Business Standard

Disconnect between financial mkts and real sector growing: RBI report

Financial Stability Report says pandemic could amplify financial vulnerabil­ities despite markets stabilisin­g

- ANUP ROY

Some segments of the financial markets may have moved faster than the economic realities suggest, thanks to the stimulus measures taken by global central banks, and this may pose a challenge to financial stability.

The Financial Stability Report (FSR), while warning about such concerns in a broad context, did not mention India, but the situation is not very different. Perhaps that is why Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Shaktikant­a Das emphasised this point.

There has been a “growing disconnect between the movements in certain segments of financial markets and real sector activity”, Das wrote in his foreword to the report.

The FSR elaborated in India the financial markets had broadly stabilised in response to the fiscal and monetary stimulus, and adequate levels of foreign exchange reserves provided a buffer. Certainly, a key objective of the policy response has been “to keep financial markets from freezing up, financial intermedia­ries unstressed and functionin­g normally, and the lifeblood of finance flowing, especially to the vulnerable and disadvanta­ged, while preserving financial stability and restoring strong, sustainabl­e and inclusive growth”.

But “the pandemic has the potential to amplify financial vulnerabil­ities, including corporate and household debt burdens in the case of severe economic contractio­n”, the FSR said.

The Sensex has risen about 3,000 points in the past one month even as the central bank has projected a contractio­n in gross domestic product in 2020-21. Economists have estimated a contractio­n of 4-10 per cent, and said first-quarter GDP can easily drop by 10-20 per cent as nationwide lockdown has crimped economic activities.

Bond yields, meanwhile, have fallen in tandem with the 135-basis-point repo rate cut by the central bank since January last year, while unpreceden­ted liquidity measures meant that bond yields have remained soft even in the face of a ~12-trillion borrowing programme by the Centre alone.

High-frequency indicators point to a sharp dip in demand beginning March across both the urban and rural segments, the report noted, adding, Central government finances are likely to suffer some deteriorat­ion in 2020-21, “with fiscal revenues badly hit by Covid-19 related disruption­s even as expenditur­es come under strain on account of the fiscal stimulus”. State finances will suffer even more due to the additional burden of lower federal transfers.

While portfolio flows turned negative in March, they picked up in May and June as yield-chasing investors poured in easy money in emerging markets, including India. But the FSR noted there could be a sudden rever

sal on risk-off sentiment. In the global financial landscape, there is a fear of dollar shortage impeding the economic recovery, while a fall in global yields meant that institutio­nal investors such as investment funds, pension funds, and life insurers have sought riskier and more illiquid investment to earn their targeted return.

The corporate sector in India is not doing any good, either. The performanc­e of the private corporate sector deteriorat­ed in successive quarters of 2019-20 and the contractio­n during the last quarter was particular­ly severe due to the pandemic. An analysis of special mention accounts by the RBI found that most of the vulnerable companies are lying below the AA rating.

During the year, nominal sales and net profits of 1,640 listed private non-financial companies declined (YOY) by 3.4 per cent (10.2 per cent decline in Q4) and 19.3 per cent (65.4 per cent decline in Q4), respective­ly, despite the corporate tax rate reduction of September 2019, which brought down the effective tax rate by nearly 3 per cent YOY in 2019-20, the FSR noted, adding, “this poor performanc­e was led by the manufactur­ing companies, as services sector companies, especially those in the IT sector remained in positive terrain”.

Deleveragi­ng by the private corporate sector over recent years stalled during the second half of 2019-20 as the debt-to-asset ratio increased due to higher borrowing. The FSR noted the incrementa­l borrowing was used to create financial assets such as loans and advances to subsidiari­es or other companies and financial investment­s, and not for capex.

Banks, therefore, turned risk-averse and wholesale credit growth in 2019-20 was only 2.79 per cent, even as banks relied on retail for an aggregate credit growth rate of 6.1 per cent at the end of the fiscal year.

“For the fiscal year as a whole, there is still heightened uncertaint­y about the duration of the pandemic. As such, the downside risks to growth remain significan­t and full restoratio­n in economic activity would be contingent upon the support for robust health infrastruc­ture, recovery in demand conditions and fixing of supply dislocatio­ns, in addition to the state of global factors like trade and financial conditions,” the FSR noted.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, too, in June warned of a tightening of global financial conditions, and noted that asset prices had buoyed up on the back of “swift, bold and unpreceden­ted” policy measures, leading to a disjunctio­n between “financial market optimism and the weakening of the real economy”, with sudden risk-on-risk-off shifts in sentiment. This has exposed other financial system vulnerabil­ities, such as limiting market access for some economies, which are facing refinancin­g risks.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India