EconTweets
🛢️ Brent Surges 5.8% to ~$107 After Trump Threatens to Strike Iran “Extremely Hard”
US President Trump’s late Thursday address reversed two days of oil price declines in a single speech. He reiterated that US military operations in Iran were nearing their “core strategic objectives” — but added a stark warning that Washington could strike Iran “extremely hard” if no deal is struck within two to three weeks. Brent crude surged 5.8% to around $107 per barrel, while WTI spiked to $111.29, inverting the normal Brent premium. The India VIX (fear gauge) jumped 6.36% to 26.6 on Thursday as markets absorbed the news before shutting for Good Friday. Asian peers sold off sharply: Japan’s Nikkei fell 1.4%, South Korea’s Kospi dropped 2.82%. For India, which imports ~87% of its crude, every $5 rise in Brent adds approximately ₹20,000–25,000 crore to the annual import bill — directly widening the Current Account Deficit, weakening the rupee, and fanning retail inflation. The IEA estimates the Iran war has already disrupted nearly 20 mb/d of global crude and product flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
🏦 RBI MPC Meets April 6–8 — Rate Hold at 5.25% Near-Certain, But Governor’s Words Will Move Markets
The RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee begins its first FY27 deliberation on April 6, with the policy announcement on April 8. All major analysts — Bank of Baroda, Emkay, SBI Securities — expect the repo rate to be held unchanged at 5.25% (after cumulative 125 bps cuts in 2025). The dilemma: crude above $100 and a rupee near ₹93–94 risk pushing CPI above 4%; but a near 4-year low PMI of 53.8 and record FII outflows of ₹1,17,775 crore in March signal growth may be softening. Bank of Baroda says the Iran war has likely ended the rate-cut cycle — and if CPI breaches 6%, a hike could be on the table by year-end. Markets will scrutinise every syllable of Governor Sanjay Malhotra’s statement — specifically: revised FY27 GDP and CPI forecasts, forward guidance on rate direction, and any new rupee-support measures. Trading resumes on Monday April 6 — just as the MPC meets.
🔍 US Section 301 Probe Targets India & 15 Others — The New Tariff Threat After SCOTUS Killed IEEPA
On March 11, 2026, the US Trade Representative (USTR) launched a Section 301 investigation into the manufacturing and industrial practices of 16 economies — India, China, EU, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Switzerland, and others. The probe examines whether these countries have built structural “excess manufacturing capacity” through government subsidies, harming American industries. This is the Trump administration’s recalibrated trade enforcement strategy following the Supreme Court’s February 2026 ruling that IEEPA-based tariffs were unconstitutional. Simultaneously, Trump has imposed a 10% universal tariff and signalled raising it to 15%. For India, Section 301 targets sectors where it is a major global supplier: pharmaceuticals, IT hardware, textiles, auto components, and electronics. USTR Jamieson Greer said he did not want to “prejudge the outcome.” The investigation typically takes 6–12 months — giving India time to negotiate, but the tariff risk is real and sustained.
💊 Sun Pharma Falls 1.7%, Cipla Drops 3% — US Drug Pricing Tariff Threat Hits Indian Pharma Sector
On Thursday April 2, Sun Pharmaceutical fell 1.7% and Cipla dropped up to 3% after reports emerged that the US administration may impose tariffs on drugmakers that have not agreed to lower their medicine prices in the American market. The Nifty Pharma index was Thursday’s worst sectoral performer. India’s pharmaceutical sector exports roughly $8.7 billion annually to the US, supplying ~47% of all generic prescriptions there — making it the single largest and most critical export relationship for Indian pharma. Unlike the broader Section 301 probe (which could take a year), a pharma-specific pricing-linked tariff could be implemented more quickly under executive authority. Indian companies like Sun Pharma, Dr. Reddy’s, Cipla, Lupin, and Aurobindo have invested heavily in USFDA-approved facilities — a tariff would erode their pricing advantage in the US market. The government has reportedly begun diplomatic outreach via the Commerce Ministry.
