Balance of Payment Q3 FY (October-December 2012)

Similar documents
June 27, 2013 Developments in India s Balance of Payments during the Fourth Quarter (January- March 2013) of

STCI Primary Dealer Ltd

4(8)/Ec. Dn. /2017 Ministry of Finance Department of Economic Affairs Economic Division MONTHLY ECONOMIC REPORT NOVEMBER 2018 ***** HIGHLIGHTS

MONTHLY ECONOMIC REPORT MARCH 2013 HIGHLIGHTS

November 21, Economic Intelligence Unit Baroda Corporate Center Bank of Baroda Mumbai Indian Economic Briefs

4(8)/Ec. Dn. /2017 Ministry of Finance Department of Economic Affairs Economic Division MONTHLY ECONOMIC REPORT JUNE 2018 ***** HIGHLIGHTS

MONTHLY ECONOMIC REPORT MARCH 2014

Ministry of Finance Department of Economic Affairs Economic Division 4(8)/Ec. Dn. /2017 MONTHLY ECONOMIC REPORT OCTOBER 2017 *****

MONTHLY ECONOMIC BULLETIN

Markets at a Glance. India Q2 CY For Distributors use only

ROYAL MONETARY AUTHORITY OF BHUTAN SELECTED ECONOMIC INDICATORS

REFERENCE NOTE. No. 28/RN/Ref./November /2013

Indian Economy. GDP growth slowed down but remained above the comfortable 7% Manufacturing GVAbp

MONTHLY UPDATE SEPTEMBER 2017

MONTHLY UPDATE NOVEMBER 2018

(Narendra Jena) Economic Officer

Saudi Arabian Economy

Saudi Arabian Economy

STCI Primary Dealer Ltd

ANALYST CERTIFICATIONS AND REQUIRED DISCLOSURES BEGIN ON PAGE 21

Economic Spotlight. Current Account Deficit Narrows. Edelweiss Investment Research

Prepared by Basanta K Pradhan & Sangeeta Chakravarty December 2012

RBI s Monetary Policy Q : Expectations

The Problem of Widening Current Account Deficit of India

Gratuity Fund Performance

Prepared by Basanta K Pradhan & Sangeeta Chakravarty January and February 2013

Ministry of Finance Department of Economic Affairs Economic Division 4(3)/Ec. Dn. /2012 MONTHLY ECONOMIC REPORT NOVEMER 2016 ***** HIGHLIGHTS

STCI Primary Dealer Ltd

ASSOCHAM Economic Weekly 11 th May, 2014

Major Highlights. Recent Economic Developments. September/October,2016. Central Bank of Swaziland 1

Monthly Economic and Financial Developments February 2007

Vietnam grew quicker than expected in 3Q

Review of the Economy. E.1 Global trends. January 2014

RBI Q1 FY11 Monetary Policy Review

Monthly Economic and Financial Developments April 2006

Current Economic Scenario: Some Indicators

Gratuity Fund Performance

Quarterly International Investment Position Report

Market Outlook. Nifty % Sensex %

Sri Lanka: Recent Economic Trends. January 2018

EXTERNAL SECTOR MODULE 1 BALANCE OF PAYMENT

MONTHLY ECONOMIC BULLETIN

VI. THE EXTERNAL ECONOMY

ECOSCOPE. 3QFY16 CAD/GDP corrects to 1.3% The Economy Observer. Balance of Payments. See surplus in 4Q and to remain low in FY17; INR to correct still

Investment Strategy Note 24 Nov 2015

Economic Outlook: Global and India. Ajit Ranade IEEMA T & D Conclave December 12, 2014

BRAZIL. 1. General trends

FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION ONLY DECEMBER 2015 FINANCIAL ASSETS ARE GAINING AN EDGE OVER PHYSICAL ASSETS

Survey of Professional Forecasters on Macroeconomic Indicators Results of the 47 th Round 1

