Indian Economy : News,Discussions & Updates

You are Googling the topic, posting the first article that comes up and passing it as your own comment :) not just that even in that article you are cleverly picking up lines that suits you and not posting lines that supports what you are trying to counter.

How childish :)
Dear Google Scholar,

If you read Indian Banking, it's evolution and history or just how a bank function one thing will always remain constant. Banks getting capital from masses, loaning them to Industries. This system works well till the time most people are paying back the loans but due to political influence when loans are given to fraudulent companies banks goes into trouble and like old tested times for the greater good of people Government bail out the banks, and government dont have money of its own, it's all public money (taxes, natural resources and borrowings).

This is not happening today, it's been happening from good old times. Only now few people are making massive defaults, same people or people closely associated with ruling party, both BJP and Congress.

Now if in your tiny little world questioning this, asking BJP to be different from Congress and break this chain, to punish the people putting exceptional stress on economy is "socialist" please find a good psychiatrist. You can get stuck into syntax and stay ignorant but its a very simple concept and how things work.

Regards
So basically no answer. Carry on with your outraged rants and victimhood here. Go to another thread and blame commies for doing the same. On top of all that write a para how it is/was always like this and that and call names to show the frustration. Cute.
 
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Individuals see the long term sense in investments, Short algorithms for machine trading do not.
Yes bank has had exposure to IL&FS, ADAG, Jet, DHFL, Cox and kings, Zee, etc.

Let's not forget when the money was lent to these organizations, they were not doing poorly by any means. Il&FS was touted as king of NBFC's ADAG's Reliance Infra and Reliance Capital were big players; we often forget that till 2014-15 Reliance's Multicap fund has the highest average return in the world and stood as the case study for fund managers across the world. Similarly, Zee was setting up to become global news and media group, and then there was DHFL, the darling of NBFC's, Sharukh Khan endorsing their ads, business channels lining up to get interviews from Mr. Wadhwan.

Organizations that Yes Bank lent to, like IL&FS, ADAG, Jet, DHFL, Cox and kings, Zee, guess who else lent them money? it was SBI, PnB, IOB, Dena, and other PSU's too. The PSU bank went scott free, because majority shareholding is of GoI, they have rarely paid any dividends and they were recapitalized by RBI and have never really faced any capital problems ever. Yes bank did not have this "Chatra-Chaya".

Now despite my disdain for Chota Ambani, his antics will actually pay off in some years, Mota bhai will take care of that, and not all is lost in ADAG NPA, similarly, IIFL will make a comeback with their Infra projects coming back online. Zee is already on recovery and less than 20% of the NPA's are a writeoff.

There is a very good reason that SBI other Private banks along with the Big Bull Himself have thrown themselves in the ring. There is value to recover in the Yes Bank, and within 5 years if run well, it will recover its entire market cap + the Growth rate. Essentially you got a fully functioning well-established bank and it's an operational asset at throwaway prices. Sure it's a gamble, but it definitely is a gamble worth taking.

There government is not doing anyone any favors in this bailout, it stands to make billions in the process.
So you are saying they are too big to fail. yeah we have heard that before during US housing bust. Instead of allowing it to fail and the guilty ppl face music we are just saving the big shots who will go on to repeat the same thing in future.
 
Dear Google Scholar,

If you read Indian Banking, it's evolution and history or just how a bank function one thing will always remain constant. Banks getting capital from masses, loaning them to Industries. This system works well till the time most people are paying back the loans but due to political influence when loans are given to fraudulent companies banks goes into trouble and like old tested times for the greater good of people Government bail out the banks, and government dont have money of its own, it's all public money (taxes, natural resources and borrowings).

This is not happening today, it's been happening from good old times. Only now few people are making massive defaults, same people or people closely associated with ruling party, both BJP and Congress.

Now if in your tiny little world questioning this, asking BJP to be different from Congress and break this chain, to punish the people putting exceptional stress on economy is "socialist" please find a good psychiatrist. You can get stuck into syntax and stay ignorant but its a very simple concept and how things work.

Regards
Frankly this was a good chance for the current govt to enforce the rule of law and go after guilty ppl. It will just reinforce the old adage that if you are big shot you can get away with whatever you do. Unfortunately companies which really need funds will suffer while the crooked continue their looting ways.
 
