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Showing posts from March, 2023

Some notable research snippets of the week

Nominal GDP growth could be ~7.5% in FY24 (MOFSL) It is remarkable that the first three months of 2023 have already witnessed several different moods. The year began with very strong optimism on global economic growth; however, from mid-Feb’23, the positive sentiment started fading with US economic data turning out to be much stronger than expected. With the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank on 10th March 2023, the caution was quickly replaced by serious concerns. The US Fed hiked rates by 25bp this week, continuing its inflation fight. As highlighted in our earlier QEO, owing to increasing growth concerns in the US economy, inflationary concerns will take a back seat in 2HCY23. India, however, seems to be shrugging off these developments so far. Real GDP growth continues to remain strong but we keep our forecasts broadly unchanged at 7%/5.2%/5.6% in FY23/FY24/FY25. We see nominal GDP growth at 16.3%/7.7%/10% in FY23/FY24/FY25, slightly higher than 14.7%/7.3%/9.3% expected earlier. ...

FY23 – A year of normalization

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After two years of disruptions, uncertainty and volatility, FY23 appeared a rather normal year. Both the markets and the economy regained a semblance of normalcy in terms of the level of activity, trajectory of growth, direction, and future outlook. Though, it would be inappropriate to say that skies are blue and bright; it can be reasonably stated that we have reverted to a market that is no longer euphoric. Pendulum swinging back to equilibrium The global economy that witnessed two years of extreme pessimism followed by a period of steroid stimulated exuberance began to normalize in FY23. Central bankers began the process of normalizing monetary policies by withdrawing liquidity and hiking rates. The broken supply chains have been mostly restored. Inflated asset and commodity prices are returning to more reasonable levels. The organs of the global ecosystem which were infected badly by the excessive liquidity, irrational exuberance and unsustainable stress are now getting amputated. ...

Some notable research snippets of the week

  India Internet: Powerful watershed unfolding (Elara Capital) India’s digital neural networks are set to step into self-regulated, self-taught proliferation zone, led by the second largest digital consumer base globally (800mn+ internet users), massive government impetus and keen private innovation. Thus, reportedly, India’s digital economy is forecasted to snowball into USD 800bn by 2030, growing 2.4x faster than its economy in FY14-19 (source). And MSMEs, the key brace structure of the economy with 26%+ GDP contribution in FY22, have sharply stepped digitisation pace. MSME digital penetration should grow 6x in FY20-25, as per Redseer. Expect plays such as Indiamart (INMART IN)/Justdial (JUST IN) that offer direct play on MSME digitisation, to set the pace for such progress and in turn benefit. MSME business dynamics are seeing a paradigm shift, led by nuanced policy support and post-Covid recovery. Improving MSME credit growth, manufacturing revival, supportive government/RB...

Fed stays on course

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The US Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) decided to hike the key federal fund rate by 25bps to 4.75% - 5% range. This is the eighth straight hike decision by the FOMC since the Fed started its fight against inflation in March 2022; bringing the rates to highest since September 2007. Speaking to the press post FOMC meeting, the Fed chairman Jerome Powell, dismissed the speculation about any imminent rate cuts, stating “FOMC participants don't see rate cuts this year, it is not our baseline expectations”. The post meeting statement of FOMC indicated that the policy may remain sufficiently restrictive though future hikes shall be data dependent. The statement read “The Committee anticipates that some additional policy firming may be appropriate in order to attain a stance of monetary policy that is sufficiently restrictive to return inflation to 2 percent over time” and “The Committee will closely monitor incoming information and assess the implications for monetary policy”...
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  Exploring India – Part 2 In the past three weeks our team travelled through eight out of ten administrative divisions of Madhya Pradesh (MP), covering thirty six out of fifty two districts in the state. I may share some key points from the socio-economic and political assessment made by the team. Socio-economic assessment From socio-economic perspective, MP comprises of easily distinguishable three states – 1.    Tribal areas that are extremely poor; lack basic amenities (especially health and education); not properly connected; agrarian; highly contended; and mostly integrated with nature. Though the non-tribal elements and cultures have started to make inroads in these areas from the fringes, the impact so far is limited. Mobile phones, packaged snacks, pan masala (chewing tobacco sachets), motorcycles (scooty), small solar panels, shirt-pants, denim, plastic crockery, are main signs of what is commonly known as “modern civilization” in the tribal areas o...

Indian equities sailed the turbulent decade very well

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  The past 10yrs (2013-2022) have been a period of great uncertainty and turbulence for the global economy, financial system and markets which were considerably weakened by the global financial crisis in the preceding five years. Supported by abundant liquidity and lower rates, the markets weathered Tapering 1.0; Brexit; Covid-19 pandemic; Sino-US tariff war; remarkable shift in weather patterns; handing over Afghanistan to Taliban; Russia-Ukraine war; out of control inflation; and burst of technology stock bubble rather well. The end of near zero rate regimes and monetary tightening in the past one year has however made the markets jittery. The current generation of the market participants (investors, bankers, analysts, intermediaries, and policy makers etc.) who are in their 20s and 30s have never practically experienced persistently higher inflation and consistently rising interest rates. They might have read case studies of the 1970s and 1980s era; but that is usually not a goo...