Middle East Tensions Pose Minimal Risk to Rupee, Growth: Report

A report by Shriram Wealth indicates that escalating Middle East tensions are likely to have only a minimal impact on the rupee's depreciation and India's GDP growth. The analysis suggests a 10% rise in crude oil prices from the RBI's baseline could increase inflation by 30 basis points but weaken growth by just 15 bps. India's strong macroeconomic fundamentals, including forex reserves exceeding $700 billion, provide significant resilience to the broader economy. Sectors like chemicals and airlines may face margin pressure, while defence and precious metals like gold could benefit.

Key Points: Middle East Conflict Impact on Rupee & Growth Minimal: Report

  • Minimal rupee & growth disruption expected
  • Defence stocks & precious metals may rally
  • Oil price rise could lift inflation 30 bps
  • Strong forex reserves provide economic resilience
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Middle East tensions could pose only minimal risk to rupee, growth: Report

Report says escalating Middle East tensions pose minimal risk to rupee depreciation and GDP growth, while boosting defence stocks and precious metals.

Middle East tensions could pose only minimal risk to rupee, growth: Report
"Based on these assumptions, we noted limited upside risks of oil prices to domestic inflation and growth outlook. - Shriram Wealth Report"

New Delhi, March 5

Escalating conflict in the Middle East could only cause minimal rupee depreciation and disruption in growth while defence stocks and precious metals could rally, a report said on Thursday.

The report from wealth management firm Shriram Wealth said a 10 per cent rise from RBI's baseline assumption of crude oil price could lift inflation by 30 bps but weaken the rupee and growth minimally.

The same could cut growth by 15 bps, while a 5 per cent rupee depreciation could raise inflation by 35 bps but add 25 bps to GDP growth, it added.

The firm forecasted that depreciation in INR is likely to be capped on account of RBI FX intervention.

"Additionally, reversal of ongoing tensions should help the local currency stabilize. Based on these assumptions, we noted limited upside risks of oil prices to domestic inflation and growth outlook," the report said.

The RBI's baseline assumption for crude oil in H2FY26 was $70 per barrel with INR at 88 per dollar, and the Indian crude basket has averaged $65 and spot INR at 89.5 in the second half of FY26, the report said.

India's overall macros such as forex reserves exceeding $700 billion, manageable trade & current account deficits, low inflation & interest rates, contained fiscal deficit are in a fairly strong position providing resilience to the broader economy, the report noted.

Sectors reliant on crude inputs such as chemicals, paints, pharma, airlines, tyres and OMCs may face margin pressure, while companies with meaningful Middle East exposure could see operational and earnings risks.

"The defence sector is likely to benefit from improving sentiment amid rising global defence spending. Any further escalation in conflict is likely to support gold and silver prices in the short term, which would be positive for gold and silver ETF investments," it said.

Nearly 9 million Indians reside in the Middle East, contributing 38 per cent of remittances, and the region accounts for 15 per cent of India's exports and 21 per cent of imports.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good analysis, but I'm more worried about the 9 million Indians living there. Their safety and the remittances they send home are more important than a few basis points of GDP. Hope the government has a solid evacuation plan if things get worse.
A
Aman W
Time to look at defence stocks and maybe some gold ETFs? The report clearly hints at that. But as a retail investor, I always get nervous when markets rally on geopolitical tension. Feels wrong to profit from conflict.
S
Sarah B
The interconnectedness is staggering. 15% of exports and 21% of imports! While the rupee impact might be minimal, the supply chain disruptions for chemicals, paints, and pharma could be a bigger headache for businesses on the ground.
V
Vikram M
The report is optimistic, which is good. But let's not be complacent. "Minimal risk" can quickly become "significant risk" if the conflict escalates beyond current assumptions. Our policymakers must stay vigilant.
K
Karthik V
Finally, some positive economic news. After hearing so much about inflation, it's a relief to know our macro fundamentals are strong enough to handle this. Kudos to the RBI for building those $700bn+ reserves. A true safety net.

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