Showing posts with label FDI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FDI. Show all posts

Friday, 7 December 2012

In six months, market chains to flood India DC | Pawan Bali | 08th Dec 2012

New Delhi: Companies, including American supermarket chain Walmart, UK’s Tesco, French chain Carrefour and Germany’s Metro, which already have some presence in India, are expected to move to open retail stores in India after FDI in multi-brand crossed its final hurdle, the Rajya Sabha. 


Click to read:
http://www.deccanchronicle.com/121208/news-businesstech/article/six-months-market-chains-flood-india

Wednesday, 10 October 2012

How to attract FDI in shipping and increase the currently declining share of Indian ships in national cargo ARCHIE D’SOUZA KOCHI, OCT 10


The two-day India Shipping Summit is underway in Mumbai as I write this (see www.indiashippingsummit.com) and we have seen a great deal of suggestions coming from various quarters of the industry.  Two issues dominate the summit, one the declining share of Indian ships in national cargo and two, relaxing cabotage rules to allow foreign carriers operate on coastal waters.  I have expressed my views on the second subject in earlier posts in this blog.  Let me today address the first.  I have already written about FDI in civil aviation and how it will benefit India (see http://sunriseacademyonline.blogspot.in/2012/04/fdi-in-civil-aviation-how-it-will-help_28.html).
To begin with the Central Government must ease the fiscal burden on Indian shipping companies in line with what it is in the developed markets.  It is only if the government extends policy support will Indian shipping lines be able and willing to acquire additional tonnage.  The nation’s annual freight spend is $ 40 billion and the share of Indian carriers is less that 10% of that.  I’m of the opinion that before we relax the cabotage rules we must ensure a level playing field for Indian flag carriers.  Frankly I don’t see why foreign vessel owners would be so interested in carrying our coastal cargo.  At the moment though, I’m referring to international cargo and how to increase the share of Indian vessels.  The main focus though is FDI in shipping.
Today, Indian flag carriers lack a level playing field.  The government allows 100% FDI in shipping but potential investors are put off due to various taxes and levies.  The relaxation of cabotage rules, currently only to & from the ICTT at Valarpadam, has resulted in foreign lines being permitted to carry coastal cargo.  These carriers are not subject to the local levies that are forced upon Indian carriers.  This is the main stumbling block of FDI in shipping.
According to a repost in The Sunday Guardian on Sep 30, 2102, in spite of 100% FDI being allowed, as many as nine shipping companies have exited India in the last five years (see http://www.sunday-guardian.com/news/100-fdi-but-nine-shipping-companies-leave-india).  Why has this happened?  The main reason cited by them is the taxation policy.  They say that Indian shipping companies pay three times more tax than their counterparts in Singapore.  Also, Indian seafarers prefer to work in foreign flagged vessels due to the fact that they pay no income tax if they do so.  When working for Indian flagged vessels their salaries are taxable as per Indian standards.  India is the largest supplier of seafarers after the Philippines.
In the fiscal year 2004-05 India introduced the tonnage tax regime which cut the incidence of income tax on Indian shipping companies.  This resulted in a sharp growth in tonnage.  However, in course of time, the initial impact of the tonnage tax regime petered out and very few investments have come from foreign sources.  This indicates that more needs to be done on the tax front.  The introduction of the tonnage tax has been neutralised due to the new service tax regime.  This has increased to 12.36% resulting in shippers having to pay much more.
Here are some ways in which the sector will be able to attract FDI:
·         The centre should relook at the taxes affecting shipping.  These include service tax, MAT and withholding tax.
·         Seafarers working with Indian shipping lines should be treated as NRIs and taxed accordingly
·         The infrastructure for coastal shipping should be improved.  Besides increasing the volume of local good moved by sea, it will have a lot of other fringe benefits such as less pollution and congestion on the roads.
·         Surplus resulting from the sale of vessels should be covered within the scope of the tonnage tax regime
·         Exempt Indian shipping companies from payment of  dividend distribution tax and fringe benefit tax
·         Exempt imported ship spares/supplies from customs duty
·         Exempt tugs & pusher crafts, dredgers & floating docks, cranes, production platforms, etc from customs duty
·         Exempt shipping services from service tax

I am certain that once these measures are in place there will be a great increase in investment, both FDI & domestic, in the shipping industry.

