There has been lot of debate over the last few weeks on the monetary policy stance of the RBI. As I listen to lot of commentaries and the opinions of economists and media experts the thing that I hear the most is that the RBI is behind the curve and it should have tightened more aggressively. However I find myself totally disagreeing with this view as RBI has been the most aggressive central bank and has tightened both policy rates as well as the CRR quite aggressively. In fact the Indian banking system has been in liquidity shortage for over 4 months now.
First of all the inflation as measured in
The IIP data for November has already shown the first signs of slowdown of growth and the extremely tight liquidity has already started hurting credit flow for investments. Manufacturing inflation as per the latest data was just around 4.5% which reflects that the pass through of primary inflation is not happening in the same ratio to the consumers and that is the impact of the tight monetary policy of the past.
The ECB has already started talking of an inflation threat and the Chinese have finally woken upto it. As such if
Equities
The call that equity investors have to take is the scenario that they see a year from now and not next week or the week after that. I believe that 12 months hence when we sit and analyze the markets headline inflation could be 4-5%, the government would be more stable as the scams and governance issues will be behind us, growth outlook would be looking much better and the situation will be sanguine for investments. At that time in all probability the markets will be 25-30% higher than current levels and one will not be able to see reasons why markets should not be doing well. Investors should just focus on indentifying the right stocks and invest in them rather than being focused on the immediate few days or weeks. At this stage when most analysts are giving bearish and dire views the only thing that I will like to repeat is that –
“Its important to grab entry points in bull markets as,
They come with gaps and are normally short lived”
Unless off course you believe that we are in a bear market.