Market Roundup. Macro-Economic Overview. Domestic Macroeconomic Development

Daily Market Update Report as on Monday, October 15, 2018

Current Macroeconomic Situation of Nepal

ECONOMIC POLICIES, GROWTH AND STRUCTURAL CHANGE OF INDIA B. A. PRAKASH

August 1, 2017 I Economics EXPECTATIONS FROM CREDIT POLICY: AUGUST 2017

JSW Energy Limited. Q2 FY 2016 Results Presentation October 28, 2015

Results of the Survey of Professional Forecasters on Macroeconomic Indicators Round 44 1

Monthly Economic and Financial Developments January 2013

PERFORMANCE OF ECONOMY REPORT December 2017

Indian Economy. Industrial output grew highest in four months in June 2015 but volatility continued

Saudi Arabian Economy

ShroffConnect Weekly Report 15 th September, 2018

Indian Economy. Industrial production declined in Nov 2015 for the first time in last 13 months. Fig1: Industrial Output Growth from April 2014

Macroeconomic Overview of India: Recent Trends and Developments

Q1 FY 14 IMS Analyst & Investor presentation. 3 months to 31 December 2013

Prepared by Basanta K Pradhan & Sangeeta Chakravarty August 2010

1 RED June/July 2018 JUNE/JULY 2018

2018 The year of promise

RBI s Sixth Bi-Monthly Monetary Policy Review ( ) Maintains status quo...neutral Stance

PUBLIC DEBT MANAGEMENT QUARTERLY REPORT JANUARY-MARCH 2018

MONETARY POLICY COMMITTEE STATEMENT FOR THIRD QUARTER Governor s Presentation to the Media. 22 nd November, 2017

Hong Kong Economic Update

Indian Economy. Global Economy

BALKRISHNA INDUSTRIES LTD

4(8)/Ec. Dn. /2017 Ministry of Finance Department of Economic Affairs Economic Division MONTHLY ECONOMIC REPORT OCTOBER 2018 ***** HIGHLIGHTS

Saudi Arabian Economy

BUY CMP (Rs.) 297 Target (Rs.) 385 Potential Upside 30%

IDBI Bank RESEARCH. EQUITY RESEARCH July 29, 2008

République et Canton de Genève. Green bonds. November 8, Département des finances Direction générale des finances de l'etat Page 1

1 RED July/August 2018 JULY/AUGUST 2018

Mutual Fund Screener For the quarter ended Jun -18

Saudi Arabian Economy

Equity Market Outlook. May, 2016

Impact of Rupee Devaluation on the Growth of India Economy A Study on Rebounding Strategies

Air Berlin PLC 11 th November 2015 Analyst Conference 3rd Quarter 2015

Foreign Trade and Balance of Payments. V{tÑàxÜ f å

Monetary Policy Review : April 16

Capital Flows and External Vulnerability Examining the Recent Trends in India

MONTHLY UPDATE FEBRUARY 2018

Indian Economy. Industrial production slowed down in June 2016 on a year-on-year basis

CHAPTER 5 DETERMINANTS OF FORWARD PREMIA INTERPRETATION OF. Only those who see the invisible can do the impossible Anonymous

Mid-Quarter Monetary Policy Review

AsianBondsOnline WEEKLY DEBT HIGHLIGHTS

Prepared by Basanta K Pradhan & Sangeeta Chakravarty November 2009

Global Investment Perspective

Public Debt Management

Saudi Arabian Economy

Impact of Rupee- Dollar Fluctuations on Indian Economy: Challenges for Rbi & Indian Government

TransGraph Research Consulting Technology

GDP. Economy Snapshots. Q3FY18 GDP at 7.2%; recovery shaping up

Equity Update October 2018

Transcription:

Balance of Payment Q3 FY2012-13 (October-December 2012) Key Highlights: - India s Current Account Deficit (CAD) widened to a record high of 6.7% of GDP in Q3 FY2012-13 on the back of surging oil and gold imports. - The CAD for April-December 2012 period was at US$ 72.0 billion as against US$ 56.4 billion in the corresponding period last year. - Widening CAD highlights the elevated trade deficit on account of suppressed external demand and relatively inelastic POL imports especially oil and gold. - However, the overall Balance of Payment (BoP) position moved back to surplus zone (US$ 0.781 billion) after the BoP position slipped to deficit zone in Q2 FY2012-13. - Net invisible contracted; though Net Service Receipts recorded a growth of in Q3 FY2012-13 on the back of a sturdy growth in travel, transport, software services and financial services. - Pickup in capital flow aided in fully funding the CAD; the surge in Capital flow was on account of a healthy growth in Portfolio investment, but the more stable FDI inflow (net) witnessed a considerable fall. BoP position recovers but CAD touches new high [USD Bn] 6 4 2 0-2 -4-6 -8-10 -12-14 Balance of Payment (Old Format) 5.44 Q1 0.28 Q2-12.81 Q3-5.74 Q4 0.52 Q1-0.16 Q2 0.78 Q3 40.0 30.0 20.0 10.0 0.0-10.0-20.0-30.0-40.0 Balance of Payment (New Format) 31.1 23.9 15.8 0.0-0.3-0.2-16.4-22.6-32.6 Current Account Capital Account Financial Account Q1 Q2 Q3 The BoP improved slightly to US$ 0.781 billion in the third quarter of FY 2012-13 (October-December) compared to a huge deficit of US$ 12.8 billion in Q3 FY2011-12 and a deficit of US$ 0.158 billion in the previous quarter of June-September 2012 (Q2 FY2012-13). However, the CAD widened to US$ 32.6 billion in Q3 FY2012-13 (6.7% of GDP) as against US$ 22.6 billion (5.4% of GDP) in Q2 FY2012-13 and US$ 20.0 billion (4.4% of GDP) in Q3 FY2011-12. The higher level of CAD can be attributed to expanding trade deficit which was mainly on account of a meager growth in merchandise exports as against a sharp surge in imports. The trade deficit augmented to US$ 59.6 billion in Q3 FY2012-13 as against US$ 48.7 billion in Q3 of FY2011-12 and US$ 48.3 billion in Q2 FY 2012-13.

A muted merchandise exports highlights the deteriorating global appetite and sluggish industrial activities. However, the surging domestic demand for gold and silver, despite various imports restrictions, has lead to an increase in India s merchandise imports, resulting in further widening of trade deficit. [US$ Bn.] Trends in Current Account Balance 35 6.7% 30 5.4% 25 4.2% 4.4% 4.5% 20 3.8% 3.9% 15 32.6 10 17.4 18.9 20.2 21.7 22.6 16.4 5 0 Q1 FY 10-11 Q2 FY 11-12 Q3 FY 11-12 Q4 FY 11-12 Q1 FY 12-13 Q2 FY 12-13 Q3 FY 12-13 Current Account Deficit CAD as a % of GDP [%] 8% 7% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% Merchandise export grew marginally by 0.5% to US$ 71.83 billion in Q3 FY 2012-13 as compared to US$ 71.4 billion in Q3 FY 2011-12. Merchandise imports grew by a robust 9.4% to US$ 131.44 billion in Q3 FY 2012-13 as compared to US$ 120.10 billion in Q3 FY 2011-12. The net service receipts grew by 9.2% in Q3 FY 2012-13; service exports grew by 2.0% to US$ 36.5 billion in Q3 FY 2012-13 mainly led by a decline in software services exports and receipts under travel and transportation, whereas, the service imports declined by 10.6% to US$ 18.9 billion in Q3 FY 2012-13 on the back of fall in the payments towards travel, transportation, financial and communication services. Net receipts under secondary income (private transfers) recorded a marginal decline of 3.4% during the quarter indicating a fall in net remittances from overseas Indians. The net outflow under primary income (investment income) increased to US$ 6.3 billion in Q3 FY 2012-13 mainly led by a fall in investment income receipts by 2.4% and a rise in payments by 49.6% in Q3 FY2012-13. The net inflow under the capital account mainly consisting of official transfers, net acquisition of nonproduced non-financial assets and other capital receipts including migrant transfers was at a meager US$ 0.01 billion in Q3 FY 2012-13. The CAD during the third quarter was financed by the net inflow under the financial accounts. The financial account, which comprise of foreign direct investment, portfolio investment, loans availed by banks and corporates, external assistance and short term trade credits and advances, stood at a surplus of US$ 31.1 billion, higher than the US$ 23.9 billion in the September quarter and US$ 20.6 billion in the corresponding quarter a year ago. The surge in net inflow under financial account was driven by higher net portfolio investment, loans availed by banks and corporates, external assistance and short term trade credits and advances. Foreign Portfolio Investment rose to US$ 8.6 billion from US$ 1.8 billion in the corresponding quarter a year ago; however, the more stable inflows of FDI (net) almost halved to US$ 2.5 billion from US$ 5.0 billion in Q3 FY 2011-12. External Commercial Borrowings (ECBs) surged to US$ 3.1 billion as against a net repayment at US$ 0.8 billion in Q3 FY 2011-12. The Foreign Exchange Reserves rose marginally to US$ 0.8 billion in October-December 2012 quarter as against a drawdown by US$ 0.2 billion in the July September 2012 quarter.

