Business Standard

STATSGURU: BS analyses the impact of demonetisa­tion on Sensex movement

- —ISHAN BAKSHI

MARKETS DETEST uncertaint­y. But if anything, policy uncertaint­y across the world has increased of late.

Consider, for instance, Indian markets. Prior to November 8, analysts believed a good monsoon, coupled with payouts on account of the Seventh Pay Commission, would provide the much-needed fillip to consumptio­n, pushing up growth. Anticipati­ng dividends, markets rose. As Chart 1 shows, the Sensex was testing the 29,000 level in September.

But all that changed on November 8. In the fortnight after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s decision to demonetise higher-denominati­on notes, the Sensex fell by 6.6 per cent. Though it has recovered since then, growth concerns continue to dominate.

On the other hand, US markets have behaved contrary to expectatio­ns, shrugging off Hillary Clinton’s defeat. As Chart 2 shows, the S&P 500 has rallied on expectatio­ns that growth may perk up as Donald Trump loosens the fiscal tap. As this might prove inflationa­ry, expectatio­ns that the US Federal Reserve may raise rates faster than anticipate­d has pushed up US bond yields, as shown in Chart 3.

But in India, the opposite has happened after November 8. As Chart 4 shows, a surge in liquidity after demonetisa­tion has pushed down bond yields. In fact, prior to the recent Monetary Policy Committee meeting, the 10-year bond yield was lower than the repo rate, implying that longterm rates were lower than short-term rates.

If the Fed raises rates in December and the Reserve Bank of India cuts rates in its next monetary policy meeting, the current gap between the two (seen in Chart 5) is likely to lead to an outflow of capital, especially from the debt segment, putting pressure on the rupee. The rupee has already depreciate­d sharply against the dollar, as seen in Chart 6. But as Charts 7 and 8 show, other currencies have also depreciate­d against the dollar.

For India, the uncertaint­y lies in how quickly economic activity rebounds once the currency notes are replenishe­d. For the rest of the world, perhaps the uncertaint­y stemming from the Trump presidency is the foremost concern.

1: UNCERTAINT­Y MARS SENTIMENT ON DALAL STREET 2: US MARKETS SHRUG OFF HILLARY DEFEAT, RALLY AFTER TRUMP WIN 3: YIELDS IN DEVELOPED ECONOMIES HAVE RISEN ON EXPECTATIO­NS OF STRONGER GROWTH 4: BUT AFTER DEMONETISA­TION, A SURGE IN LIQUIDITY HAS PUSHED DOWN BOND YIELDS IN INDIA 5: DIVERGENT TRAJECTORI­ES OF MONETARY POLICY 6: RUPEE ALSO VOLATILE, TESTS HISTORIC LIMITS, BUT PULLS BACK 7: BUT CURRENCIES OF MAJOR DEVELOPED ECONOMIES HAVE WEAKENED AGAINST THE DOLLAR 8: DEVELOPING ECONOMIES HAVE ALSO SEEN THEIR CURRENCIES WEAKEN AGAINST THE DOLLAR

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India