current year's average exchange rate. Let's wait for May 31st for the next release of GDP numbers.
 
UAE keen to increase energy exports to India

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UAE keen to increase energy exports to India

(Wam) / 18 May 2012

The United Arab Emirates is keen to increase its energy exports, as well as downstream investments in India, said Foreign Minister Shaikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan.
“Would like to see more UAE energy exports to India especially when it comes to crude oil.....There are talks between our officials looking at these avenues and even further. We would like to see UAE presence in downstream investments in India, including petrochemicals,” Shaikh Abdullah told reporters today during a joint press conference with Indian Minister of External Affairs S. M. Krishna.

Shaikh Abdullah and Krishna held wide-range of discussions on international, regional and bilateral issues including ways to boost trade ties, maritime security cooperation to tackle piracy and Indo-Pak ties.

Shaikh Abdullah also said that he was “pleased” to see the developing “vibrant” ties between India and Pakistan.

According to Press Trust of India (PTI), The two sides also discussed forthcoming 3rd India-Arab Economic Conclave to be hosted in Abu Dhabi on 21-22 May and the proposed ‘Road Show’ on investment in Abu Dhabi and Dubai that Indian officials intend to undertake in June to exchange information and clarify issues related to the investment climate in India. Also discussed were ways to increase cooperation to fight the “scourge” of piracy.

“Resolving piracy cannot come until we resolve Somalia,” Shaikh Abdullah said.

He said building Somalia’s capacity in every form is the way the issue of piracy can be tackled.

Underlining the country’s need to increase its oil imports, Krishna, said, “The need to increase import of oil and other energy sources is of extreme critical importance and in UAE we have a dependable supplier which India needs so badly.”

He added that it was decided to set up a high-level joint task force on investment which will also look into securing more oil supplies from UAE that has assured it of “increased” energy exports.

Shaikh Hamed bin Zayed al Nahyan, Chief of the Abu Dhabi Crown Prince’s Court and Managing Director of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and Commerce, Industries and Textiles Minister Anand Sharma will be leading the respective sides of the High Level Task Force, Krishna said.

Noting that the United Arab Emirates’ leadership is now keen to address the issue of investments to bring it on par with the multi-faceted relations the two countries enjoy in all other sectors, Krishna said the ‘High Level Joint Task Force’ will explore further opportunities in investments.

Besides oil, UAE is also looking at investment opportunities in sectors like petrochemicals. Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA), one of the world’s biggest sovereign wealth funds, is looking at investment opportunities in India, particularly in the real estate sector.

ADIA’s investments in Indian real estate is around USD 500 million, largely through property and private equity funds, reports said, adding the fund is now scouting for direct investment opportunities.

India enjoys close and multifaceted relations with UAE and during the last three years, the two countries were each other’s largest trading partners.

Bilateral trade during 2011-12 was USD 67 billion. UAE contributes significantly to India’s energy security and also hosts a large Indian community.
 
That is a wrong analysis. That Income was earned in 2011 and has to converted at average rates that existed in 2011. Applying current exchange rate on last year's income doesn't solve any purpose. The GDP numbers for current year will be a lot higher than last years due to inflation and real growth, which must then be converted at current year's average exchange rate. Let's wait for May 31st for the next release of GDP numbers.

Agreed. However, a drastic drop in exchange rate value is definitely going to lower the GDP in dollar terms, or at least neutralize the gains in rupee.

This drop is largely a result of FII decrease and investment flight from India. This is worrying because:
1. Drop in investment will decrease manufacturing, and therefore hurts export
2. India will face an ever higher cost of borrowing foreign currency
3. India has huge budget deficit and trade deficit. This may cause a financial collapse.

I am not spelling out dooms here, though. India's economic trouble should be able to stay within India since the country is largely irrelevant in global trade and investments. The impact will be most felt by poor Indians.
 
Drop in investment will decrease manufacturing, and therefore hurts export
Its not necessary...specially considering indian market in itself is so huge that it can survive within itself for a longtime. Indian companies are investing and they have a huge market right infront of their eyes, they just have to innovate and innovation is happeing, slowly but happening and if product is good, it can support export too.

2. India will face an ever higher cost of borrowing foreign currency
Thats true but India can alsways go for barter or some other way of exchange like in case of Iran. Even Saudi Arabia is thinking for similar exchange. These two accounts alot of money. Not to mention this will increase the export tremendously. We will have to just wait.

India has huge budget deficit and trade deficit. This may cause a financial collapse.
Yeah its huge but not that big enough that might cause collapse.