Our View: India s Twin Deficit (Current Account Deficit and Fiscal Deficit) highlight the growing risk of macroeconomic and financial instability. During the April-February period of FY 2012-13, the fiscal deficit of the Government was at Rs 5.07 lakh crore i.e. 97.4% of the budget estimates for the fiscal. With the fiscal deficit pegged at 4.8% of the GDP in FY 2013-14, it is crucial for the Government to mobilize additional revenue sources as also build-up the existing ones to avoid a fiscal slippage on the back of increased expenditure. In a bid to narrow the trade deficit and restrict the burgeoning CAD, the Government has initiated various measures like deterring the gold imports by increasing the import duty and extending various exports incentives to boost outward shipments. Though these measures have led to narrowing of trade deficit in the month of February 2013 to US$ 14.9 billion aided by a slower growth in imports as against exports, sustaining the trend is a daunting task given the upheavals in global economy which would have an immediate bearing on India s trade. Though the CAD in the month under review was funded by a surge in inbound portfolio investment without drawing down on the foreign exchanges reserves, the indecisive nature of these inflows could trigger fresh round of pressure on the balance of payment position. This could exert significant pressure on the foreign exchanges reserves and will lead to further devaluation of the Indian Rupee. Furthermore, the trend will necessitate the Government to consider a comprehensive reform of the FDI regime to encourage foreign investors to invest in India. Additional, India s external sector continues to remain under stress. India s External Debt was valued at US$ 376.3 billion as at end-december 2012, up 8.9% from March 2012, on account of long and short term components. The short-term debt (indicating trade-related credit) increased by 17.5% from March 2012 to US$ 91.9 billion as of December 31, 2012. The increasing ratio of short-term debt to total debt signifies an additional pressure on the foreign exchange reserves if these debts are not refinanced or equivalent inflows from other sources doesn't come through. These developments will further deteriorate the import cover which has been showing a declining trend with a persistent fall in foreign exchange reserves. - Prateusha Kumaran prateusha.kumaran@idbi.co.in +91-22-66552307

