City
Epaper

India's CAD to remain elevated in FY26 also due to stringent global trade policies: Report

By ANI | Updated: January 4, 2025 11:55 IST

New Delhi [India], January 4 : India's current account deficit (CAD) is expected to remain elevated in FY26 due ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], January 4 : India's current account deficit (CAD) is expected to remain elevated in FY26 due to stringent global trade policies, according to a report by JM Financial.

The report highlighted that the country's imports have consistently outpaced exports, leading to a widening trade deficit. The risk of a further deterioration in India's trade balance due to sluggish exports, which will keep the country's current account deficit (CAD) elevated.

It said, "the global supply chain gets re-aligned with Trump's trade policies, India's exports will be impacted the most vs. imports; hence we expect exports to trail imports in 2025 as well".

In November 2024, the trade deficit expanded to USD 37 billion, significantly higher than the monthly average of USD 23.5 billion recorded during April-October 2024.

The report attributed this trend to the realignment of global supply chains influenced by US President-elect Donald Trump's trade policies. It also predicted that India's exports will be more adversely impacted than imports, with exports likely to trail imports in 2025 and beyond.

"We are now building in a CAD of approximately 1.5-1.6 per cent of GDP for FY25, and depending on Trump's policies, it should continue to remain elevated in FY26 at around 1.4-1.5 per cent," the report stated.

This persistent deficit is expected to exert pressure on the Indian rupee (INR), potentially leading to currency depreciation.

On a positive note, the report indicates that fiscal consolidation efforts will keep bond yields in check. The government is expected to meet its FY26 fiscal deficit target of 4.5 per cent comfortably.

However, this focus on fiscal discipline has led to reduced capital expenditure (capex) in FY25, particularly during the election period, when capex intensity slowed.

Going forward, the report noted the government is likely to shift its focus to reducing debt levels, measured as a percentage of GDP, instead of solely prioritizing the fiscal deficit target.

This tight fiscal positioning, combined with the expected rate-easing cycle, is projected to stabilize bond yields. The report anticipated bond yields to average 6.5 per cent (within a range of 6.2-6.8 per cent) during 2025.

While India faces challenges with a widening CAD and trade imbalances, fiscal prudence and a stable bond market are expected to provide some relief to the economy in the coming years.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalWe can serve as bridge for Israelis, Palestinians: Cyprus President

InternationalPiyush Goyal meets Belgian Defence Minister, Minister-President of Flanders

InternationalUAE DyPM Saif bin Zayed attends closing ceremony of international symposium in Moscow

InternationalCrown Prince of Dubai reviews progress of key strategic road corridors, projects timeline through 2027

Other SportsIPL 2025: It gives you a lot of satisfaction, says Rahane on one run win over RR

Business Realted Stories

BusinessSmall traders plan stir against e-commerce giants, quick commerce firms

Business'WAVES 2025' promises bright future for creative economy, sees multi-crore deals

BusinessIndia first country to develop genome-edited rice varieties: Minister

BusinessData breach: Nearly 20 million SKT subscribers sign up for USIM protection

BusinessPiyush Goyal's Brussels visit bolsters India-Belgium trade, investment ties