🏭 India’s March Manufacturing PMI Confirmed at 53.8 — Near 4-Year Low, But Export Orders Hit Record
The final HSBC India Manufacturing PMI for March 2026 was confirmed at 53.8 — down sharply from February’s 56.9, the weakest reading since mid-2022. The headline contraction was broad-based: domestic new orders slowed to a 3-year low, output growth decelerated, and input cost inflation hit its fastest pace in 45 months (driven by oil and metals). However, the critical silver lining — and a key signal of India’s global positioning — is that international export orders surged to a record high in March, as global buyers diversified supply chains away from Iran-proximate and China-heavy sources toward India. The Composite PMI (manufacturing + services) fell to 56.5, a 3.5-year low. For the RBI MPC meeting on April 8, this data creates a genuine dilemma: a cooling domestic economy argues for a rate cut, but surging input costs from oil argue firmly for a hold.
🛢️ Indian Oil Corporation Posts All-Time Record Crude Throughput of 75.4 MMT in FY26
Indian Oil Corporation (IOCL) — India’s largest state-owned refiner — announced that its refineries achieved a record crude oil throughput of 75.4 million metric tonnes (MMT) in FY2025–26, at an operational reliability of 99.5% — both all-time highs. Pipeline throughput also reached a record 105.3 MMT. While India is buffeted by $100+ Brent prices on the international market, this refining milestone means India’s domestic fuel supply chain operated at peak efficiency throughout the year. IOCL’s diversified crude sourcing — including Russian Urals at discounts, US WTI crude, and Middle East barrels — helped manage refining margins. The government is now under pressure to decide whether to revise retail petrol and diesel prices upward, after keeping them frozen since March 2024 ahead of elections. Retail price revision would reduce the fiscal burden on OMCs (Oil Marketing Companies) but stoke CPI inflation — another headache for the April 8 MPC.
🏍️ TVS Motor Races Past 5.19 Lakh Units in March — Two-Wheelers End FY26 on a Strong Note
TVS Motor Company reported March 2026 total sales of over 5,19,000 units — a 25% year-on-year surge, capping a strong FY2025–26 for India’s two-wheeler sector. The growth was powered by both domestic demand (supported by rural income recovery and income tax cuts from the FY26 Budget) and export strength, as Indian two-wheelers benefit from competitive pricing in Southeast Asian and African markets. TVS’s results followed strong March numbers from Hero MotoCorp and come alongside Maruti Suzuki’s FY26 record of 24.22 lakh units (reported yesterday). India’s two-wheeler sector — the world’s largest by volume — is on track for record FY26 annual volumes above 25 million units, despite a headwind from rising fuel costs that could moderate demand in FY27 if petrol prices are revised upward.
📈 Sensex Closes 0.3% Up at 73,319 on April 2 — IT Leads, Pharma & PSU Banks Drag
India’s last trading session before the Good Friday long weekend closed in cautious positive territory. The BSE Sensex ended at 73,319.55 (+0.3%), the second straight session of gains despite intraday volatility from Trump’s Iran comments. IT stocks led the advance — HCLTech, Tech Mahindra, Infosys, and TCS rose 1.8%–3.5% as investors positioned ahead of Q4 earnings next week. Maruti, Titan, Bajaj Finance, HDFC Bank, BEL, and IndiGo also gained. On the losing side: Sun Pharma (−1.7%) on US pharma tariff fears, Karnataka Bank (−6%) on a weak Q4FY26 business update, and Nifty PSU Bank (worst sectoral performer, −3%). India VIX jumped to 26.6. The market now faces a significant gap risk over the three-day weekend — any Iran war escalation, oil price swing, or tariff headline will be absorbed only when trading resumes Monday morning.
🏦 RBI Unveils ‘Payments Vision 2028’ — A Roadmap for India’s Digital Payments Future
The Reserve Bank of India has announced its Payments Vision 2028 framework, outlining a comprehensive roadmap for India’s rapidly growing digital payments ecosystem. Key pillars include: deepening security and trust in UPI and other real-time payment rails; improving cross-border payment efficiency for India’s massive ~$118 billion annual remittance inflows; enabling MSME credit using digital payment data as a creditworthiness signal; and a new customer compensation framework of up to ₹25,000 for small-value unauthorised electronic transactions — shifting fraud liability from users to banks. With India processing over 18 billion UPI transactions monthly (more than all other countries combined), establishing fraud liability frameworks is increasingly critical for extending digital financial access to semi-urban and rural India, where digital fraud anxiety remains a key adoption barrier.
