Friday, 28 December 2018

Sri Lanka holds rates; credit up amid sterilized forex interventions

ECONOMYNEXT - Sri Lanka's central bank held rates in December at 9.0 percent, while credit to the state and private sector accelerated amid money printed to enforce fixed interest rates after intervening in forex markets to maintain a soft-pegged exchange rate.

"In spite of the increased cost of funds and tight liquidity conditions, the year-on-year growth of credit to the private sector accelerated since September 2018, partly reflecting the private sector advancing its activities in anticipation of measures by the government and the Central Bank to curb excessive import growth," the soft-pegged central bank said in its December monetary policy statement.

Liquidity runs short when the central bank intervenes in forex markets to defend a peg when a run is triggered on the rupee.

In a soft-peg the central bank then prints money to fill the liquidity shortage (sterilize the intervention) and stop rates from going up and slowing credit, triggering 'balance of payments' pressure.

Private credit had expanded by 79 billion rupees to 5,509 billion rupees in November, growing at an annual rate of 16.2 percent, up from 16.1 percent a month earlier.

In November the central bank also dumped tens of billions of rupees in the banking system through a reserve ratio cut and expanded the ability of banks to give loans from future deposits.

A soft-pegged central bank's monetary operations may appear as credit to government because Treasuries are used to print money into the banking system, despite budget deficits falling or not expanding.

Net credit to government from the banking system accelerated at an annual rate of 9.2 percent in October to 14 percent in November, data showed.

The SRR cut dumped 90 billion rupees in to the banking system in November to sterilize earlier interventions.

But interventions in the forex markets continued generating more shortages.

"The reduction of the Statutory Reserve Ratio (SRR) at the last monetary policy review in November 2018 released around Rs. 90 billion of rupee liquidity to the banking system," the monetary authority said.

"However, the liquidity deficit has widened thereafter, and the Central Bank continued its open market operations (OMOs) cautiously to manage liquidity on overnight, short term and long term basis as appropriate."

The central bank which was injecting printed money into banks at rates around 8.47 percent in the first week of November, injected new money at rates as low as 8.35 percent after a 50 basis point 'rate hike' to 9.0 percent from 8.50 percent and a cut in the reserve ration which dumped 90 billion rupees of liquidity in to the banking system.

Sri Lanka operates a highly unstable foreign reserve collecting soft-peg with the US dollar, involving a de facto external anchor with a shifting convertibility undertaking.

The regime suddenly shifts to a floating rate with a domestic anchor made up of a wide near-double-digit inflation target with unsterilized excess liquidity collected during the pegging period intact, sending the rupee sliding down forcing currency defence.

The central bank lost control of the peg in the first quarter of 2018, when the economy recovered, as it failed to mop up inflows (sterilize dollar purchases) and injected cash to generate excess liquidity in April.

Though the peg stabilized around July and August after falling sharply, unsterilized excess liquidity was against built up including through rupee dollar swaps, triggering a renewed period of pressure. The rupee has since fallen to 180 to the US dollar.

In November interventions topped 500 million dollars, amid a political crisis, which added to uncertainty.

When a soft-pegged central bank mops up inflows (liquidity from dollar purchases), the peg strengthens by squeezing credit and outflows.

But when it injects cash through open market operations, credit expands and imports grow beyond dollar inflows generating balance of payments pressure and forcing the currency down.

There have been calls to reform the central bank's open market operations to make it more difficult for the central bank to generate monetary instability.

Critics have pointed out that the central bank cannot take the risks it did 15 or 20 years ago because Sri Lanka is now more exposed to international capital markets, and monetary instability is amplified by panicking foreign bond holders and credit downgrades, making it more difficult to recover from such periods.

The full statement is reproduced below:

Monetary Policy Review: No. 8 – 2018

The Monetary Board of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, at its meeting held on 27 December 2018, decided to maintain policy interest rates at their current levels. Accordingly, the Standing Deposit Facility Rate (SDFR) and Standing Lending Facility Rate (SLFR) of the Central Bank will remain at 8.00 per cent and 9.00 per cent, respectively. The Board considered current and expected developments in the domestic economy and the domestic financial markets as well as the global economic environment, with the broad aim of stabilising inflation at mid single digit levels in the medium term to enable the economy to achieve its potential growth.

