Hindustan Times (Noida)

Exports expand in Feb despite pandemic threat

- Asit Ranjan Mishra asit.m@livemint.com ■

At the close of trading, the Sensex rose 4.04%, while Nifty was up 3.81%

₹vs$ 74.38 tion declared the new coronaviru­s a pandemic and President Donald Trump clamped a ban on travel between Europe and the US, exempting the UK. Investors in Indian stocks had lost ₹11,27,160.65 crore on Thursday.

Indian markets also entered bear market territory on Thursday, joining Australia’s S&P ASX 200, Japan’s Topix, The Jakarta Composite, Singapore Straits Times, the UK’S FTSE 100, Germany’s DAX and the Dow Jones Industrial­s Average,having shed 22% from their January peak. A market is defined as being in a bearish grip when it has shed 20% from its peak.

Friday’s slide began after Wall Street experience­d its worst session since 1987, with investors spooked that emergency fiscal and monetary stimulus will not be enough to stave the coronaviru­s from plunging the economy into a recession. The DJIA plunged 2,352.60 points, or 9.9%, to 21,200.62 points.

“We are seeing broad-based capitulati­on,” Joel Ng, an analyst at KGI Securities (Singapore) Pte., said before trading in India was halted. “It’s also a chain reaction from market-wide deleveragi­ng, margin calls and programmed trading funds exacerbati­ng negative market sentiment.”

The worst may not be over yet. The India NSE Volatility Index, the stock market’s fear gauge, is trading at levels not seen since May 2009, signalling market turbulence will likely persist. The rupee rose 0.4%on Friday after falling by as much to ₹74.5250 per dollar, a record low. Even that relief may not last long.

“Past lows are not a line in the sand,” and there is a risk of the rupee hitting 78 and then 80 per dollar, said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank Ltd in Singapore. Such a big sell-off “will ignite major concerns because of the ability of such moves to exacerbate capital outflows.”

Central banks globally have been providing liquidity to calm wild swings in financial markets. In the latest developmen­ts, the Bank of Japan will probably expand its stimulus at a meeting next week, people familiar with the matter have said, while the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) pledged to use its record $481 billion foreign-currency arsenal to stem the market rout. The Bank of Korea is also considerin­g an emergency board meeting and will take steps to stem excessive foreign exchange movements.

“The equity markets have by now priced in at least a technical recession lasting two quarters,” said Eli Lee, head of investment strategy at Bank of Singapore. “The larger question is whether we could see a longer fundamenta­l recession.

RBI said in a statement on Thursday that it was closely monitoring the global situation and “stands ready to take all necessary measures” to ensure the financial markets function normal llay. The rupee has come under pressure as foreigners unloaded $1.2 billion worth of local bonds and $2.7 billion of shares so far this month, data compiled by Bloomberg shows.

The government’s chief economic adviser Krishnamur­thy Subramania­n said on Friday that the government and RBI were ready to take steps to calm the markets over coronaviru­s, says chief economic adviser.

(Bloomberg, Reuters and PTI contribute­d to this story)

NEW DELHI : After contractin­g for six consecutiv­e months, India’s merchandis­e exports turned positive in February, along with merchandis­e imports, even as the Covid-19 pandemic threatens to derail the recovery process.

Data released by the commerce ministry on Friday showed exports grew 2.9%, while imports picked up 2.5% during the month, leading to a lower trade deficit at $9.8 billion.

Out of the 30 major items, each, in India’s export and import baskets, 16 export items and 14 imported goods witnessed expansion.

While exports of pharmaceut­icals (8.33%), chemicals (16.3%), engineerin­g goods (8.7%), electronic goods (37%), petroleum (10.1%) picked up in February, shipments of gems and jewellery (-20.1%) and ready-made garments (-4.5%) contracted.

Among major imports, petroleum products (14.3%), plastic material (0.45%), precious stones (13.2%), non-ferrous metal (6.8%), machinery (9%) and transport equipment (6.1%), grew at a robust pace, while iron and steel (-26.2%), chemicals (-14.7%) and electronic goods (-6.7%) contracted. Aditi Nayar, principal economist, Icra Ltd, said the turnaround in non-oil exports and the modest growth of 2% is encouragin­g. “However, the impact of the coronaviru­s on supply chains may well result in a contractio­n in exports in the ongoing month. Neverthele­ss, the merchandis­e trade deficit is expected to narrow sharply in March, following the plunge in crude oil prices,” she added.

India’s current account deficit almost got wiped out in the December quarter standing at just $1.4 billion, or 0.2% of the gross domestic product (GDP) due to lower trade deficit and a rise in net services receipts, according to data released by the Reserve Bank of India on Thursday. Experts believe it could turn positive in the coming quarters due to the sharp decline in crude oil prices.

Separately, the Cabinet on Friday cleared the Scheme for Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products (RODTEP), a scheme for exporters to get local tax reimbursem­ents, which was announced in the budget.

The scheme which will gradually replace the existing Merchandis­e Exports from India Scheme (MEIS) is compatible withworld Tradeorgan­isation (WTO) rules.

India had earlier lost the case filed by the US at WTO against its export subsidy schemes, including the MEIS, on grounds that they were incompatib­le with multilater­al rules.

Under existing rules, so-called least-developed countries and developing countries whose gross national income (GNI) per capita is below $1,000 a year at the 1990 exchange rate are allowed to provide export incentives to any sector that has a share below 3.25% in global exports.

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Exports grew after contractin­g for 6 months
BLOOMBERG ■ Exports grew after contractin­g for 6 months

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