Tue, 14 Jul 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jul 14, 2026 · 13:15
Business World News Updated Jul 14, 2026

India's Trade Deficit Likely to Stay Elevated Amid Middle East Risks, Oil Prices

India's merchandise trade deficit is likely to remain under pressure due to renewed geopolitical uncertainty in the Middle East, which could keep oil prices and freight costs elevated. The deficit widened to a five-month high of USD 30.4 billion in June 2026, driven by a 31% surge in imports. Petroleum imports remained elevated at USD 19.3 billion, while gold imports moderated after duty changes. The report warns that further supply disruptions could keep the import bill high and pose a downside risk to the current account.

India's trade deficit may stay elevated amid Middle East risks, oil prices: Report

New Delhi, July 14

India's merchandise trade deficit is likely to remain under pressure in the coming months as renewed geopolitical uncertainty in the Middle East could keep oil prices and freight costs elevated, although softer crude demand from China may help limit any sharp rise in global oil prices, according to a report by Dolat Capital.

"Looking ahead, renewed disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz could keep freight costs and oil prices elevated, although subdued crude demand from China and the absence of aggressive strategic reserve stockpiling by major economies are likely to limit any sharp rise in global oil prices," the report said.

India's merchandise trade deficit widened to a five-month high of USD 30.4 billion in June 2026, compared with USD 19.1 billion a year ago, as imports grew much faster than exports. Merchandise imports rose 31 per cent year-on-year to USD 70.8 billion, while exports increased 15.5 per cent to USD 40.4 billion.

According to Dolat Capital, the sharp rise in imports was driven by inventory restocking after supply chain disruptions eased following the Strait of Hormuz closure, along with strong demand for petroleum products, fertilisers, electronic goods and key agricultural commodities. Petroleum imports remained elevated at USD 19.3 billion, well above the pre-war monthly average of around USD 13-15 billion, while fertiliser imports also increased significantly.

Gold imports, however, moderated to USD 2 billion after import duty changes that came into effect in May 2026, while silver imports declined sharply to USD 0.1 billion, the report noted. On the export front, engineering goods, electronic goods, petroleum products and organic and inorganic chemicals remained the key growth drivers. Export demand stayed broad-based, supported by major markets such as the United States, the UAE, Singapore and China.

The report said that while India's exports have remained resilient, stronger import growth has widened the merchandise trade deficit. It added that any further disruption to oil supplies due to geopolitical developments in the Middle East could keep the country's import bill elevated and remain a key downside risk to the current account in the months ahead.

— ANI

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