Subpar economic growth continued in the third quarter of 2018 as well

As per the provisional estimates of the Department of Census and Statistics (DCS), the Sri Lankan economy recorded a modest real GDP growth of 2.9 per cent, year-on-year, during the third quarter of 2018, compared to the revised growth of 3.6 per cent in the second quarter of 2018. As per the available economic indicators and other economic developments, real GDP growth is likely to be low in the fourth quarter of 2018 as well, before picking up gradually in 2019. The continued low economic growth reemphasises the need for implementing broad based structural reforms without further delay.

Notwithstanding the elevated market interest rates and rupee liquidity deficit, private sector credit growth accelerated

The reduction of the Statutory Reserve Ratio (SRR) at the last monetary policy review in November 2018 released around Rs. 90 billion of rupee liquidity to the banking system. However, the liquidity deficit has widened thereafter, and the Central Bank continued its open market operations (OMOs) cautiously to manage liquidity on overnight, short term and long term basis as appropriate. Given high credit growth and foreign exchange market developments, overnight interest rates in the money market have been maintained close to the upper bound of the policy rate corridor. Other market interest rates remained at elevated levels, both in nominal and real terms.

In spite of the increased cost of funds and tight liquidity conditions, the year-on-year growth of credit to the private sector accelerated since September 2018, partly reflecting the private sector advancing its activities in anticipation of measures by the government and the Central Bank to curb excessive import growth. Nevertheless, with the contraction in net foreign assets of the banking system, the year-on-year growth of broad money (M2b) remained within the expected levels.

Favourable outlook for inflation in the near term

Headline inflation, based on both the National Consumer Price Index (NCPI) and the Colombo Consumer Price Index (CCPI), remained in low single digit levels. Core inflation also remained subdued thus far in 2018. Recent downward adjustments to fuel prices and selected administratively determined prices, as well as the reduction of Special Commodity and telecommunication levies, along with the ongoing recovery in the agriculture sector are expected to impact favourably on inflation in the near term. 


Volatile global commodity prices, possible weather related disruptions to domestic supply chains due to unpredictable weather patterns, and the possible pass-through of the effect of the rupee depreciation in recent months to domestic prices pose risks to the inflation outlook. The current projections show that inflation, on average, will remain below 5 per cent in 2019 and stabilise in the range of 4-6 per cent thereafter with appropriate policy adjustments.

External sector continues to face international and domestic headwinds

The trade deficit widened further in the first ten months of 2018 with the expansion in import expenditure outpacing the growth of export earnings. However, a moderation in import expenditure is expected, in response to the measures adopted to curb imports of motor vehicles and non-essential goods as well as the impact of the depreciation of the rupee.

While earnings from tourism continued to grow, a slowdown in workers’ remittances was observed. In the financial account, both the government securities market and the Colombo Stock Exchange experienced net outflows of foreign investment, although marginal inflows have been observed in December.

The widening trade deficit, tight conditions in the global markets and excessive speculation in the domestic market exerted pressure on the exchange rate, and the Sri Lankan rupee depreciated by 15.9 per cent against the US dollar thus far during 2018 up to 27 December. Meanwhile, gross official reserves amounted to US dollars 7.0 billion at end November 2018, providing an import cover of 3.7 months.

Policy interest rates maintained at current levels

Although inflation remains subdued and economic growth remains below potential, the Monetary Board of the Central Bank was of the view that it is appropriate to continue the current monetary policy stance to stabilise overall economic conditions and domestic financial markets in a context where there has been an uptick in private sector credit as well as continued pressure on external reserves. Accordingly, the Monetary Board decided to maintain the Standing Deposit Facility Rate (SDFR) and Standing Lending Facility Rate (SLFR) of the Central Bank at their current levels.

