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Debt Crisis in India-Will Chinese Banks Bail Out More Indian Companies?

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How can they be competitive and cheap then?

Chinese workers are very efficient, and hardworking. They have much higher productivity than Indian workers. Cost of business is cost per product unit, not just salary. So actually they are cheaper than Indian workers, and thus more competitive.
 
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lol.. an extremely denial India in his very pain, I am sorry have to be born like this with no pride, dignity but dreams.
How long have you been living there in UK?

Let me guess, You went to UK in 2011 for college education and you are in your freshmen year. right?

---------- Post added 02-01-2012 at 12:01 AM ---------- Previous post was 01-31-2012 at 11:59 PM ----------

Chinese workers are very efficient, and hardworking. They have much higher productivity than Indian workers. Cost of business is cost per product unit, not just salary. So actually they are cheaper than Indian workers, and thus more competitive.

You are simply using words efficient, hardworking, Productivity. No real substance there.
 
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How long have you been living there in UK?

Let me guess, You went to UK in 2011 for college education and you are in your freshmen year. right?

kid i have been doing businesses in London for a decade now, and in fact just went back to China to expand (i thought lots senior member know that```ops you just joined)
 
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Don't worry about the run up debts Indians. I can lend you my $0.02 when you need it.
 
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How long have you been living there in UK?

Let me guess, You went to UK in 2011 for college education and you are in your freshmen year. right?

---------- Post added 02-01-2012 at 12:01 AM ---------- Previous post was 01-31-2012 at 11:59 PM ----------



You are simply using words efficient, hardworking, Productivity. No real substance there.[
you really don't want to go to details why China is way much better than India, that truth will only seriously hurt you people's false ego and delusion
 
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Working with Indian workers was real eye opening. They take long long breaks, have no or little technical skill, no initiative, complain, and have no sense of punctuality.

I can see you are not a business person because you think that mentioning productivity is not real substance.

How long have you been living there in UK?

Let me guess, You went to UK in 2011 for college education and you are in your freshmen year. right?

---------- Post added 02-01-2012 at 12:01 AM ---------- Previous post was 01-31-2012 at 11:59 PM ----------



You are simply using words efficient, hardworking, Productivity. No real substance there.
 
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Chinese workers are very efficient, and hardworking. They have much higher productivity than Indian workers. Cost of business is cost per product unit, not just salary. So actually they are cheaper than Indian workers, and thus more competitive.

This is the lamest kind of argument that i hear from anyone,ie. that of personal virtues. whether it is chinese bragging about their labourers or it is pakistanis bragging about their soilders.These people forget the law of averages which state that for a large sample,individual heroic capacity and shortcomings would be dwarfed and cancelled.Chinese worker are cheap only because they are exploited as slave labourers by manufacturers due to lack of independent unions for workers.An outright exploitation would lead to strikes in India due to presence of independent trade unions in every Industry.
 
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India’s total external public debt has risen to $326 billion while foreign exchange reserves have dropped to $293 billion, according to the RBI data reported by the Indian Express newspaper.

The Reserve Bank of India is concerned over the increasing shift from equity to debt to fill India's widening current account gap. The latest available data indicates that foreign debt inflows in January so far have amounted to $3.21 billion versus $1.7 billion through equity inflows.

Recent $1.1 billion bail-out of Reliance Communications by state-owned Chinese banks is the clearest indication yet that the situation is also becoming dire in India's private sector with its mounting foreign debt.

This is not the first instance of Chinese banks coming to the aid of an Indian company. Last November, Sasan Power, the project company for the Sasan ultra mega power plant and a subsidiary of RComm affiliate Reliance Power, completed a $2.2 billion refinancing, including a $1.114 billion 13-year tranche. Bank of China, CDB and Chexim took $1.06 billion of that tranche, for which Chinese export credit agency Sinosure provided insurance.

Reliance Com is not alone in facing cash crunch in their ability to service debt. More than two dozen Indian companies included in the BSE-500 index face redemptions on foreign currency convertible bonds worth a combined Rs330 billion ($6.5 billion) by March 2013, according to brokerage Edelweiss. These include RComm’s US$925m outstanding CB, which the loan will repay.

Unless other Indian borrowers can somehow find lenders, they will be facing deteriorating debt market conditions that have led to shrinking liquidity in the loan markets and a rise in pricing.

