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Foreign Investment Ebbs in India

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Foreign Investment Ebbs in India
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/25/business/global/25rupee.html?_r=1&src=busln

MUMBAI, India — India’s rise has captured the world’s imagination, as the economy grows at nearly 9 percent a year and a growing consumer class buys cellphones, cars and homes. Yet foreign businesses and investors, once increasingly eager to tap that stunning growth, have started looking elsewhere.

Foreign direct investment in India fell more than 31 percent, to $24 billion, in 2010 even as investors flocked to developing nations as a group.

And in the last two months, foreign investors took $1.4 billion out of the Indian stock market, helping drive the country’s Nifty 50 stock index down 17 percent from the record high it set in early November.

The decline in foreign investment highlights the challenges outsiders still face in India, two decades after policy makers started opening up the country to the world. For Indian leaders, the drop in outside money could make it harder to achieve the faster and broader economic growth that they need to create jobs and pull hundreds of millions of India’s 1.1 billion people out of poverty.

While inefficiency and bureaucracy are nothing new in India, analysts and executives say foreign investors have lately been spooked by a highly publicized government corruption scandal over the awarding of wireless communications licenses. Another reason for thinking twice is a corporate tax battle between Indian officials and the British company Vodafone now before India’s Supreme Court.

Meanwhile, the inflation rate — 8.2 percent and rising — seems beyond the control of India’s central bank and has done nothing to reassure foreign investors.

And multinationals initially lured by India’s growth narrative may find that the realities of the Indian marketplace tell a more vexing story. Some companies, including the insurer MetLife and the retailing giant Wal-Mart, for example, are eager to invest and expand here but have been waiting years for policy makers to let them.

Jahangir X. Aziz, an economist with JPMorgan in Mumbai, said that while Indian policy makers have been seemingly ambivalent toward foreigners, some other emerging economies have laid out red carpets. Lately, foreign direct investment to countries like Thailand, Indonesia and Brazil has surged. Direct investment into Brazil, for instance, jumped 16 percent, to $30.2 billion last year, according to the United Nations. “In a world awash with liquidity, there are many other places to fish,” Mr. Aziz said.

India’s prime minister, Manmohan Singh, told reporters last week that global investor sentiment, not Indian policies, were to blame for the investment decline. But he acknowledged that the country should improve its business climate, and he promised that his government would outline its “reform agendas” in the budget it plans to present on Monday.

“I do agree that we need to strengthen our resolve to create a favorable environment for a larger flow of funds from aboard,” Mr. Singh said.

There is no doubt that investors and companies around the world are still placing bets on India’s growth. Last year foreign investors poured nearly $30 billion into the Indian stock market; some profit-taking from the market’s record high last fall was probably to be expected. And earlier this week BP announced that it would buy into oil and gas fields here for $7.2 billion, which would be the largest foreign investment yet in India.

But the broader trend signals that foreign firms and investors are concerned about their ability to do business in India.

Mr. Aziz and other analysts say the slowdown in foreign money is part of a broader pullback that also includes Indian companies. Private investment as a percentage of India’s gross domestic product fell to about 22 percent in the current fiscal year, from 25.6 percent a year earlier. Analysts say businesses are more cautious because of trouble getting regulatory approvals, as well as uncertainty about the direction of government policies.

So far, the shortfall has been made up by higher government spending and personal consumption. But economists note that these alone are not ingredients for sustained growth.

And despite Prime Minister Singh’s promises, executives fear he will not be able to persuade other policy makers to make necessary changes. Indian ministers often sidestep the broader agenda set by Mr. Singh, who formulated India’s first big economic reforms in 1991 when he was finance minister.

He now heads a fractious political coalition. And recent corruption scandals, including allegations that kickbacks helped undermine last year’s poorly organized Commonwealth Games in New Delhi, have further eroded the government’s credibility.

Privately, business executives complain that Indian officials are adept at proclaiming their commitment to free markets but delay specific measures to ease restrictions. Doing so is politically difficult in India because many politicians, labor unions and civil society groups prefer government spending and domestic protectionism over further economic liberalization.

In the retail industry, for instance, the country still bars foreigners from owning stores that sell more than one brand of products. That restriction, meant to protect India’s many small shopkeepers, prevents Wal-Mart, Tesco and others from selling to India’s growing consumer class. In recent months, Indian officials have sent conflicting signals about whether the government intends to ease that policy.

