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Mideast war impact: India’s pvt sector growth hits 3-yr low on reduced demand

Mideast war impact: India’s pvt sector growth hits 3-yr low on reduced demand

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Virendra Pandit

 

New Delhi: Less than a month into the ongoing conflict in West Asia, its impact on India’s private sector is being felt as it expanded at its weakest pace in over three years in March 2026 because of diminished demand, the media reported on Tuesday.

Price shocks from the ​ongoing US-Israeli war against Iran, and Tehran’s retaliatory attacks across the volatile region, dampened domestic demand, yet international orders hit a record ‌high, a survey showed.

The data signals weakening activity ​in the final month of the current fiscal year (2025-26) for ⁠one of the world’s top-performing economies, and highlights the risks to growth in India and globally from the conflict that started on February 28.

India’s GDP growth had already slowed ‌to 7.8 percent in the September-December 2025 quarter from 8.4 percent in the previous one as government spending and private investment cooled.

HSBC’s flash India ‌Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), compiled by S&P Global, slumped to ‌56.5 ⁠this month, well below the median forecast of 59.0 ⁠in a Reuters poll which had expected little change from February’s final reading of 58.9.

While a reading above 50 signals expansion, the downturn was the sharpest in 18 ​months, pointing to a notable ‌loss of momentum.

Manufacturing bore the brunt with its PMI sliding to a 4-1/2-year low of 53.8 from 56.9 as the conflict stoked market instability and consumer uncertainty, dragging factory output growth to ‌its softest since August 2021.

The services industry, which accounts ​for the majority of India’s GDP, also lost ground with the PMI easing to 57.2 from 58.1.

Inflationary pressures intensified ⁠sharply, with input costs – oil, energy, food, aluminium, steel and chemicals – rising at their fastest pace since June 2022, while selling prices climbed to ‌a seven-month high.

“Cost pressures intensified, but companies are absorbing part of the increase by squeezing margins,” said HSBC’s chief India economist Pranjul Bhandari.

As the world’s third-largest oil importer – sourcing roughly 90 percent of its crude oil and nearly half its natural gas from abroad – India is acutely exposed to oil price shocks, particularly as Iran has almost blocked the ‌Strait of Hormuz. Oil prices have already soared over 40 percent since the war began.

That ​threatens to push inflation, already at 3.21 percent before the war began, even higher and slow economic growth.

One bright ⁠spot was a record surge in international orders since the sub-index was added ⁠to the survey in September 2014 with goods producers and service providers logging new business from clients across Asia, Europe, ‌the Americas and the Middle East.

Despite the moderation in new domestic orders and mounting cost pressures, business optimism hit its highest since September ​2023, leading to the quickest pace of job creation since August.

 

 

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