Frankly this was a good chance for the current govt to enforce the rule of law and go after guilty ppl. It will just reinforce the old adage that if you are big shot you can get away with whatever you do. Unfortunately companies which really need funds will suffer while the crooked continue their looting ways.
You are bordering blasphemy here, careful.:p
 
So you are saying they are too big to fail. yeah we have heard that before during US housing bust. Instead of allowing it to fail and the guilty ppl face music we are just saving the big shots who will go on to repeat the same thing in future.
No, I am not saying they are too big to fail, I am saying exactly what I wrote above. Their investments are not total writeoffs and there will still be still adequate value to wipe off most of the NPA. There is nothing to construe there.

And again there is no face the music there, Banks weren't doing any favors to these companies by lending, they were making billions in interests. Banks are completely to blame here who lent money without the due diligence for secured loans.
 
India may top up strategic tanks with Saudi, UAE oil

Updated: 17 Mar 2020, 06:31 AM IST
By Nidhi Verma , Reuters
  • Global oil prices have fallen around 40% in March as the impact of the coronavirus pandemic has destroyed demand
  • Leading Opec producers Saudi Arabia and the UAE have said they will increase output while cutting prices, giving big consumers the chance to fill up at discounted prices
1584467182954.png

Global oil prices have fallen around 40% in March as the impact of coronavirus pandemic has destroyed demand. (Photo: Reuters)

India plans to take advantage of low prices for oil from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to top up its strategic petroleum reserves (SPR), two sources familiar with the matter said on Monday.

Global oil prices have fallen around 40% in March as the impact of the coronavirus pandemic has destroyed demand, while supplies are growing following Moscow’s refusal to back deeper output cuts at a meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) and its allies.

Leading Opec producers Saudi Arabia and the UAE have said they will increase output while cutting prices, giving big consumers the chance to fill up at discounted prices.

“It is an opportune time for us and for them (Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. or ADNOC and Saudi Aramco) to finalize the deals and fill the SPRs... If there is any delay, we might fill the SPRs on our own," said an official familiar with the matter, asking not to be named.

A second person, who also requested anonymity, said the oil ministry has written to the finance ministry to release about ₹4,800-5,000 crore ($673.7 million) to buy oil in eight-nine very large crude carriers for filling the storage.

Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Ltd (ISPRL) and India’s oil and finance ministries had no immediate comment, while ADNOC and Saudi Aramco declined to comment.

India, the world’s third biggest oil importer and consumer, imports about 80% of its oil needs and has built strategic storage at three locations in the south to store up to 36.87 million barrels of oil or about 5 million tonnes to protect against supply disruption.

ISPRL, a company charged with building of strategic storage, has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the UAE’s national oil company ADNOC for the lease of half of its 2.5 million tonnes Padur facility.

Last year it signed an MoU with Saudi Aramco for the lease of a quarter of Padur SPR.

The leases allow the national oil companies to store their oil, some of which will cater for the country’s strategic needs, while they can sell the rest to Indian refiners.

Padur has four compartments that hold about 4.6 million barrels each. ISPRL has received one very large crude carrier (VLCC) with Arab Mix to fill one compartment and will get a second VLCC in April, said a third person.

ISPRL has already leased half of the 1.5 million tonnes capacity in Mangaluru storage to ADNOC, which has stored about 5.5 million barrels of Das crude oil in the cavern, while ISPRL has retained the remainder.

“This is the right time to fill the SPRs before prices start moving up," added the third person.

India has also filled its 1.03 million tonnes Visakhapatnam facility with Basra oil from another Opec producer Iraq. While India is primarily taking advantage of crude oil low prices as a consumer nation, US President Donald Trump aimed to help American energy producers struggling to cope with the price fall by announcing he would take advantage of low prices to fill up the nation’s emergency reserve.

India may top up strategic tanks with Saudi, UAE oil
 
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Govt announces incentive for electronics to make India a manufacturing hub

The provision is aimed to boost domestic manufacturing and attract large investments in mobile phone manufacturing and specified electronic components said minister Prakash Javadekar.