In insurance, MetLife, which has invested $139 million in an Indian firm, would like to put more money into the country. But it is restricted by rules limiting foreign ownership in insurers to 26 percent — a ceiling that policy makers set in 1999 with the expectation that they would raise it in a few years.

MetLife, which has already hit that limit, cannot grow as fast in India as it can in Brazil, where it owns 100 percent of its affiliate. Even in China, notorious for favoring its domestic firms, MetLife owns 50 percent of its insurance operation there.

“Our commitment to India is as strong as it ever was,” said Shailendra Ghorpade, MetLife’s chief executive for Europe and India. “However, we would like to see an opportunity for us, and people like us, to participate fully in this marketplace.”

Foreigners are also increasingly concerned about Indian tax laws.

Vodafone, the global telecom giant, is battling tax officials who want it to pay about $2.5 billion in capital gains tax on its $11 billion acquisition of an Indian mobile phone company in 2007. Indian officials say Vodafone should have deducted the tax from the money it paid to Hutchison Whampoa, a Hong Kong-based company.

Vodafone says that no tax should apply because the transaction took place outside India and that if any tax applies, it should be paid by Hutchison. Analysts say Indian officials are billing Vodafone because Hutchison no longer does business in India.

The Vodafone tax case has other companies worried that they will be subject to unexpected taxes when they try to buy and sell their investments, said Nandan Nelivigi, a partner at the law firm White & Case in New York who advises companies on investing in India.

“Foreigners don’t want to avoid paying taxes in India,” he said. “But they just want to know what their tax liabilities are.”

Still, some executives say that doubts about India’s investment climate are being overplayed.

Gunit Chadha, chief of Deutsche Bank’s Indian operations, said that even though he would like policy makers to speed up the pace of reforms, he did not think India had become hostile to foreign businesses. Despite the recent downturn, he noted, the flow of funds is still much higher than as recently as 2004, when India attracted just $6 billion in foreign direct investment.

“Sometimes it’s a good idea to open the tap in a calibrated fashion, lest you flood the place and then have to erratically close the tap or clean the mess,” Mr. Chadha said. “You will always have a situation where some would argue you could have done a bit more or a bit faster, as is currently the feeling. But in a democracy like India, a more measured pace is beneficial.”

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FDI rises 30% in December

press trust of india
NEW DELHI, 13 FEB: Snapping two months of declining trend, foreign direct investment (FDI) in India increased by 30.69 per cent to $2 billion (about Rs 9,000 crore) in December 2010.
In December 2009, India had attracted FDI worth $1.54 billion (Rs 7,185 crore).
However, during the nine-month period (April-December) of the current fiscal, FDI declined by 23.14 per cent to $16.03 billion over the year ago period, a source said.
India had received $20.92 billion FDI during the same period of the previous financial year.
In view of declining foreign investment inflows, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is considering setting up a panel to find out the reasons for FDI slowdown and suggest ways to encourage it.
According to economists, investors are cautious as the global economic recovery is fragile and uneven, specially in Europe.
“The global economic recovery is not at all strong. Going by the trend, it appears that India will receive less FDI in 2010-11 compared to the previous fiscal,” said Crisil's principal economist Mr DK Joshi.
He also said that India was not able to attract very large amounts of foreign investments because of procedural delays.
Meanwhile, another economist said that global recovery, although modest, had thrown up more options for investors in other parts of the world.
In 2009-10, India's FDI had declined to $25.88 billion from $27.33 billion in the previous financial year.
FDI inflows in October 2010 dipped by about 40 per cent to $1.4 billion over the year ago period. In November, too, it dipped by seven per cent to $1.6 billion.
The main sectors that attracted FDI include services (financial and non-financial), telecommunications, housing and real estate, construction activities and power, the source said.

FDI rises 30% in December

FDI trend still in India’s favour, says Ernst & Young - Money - DNA
 
The foreign direct investment flows (FDI) into developing countries, including India, is expected to recover over the next couple of years and is projected to increase by 17 per cent in 2010, a World Bank report said.

The report - World Investment and Political Risk - which was launched by the World Bank's Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) - said the net FDI inflows into the developing countries is projected to touch $416 billion in 2010, up from its 2009 level of $354 billion.

