China's Hard Landing To Trigger Meltdown In India: "We Will See Another Crisis"

Tyler Durden's picture




 

In late September, India “surprised” 51 out of 52 economists by cutting rates a larger than expected 50 bps.

Despite RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan’s penchant for catching markets off guard and despite the fact that exports had fallen for eight consecutive months, economists still failed to predict that anything more than 25 bps was in the cards.

“The weakness in India’s exports is striking, not only in terms of past trend, but also from a cross country perspective,” Deutsche Bank wrote at the time. “Indeed, India’s exports performance has been the weakest in the region in 2015.”

In short: in a world gone Keynesian crazy, you live and die by your willingness to engage in competitive easing and with China having just a month earlier moved to devalue the yuan, India had little choice but to cut lest the export picture should darken further.

Since then the malaise has deepened.

Exports have now fallen for 12 straight months and although some of the decline is probably attributable to slumping prices (as opposed to lower volumes), it’s worrisome nevertheless.

“India’s external trade likely fell for second consecutive year in FY16E, with both exports and imports contracting by 18.5%YoY and 17.2%YoY in the period Apr-Nov’15,” Citi notes, adding that “the meltdown in India’s exports and imports was even sharper than the global trade which contracted by 12- 13%YoY.”

On Friday, in the wake of China's continued devaluation of the yuan, Indian Trade Minister Nirmala Sitharaman expressed concern about the effect a sharply weaker RMB will have on her country's trade deficit with Beijing. "It's worrying," she said. "My deficit with China will widen."

India is now looking at ways to prevent a flood of cheap imports from hitting domestic producers.  "India steel companies such as JSW Ltd have asked the government to set a minimum import price to stop cheap imports undercutting them," Reuters writes. "A similar measure was adopted in 1999." 

And cheap Chinese imports aren't the only thing domestic corporates have to be concerned about. If the Chinese economy continues to land hard (so to speak) a sharper devaluation is a virtual certainty. That could weigh on the rupee and imperil Indian corporates that have borrowed in dollars. 

“If China keeps getting hit like this, the yuan has to devalue, and we will see another crisis in India,” Vishal Kampani, managing director at JM Financial said in a January 8 interview with Bloomberg. "A devaluation of the yuan could weaken the rupee, creating 'huge problems' for Indian companies that have to pay back dollar loans, Kampani said." Here's more: 

China is India’s largest trade partner and third-largest export market, so a slowdown there could prolong a record slump in the South Asian nation’s overseas shipments, which declined 12 straight months through November.

 

A China-led rout in Indian markets also risks damping private investment, already hurt by credit lines choked by bad debt and a legislative gridlock that’s blocked economic bills. That would boost pressure on Prime Minister Narendra Modi to sustain public spending even at the risk of worsening Asia’s widest budget deficit.

As a reminder, the country's fiscal situation is a bit precarious or, as Citi puts it, Modi has "good intentions in a challenging environment." "We believe that the government is committed to a fiscal consolidation path, but balancing the credibility of its deficit compression promise and presenting a realistic budget which does not give a negative growth shock is going to be tricky," Citi wrote, in a note out Monday.

Yes, it's "going to be tricky" because as we've seen in countless other countries over the past five or so years, fiscal retrenchment and booming growth aren't compatible. 

So ultimately, the spillover from China may well force India to choose between shoring up the deficit and keeping the economy going with fiscal stimulus as private investors close their wallets. Meanwhile, a sharp drop in the rupee is going to put tremendous pressure on Indian corporates who have borrowed in dollars and are "less [hedged] than we would wish", to quote Rajan.

Why should you care about this, you ask? 

Because as we showed back in November, the fate of global growth hangs on just three countries and if you believe Goldman, India will be the strongest performer:

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Mon, 01/11/2016 - 14:48 | 7030927 MadVladtheconquerer
MadVladtheconquerer's picture

YOU, Jethro, are one BAD-ASS monkey! ;)

If I ever get the chance, I wanna party w/ you, cowboy! (Bill Murray:  Stripes----https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H89XiE7GWao)

Mon, 01/11/2016 - 14:35 | 7030852 ZangotheMagnificent1
ZangotheMagnificent1's picture

Flash crash coming ... get ready for putting out some "below dirt" strike prices

Mon, 01/11/2016 - 14:36 | 7030853 ZangotheMagnificent1
ZangotheMagnificent1's picture

Of course the PPT is on duty ... HAHAHAHHAHAHHAHA

Mon, 01/11/2016 - 14:36 | 7030858 commie
commie's picture

Ah, yes. The ascendency of the BRCI that was going to rule the world. hahahaha

Mon, 01/11/2016 - 14:44 | 7030903 MadVladtheconquerer
MadVladtheconquerer's picture

"All in all, you're just another DICK at the mall."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gR00XhHs0vE

Mon, 01/11/2016 - 15:17 | 7031098 Anopheles
Anopheles's picture

With China and India swirling around the bowl, watch the price of gold and silver plummet.    Gold and to a lessor extent, silver are luxuries and a high price is entirely dependant on a robust world economy.   Note that about 55% of annual gold production goes into jewelry, the very definition of a luxury item.  

 

India's been restricitng buying foreign currency.   Since the rupe is a closed currency, the lack of FX will also mean a decrease in gold imports. 

Mon, 01/11/2016 - 15:16 | 7031104 falak pema
falak pema's picture

If MOdi is in the eye of the cyclone then we have another huge domino down.

BRICS are like the Berlin wall...

Mon, 01/11/2016 - 15:24 | 7031153 Fuku Ben
Fuku Ben's picture

It won't be long now before the individual governments start implementing protectionist measures like the recent Chinese steel import duty by the US so that all the failed politicians can cover their rear ends on the economic and social fallout. This will cause more problems that it will solve. And they will all find themselves caught in the same "Spiral of Death" thinking bail out after bailout will keep it going.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ylsVCyx96_c#t=4m12.5s

India and China and the EM's can easily blame the Fed on the last rate hike exacerbating the situation. The EM's are going to take a bigger hit soonest as things progress. If the EM's are smart they won't fall for the trap and will find ways to keep markets open and flowing freely.

Mon, 01/11/2016 - 16:08 | 7031437 Magnum
Magnum's picture

Stories in Thailand about suppliers of materials that enjoyed steady orders from china but today there are no orders at all. 

Tue, 01/12/2016 - 04:18 | 7033810 onmail1
onmail1's picture

Indian products & services are very strong

internally

It is the internal strength that drives it

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