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Staying in the hunt

FIIs preferred India over other Asian markets this year: Report:yahoo:

Is the India growth story losing steam? Whatever India's macroeconomic indicators, global investors do not think so. Foreign institutional investor (FII) inflows into the Indian stock markets have scaled record highs so far in 2012. Indeed, FIIs have preferred India to all other Asian markets this year, according to BNP Paribas's "India Market Outlook" report.



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No fast growth rebound for India amid downgrade fears

reuters

By Frank Jack Daniel and Manoj Kumar
NEW DELHI | Tue Aug 28, 2012

(Reuters) - India's economy likely remained in its deepest slump for nine years in the quarter ending in June, but high inflation and polarized politics leave the country's leaders with limited scope to crank up growth.

Weak demand in the United States and Europe has hit exports of IT services and manufactured goods, but the heaviest toll on the economy is from overspending and the lack of reforms at home - a point made by ratings agencies Fitch and Standard & Poor's, who have threatened to downgrade India's sovereign debt to junk.


Distracted by a scandal over the allocation of coalfields that has paralysed parliament, the government has further delayed planned big-ticket economic reforms. For now, it is focused on smaller measures it hopes will put the economy on track, including possible budget cuts later in the year.

Many G20 central banks have been moving to support growth through monetary stimulus.

But the Reserve Bank of India is lothe to reduce borrowing costs, among the highest of major economies, until the government reins in spending on subsidies and increases capacity to fight stubbornly high inflation.

"India in a way is in an abnormal cycle with the combination of below-trend growth and above-trend inflation. And monetary policy cannot be the panacea," said Rajeev Malik, a senior economist at brokerage CLSA in Singapore.

A Reuters poll of 38 economists produced a median forecast of 5.3 percent year-on-year GDP growth for the April-June quarter, unchanged from January-March, which was the slowest growth rate since the same quarter in 2003.

Forecasts ranged from 4.8 percent to 6 percent in the poll, ahead of the data due for release at 0530 GMT on Friday.

"We'll be in that 5 to 6 percent range for next year also," said CLSA's Malik. "The question is going to be how effective is any kind of response from the government and that is anybody's guess at this point."

While strong by global standards, such rates are considered almost recessionary in India, which targets 9 percent to provide jobs for a bulging young population.

Worried about social unrest if aspirations are not met, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh this month called high growth a matter of national security.

Singh's economic advisory panel this month cut its forecast to 6.7 percent for economic growth in the year to next March (2012/13), down from a previous forecast of 7.5-8 percent. The RBI predicts growth of 6.5 percent in the same period.

REVIVAL PLEDGE

Newly reappointed Finance Minister P. Chidambaram has vowed to revive an economy he steered through the 2008 credit crunch with tax cuts. The buzz on his return to the ministry helped a market rally, further fuelled by a flurry of minor policy moves.

India never fully unwound the consumer-oriented tax breaks that some economists say caused the economy to overheat. With inflation at close to 7 percent for 2-1/2 years and a yawning fiscal deficit in the cross-hairs of ratings agencies, India, like China, has little space for a new round of stimulus.

Chaotic scenes in parliament this week highlighted political gridlock scuppering plans to cut runaway fuel subsidies and invite foreign supermarkets to open shop. Industrial output contracted in June, and the country is running a wide current account deficit that has driven the rupee to record lows.

Singh, the pilot of India's initial reforms as finance minister in the 1990s, has seen his second term as prime minister dogged by graft scandals that have sapped his government's capacity to further remodel the economy.

He has a window to implement unpopular economic policies after the parliament session finishes next week and before elections in the state of Gujarat towards the end of the year, but a drought driving up farm aid casts doubt on that timetable.

"The current political environment puts a question mark on all the markets' reform expectations being met," J.P. Morgan said in a research report. Optimism that reforms are imminent drove a 12 percent rally in Indian equities in the last three months, but the "bulls are now getting edgy," the report said.

The Reserve Bank of India next reviews policy on September 17, and recent hawkish comments suggest it is in no mood to lower rates.