Updated: Mar 21, 2020 17:01 IST
HT Correspondent
Hindustan Times, New Delhi
ravi-shankar-prasad-briefs-the-media_175c6496-6b67-11ea-963c-5f43816952e0.jpg

Union minister Ravi Shankar Prasad announced incentive for the mobile manufacturers on Saturday(PTI Photo)

Central government has approved a production-linked incentive for electronics companies in a cabinet meeting on Friday to take mobile manufacturing in the country to the next level.

The provision is aimed to boost domestic manufacturing and attract large investments in mobile phone manufacturing and specified electronic components said minister Prakash Javadekar.

Minister of communications and electronics Ravi Shankar Prasad said the decision was in keeping with the target of making India a big hub of manufacturing.

“Two long term policy decisions have been taken to make India a big hub of manufacturing, first in the case of electronic and second in the case of Pharma, as also medical devices,” said Prasad, who was present among the ministers at the briefing.

Prasad said the NDA government had made record progress in the area of electronic and mobile manufacturing,

“From Rs 1,90,000 crore in 2014-2015 , electronic manufacturing in the country has risen to Rs 4,98,006 crore in 2018-19. There is a compound growth rate of 25%. India’s contribution has increased from 1.3% from 2012 to 3% now. Almost 20, lakh people work in this industry,” Prasad said.

He added that there were only two mobile making factories when the government came into power but now, there are 260 companies.

Govt announces incentive for electronics to make India a manufacturing hub
 
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??? MeLord Supreme Court is out to destroy this country. Petrol/Diesel engine standard upgrade to BS6, telecom controls, what else...
I think we need to dismantle this institution and find an alternative.
 
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Can't say if I'm happy or sad. With the kind of foresight, independence of mind & clarity of thought, it took Modi a pandemic to understand the importance of self reliance where this should have been undertaken in his previous stint. Saurabh Jha had outlined 4-5 key action points including setting up of a fab plant for chipsets, reducing our import of consumer electronics by incentivising manufacturers to shift base here, expediting li battery assembly units, mission mode for turbojet engine, expediting the plans for thorium based N power plants, api production among others as vital for self sustenance. The record is extremely patchy. And if this is Modi's performance with the kind of majority he commands , God Forbid, what can we expect from others?
 
setting up of a fab plant for chipsets,

Govt did its best, but no private industry is willing to step forward. And it can't be handed over to a PSU.

For now, the domestic market is too immature for us to get into it.

reducing our import of consumer electronics by incentivising manufacturers to shift base here,

This takes 10+ years and began under Modi-1. Progressing quite well. CAGR is more than 25%.

expediting li battery assembly units,

Work on it began a long time ago. Our first Li-ion batteries were developed only in 2017 and became available to the industry in 2019. Also, we can't do what others are doing since we do not have domestic supply of raw materials for it. It will simply replace oil imports. So we are working on new technologies, like solid states and fuel cells, which are next gen. Work on that is also progressing.

First factory for Li-ion to come up in 2022.

mission mode for turbojet engine,

Began a few years ago. There are four independent jet engine programs, and one of them is further divided into two programs.

expediting the plans for thorium based N power plants,

Can't expedite R&D programs, govt can only start them. BARC has still not cleared the thorium design for construction. It's possible they are waiting for the construction of the FBR to finish because the fuel from the FBR is necessary to power the AHWR.

api production among others as vital for self sustenance.

Private industry wasn't interested. Now GoI is forcing it down their throats.

It was originally used as a bargaining chip against China under Modi-1, in order to gain access to China's drug market. Once RCEP started dying, they changed their minds, so this has nothing to do with the virus. A roadmap for domestic API production began back in April 2018 during Modi-2.

The problem for the industry is drug production costs will increase to unacceptable levels if Indian APIs are used, even with GoI support.
 
Govt did its best, but no private industry is willing to step forward. And it can't be handed over to a PSU.

For now, the domestic market is too immature for us to get into it.
Domestic market will always be immature. That doesn't prevent us from getting into it. A meeting with the captains of industry, asking them what are their wants in order to work this thing out would certainly go a long way . The government can even fund this venture besides offering tax breaks & insisting on R&D. We can also use this opportunity to build capacities for 5G network hardware & R&D for 6G . Jio claims that they're doing it all in-house. That's a start. Though Jio being what it is, I'd take it with a pinch of salt.

