Don’t miss the latest developments in business and finance.

Power outages risk to growth, add to retail inflation woes: Nomura

With power demand likely to rise amid continued economic normalisation and upcoming festive sales, supply-side disruptions pose an important near-term downside risk to growth momentum, Nomura warned

power, electricity, IIP, grids, cyber security, demand, discoms, distribution, companies, firms, transmission, transformer, workers
The country is reporting coal shortages and power sector companies face the prospect of importing coal at significant cost.
Press Trust of India
2 min read Last Updated : Oct 12 2021 | 2:24 AM IST
Demand remains strong in India, but there are supply-side headwinds in areas like chips which is bothering the auto sector and coal shortages which threatens to put parts of the country into darkness, a Japanese brokerage said on Monday.
 
With power demand likely to rise amid the continued economic normalisation and upcoming festive sales, supply-side disruptions pose an important near-term downside risk to growth momentum, Nomura warned.
 
The country is reporting coal shortages and power sector companies face the prospect of importing coal at significant cost. “If power outages become more widespread, then industrial output could suffer in the near term, while higher energy costs may squeeze firms' margins and add to consumer price inflation,” the brokerage said in the report.
 
For the week ended last Sunday, its Business Resumption Index rose to 105.1 from 103.4 in the prior week.
 
The Reserve Bank is likely to change the stance of its monetary policy and hike rates from the first quarter of 2022, it said. The central bank will start with liquidity normalisation moves this month, narrowing the difference between the rate at which it funds the system and at which it absorbs excess liquidity in December, Nomura said.
 
It can be noted that the latest move by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) last week to narrow the excess liquidity in the system through stated targets is being seen by some as the normalisation of the policy, which has been very accommodative since the onset of the pandemic to boost growth.
 
The brokerage upped its consumer price index (CPI) inflation target for 2022 to 5.2 per cent from 5 per cent earlier.


Topics :power crisisCoal shortageretail inflationNomuraAuto sector

Next Story