Macro

RBI Leaves Rates Unchanged

No Comments » Written on March 15th, 2012 by
Categories: Macro

In a very boring macroeconomic note (mid quarter review, March 2012) the RBI decided not to change anything, and wait and watch. They had recently reduced the Cash Reserve Ratio by 0.75%.

Important was this statement:

On the domestic front, while most indicators suggest that the economy is slowing down, the performance in Q4 of 2011-12 is expected to be better than that in Q3. Inflation has broadly evolved along the projected trajectory so far. However, upside risks to inflation have increased from the recent surge in crude oil prices, fiscal slippage and rupee depreciation. Besides, there continues to be significant suppressed inflation in fuel, fertilizer and power as administered prices do not fully reflect the costs of production.

Market reactions:

- Bank stocks fell nearly 3% today intraday. The Nifty was down 1.5%.

- Bond yields went immediately up to 8.35% (they have been 8.20% recently).

- The Repo Offtake has been above 1.25 lakh cr. since the CRR cut (was over 1.8 lakh cr earlier) which seems to not have changed.

- The budget’s tomorrow, so everyone will wait for that instead for direction.

Next review’s in late April 2012. It’s likely that rates are lowered then.

Feb 2012 Inflation at 6.95%, Flat Base Last Year

No Comments » Written on March 14th, 2012 by
Categories: Inflation

The headline number for inflation in Feb 2012 is officially 6.95% which will be revised in two months.

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The number hides two important points.

imageOne, that the Feb 2011 index number (last year) was almost flat compared to the number in Jan 2011 last year.

As you can see, the Jan to Feb change is very marginal in 2011, with a large change coming in March and April last year. Watch the blue line in the inflation chart twist up after Feb, with Feb remaining flat from Jan.

That means inflation was bound to be a little bit more this time (I had noted this last month)

Headline inflation for Feb, at this rate, might show a marginal increase as the index was flat last Feb – this data is revealed mid-March.

That brings me to my second point, which is that the overall trend in inflation remains constant, and pointed upwards. This is not a “drop in inflation”; we need the slope of the index curve to drop below the trend. (We are maintaining a trend of around 8.5% inflation since April 2009)

Component wise, there is some relief.

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With Manufactured goods having the highest weight in the index (65%) and dipping down to 5.75%, there has been a downward push to inflation. I might not believe that figure, to be honest, but so what, this is the only figure we have.

Primary Articles has inched up again, to 6.95%, and I don’t think we should pay any attention to fuel inflation (since it’s all screwed up because of the fuel subsidy the government gives).

Btw, in terms of data suckage: Crude Petroleum prices have gone up over 10% since December, but the total change in our “index” for crude petroleum: ZERO. So yes, pinch of salt and all that.

Jan 2012 IIP at 6.82%, Dec 2011 revised to 2.5%

No Comments » Written on March 12th, 2012 by
Categories: IIP

In January 2012, the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) went up 6.82% from the previous year. Note that this is highly untrustworthy data. MOSPI is notorious for changing data constantly and much of what they say doesn’t corroborate with anything anyone else says, so you should treat it as highly suspect. I print it because it’s considered important by markets and players, so I’ll report.

Here’s the breakup

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Manufacturing and Electricity have rebounded big time.

MOSPI has revised the December 2011 IIP from the earlier announced 1.8% to 2.51%, a large upgrade. This Jan figure will also change – revised both next month and then once more in June.

Looked at in a different way, the growth is all in capital goods (which came in at –1.5% but way higher than the –16% last month), and Consumer goods and non-durables. In fact if you remove all the other factors, nearly ALL of the growth in the IIP this month (Jan 2012) was from consumer non-durables. Is FMCG making such a big move?

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(Source: MOSPI)

Nifty Consolidated P/E is 16.16, Standalone is 19

2 comments Written on March 4th, 2012 by
Categories: Macro, Nifty

Looking at Q3 figures (now that all data is in) we have a pretty interesting result on the Nifty P/E. If I use the exchange methodology, then the way to get the Index P/E is to simply add up all the profits and use the formula:

Index P/E = (Sum of Market cap of all stocks) / (Sum of profits)

I’ve mentioned earlier that the index creators have said they only consider “standalone” profits, which according to me makes little sense now that many companies report consolidated profits on a regular basis. For instance, CAIRN has a standalone profit, in the last four quarters, of just Rs. 20.56 cr. while it has a consolidated profit of 8209 cr. Similar number differences are seen with Tata Steel, Tata Motors and the like.