This takes 10+ years and began under Modi-1. Progressing quite well. CAGR is more than 25%.
You're referring to cell phones. I'm referring to the entire eco system not just fir cellphones but LEDs, LCDs, chipsets, compressors, etc. CE consists of washing machines, cellphones, TV, Laptops& PCs, audio systems, refrigerators, air conditioners, etc. A few years ago, Vedanta announced they'd be getting into the LCD / LED space. Wonder what happened to that?


Work on it began a long time ago. Our first Li-ion batteries were developed only in 2017 and became available to the industry in 2019. Also, we can't do what others are doing since we do not have domestic supply of raw materials for it. It will simply replace oil imports. So we are working on new technologies, like solid states and fuel cells, which are next gen. Work on that is also progressing.

First factory for Li-ion to come up in 2022.
China has already cornered a huge share of the raw material rare earths market, in-house or external. They plan to be the biggest player in terms of mfg for all Li ion batteries. As usual we are sleepwalking. A few years ago Bolivia sought out India to export their Li reserves. Where that went is there for us to see. The same likely scenario will be played out. We'd have some being manufacturered in house. The bulk will still be imported from China principally. They'd undercut us. We'd either have to merge with them or shut shop like what happened with the API sector.



Began a few years ago. There are four independent jet engine programs, and one of them is further divided into two programs.
Sure. We've all read that. What came out of it? As of now we're sitting on the SAFRAN offer . We don't know where do we stand in this regard. Do you?
Can't expedite R&D programs, govt can only start them. BARC has still not cleared the thorium design for construction. It's possible they are waiting for the construction of the FBR to finish because the fuel from the FBR is necessary to power the AHWR.
Acc to Bhabha's plans, we were to go full fledged with the Thorium powered plants by 2050 . Our FBR program has been indefinitely delayed. There in lies the problem. We've been consistently missing our deadlines for power generation thru N power. Remember the 10GW by 2010 or was it 2000(?)

Private industry wasn't interested. Now GoI is forcing it down their throats.

It was originally used as a bargaining chip against China under Modi-1, in order to gain access to China's drug market. Once RCEP started dying, they changed their minds, so this has nothing to do with the virus. A roadmap for domestic API production began back in April 2018 during Modi-2.

The problem for the industry is drug production costs will increase to unacceptable levels if Indian APIs are used, even with GoI support.


The problem lies in the 2000's where domestic manufacturers screamed themselves hoarse asking the Government to do something about China undercutting their prices. The government looked the other way. Some of these Manufacturers shut shop, some switched over to other ingredients. Results are there for all to see. Right now we're re inventing the wheel
 
Domestic market will always be immature. That doesn't prevent us from getting into it. A meeting with the captains of industry, asking them what are their wants in order to work this thing out would certainly go a long way . The government can even fund this venture besides offering tax breaks & insisting on R&D. We can also use this opportunity to build capacities for 5G network hardware & R&D for 6G . Jio claims that they're doing it all in-house. That's a start. Though Jio being what it is, I'd take it with a pinch of salt.

I was talking about fab plants, our market is still immature for it because people do not buy expensive stuff. Most of the market deals with the cheap stuff, so people are going to have to get richer than they are today. Maybe post 2025, the market will become realistic enough for companies to pump is $10-15B in such businesses. Right now, the private sector believes the fab plant will fail even with full govt support.

But there are strategic fab plants under the MoD and PMO.

You're referring to cell phones. I'm referring to the entire eco system not just fir cellphones but LEDs, LCDs, chipsets, compressors, etc. CE consists of washing machines, cellphones, TV, Laptops& PCs, audio systems, refrigerators, air conditioners, etc. A few years ago, Vedanta announced they'd be getting into the LCD / LED space. Wonder what happened to that?

Some technologies, companies are not willing to transfer, some technologies, people are not willing to buy. This is again something that requires market maturity. With a $2000 per capita income, the market is nowhere mature enough to allow the growth of this industry. Do note that I am referring to creating Indian IP for electronics because other companies are not going to share.