A SNAPSHOT OF INDIA S MACRO ECONOMIC INDICATORS Units FY2010 FY2011 FY2012 FY2013 1. National Income GDP at Factor Cost (at constant price) Rs.crore 4516071 4937006 5243582 5503476(AE) GDP Growth Rate Per cent 8.39% 8.39% 6.48% 5.0% (AE) Agriculture & allied activities Per cent 0.80% 7.90% 3.60% 1.79% (AE) Industry Per cent 9.20% 9.20% 3.50% 3.12% (AE) Service Per cent 10.50% 9.80% 8.20% 6.58% (AE) Sectoral Share in GDP Agriculture & allied activities Per cent 14.64% 14.45% 14.10% 13.7% (AE) Industry Per cent 28.27% 28.23% 27.51% 27% (AE) Service Per cent 57.09% 57.32% 58.39% 59.3% (AE) Foodgrain Production Mn. tonnes 218.1 244.5 259.3 250.1(AE) 2. Inflation Rate (WPI) All commodities (wt 100.0000) Per cent 3.80% 9.56% 8.94% 7.46% * Primary articles (wt 20.1182) Per cent 12.66% 17.75% 9.80% 9.89% * Fuel & power (wt 14.9102) Per cent -2.11% 12.28% 13.96% 10.29% * Manufactured products (wt 64.9716) Per cent 2.22% 5.70% 7.26% 5.58% * 3. Index of Industrial Production (IIP) Overall IIP Per cent 5.28% 8.23% 2.89% 0.82% # Sector-wise Mining & Quarrying (wt 141.57) Per cent 7.91% 5.23% -1.97% -1.76% # Manufacturing (wt 755.27) Per cent 4.84% 8.95% 3.00% 0.78% # Electricity (wt 103.16) Per cent 6.07% 5.56% 8.16% 4.55% # Use-Based Basic Goods (wt 456.82) Per cent 4.75% 5.98% 5.48% 2.75% # Capital Goods (wt 88.25) Per cent 0.99% 14.75% -3.97% -9.24% # Intermediate goods (wt 156.86) Per cent 6.03% 7.39% -0.62% 1.62% # Consumer goods (wt 298.08) Per cent 7.66% 8.57% 4.37% 2.82% # 4. Fiscal Health Central govt. receipts Rs.crore 1025874 1190899 1320355 1435976 Revenue receipts Rs.crore 572811 788471 751437 871828 Net tax revenue Rs.crore 456536 569869 629765 742115 Non-tax revenue Rs.crore 116275 218602 121672 129713 Capital receipts (net) Rs.crore 453063 402428 568918 546148 Central govt. Expenditure Rs.crore 1024487 1197328 1304365 1430825 Non-plan expenditure Rs.crore 721096 818299 891990 1001638 Plan expenditure Rs.crore 303391 379029 412375 429187 Central govt. gross fiscal deficit Rs.crore 418482 373592 515990 520925 Central govt. revenue deficit Rs.crore 338998 252252 394348 391245 Central govt. primary deficit Rs.crore 205389 139569 242840 204251

