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Business India News Updated Jun 19, 2026

Power and IT to Dominate India's Post-Covid Investment Landscape: BoB Report

A Bank of Baroda report reveals that power and IT sectors will remain dominant in India's post-Covid investment landscape. Total new investment announcements over the past four years reached approximately Rs 191 lakh crore, with electricity and transport services accounting for nearly 50% of planned investments. The private sector has taken a leading role, claiming 71.3% of investment announcements compared to the government's previous 54.2% share before the pandemic. Consumer segments like automobiles, textiles, and hotels hold smaller investment shares, reflecting a shift toward service-oriented spending.

Power and IT set to remain dominant industries as private sector leads India's investment landscape in post Covid era: BoB report

New Delhi, June 19

Power and IT will continue to be the dominant industries in the near future, as the world increasingly turns to technology areas that will dominate the economic landscape, according to a Bank of Baroda report. This projection comes amid a transforming investment climate in the country over the last four years, where distinct sectors attract varied capital based on specific demand conditions.

As per the report, the domestic investment environment shows encouraging trends that persist into the current financial year. A strategic push toward digital infrastructure and data centers creates significant opportunities for potential investors within the IT domain, while the renewable energy sector maintains strong traction.

The BoB report stated that post COVID, "For the 4 years, the total amount of new investment announcements were for around Rs 191 lakh crore which is around Rs 48 lakh crore on an average annual basis."

"The two dominant sectors which accounted for almost 50% of the total planned investments are electricity and transport services," the report added.

Meanwhile, planned investments in the IT space accounted for nearly 6 per cent of the total layout, fueled by a sharp focus on artificial intelligence and data centers. Data from the first 75 days of the year up to June 15 confirms a similar trend, where electricity and IT dominate the landscape and comprise 85 per cent of all proposed investments.

This allocation highlighted a deliberate thrust toward power generation to meet growing conventional and renewable energy requirements. As per the report, in transport services, expansion plans span both the aviation and railway sectors. Specifically, two airlines announced intentions to purchase new aircraft, which expanded the total figures.

Chemicals and metals follow these sectors with a combined share of roughly 24 per cent, driven by infrastructure activity, machinery, and construction material requirements.

Conversely, consumer segments hold smaller shares. The automobile sector holds a 2.4 per cent share, ranking eighth, followed by food-based industries at tenth with 0.7 per cent. Textiles and consumer goods stand at 0.6 per cent and 0.5 per cent, respectively.

"Hotels and trading have shares of 0.5% and 0.3% which are rising businesses in the last few years," the report added. "There has been a change in the consumer mindset where there is higher spending on services (which also comes out in the GDP data) relative to goods which includes both tourism as well as ecommerce."

Because these service-oriented sectors require lower initial capital than heavy industries like metals or power, they maintain a lower relative share of total investments.

On the structural side, the report mentioned that the private sector now leads capital intentions. Prior to the pandemic, the government share in total investment announcements averaged 54.2 per cent. However, between 2022-23 and 2025-26, the private sector claimed a dominant share of 71.3 per cent, indicating a substantial shift in investment ownership.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

The change from govt to private sector dominance is interesting. Pre-COVID govt had 54% share, now private has 71%? That's a big shift. But I worry about consumer goods and textiles getting only 0.5% each—those employ many people. Hope we don't forget traditional sectors.

Michael C

As someone who works in IT, this is promising. AI and data centers are the future. But 6% of total investments in IT seems low given its potential. Anyway, glad electricity and transport are being prioritized—India needs reliable power and better railway connectivity for growth.

Nisha Z

Wait, Rs 191 lakh crore in 4 years?? That's massive. But does this include actual money spent or just announcements? 🤔 Too often these plans remain on paper. Would like to see actual implementation rate. Also, hotel sector at 0.5% seems low for tourism push. Need more focus on hospitality jobs.

Rohit L

Power and IT dominating makes sense—basic needs plus future tech. But 0.5% for textiles in a country known for textile heritage feels wrong. Also, consumer goods at 0.5%? With rising middle class, that should be higher. Still, private sector leading is healthy sign. Let's see if the momentum sustains.

Sarah B

Interesting that electricity and transport services account for 50% of planned investments. India's infrastructure gap is real, so this makes sense. The shift to private sector from 54% govt to 71% private is dramatic—shows growing confidence in the economy. Hope the renewable energy focus stays strong.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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