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India March qtr growth seen strongest since Dec 07

India's economy probably grew 8.7 per cent in the March quarter from a year earlier, its strongest since December 2007, the median forecast of 20 economists showed. Forecasts in the survey ranged between 7.3 and 9.4 per cent.

Updated on: May 31, 2010 09:14 AM IST
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Reuters forecast:

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India's economy probably grew 8.7 per cent in the March quarter from a year earlier, its strongest since December 2007, the median forecast of 20 economists showed. Forecasts in the survey ranged between 7.3 and 9.4 per cent.

The predicted growth, on the back of robust manufacturing and a pick up in consumer spending, would be an acceleration from an annual 6 per cent expansion in the December quarter.

A poll of 22 economists showed Asia's third-biggest economy likely grew 7.2 per cent in the financial year ended March 31, up from 6.7 per cent in 2008/09.

Factors to watch:

* Manufacturing production climbed 14.3 per cent in March from a year earlier, compared with a fall of 3.3 per cent in March 2009. Consumer goods output rose an annual 10.6 per cent in March from 1.3 per cent from a year earlier.

* In April, the Reserve Bank of India raised key interest rates by 25 basis points for the second straight month to tame near double-digit inflation and said further hikes were likely as it moves policy towards pre-crisis settings.

* Industrial output grew 10.4 per cent in the 2009/10 fiscal year, faster than an upwardly revised 2.8 per cent in 2008/09.

Market impact:

* Stronger-than-expected growth data could briefly push up bond yields and overnight indexed swap rates but investors are focused more on how the euro zone crisis may impact the central bank's pace of policy tightening.

* Traders will also await April's infrastructure output growth data due on Monday, and the HSBC Markit Purchasing Managers' Index for May expected a day later.

* The yield on the benchmark 10-year government bond has fallen 28 basis points in May as worries about the euro zone's debt crisis triggered demand for safe-haven debt.

 
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