“Top-tier Indian firms will have to pay between 250 basis points (2.5%) and 300 basis points (3.0%) over LIBOR (London Inter-bank Borrowing Rate) to borrow five-year money offshore. Even at that kind of pricing, there isn’t a lot of liquidity available,” said a Hong Kong-based lender quoted by International Financing Review. Over $20 billion worth of Indian debt is set to mature in 2012 and, of that, about $6 billion each of convertible bonds and rupee loans are up for redemption, with the balance in offshore loans.

India continues to run huge twin deficits of current account and budget. It depends heavily on foreign inflows. United Nations data shows that India received less than $20 billion in FDI in the first six months of 2011, compared to more than $60 billion in China while Brazil and Russia took in $23 billion and $33 billion respectively. Stocks in all four countries have underperformed relative to the broader emerging markets equity index, as well as the markets in the developed nations. Pakistan's KSE-100 has significantly outperformed all BRIC stock markets over the ten years since BRIC was coined.

Noting India's significant dependence on foreign capital inflows, Jim O'Neill recently raised concern about the potential for current account crisis. "India has the risk of ... if they're not careful, a balance of payments crisis. They shouldn't raise people's hopes of FDI and then in a week say, 'we're only joking'". "India's inability to raise its share of global FDI is very disappointing," he said.

In addition to Jim O'Neill, a range of investment bankers are turning bearish on India. UBS sent out an email headlined "India explodes" to its clients. Deutsche Bank published a report on November 24 entitled, "India's time of reckoning."

"Suddenly everything seems to be coming to a head in India," UBS wrote. "Growth is disappearing, the rupee is in disarray, and inflation is stuck at near-record levels. Investor sentiment has gone from cautious to outright scared."

India's current account deficit swelled to $14.1 billion in its fiscal first quarter, nearly triple the previous quarter's tally. The full-year gap is expected to be around $54 billion.

Its fiscal deficit hit $58.7 billion in the April-to-October period. The government in February projected a deficit equal to 4.6 percent of gross domestic product for the fiscal year ending in March 2012, although the finance minister said on Friday that it would be difficult to hit that target.

As explained in a series of earlier posts here on this blog, India has been relying heavily on portfolio inflows -- foreign purchases of shares and bonds -- as a means of covering its rising current account gap. Those flows are called "hot money" and considered highly unreliable.

Indian policy makers face a significant dilemma. If they do nothing to defend the Indian currency, the downward spiral could make domestic inflation a lot worse than it already is, and spark massive civil unrest. If they intervene in the currency market aggressively by buying up Indian rupee, the RBI's dollar reserves could decline rapidly and trigger the balance of payment crisis Goldman Sachs' O'Neill hinted at.

Haq's Musings: Is India Heading Toward Debt Crisis?
Sir, bigger debt is not a problem, but an unsustainable one is. I said it before many times that if someone compares India with China, its very much like comparing oranges with Apples. While China derives its growth through trade surpluses, India does it through increased local demand. Unfortunately, both are unsustainable as we can see with Japan which is now completely dependent upon exports for its growth and having no domestic contribution. The way to go is the balanced and sustainable growth. While China and India have been growing at impressive paces, both will have to slowdown gradually since you just can not grow indefinitely at near double digit, doesn't make any sense. Chinese domestic demand has recently started to play a role in its growth but still there is a long way to go. The India on the other hand predominantly depended upon services as opposed to real sector in China for its external growth component, which unfortunately, didn't pay off as well as hoped. And to be more frustrating, the investment in India was basically attracted for local market as opposed to investment in China which was more focused on exports. But with greater trade integration like China, inevitably comes greater financial intergration i.e. Chinese Banks financing Indian imports and Indian Banks financing Chinese imports. Its not surprising if Chinese Banks would have developed stakes in Indian Businesses given increasing trade volume and increasing interest of Chinese companies in Indian markets. Like they say "if you owe bank 10$, its your problem, if you owe 100 Million $, its bank's problem".
 
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Shameless india calling us their enermy number 1 and beg us to resuce them LOL

No we don't need it but your Pakistani friend Mr. Riaz Haq wants that China should bailout India. :lol: :lol:

It seems you too need a

large_electric-funny-chinese-signs-a-nice-electric-shock.png
 
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Its Riaz Haq again. :fie:

People fail to understand that if he was that good at economics, he would be enjoying holidays millionaire style at some exotic tourist destination with his money earned because of his knowledge and understanding. Not spending time on PDF with just one aim "bash India" on some topic or the other.
 
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Guys, these articles are bread and butter for Riaz. He is a blogger. He needs to generate revenue from it. What better way than create stupid threads on India by a Pakistani? I am guessing he would thank all Indians before he takes a bite of his food. hehe.
 
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