Assuming a normal monsoon, we expect GDP growth to surge 8.3 per cent during the financial year 2010-11, driven by robust industrial growth and resilient performance of the service sector," D&B said in a report.
Besides, it said that rise in consumption demand is likely to contribute majorly to the economic growth and help augment investments.
Healthy income levels on account of faster pace of job creation as well as broadening of tax slabs -- as proposed in this year's Union Budget -- will create higher disposable income with consumers, driving up demand.
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Economy of India to grow at 8.3 percent
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Banks move to Mutual funds as loan applications dip
(posted under - Indian Economy, Mutual funds investing) - According to the latest RBI figures, the first week of April has seen a dip in outstanding loans. Total bank loans as on April 9 stood at Rs 32,41,255 crore, up Rs 1,167 crore over the previous fortnight’s levels. However, outstanding loans were marginally lower than the Rs 32,43,175-crore loans outstanding on end March 2010. The second half of March saw bank loans growing by over Rs 1,00,000 crore — a feat which banking sources say was achieved only by banks window dressing their books.
Banks have invested an additional Rs 50,016 crore during the fortnight ended April 9, taking their total MF exposure to Rs 1,05,519 crore. This is despite the central bank asking lenders to cut down exposure to mutual funds. Foreign exchange reserves were flat at $280 billion during the week-ended April 16, largely on account of revaluation of non-dollar assets.
Govt to infuse 15000 cr into public sector banks - nice move
(posted under PSU banks, banking sector news)- just headrd that the government on Friday approved a plan to infuse Rs 15,000 crore capital into state-run banks in the current fiscal to boost their lending capacity. looks like a nice move if whole amount is infused without anything taken by politicians from it.
The proposed infusion will increase the lending capacity of the banks by Rs 1,85,000 crore. This additional availability of credit is likely to benefit employment oriented sectors, especially agriculture, micro and small enterprises and entrepreneurs that in turn would contribute substantially to the growth of the economy.
Monday, January 25, 2010
Indian Share Markets closes in red | SENSEX | NIFTY closing rates
(posted under - BSE stocks, NSE stocks, SENSEX closing) - Major indian stock indices closed in red as profit booking lowered the indices.
Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensex ended at 16780.46, down 79.22 points or 0.47 per cent. The index touched an intra-day low of 16705.56 and high of 16877.77.
National Stock Exchange’s Nifty closed at 5007.90, down 28.10 points or 0.56 per cent. The broader index touched a low of 4983.05 and high of 5035.70.
The BSE Midcap Index was down 1.30 per cent and BSE Smallcap Index fell 0.90 per cent.
Amongst the sectoral indices, BSE Realty Index was down 2.88 per cent, BSE Auto Index fell 2.14 per cent and BSE Metal Index declined 1.52 per cent. BSE FMCG Index was up 1.14 per cent and BSE Capital Goods Index advanced 0.42 per cent.
Prediction : Indian economy to grow at 9.2 perc in 2010-11
(posted under - Indian Economy news) - The Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) expects the Asia's third largest economy's GDP growth to accelerate to 9.2 percent in 2010/11 from 6.9 percent in 2009/10.
The measures helped as the country's industrial output grew at its fastest pace in two years in November at 11.7 percent, the economy expanded 7.9 percent in the September-quarter and inflation jumped to a one-year high of 7.3 percent in December CMIE expects the wholesale price index, the main price barometer, to steadily fall to 7.7 percent in the June quarter and further to 3.8 percent March quarter of 2011.
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Govt seeks CVC nod for new norms for advisors
The Government has sought the opinion of the CVC to change the norms for appointing investment bankers for advising it on divesting its stakes in the companies it runs.
Last year, the Government had identified over 60 Central public sector undertakings for disinvestment over the next few years to bridge the gaping fiscal deficit and fund its social sector and infrastructure programmes.
Under the plan, the Centre would dilute up to ten per cent of its stakes in those CPSUs which are unlisted through IPOs and those already listed would have to dilute up to 15 per cent through follow-on public offers to meet Sebi guidelines.