Units FY2010 FY2011 FY2012 FY2013 5. Money & Banking Number of reporting SCBs Numbers 163 163 169 165^ Total liabilities of SCBs Rs.crore 5029833 5796736 6619990 7220910 @ Total assets of SCBs Rs.crore 5305495 6220162 7158020 7822650 @ SCBs credit Rs.crore 3244788 3942080 4611850 5027220 @ Food Credit Rs.crore 48489 64280 81300 107560 @ Non-Food Credit Rs.crore 3196299 3877800 4530550 4919660 @ SCBs credit-deposit ratio Per cent 72.22 75.7 78 75.4 ^ M3 Rs.crore 5602700 6504120 7359200 7979160 @@ 6. External Sector Export Growth (USD) Per cent -3.5 40.5 21.3-4.9% * Import Growth (USD) Per cent -5 28.2 32.3-0.0% * Current Account Balance / GDP Per cent -2.8-2.8-4.2-4.6%^^ Foreign Exchange Reserves USD billion 279.1 304.8 294.4 295.5 * 7. Financial Market BSE Sensex Base 1978-79 =100 17527.77 19445.22 17404.2 18096.08 + Market capitalisation on the BSE Rs.crore 6165619 6839083 6214941 6399684.72 + Central govt dated securities auctions Numbers 108 115 128 142 $ Amount raised through dated securities Rs.crore 418000 437000 509275 558000 $ Market rate of Rupee v/s US dollar Rs./US $ 47.413 45.575 47.947 54.456 + Market rate of Rupee v/s Pound Sterling Rs./Pound Sterling 75.882 70.896 76.413 86.363 + Market rate of Rupee v/s Euro Rs./Euro 67.082 60.23 65.898 70.030 + Market rate of Rupee v/s Japanese Yen Rs./Yen 0.5112 0.5332 0.608 0.667 + Source Economic Survey 2012-13, CSO, Business Beacon, IDBI Bank Note: 1. AE- Advance Estimates; 2. * - April-Jan 2012; 3. #- April -Dec 2012; 4. + - daily average; 5. $ - Apr12-Feb13; 6. ^ - as of Oct 2012; 7. @ - as of Dec 2012; @@ - as of Nov 2012 8. NA - Not Available 9. ^^ - April- September 2012 Disclaimer: This report/ material has been prepared by IDBI Bank Limited ( IDBI Bank ) and is only meant for the recipient for use as intended and not for circulation. This document and its contents are strictly confidential and may not be retransmitted, distributed, published, reproduced (in whole or in part) by any medium or in any form, or disclosed or made available by recipients to any other person. The information contained herein is collected from public domain or sources believed to be reliable and IDBI Bank has not independently verified it. While reasonable care has been taken to ensure that the information given is at the time believed to be fair and correct and opinions based thereupon are reasonable, due to the very nature of the research, it cannot be guaranteed, warranted or represented that it is accurate or complete and it should not be relied upon. This report/material has been prepared solely for informational purposes and does not constitute or form part of, and should not be construed as, an offer to sell, or as an invitation or inducement to make, or a solicitation of, any offer to purchase or subscribe for any securities investment products or other financial product or service, or an official confirmation of any transaction. No part of this report/material should form the basis of, or be relied on in connection with, any contract or commitment or investment decision whatsoever. It is clarified that the information contained herein is preliminary, limited in nature and subject to verification, completion and amendment. No representation or warranty, express or implied, is given or made by any person in relation to the fairness, accuracy, completeness or reliability of the information or any opinions contained herein and no reliance whatsoever should be placed on such information or opinions. This report/material, should not be regarded by recipients as a substitute for the exercise of their own judgement and assessment. Any opinions expressed in this material are subject to change without notice and neither IDBI Bank nor any other person is under any obligation to update or keep current the information contained herein. Neither IDBI Bank, nor its advisors nor any of their respective affiliates, agents, directors, partners and employees shall have any responsibility or liability whatsoever(for negligence or otherwise) for any loss howsoever arising from any use of this report/material or its contents or otherwise arising in connection with this report/material. This report/material contains certain tables and other statistical information and analyses (the Statistical Information ). Numerous assumptions were used in preparing the Statistical Information, which may or may not be reflected herein. As such, no assurance can be given as to the Statistical Information s accuracy, appropriateness or completeness in any particular context; nor as to whether the Statistical Information and/or the assumptions upon which they are based reflect present market conditions or future market performance. The Statistical Information should not be construed as either projections or predictions or as legal, tax, financial or accounting advice. This report/material may contain statements about future events and expectations that are forward-looking statements. Any statement in this report/material that is not a statement of historical fact is a forward-looking statement that is based on various assumptions and involves unknown risks and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. The recipient may have to make its own independent investigation and appraisal of the market condition and environment and no reliance may be placed upon the information herein for such purposes. Recipients should consult with their own legal, regulatory, tax, business, investment, financial and accounting advisers to the extent that they deem it necessary, and make their own investment, hedging and trading decisions based upon their own investigation and judgement and advice from such advisers as they deem necessary and not upon any view expressed in this material. Nothing in this document constitutes investment advice and any recommendations that may be contained herein have not been based upon a consideration of the investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any specific recipient. By reviewing this material you acknowledge and agree to be bound by the foregoing.