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Home  » Business » Will demonetisation drag GDP growth to 3.5%?

Will demonetisation drag GDP growth to 3.5%?

By Samie Modak
November 21, 2016 18:15 IST
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Brokerage firm Ambit Capital has cut FY17 growth estimate to 3.5 per cent from 6.8 per cent and said there was even a possibility of growth contracting during the December quarter.

Ambit Capital has slashed its India gross domestic product (GDP) growth estimate for this financial year to 3.8 per cent from 6.8 per cent.

The brokerage said the cash crunch created by the government's demonetisation drive would “paralyse economic activity in the short term.”

Ambit said there would be a significant deceleration in growth in the second half of the financial year. There was even a possibility of growth contracting during the December quarter.

"We expect GDP growth to decelerate from 6.4 per cent in 1HFY17 (as per Ambit estimates) to 0.5 per cent year-on-year in 2HFY17, with a distinct possibility of GDP growth contracting in 3QFY17,” said the brokerage in a note authored by Ritika Mukherjee, Sumit Shekhar and Prashant Mittal.

Ambit Capital slashes GDP growth estimate
It also scraps its March 2017 Sensex target
Services and manufacturing sector would be impacted the most
Measure positive for the banking sector
SMEs would have major problem in adjusting production schedules

“From 3QFY17 until 4QFY19, we expect a strong ‘formalisation effect’ to play out as nearly half of the non-tax paying businesses in the informal sector (40 per cent share in GDP) become unviable and cede market share to their organised sector counterparts.”

Ambit also cut the GDP growth forecast for 2017-18 from 7.3 per cent to 5.8 per cent. Further, it scrapped its March 2017 Sensex target of 29,500. The brokerage has set a target of 29,000 for March 2018, implying an upside of 11 per cent for a period of little over 16 months.

Ambit said the earnings per share (EPS) of Sensex companies could remain flat in 2016-17 at around Rs 1,390 a share “to reflect the weak GDP growth expected over the next two quarters.”

The Sensex on Friday closed at 26,150.24. The index has given up 1,441 points, or 5.22 per cent since November 8, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced recall of Rs500 and Rs1,000 notes to clamp down on black money.

The Street is expecting EPS growth of Sensex companies between 15 per cent and 18 per cent for the 2016-17.

Care ratings

Abolition of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes might lower GDP growth by 0.3-0.5 per cent this financial year as business in various sectors was expected to get adversely affected, says a report by CARE Ratings, PTI reported.

The services and manufacturing sector would be impacted the most. The measure was positive for the banking sector. Agriculture was expected to be the least impacted.

Prior to the demonetisation, CARE had estimated a GDP growth of 7.8 per cent for 2016-17. Now, it has now projected that “the overall GDP growth would be affected by 0.3-0.5 per cent”.

The agency noted that Small & Medium Enterprises would have a major problem in adjusting production schedules as both payments and receipts flow were in cash.

Photograph: Reuters.

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Samie Modak in Mumbai
Source: source
 

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