The proposed regulations would help the Government modify the criteria of choosing investment bankers from cost- basis to quality-cum-cost basis, as the current norms put those advisors who do not have deep-pockets at a disadvantageous position.
The objective is to give more weight to the quality of these advisors and not just cost.
Currently, the investment bankers are selected on the cost-basis under which the technically qualified investment bankers are selected on the basis of the lowest bid.
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
India can join WTO pact
India is not a member of the WTO agreement on government procurement and has so far resisted the attempts by the developed countries like the US and European Union to subject Indian state purchases to the multilateral bidding rules.
While the observer status will not mean India immediately coming on the board, it could signal that the country would eventually play the ball, a source said.
The WTO agreement on government purchases is an accord among 30 select countries and is voluntary in nature.
The central government alone has an expenditure budget of Rs 10 lakh crore (approx $125 billion) of which at least more than one third is spent on state purchases. The multinational companies see it as a huge opportunity but find the procurement procedures falling short of global guidelines.
Friday, January 8, 2010
Import ban on steel lifted - sigh of relief for Auto sector
The government on Friday removed restriction on imports of hot-rolled steel, which is mainly used in the automobile and consumer durable industries, giving a big relief to these sectors from rising raw material prices.
A notification to this effect has been issued by the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT).
The government had put the mother steel product in the restricted category in October 2008, which meant that the users required an import licence from the government.
Experts said the government is allowing free imports as the domestic demand is picking up and steel prices have gone up by 10-14 per cent in the last 45 days.
During April-December 2008-09, the imports of this product were worth USD 2.33 billion.
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
RBI all set to curb inflation
Concerned over the spiralling food prices, the Reserve Bank has indicated at tightening money supply to contain the rising inflation pressures.
The Reserve Bank is slated to come out with the third quarter review of its monetary policy on January 29 amid intense speculations that it may signal an interest hike to tighten money supply to contain the rising inflation.
The food inflation was nearly 19 per cent last week while the overall wholesale price inflation rose massively to 4.78 per cent in November compared to 1.34 per cent in October.
The deputy governor further said the near-term policy challenges are clearly conditioned by the evolving growth-inflation outcome that supports shifting the balance of policy focus on managing the recovery and on containment of inflation.
Friday, November 27, 2009
Foreign Direct Investment down 11 percent
Foreign direct investment (FDI) into India fell 11 percent on year to $15.3 billion in the first six months of fiscal 2009/10, the trade minister said, as the global financial downturn clipped flows. India had received $17.2 billion in FDI in the corresponding period last year
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Food price index up 15.58 percent
India's food price index was up 15.58 per cent in the 12 months to November 14, while the fuel index was down 1.51 per cent.
The worst dry spell in nearly four decades and floods in parts of the country have hurt farm output and pushed up food prices.
On Tuesday, C Rangarajan, Chairman of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's Economic Advisory Council, said that food price inflation was the biggest worry for the economy in near term and a strong rise in food prices could prompt monetary action.
India's annual wholesale inflation rose 1.34 per cent in October from a year earlier, compared with 0.5 per cent in September and 11.06 per cent a year ago.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
CII's Survey projects growth of 6-7 % for present fiscal year
(posted under - Indian economy news) - Out of 134 respondents participated in the CII Northern Region Business Outlook Survey, more than half said that India's economic growth is likely to be in the range of 6-7 per cent in the current fiscal.
"Global economic instability followed by slackening consumer demand are the two most important concern areas," it said.
The survey also said that the overall outlook for business is better for the current six months (October-March 2009-10) compared to the previous six months.
Over 50 per cent of the respondents expects an increase in investments during the current six months.
On exports, it said that the outward shipment seems to be much better for October-March. "Fifty-one per cent of the respondents expected an increase in volume of exports," it added.
India's exports are on downslide since October 2008 due to the global slump in demand.
Government of India approves FDI's worth over 1150 crore
(posted under - FDI's in india) - The government of india has approved 17 foreign direct investment (FDI) proposals worth Rs 1,158.78 crore.
