China’s glut and India’s drought show the two faces of liquidity

The Modi administration wants to make a start by not reporting a deficit much higher than the budgeted 5.9% of gross domestic product for this fiscal year, even though nominal GDP is going to be a lower than it had assumed.
The Modi administration wants to make a start by not reporting a deficit much higher than the budgeted 5.9% of gross domestic product for this fiscal year, even though nominal GDP is going to be a lower than it had assumed.

Summary

  • Banks in the two economies face remarkably different challenges. Indian banks face a liquidity crunch but RBI wants fuller monetary policy transmission before it eases its spigot.

Lenders in the world’s two most populous nations are having very different problems with monetary and fiscal taps. In China, creditors are drowning in cheap central-bank cash, but loan demand is muted. In India, banks are in the middle of their fastest expansion in a decade, but they’re parched for liquidity.

While the Chinese authorities’ struggle to stimulate the economy with 3 trillion yuan ($418 billion) in long-term cash injections has the world’s attention, the Indian deficit is also beginning to worry investors.

Barely a few months before the next general election, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration has cut back on spending. That’s hurting lenders. Funds that left bank accounts as advance tax payments by companies in December would only return as deposits as New Delhi starts writing checks to contractors working on government projects. But with the fiscal year approaching its 31 March end, there’s no sign of a last-minute acceleration.

The liquidity drought may be deliberate. Unlike Beijing, New Delhi has every reason to be sanguine about growth. A 7%-plus rate of economic expansion gives India breathing room to slay inflation before embarking on a fresh investment spree after the polls. Unless the Modi government surprises analysts by announcing populist spending programmes in its interim budget, a reasonable assumption is that it’s angling for an upgrade to its sovereign rating, which is perched at the lowest rung of investment grade. Meanwhile, the monetary authority is seeking to buttress its credibility as an inflation fighter.

The all-around tightfistedness is not helping Indian banks. Dismal quarterly results from HDFC Bank—India’s largest lender by market value—have made it the worst-performing stock on the benchmark Nifty Index this month. The 5% drop in the S&P BSE Bankex index since the end of December has also shone a spotlight on a near-$40 billion liquidity deficit in the banking system last week.

Then there’s the upcoming election. A repeat of the 2019 poll, when politicians spent $9 billion in the lead-up, a lot of it in hard cash, will worsen lenders’ funding challenge. Before the 2019 polls, currency in circulation had risen by more than 9% in 20 weeks. It took several months for the money to go back into the banking system.

The fiscal authority is perhaps waiting for a deluge of foreign money after JPMorgan adds India to its emerging-markets bond index in June. HSBC Asset Management is predicting $100 billion in inflows in the coming years. Still, courting foreign investors on a more durable basis will require fixing the government’s rickety fiscal house. The Modi administration wants to make a start by not reporting a deficit much higher than the budgeted 5.9% of gross domestic product for this fiscal year, even though nominal GDP is going to be a lower than it had assumed; its 7.3% real or inflation-adjusted growth is on the back of an 8.9% nominal expansion against an initial estimate of 10.5%.

The other important actor in India’s liquidity drama is the central bank. After the US Federal Reserve starts reducing interest rates, the Reserve Bank of India will come under pressure to do the same. But RBI’s tightening is yet to transmit fully through the Indian economy. The stock market is frothy and inflation has been unmoored from 4% for so long that there’s a real danger that people will stop believing that the monetary authority is committed to achieving it.

Hence, RBI also appears reluctant to ease the current liquidity shortage, lest lenders become too comfortable and stop mobilizing deposits. The monetary authority wants banks to pay extra for funds and charge more on loans, thus completing the transmission of higher policy rates.

The problem is that credit demand is high for unsecured consumer loans, and pushing more of it out the door may lead to concentration risk. Demand for advances from industrial firms is weak and might not hold up if borrowing costs are higher for longer. That could delay a post-election investment boom. RBI may have no choice except to ease the crunch with a durable liquidity infusion.

Indian banks’ price-to-book value of 1.8 is far higher than the multiple of 0.4 for their Chinese peers. The difference is understandable. With China Evergrande Group’s liquidation order by a Hong Kong court clouding the outlook for an already embattled housing industry, mainland banks will struggle to protect profit even by cutting deposits rates further. However, investors are only beginning to weigh the risk of a sharp squeeze on Indian banks’ margins if the liquidity drought drags on. Banks in both countries could be miserable in different ways. ©bloomberg

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