Thursday, 27 December 2018

Sri Lankan rupee hits record low; foreign outflows weigh

Reuters: ** The Sri Lankan rupee fell to a record low on Thursday amid dollar demand by state banks and continued outflows of foreign funds mainly from government bonds as political uncertainty dented investor sentiment.

** The rupee hit an all-time low of 182.35 the dollar in early trade, surpassing its previous record of 181.85 marked in the prior session. It has weakened about 5 percent since Sri Lanka’s political crisis began on Oct. 26, and lost 18.7 percent so far this year. 

** The rupee ended at 182.10/60 per dollar, compared with 181.80/182.00 in the previous session.

** President Maithripala Sirisena appointed the cabinet of ministers from his rival party last week after he was forced to reinstate Ranil Wickremeinghe as prime minister, 51 days after he was sacked.

** The political crisis was expected to ease, though uneasy relations between the two men could cause fiscal problems, analysts have said. Parliament approved 1.77 trillion rupees ($9.39 billion) to meet four months of expenditures and avert a government shutdown from Jan. 1. 

** The Colombo stock index ended 0.02 percent weaker at 6,018.19 on Thursday. Turnover was 338.1 million rupees, less than half of this year’s daily average of 840 million rupees.

** Foreigners were net sellers of 6.4 million rupees of stocks on Thursday. They have been net sellers of 13.3 billion rupees since the political crisis began. The bond market saw outflows of about 56.7 billion rupees between Oct. 25 and Dec. 19, central bank data showed. 

** Five-year government bond yields have risen 35 basis points since the political crisis began. 

** Credit agencies Fitch and S&P downgraded Sri Lanka’s sovereign rating in early December, citing refinancing risks and an uncertain policy outlook.
(Reporting by Shihar Aneez; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)

Sri Lanka vehicle registration down in Nov 2018

LBO - Vehicle registration momentum across most categories came down in the month of November relative to October 2018, a new report said.
Data compiled by JB Securities equities research shows total car registrations recorded 3,354 units in Nov down from 5,826 units in Oct but up from 2,400 units 12 months ago.
The measures taken by the fiscal authorities (increase of duty on small cars to a minimum of Rs 1.25 mn on 1 August) and margin requirements on car imports (100% margin from 19 Sep and 200% from 29 Sep) have finally taken effect,  the research firm said.
Brand new car registrations recorded 365 units in November down from 683 units in October and marginally up from 475 units 12 months ago.
Suzuki/Maruti accounted for 187 units of which Wagon R sold by the agents were 131 units. Financing share was 42.2% down from the normal monthly figure of 50-55% indicative of lesser credit financing these vehicles.

The full report is below

Vehicle registration momentum across most categories came down in the month of Nov relative to October. The measures taken by the fiscal authorities (increase of duty on small cars to a minimum of Rs 1.25 mn on 1 August) and margin requirements on car imports (100% margin from 19 Sep and 200% from 29 Sep) have finally taken effect.