China has already cornered a huge share of the raw material rare earths market, in-house or external. They plan to be the biggest player in terms of mfg for all Li ion batteries. As usual we are sleepwalking. A few years ago Bolivia sought out India to export their Li reserves. Where that went is there for us to see. The same likely scenario will be played out. We'd have some being manufacturered in house. The bulk will still be imported from China principally. They'd undercut us. We'd either have to merge with them or shut shop like what happened with the API sector.

China has market maturity on their side. How many people in India can buy a Tesla that costs 20 to 30L? Everybody is waiting for the 5-10L car, when even the batteries today are more expensive than that. Another case of market maturity.

Look, anything to do with high end manufacturing requires market maturity. We only have about a few million people out of 1.38 billion who can actually afford high end stuff. Companies can't cater to such a niche market without economies of scale. The Chinese market is already bigger than the US, so it can't be compared to the Indian market which is many, many times smaller.

Govt can't do sh!t here even if they pay for the entire ecosystem on their own. People are simply too poor. In the US people buy a new car every 3-5 years. In India, we go chasing after a 15-year fitness certificate.

Sure. We've all read that. What came out of it? As of now we're sitting on the SAFRAN offer . We don't know where do we stand in this regard. Do you?

Honestly, all the import plans are not workable. Even the SAFRAN plan is a dud, it was always a dud even the previous decade, which is why IAF insisted on domestic R&D at the time, when the French offer was first cancelled. Just like K9, even the SAFRAN engine doesn't have a fighter jet for us to test it on now, since they have finalised F404/F414 for the LCA and MWF due to the delays. Our domestic R&D is bearing fruit though. AMCA will also require a domestic engine. Until then, imports it is.

Acc to Bhabha's plans, we were to go full fledged with the Thorium powered plants by 2050 . Our FBR program has been indefinitely delayed. There in lies the problem. We've been consistently missing our deadlines for power generation thru N power. Remember the 10GW by 2010 or was it 2000(?)

The nuclear plans were always super ambitious. No one else is doing what we are even today. Anyway, it was expected that India would be a developed country by the time the FBR project starts. Lol. Yep. Socialism.

Anyway, our first AHWR should begin construction in a year or two.

The problem lies in the 2000's where domestic manufacturers screamed themselves hoarse asking the Government to do something about China undercutting their prices. The government looked the other way. Some of these Manufacturers shut shop, some switched over to other ingredients. Results are there for all to see. Right now we're re inventing the wheel

Yeah, but these industries wanted govt to place 50% or 100% tarrifs, even more, on basic Chinese goods. How realistic would that be? Our people would be in the stoneage today if that happened, with people still rocking to walkmans and discmans and using floppy disks and CDs as storage. Our best car would still be the Ambassador. Even now the industry wants us to put unrealistic trade barriers, which will only increase the cost of goods to the general public to unaffordable levels. Fvuk the industry if it can't compete on the same level as China. People cannot lose access to goods.

The problem is you believe protectionism and socialism will be our saviour when in fact we need hardcore capitalism and innovation. But that won't happen unless the market itself matures to absorb that amount of capitalism and innovation first.

The govt believes it can set up the foundation of some industries before the demand is generated. But which private industry is going to invest in something and then wait for demand? They will all shut down waiting for it. Hell, it was the private industry that held back India's defence production programs for the last 5 years. Even today they are bickering about it. Take FICV for example, some companies want to switch the DPP category to Make II (100% private investment) instead of Make I (10% private investment) thereby killing some competition in the process. So even in projects that they themselves want to start immediately, they have put up their own hurdles even if demand is there.
 
How Indian firms have de-risked from China

Updated: 22 Mar 2020, 10:49 PM IST
By Goutam Das

A clutch of companies have insulated their supply chains from global vagaries. What can we learn from them ?
1584901311268.png

A worker at Lloyd’s highly automated air-conditioner factory in Rajasthan’s Ghiloth. (Photo: Ramesh Pathania/Mint)

When the robots hum in unison, one split air conditioner (AC) can be made in 23 seconds flat. Humans play second fiddle at home appliances maker Lloyd’s highly-automated factory in Rajasthan’s Ghiloth. About 100 men and women in blue tees and caps assemble the manufactured components and screw-in the compressor and the electronic controllers, before the finished ACs are shifted to testing labs.

