56 years of glorious service

Life Insurance Corporation of India turns 56 on 1st September, 2012. One of the objectives of the Corporation is the use of people’s money for people’s welfare and the life funds are deployed for the best advantage of LIC policyholders as well as for the community.

LIC launches Jeevan Deep

The Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) of India local division launched a micro insurance policy called ‘Jeevan Deep T-810’ for the benefit of the common man on the occasion of its 56 anniversary on Saturday.

How to pay LIC premium using IMPS

Inter mobile payment (IMPS)the fastest growing payment service which n now be used to pay premium online.

LIC embarks on ambitious plan to cover all Indians

State-owned Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) wants every Indian to have life cover by 2020. The country’s largest insurer has formed a team that’s working on the ambitious expansion strategy, which could cost as much as Rs.2 trillion to execute, two top LIC officials said.

LIC Housing Finance plans to hike loan disbursements to developers

LIC Housing Finance, a subsidiary of Life Insurance Corporation of India, plans to disburse around 8-10 per cent of its total loan portfolio to developers by the end of this fiscal.

Showing posts with label manufacturing growth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label manufacturing growth. Show all posts

Monday, 3 September 2012

Manufacturing growth eases to nine-month low in August

Growth in India's manufacturing sector eased to a nine-month low in August as export orders fell for a second month, underscoring the risks to the wider economy from Europe's debt crisis, a business survey showed on Monday.

The HSBC manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) eased for the second month to 52.8 in August, its lowest level since November, from 52.9 in July. However, it has kept above the 50 mark that divides growth and contraction for more than three years.

"The momentum in the manufacturing sector eased further on the back of weak external demand and output disruptions caused by the major power failures in early August," said Leif Eskesen, economist at HSBC.

Sixteen states in northern India, home to almost half of the country's 1.2 billion people, fell into darkness last month as power grids collapsed, disrupting businesses and economic activity.

Any slowing in the manufacturing sector, which accounts for a little over 15% of India's gross domestic product, does not bode well for the overall economy, especially as this sector has been the biggest drag on growth.

The Indian economy grew 5.5% in the quarter to June, languishing near its slowest pace of growth in almost three years, data showed on Friday.

With no concrete signs of a resolution to Europe's debt crisis, the new export orders sub-index - an indicator of prospective overseas business - fell for the second month in a row to 49.2, its deepest contraction since October.

The euro zone, India's largest trade partner, has been ravaged by a debt crisis that began in Greece and appears to be hurting growth in heavyweight economies like France and Germany, posing further risks to the Indian economy.

While domestic orders helped increase output in August, the pace of expansion was the slowest since November.

The lone bright spot among the survey's otherwise gloomy data was that new jobs were created at the fastest pace since the series began more than seven years ago.

The survey also showed output prices, or what consumers pay for products, jumped in August and may push India's headline inflation rate up from July's 6.9%.

At the same time, input price pressures remained elevated, giving little room for the Reserve Bank of India to act on increasing calls for it to cut interest rates and support growth.

"While input price rose at a slightly slower pace, output price inflation picked up due to higher import costs and taxes. With the slowdown partly supply driven and inflation risks still lingering, these numbers underscore that the room for policy rate cuts is very limited at the moment," Eskesen added.

The RBI next meets on Sept 17 and with inflation refusing to ease substantially the chances of a rate cut appear slim, even with growth slipping, after the central bank placed the onus of reviving the economy on the government.

Pending government reforms include allowing foreign direct investment in the retail and airline sectors coupled with pension and insurance reforms.

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