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India: inflation continues to accelerate, setting the stage for
an RBI hike
August inflation
continues to accelerate and the details are sobering
Inflation predictably
continued to accelerate in August with the headline rate printing
at 9.8 % oya (0.7 % m/m, sa) significantly higher than July’s 9.2%
print and slightly higher than expectations (Consensus: 9.6%oya, JP
Morgan: 9.7%.)
The details were
equally sobering. Reversing their declining trend over the last few
months, domestic manufacturing input prices increased sharply on a
sequential basis in August, reflecting the fact that (i) global
commodity prices hardened in the second half of August and (ii) the
INR depreciated more than 4 percent that month likely increasing
the domestic prices of imported goods and commodities. As a
consequence, non-food primarily articles increased 2.8 % m/m, sa
(17.8 % oya) and minerals increased 3.1 % m/m, sa (23.4 % oya) in
August. Food and energy prices, too, continued to increase
sequentially, albeit at a slower pace (about 0.5 % m/m, sa). These
increases are in line with the surge of input prices in the August
manufacturing PMI and all of this is likely to pressure output
prices and core inflation further in the weeks to
come.
Core inflation
continue to remain elevated; no sign that pricing power has
abated
Not that core inflation
needs any further provocation. Non-food manufacturing prices
continued to accelerate on a sequential basis, growing at 0.5 %
m/m, sa, the highest sequential increase in the last four months.
While this is lower than the 1% month-on-month surges witnessed
earlier in the year, it is still higher than policymakers’ stated
comfort zone. The latest sequential increase meant that core
inflation’s year-on-year rate rose further to 7.7% oya from 7.5%
the previous month – almost twice its historical average.
Furthermore, it is likely to be revised upwards when the final
estimates for August are released, as was the case in June (see
below).
We have long maintained
that while the economy may be slowing, it is doing so gradually,
and hasn’t slowed enough to reverse entrenched inflationary
pressures. Yet, markets continue to fear that activity is falling
off sharply and these concerns were exacerbated after Monday’s
misleading headline IP print (see, “India: IP
plunges but it’s not as bad as it looks,” MorganMarkets, September 12,
2011). As a consequence, the notion that pricing power is fast
evaporating has been gaining ground. The sequential accelerating of
manufacturing prices in August, however, tells a very different
story.
June headline revised
up only 7 bps; but core revised up 50 bps !
In contrast to the
sharp retrospective upward revisions witnessed over the last few
months, the June headline rate, in a pleasant surprise, was only
revised up 7 bps from 9.44 % to 9.51%. But if one were to get an
impression that revisions across the board were more muted –
suggesting greater stability of the initial print -- the impression
would be misleading. Instead, the headline revision was relatively
muted because relatively large revisions across primary articles
and manufactured products occurred in opposite direction and
thereby offset each other.
Specifically, almost
all categories of primary articles (food, non-food, minerals)
witnessed relatively sharp downward revisions. In contrast, and
more worryingly, manufactured products saw sharp upward revisions.
This was particular true of non-food, manufacturing (RBI’s proxy of
core inflation) which was revised up 50 bps from 7.2 % to 7.7 % oya
– another indication that core pressures remain firmer than many
market participants had believed.
RBI set to hike rates
by 25 bps on Friday
Today’s inflation print
is likely to be the straw that breaks the camel’s back, inducing a
25 bps rate hike by the RBI at it’s mid-quarter review on Friday,
September 16. The central bank has been quite explicit in its
previous reviews that it needs to see a sustained downturn in
headline and core inflation to change its stance. Far from
moderating, inflation accelerated across the board in August.
Additionally, the sharp upsurge in input prices in August does not
augur well for output prices in the future.
This is not surprising
since the slowdown in activity is gradual. Leading indicators
certainly point to the slowdown becoming more pronounced in the
months to come. For now, however, activity is far from collapsing.
This shows up in the continuing strength of non-oil imports and
indirect tax collections in August and even in IP growth – ex
capital goods -- which slowed only gradually through 2011. In sum,
activity has not slowed enough to erode pricing power – clearly
evident in today’s inflation print. For these reasons, and in
contrast to other central banks in the region, we believe the RBI
will stay on course this Friday.
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