---
title: "“WHO” Calls COVID-19 a Financial Rebound- A Statement or a Question?"
date: 2020-03-20
author: "Rhea Susan Verghese"
url: https://ksandk.com/banking/who-calls-covid-19-new-financial-rebound-king-stubb-and-kasiva/
---

# “WHO” Calls COVID-19 a Financial Rebound- A Statement or a Question?

Posted On - 20 March, 2020 • By - Rhea Susan Verghese

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### **The Wintered Tale of COVID-19**. WHO Calls COVID-19 New Financial Rebound

*“If you’re born poor, it isn’t your mistake but if you die poor, it indeed is your mistake!”* With the outbreak of Coronavirus (“COVID-19”), the main concern is and should be saving lives but another aspect of thinking would crack a consumer’s brain to, ‘what about personal finances?’

The Chinese Rat Year of 2020 meant prosperity, but unfortunately, COVID-19 occurred at the time when the economy was already showing signs of a global economic go-slow in terms of real GDP growth at a mere 4.7 per cent[[1]](#_ftn1). 

In  

addition, COVID-19 has jostled the monetarist markets and brought a stirring  

standstill to the demand and supply chain. In India, since February 2020, where  

crude oil and equity prices have sharply fallen, petrol and gold are  

snowballing because of the indecisive safe haven reliance they are bred within.  

Worldwide, equity prices on stock catalogues have also fallen.

### **Has  

COVID-19 made India a Bull Market or a Bear Market?**

A fair look at the Indian stock market tells us that we have consolidated into a bear market in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak. What’s a Bull and Bear market? A Bull lunges its horns up in air connoting raising prices and a Bear jabs its paws connoting falling prices with regard to stock indices.

Let alone the stock market, companies, MNC’s, operators and manufacturers have been presaged of a heavy hand on their pockets due to the economic upshot resulting from the pandemic. A gigantic drop in stock prices has led the National Stock Exchange into the Bear territory as of March 12, 2020, and Bombay Stock Exchange is not far from the wrath.

Circumstantial  

data provides that we have not fallen further than 25-28 per cent and recovery  

insight is a possibility. The last time India faced the wrath of a bearish  

market was 2015 and it took almost 2 years to stand up on its feet. India was  

not a foreseen epicentre of the pandemic at the rate of trouble we stand at, as  

of today. The impact of falling stocks in India has dampened the banks and led  

them into a bear market, the resultant of which pushes us into thinking that  

how are we then expecting a bull market for our stock indices anytime  

soon?  The sharpened tumble in stock  

market prices showcase an attractive but very risky proposition for investors  

in India and worldwide.

Commotion  

in one business would mean disruption in many other businesses from many  

countries considering the connecting factors that bind each of them together in  

some way or the other. A drop in business is resultant of a drop in finances  

gradually and automatically affecting the economy as a whole. For example, the  

Indian market stopped its supplies in the roll of dropping demand, but the very  

stop was because their supplies from China came to a standstill. COVID-19  

showed its wakened presence in the form of falling markets and threats of  

recession, and the reasons why investors show skepticism when it comes to  

investing. 

Economically,  

India does not stand stout because of the upsurge in non-performing assets  

(NPA’s). Banks and capital institutions will have to be weary of the impending  

lockdowns for this, in turn, will lead to a zero-revenue situation holding many  

starving mouths to ransom.

### **An Apocalypse Packed in a  

Suitcase Bomb**

No  

one really presumed that a little micro-organism would create a global fiscal  

shudder. For India in specificity, it turned out to be a twin throw up.  The very fact of having to edge the economic  

impact of the pandemic and that too in an already slow economy. The last time  

India got locked into the bear territory was 2008 and now again almost a decade  

later. Given that the statistic of COVID-19 hasn’t seen many casualties in  

India as compared to other epidemics in the past, we can still see the effect  

in terms of financial dropdowns.

Globally  

if looked at, the jeopardy of recession is real in terms of diminished  

demand-supply chains. The international economies were already sinking, and now  

in the wake of the virus outbreak, we are looking at a global recession.  

Stunted economic growth would mean a slow revenue growth which would shake the  

roots of an already settled financial system whether nationally or  

internationally. In situations of the like, the onus is more on the banks and  

governments to take stabilized actions. From an Indian perspective, the Reserve  

Bank of India is going to have to step up in terms of systemic stability  

otherwise the market crash will never revive.

The instantaneous  

impact of this apocalypse was seen in the form of travel bans in the tourism  

sector, which in a way led to a financial crunch and a glut in the finance  

economy. COVID-19 weakened the rupee by 3 per cent, thereby trading the Indian  

rupee at almost INR 76[[2]](#_ftn2)  against 1 US dollar. This has also led to  

foreign investors pulling out of the domestic markets. The virus outbreak has  

soured all relations between Indian equities and bonds and same

can  

be refurbished through bank intervention if done in a stabilized manner.  

---

- [[1]](#_ftnref1) [https://www.imf.org/external/datamapper/NGDP_RPCH@WEO/OEMDC/ADVEC/WEOWORLD](https://www.imf.org/external/datamapper/NGDP_RPCH@WEO/OEMDC/ADVEC/WEOWORLD)  , IMF Data Mapper.
- [[2]](#_ftnref2) [https://www1.nseindia.com/marketinfo/fxTracker/fxTracker.jsp#  , National Stock Exchange Tracker](https://www1.nseindia.com/marketinfo/fxTracker/fxTracker.jsp)

### Contributed By – Siddartha Karnani, Partner  
 & Rhea Susan Verghese, Associate

#### [King Stubb & Kasiva](https://ksandk.com/),  
Advocates & Attorneys

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---

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