A “self check" poster at the start of the assembly lines urges the workers, particularly men, to keep well-groomed hair, be clean shaven. The workers cannot sport a watch or wear rings. The poster hasn’t yet been updated to urge the workers to regularly wash their hands with soap and water.

But then, this plant, which started production in September 2019, appears to be an outlier—the coronavirus epidemic hasn’t disrupted operations much even as global supply-chains are facing a meltdown due to factory shut downs in China since February of 2020.

Some Indian factories are running at half their capacities since manufacturers, overall, are heavily reliant on China for components. India’s overall imports from the Middle Kingdom totaled $70 billion in 2018-19 and the trade deficit runs at over $50 billion.

Lloyd wasn’t an outlier three years ago. The company sourced nearly everything from China. Havells India Ltd acquired the consumer business of Lloyd in 2017 and planned local manufacturing. From little local components in its bill of materials around 2017, the products made at the Ghiloth plant now have 60% domestic components. Just the compressor and the controllers— the remaining 40% per cent—are imported from China. In another six months, the company hopes to start domestic production of controllers. That would further shoot up the Indian value addition.

“By July of 2020, the local value addition would go up to about 75-80%. The compressor would be the only imported product," said Shashi Arora , CEO of Lloyd. “Similarly, our washing machines were entirely China-sourced till about a year ago. Now, we moved part of the production within India," he added.

Slowly but surely, other manufacturers are slashing their dependence on China, too. Apart from home appliance companies, the list includes mobile phone makers and lighting companies. An analysis by consulting firm Frost and Sullivan puts the home appliances market at ₹85,300 crore in 2019-20. Less than half this demand is currently met by domestic manufacturing.

Access to Indian consumers

One way to understand the de-risking journey thus far is to look at the capacity expansion of Indian companies who are contracted by many home appliance and mobile handset brands to locally manufacture their products. Five years ago, Dixon Technologies (India) Ltd, an electronic manufacturing contract manufacturer, assembled five million phones a year. Today, it makes 24 million for many multinationals.

“Dixon made 50 million bulbs five years ago. Today, we do 250 million. Similarly, our washing machine production has increased from 300,000 to a million units a year in the same period," said Sunil Vachani, chairman and managing director (CMD) of the company.

The de-risking trend is all set to accelerate further because of the coronavirus pandemic. The scare, however, wasn’t around five years back. What forced companies to reduce their imports from China ? There are a bunch of reasons but the most prominent is the government of India’s import substitution strategy that started levying high customs duties on the import of finished products and components.

The question is why was import substitution necessary ? Does it help domestic consumers? Can it create enough jobs considering that manufacturing is getting highly automated ? Import substitution, often, doesn’t build export competitiveness—so what happens if aggregate demand in the Indian economy falls ?

There are no easy answers but Sunil Kumar Sinha, principal economist and director public finance at India Ratings and Research Pvt Ltd said that the import substitution strategy has to be seen from the context of global protectionism. “The tariffs are in response to changes in the global landscape where India is at a disadvantage because of tariff and non-tariff barriers being erected by other countries. Second, the focus is on Make in India," he said. The Make in India initiative was launched in September of 2014 with an aim to make India a global design and manufacturing hub.

Some amount of protection is required against the dumping practices of China as well, but for how long is the question, according to Sinha. “Unfortunately, in India, once you provide a subsidy or any kind of protection, it becomes a rule rather than an exception. We don’t know how to roll it back," he said. Customs barriers, he added, wouldn’t harm a consumer in segments where there are enough domestic and international manufacturers—the standard of the product would be high as well as cost competitive.

De-coupling handsets

The mobile handsets industry is a case in point. Around 120 mobile handset manufacturing units mushroomed in India since 2014, according to India Cellular and Electronics Association, a trade body. After Nokia’s Sriperumbudur plant near Chennai shut down because of two tax disputes, the centre of gravity for phone making gradually shifted to Noida. But the import substitution strategy encouraged assembly of the phone. The components weren’t manufactured. Besides China, a smartphone often has components from countries such as Korea and Taiwan.

Sanjeev Agarwal, the chief manufacturing officer of Lava International Ltd, refused to shake hands when this writer met him at the company’s factory in Noida. He offered a namaste, instead.

