Wednesday, August 24, 2022

State of the economy

Some notes on the current state of the Indian economy.

Monsoon ‘abnormal’ so far

The monsoon season this year has been quite erratic so far. Statistically, during the period from 1st June to 22nd August the country has received 9% more than the normal rainfall. However, the temporal and spatial distribution of rainfall has been quite abnormal so far.

·         252 (36%) of the 703 districts in the country have witnessed ‘excess’ (20% to 59% above normal) to ‘large excess’ (60% or more above normal) of rains.

·         236 (34%) districts have received ‘normal’ (upto 19% above or below normal) rains.

·         215 (30%) districts have received ‘deficient’ (60% to 59% below normal) to ‘large deficient’ (more than 60% below normal) rains.

·         More importantly, the granaries of India – UP, Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal have been mostly deficient to large deficient. In UP, 66 out of 75 districts have been deficient to large deficient. In Bihar 35 out of 38 districts have received deficient to large deficient rainfall.

The agriculture activities have been affected in large part of the country due to erratic, large excess and deficient rainfall. However, the water storage levels in most reservoirs are now good and soil moisture is also better, which augurs well for the Rabi crop. Thus, despite a below par Kharif crop and poor summer vegetable crop; we may see decent overall agriculture growth in FY23. However, the rural demand in this festival season may be not buoyant. The rural credit may also face renewed stress in some pockets.



Infrastructure orders ‘strong’

NHAI reportedly awarded 6,306km of orders in FY22 – vs 4,788/3,211km in FY21/20, exceeding its target of 5000km. Other government departments and state governments are also accelerating the pace of infra order awarding, especially in roads, irrigation, metro, water and mining. It is expected that the order momentum may sustain in FY23 as well. Reportedly, more than Rs1trn of tenders have been issued in July 2022 alone. Roads, water, and railways continue to be the major contributors for the same.

Among sectors, roads, railways, water and irrigation, and power equipment (Solar EPC) saw strong inflows in April-July 2022. Growth in railways was driven by large wagon orders. Growth in power equipment was driven by solar EPC orders.

Considering the ‘above estimate’ performance of most infrastructure developers, it is evident that the execution may also be improving. It is reasonable to expect that the infrastructure activity may finally be taking off to an acceleration phase.






Inflation expectations ‘anchored’

Reported CPI for July 2022 was at 6.71%, at five month low level. Though, it remained above the RBI upper tolerance band of 6% for 7th consecutive month. The core inflation-excluding food and fuel segments- came in at 6.04% in July compared to 6.22% in June. Thus a slowdown in inflation rate was primarily driven by food, transportation and communication.

The RBI Governor commented yesterday that “inflation is getting increasingly anchored; has moderated from the peak. Bond yields at the long end are reflecting the anchoring of inflation. Softening of crude and commodity prices is also supportive. Inflation has peaked and is expected to moderate.”

As per the brokerage firm JM Financials, “India’s inflation trajectory is trending downwards while core inflation should be range bound (5.9% - 6.4%) throughout the upcoming festive season before easing meaningfully. But the risk of percolation of high WPI inflation to retail inflation would keep CPI elevated, currently the wedge remains as high as 8.2% and even if July WPI print eases by 50bps, the wedge would still be 8%. Although global supply chains may show early signs of easing, geopolitical issues are far from over and any further escalation would negatively impact crude price and INR. We see Q2FY23 CPI inflation at 6.9% vs RBIs 7.1%, easing inflation would entail a policy action addressing more towards defending
INR than suppressing demand, hence Sep’22 MPC meet should see shallow rate hikes (30bps).”



Borrowing cost and deposit rates rising

As per rating firm CARE Ratings, “Credit offtake had shown an improving trend in the latter half of FY22, which has continued in the first four months of FY23. RBI has been working on reducing the liquidity surplus in the banking system which has been consistently reducing and is currently around the Rs 2 lakh crore mark from Rs 7 lakh crore at the beginning of 2022.”

Weighted average lending rate (WALR) for all banks has risen post RBI hiking the policy rates. Expectations of further policy rate hikes are also prompting certain banks to proactively raise rates. Deposits rates have also witnessed some hikes; though the rise in deposit rates, has been slower than the increase in lending rates.




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