Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Check for signs of Investment cycle turning up

Some food for thought
"Not everyone grows to be old, but everyone has been younger than he is now."
—Evelyn Waugh (British Author, 1903-1966)
Word for the day
Diablerie (n)
The domain or realm of devils.
 
First random thought this morning
It is often seen that cricketers highlight the evening dew as an external factor in determining the outcome of a day-night cricket match. Why?
Isn't dew a key factor that is known to all the stakeholders well in advance? Shouldn't the game strategy take care of it? Why is it cited as an external factor that helped in changing the outcome of the match?
The same thing applies to the politics also.
Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) knew very well, before preparing its manifesto for Delhi elections, the power, accountability and limitations of the Delhi administration, as per the constitutional provisions. Nowhere in the manifesto of AAP it's mentioned that their promises are contingent upon Delhi Administration getting more power or Delhi getting the status of full state. Then why AAP is taking refuge under this excuse for its failure to fulfill the promises made in the manifesto?
Similarly, BJP came to power fully knowing the state of economy, treasury and politics. In fact one of its primary election plank was poor state of economy (10year of policy paralysis), and treasury (stimulus post GFC, MNREGA, food security, pay commission, OROP etc.) BJP was also fully aware about its political limitation (lack of adequate numbers in Rajya Sabha, etc.) BJP did also adequately highlight the poor state of infrastructure, employment, corruption, inequality, institutional inadequacies etc. allegedly due to 70yr misrule of Congress.
Fully cognizant of all these facts, BJP made promises in its election manifesto. Nowhere did it mention that all these promises are subject to Congress cooperation in Rajya Sabha, or correction in the circumstances that are prevailing due to Congress misrule. The promises were made unconditionally for a 5yr term. It has to answer accordingly. The platitudes like "we have done more in 4.5yr than what Congress did in 70yrs" are not acceptable.
It is high time that the Election Manifesto of parties is made a statutory document, and all parties are accountable for what they promise. A delivery percentage of less than 50% should lead to ban on contesting elections for one term.
Chart of the day

 

Check for signs of Investment cycle turning up

A recent study conducted by RBI staff (India's Investment Cycle: An Empirical Investigations by Raj, Sahoo & Shankar) highlighted some encouraging signs for Indian economy. The study highlighted that the Indian investment cycle that was struggling for some years, has shown some signs of turning the corner. Though, it is yet to be seen whether this turnaround is sustainable or not. However, if the current trend sustains, we may be at the cusp of bull market that may sustain for 5year.
It is therefore important to assimilate the findings of this study and keep a close watch on the variety of factors to find if the turnaround in investment cycle in India is sustainable. The investment strategy shall according be modified suitably.
The following are some of the key findings of the said study that an investor may want to note:
1     The real investment rate in India generally trended upwards to peak at 36.7 per cent in 2007-08, before declining to 30.3 per cent by 2015- 16 due to a variety of factors such as the adverse impact of the global financial crisis, the twin balance sheet problem – high leverage by the corporate sector and high nonperforming assets (NPAs) of the banking sector, and subdued domestic capital market conditions.
The slowdown in the investment rate was one of the major factors, which pulled down India’s growth rate from a high of 9.3 per cent in 2007-08 to a low of 6.7 per cent in 2017-18.
Though the investment rate has picked up since 2016-17, there is uncertainty about the sustainability of the recent upturn in investment activity and its role in stepping up India’s growth rate – both in the near- and the medium-term.
2.    One percentage point fall in investment rate dents growth by 0.4-0.7 percentage points. Investment rate is also highly correlated with the non-agriculture GDP growth rate, particularly in recent years.
3.    Interest rate is one of the major factors in investment decisions, as user cost of capital, plays an important role in capital formation. The negative relationship between real interest rate3 and investment rate in India is also evident after the 1990s when interest rates were deregulated.
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4.    Apart from the cost of capital, availability of financial resources/funds is another important factor that is expected to drive investment, especially because India has a bank-dominated financial system. Non-food credit growth of commercial banks is closely related with the investment rate.
5.    The private sector is the biggest contributor to gross capital formation and it has played a crucial role in driving India’s investment activity. However, the fiscal deficit in India appears to have crowded out private investment as is evident from the negative relationship between the GFD and the investment rate.

