Faster, Higher, Stronger...

We’re living through an extreme nightmare of human civilisation.
This generation of humanity will retain the bragging rights to narrate
coronavirus tales to children and grandchildren for decades to come.
business-today - Vaish
But no story will be complete without a tinge of regret over the economic fallout,
death, destruction and social consequences that entail.
Just as coronavirus ravages through countries, states, cities and villages
around the world, India’s decision to go for a nationwide lockdown may have
been the best case scenario to prevent a severe outbreak in densely populated
areas, including among the most vulnerable citizens in villages.
But most nations on Earth will pay an unimaginable social and economic
price of the spread of virus. Depending on their reaction time – some more,
some less. For instance, shrinking GDP is a certainty. Loss of output is a given.
Loss of revenue is certain. Lower fiscal profitability or losses in firms are a given.
And loss of jobs hinges on the timeline.
Just how long? That’s a question up in the air right now as it depends on what
it takes to break the cycle of transmission of the virus. Will it be just one 21-day
cycle? Two? Or even three? The longer it gets, the more painful the outcome.
After all, that duration will decide whether a quarter of the fiscal is a writeoff
or two quarters. While a vaccine-based cure is about two years away, world
GDP will shrink this fiscal. So will India’s.
But as they say, never waste a crisis to push through a change!
Who recovers fast enough will depend on the resilience, the tenacity and resolve
of the governments, the nation and its people. And of their microcosm in
companies and their employees.
That’s why this issue of BT is devoted to that one big question: What next
after coronavirus?
Will Indian firms re-examine dependence on sourcing from China? Are
there cost-effective options locally or internationally? World will look for alternatives
to single source of supplies, including manufacturing. Are our firms up
to the mark? Will it disrupt supply chains? Can our economy capitalise?
Entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, bankers and CEOs will have the luxury
of time to mull over these during the 21-day lockdown. Companies and industries
are readying strategies to hit the ground running when the lockdown is
lifted. Chemicals industry aims to diversify sourcing and reduce dependence
on China; in aviation, fleet additions would be gradual, and mostly concentrated
around profitable metros, expat pilots may have to give way to domestic staff;
hospitality will re-examine its cost structure to stay a lean, mean machine; IT
firms, in particular, will aim for opportunities in Covid-ravaged sectors such as
hospitality, aviation, travel, manufacturing and energy and utilities as against
their traditional core focus areas of BFSI, retail and telecom, besides others.
If WFH does become the new norm as predicted, several industries, particularly
IT firms, will free up expensive office spaces to cut cost drastically.
How contracts are structured will be reviewed and new enabling clauses
will be inserted.
And what do you do in the stock market after it has eroded nearly 30 per cent
of market-cap since the peak in January? Rebuild a portfolio for the long term.
Look forward to the post-corona era! Lively, positive and full of energy…

rajeev.dubey@intoday.com
@rajeevdubey

Courtesy : Business Today


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