Overall, FDI inflows to the developing world continues to be 'overwhelmingly' concentrated in middle-income countries, with Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, and China (BRIC) alone absorbing about half, the report said.

Net private flows (which include FDI and portfolio equity flows, as well as debt from private creditors) are projected to rebound in 2010 and 2011, but to remain substantially lower than their $1.2 trillion peak in 2007.

FDI prospects appear brighter for developing countries in 2010 and beyond: their economic performance is expected to outpace that of high-income economies as their domestic demand is buoyant, the report said.

"This upsurge in FDI into developing countries is welcome news, especially considering last year's drop," MIGA Executive Vice-President Izumi Kobayashi said.

FDI into developing countries declined by 40 per cent last year.

Kobayashi noted that "FDI flows directed to productive assets can spur economic growth and reduce poverty."

FDI can help generate and sustain economic growth and development by providing much-needed financial resources, technology transfer, managerial expertise, and connections to the global economy, the report said.

"Economic growth is critical for all of us around the globe but it is even more so for underserved markets -- those economies that have been struggling under the very heavy burden of conflict and instability," Kobayashi added.

The MIGA report said executives from multinational companies across the world believe that despite the various problems being faced by the developing world, such as lack of finance and quality of infrastructure, the biggest worry is "political risk".

The top worry of multinational executives when operating in developing countries over the next three years is political risk, and a fifth of the investors surveyed use political risk insurance to mitigate this risk.

The report, which also focuses on FDI into conflict affected and fragile economies, said investors there are mainly concerned about adverse government intervention rather than overt political violence as adverse changes are often responsible for losses in these destinations.


Read more at: FDI into developing nations to rise 17%: World Bank - NDTV Profit

FDI into developing nations to rise 17%: World Bank - NDTV Profit

:wave: :wave: :wave:
 

^^^Old News published in "Press Trust of India, December 10, 2010 (New Delhi)"

FDI rises 30% in December

press trust of india
NEW DELHI, 13 FEB: Snapping two months of declining trend, foreign direct investment (FDI) in India increased by 30.69 per cent to $2 billion (about Rs 9,000 crore) in December 2010.
In December 2009, India had attracted FDI worth $1.54 billion (Rs 7,185 crore).
However, during the nine-month period (April-December) of the current fiscal, FDI declined by 23.14 per cent to $16.03 billion over the year ago period, a source said.
India had received $20.92 billion FDI during the same period of the previous financial year.
In view of declining foreign investment inflows, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is considering setting up a panel to find out the reasons for FDI slowdown and suggest ways to encourage it.
According to economists, investors are cautious as the global economic recovery is fragile and uneven, specially in Europe.
“The global economic recovery is not at all strong. Going by the trend, it appears that India will receive less FDI in 2010-11 compared to the previous fiscal,” said Crisil's principal economist Mr DK Joshi.
He also said that India was not able to attract very large amounts of foreign investments because of procedural delays.
Meanwhile, another economist said that global recovery, although modest, had thrown up more options for investors in other parts of the world.
In 2009-10, India's FDI had declined to $25.88 billion from $27.33 billion in the previous financial year.
FDI inflows in October 2010 dipped by about 40 per cent to $1.4 billion over the year ago period. In November, too, it dipped by seven per cent to $1.6 billion.
The main sectors that attracted FDI include services (financial and non-financial), telecommunications, housing and real estate, construction activities and power, the source said.

FDI rises 30% in December

FDI trend still in India’s favour, says Ernst & Young - Money - DNA

Old News "Published: Tuesday, Jan 25, 2011, 3:11 IST"
 
^^^Old News published in "Press Trust of India, December 10, 2010 (New Delhi)"

There is No Old News, new News when the Published Article Relates to the Same Fiscal year.... :wave: , When there already is a 30% growth in the 2010-2011 Fiscal Year how can there be a Loss of 31% in the same fiscal year??? my my source is just 2 months old.... :lol:
 
If they have invested the money pulled out of India in pakistan, I could understand your jubilation. But, they were invested in Thailand, Indonesia and Brazil.... Your response is schadenfreude.
 
nytimes is more credible then NDTV and DNA.
 
the news is absolutely true.. the FDI has been decreased by more than 30 % as compared to previous year. it was 36 bn dollar last year but it is now near to 25 bn dollar 30% increase is month on month basis.

