Category: Indian Economy

  • The Budget and its tryst with startups

    The Budget and its tryst with startups

    a person stacking coins on top of a table

    Does Budget 2022 do enough for startups?

    The short answer is – No.

    We saw the rise of 44 unicorns in India during the last calendar year itself. Studies have shown that raising funds for a startup in India has never been easier.

    The Hon’ble Finance Minister used the words “digital”, “startups” and “technology” in historic proportions in Budget 2022. In one of the many firsts, the Speech also acknowledged that there are various on-ground challenges plaguing the startups and new businesses in India.

    It was indicated that the Government will form an expert panel to look into the same and resolve those issues. This is a laudable move. Yet it gets us nowhere.

    The tax and regulatory environment is not geared to handle the booming venture capital and private equity investment in Indian start-ups. It definitely helps to be officially recognized as a start-up which provides tax breaks, angel tax exemptions etc. under Income tax laws.

    The official start-up recognition scheme is not completely inclusive as it requires the start-ups to be doing something “innovative” in order to qualify as a start-up. This has led to merely 54,000 registrations under the start-up scheme since past 6 years.

    Mind you, over 1.5 lakh companies are incorporated each year alone in India. With a booming funding environment, investors are not selectively investing in “innovative” companies anymore.

    Over the years, various round table discussions have been held with bureaucrats and even the Prime Minister and various industry representations have been submitted as well – all of which ask for widening the definition of a start-up.

    The Budget 2022 was historic for start-ups but in many ways, it has actually done close to nothing.

  • Implications of India’s listing on global bond market indices

    Implications of India’s listing on global bond market indices

    person using phone and laptop computer

    India is the world’s fastest-growing economy and yet there is no mention of the Indian debt market on global indices. Most major economies are listed since a long time.

    “India has made significant strides in macroeconomic stability, and its government is more motivated than ever to encourage corporate-investment-driven growth,” says Chief India Economist Upasana Chachra.

    “We think India will be included in two of the three major global bond indices in early 2022.”

    Beyond the direct benefits of index inclusion—it could trigger $170 billion in bond flows over the next decade, lifting Indian bond prices while lowering borrowing costs—this milestone could have profound implications for the country’s currency, corporate bonds and equities.

    A few implications of global-bond-index inclusion for India, and why it could signal the emergence of a new India.

    1. Immediate Boost for Government Bonds

    Major indices don’t simply track their respective markets—they influence them. When an index adds new constituents, portfolios pegged to those benchmarks must adjust their allocations accordingly. “India’s inclusion would trigger significant index-related inflows, followed by an allocation from active global bond investors,” says Min Dai, Head of Asia Macro Strategy.

    2. Shrinking Deficit, Stronger Rupee

    Index inclusion, while significant on its own, would also signal policymakers’ desire to support higher economic growth through investment. “This will push India’s balance of payments into a structural surplus zone and indirectly create an environment for lower-cost capital and, ultimately, be positive for growth,” says Chachra, adding that India’s consolidated deficit could shrink to 5% of its GDP by 2029, down from 14.4% for the 2021 fiscal year.

    India’s currency would also feel the impact. The shrinking deficit could bolster the value of the Indian rupee by 2% a year against a basket of other major currencies, in exchange rate terms. While India’s long-term 4% annual inflation would imply a 2% depreciation in the value of the rupee in nominal terms, at around a 6% yield, Indian government bonds could offer investors medium-term returns of around 4% in dollar terms, “which is quite attractive for foreign investors,” says Dai.

    3. Capital needs of Corporates

    Inclusion in global bond indices could also help Indian corporations with their capital needs. When foreign capital flows into government bond markets, it lowers overall borrowing costs, improves debt sustainability and also drives demand for other—read corporate—fixed-income securities. That’s potentially good news for India’s domestic corporate bond market, which foreign investors have largely overlooked.

    Foreign investors would gain access to a significantly larger pool of Indian corporate issuers.

    4. Equities Buoyed by Better Growth

    The opening of India’s sovereign bond market may also bode well for equities, which stand to benefit from lower borrowing costs and a healthier macroeconomic backdrop. Among these, large private banks could be the most obvious winners. Still, nonbank financials— such as those focused on mortgages, credit cards, insurance and asset management—could enjoy the spillover effects of a more robust bond market in India.

    Sources:

    1. Morgan Stanley research report

    2. India’s global indices report

    3. RBI Press Release dated 8 October 2021

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