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India's fears and the US 'Bail-out'

batmannow

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a contingency plan

Business Standard / New Delhi September 30, 2008, 0:00 IST



The sub-prime hurricane is wreaking havoc on the global financial system. After a series of relatively small, firm-specific rescue missions, the US government has now cast all its dice on a $700 billion bail-out package. Opinion is divided on whether this will work, and there is widespread scepticism. Meanwhile, all governments should be giving serious thought to their own economic contingency planning. What kinds of threats does India face in today’s context, and what mechanisms does it have in place to deal with them? The question assumes urgency when the Sensex has dipped to its lowest point in the year, and when net sales by overseas investors in the secondary market have already topped $18 billion this year. If as much more were to flow out again in the next six months (and the FIIs still hold $150 billion worth of stocks), bears could be in command on Dalal Street.



One risk here is the robustness of the clearing and settlement systems. Fortunately, India’s trading systems have held up quite well; even in the bloodbath of May 2004, by far the worst one-day fall, they did not let traders down. A second area of concern is liquidity. As large amounts of money are withdrawn and repatriated, domestic liquidity is compressed and this disrupts the normal course of business. Credit costs significantly more already, and could become more difficult to access. This may render an otherwise viable business activity infeasible. Over the past several weeks, the attention of central banks around the world has been focused on maintaining appropriate levels of liquidity, though no one is quite sure how much is needed. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) did its bit on September 8, but the situation appears to have tightened again, suggesting the need for further measures, including some unwinding of the Market Stabilisation Scheme holdings, built up earlier.

A third pressure point is the downward thrust on the exchange rate because of escalating outflows, which add to the pressure that oil companies are exerting on the forex market by virtue of their buying up dollars to pay for imports. Taking the latter out of the market, by resuming the dollars-for-oil bonds swap that was tried in June, will help stabilise the exchange rate, but cannot guarantee it. Meanwhile, managed depreciation of the rupee could aggravate capital outflows as foreign investors act to minimise their losses in dollar terms. However, it is probably better than risking a free fall in the currency. The RBI needs to decide where it stands on the issue — resist depreciation by drawing down on reserves, or let the rupee fall where it may. If it chooses the former, how far down is it willing to let reserves go? Fourth, for both exporters and financial institutions, there is a very real risk of exposure to bankrupt counter-parties. ICICI Bank has already been impacted by its investment in Lehman Brothers’ securities. Others may be hurt as more institutions go under — and one seems to be going down every day now. For exporters, payment schedules may be thrown out of gear if banks that had extended credit to importers fail.

The only thing that is clear is that a contingency plan needs to be put in place, if it hasn’t already been. At the very least, this is going to require effective co-ordination between the ministry of finance and the two main financial regulators, RBI and the Securities and Exchange Board of India.:what::undecided:
 
US is going down and it will take world markets down nothing much to read in to that there will be problems ahead. need to prepare for it. This is just the beginning. Get ready for more news.
 
US is going down and it will take world markets down nothing much to read in to that there will be problems ahead. need to prepare for it. This is just the beginning. Get ready for more news.
Dear nitesh; sir
thanks for your input, i guss, this is great for whole of the world. because evntully , it will bring old enemies, to become friends & in the end world's dependence on USA will come down to normal level.:cheers::azn:
 
Dear nitesh; sir
thanks for your input, i guss, this is great for whole of the world. because evntully , it will bring old enemies, to become friends & in the end world's dependence on USA will come down to normal level.:cheers::azn:

Nope it is not as simple. World economies are related to US economy. US economy runs on consumption. If it drops every body gets effected. Look at the oil prices. They dropped drastically. So the economies which were booming due to higher oil prices are seeing recession. The economies which were dependent on exports to US are getting effected. So if US goes down the world will also go down.

Mean while please post the link also of the article.
 
Nope it is not as simple. World economies are related to US economy. US economy runs on consumption. If it drops every body gets effected. Look at the oil prices. They dropped drastically. So the economies which were booming due to higher oil prices are seeing recession. The economies which were dependent on exports to US are getting effected. So if US goes down the world will also go down.

Mean while please post the link also of the article.

one more point..... most of the investment in developing economy are coming from US ...... in terms of FII and FDI. so the financial melt down in US will also impact vital infrastucture and developement programs in most of these countries as they will start pull out their money. which means economic slow down in developing economy as well.
 
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Dear nitesh; sir
thanks for your input, i guss, this is great for whole of the world. because evntully , it will bring old enemies, to become friends & in the end world's dependence on USA will come down to normal level.:cheers::azn:

If you are hoping that this will weaken the US and make your buddy China stronger, think again.

The Chinese economy is heavily dependent on the US consumer market. China has as much a stake in this as any other country.

Also, you'd better hope that US remains the dominant power. I don't think anyone will like the prospect of an evangelist Chinese government spreading communism around the world.
 
...

Also, you'd better hope that US remains the dominant power. I don't think anyone will like the prospect of an evangelist Chinese government spreading communism around the world.

There will be equal or even more amounts of people who don’t want to see Christian Fundamentalist US government to spread democracy around, especially through the use of force, coup or subversion, and by lying to the American people, to the United Nations and to the people of the world.

Of course the US will remain dominant for a quite while, but its wrongful hegemony and bad influence have to be checked by the rest of the world, and its righteous power and achievements have to be used/learnt by the rest of the world.

On the other side, and as a matter of fact, the people of Nepal love communism very much as evidenced recently.
 
They dont love communism, they are trying a new government. Same as why the people in West Bengal dont love communism despite having communist parties in power for over a decade.
 
US economy is completing its yet another business cycle which occurs everytime in 35-40 yrs, they will revamp their system, boost dollars in operations, would gain edge over their competitors specially china in terms of manufacturing, will change their currency flow system ,will increase investments worldwide with M&A and will return back with a good development index,possibly with a democrat president, so just a pause in between.
their reemerging is important and welcoming for both India and China as time will show.:cheers:
 
USA is the largest consumer market in the world. If USA's purchasing power drops, demand for goods from all over the world drops.

In short, everyone suffers.
 
The Chinese economy is heavily dependent on the US consumer market. China has as much a stake in this as any other country.

The Sino-US ecomomy is actually interdependent, it is difficult to calculate who is more dependent than the other. The Chinese has other alternative major markets like the EU and Asia.

But it will be a blow to them should the US market slows, as the saying goes, when the US sneezes, everyone catches a cold.

The Chinese also holds massive US reserves.

Also, you'd better hope that US remains the dominant power. I don't think anyone will like the prospect of an evangelist Chinese government spreading communism around the world.

I am not sure about China spreading communism, but the US will remain as the dominant power.
 

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