Sify.com reported Jagannadham Thunuguntla, head of the Delhi-based SMC Group
saying, "The first major point of nervousness is that the US bailout plan will now be in
three tranches of $250 billion, then $100 billion and finally $350 billion and the second
and third tranches will require further Congressional approval. This means effectively,
only $250 billion is now available for buying troubled assets of banks instead of $700
billion outright. This doesn't really solve the problem of liquidity."
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BMS Campus Oct 1, 2008 India Economy Effects Of The US Financial Crisis In India
1. India Economy: Effects of the US Financial Crisis in India
01/10/2008
New Delhi, 30 Sep. It is often said that when the US sneezes the rest of the world catches a
cold. This three-part series looks at how India, China, and Russia have been affected by the
US financial crisis. Before we get into detail about how much this US problem is spreading
globally, we should understand the severity of it and the possible consequences in the US.
How sick is the US? Some have compared the situation in the US with the Great
Depression of 1929, but this situation is far from a depression – in fact it’s not even a
recession. In the Great Depression there was no work and there was widespread poverty.
People struggled through the winter with no heating and no food. We are not seeing such
extensive suffering in the US. In the US, August 2008 unemployment figures were at
6.1%, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. In the Great Depression
unemployment was higher than 25%. The Commerce Department reported that GDP
growth was at 2.8%, hardly indicative of a recession, although this was revised down from
the 3.3% figure it projected a month ago. But one cannot ignore yesterday’s 777 point drop
in the Dow Jones Industrial Average after the $700 billion bailout plan failed to pass
through Congress. These paper losses of more than a trillion dollars may be the sneeze that
disrupts global markets. Even before this controversial rescue plan was shot down, Indian
markets took a dive of their own on Monday 29 September. The stock market sank to an
18-month low and the rupee a 5-year low. The stock market dropped 5.3% to 12,595.75.
According to Business Standard, vice-president of Karvy Stockbroking Ambareesh Baliga,
said, “We are advising our clients to stay away from trading till selling by Foreign
Institutional Investors (FIIs) stops. Also, there is no support to the markets from any
domestic institution. While markets are below their fundamental levels, fear has gripped
investors and there is panic selling.” While US investors and consumers are concerned
about who will foot the bill for this $700 billion plan, to Indian and non-US markets that
doesn’t matter. They just want it to happen so as to restore confidence and of course
liquidity.
Sify.com reported Jagannadham Thunuguntla, head of the Delhi-based SMC Group
saying, quot;The first major point of nervousness is that the US bailout plan will now be in
three tranches of $250 billion, then $100 billion and finally $350 billion and the second
and third tranches will require further Congressional approval. This means effectively,
only $250 billion is now available for buying troubled assets of banks instead of $700
billion outright. This doesn't really solve the problem of liquidity.quot; Crowds gathered
outside the Bombay Stock Exchange to watch the markets drop, with many investors
angry. Why should failure of the world’s most advanced financial system hurt individual
Indian investors? But the fact remains that the “Bush administration's failed economic
policies” as speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi described it, is everybody’s business.