(Standalone is just the entity, consolidated includes all subsidiaries as well)

So what is the index P/E if we consider consolidated profits where available and standalone where not? (You have to consider free-float shares – non promoter stake – to arrive at both market capitalization and earnings)

Consolidated P/E: 16.16

(Standalone P/E  using the same calculation, comes to 18.95 and the index released figure is 18.99, for March 2, 2012.)

Consolidated Earnings (adjusted for free float) are about 17% higher than standalone.

Using the free float factor changes things around but if we were to look at raw earnings,that is – net profit with no weights or free float adjustments, here’s what we have.

Nifty Standalone Earnings (Trailing 4 quarters): 192,746 cr.

Nifty Consolidated Earnings: 232, 275 cr. (21% higher!)

The point is that while we might look at P/E from the perspective of the exchange, which provides data only from standalone numbers, the real deal is only found by using consolidated figures. At a P/E of  16, India sounds less expensive than the 19 it officially quotes.

More interesting will be to see how the Nifty earnings have grown, when looked on a consolidated basis. That will unfortunately take a lot more work from my side, in terms of programming. We have to take the Nifty constituent stock changes in the past (for instance Coal India was added recently), and the number of outstanding shares for each stock would have changed etc. An exercise for another day!

Note: The full spreadsheet is here:

Dec 2011 GDP Growth At 6.09%, Lowest in 3 Years

No Comments » Written on February 29th, 2012 by
Categories: Macro, Slider

GDP Growth for the 3rd Quarter ending December 2011 is at 6.09% over the previous year. This is the lowest since March 2009.

Read the rest of this entry »

Chart Of The Day: “New” CPI Inflation at 7.55%

1 Comment » Written on February 21st, 2012 by
Categories: ChartOfTheDay, Inflation

The first official Consumer Price Index (CPI) in the “new series” comes up, with the headline number at 7.5%. (Source: MOSPI) This is much lower than expected, even though it’s higher than the corresponding WPI number of 6.55%.

At the component level, the drop is because of the high weight of food (which is nearly 50% of the CPI).

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As you can see, fuel inflation, clothing, housing and household requisites are all above 12%, as is “others” which is everything that can’t be categorized otherwise. Education costs and personal care (FMCG?) are up marginally while transport costs are shy of 10% (largely because the price of diesel hasn’t moved much).

We don’t have enough data to plot solid graphs, but the CPI (annualized compared to Jan 2011), as compared to the WPI throws a graph that shows we’re dropping on the inflation front:

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On a different note: the MOSPI site makes it really really difficult to collect this data. This month, they reordered the items! The statisticians should be forced to provide standard, CSV format data; this kind of silly trick is inexcusable. (It really takes effort to distort this data, and I have a strong feeling it’s malicious, to make it more difficult for us to mine it. It’s like giving your car for hire and then switching the accelerator and clutch pedals every alternate day.

Consumer Prices: A Better Inflation Indicator

3 comments Written on February 15th, 2012 by
Categories: Inflation, Yahoo

At Yahoo, I write on Consumer Prices: A Better Inflation Indicator

"Inflation is when you pay Rs. 100 for the fifty rupee haircut you used to get for 25 rupees when you had hair"; a quote I received on twitter. In India, when we speak of inflation, we've never really talked about haircuts. No, I'm serious, stick with me.

The Inflation Index that our country talks about is based on the Wholesale Price Index (WPI), which is a weighted sum of product prices at the wholesale level. That means stuff that you can buy at wholesale markets, such as vegetables, copper, fuel, or even liquor. But it doesn't include the cost of services; the WPI will indicate the cost of vegetables and meat to your favourite restaurant, but it won't add up the cost of chef/waiters' salaries, rent of the premises, air-conditioning costs and valet parking. In the haircut example, they'll note that the scissors or shampoo got more expensive, not that the haircut costs you more.

