What's new

India May Be First in Asia to Emerge from Downturn, CLSA Says

jeypore

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Sep 18, 2008
Messages
2,885
Reaction score
0
Country
India
Location
United States
By Subramaniam Sharma

Nov. 4 (Bloomberg) -- India may be the first in Asia to emerge from a downturn, helped by local consumption and a drop in commodity prices as financial turmoil sweeps the world, a senior economist at CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets said.

``We do expect the Indian business cycle to be the first to bottom in Asia. And, it should, in theory, be first to emerge,'' Sharmila Whelan, senior economist at CLSA, said in a telephone interview from Gurgaon, near the capital New Delhi today. ``The worst will be over by mid-2009 and by 2010 you should be able to see the next investment-led business cycle taking root.''

The world's second-most populous nation will benefit from the fact that its trade as a percentage of gross domestic product is 32.5 percent, about half that of China and the European Union, according to the Asian Development Bank. India will also benefit from falling commodity prices, Whelan said.

Crude oil, copper and wheat has tumbled more than 50 percent from records this year as the U.S. economy declined in the third quarter by the most since 2001. India relies on oil imports for three-quarters of its energy needs.

``India stands to benefit significantly from falling commodity prices and therefore corporate profit margins should improve ahead of its peers'' in the region, Whelan said. ``While we are bearish on the short-term outlook, over the medium term we expect infrastructure spending to pick up and reinforce the investment cycle.''

India's economy may slow to a pace of 7.3 percent this financial year ending March 31 and further to 6.5 percent in the next year, she said. Gross domestic product grew at 9 percent in the year ended March 31, 2008.

Rate Reduction

India's central bank had on Nov. 1, for the first time since 1997, deployed all three of its main tools to shore up growth. It pared the repurchase rate to 7.5 percent from 8 percent, reduced the amount of deposits that lenders need to set aside as reserves to 5.5 percent from 6.5 percent, and cut the amount of cash banks must keep in government bonds to 24 percent from 25 percent.

Whelan expects further reductions by the Reserve Bank of India. She expects the repurchase to be cut by another 150 basis points and the cash reserve ratio reduced by an additional 100 basis points. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

``It is a fact, inflation has turned. That gives them scope to cut rates,'' said Hong Kong-based Whelan, who is attending an investor conference organized by CLSA in India. ``Obviously, growth is a concern.''

India's inflation rate fell below 11 percent for the first time since May, to 10.68 percent in the week to Oct. 18 from a year earlier.

To contact the reporter on this story: Subramaniam Sharma in New Delhi at ssharma@bloomberg.net.

Bloomberg.com: India & Pakistan
 

Latest posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom