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Standard Chartered raises India’s current account deficit estimate to 3.8%




(Reuters) – Standard Chartered on Wednesday raised its estimate of India’s current account deficit (CAD) as a share of the gross domestic product for 2023, citing higher commodity prices and chances of an export slowdown.


The British bank raised its CAD forecast for fiscal year ending March 2023 to 3.8% of India’s GDP from its earlier estimate of 3.0%–higher than the assessments of peers Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Nomura.


India’s CAD came in at 1.2% of the GDP last year.


A slight pullback in commodity prices since the beginning of this year is likely to help trade deficit average around $23 billion – $25 billion in the next two quarters, but it wouldn’t make a major dent in the overall trajectory, Standard Chartered analysts wrote in the report.


Only a significant drop in coal prices and crude settling around $90 per barrel would bring the trade deficit under $20 billion, though the likelihood of that happening is very low, they added.


India’s trade deficit contracted marginally to $28.7 billion last month from a record $30 billion in July.


 


(Reporting by Anushka Trivedi in Mumbai)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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