Categories
Personal

RIP Dr. Patil

Dr.R.H. Patil , the architect of the National Stock Exchange, died yesterday.

I had the opportunity to see him work at NSE, Mahindra Towers, Worli and then later at the Clearing Corporation, Kamala Mills,Lower Parel.

He was the rarest of rare individuals-a top class technocrat with phenomenal leadership and people skills.

His achievements were extraordinary and it would be fair to say that he was one of the builders of modern India

When the history of Capital Markets is narrated, his name will be written in golden letters

Categories
Observations

An owl on every branch

Now the President’s office has come under fire for a land grab (see here)

Now practically, every branch of the Government-President’s office, the Army,the Executive, the Legislature and even the Judiciary is embroiled in some controversy or the other.

Am reminded of  a couplet of Akbar Allahabadi:

“Barbaad Gulistan karne ko,

ek hi ullu kafi hai,

har shaakh pe ullu baitha hai,

anjame gulistan kya hoga?’’

 

To destroy a garden

One owl (colloquial for fool) is enough

There is an owl on every branch,

What will be the fate of the garden?

Categories
Observations

Friend or Servant?

An old joke about Reliance goes like this:

“There are two types of people in government-friends of Reliance and servants of Reliance”

 

The truth behind this joke has now become evident.

Along with Natwar Singh, Reliance Petroleum was named in the Volcker Report as a beneficiary of the oil-for-food scam.Yet it was let off scot free

When the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was asked why,he replied “After all, what can I do? It is India’s largest corporate.” (source:Caravan)

 

Categories
Links

Linkfest: April 13, 2012

Some interesting morning reads:

Different prices for the same cigarettes ? (BusinessStandard)

LIC India to invest 60000 Crores in equities this year (Mint)

RBI rate cut may not cheer markets (FinancialExpress)

Do fixed deposits beat stocks? (Moneylife)

Fake degrees led India to build an Ivy League (Bloomberg)

3 Big Ideas for the financial services industry (Forbes)

A shout out to Myanmar (DailyReckoning)

Categories
Currencies

An equation for the Indian Rupee

The USD INR relationship for the last 20 years is as shown below:

 

 

The last 4 years has been extremely volatile due to the global crisis and the response of the Central Banks to it.

At this particular juncture, the Indian rupee looks very vunerable due to the following reasons:

1.Current Account Deficit:India’s Current Account Deficit for Oct-Dec 2011 nearly doubled from 10.1 Billion $ to 19.6 Billion $ (source:WSJ)

2.This has resulted in a falling of reserves by around 15 Billion $.The trade-based indicator of reserve adequacy viz. import cover of reserves reached a peak of 16.9 months of imports at the end of March 2004. At the end of September 2010, the import cover stood at 10.3 months. (source:ProjectMonitor)

3.Despite the recent CRR cut, the liquidity is extremely tight.(source:RBI) .Banks are borrowing close to 2Billion $ daily from the repo markets. RBI intervention in the currency markets will further worsen  the liquidity situation

4.Flows to the capital markets is adversely affected owing to the GAAR news in the recent budget.In the month of April 2012 so far, FIIs have invested only 36.76 Million $ !! (source SEBI)

5.The entire country is expecting a rate cut.Even though inflation figures remain elevated, the RBI governor is likely to cut rates

6.The Govt’s fiscal deficit will worsen over the year.The Food Security Bill , political compulsions and failure to meet its ambitious disinvestment targets (30000 Crores) will ensure that.

7.Geopolitical shocks such as Iran-Israel war and/or reigniting of the Euro crisis will be huge negatives for India

So the equation is:

Wide Current Account Deficit+Falling Reserves+Tight Liquidity+Weak Capital Inflows+Monetary easing+Worsening Fiscal Deficit+Geopolitical Shocks=Weak Indian Rupee