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India: IP plunges but it’s not as bad as it looks; RBI still
likely to hike
IP plunge driven
primarily by volatile capital goods
July IP plunged to 3.3
% oya (-1.9 % m/m, sa) from 8.8 % in June and significantly below
market expectations (JP Morgan 4.7%, Consensus 6.2 %). However, the
print is not as bad as it looks because it was driven primarily by
a plunge in capital goods production (-15.2 % oya, -18% m/m, sa).
Recall, capital goods have been notoriously volatile over the last
year resulting in sharp swings across months. Much of this is
because private corporate investment continues to be anemic, and
capital goods production is being driven by infrastructure projects
which are typically lumpy and volatile themselves. As such, while
capital goods constitute less than 9% of the IP basket, large
monthly swings have unduly influenced the headline rate. Last
month, for example, capital goods surged 14.2 % m/m, sa boosting
the headline rate to 8.8% oya. In contrast this month, capital
goods gave all of their gains pulling the headline rate down with
it. What today’s numbers also revealed was that the expectation
that the private capex cycle was picking up (supported by two
surges of capital goods production within the IIP in the last four
months and rising non-oil imports) was belied by today’s
data.
In light of the capital
goods production volatility, a better measure to gauge the trend of
industrial activity is to look at a three month moving average
(3mma) as well as the IP index without capital goods. Both these
measures reveal an economy where industrial activity may be slowing
but not collapsing. Specifically, on a three-month-moving average
(3mma) basis, IP growth slowed to 6% oya from 6.7% the month before
and down from 7.4 % oya in January.
Ex-capital goods, IP
growth rose to 6.7% oya in July, the highest in 4 months. On a 3mma
basis, July growth also increased to 5.7% compared to 5.1 % in June
and was only marginally below the 6% in January 2011. In sum,
today’s headline print of 3.3% overstates the industrial sector’s
weakness.
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Basic goods and
consumer durables demonstrate renewed resilience
In contrast to capital
goods, consumer durables showed renewed resilience, growing 8.4 %
m/m, sa (8.6 % oya) after declining sequentially for three of the
last four months. Consumer durables have certainly slowed in
response to the rate hikes (the 3mma has fallen to 5.1 % oya from
9.3 % oya in January), but today’s number suggests that they have
not completely collapsed like two of the last three data points
seemed to suggest. However, consumer non-durables did not
demonstrate the same resilience, declining 2.3 % m/m, sa from the
previous month.
In addition, basic
goods (which comprise almost half the IP basket) had a particularly
strong month (3.4 % m/m, sa, 10 % oya) and growth for this
sub-component, in contrast to the other sub-components, has
actually accelerated mildly over the last year.
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Trade deficit widens
as exports began to moderate ….finally
After sustained
strength over the last two quarters, India’s merchandise export
growth finally began to moderate in August, consistent with
weakening global cues and falling new export orders within the
manufacturing PMI. Specifically, provisional August data suggests
that exports declined 11.1 % m/m, sa but this comes on the back of
strong sequential increases over much of the last year. A weak base
from last August meant that the year-on-year growth rate was still
healthy at 44.2 %.
Imports, too, declined
sequentially but less so than exports (-7.8 % m/m, sa) and continue
to stay at a relatively elevated level consistent with the fact
that growth is moderating slowly and sustained elevated inflation
levels at home are inducing firms to increase imports in lieu of
domestic production.
As a consequence, the
monthly trade deficit rose sharply to $14.1 billion from $11.1
billion the month before and $7.7 billion in June and thereby
contributed to pressurizing the rupee INR (see below)
INR underperforms as
trade deficit widens and global stress rises
Despite demonstrating
remarkable resilience over much of the last year, the INR has
significantly underperformed the ADXY over the last six weeks. The
underlying factors are both external and domestic.
The INR typically
underperforms the region during periods of global stress on
negative sentiment given India’s need to finance its current
account deficit, in contrast to the current account surpluses of
its Asian neighbors. Heightened global uncertainty in the US and
Europe and corresponding FII outflows from India over the last six
weeks has seen this phenomenon play out again.
Compounding this
phenomenon are domestic issues. A rising trade deficit in August
likely put further pressure on the INR and this same phenomenon is
likely at play in the first half of September. If all this was not
enough, local idiosyncratic factors added to the pressure, with
oil-payments of $5 billion finally being paid out to Iran in August
after the political impasse was resolved.
The INR weakness could
persist in the short-run because (i) global uncertainty is likely
to remain elevated in the near-term as concerns over peripheral
Europe and Greece rise, and (ii) the trade deficit could stay at
elevated levels until growth slows further to quell import demand
and inflation moderates so that the desire to import-substitute is
reduced.
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August inflation
expected to accelerate over July, likely inducing an RBI
hike
The August inflation
print, which is out Wednesday, is expected to show a
re-acceleration of the headline WPI print from the 9.2 % levels
observed in July (August consensus: 9.7 % oya). Furthermore, input
prices seem to have re-accelerated in August (both within non-food
primary articles of the WPI index and the manufacturing PMI)
suggesting that inflationary pressures in the system remain firm,
and could further pressure output prices and core inflation in the
weeks to come, unless demand is slowed to the point that pricing
power evaporates.
It is undoubtedly the
case that activity is slowing but, unlike what today’s IP headline
print suggests, it is not collapsing. It is also the case that, in
line with leading indicators, the slowdown is likely to get more
pronounced in the months to come.
All that said, headline
and core inflation is significantly above policy-makers’ comfort
zone and the tolerance for inflation among policymakers is still
low. As such, until there is clear and sustained evidence that
activity is slowing to the point that pricing power has evaporated
across most sectors, we expect the monetary tightening to continue.
We haven’t reached that point just as yet, and therefore expect the
RBI to hike policy rates by another 25 bps at its mid-quarter
review on Friday.
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