The coronavirus pain runs deep at the company. The cost of Lava’s logistics have shot up dramatically ever since the crisis hit, post the Chinese New Year holidays in February. Agarwal, nevertheless, appears happy at the progress of the company’s localization strategy.

Before 2015, Lava imported all its phones from China. The company noticed quality issues with many of its imports. The labour costs were rising too. In India, the entry level salaries start between ₹12,000 and ₹15,000; salaries in China are three times higher. Then came the government nudge to localize. “We decided to localize a few parts each year, starting with chargers, battery, ear phones—those were easier to begin with. The duty barriers helped us in mitigating the costs," Agarwal said.

Now, almost 35% of the company’s feature phones by value is localized. Noticeably, Agarwal’s visiting card has “#ProudlyIndian" printed on it.

The government first announced a countervailing duty on mobile phone imports in the Union budget of 2015-16. Since then, there have been steady increases in customs duties on various mobile handset parts. The printed circuit board assembly (PCBA), which is considered the smartphone’s brain, was also included.

Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s budget of February 2020-21 has further tightened the screws on mobile-related imports. From October 2020, the duty on display panel and touch assembly will rise to 10% from nil. Display and touch panel manufacturing is capital intensive and constitutes about 25% of the cost of making a mobile handset. These panels are imported from China right now.

“For the future, Lava will work on display and camera modules. We are working with our suppliers who are putting up plants. There are Chinese companies, some are joint ventures. The localization content in smartphones would go up soon," Agarwal said.

The Indian bulb

Meanwhile, the localization content in LED bulbs is getting brighter. The broad script is similar to mobile phones. While manufacturers assemble in India and have reduced dependence on China for low-value work, component manufacturing is yet to take root.

“We are far more detached from China than what we were a few years back," said Sumit Joshi, the chief executive of Signify Innovations India Ltd, the new avatar of Philips Lighting India Ltd. “About 98% of what we sell in India is made in India. I don’t depend on China for finished goods," he added.

Joshi said the dependence on Chinese components is dwindling. “We are now able to make 60% of the components in India," he said. Lighting components imported from China include LED chips, transistors, and resistors.

There are two reasons why lighting companies de-risked from China. Indian consumers behave differently from global consumers and two, the Indian government became a big buyer.

The Union government’s Unnat Jyoti by Affordable LEDs for All (UJALA), a scheme to provide LED bulbs to consumers and replace 770 million incandescent bulbs, began in 2015. The overall LEDs distributed through the programme totals over 360 million until 16 March 2020. Since the mandate was to make bulbs affordable, LED makers started developing local supply-chains.

How are Indian consumers different ? Joshi cites the example of the still-preferred tube light in Indian homes. “We came up with the Philips T bulb. It is more of a horizontal kind of a bulb because Indian consumers like brightness and a throw of light," he said.

To switch over from conventional lighting to LEDs, Indian consumers also demanded longer warranties. Signify offers a two-year warranty on a bulb, a small value product. It can’t afford returns. The company, therefore, ensures that the bulbs tolerate power surges, common in many parts of the country. This customization ensures that lighting companies are less dependent on imports.

The quality imperative

Back to Lloyd’s Ghiloth factory where the machines dominate men. Most greenfield factories set up since 2015 are highly automated. Automation implies standardization and thereby, a higher standard of the final produce. Arora quipped that the product quality in the Ghiloth plant is best in class since human intervention is less.

Like Signify, the company can now offer long-term warranties. “We offer a 10-year warranty on AC compressors as well as on washing machine motors. To be able to offer this, you need to have a positive control on production. We know what goes in the machine because everything is done from scratch. The bill of materials is controlled," Arora said.

The quality imperative to de-risking from China is palpable at Godrej Appliances, as well. Around 2014, the company imported many finished products from China—ACs, washing machines, deep freezers. “Today, we manufacture the entire washing machine range in-house. We have set up new lines, expanded capacity in ACs. All this has been done over the last four-five years," Kamal Nandi, business head and executive vice-president of Godrej Appliances said.

The firm’s manufacturing capacity for inverter split ACs is expected to grow from two lakh to four lakh units in three years.

The import duty structures certainly played a role in pressing the localization button. In September 2018, the central government announced higher tariffs to curb import of many home appliances with an aim to “narrowing the current account deficit". The basic customs duty on ACs, refrigerators and washing machines less than 10kg spiked from 10% to 20%. Nandi, nevertheless, stressed that Godrej Appliances also wanted to be more competitive.

