Growth in India’s private sector eased to a five-month low in October dragged by softer demand and rising output costs, according to HSBC’s flash Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) compiled by S&P Global. The index slipped to 59.9 from September’s final reading of 61.0,
Services slowdown drags India’s private sector growth
Despite slipping to the lowest since May, growth remained robust and well above the 50-mark separating expansion from contraction. The overall index – a seasonally adjusted index measuring the month-on-month change in the combined output of India’s manufacturing and service sectors – was mainly dragged down by a slowdown in services growth even as manufacturing activity recovered from a four-month low in September. The flash manufacturing PMI rose to 58.4 from 57.7 last month while the services business activity index slipped to 58.8 from 60.9.
An overall new orders sub-index expanded firmly though at its weakest pace since May. The softer increase stemmed from a loss of growth momentum in the services sector, however, goods producers saw a slightly quicker rise than in September.
Exports hit seven-month low amid higher US tariffs and weaker global demand
International demand for Indian goods and services softened to its weakest in seven months, largely due to a slower increase in manufacturing exports. India’s export is also impacts because of 50% tariffs imposed by the United States, which includes 25% additional tariff for purchasing Russian oil. US President Trump reiterating tariffs will remain high unless New Delhi stops its purchases of Russian oil.
A monthly bulletin released by the Reserve Bank of India on Monday noted merchandise trade remained resilient overall but highlighted a sharp decline in exports to the US in September as the higher tariffs kicked in. Cost pressure eased across both sectors, helped by a lowering of the goods and services tax (GST) in September.
However, firms refrained from passing those benefits on to customers and selling charges were raised to offset higher operational costs. For the year-ahead business optimism waned showing concerns over rising competitive pressures, market conditions and demand trends.
With the input from Reuters
