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What Raghuram Rajan can't do

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The RBI cannot do much about business confidence, A key reason why the economy is slowing down is that businessmen are not keen on investing due to uncertain policies and court interventions in various sectors.

If we accept that the markets are manic-depressive, we should discount the ecstatic welcome given to Raghuram Rajan on his taking over as Reserve Bank of India Governor last Wednesday (September 4). If you ask yourself how many century-on-debut cricketers went on to become truly great cricketers, you will know what I mean. A century on debut always means public expectations are too high, and hence unlikely to be met in most cases. More critically, we all know how rapturously P Chidambaram’s reforms of August 2012 were received by the market. We also know where the rupee stands, where growth is headed, and where inflation is stuck even after a year of so-called “reforms”.

Raghuram Rajan can, of course, be an exception to the rule, but one has to understand the limitations of what a central banker can do when faced with a recalcitrant government as Duvvuri Subbarao did.

The first thing to remember is that the RBI’s impact on the economy is through its control of the banking system. It can impact the economy through interest rates, through the pre-emption of bank money, by controlling the rate of credit growth, and by prescribing tough conditions for bank functioning that can have the effect of pepping up or tapering down economic activity - in specific sectors, or through the economy. For example, by curbing how banks lend money for property purchases under the 80:20 scheme , it can curb credit to this sector. But it can’t end all speculation in realty on its own. There is enough black money in the economy to stymie the RBI.

Conversely, what lies outside the banking system is beyond the control of the RBI. The prolonged bout of inflation, for example, had its origins in excess government spending, which the RBI can partially restrain by raising rates, but a larger part of the price rise came from government actions such as raising minimum support prices for foodgrain heftily in 2008 and later, et al. These raise prices directly.

The second thing to note is that the RBI can act on the demand side of inflation, but not the supply side. If prices rise, the RBI can raise rates or restrict credit directly to some sectors or even the whole economy so that demand is damped down. But if supply stays constricted, this won’t be enough to curtail inflation. Only government action, and the right incentives, can increase supplies to reduce prices. Inflation in recent years has been driven not by rice and wheat, but protein-based foods such as milk, veggies, eggs, meat, pulses, etc where demand cannot be constrained any further by monetary measures. You have to increase supplies to bring down prices. The RBI can do nothing about that.

The third thing is that the RBI cannot do much about business confidence. A key reason why the economy is slowing down is that businessmen are not keen on investing due to uncertain policies and court interventions in various sectors from mining to spectrum resulting from executive failures. The RBI can, of course, improve economic confidence by running stable policies and bringing down inflation, but this won’t work if the government inspires no confidence. Also, whatever the RBI does to curb inflation can be undone by the government.

For example, you can’t bring down real estate prices if a Land Acquisition Bill seeks to restrain land supplies by artificially jacking up how much should be paid for acquired land. The fourth point is that the global economy can have an impact on us, RBI or no RBI. If Ben Bernanke starts reducing bond purchases and raises interest rates, capital will flow out. The RBI can at best try to stem the outflows by raising interest rates but this will work only in the long term. It is only by being an attractive long-term destination for investment that capital flows will be less volatile. That lies in the government’s domain.

William Pesek of Bloomberg, in an article titled “ India’s new central banker isn’t a superhero ,” tells us why Rajan will not find it easy to live up to his first day star rating. His essential point is this: both Manmohan Singh and P Chidambaram will be in election mode, and this means the support that Rajan needs in terms of policy action will be lukewarm or altogether missing.

Pesek writes: “The man who must address the core problems, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh , is a spent force.” And Chidambaram? Pesek agrees that he “understands India’s troubles as well as anyone. But he is a possible successor to Singh should the Congress party win at the polls. That means that the two men most pivotal to India getting its act together probably won’t be doing anything bold or creative between now and then (i.e. May 2014).”

This is why he feels Rajan is in for serious disappointments as real reforms will be delayed till after the elections. His dismal conclusion: “For the next nine months, India’s rot will only deepen. That’s about 270 days to hit new lows on the rupee and for rating companies to mull downgrades. Wasting this time might seem less irresponsible if India had enjoyed a surge of reformist energy in the last 10 years. Instead, it’s been a lost decade for change.” Rajan can’t fix in weeks and months what the UPA was busy ruining over nine-and-a-half years.


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Sensex poised for 23,000? Analysts speculate on fair value

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Over 6 per cent slide in the value of the S&P BSE Sensex so far in 2013, as per data till September 3, is making analysts speculate the base case - or what is called the fundamental value of the index. 

So far in the year, the index was largely weighed by a host of factors including uncertain macro-economic environment, depreciating rupee, concerns over US Federal Reserve's winding down of its $85-billion bond-buying program and geo-political concerns. 

Estimates on Sensex are mixed and analysts expect the benchmark index to move in a 5000-point range, from 18000 upto 23000. Morgan Stanley is of the view that earnings growth of Sensex companies are likely to take a hit in FY14 and FY15. 

"We cut our Sensex earnings growth estimates from 10.5% to 4.1% for FY14 and from 19.0% to 12.7% for FY15. We issue a new 12-month forward Sensex target of 18200," Morgan Stanley said in a report. Amid expectations of a slowdown in economic growth, the brokerage has trimmed its broad market earnings growth forecast for FY14 to 6% from 12% and forecast an estimate of 5% for FY15. 

However, the global brokerage firm put a target of above 23000 in a bull market scenario, where earnings growth accelerates to 10 per cent and 15 per cent in FY2014 and FY2015, respectively. With a 15 per cent probability, Sensex can rally towards 23800 in a bull case scenario. 

GDP figures released last week highlighted the fact that annual growth had slipped to 4.4 per cent in the April-June quarter, its weakest pace in four years. The gloom surrounding the Indian economy may deepen in the next three months with rupee expected to weaken and inflation projected to stay high, an ET poll of top-fund managers and brokers shows. 

The rupee may possibly touch 65 to the US dollar by December while inflation is expected to stay at elevated levels of 9 per cent (retail) and 6 per cent (wholesale). The Sensex is expected to hold its current position and may even surprise on the upside, the poll reveals. 

The currency has seen a steep fall against the US Dollar, hittting a record low of 68.85 last week, marking a drop of 20 per cent from the end of 2012. A major overhang on emerging markets, including India, is the US Federal Reserve, which could start slowing its bond purchases by the end of the year. A reversal of flows will put pressure on countries which use hot money to finance current account deficit (CAD). 

With the trend showing signs of reversal, India faces the burgeoning problem of financing current account deficit which the government wants to bring down to $70 billion in the current fiscal year, from $88.2 billion last year. However, the rising cost of crude oil import will continue to put pressure on the CAD. "The market is now trading at a reasonable valuation leaving short-term aberrations aside; there is nothing which prevents the market from trading below fundamentally merited valuation for some period of time," said Jitendra Sriram, Director & Head of Research, HSBC Securities in an interview with ET Now. 

"The QE unwind could make it even more possible that we continue to drift below the fundamental value. However, I would still say that the fundamental value of the index is probably closer to the 20,000 to 21,000 range, rather than where it is today," he added. 

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