, India

Sluggish global demand poses headwind to India's GDP growth

High leverage will also be a factor.

Moody's Investors Service has noted that India's GDP growth over the next two years will be challenged by lackluster global demand and high leverage in some corporate sectors.

According to a release from Moody's Investors Service, it quoted Marie Diron, a Moody's Senior Vice President and Manager, who said: "Growth will be adversely affected by high leverage of some large corporates also weighs on credit demand, while impaired assets in the banking system negatively affect credit supply."

By contrast, India's medium-term potential will be supported by the gradual implementation of further targeted policy reforms, thereby improving the business environment, state of infrastructure and productivity growth.

As for whether or not the United Kingdom's majority vote to leave the European Union will affect India's financial markets, Moody's says that any effects will be limited because exports to the UK and the rest of the European Union account for 0.4% and 1.7% of India's GDP respectively. In addition, India is not significantly exposed to a potential sharp fall in capital flows to emerging markets.

Here's more from Moody's Investors Service:

Moody's analysis is contained in its latest edition of Inside India, a quarterly publication that looks at major credit trends in India. The publication also notes that India has acquired energy assets in Russia to enhance the country's energy security.

Specifically, India's national oil companies (NOCs)—Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. (ONGC), Oil India Limited (OIL), Indian Oil Corporation Ltd (IOC), and Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited (BPC)—signed agreements with OJSC Oil Company Rosneft (Rosneft) to acquire upstream oil & gas assets in Russia.

The Indian NOCs have announced four deals, which together will result in the NOCs owning a 49.9% stake in Rosneft's Vankor field, and a 29.9% stake in Rosneft's Tass-Yuryakh field. Moody's estimates that the combined value of the deals will total about $5.5 billion, based on recently concluded transactions for the same fields.

The assets can potentially provide the NOCs with an additional crude oil production of 225-250 thousand barrels per day (kbpd), which would be equivalent to about 34%-38% of India's total domestic oil production of 664 kbpd for the fiscal year ended March 2016 (fiscal 2016). The acquisitions will more than double India's overseas oil & gas production of 194 kbpd reported in fiscal 2016.
 

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