A drought in several farming states has delayed a plan to raise the price of heavily subsidised fuels such as diesel, a major contributor to a fiscal deficit that hit 5.8 percent of GDP in the last fiscal year.

SPENDING CUTS?

In private, officials admit a deficit target of 5.1 percent this year will be missed if fuel prices do not rise. One senior official involved with government finances said the ministry was considering an across-the-board cut to budgeted planned spending, with a task force due to report on the issue.

"If the oil subsidies are not controlled, the fiscal deficit could shoot up to 5.4 or 5.5 percent of GDP," he said. "There is a proposal to have 10 percent cut in the planned expenditure if needed."

An architect with Singh of the 1990s market liberalization, Chidambaram is doing his best to boost growth and balance the books through small-bore measures. Last week the ministry made it easier for companies to borrow overseas, where interest rates are almost zero compared with above 8 percent in India.

Chidambaram approved an $180 million FDI proposal from Walt Disney Corp (DIS.N), part of a backlog of proposals by foreign companies now being fast-tracked. He asked state-run banks to lend more money to consumers for durables like cars and washing machines, and credit to help stimulate farm growth.

Chidamabaram's immediate goal is to avert a downgrade that would make India the first country to trade at junk in the BRICS group - Brazil, Russia, China, and South Africa.

Credit default swaps suggest India is already a bigger investment risk than emerging markets such as Vietnam and more than double the risk of fellow BRICS.

The capital market division of the economic affairs ministry regularly updates the agencies about steps taken to improve the fiscal situation.

"We assume they would wait before taking any action," said another senior finance ministry official. "If they downgrade us in a hurry and the economy starts picking up in the second half won't they lose face?"
 
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Rural Indians outpace urbanites in spending growth: Crisil study
KOLKATA, AUG 29: For the first time since economic reforms began two decades ago, consumption in rural India is seen growing faster than in urban India and has widened the growth differential.

Between 2009-10 and 2011-12, additional spending by rural India was Rs 3,75,000 crore, significantly higher than Rs 29,9400 crore by urbanites. The change has been aided by shift in rural income and employment scenario.

NSSO data shows that during 2004-05 to 2009-10, rural construction jobs rose 88 per cent, while the number of people employed in agriculture fell from 249 million to 229 million.

In addition, migrants from villages to urban areas, who benefitted from job opportunities in infrastructure and construction projects, increased remittances to their families in rural India, which boosted consumption.

According to Roopa Kudva, MD & CEO, Crisil, “Underpinning this growth in rural consumption is a strong increase in rural incomes due to rising non-farm employment opportunities and the government’s rural focus through employment generation schemes.”

The value of goods and services consumed has always been greater in rural India, but urban India has narrowed the differential during most of the last decade by growing at a faster pace.

For sustaining the rural boom, substitution of short-term income boosters such as government-sponsored employment guarantee schemes with durable job opportunities in rural areas has played a critical role.
 
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India revises key growth data, raising reliability fears :tdown:

31/8/2012


New Delhi: India has sharply revised its GDP data to show a much worse economic performance than originally thought in the aftermath of the global financial crisis, putting renewed scrutiny on the reliability of government data.

The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has revised GDP growth to 3.5 per cent from earlier estimates of 5.9 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2008-09.


Questions over the reliability of Indian data are not new. Economists have previously challenged the accuracy of other indicators such as industrial production and exports. Faulty data makes it potentially trickier for policymakers to take decisions on matters like interest rates.

The trade ministry admitted in December it had accidentally inflated India's export figures by more than $9 billion due to a glitch in the computer system that collates the data.


http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/2012/08/30/dramatic-gdp-growth-revisions-baffle-economists/
 
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India revises key growth data, raising reliability fears :tdown:

31/8/2012


New Delhi: India has sharply revised its GDP data to show a much worse economic performance than originally thought in the aftermath of the global financial crisis, putting renewed scrutiny on the reliability of government data.

The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has revised GDP growth to 3.5 per cent from earlier estimates of 5.9 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2008-09.


