*

BOA Merrill Lynch

India GDP Upgrade

Bottom line: India bottoming out to ~7% growth end-09…



   *

We grow more and more comfortable with our January call of India bottoming
out end-09 to ~7% growth. This leads us to hike our growth forecast to 6.3%
in FY10 (from 5.3%) and 7.3% in FY11 (from 7.1%), assuming the 2H09 G-3
bottom out our global economics team expects.

We have also grown more confident of our long-held twin view of BoP risks
overdone/ medium-term constructive INR outlook: read Christy and me

 here. This, in turn, has led us to push our FY10 BoP outlook up by US$14bn.
Risks: monsoon, US$100+/bbl oil.


*

…although 4QFY09 ‘upside’ bit of statistical ‘construct’



*

We do not set much store by the fact that India’s 5.8% 4QFY09 GDP growth
beat

our (/consensus) 5% expectation. 40bp of the ‘upside’, after all, emanated
from a

concentrated higher-than-expected growth in construction (7% of GDP), due to
an

ever so convenient downward revision in its 4QFY08 growth to 6.9% from
12.6%.



   *

Political stability allows pump priming by PSU divestment…



*

At the heart of our upgrade is a likely fiscal stimulus of 0.5-1% of GDP in
the July

budget. The convincing re-election of the Congress-led UPA, after all, has
opened

the door for ~0.5% of GDP of PSU divestment. Our estimates also suggest that

the government can borrow an additional Rs500bn/US$10bn, in case the RBI

steps in with our expected OMO purchases of Rs1200bn/US$25bn.



    *

… and softer lending rates should support loan demand



*

There is also greater visibility of our expected 50-100bp bank prime lending
rate

(PLR) cut by September. A much more politically stable Delhi should be able
to

muster the comfort to cut PSU bank deposit rates, if CPI inflation softens
as we

forecast. This, in turn, should fructify our expected bottoming out of
credit demand

around 15.5% (14%, earlier) by September to fund end-09 recovery.



    *

With 550bp PLR-10y spread muting fiscal/inflation risks…



*

Won’t a high fiscal deficit/inflation prevent softer lending rates? Not
really. True,

we ourselves expect a reversal of the easy money policy by April 10, with
WPI

inflation crossing 5% by March. Yet, even if yields react – as we expect -
the

~550bp spread between bank PLR and the 10y is too high to sustain. This
should

protect our soft lending rate regime until 2HFY11. Do read Ashish and me

   here.

*

…improved BoP outlook easing funding constraints



*
**

We have upgraded our FY10 capital inflow projections by US$14bn on a mix of

receding international risk aversion as well as domestic political risks.
This, in

turn, should ease funding constraints given India’s dependence on foreign
capital

inflows for long-tenor funding. Could appreciation damage recovery? We think

not. The RBI will persist, in our view, with its policy preference for a
relatively

weak INR to support exports. At the same time, the need to block imported
inflation from rising oil prices should prevent policy-driven depreciation.







-- 
National Youth Day

Dr  APJ Abdul Kalam speech

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-O24qidjj0&feature=related

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