Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

India’s festival season does little to spur growth outlook

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MUMBAI: AN OVERALL ACTIVITY INDICATOR MEASURING ANIMAL SPIRITS WAS UNCHANGED IN OCT DESPITE A SLEW OF DATA SHOWING IMPROVEMEN­T

A banking liquidity crunch and weak business sentiment before state elections this year outweighed signs of a revival in consumer demand during India’s main festival season, keeping the outlook for the world’s fastest-growing major economy muted.

An overall activity indicator measuring animal spirits—a term coined by British economist John Maynard Keynes to refer to investors’ confidence in taking action—was unchanged in October despite a slew of data from two-wheeler vehicle sales to consumer demand showing an improvemen­t from the previous month. The measure, compiled by Bloomberg News, reflects a sharp drop in a liquidity indicator, a sign of tight financial conditions, as well as slowing growth in infrastruc­ture industries.

The latest readings back up the view that growth is moderating in India. Data on November 30 will probably show gross domestic product grew 7.5% in the JulySeptem­ber quarter from a year ago, down from 8.2% in the previous three months.

It also gives the central bank reason to keep interest rates unchanged next week, as most economists in a Bloomberg survey predict.

The Nikkei India Composite PMI output index climbed to 53.0 in October from 51.6 in September, helped by gains in the main services index and the manufactha­n turing output gauge. It was the strongest expansion in private sector activity since July, and came amid cooling price pressures. Business sentiment is flagging though, with confidence among services firms dropping to a 20-month low in October, according to an IHS Markit report based on the purchasing managers’ survey. Sentiment among manufactur­ers also fell to the weakest since February 2017, as political uncertaint­y hampered confidence, it said.

Elections in five states— phased voting for which has already begun—is seen as an indicator of voter mood toward Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government in next year’s general election.

Exports grew 17.9% in October from a year ago, rebounding from a 2.1% decline in the previous month, with a weaker rupee making shipments competitiv­e. The uptick was driven by sectors including textiles, yarns and garments. According to Aditi Nayar, an economist at ICRA Ltd., the rise was due to a favourable base effect as well as decent demand from China.

In value terms, exports fell from a month ago, and were lower imports, putting pressure on the trade deficit and acting as a possible drag on growth.

While demand for goods and services were showing signs of recovery before Diwali, the Hindu religious festival, economists like Teresa John of Nirmal Bang Equities Pvt. expect some sluggishne­ss going forward.

Soft food prices will hit farm income, and rural wage growth has been muted, she said, adding that the only support for rural growth will be from government spending before elections.

Data from the Society of Indian Automobile Manufactur­ers showed vehicle sales picking up, led by scooters and motorbikes. Commercial vehicle sales remained robust, growing nearly 25% year-on-year. Demand for bank loans strengthen­ed—up 14.6% in October from a year ago.

The Citi India Financial Conditions Index shows a considerab­le tightening as the central bank’s interventi­on in the foreign exchange market and a traditiona­l pick-up in lending by banks in the second-half of the financial year gathered steam. The index includes indicators such as short-term money market rates, government bond yields, the yield curve, credit and credit default spreads. Growth in infrastruc­ture industries slowed in September, due partly to a decline in the output of crude oil and subdued natural gas production. Overall, growth in the index for industrial production picked up slightly to 4.5% in September from a year ago.

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