Questions over the reliability of Indian data are not new. Economists have previously challenged the accuracy of other indicators such as industrial production and exports. Faulty data makes it potentially trickier for policymakers to take decisions on matters like interest rates.

The trade ministry admitted in December it had accidentally inflated India's export figures by more than $9 billion due to a glitch in the computer system that collates the data.


Dramatic GDP Growth Revisions Baffle Economists - India Real Time - WSJ

BIG MOUTH INDIANS THE TRUTH PROVES IT AGAIN! :rofl:
 
. . . .

What is new in this...you guys are known to create your own stories - for years you guys said 9/11 was staged by the "Jew and American agencies" and never admitted Osama is in Pakistan, and one fine day the Americans busted your *** and took Osama as corps from close to your military establishment and your country become naked in-front of the world!!!
 
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BIG MOUTH INDIANS THE TRUTH PROVES IT AGAIN! :rofl:

Did you even bother to understand the article or is the English used in 'it' is beyond your comprehension?

Here is the complete article ..which is from reuters and not a 'wsj blog' source you have given

It just explains how growth rate for FY 2008-09 has been revised to 3.5% from 5.9% and 2009-10 growth rate has been revised to 11.2% rather than 9.4%.
(Reuters) - India has sharply revised its GDP data to show a much worse economic performance than originally thought in the aftermath of the global financial crisis, putting renewed scrutiny on the reliability of government data.

The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has revised GDP growth to 3.5 percent from earlier estimates of 5.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008/09. On the flip side, it also showed the fourth quarter growth estimate for 2009/10 was better than first thought - 11.2 percent rather than 9.4 percent.

The news, first published in Mint newspaper, came as the country braced for the release of GDP data for this fiscal year's June quarter on Friday, which is likely to show a continued economic slowdown.

Questions over the reliability of Indian data are not new. Economists have previously challenged the accuracy of other indicators such as industrial production and exports. Faulty data makes it potentially trickier for policymakers to take decisions on matters like interest rates.

The trade ministry admitted in December it had accidentally inflated India's export figures by more than $9 billion due to a glitch in the computer system that collates the data.

Government statisticians defended the change in the GDP numbers as routine revision.

Globally, economic data is revised on a regular basis. India, for example, revises inflation data every month. But the sharp revision - and the time gap from when the data was first collected - raised eyebrows.

"In GDP data, which is a very, very important data set for the central bank and the government, such sharp revisions are something which are a cause of worry," said RBS economist Gaurav Kapur in Mumbai.

"Quality of statistics is something which has been a concern for a while, and these numbers point to that again," he said. "At least for the inflation side, for instance, we know about revisions on a monthly basis, but in GDP numbers, having such sharp revisions, and that too going back three years, is something at least I have never seen."

(Also read Reuters Poll on April-June 2012 GDP data, click here)

"TRUE PICTURE"

The downward revision means the economy is growing at its slowest rate in three years, not nine years as previously thought. Economists expect Friday's data to show the economy grew at 5.3 percent in the June quarter, mirroring its disappointing performance in the previous quarter.

"These kind of historical revisions complicate the job for policymakers as it gets difficult to get an accurate picture of the risks in the economy and weakens ability to anticipate impact of shocks in the economy," said Rahul Bajoria, regional economist at Barclays Capital in Singapore.

India, which has basked in two decades of rapid economic development since landmark economic reforms in 1991, has seen growth slow sharply amid a prolonged political logjam that has stalled decision-making.

Government officials said the revision reflected changes in how India's industrial production was measured. The government recently changed the base year to which data is compared, something it has typically done every 10 years. The government now plans to revise the base year every five years.

The new index covers 682 items and includes products such as clothing, jewellery, processed food and new industrial products that were not covered in the previous index.

"The aim was to give a more true picture of the economy," T.C.A Anant, India's chief statistician, told Reuters.

(Writing by Matthias Williams, additional reporting by Tony Munroe and Suvashree Dey Choudhury in MUMBAI)
 
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India's revised growth data, raises fears

New Delhi - India has quietly revised a slew of key economic data ahead of new GDP figures due out on Friday, a move economists say raises questions about the reliability of the country's financial records.

