By Mohan Sule
Use forex reserves to buy bad loans of PSU banks so as to profit from low commodity prices and US recovery 
Global financial markets took one step forward and two backwards last fortnight. Even as the Greece blowout was being contained, China’s stocks melted and there were indications that the US interest rates were set to rise. The dollar strengthened and commodities collapsed. So there is a strange spectacle of the US economy regaining health even as rest of the world is struggling. As a major consumer of commodities, India’s current account deficit will narrow further. Cheap metals will boost a host of industries including refineries, power distributors, capital goods, automobiles, consumer durables, paper and packaging, paints and FMCG. The margins of tech, pharmaceuticals, garments, jewellery and other services exporters might expand A weak rupee should be an incentive for global manufacturers to set up base in India to export. What could be a better booster dose for the prime minister’s Make in India project? The problem is that the Indian rupee’s depreciation against the dollar is on the lower side compared with those of other emerging economies including Russia and Brazil. Due to the scare about China slowdown, foreign investors have not completely abandoned India. The market is huge and so also the scope for reforms. Their presence is keeping the rupee range-bound. The other not-so-obvious explanation is the covert role of the Reserve Bank of India. A steep depreciation will leave little room for reduction in lending rates. The fall in oil prices will be somewhat blunted, frustrating the government’s efforts to reduce fuel subsidy. Besides good southwest monsoon, low prices of petroleum products are necessary to keep inflation in check. 
The currency is not the only worry that is complicating India’s efforts to profit from the current scenario. A low interest rate regime at a time US bond yields are stiffening is similar to opening the stable doors for foreign investors to bolt. Pre-2008, it was the carry-trades (borrowing in cheap yen to invest in economies with high returns) that kept the stock market buoyant. Those expecting the RBI to embark on an aggressive cycle of rate cuts will have to contend with disappointment. More than the domestic economy, future action on access to money is likely to be calibrated with that of the Fed. As the cooling of food inflation will not be the only motivator for the central bank to cut rates, there will be no immediate easing of the troubles of infra companies and banks. The short-term solution will be capital infusion into banks and fund-raising by leveraged companies depending on investors’ sagacity to overlook the present problems for a long-term vision. Overseas acquisitions to expand might slow down as borrowing costs rise in the US. The impact of the miscalculation of those who had issued foreign currency convertible bonds to finance overseas acquisitions is still being absorbed by the shareholders. The bearish phase post 2008 meant that investors preferred redemption over conversion into equity.
The RBI has limited flexibility to ignite growth by keeping the cost of money low, balance the currency so as to not hurt importers and exporters and sustain foreign inflows. Besides, banks’ balance sheets are hindering the pass-through of interest rate cuts to customers. Unless the problem of bad loans is solved, softer interest rates will remain on paper. The tapering of supply of capital from overseas and domestic sources can stall the economy. Liquidity is essential to drive investment, direct or portfolio. The challenge will be to sustain and accelerate inflows from both to meet the capital expenditure requirement of the public and private sector during this difficult juncture till global markets adjust to the decoupling of the US and rest of world. The central bank had foreign exchange reserves of US $ 353.33 billion mid July. It can set up a special purpose vehicle to buy out at least 50% of the US$435-billion bad loans of PSU banks, leaving sufficient cushion to step into the market during volatility. The depletion of dollars will be at best temporary as these will get bulked up by export revenue from a healthy US market. Banks will get a breather to pass on base rate cuts and should write off at least a quarter of the remaining sour assets. In the process, they will become attractive to investors to contribute to their capital. The move will provide the much-needed propellant to lift the economy, without straining government finances, and hold the attention of foreign investors set to flee to the US. The SPV can sell the bad loans in small tranches at a discount to the face value to vulture funds and institutional investors. These investors can redeem them after an appropriate gap from the issuing bank or convert into equity of the borrower, thus gaining a voice in the future of the company. 
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