RBI MPC April 8: Why This Meeting Is Harder Than Any in the Past Two Years
🔍 WHY — The Rare Double-Bind Situation
Every two months, India’s six-member Monetary Policy Committee sets the repo rate. Usually, the dominant signal is clear: either inflation is too high (hold or hike), or growth is flagging (cut). The April 2026 meeting is unusual because both signals are flashing simultaneously — in opposite directions.
Crude oil above $100 and a rupee near ₹93–94 mean imported inflation is rising fast — raising the cost of petrol, diesel, LPG, plastics, and fertilisers across the economy. But simultaneously, India’s Manufacturing PMI has fallen to 53.8 — a near 4-year low, domestic new orders are at a 3-year trough, and record FII outflows of ₹1,17,775 crore in March signal that global capital is fleeing. The RBI’s legal mandate — keeping CPI inflation within 2–6% AND supporting growth — is being pulled in two directions at once.
📌 WHAT — The Rate Trajectory and the Current Pause
The RBI cut rates by a cumulative 125 basis points in 2025 — from 6.5% in January 2025 to 5.25% in December 2025 — as CPI inflation fell to record lows (1.2% in December under the new 2024 base series) and the economy needed stimulus. Since February 2026, the MPC has been on hold at 5.25%.
- Between the February and April meetings: The Iran war broke out on February 28, Brent crude surged from $72 to $110+, the rupee weakened ~4–5%, Manufacturing PMI fell 3 full points, and FII outflows hit records. The macro environment changed dramatically in 5 weeks.
- April 8 expected outcome: Unanimous hold at 5.25%. Bank of Baroda says the rate cut cycle is now definitively over. If CPI breaches 6%, a hike could be on the table by Q3 FY27.
- The key forward signal: Will Governor Malhotra shift language from “neutral stance” to something more hawkish? Even a subtle wording change could spike bond yields and push the Sensex lower on Monday.
⚙️ HOW — Beyond the Rate: The Toolkit the RBI Has
The repo rate is not the RBI’s only lever. Especially when raising rates risks hurting growth, the RBI can deploy:
- Open Market Operations (OMOs): Buying G-Secs to inject rupee liquidity, reducing banks’ funding costs without touching the headline rate — the ₹6.3 lakh crore already injected in early FY27 was exactly this tool.
- Forex Market Intervention: Selling US dollars from reserves to support the rupee — already deployed (capping bank positions at $100M/day). Each rupee of stability reduces imported inflation directly.
- CRR adjustment: Cutting the Cash Reserve Ratio releases additional liquidity — each 50 bps cut frees ~₹1 lakh crore.
- Forward Guidance: The Governor’s tone and language are themselves market-moving tools — shaping bank lending behaviour and investor expectations even without rate changes.
The RBI’s policy stance — its forward guidance signal — often matters more to bond and currency markets than the rate number. “Neutral” means it could go either way. A hawkish shift in language (even without an actual rate hike) could spike 10-year G-Sec yields by 20–30 bps, raise home loan rates, and pressure the Sensex. Conversely, dovish language could weaken the rupee further by signalling the RBI will tolerate inflation. On April 8, 1,000 analysts, fund managers, and traders will be parsing every single word of the Governor’s statement for signals about FY27.
If Brent crude stays above $100 throughout FY27, India’s CPI could rise to 5–6% — approaching the 6% upper tolerance band. At the same time, a manufacturing slowdown and FII outflows mean the economy needs support. Should the RBI prioritise price stability (risk growth slowdown) or growth support (risk inflation overshoot)? India’s Flexible Inflation Targeting framework legally requires the MPC to write an explanation to the government if CPI stays outside the 2–6% band for three consecutive quarters. Has the RBI given itself enough flexibility? And what happens if the US Fed is simultaneously hiking rates to combat resurgent US inflation — widening the rate differential and pressuring the rupee further?
The RBI’s April 2026 MPC meeting arrives at a rare inflection: Brent crude above $100, the rupee near ₹93–94, and a near 4-year low Manufacturing PMI of 53.8 have created a simultaneous supply-side inflation shock and growth deceleration — a mild stagflationary signal. This tests the limits of conventional inflation-targeting and demands a nuanced, multi-instrument policy response beyond simple rate decisions.
