New Delhi, Dec. 3 -- India's current account deficit (CAD) widened sequentially to USD 12.3 billion, or 1.3% of GDP, in the second quarter of FY26. Analysts believe that the deficit is led by a sharp rise in the merchandise trade gap despite strong growth in services exports and remittances. The CAD had stood at 0.3% of GDP in the previous quarter.
According to assessments by Crisil, ICICI Bank Research and Emkay Global, the merchandise deficit expanded as gold imports surged nearly 150% quarter-on-quarter, touching USD 19 billion in Q2, while goods exports declined on a sequential basis following the rollout of higher US tariffs on Indian shipments.
Overall goods exports stood at about USD 109 billion, while imports rose to nearly USD ...
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