The world over, what is used is a Consumer Price Index (CPI), which uses a basket of goods that you are more likely to consume and uses end-user prices (not wholesale). CPI is more indicative of inflation that the common man faces. India has taken uncoordinated steps in that direction, with the labour bureau releasing three monthly CPI numbers for Agricultural Labourers, Rural Labourers and Industrial Workers, and the Ministry Of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MOSPI) releasing the CPI for Urban Non Manual Employees (UNME).

Multiple Consumer Price Indexes were necessary, we were told, because the spending pattern of different people was different.

A few years back, MOSPI decided to halt collection of data for the UNME based CPI and prepared data collection for a new index called, with great creativity, the "New CPI". This contains:

Pic1 

With the base year as 2010, MOSPI has released data for every month in 2011. This index consists of rural and urban data, with different weights given to each sub-head. The New CPI is envisaged to clear all the confusion among the current CPI indexes; we can only hope that someone else comes up with a "Newer CPI" and confuse the bejeezus out of everyone.

So what has inflation has looked like, when it comes to consumer prices? Since the first data point in the New CPI is January 2011, our first real annual inflation point will be revealed with data for January 2012 (since inflation is a year-on-year change). But we could extrapolate, by looking at December data and comparing it to January.

CPI inflation, thus calculated, gives us an annualized figure of 8.2%. The WPI inflation — the newspaper version — is 7.5%. This is counter-intuitive — food prices are the ones that have reduced the most, and food is nearly half of the CPI. Comparatively, food has a far lower weight in the WPI.

What has happened, then? Let's look at the components:

Pic 2

While food has fallen, much of everything else — from fuel to housing to clothing — has gone up substantially more. If you remove food, the New CPI has gone up 11.4%!

(Even within food, it is vegetables that are down more than 25% from last year, when prices of essential vegetables were shooting through the roof. Take Veggies out and inflation goes to double digits)

In the US, they have a concept of "core" inflation, which is "non-food, non-fuel" — meaning, items that are not heavily volatile. If you calculate that with the WPI, it is only about 8%. But with consumer prices, "core"inflation is 10.70%, a significantly high number. At the core level, prices are sticky — that barber who raises his haircut prices isn't going to reduce it just because shampoo just got a little cheaper.

Think of it this way: when cost prices and salaries go up, barbers will suck up the cost initially. When they can't do it anymore, they'll raise haircut prices. Now even if costs go down, their wages will not decrease — who takes a pay cut voluntarily? — so the consumer's price remains constant. This is "sticky" inflation and one of the most difficult to reverse.

CPI measures inflation you can actually see. Rents are going up. Wages — not just yours but also those you hire, are shooting up. Clothes, restaurants, fuel — all up. The inflation that we saw in the wholesale prices a year or so back (inflation at the primary and wholesale level was nearly 20%) has now moved into items where you and I can feel the pinch.

Still, it's not useful to emulate what the west does. The US attempts to mask its CPI-based inflation by making adjustments that distort the CPI itself. It uses a substitution effect — stating, in effect, that if meat prices go up too much, people will substitute it with chicken, so we'll use the lower of the two prices. They use "hedonic adjustments" to show, for example, that a computer has become cheaper even if you pay the same price, because you get more hard disk space today. These are vaguely justifiable changes, but very wrong in the context of calculating how the common man hurts. While the objective of doing such a thing is unclear, most people believe they are used because they make GDP data look better. Luckily, our tinkering with four different CPIs has kept us from such adjustments.

The CPI is, in general, a better indicator of inflation than a wholesale price index; the rest of the world also thinks so. We have a new index, and let's hope they regulators decide to use it to gauge inflation as it really is, and that index creators don't get ideas to distort the index so that it makes other data more appealing in comparison. And to address the issues with the WPI data, let's also hope that CPI data is properly maintained and promptly updated.

Maybe I'll be able to keep my hair on, just for that haircut.

IIP for Dec 2011 Up 1.8%

No Comments » Written on February 10th, 2012 by
Categories: IIP, Macro

India’s Index of Industrial Production (IIP) for December has been released. The index is up 1.8% over last year.

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This should end a dismal year in for manufacturing, and we might see activity pick up in Jan. This data, though, is horrendously unreliable, and revisions come often. The IIP for December, given the dismal financial results, should have been even lower and I suppose it will be corrected soon.

In a different way, use based indexes give us a picture:

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All the positive action is in Consumer goods and non-durables.