 
6.    Global growth is also observed to have an important bearing on India’s investment activity through exports. For instance, the GFC during the second half of the 2000s impacted the Indian economy through trade and finance channels. The global GDP growth turned negative in 2008 and 2009. Sluggish global economic activity dampened India’s export demand and led to a slowdown in investment activity.
Signs of Investment cycle turning up
7.    In the post-liberalisation period, four major downturns in the investment cycle have been witnessed. The first phase of severe downturn was in the first half of the 1990s, when the Indian economy was hit hard by the balance of payments crisis, leading to import compression and a deceleration in domestic economic activity. The next phase of downturn in the investment cycle occurred in the early 2000s due to an adverse impact of the bursting of the information technology bubble. The third phase of downturn during 2008-10 reflected knock on impact on the Indian economy through the trade, finance and confidence channels, resulting from the global financial crisis and seizure of the international capital market.
The last phase of downturn in the investment cycle occurred from 2011-12 to 2015-16, reflecting a combination of global and domestic factors. During this phase, world GDP growth fell from 4.3 per cent in 2011 to 3.2 per cent in 2016; average domestic inflation was around eight per cent; real interest rate was high at around five per cent; the combined GFD of the Centre and states was on an average of 7.1 per cent; and the average current account deficit was 2.6 per cent. Bank credit growth collapsed as domestic commercial banks became risk averse due to large gross NPAs and the corporate sector focused on deleveraging rather than fresh investments.
8.    The investment rate began to turn around from 2016-17. This is also reflected in several other high frequency indicators such as industrial production which has picked up since the H2:2017-18. Capital goods production, in particular, has increased sharply, reflecting strengthening of capital formation.
9.    Bank credit growth (y-o-y) of scheduled commercial banks (SCBs), which decelerated from 21.3 per cent in March 2011 to 4.5 per cent in February 2017, has also shown a gradual pick-up from Q3:2017-18. The recent improvement in credit growth is also becoming increasingly broad-based. Credit flows to industry, which contracted during October 2016 to October 2017, has turned positive since November 2017.
10.  Resource mobilisation through initial public offerings (IPOs), which has been picking up since 2015-16, rose sharply in 2017-18.
11.  Capacity utilisation in the manufacturing sector, which plays a significant role in promoting fresh investment activity, has also picked up since H2:2017-18 and has reached the long-term average level in Q4:2017-18.


Friday, October 26, 2018

It is, what it is.



Some food for thought
"A position of eminence makes a great person greater and a small person less."
—Jean de la Bruyere (French Philosopher, 1645-1696)
Word for the day
Dirigible (n)
An airship;
Designed for or capable of being directed, controlled, or steered.
 
First random thought this morning
The premier investigation agency of the country, The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), had always been mired in controversy. Almost every government in past 40-45 years has been accused of misusing the agency to further the agenda of ruling party. All politicians accused of wrong doing by the agency have invariably termed its action as political vendetta. Even the Supreme Court on many occasions has raised questions over independence of the agency.
This suggests that the country in general and political class in particular, has little faith in CBI. Ironically, the politicians from all parties have always wanted CBI to investigate their allegations against each other.
The recent controversy involving CBI and the government's response in removing the top officers must be seen from this prism, in my view.
I guess, the response of the government is decisive and shall lead to structural reforms in the working of the agency. We shall see, in near future, a comprehensive constitutional framework to ensure credibility of the agency and brining transparency and accountability in its operation.
The situation could be compared to the circumstances that led to autonomy of election commission about three decades ago, making it one of the most respected institutions globally.
I am not too worried about the dust and din being raised for now.
Chart of the day
 

