Depth
of India’s downturn takes some by surprise
India
has just recorded its slowest growth since 2003-2004, when it was
gripped by a crippling drought. There is no drought now, but even the
imminent monsoon won’t fix its problems
1
May, 2012
Economic
growth sagged in the January-March quarter to 5.3 per cent, according
to official data released Thursday. For the fiscal year ending in
March, gross domestic product expanded by 6.5 per cent, well below
the 7.5 per cent projected by the government, which in turn was
already a sharp decline from almost double-digit growth before the
global slowdown.
Surprise
half-point rate cut in India
Troubles
are piling up in India. Economic reform legislation, including
simplification of land acquisition and a goods-and-services tax, is
stalled. So are infrastructure projects for which the country is
desperate, including new highways and ports. A recent gas price
increase was the only move to help rein in the cost of a government
subsidies package for food, fuel and fertilizer that costs an
estimated 9 per cent of GDP.
The
rupee continues to slide, falling Thursday to its lowest level ever,
at 56.5 to the U.S. dollar. Manufacturing, the engine meant to be
creating hundreds of thousands of desperately needed jobs, contracted
by 0.3 per cent in the January-March quarter. The rate of growth in
electricity production, mining and agriculture all shrank, too.
Meanwhile,
many of India’s cities were operating at half-speed or less
Thursday because of a mass strike called by the political opposition
to protest the gas price move. The May 24 gas price hike, of 11.4 per
cent, was the steepest in Indian history and has enraged a public
already hit hard by the currency collapse and inflation running above
7 per cent. Yet it was the only economic reform the embittered
business community has seen from government in months.
“The
depth of this downturn has taken us by surprise,” said Aninda
Mitra, who until recently handled India’s credit rating for
Moody’s. “And we expect it will be prolonged. We don’t quite
see where the circuit breakers will come from.”
If
all that weren’t enough, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee
announced in the April budget that there would be a new tax regime
for foreign firms doing business in India – and rewrote tax policy
so that Vodafone Group PLC, (VOD-Q26.78-0.01-0.04%) despite having
won a Supreme Court case on the matter, would have to pay billions of
dollars in taxes retrospectively on its $11-billion acquisition of
Hutchison Essar in 2007.
Mr.
Mukherjee said in a statement that the factors causing the slowdown
have hit bottom – a notable change from his line to date that there
is no cause for alarm.
The
government response to fears about the economy over the past year has
been to put most of the blame on international factors, but that
explanation finds little quarter any more.
“We’ve
turned a dream run into a nightmare,” said Mythili Bhusnurmath, an
economist who writes a popular finance blog for the Economic Times.
She called it “a transformation [that] is entirely of our own …
government’s making.”
Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh oversaw India’s economic liberalization as
then-finance minister in the early 1990s, but in his second term as
Prime Minister, there have been no such decisive moves.
Part
of Mr. Singh’s problem appears to be the fractious, populist
coalition he oversees; a national uproar over corruption and scams
has also crippled productivity in government.
“Vodafone
is a worrying sign, not only for its impact on sentiment of other
foreign investors – but also in that it reflects a lack of
understanding of how serious the macro situation is for India,”
said Mr. Mitra, who now watches India from Singapore, where he works
with Australian and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. “If you were in
a much stronger macro situation, you could pull this off. But now the
question arrives – do key policy makers realize how serious the
situation is?”
In
any case, the government has few policy options at its disposal at
this point: The fiscal deficit in the year to March, 2012 was 5.9 per
cent of GDP – so there are few resources to put into economic
stimulus. At the same time, the central bank has been reluctant to
reduce interest rates, with inflation already over 7 per cent. The
trade deficit is at 11 per cent of GDP.
However,
not everyone sees the latest data as harbingers of crisis.
“Five-point-three
[per cent economic growth] is pretty horrendous, to say the least,”
said Shankar Sharma, vice-chairman of First Global Securities Pvt.
Ltd. “But I don’t think we should be being too harsh on India
because the fact is that every single country in the world has slowed
dramatically, and India has done remarkably well relative to its peer
group and the developed markets.”
The
other BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia and China) have all posted much
lower growth, except for China, where the stimulus was much greater,
he said. (Indonesia and the Philippines, two countries which are
increasingly setting themselves up to compete with India in some key
fields, are posting growth higher than India.)