  • Total car registrations recorded 3,354 units in Nov down from 5,826 units in Oct but up from 2,400 units 12 months ago.
  • Brand new car registrations recorded 365 units in Nov down from 683 units in Oct and marginally up from 475 units 12 months ago. Suzuki/Maruti accounted for 187 units of which Wagon R sold by the agents were 131 units. Financing share was 42.2% down from the normal monthly figure of 50-55% indicative of lesser credit financing these vehicles.
  • Pre-owned car registrations recorded 2,989 units in Nov significantly down from 5,143 units in Oct but up from 1,925 units 12 months ago. The monthly registration figure is the lowest number for the year, contraction in Wagon R volumes to 665 units from an all time high of 2,846 units in July was the main contributor to the monthly decline. Toyota accounted for 1,544 units followed by Suzuki with 1,041 units. Financing share was 42.6% below the normal monthly average of 50-60% indicative of falling credit funding purchases in this segment.
  • Premium branded motor cars recorded 158 units in Nov down from 207 units in Oct. Brand new accounted for a mere 28 units with Mercedes accounting for 11 units (C class 8 units) and BMW 9 units (5-series 4). Preowned accounted for 130 units of which Mercedes accounted for 31 units (C class 27 units), BMW accounted for 54 units (3-series 36 units) and Audi 45 units (A1 45 units, A3 10 units, A4 5 units).
Notable premium cars in Nov were a Porsche Cayenne-S, 3 Jaguar XF/XE and a Mercedes Benz C Coupe. In Oct there were 3 BMW i8s, 1 Jaguar XE, 1 Porsche 718 Boxter and 1 Ferrari 488 Spider.
  • SUV and crossover registrations accounted for 1,301 units in Nov down from 1,517 units in Oct but up from 576 units 12 months ago. Brand new vehicles accounted for 397 units – MG 136 units, Peugeot 89 units (3008 68 units), etc. and Pre-owned vehicles accounted for 767 units – Toyota 344 units (CH-R 338 units), Honda 258 units (Vezel 195 units), etc. This segment is continuing to show buoyancy due to a strong performance from Crossovers (see attachment titled ‘Selection of crossovers”) – vehicles with engines less than 1.5L comprise 94.5% of total volumes.
  • Electrical car registrations recorded 6 units in Nov down from 5 units in Oct and 5 units 12 months ago. Nissan Leaf accounted for 3 units.
  • Hybrid vehicle registrations recorded 1,585 units in Nov significantly down from 2,917 units in Oct and 2,039 units 12 months ago. Motor cars accounted for 1,369 units followed by SUVs accounting for 215 units. Suzuki hybrid cars recorded 948 units in the month down from 2,038 units the previous month and high 3,559 units in July.
  • Van registrations recorded 451 units in Nov down from 713 units in Oct and 643 units 12 months ago. Mini vans (< 1,000cc) accounted for 338 units, the balance 113 units were accounted for by mid-size vans. Suzuki Every which is a minivan accounted for 208 units. Financing share was 57.6% down from the normal monthly figure of 65-70%.
  • 3-wheelers recorded a low 1,314 registrations in Nov down from 1,932 units the previous month and 2,270 units 12 months ago. Bajaj continues to be the segment leader with a 90.9% share. Financing share was 71.5% in line with previous months.
  • 2-wheelers registrations recorded 22,373 units in Nov down from 30,889 units in Oct and 28,334 12 months ago. Scooters accounted for 14,476 units with the balance 7,897 units being motor cycles. Honda continues its dominance in the scooter category with a 60.9% share and an overall segment share of 42% followed distantly by Bajaj, TVS and Yamaha with 14.6%, 15.6% and 16.5% segment share, respectively. Financing share was 73.6% in line with prior months.
  • Pickup truck registrations recorded 207 units in Nov up from 146 units the previous months and 175 units previously. Tata recorded 120 units (Xenon 111 units) almost double its normal number claiming a 58% segment share. Financing share was 30.9% below prior month levels of 60% indicative of an institutional purchase of Xenon trucks.
  • Mini truck registrations recorded 222 units in Nov down from 359 units in Oct and 334 units 12 months ago. Tata is the category leader with a 86.8% share. Financing share of 85.6% is in line with prior months.
  • Light truck registrations recorded 233 units in Nov down from 336 units in Oct and 374 units 12 months ago. Mahindra is the category leader with a 79.1% share. Financing share was 85.8% in line with prior months.
  • Medium truck (between 2 MT and 5 MT) registrations recorded 240 units in Nov down from 314 units in Oct and 355 units 12 months ago. Unlike in other truck categories in this category preowned units make up 47.5% of the total. Isuzu is the category leader with a 49.2% share. Tipper registrations recorded 29 units in line with previous months. Financing share was 89.6% in line with prior months.
  • Heavy truck registrations recorded 152 units in Nov down from 167 units in Oct and 209 units 12 months ago. Tata is the category leader with a 45% share followed by Lanka Ashok Leyland with a 36.4%. Tipper registrations recorded 25 units significantly down from prior months. Financing share was 87.5% in line with prior months.
  • Bus registrations recorded 130 units in Nov down from 201 units in Oct and 381 units 12 months ago. Lanka Ashok Leyland is the segment leader with a 45% share. Financing share was 76.9% lower than the normal monthly rate of 90% indicative of an institutional purchase.

