A Brickwork report projects India’s PMI to hold a firm 57-59 range in FY27, led by IT and healthcare. Services remain resilient, while manufacturing recovery hinges on easing input costs, sustained capex, and West Asia conflict resolution.
India’s PMI is expected to stay firm in the 57-59 range in FY27, with IT and healthcare as key growth drivers, while manufacturing recovery led by autos, metals and construction materials will likely depend on easing input costs, West Asia conflict resolution, sustained capex and PLI-led investments, according to a Brickwork report.
Cautiously Optimistic Outlook
The report said India’s PMI landscape reflects a cautiously optimistic outlook, with the services sector remaining resilient and supporting consumption and job creation, even as manufacturing activity moderates amid the West Asia conflict and elevated input costs.
It noted, while composite PMIs maintained a firm expansionary trajectory, with manufacturing in the 56-58 range and services in the 58-60 range, supported by robust demand conditions, IIP and core sector output, averaging 5-6 per cent and 7-8 per cent year-on-year respectively, signal strengthening industrial production and a gradual narrowing of the output gap. “This procyclical acceleration is driven by increased fiscal spending and optimized capacity utilization across the steel, cement, and refinery verticals.to remain positive, supported by government spending and improving capacity utilization,” the report said.
Manufacturing and Policy Response
While flagging a slowdown in India’s manufacturing activity in March, with the PMI slipping to 53.9, the report noted that the composite PMI remained firmly in expansionary territory, broadly in line with the Reserve Bank of India’s revised FY27 GDP growth forecast of 6.7 per cent. It added that record export order growth helped offset softer domestic demand, while the Reserve Bank of India’s neutral policy stance and active liquidity support ensured steady credit transmission across sectors.
Overall, “India’s PMI landscape pointed to a cautiously optimistic outlook, with resilient services sustaining consumption and job creation even as manufacturing moderated amid the West Asia conflict and rising input costs,” it said.
FY27 Projections and Growth Anchors
Looking ahead to FY27, the PMI is expected to remain firm in the 57-59 range, supported by strong digital exports, robust urban consumption and expanding trade linkages through India-US and India-EU agreements, with information technology and healthcare emerging as key growth anchors.
At the same time, a recovery in manufacturing — led by autos, metals, and construction materials — “hinges on West Asia conflict resolution, easing input costs, and sustained transmission of government capex and PLI-led investment,” it noted. (ANI)
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