Showing posts with label Decoupling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Decoupling. Show all posts

Friday, July 2, 2010

A Bubble In Optimism While the World Is Sinking

Kindle Wireless Reading Device, Free 3G, 6" Display, White, 3G Works Globally - Latest GenerationApple

We are bombarded from all corners of the country, the media, the television, the neighbors, the internet about how India's growth is unstoppable. 

The World Is Flat is a classic and bible of business.  Business titles about management, creativity, success dominate bookstore displays.  Thomas Friedman is the God of Business in a country that is comfortable with many Gods.  Consensus thinking rules and to be skeptical is akin to being unpatriotic.  It is a reasonable and understandable sentiment pervading the country.

Indians spent 50 years of being mauled by government policies that promoted corruption while suppressing  the entrepreneurial spirit of the people.  India is finally an arguably open market. 

The populace is bought into the growth story.  As with all bubbles, this one will only be evident after the fact.  Property prices have risen almost a 100 fold in many instances.  Not 100%, a 100 fold.  Yet the prevailing sentiment is that property prices will continue to rise.  An apartment in Gurgaon costs roughly $400,000 which would be enough these days to buy a mansion on the ocean in California.  Prices in India are no longer cheaper than the rest of the world.  Purchasing power parity has arrived for goods.  Compensation however is not keeping up.  Average salaries still hover under $25,000 a year for all except the businessman and higher level corporate executive. 

India's success came about as a result of India's cost advantages and economic reform.  Economic reforms continue but the cost advantages are starting to disappear.  Companies are now turning to villages to find cheap sources of capital.  But incremental business on the margin is being lost to the Phillipines and South America, Romania.

No country is an island.  Particularly not today.  Europe is struggling with massive debt and potential sovereign defaults.  The U.S. is not far behind but benefits from the ability to print unlimited amounts of the world's reserve currency and have debts denominated in dollars.  Yet I am told that Africa and islands in the southeast are growing and flourishing and will pick up the slack.

The most worrisome aspect is that Europe and the U.S. - the major markets for Indian exports - are in a deflationary vortex and a double dip recession is likely in the cards the second half of this year.  Europe has had a devaluation of its currency by around 20% which is another way of saying Indian exports just got 20% more expensive to that region.  China is slowing down dramatically as it is becoming apparent to the rest of the world that the growth story there was really a bubble that owes its origins to the now moribund U.S. consumer.

Worry not, I am told.  Government spending and domestic demand will pick up the slack.  Unfortunately, the lesson of the past 2 years from the U.S. and countless other countries over decades is that government spending is rarely an efficient use of capital and its effects are temporary and usually not multiplicative.  Much depends on the monsoon and optimism about the monsoon is justified by the weather forecasters, which may be the only profession with predictive powers worse than those of economists.

Investing is about the future, not the past.  The market already recognizes the growth of the Indian market over the past few years and it is priced in the valuation of stocks.  The future however seems far more doubtful. 

Japan was anointed the new superpower before a dramatic 20 year decline that continues.  The Tiger economies were dominant in the 1990s and anointed kings untill a dramatic collapse in 1997-1998.  China was anointed the next heir to the throne but the fall from the throne looks to be quite nasty.  It is India's turn.  Will India deliver where others have failed.  The consensus thinks so.  The consensus is usually wrong.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Management Hubris - India Decoupling Stock Market Will Be A Myth

How ironic that HDFC's Aditya Puri's article prints today just when the China market is down roughly 5%.

Here is the link to HDFC Aditya Puri article "Decoupling is set to become a reality soon" a self serving media spin article by the head of HDFC Bank

I am going to deconstruct his comments.  Mr. Puri makes the argument - correctly - that European and American economies are struggling and the world has changed structurally.  True, no arguments there.

The financial markets, however, are slow learners, creatures of habit, and therefore, create confusion in the short-term or transition (defined as volatility) period.
Really? I would love to know when the markets corrected in Nov 2007 they foresaw a correction ahead in 2008.  I do not know if Mr. Puri made any such calls and protected his stockholders.  Fact is that yes, markets do forecast 9 of the past 5 recessions but they usually are smarter in sum than any one individual.  Anyone that considers himself smarter than the market is suffering from a God complex and has an ego problem.

The forecast GDP growth rate during the next 3-5 years for the following countries are (%): US: 1.8; Europe: 0.8; East Asia: 8; China: 8.5; India: 8. This reflects the level of structural adjustments required in the Western countries in terms of asset bubbles, financial contagion, stimulus, exchange rate, etc. 
I am stunned that any corporate executive would be out there spewing forecast statistics, that too from economists? Economists forecasting record for this cycle and most cycles in my lifetime has been dismal.  The fact that economists are forecasting 8% growth rates for Asia is meaningless.

These same economists were forecasting similar forecasts for Japan in the late 80s and the Tiger economies in the mid 90s.

Besides, investors seeking higher returns on their investment will flock to Asia; this will result in a flood of capital and Asian currencies will see a phase of secular rise against their G-7 counterparts. This could erode export competitiveness, and economies within Asia such as India and Indonesia that are more internally focused, will outperform the others.
Yes, investors will probably flock to Asia to seek higher returns.  However, in a bear market, there are no safe havens.  Just as almost every company benefited during the bull market from global market expansion, what I am seeing today is that there is deflation in Europe and the U.S. and wages are falling dramatically in these countries while wages are rising and inflation is rising in India and China.

Further, Europe has exported a 20% decline in its currency, the net result of which will be a deterioration in competitiveness for India and China.

It is shocking to me that the CEO of one of our major banks does not recognize the risks posed by a rising Rupee.  The consensus today is that India will decouple.  The consensus will be proven wrong in the near future, yet again.

Mr Aditya Puri might want to check the performance of China over the past 12 months and would see that the present market correction / selloff initiated in China.

We are entering a phase where the recession is about to be exported to Asia.  Europe and U.S. have experienced significant declines and a severe recession.  However, a double dip is likely headed.  This time around, emerging markets will suffer along side global markets.

There is no decoupling. 

Here is the first piece of news that Mr. Puri would do well to read. 
Chinese growth May Slow