the main reason is corruption and putting back the reform agenda..

but on the positive side ..BP is investing around 20 bn dollar over the period. time to reform
 
the news is absolutely true.. the FDI has been decreased by more than 30 % as compared to previous year. it was 36 bn dollar last year but it is now near to 25 bn dollar 30% increase is month on month basis.

the main reason is corruption and putting back the reform agenda..

but on the positive side ..BP is investing around 20 bn dollar over the period. time to reform
Instead reliance petroleum sold 30% of its stakes to BP including 50% in KG D6 block.Radia tapes sure taking toll on reliance industries.


http://www.ril.com/downloads/pdf/PR21022011.PDF
 
Foreign investment might have curbed...
But it has curbed in almost all the countries due to rising prices of oil etc...
The KSE dropped more than 400 points today due to foreign selling...
 
Economic Survey pegs growth at 8.75-9.25% in 2011-12

NDTV Correspondent, February 25, 2011 (New Delhi)
The Economic Survey, tabled in Parliament by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee on Friday, has pegged the economic growth at 8.75-9.25 per cent for fiscal year 2012. (Read: Highlights of Economic Survey)
The survey has pegged the growth for the current fiscal at 8.6 per cent, helped by broad-based rebound in agriculture and "continued momentum" in manufacturing and private services. It said growth in the economy is likely to revert to pre-crisis level by the next fiscal and hinted at a gradual exit from the stimulus.

Fiscal deficit for the current financial year is seen at 4.8 per cent on higher GDP base, the survey says. Revenue deficit for the current fiscal has been pegged at 3.8 per cent. The survey has attributed this to tax buoyancy and collections from 3G auction.

The survey, prepared under the mentorship of Finance Ministry's chief economic advisor Kaushik Basu, says high food inflation is a 'dark cloud' on Indian economy.

"Inflation is clearly a dominant concern. High food prices are driven by demand factors and may stay elevated on West Asia crisis," according to the Economic Survey. It also says rising purchasing power aided spurt in food prices. However, the survey stressed on higher FY11 farm growth to curb food prices and urged for urgent expansion of storage space and facilities.

The survey also suggested improvement in grain release policy to strengthen the supply side. "There's need to review grain release and procurement policies," the survey said.

The Economic Survey says April-December average inflation of 9.4 per cent is highest in 10 years. Food inflation soared to 18.23 per cent in December, before moderating to 11.05 per cent in January.

On risks to growth, the survey pointed monsoon, crude prices pose serious threats. Oil prices in India have crossed $100-mark for the first time in two years. It also says slowdown in industrial growth may be temporary but deceleration in industrial output is a cause for concern.

The survey says the government will cap auto fuel prices if crude oil spurts. It also plans to increase diesel prices in a staggered manner. It says the government is committed to provide cooking fuel at an affordable price.

On the subsidy side, the government favours smart cards for kerosene and fertiliser subsidy. According to the Economic Survey, the government needs to plug slippages in Public Distribution System and to improve coverage of the system.

According to the survey, slowdown in foreign direct investment, which is hit by 'sluggish' bureaucracy, is partly offsetting spurt in FII investment. "There's need of cooperation from the G-20 in managing foreign exchange flow volatility," the survey said.




Read more at: Budget News: Economic Survey pegs growth at 8.75-9.25% in 2011-12 - NDTV Profit
 
These paid articles have an agenda to create hysteria in general populace and pressurize govt to open FDI in retail and Finance sector. As long as growth rate is above 9%, we should take these propaganda articles with a pinch of salt. At the same time we should allow and try to attract FDI in hi-tech service and manufacturing industries like aviation, software, semiconductor, automotive, energy etc.
 
nytimes is more credible then NDTV and DNA.

Are you disputing any economic figures given in above articles..from the said sources?
 
You have to wait one more year to see if this is a sustaining trend. One year is not enough data points to ascertain a trend. But there is some fear about the Indian judicial system. Can someone post somewhere in detail what is being done to fix the outdated legal processes/laws and including computerization etc.? In the western world we believe in the sanctity of a contract and its enforcement. That is not the case in the eastern world including China. If India gets its legal and judicial system world class, it will see a lot faster and more equitable growth. For instance, I hear that the real estate laws are really backward in India and people are suffering a lot because of this. An Indian friend just told me this.
 
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