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"Credit offtake today is working capital-related and not project-related, so I don’t see what the optimism is all about." Abheek Barua, HDFC Bank
"The government has dealt well with the fears of companies and people. We have had a good rabi crop too." Mahesh Vyas, CMIE
"I’m worried about the government giving money back to the people. It will lead to double-digit inflation." Parag Parikh, Stockbroker
"Things are better in terms of number of transactions, not prices. But the volumes are a sign of health." Pranay Vakil, Knight Frank India
"We are now slightly more optimistic but growth in 2009-10 will be 5-6% and 7.5-8% after 2010." Shankar Acharya, ICRIER
"It’s worrying if quarter after quarter brings bad news. So the recent stockmarket rally is a good sign." Shankar Sharma, First Global
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If numbers don't lie, they are currently promising an improvement in the economy—capital that had pulled out is slowly trickling in again. The stockmarket has seen lively activity in April and May. Buoyed by the Pay Commission largesse, car-makers are still selling well and consumer durables are marching along nicely. Manufacturers are more upbeat than they were until January or February, when the index of industrial production (IIP) slumped into two all-time lows.
Having acknowledged that the days of easy credit are over, companies such as those in housing have quickly re-aligned prices. How far this effect will ripple on is anybody's guess, but Pranay Vakil, chairman of realty firm Knight Frank India, says the business is better today compared to October and November 2008. "Things are better in terms of number of transactions, not in terms of prices. But the volumes themselves show signs of a healthy market." What's heartening is that speculators and investors have exited the market "more or less".
Some of the good news portends a clear recovery from the downturn. The rest is pure logic, as Shankar Sharma of First Global explains: It's worrying for an economy if it sees only bad news quarter after quarter. So the recent rally in the stockmarket, for instance, is a positive sign. "However," warns Sharma, "we need more confirmation of the improvement because the scale of the problem is unprecedented. Also, India may still grow at a projected five, six or seven per cent, but that's not going to be good enough. It's way too early to say whether the current upswing will last or not," he cautions.
That said, across the board, market players expressed caution at Dalal Street's rapid jump upwards. Vikram Limaye, executive director, Industrial Development and Finance Corporation (IDFC), believes that the recent stockmarket run shouldn't be read as a clear signal of recovery. "Fundamentally, there is no significant improvement in earnings or earnings projections from corporates over the next two to three quarters. There's also no real trigger for this stocks rally and it may not be sustainable," says Limaye.
Abheek Barua, chief economist, HDFC Bank, sounds another note of caution—when compared with predictions of 3-4 per cent growth by the doomsday crowd, what is happening now is more realistic. "We're coming back to a middle path," he says, but credit data does not indicate a dramatic pick-up. "I think it has bottomed out but it's a very marginal improvement from a very deep bottom. Credit offtake is largely working capital-related, not really project-related. So I don't see what the optimism is all about," he adds.
Another unaccounted-for factor in the revival equation is India's monsoon-dependent agriculture. Thus far, international prices of agriculture commodities have not been affected by the global crisis. However, over the last five months, prices of some commodities have started firming up, a situation that could well ring alarm bells—it could raise inflation, fuelling another cycle of rising prices of food.
Broadly, the economy in India is reflecting the effort by government to revitalise spending by consumers and credit to industry. As Subir Gokarn, chief economist, Standard & Poor's (Asia-Pacific), puts it, there are some indications, including the happy sentiments, of a turn for the better, but these are "so fragile, they could turn for the worse easily." In hindsight, some of the over-reaction over the past 6-8 months is now abating. Whether this will lead to a new growth engine is debatable. Also, the election results are awaited. For now, it all goes back to Mr Kumar: will he vote with his wallet?
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