I am not spelling out dooms here, though. India's economic trouble should be able to stay within India since the country is largely irrelevant in global trade and investments. The impact will be most felt by poor Indians.
You don't have to spell out. Everybody knows right now we are in economic slowdown. With 6-6.5 % increase in GDP we are still doing fine and collapse is a bit far fetched but you will know that if you get out of your fantasies. Pakistan economy has not yet collapsed and you think India's will collapse so soon. Good for you...whatever makes you sleep at night.
 
‘Free-falling’ India rupee hits new lows

India’s central bank promised yesterday to use “all its available tools” to stabilise the rupee, which sank to a record low against the dollar for a third straight day amid turmoil in global markets.
The Indian unit fell to 54.91 against the dollar, below its previous low of 54.58 a day earlier, before clawing back to 54.4 in late afternoon trade.
Asian shares and currencies fell after Moody’s downgraded 16 Spanish banks on Thursday, while poor US manufacturing data heightened concerns over the global economy.
The central bank “will use all its available tools to fulfil its objective of curbing volatility in the foreign-exchange market”, the bank’s deputy governor Subir Gokarn told reporters in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata.
“The central bank will not hesitate to take more steps to stem the falls in rupee, if needed,” he said.
Indian shares rose 82.27 points, or 0.51%, to 16,152.75 in cautious trade yesterday, even as the rupee hit a fresh low against the dollar on concerns over the eurozone debt crisis and weak domestic indicators.
But analysts and traders expect the rupee to fall further in coming days with risk aversion hitting global markets and sentiment souring over India due to its gaping trade and current account deficits and slowing economy.
“The rupee is in a freefall. Unless the RBI (Reserve Bank of India) and the government take major steps to boost sentiment, there are more worries ahead,” said Abhishek Goenka, chief executive of India Forex, a consultancy firm.
India’s central bank is suspected to have intervened on Thursday to help prop up the rupee in one of more than a dozen recent occasions it has sold dollars to help slow the decline of the currency.
Last week, it announced new measures to support the local unit, ordering exporters and other foreign-exchange earners to convert half of their total foreign-exchange earnings kept in banks into rupees.
Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee this week blamed the deteriorating international climate for the falls as international investors sell risky emerging market assets and retreat to safe havens.
Other emerging currencies from Indonesia to Brazil have also been hit.
Foreign investors have been turned off the country of 1.2bn people due to recent regulatory moves by the government, which has stalled on a pro-growth reform agenda aimed at opening up the economy.
Overseas funds withdrew a net $133.44mn worth of Indian equities in the new financial year, which started April, pulling down local share prices seven% in the same period.
The falling rupee is bad news for India’s economy, pushing up import prices and aggravating inflation that is running at over 7%, limiting the central bank’s scope to roll back interest rates and spur the economy.
It will also further strain the government’s budget because oil imports—which are priced in dollars—will become more expensive.
The central bank said recently it had spent more than $20bn in spot-market intervention between September and the end of February. Analysts estimate a further $5 to $7bn to have been pumped in since.
The rupee was Asia’s worst performing currency in 2011, losing more than 20% of its value in the calendar year.


Gulf Times ? Qatar?s top-selling English daily newspaper - Finance & Business

Air India losses mount to $37 million as crisis continues

The crisis in Air India raged on for the 11th day on Friday and the national carrier's losses mounted to Rs.200 crore ($37 million) as the impasse between agitating pilots and the management continued.

“Contingency plan is in place,” a senior official of Air India's operations arm told IANS. “We are operating a bare minimum number of international operations by clubbing flights to destinations in Europe and the US.”

“We have lost about Rs.200 crore due to ticket cancellations, unused labour and with a bulk of our Boeing-777 fleet grounded, the official said. “Our losses per day stand at Rs.13-15 crore ($2-3 million).”

According to the official, the airline has started a special program whereby passengers can advance, postpone or cancel their tickets without any extra charges until May 22.

The airline has deployed the Airbus family of aircraft such as A320, A321 and A330 for international routes. It is only operating eight of its 17 Boeing-777 aircraft which are normally manned by the pilots belonging to Indian Pilots Guild (IPG), who are now on strike.

The development comes a day after Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh called all unions of the airline for talks next week and the Delhi High Court refused to entertain the Indian Pilots Guild's (IPG) plea challenging the court's earlier order restraining the pilots from going on an 'illegal strike.'

Singh said on Thursday he would discuss with the unions all outstanding issues such as pay parity and promotion, while a division bench of the high court said contempt proceedings should be started against the pilots.

Air India losses mount to $37 million as crisis continues - NY Daily News
 
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