Among the most significant alterations, the CSO sharply downgraded growth in the last quarter of the financial year to March 2009from 5.9% to 3.5%.

Rather, one economist, who did not wish to be named, said he felt the changes reflected "incompetence".

"What's the point of taking any (policy) decisions based on this kind of data?" asked Manas Chakravarty, a columnist at India's Mint financial newspaper.

India's revised growth data, raises fears | Fin24

:rofl::rofl:

India's revised growth data, raises fears

New Delhi - India has quietly revised a slew of key economic data ahead of new GDP figures due out on Friday, a move economists say raises questions about the reliability of the country's financial records.

Among the most significant alterations, the CSO sharply downgraded growth in the last quarter of the financial year to March 2009from 5.9% to 3.5%.

Rather, one economist, who did not wish to be named, said he felt the changes reflected "incompetence".

"What's the point of taking any (policy) decisions based on this kind of data?" asked Manas Chakravarty, a columnist at India's Mint financial newspaper.

India's revised growth data, raises fears | Fin24

:rofl::rofl:

Cheater and Incompetent INDIANS & SHAME ON YOU! :tdown:
 
. .
What is new in this...you guys are known to create your own stories - for years you guys said 9/11 was staged by the "Jew and American agencies" and never admitted Osama is in Pakistan, and one fine day the Americans busted your *** and took Osama as corps from close to your military establishment and your country become naked in-front of the world!!!


wat own ...this is said by ur own indian ...btw u people are responsible for every thing ,even to make highways and for trading u have killed muslims in burma and assam ......

not only this uR RAW supports khawariji people( TTP.).............

You are a comedian man....Really.

thanku ..anything else .......??;)

chennaiking from india got very angry when i sent him link LOL

THIS IS UR REAL FACE ......
 
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What slowdown? For some firms, India's economy still humming

India's economic growth may have slowed to a near-decade low, but you wouldn't know it from the pace at which Britain's Costa Coffee and many other consumer-focused companies are expanding.

"The last couple of months have shown a slight dip in terms of consumer traction, but I don't think it's anything that we are very worried about," said Santhosh Unni, India CEO of the chain owned by Whitbread Plc.

The firm recently opened its 100th India store and plans 100 more over 18 months.


"We will continue to expand aggressively in the coming 6-8 months," he said.

ANALYSIS-What slowdown? For some firms, India's economy still humming | Reuters
 
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Hmm.... Interesting.

The latest Indian GDP data comes in at 5.5% (let's just assume that it is true) Rupee has been hovering around 55-56 which indicates no significant capital inflows. Inflation is at around 7% which is still sky high. The Indian forex reserve has dipped to 288 billion.

It is quite possible that the Indian government is just printing cash.........

India's revised growth data, raises fears

New Delhi - India has quietly revised a slew of key economic data ahead of new GDP figures due out on Friday, a move economists say raises questions about the reliability of the country's financial records.

Among the most significant alterations, the CSO sharply downgraded growth in the last quarter of the financial year to March 2009from 5.9% to 3.5%.

Rather, one economist, who did not wish to be named, said he felt the changes reflected "incompetence".

"What's the point of taking any (policy) decisions based on this kind of data?" asked Manas Chakravarty, a columnist at India's Mint financial newspaper.

India's revised growth data, raises fears | Fin24

:rofl::rofl:

India's revised growth data, raises fears

New Delhi - India has quietly revised a slew of key economic data ahead of new GDP figures due out on Friday, a move economists say raises questions about the reliability of the country's financial records.

Among the most significant alterations, the CSO sharply downgraded growth in the last quarter of the financial year to March 2009from 5.9% to 3.5%.

Rather, one economist, who did not wish to be named, said he felt the changes reflected "incompetence".

"What's the point of taking any (policy) decisions based on this kind of data?" asked Manas Chakravarty, a columnist at India's Mint financial newspaper.

India's revised growth data, raises fears | Fin24

:rofl::rofl:

Cheater and Incompetent INDIANS & SHAME ON YOU! :tdown:
 
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