Key Highlight: 

  • CPI Inflation at 2.4% in July 2017 versus 1.5% in June 2017
  • IIP made first instance of a decline in four years and stood at -0.1% in June 2017
  • Both CPI and IIP are expected to rise further in coming months

COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

The Ministry of Statistics and Program Implementation will be releasing India's two key macro-economic indicators; namely Consumer Price Index (CPI) or retail inflation for the month of August 2017 and Index of Industrial Production (IIP) for July 2017 on Tuesday.

A Reuters poll of nearly 40 economists predicted higher CPI to 3.20 % in August from a year ago on higher frequency in food prices

For July 2017, CPI inflation surprised markets and reached 2.4% compared to 1.5% in June 2017 and 6.07% in the corresponding period of the previous year. 

tradingeconomics.com

This was on the back of sharp rise in vegetable prices, excluding which, CPI inflation was unchanged at 2.9% YoY in July versus the preceding month. Core inflation also inched up slightly from 3.8% in June to 4.1% in July.

According to Morgan Stanley, the uptrend in CPI is likely to continue in the coming months, limiting the space for further monetary easing.

Nikhil Gupta and Rahul Agarwal, analysts at Motilal Oswal said, "An adverse base effect is set to kick in from August, which should push up CPI inflation in the near term."

In ICRA's view, while the volume of monsoon rainfall is near-normal at 3% below the long period average, its uneven geographic spread poses a concern, particularly the substantial 16% shortfall in precipitation in South Peninsula. 

It added, "The YoY decline in sowing of various oilseeds (-9.9%), pulses (-1.6%) and coarse cereals (-1.5%), may affect their prices and exert some upward pressure on the CPI inflation in coming months."

Food and beverage inflation, which holds nearly 50 % of the CPI basket is expected to have rebounded in August after prices fell in the three previous months.

tradingeconomics.com

Reason behind this IIP fall was manufacturing - which fell 0.4% on account of de-stocking in the run-up to GST implementation. Decline was broad-based, with nearly two thirds of the sector reporting a contraction in output.Growth in mining & electricity production was also sluggish.

IIP has risen by just 2% YoY in 1QFY18 – the slowest pace in eight quarters.

As per ICRA, the early indicators for IIP in July, such as the sharp improvement in YoY expansion of automobile production, modest rise in growth of electricity generation and narrowing contraction in output of Coal India Limited, offer a contrast to the sub-50 PMI reading for that month. 

Given the fabourable base effect and the rebuilding of inventories post-GST, ICRA expect the IIP to revert to a YoY rise in July 2017, although the pace of growth may continue to trail the 5.2% recorded in July 2016.

While the duo at Motilal expect IIP growth to recover to 2.2% in July 2017 after the poor show in June. Our full-year FY18 growth estimate is ~3.5% as against 4.6% in FY17. The FY17 number has been revised downward from over 5% earlier.

Retail inflation rises 2.36% in July 2017

  • CPI, WPI inflation to rise further in coming months: Morgan Stanley report
  • India August inflation seen at 5-month high on rising food costs: Reuters poll
  • Index of Industrial Production eases at 1.7% in May