It is, what it is. Diary

After going through numerous research reports about the current state of global economy and markets, I have come to a conclusion, which many would like to term cynical, preposterous, myopic or even bizarre. But it is what it is.
I feel we are fast approaching a stage, where trends begin to deviate from historical path. This is the stage in global history where the economy makes a "shift". Forecasting the direction and trajectory of this shift is not possible using the conventional tools. The forecast has to be institutive (or speculative if you like the word better).
I find most of the contemporary research suffers from one or more of the following limitation, viz., treating the current turmoil:
(a)   A normal financial market correction, mostly led by higher valuations of equities in a rising rate environment; and fall in bond prices due to US rate hikes and fiscal slippages.
(b)   A usual cyclical economic downturn, led primarily by peak employment conditions in US and rising inflation.
(c)    A usual cyclical correction in global economic cycle led primarily by rising US rates, tariff related disruptions in trade, and higher crude prices due to OPEC curbs and Iran sanctions.
(d)   A pause in secular bull market led primarily by geopolitical concerns as specter of cold war revisits.
(e)    A global liquidity event led by unwinding of USD carry trade as US rates begin to climb and trade related disruption caused USD supply to contract materially.
(f)    Two engines of global growth EU and China are not functioning properly.
My intuition says, these reports perhaps suffer much from ad hocism and myopia.
I see the current market turmoil as part of the Endgame for the biggest bubble ever created in the human history. The pain that was suppressed by artificial liquidity (only book entries without even printing the currency) created in the wake of market freeze post Lehman collapse, is beginning to hurt again.
The global trade and geopolitical balances that got skewed in post USSR (Coldwar) world, and further exacerbated post China's entry into WTO in early 2000s, shall seek to return to a state of equilibrium.
This gigantic rebalancing effort, inter alia, shall see:
(a)   China seeking a respectful place in the global arena, given that it has subsidized the global growth with cheap labor and capital for almost two decades now. The Chinese State shall fight the global powers which do not find China (not being a democracy) suitable to sit on high pedestal with them; and the internal dissent from vast majority of people that shall seek freedom from decades of suppression.
(b)   Europe seeking an alternative to the common market, as the common currency experiment seems to have failed in bringing equity to disparate regions.
(c)    The third generation of the losers of WWII (Germany & Japan) seeking to obliterate the guilt from their national consciousness and seeking an equitable role in global affairs.
(d)   Countries like Russia, India, Australia, Korea seeking a commensurate role in global affairs and metamorphosing the world into a multipolar field from the current unipolar field.
(e)    The world seeking to correct the demographic imbalances by changing the norms for cross border movement of people.
Intuitively I feel that India may have a large role to play in this whole effort. The top level political and corporate leadership perhaps recognizes this opportunity too. However, I do not see any vision or plan to prepare the 1.3bn people for this opportunity.
This is where the greatest risk to Indian economy and markets lies, in my view. Bothering about meaningless things like elections, kilometers of road made or not made, failure of few NBFCs or banks, etc. could just be a distraction, a rather fatal one.
May also like to read the following:

Thursday, October 25, 2018

Beyond liquidity vs. solvency debate

Some food for thought
"If man makes himself a worm he must not complain when he is trodden on."
—Immanuel Kant (German Philosopher, 1724-1804)
Word for the day
Hooly (adv)
Cautious; gentle.
 
