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Friday, September 6, 2013

Take Heart, India. CEOs Say Economy is on the Mend CEO CONFIDENCE SURVEY: 42% forecast a minor uptick in GDP growth to over 5% this year and next, while 66% see rupee recovering to below 66

 Indian chief executives, who have been struggling to cope with an unrelenting slowdown over the past two years and battered by a rupee in free fall, are showing the first, faint signs of optimism. 

In an 'ET CEO Confidence Survey' of the country's 100 top business leaders, 42% were brave enough to predict a minor uptick in the GDP growth rate — from 4.4% recorded in the first quarter of FY13 to over 5% this year and the next. Growth slumped to a decade-low 5% in the year ended March. 
Any recovery, however minor, seemed improbable even last fortnight, when HSBC, JPMorgan, 
Nomura and Goldman Sachs, among others, slashed India's growth forecast to the 4-4.2% range. "I do not think it (the economic situation) is going to get worse than this," says Ajay Piramal, chairman of the Piramal group. He's optimistic that GDP growth could climb back to over 6% if the economy is managed well. 
Only 9% of CEOs polled fear the GDP growth rate will slip any further to below 4% while 46% said it would remain in the 4-5% range. 
Almost two-thirds of CEOs interviewed also believe the rupee will recover, and strengthen past 66 to the dollar one year from now. Twentynine per cent even went to the extent of saying the currency will be stron
ger than 62 to the dollar. This is a fairly bold consensus, given that the rupee depreciated sharply — from 61.25 to the dollar all the way down to 69 — during the fortnight in which a bulk of the interviews for this survey was conducted. 
The optimism on GDP and currency fronts, coupled with the investment plans and profit expectations from their respective businesses that the CEOs shared in the survey, suggests that large swathes of India Inc now believe that the worst is probably over. 
But is this optimism warranted? "Frankly, I think the question should be what drove this exaggerated pessimism over the last three months in the first place," answers 
Janmejaya Sinha, chairman, Asia-Pacific, Boston Consulting Group (BCG). 
Raghuram Rajan's swashbuckling start as RBI governor on Wednesday has edged out some of the "exaggerated pessimism" that BCG's Sinha is referring to. The bulk of the survey, though, was completed before Rajan took over on Wednesday. On Thursday, the BSE Sensex soared more than 400 points and the rupee shot up 1.6% in an obvious turnaround of sentiment. "The worst is over for the rupee," Piramal says. 
CEOs also seem to be taking a measured view of currency and stock market volatility. 
Spirit of Enterprise is Still Alive 
At a time the rupee has been extraordinarily weak, business heads haven't been swayed by it. Continuing infrastructure bottlenecks, policy ambiguity and lack of reforms, they said, were bigger challenges than a weak currency. 
"Yes, there is volatility, but fundamentally I think India is in a much stronger place today," says Sonjoy Chatterjee, chairman, Goldman Sachs India. "When I think about India over the past two decades, I remember us being a far weaker country trying to deal with volatility in the 1990s, the Asian crisis of 1997, and then the difficulties of the early 2000s," he said. 
Says Rajiv Bajaj, managing director of Bajaj Auto: "The government must acknowledge the downturn as a symptom of a chronic disease and heal through long-term measures such as improvement in infrastructure, labour laws, power, etc." 
The survey also provides at least some evidence that In
dia Inc hasn't allowed the slowdown to kill the spirit of enterprise. Only 22% CEOs admit they have withdrawn to a defensive, cost-cutting frame of mind. The rest, 78%, are still looking to either invest or innovate their way through the slowdown. 
"The smarter companies will live by 'less is more' and 'deep before wide' by focusing their strategy to create a few strong brands that can dominate," says Bajaj. 
Companies with superior strategies will create new segments through new products and technologies, thus emerging stronger, according to him. "The weak will perish," he adds. 
There are also some clues that business efficiency has improved across the board. Despite the many pressures on costs due to raw material, fuel and capital, 51% companies are confident of at least 10% growth in net profit over the next 2-3 years. 
The survey was conducted between August 1 and September 4 by Nielsen on behalf of The Economic Times.



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