India's Trade Deficit Narrows to $28.21 Billion in May 2026, Report Says
India Trade Deficit $28.21 Billion in May 2026

India's merchandise trade deficit narrowed to $28.21 billion in May 2026, according to a report by Dolat Capital cited by ANI. The report indicates that lower crude oil prices and higher duties on gold imports are likely to ease pressure on the import bill in the coming months.

Imports and Exports Performance

The report highlighted that petroleum imports surged to $22.7 billion in May 2026, up from $14 billion a year earlier. Meanwhile, non-petroleum exports rose to $70.7 billion during April-May FY27, compared to $64 billion in the same period last year. Non-petroleum, non-gems and jewellery exports also increased to $65.9 billion from $59.2 billion.

India's non-petroleum imports remained strong at $104.1 billion, up from $90.8 billion a year ago, driven by demand for electronics, machinery, capital goods and industrial inputs, reflecting continued momentum in domestic investment and consumption.

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Key Figures from Dolat Capital

Dolat Capital stated that merchandise imports surged to $73.41 billion (+20.62% year-on-year) in May 2026, and cumulatively for April-May 2026 reached $145.35 billion (+15.14% year-on-year). On the export front, merchandise exports grew to $45.20 billion (+18.00% year-on-year) in May 2026, and cumulatively for April-May 2026 reached $88.91 billion (+16.09% year-on-year).

Broad-Based Export Growth

The report noted that export growth is becoming increasingly broad-based across products and geographies, reducing dependence on a limited set of commodity segments. Stronger trade engagement with Asia, the Middle East, Africa and other emerging markets is helping diversify geopolitical risks and improve resilience against regional disruptions.

Future Outlook

Looking ahead, the report said, “Softer crude oil prices amid easing geopolitical tensions in West Asia could lower the oil import bill and help narrow the trade deficit.” It further noted that petroleum product exports are likely to benefit from a favourable excise duty structure and pent-up demand, while higher duties on gold imports could curb non-essential 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 added.

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