First random thought this morning
Going beyond the gloom in stock markets and the muck flying on news channels the whole day (yes it is no longer confined to prime time now); a brilliant season has started.
In north India the weather is beautiful. Pre winter nip in the air is brilliant. Flowers have started blooming.
It's festival time all across the country.
Durga Puja has just ended and Diwali festivities have already begun. Card and drink parties have already started in posh South Mumbai, South Kolkata homes and South Delhi farm houses.
The festive fervor is enhanced in Central India by the colorful and noisy election campaign.
Celebrity marriages (Ambanis, Deepika-Ranbir, Priyanka-Nick) scheduled in next two months are also adding to the joy of middle classes. These marriages are being watched with great anticipation. Many aspiring couple (and their parents), event managers, dress designers shall draw inspiration from these celebrity marriages.
Switching off your TV and phone in the evenings and taking a walk to local markets, could really cheer you up, if you are feeling bit low.
Chart of the day

 

Beyond liquidity vs. solvency debate

As the fresh breeze of liberalization and globalization entered India in early 1990s, there came many new businesses. In the initial phase these businesses were less regulated and promoters had little experience. They experimented, in many cases rather aggressively. Few of them survived. For example consider the following:
(a)   The original Airline monopoly of India AirIndia is almost bankrupt. Amongst the first set of private airlines, which started business in early 1990s, only Jet Air survived but struggling. Most like Sahara, ModiLuft, East West, Damania and NEPC, etc. ended miserably. From the second set Kingfisher, Deccan and many smaller ones went kaput. The latest set IndiGo, GoAir, Vistara and SpiceJet is surviving well and making money too.
(b)   The original telecom monopolies BSNL and MTNL are almost bankrupt. From the first set of private operators Reliance infocomm, BPL, Tata Teleservices, Escotel Spice, Essar Hutchison, HFCL are out of business - sold off or shutdown. Airtel survived & thrived, Idea has merged with Vodafone. Amongst the late entrants, Aircel, DoCoMo, Uninor went out of business. The latest entrant Reliance Jio has emerged a winner.
(c)    In case of mutual fund industry, the original monopoly UTI ended miserably. From the second set many like GIC, PNB and Indian Bank shut shop and few like BoI, BoB, Canara are barely surviving. From the latest set the first entrant Morgan Stanley and others like HSBC, DB, Fidelity, Goldman Sachs have sold off. Top
(d)   Many amongst the first set of private banks did not do well. Likes of GTB, Times bank, Centurion Bank, Bank of Punjab had to merge with larger banks. ICICI and IDBI reverse merged with parent institutions. HDFC Bank and Kotak, Yes and IndusInd have done very well. From the latest ones, we need to see how many are able to build a sustainable business model.
(d)   Similarly amongst the first set of large private road and power asset developers many like IVRCL, Gammon are bankrupt, some other like Reliance Infra, GVK, GMR, Suzlon are struggling. A large number of old real estate developers like are already bankrupt or struggling to survive.
(e)    A large number of steel manufacturers ended bankrupt in 1990s, just when the Indian economy was moving to higher growth orbit from the Hindu rate of growth orbit. The story is repeating two decades later.
(f)    In a perennially energy deficient country Reliance failed to make much headway in oil & gas exploration business. After a struggle of more than a decade, they have almost abandoned KG basin gas operations. The other notable investor in oil & gas exploration business Videocon Industries is already bankrupt.
This all has happened when the demand for airlines, telecom, mutual funds, roads, steel, cement and power has grown all through these years.
I am noting these events because I do not want to get involved in the current popular debate about non banking financial companies in India. Those in their forties and fifties would remember that the measures subsequent to the previous banking crisis in early 1990s caused mushrooming of thousands of NBFCs in mid 1990s. Every street in the tier I and tier II cities was filled with sign boards of companies with suffixes like Finserve and Finlease. Less than 1% of those companies exist today.
This is certainly not merely short term liquidity vs. solvency issue. This is about the paradigm shift in market place and ability to survive the change. This is also about maturity in valuing these businesses.

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Discontented, unhappy but not distressed

Some food for thought
"Stupidity is also a gift of God, but one mustn't misuse it."
—Pope John Paul II (Polish Saint, 1920-2005)
Word for the day
Branstorm (v)
To conduct a campaign or speaking tour in rural areas by making brief stops in many small towns.
 
