Higher-than-expected trade deficit in February 2026 to keep current account in deficit mode in Q4 FY2026, as against surplus in Q4 FY2025
Thematic Report
17 Mar 2026
India’s
merchandise trade deficit (MTD) nearly doubled to $27.1 billion in February
2026 from $14.4 billion in February 2025, driven by the strong growth in
imports (+24.1%) on a year-on-year (YoY) basis, even as exports (-0.8%)
remained weak. Rising commodity prices would impact the landed cost of imports
in the ongoing month, although volumes of some items may be constrained on
account of the disruption caused by the West Asia conflict. The widening in the
merchandise trade deficit (MTD) in January-February 2026 implies that the
seasonal improvement in current account balance that is typically seen in Q4
every year, is unlikely to play out in Q4 FY2026. ICRA expects the current
account to witness a deficit of ~$9-11 billion in Q4 FY2026 (vs. $13.2 billion
in Q3 FY2026), in contrast with the surplus of $13.7 billion seen in Q4 FY2025,
thereby pushing the current account deficit (CAD) to ~1.0% of GDP in FY2026
(0.6% of GDP in FY2025).
MTD nearly doubled on a YoY basis in
February 2026: India’s
merchandise imports remained substantial at $63.7 billion in February 2026,
amid a 42-month high YoY expansion of 24.1%, albeit partly on the back of a low
base (-15.7% in Feb 2025), and strong growth in gold imports. On the contrary,
merchandise exports eased by ~1% YoY to $36.6 billion in February 2026.
Consequently, the MTD widened sharply to $27.1 billion in February 2026 from
$14.4 billion in February 2025 even as it stood lower than $34.7 billion in
January 2026. The near doubling in YoY terms was largely led by non-oil items
(to $17.6 billion from $8.2 billion, led by gold) followed by a rise in net oil
imports (to $9.5 billion from $6.2 billion).
Exports to most major economies
moderated in February 2026: The
exports to the US contracted for the third consecutive month in February 2026
(-12.9% YoY), attributed to high base of pre-tariff frontloading of shipments
in 2025. In addition, shipments to the UK (-5%), the UAE (-0.3%) and Saudi
Arabia (-10.4%) dipped on a YoY basis in the month; trade disruptions in the
latter two countries may worsen the trend in the ongoing month.