“One of our focus is lean and green operations. It is possible when you localize," Nandi said. “This was paramount because we were competing against the best of brands in the world. Unless we were competitive enough, we wouldn’t have been able to scale-up. If you have to be lean, you have to be lean across the supply-chain," he added.

While lean supply-chains are about delivering products quickly to the consumer, reducing costs as well as wastage, being green is about cutting down on the carbon footprint. Most companies, perhaps, are now realizing that a local supply-chain, besides being greener, can cushion against black swan events such as the coronavirus pandemic.

How Indian firms have de-risked from China
 
RBI joins coronavirus fight with big-bang rate move, EMIs put on hold
A day after Modi govt began its economy rescue in right earnest with a Rs 1.70 lakh crore coronavirus counter, the Reserve Bank of India joined the big fight today with a host of measures aimed at minimising the damage from Covid-19.

These measures come just hours after Moody's Investors Service cut India's growth forecasts for 2020 calendar year to 2.5% from 5.3%. The MPC decided by 4-2 majority to reduce repo rate by 75 basis points to 4.4 per cent. The reverse repo rate was cut by 90 bps to 4 per cent, creating an asymmetrical corridor.

The great EMI relief
A moratorium of three months of EMIs on all outstanding loans was announced. The statement says: "All commercial, regional, rural, NBFCs and small finance banks are being permitted to allow 3-month moratorium on payment of instalments in respect of all term loan EMIs outstanding on March 31."

For the next three months, no EMI would be deducted from the account of anyone who has a loan outstanding. And all this without any hit on credit score. EMIs will resume after the moratorium period gets over.
This is going to be a huge relief for all EMI payers, especially for those — such as the self-employed — whose income had become uncertain in the wake of the lockdown.

The 3-month moratorium will apply to corporate loans, home loans and car loans. Personal loans will also qualify for this. But credit card dues won’t be part of this moratorium as it’s not a term loan.

RBI calls war
Make no mistake, it is a fight never seen before, the RBI governor warned while outlining the risks to Indian economy from coronavirus. He stressed upon the need to keep the credit flowing to the stressed areas of the economy.

Das announced a sizeable reduction in the policy repo rate and maintaining accommodative stance as long as necessary, while ensuring inflation remains within target. Das predicted a big recession coming for all the world, and said India won't be immune. It all depends how India responds to the situation, Das said.

Global slowdown could make things difficult for India too, despite some help from falling crude prices, he said. Food prices may soften further on record crop, he added. Aggregate demand may weaken and ease core inflation further, he said.

Three-way liquidity injection
At the presser, Das also announced:
— Auction of targeted long term repo operations of 3-year tenor for total amount Rs 1,00,000 crore at floating rate.
— Reduction of CRR for all banks by 100 basis points. Will release Rs 1,37,000 crore across banking system.
— Accommodation under Marginal Standing Facility to be increased from 2% from SLR to 3% with immediate effect till June 30. It will release Rs 1.37 lakh crore into the system.
Combined, these three measures will make available a total Rs 3,74,000 crore to the country's financial system.

Banking system is safe and sound, the governor insisted, adding that it would be fallacious to link share prices to banks' fate. He implored Indians not to worry about their bank deposits.

The Big Bang backstory
After cutting policy rates five times in the past one year, the RBI had been on a pause since December in view of high inflation.

Earlier this week, RBI's monetary policy committee (MPC) had held an unscheduled meeting to zero in on possible emergency measures. Asia's third largest economy has been locked down for three weeks since Wednesday, putting millions of daily wage earners and lakhs of businesses in unprecedented hardship.
Earlier, the financial services secretary had written to RBI seeking a moratorium of a few months on EMIs, interest and loan repayments. A relaxation in the NPA classification norms was also sought with a view to helping those who face loss of income.

Under RBI rules, any default in payments has to be recognised within 30 days and these accounts are to be classified as "special mention accounts". Experts say a re-classification is necessary to ensure businesses survive the coronavirus hit, even at the expense of banks for the time being.
RBI joins coronavirus fight with big-bang rate move, EMIs put on hold