India’s trade deficit widened to USD 28.21 in May 2026 due to surging petroleum imports. A Dolat Capital report notes relief is likely from softer crude prices and higher gold duties, supporting a resilient external sector outlook.
While India’s trade deficit widened to USD 28.21 in May 2026, lower crude oil prices and higher duties on gold imports will likely ease pressure on the import bill and trade deficit as per a report by Dolat Capital.
Key Trade Figures
The report noted that India’s petroleum imports surged sharply to USD 22.7 billion in May-26 from USD 14.0 billion a year ago, while non-petroleum exports increased to USD 70.7 billion during April-May FY27 from USD 64.0 billion in the corresponding period last year.
Non-petroleum, non-gems and jewellery exports also increased to USD 65.9 billion from USD 59.2 billion.
Furthermore, India’s non-petroleum imports remained robust at USD 104.1 billion as against USD 90.8 billion a year ago, on demand for electronics, machinery, capital goods and industrial inputs reflecting continued strength in domestic investment activity and consumption.
The report noted, India’s “merchandise imports surged to USD 73.41 billion (+20.62% YoY) in May 2026 and cumulatively (Apr-May ’26) reached USD 145.35 billion (+15.14% YoY).”
On the other hand, “merchandise exports grew to USD 45.20 billion (+18.00% YoY) in May 2026 and cumulatively (Apr-May ’26) reached USD 88.91 billion (+16.09% YoY).”
Dolat Capital’s Analysis and Outlook
As per Dolat Capital, export growth is becoming more broad-based across products and markets, reducing reliance on a few commodity segments. At the same time, deeper trade ties with Asia, the Middle East, Africa, and other emerging regions point to greater geopolitical diversification, lowering concentration risks and strengthening resilience against regional shocks and supply chain disruptions.
As per the report, “softer crude oil prices amid easing geopolitical tensions in West Asia could lower the oil import bill and help narrow the trade deficit.” Furthermore, petroleum product exports will likely benefit from favorable excise duty structure and strong pent-up demand, while higher duties on gold imports are expected to restrain nonessential imports. “Together, these factors support a more balanced and resilient external sector outlook, with trade increasingly anchored by manufacturing competitiveness, investment demand and diversified global partnerships,” the report said.
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