Thursday, 13 September 2012

Cabinet to consider aviation FDI on Friday

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - The cabinet will consider a proposal on Friday to allow foreign airlines to buy stakes in local carriers, moving forward with a much-delayed reform that could revitalise debt-ridden domestic carriers.
Click to read more
http://in.news.yahoo.com/cabinet-consider-fdi-aviation-friday-070444981--sector.htm

Do read this also

FDI in Civil Aviation – how it will help - Archie D’Souza

http://sunriseacademyonline.blogspot.in/2012/04/fdi-in-civil-aviation-how-it-will-help.html

Wednesday, 20 June 2012

How India's airline market lost its way by Vinay Bhaskara


When India’s Jet Airways, Kingfisher Airlines, and SpiceJet all recently reported large net losses for Fiscal Year 2012 on the heels of Kingfisher’s steep downsizing in February and March, it came as a surprise to many people around the globe who considered India, and its burgeoning airline industry, one of the world’s greatest success stories. But as with India’s economic growth story (GDP growth in the first quarter of 2012 was a (relatively by Indian standards) anemic 5.3%), beneath the shiny veneer lies a tottering industry that must take drastic steps in order to ensure its future. But before one can explore the solutions to these issues, it is helpful to look at what exactly created the problems.
Any attempt to assign the collective failure in the Indian airline market to one specific reason is highly disingenuous; it took a special confluence of factors to create this mess. Some of the major factors are outlined below.
Click to read on
http://www.bangaloreaviation.com/2012/06/how-indias-airline-market-lost-its-way.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+BangaloreAviation+%28Bangalore+Aviation%29

Thanks Bangalore Aviation

Saturday, 28 April 2012

FDI in Civil Aviation – how it will help Part II - Archie D’Souza


In a report entitled India’s Experience with FDI: Role of a Game Changer prepared by ASSOCHAM in JAN 2012, there were several interesting and valid points raised on the role of FDI in the Civil Aviation sector.  Reproduced below are some of its salient features. (Although I have not quoted the report verbatim throughout, through most of the text, the words are from the report)

The study of FDI in Civil Aviation observed:
Huge amounts of additional investments required to realize the vision of the Civil Aviation industry as suggested in Working Groups report.
Airport Infrastructure would require an investment of about Rs.67,500 crore during the 12th Plan of which around Rs 50,000 crore is likely to be contributed by the private sector.
Airlines in India are expected to add around 370 aircrafts worth Rs.150,000 crore.
Decade 2000-2010 witnessed a profitless growth. The Airline Industry in India suffers from huge debt burden – close to US $ 20 billion (Estimated 2011-12).

Allowing foreign airlines to pick up stake in three major Indian Airlines (Kingfisher, Jet Airways and Spice Jet) would result in capital infusion to the tunes of:
Promoters off loading 26% of their Equity Stake can raise approximately upto Rs. 1341 crore.
Figure goes approximately upto Rs.2530 crore in case 49 per cent FDI is allowed.
Equity valuation at 26% of all issued shares (promoter and non-promoter) approximately comes out to be Rs.2835 crore.
Estimates at 49% go approximately up to Rs.5341 crore.
The amount raised can be used to address working capital requirements of the airlines.
FDI in Civil Aviation

I. Importance
The aviation industry is critical for any nation to gain from participation in the global economy. Civil Aviation in its role of a key infrastructure sector facilitates:
Growth of other industries
Trade - by offering a reliable and faster mode of transport services to move products and personnel across long distances
Tourism
Generates both direct and indirect employment opportunities

The vision for the Indian civil aviation industry for the 12th Plan period is:
“To propel India among the top five civil aviation markets in the world by providing access to safe, secure and affordable air services to everyone through an appropriate regulatory framework and by developing world class infrastructure facilities”

II. Potential
A growing middle class supplemented with rise in disposable incomes, change in lifestyles, a globalized economy all act as drivers that project a huge potential for the industry. Another way of looking at the potential of the sector is by comparing the domestic tariff of another emerging economy China. Domestic traffic in China is believed to be five times the size of India’s despite having a population just 10% larger.

Forecast of air traffic carried out for 12th plan period suggests:
Domestic passenger throughout would grow at an average annual rate of around 12%.
Domestic passenger throughout is expected to touch around 209 million by FY-17 from 106 million in FY-11.
International passenger throughout is estimated to grow at an average annual rate of 8% during the 12th Plan period
International Passengers to reach 60 million passengers by FY-17 from 38 million in FY-11.
[please read the full  report for the references]

While the report speaks about the huge investments required in various sub-sectors like Airport Infrastructure, I shall confine this discussion to FDI in airlines only and keep the other sectors for a future discussion.  According to the report the amount required for fleet expansion is US$ 43 b (INR 2.15 L cr).  To cater to the increasing international and domestic traffic airlines are expected to add around 370 aircraft to their fleet. I will not go into individual airline requirements although the report has.  Where is this money going to come from and how will the Civil Aviation Ministry’s vision be realized?  The report says that “looking at the existing financial status of the industry the achievement of set objective seems ambitious.”