Among the major proposals which were approved today are the FDI applications of the world's largest steelmaker ArcelorMittal and ductile iron pipe maker Electrosteel Castings, a government statement said.
ArcelorMittal, with an FDI of Rs 503.37 crore, plans to infuse foreign equity into a company engaged in manufacturing cold-rolled semi-finished iron and steel products.
The Kolkata-based Electrosteel Castings plans to issue and allot eligible securities including equity shares and/ or non-convertible debt instruments along with warrants on a private placement basis bringing in FDI worth Rs 600 crore.
Meanwhile, the government deferred a decision on 12 FDI proposals and rejected five on the recommendations of the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB).
The proposal to infuse 100 per cent foreign equity by Jaipur IPL Cricket Pvt Ltd (the promoters of the Rajasthan Royals which won the 2008 IPL), has been rejected by the government.
The government referred the proposals of Jet Airways to bring in Rs 2,000 crore FDI and the Mauritius-based investment fund Indium IV to bring in Rs 2,500 crore FDI, to the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) as the proposals are of value above Rs 600 crore.
Monday, November 16, 2009
Cheers - Indian economy to be worth $ 2 trillion by fiscal year 2014-15
India will be a $2-trillion economy in the next five years as its GDP growth is likely to average at 12 per cent in nominal terms powered by a huge consumption demand, Enam Securities has said.
"India's GDP is likely to grow at (an) average 12 per cent in nominal terms. Hence, India will be a $2-trillion economy by 2014-15," Enam Securities Head-Research, Nandan Chakraborty, and economist Sachchidanand Shukla said in a report titled 'India Strategy' released today.
This growth will be led by the huge consumption demand in sectors like FMCG, power, auto (small car hub), IT and pharma, it added.
The brokerage firm said insurance companies, financial services and equity markets will flourish as the country's annual savings pool grows to $700 billion from $400 billion at present.
"More than half of this ($700 billion) could flow into financial savings. With favourable demographics and average seven per cent real growth, India can sustain more than 30 per cent savings rate akin to the Asian tigers, or China and Japan. This will transform the domestic financial services space," Enam said.
Life insurance penetration in India, which is already a USD one-trillion economy, is estimated to reach a level of 4.4 per cent over the next two years as insurance companies focus on expanding into rural India, the report said.
source - economictimes
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
How rising interest rates affect currencies and gold
When a company raises its dividend, its stock becomes more attractive to investors. Its share price rises. When a bank raises interest rates on its savings accounts, people deposit more money in the bank. It's the same way in the currency markets. Rising interest rates make a currency more attractive and it rises against other currencies with stable interest rates. Central banks around the world have been cutting rates for two years, and interest rates are as low now as they've ever been.
The governor of Australia's central bank hinted there would be more interest rate rises on the way. This could be the start of a new trend of rising interest rates around the world. If this is the start of a new trend of rising world interest rates, you can expect big new trends in the currency exchange markets, too. That's because interest rates are the single most important driver of exchange rates in the currency markets.
So how do we make money from a new global trend of rising interest rates?
While other central banks are considering raising rates, the Fed has so far refused to join the party. The dollar is the worst-performing major currency in the world this year as a result.
The recent unemployment report showed that somewhere close to 6 million jobs have vanished from the American economy in the last 18 months. The employment situation hasn't been this bad. With the ongoing unemployment, rate hikes in America are unlikely until next year.
First, this gives us a great opportunity to buy the dollar right now, while it's cheap and no one is anticipating rate hikes from the Fed. By the time Bernanke announces his first rate hike next year, the dollar will have already rallied 10% or more.
Second, a trend of rising interest rates on currencies is great for people looking to buy gold at lower prices. Gold has no interest rate. So when interest rates rise on world currencies, they become more attractive – and they rise – relative to gold. This is especially true with the dollar. It's the world's reserve currency and gold is incredibly sensitive to movements in its interest and exchange rates.
As long as unemployment keeps rising, there's no way the Fed raises interest rates and gold prices will stay high. But next year is a different story. The first hint of rate increases by the Fed will send shockwaves into the gold market.