Wednesday, 26 December 2018

Leapfrog group buys Sri Lanka Soflogic Life Insurance stake from FMO

ECONOMYNEXT - A 19-percent stake in Sri Lanka's Softlogic Life Insurance has been sold by the Netherlands-based FMO to the Leapfrog Investments group, which has a focus on Asia and Africa.

"This investment reveals our positive view of Sri Lanka's long-term trajectory, and its financial services industry," Leapfrog Chie Executive Andrew Kuper said in a statement.

Softlogic Chairman Ashok Pathirage said exiting partner FMO helped strenghten the firm.

He hoped the investment in his insurance unit woudl be the first of many investments in Sri Lanka.

The stake changed hands in two blocks, one of 35.6 million shares at 30.80 rupees each and the other of 35.6 million shares at 30.70 rupees each, down 19-20 percent from the previous, opening trade.

The total value of the 71.2 million shares traded was 2.18 billion rupees. The transaction amounted to a 19 percent stake in Softlogic Life Insurance, formerly Asian Alliance Insurance.

Sri Lanka’s Commercial Bank to raise Rs7.5bn through debenture issue

ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka’s Commercial Bank of Ceylon said it plans to raise 7.5 billion rupees through a new debenture issue with an option to double the amount in the event of an oversubscription.

A statement said the bank will issue 75 million listed, unsecured, rated, redeemable subordinated Basel III compliant debentures at 100 rupees each with a non-viability conversion feature,making them hybrid instruments convertible into equity.
.
The debentures, which will have a minimum tenure of five years and maximum tenure of 10 year, are subject to shareholder and regulatory aproval.

Sri Lanka's Lighthouse Hotel in Rs450mn upgrade

ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka’s Lighthouse Hotel said it will invest 450 million rupees to refurbish and upgrade rooms, public and service areas and plant and equipment next year.

A stock exchange filing said 63 out of 85 rooms of the Jetwing Lighthouse on the south coast will be upgraded from May to July 2019.

The remaining 22 rooms will be operational during the period, usually considered the ‘off-season’ when tourist arrivals fall.

The hotel will be fully operational by August 2019.

Sri Lankan rupee hits record low on foreign outflows

Reuters: ** The Sri Lankan rupee fell to a record low on Wednesday due to continued outflows of foreign funds mainly from government bonds as political uncertainty dented investor sentiment.

** The rupee hit an all-time low of 181.85 to the dollar in early trade, surpassing its previous record of 181.67 marked in the previous session. It has weakened about 4.8 percent since Sri Lanka’s political crisis began on Oct. 26, and lost 18.4 percent so far this year. 

** The rupee ended at 181.80/182.00 per dollar, compared with 181.50/70 in the previous session.

** President Maithripala Sirisena appointed a 30-member cabinet last week after he was forced to reinstate Ranil Wickremeinghe as prime minister, 51 days after he was sacked.

** The political crisis was expected to ease, though uneasy relations between the two men could cause fiscal problems, analysts have said. Parliament approved 1.77 trillion rupees ($9.39 billion) to meet four months of expenditures and avert a government shutdown from Jan. 1. 

** The Colombo stock index ended 0.09 percent weaker at 6,019.62 on Wednesday. Turnover was 670.9 million rupees, below this year’s daily average of 840 million rupees.

** Foreigners were net buyers of 344.7 million rupees ($1.9 million) of stocks on Wednesday. They have been net sellers of 13.3 billion rupees since the political crisis began. The bond market saw outflows of about 56.7 billion rupees between Oct. 25 and Dec. 19, central bank data showed. 

** Five-year government bond yields have risen 25 basis points since the political crisis began. 

** Credit agencies Fitch and S&P downgraded Sri Lanka’s sovereign rating in early December, citing refinancing risks and an uncertain policy outlook.

($1 = 181.4000 Sri Lankan rupees) 

(Reporting by Shihar Aneez; editing by John Stonestreet)