Let us look at the current status and the not-too-distant past (all figures from the report).  The decade 2000-10 witnessed a profitless growth phase of the airline industry.  During the three-year period between APR 1, 2007 & MAR 31, 2010, Indian carriers incurred an accumulated loss in excess of US$ 5.2 b (INR 26,000 cr).  As per certain estimates, the airline industry in India suffers from a debt burden of close to US$ 20 b – a very huge amount by any standard.  Half of this is aircraft related and the rest for working-capital loans, payments to airport operators and fuel suppliers.  Although the report has cited high cost of operation being a cause for adversely dented financials, I don’t agree.  Irrational (competitive is the word the report uses) pricing policies has definitely played a part.

In part I of this same article, I have strongly advocated the cause of FDI in civil aviation.  Here too I wish to harp on the same issue.  I’m not in favor of any kind of government bail-out to any carrier including the public-sector one.  Regarding my remedies for Air India, please read my earlier post on the same blog.  Here I’ll state how mainly citing the report’s recommendations.

Raising such huge amounts of investments would require the government to adopt a more progressive and positive fiscal regime as well as develop a collaborative approach with industry.  Civil Aviation industry would require not only large but continuous flow of funds if the next phase of growth needs to take place. For this to happen the government must relook at its FDI policy which disallows foreign airlines from purchasing equity of domestic airlines.  One of the reasons successive governments have been citing against foreign airline equity participation is that the US doesn’t allow it.  My rebuttal to this is – why follow the US model or example?  Why not one of our own?

This is what direct investment by foreign airlines would do (according to the report):
Provide managerial and technical expertise needed to improve productivity
Raise much-needed capital for the private-sector players
Improve operating standards and services
Add brand value (my addition)
Spread out the network of Indian carriers (again, my addition)

Here is an estimate of the amount of capital that can be raised by three prominent Indian private airlines shows (foreign non- airline investor’s equity has not been considered in estimation):
The promoters by off loading 26 % of their Equity Stake can raise up to Rs. 1341.45 crores.
This figure goes up to Rs. 2528.3 crores in case 49 per cent FDI is allowed.
Combined equity valuation (promoter and non-promoter) at 26 % comes out to be Rs. 2834.27crores.
The valuation at 49 % goes up to Rs. 5341.52 crores.
The capital raised from equity sale can be used to address the working capital requirements of the airlines.  The report gives a detailed table for each of the carriers.  I’d suggest that readers look at it.

Here are a few other benefits from FDI.  It has, since 1991, proved to be a game-changer for wide segments of Indian industry.  Wherever it has been allowed it has transformed those industries in ways that are now irreversible.

To conclude, I’d like to state that if India has to emerge as a global player in civil aviation, FDI in the airline industry is a must.




Saturday, 21 April 2012

FDI in Civil Aviation – how it will help - Archie D’Souza


The Central Government recently approved a proposal for airlines to borrow $1 billion overseas, but delays FDI.  Here are two reports on this subject which appeared in the press on week 16 (APR 15-21, 2012)
20 APR, 2012, 06.06PM IST, REUTERS
Decision on FDI in aviation not before May-end: Minister
NEW DELHI: The cabinet is unlikely to consider a proposal to allow foreign airlines to invest in domestic carriers before the end of May, a cabinet minister, who asked not to be named, told reporters.
The ruling Congress party's biggest ally - Trinamool Congress - is opposing the proposal, the minister said, adding that the decision depended on the ally's consent.
Indian airlines, facing a debt-load of $20 billion and losses of $2.5 billion, have been hurt by high fuel costs and massive competition, and are looking for ways to bring in cash to run daily operations.
Under current rules, foreign airlines are barred from buying stakes in domestic carriers, although foreign investors are allowed to hold a cumulative 49 percent.
________________________________________
Govt lays down ECB norms for civil aviation
THE HINDU BUSINESSLINE BUREAU
Industry cap at $1 b; individual airline limit pegged at $ 300 m
NEW DELHI, APRIL 19:
The Government has allowed companies in the civil aviation sector to raise external commercial borrowings (ECBs) for a year to meet their working capital needs and also refinance outstanding working capital rupee loans.
This would come as a lifeline to cash strapped domestic airlines which had to face the brunt of increased interest rates as well as rising jet fuel prices, besides the slowdown in the economy. The proposal to allow airline companies to access ECBs was part of Finance Minister, Mr Pranab Mukherjee's Budget 2012-13 speech.
Prior to this decision, domestic airline companies were not allowed to access the ECB window. Domestic airlines can now tide over their present financial crunch as they can access low-cost funds through the ECB window.
The aviation sector can avail itself of external commercial borrowing to the tune of $1 billion with individual airline companies allowed to borrow up to $300 million in 2012-13, a Finance Ministry statement said today.
The limit can be availed in a lump-sum or in tranches depending on the utilisation during one year, it added.
The RBI, which will notify the details of the scheme in a week's time, will consider proposals of individual companies under the approval route based on parameters such as cash flows and the capacity to repay their loans from the forex earnings.
The central bank would also consider relaxing the average maturity period for ECBs above $20 million from five years to three years.
krsrivats@thehindu.co.in