But
Mr. Sharma noted that foreign direct investment levels are at record
high levels, despite deterrents such as the Vodafone tax charge. “The
one place that looks really strong because of what is happening
across the world in commodity markets is really India – in six to
12 months, people will be a lot more bullish on India,” Mr. Sharma
predicted.
Maersk
shipping to cut 400 jobs
UPI,
26
April, 2012
Danish
container shipper Maersk Line said Friday it would eliminate 400 jobs
as part of a reorganization strategy.
The
shipping giant, which current employs 25,000 workers around the
globe, said it lost $566 million in the first quarter after earning a
net profit of $416 million in the first three months of 2011.
For
article GO
HERE
Airlines
seek to slash fuel costs
Few
industries are hit as hard by high oil prices than the airlines,
which can spend close to 40% of their budget on fuel.
1
June, 2012
With
jet fuel prices near record highs, the drive to conserve is stronger
than ever.
Delta
recently made headlines with its novel bid to buy an oil refinery,
taking a more direct role in procuring fuel. But Delta and other
airlines are experimenting with a number of other ways to cut costs.
The
entire industry is hoping a switch from radar to GPS-based navigation
will cut the time it takes both to reach cruising altitude and land a
plane.
A
Delta spokesman said GPS systems can get a plane on the ground 2 or 3
minutes faster than radar by allowing the plane to descend in one
fell swoop instead of a series of steps. Since the planes burn about
$100 minute in fuel, that can shave a few hundred dollars off of each
landing.
A
few hundred dollars may not sound like much, especially since Delta
spent $12 billion last year on fuel. But considering Delta (DAL,
Fortune 500) lands over 1,000 planes a day in Atlanta alone, the
savings can add up fast.
The
airline also cut long-haul flights by around 10% last year, and plans
another 10% reduction this year.
Long-haul
flights burn more fuel per mile than short trips because extra weight
is added by the extra fuel needed to make the trip.
Delta's
risky oil refinery bet
"Fuel
is expensive, so we're being very careful about where we fly,"
said Delta spokesman Eric Torbenson, adding that Delta is making sure
all its routes can cover the cost of fuel.
Delta
is also replacing 88 of its 50-seat regional jets with larger,
100-passenger versions, because the larger jets get better mileage
per passenger.
At
United, replacing aircraft is also part of the strategy.
United
is putting 19 of the most advanced 737's into service this year, as
well as five of Boeing's (BA, Fortune 500) new ultra-efficient 787
Dreamliners. The new aircraft are 15% to 20% more efficient than the
planes they will replace.
Like
other airlines, United (UAL, Fortune 500) has put winglets on the
tips of many of its aircraft's wings, which reduce drag and can cut
fuel use by up to 5%.
It's
also swapping out parts, such as the 800-pound steel brakes on some
737's with lighter, carbon-fiber equipment.
"We
have a long-term approach in place," said Joel Booth, who flew
777's for United before taking a job as the airline's head of fuel
efficiency. "This is very important to our businesses."
Booth
said that efficiency efforts last year saved the airline 60 million
gallons of fuel - or nearly $200 million at today's prices. In 2011
the airline spent nearly $13 billion on fuel.
The
company has over 3,600 ground support vehicles such as baggage
tractors and aircraft tugs that run on either alternative fuel or
electricity -- a move being made by other airlines too.
Southwest
extends its cost savings strategy beyond the airport entirely.
Like
most airlines, Southwest (LUV, Fortune 500) engages in extensive
hedging for its fuel -- a practice where the airline basically bets
fuel prices will be higher in the future and locks in contracts with
Wall Street traders and others willing to take the opposite side of
that bet.
The
airline received considerable attention in 2007-2008 when it was
hedged more so than most airlines when oil prices spiked -- a
strategy that paid off handsomely.
Over
the last decade or so Southwest's trading strategy has saved over $3
billion in fuel costs, said Chris Monroe, the airline's head of risk
management.
Currently
Southwest, which spent $6 billion on fuel last year, has hedges out
to 2015. But the airline is basically unhedged through the first half
of this year, meaning it thinks fuel prices will continue falling for
at least another month.
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