First random thought this morning
कर्मण्यकर्म य: पश्येदकर्मणि च कर्म य: |
स बुद्धिमान्मनुष्येषु स युक्त: कृत्स्नकर्मकृत् ||
"Those who see action in inaction and inaction in action are truly wise amongst humans. Although performing all kinds of actions, they are yogis and masters of all their actions." (Chapter 4, Verse 18, Shri Bhagwat Gita)
The Lord himself guided the humanity — a wise person, whose actions are burnt by the fire of knowledge, escapes from karma by keeping his actions free from desires and attachments, remaining contended and taking refuge in nothing.
Performing actions without expectations and without worrying about the outcome, frees the doer from bondage of Karma.
By living the life spontaneously, with unflinching trust in the Lord, one demolishes all boundaries setting himself/herself free from fear, insecurity, dependence, compulsion, and conditioning to the environment.
This is plain conventional wisdom, on which most Indian, especially majority Hindus, are raised upon.
Many in the position of power often claim to be devout Hindus and frequently quote from scriptures. Those in principal opposition parties have also claimed taking up the study of scriptures.
But do we see any reflection of what the Lord himself guided, in their personal, social, professional or political conduct. At least I cannot. To me, their actions appear invariably driven by parochial self interest.
How would this situation get corrected?
Chart of the day

 

Discontented, unhappy but not distressed

Last week we travelled through the states of Madhya Pradesh (MP) and Chhattisgarh in central India. Both these states are going into assembly election next 6-8weeks. Both the states are being governed by BJP since 2003. These states are considered crucial for the BJP's 2019 campaign, as presently BJP holds 37 out of 40 Lok Sabha seats in these states.
We covered 13 districts of Madhya Pradesh spanning over 5 divisions of Chambal, Gwalior, Jabalpur, Sagar and Shadol), and . 12 districts of Chhattisgarh spanning over 3 divisions of Durg, Raipur and Bilaspur.
The objective was to observe the prevalent socio-economic conditions and assess the political mood of the people.
Without going into too much detail, I would like to share the following key observations and assessment with the readers.
Political assessment
(a)   BJP is likely to lose in the state of Chhattisgarh. The ruling party may lose a substantial chunk of tribal votes as well urban middle class votes in the state. Ajit Jogi led JCC and BSP may register decent vote share in select pockets. But Congress led by Bhupesh Baghel seems set for returning to power.
(b)   In Madhya Pradesh, the situation is complex. The certainty is that BJP will lose both vote share and seats from its 2013 position. A large number of seats may be decided with thin margin. At present all three scenarios are possible, viz., (i) BJP wins a simple majority; (ii) Congress wins a simple majority; and (iii) Both parties fall short of a simple majority.
If I have to bet money on election outcome, I will bet on scenario (ii) - Congress wining a simple majority.
(c)    There is definitely no Modi wave this time. In fact, many local candidates may prefer not to use Modi's pictures in their campaign material.
(d)   Shivraj Singh remains popular, but may suffer from anti incumbency of central government. Kamal Nath is most preferred CM candidate after Shivraj Singh.
Socio-economic assessment
(i)    Rural population is not in distress but quite discontented. No one is dying of hunger, but younger generation does not see future in farms and villages.
(ii)   The state of urban population is no different. There is no distress. But people in general are unhappy and agitated. The confidence in future growth and prosperity is low.
(iii)  Liquidity is poor. People have low cash and discretionary spending is lower. The pain of demonetization is still lingering.
(iv)   The people are agitated in general. The outbursts are spontaneous and frequent. The trust deficit is widening. The conditions are explosive. The good part is that administration recognizes this and hence response could be prompt. The bad part is there is little effort to diffuse the agitation. The ugly part is politicians are not averse to adding fuel to fire.
(v)    The concept of development has been trivialized brazenly. Normal maintenance effort like road widening, drainage cleaning, regular pick up of garbage, replacement of transformers, providing sever lines etc are sought to be passed on as good development. The whole development paradigm thus seems seriously malignant.