________________________________________
So, as per the press-releases of the government of India aviation companies will be allowed to borrow up to $1 billion (Rs. 5,100 crore) collectively and up to $300 million individually, from overseas, via the external commercial borrowings (ECB) route.  Last month, in his Budget speech the Finance Minister had announced that companies in the aviation sector would be allowed to avail of ECBs for a period of one year for working capital/re-financing of outstanding working capital rupee loans.  Here is an extract from that speech:

“The ECB made under this provision would have a maximum ceiling of USD 1 billion for the entire Civil Aviation sector. The limit for individual airline companies would be US$ 300 million. This limit can be availed either in a lump sum or in tranches depending upon the utilization of the limit during the 1 year when the facility is available.

“The rapid growth of the Aviation sector in India has generated demand for additional finance for working capital and capacity expansion. High operating costs, particularly on account of high fuel costs, have put additional stress on the Airline Industry.”

A major problem that coalition governments face is trying to carry every party on economic issues.  One party that has been a spoiler in the economic policies of UPA-2 is the Trinamul Congress (TMC).  They have not tolerated any departure from their populist agenda as we have seen in the way their own party member and former Railway Minister Mr. Dinesh Trivedi was treated.  So, in spite of the fact that we have a very able person leading our nation (no one could do better under the current circumstances) the UPA has been unable to take even small steps towards economic reforms.  And, the word FDI seems to be evil in the eyes of certain UPA members, notable among those the TMC.

The press reports are a clear indication that the proposal to permit up to 49% foreign direct investment (FDI) by foreign airlines in Indian carriers is going to be a non-starter.  The proposal was supposed to be approved by the Cabinet in week 16 of 2012.  However, from the press-releases and other reports it is clear that one more policy of the government will be put on the back-burner.  Although the report says May-end it looks like these have been put on hold indefinitely.  The PM himself, no less, has referred the issue back to a Group of Ministers (GOM) with a directive to "establish consensus".  Is it possible?  Only time will tell.

There is a perception in certain quarters that the shelving of FDI is essentially due to the friendships of former civil aviation minister, Mr Praful Patel, with the heads of Jet Airways and IndiGo.  Another perception is that both these companies are opposed to FDI, as, again another perception, their competitors Kingfisher, GoAir, and SpiceJet will benefit from it.  No doubt FDI will dilute the promoters’ stakes in the respective airlines but what about the benefits it would bring?

It does make political sense, at the moment, to pander to the allies even though it could lead to economic disaster.  The PM has definitely learnt its lesson in the last parliamentary session when it had to retract an approval to permit FDI in retailing.  My purpose in writing this is not to go into the pros and cons of political issues or strategies, though I dread to think what would happen to the economy if the NDA comes back to power.  We saw where they took the country during their five year tenure.  It is economics not politics that I’m referring to.

What does the proposed current policy do?  In my opinion, it’s like applying skin ointment on a patient with over 80% burns.  While this policy decision will provide the Airline Industry an additional source of capital at a low cost and thus help them tide over their present financial crunch, it will not solve the problems faced by the individual companies or the industry as a whole.  This is definitely one of the most unenthusiastic responses from the government – a half-baked measure that, in all likelihood, considering the volatility of the Indian Rupee, will make the situation worse.  I hope that the government’s indecision or the realities of coalition politics, whichever way one puts it, does not lead to the sector going into ICU.

 The relevant circular/notification giving effect to the aforesaid Budget announcement is expected to be issued within 7 days.

[To be concluded – in part II, I shall go into the benefits of FDI in Civil Aviation]