- RBI instruments beyond the repo rate:
- Open Market Operations (OMOs): RBI buys/sells G-Secs to inject/drain rupee liquidity — ₹6.3 lakh crore already injected in early 2026 to support monetary transmission
- Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR): Each 50 bps cut releases ~₹1 lakh crore — blunt but powerful for liquidity management
- Forex market intervention: Selling US dollars to support the rupee — already deployed at $100M/day cap per bank; directly reduces imported inflation
- Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) rate: Adjusts the floor of the interest rate corridor, influencing overnight rates without changing the repo rate
- Targeted Long-Term Repo Operations (TLTROs): Sector-specific liquidity infusions for MSMEs or NBFCs without broad rate changes
- Forward guidance and communication: Governor’s tone, revised GDP/CPI forecasts, and policy stance language are themselves powerful market-moving instruments
- Risks of premature easing (cutting rates too early):
- Crude at $100+ creates genuine imported inflation — a rate cut could signal tolerance for higher CPI, de-anchoring inflation expectations
- A weaker rupee from rate differential narrowing (India cuts while US holds) further inflates import costs — a self-reinforcing spiral
- CPI risks breaching the 6% upper tolerance band — legally requiring the MPC to write a formal explanation to the government under the Inflation Targeting framework (embarrassing and credibility-damaging)
- Risks of prolonged pause (staying on hold too long):
- Manufacturing PMI at 53.8 and domestic new orders at 3-year lows suggest private investment and consumption may be softening — delayed policy support could deepen a slowdown
- 125 bps of 2025 cuts have not fully transmitted (home loans down only 60–80 bps) — prolonged pause risks the “transmission dividend” never materialising
- Record FII outflows of ₹1,17,775 crore in March signal eroding investor confidence — clarity on the rate outlook matters as much as the rate level itself
- Way forward:
- Hold repo rate at 5.25% with neutral stance; signal conditional readiness to cut if crude normalises toward $80
- Deploy OMOs and CRR reductions to enhance transmission without headline rate risk
- Coordinate with Finance Ministry on targeted fiscal support for oil-sensitive sectors (LPG subsidies, fertiliser support) to share the macro burden
- Publish revised FY27 GDP and CPI fan-chart forecasts with explicit scenario analysis (low oil / high oil scenarios) to reduce market uncertainty
The RBI April 2026 meeting tests not just monetary policy mechanics but the credibility of India’s inflation-targeting framework under sustained external stress. A calibrated hold, combined with proactive liquidity operations, forex intervention, and transparent communication, best balances the stagflationary challenge. The true test is whether the RBI can maintain price stability without sacrificing the growth momentum of a still-resilient Indian economy.
RBI Repo Rate History — The 2025 Cutting Cycle & Current Hold at 5.25% (2024–2026)
India Manufacturing PMI — Monthly Trend (April 2025 – March 2026)
India Economic Dashboard — Key Indicators as of 3rd April 2026
| Indicator | Current Value | Prior / Comparison | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| RBI Repo Rate | 5.25% | 6.50% (Jan 2025) | ⬇️ Down 125 bps in 2025; on hold |
| Brent Crude (Apr 2 close) | ~$107/barrel | $60.75 (Jan 1, 2026) | 🔴 +76% in just 3 months |
| INR/USD (late March) | ₹93.5–94.5/$ | ₹89.96 (Jan 1, 2026) | 🔴 Rupee weakened ~5% |
| BSE Sensex (Apr 2 close) | 73,319.55 | 72,995 (Mar 31 close) | 🟡 +0.3% on day; volatile |
| India VIX (Apr 2) | 26.6 | ~18 (early Jan 2026) | 🔴 Elevated market fear |
| Manufacturing PMI (Mar final) | 53.8 | 56.9 (Feb 2026) | 🔴 Near 4-year low |
| GST FY26 Annual Gross | ₹22.27 lakh crore | ₹20.55 lakh crore (FY25) | 🟢 +8.3% YoY; milestone |
| IOCL Crude Throughput FY26 | 75.4 MMT | Prev. record was lower | 🟢 All-time record |
| FII Outflows (Mar 2026) | ₹1,17,775 crore | Highest single month ever | 🔴 Record capital flight |
| India CPI (Jan 2026, new series) | 2.8% | 1.2% (Dec 2025) | 🟡 Rising but still benign |
| RBI MPC next decision | April 8, 2026 | Last: Feb 6 (hold) | 🟡 Hold at 5.25% expected |
Monetary policy transmission is the process by which an RBI repo rate change flows through the financial system to affect actual lending rates, consumer spending, business investment, and ultimately inflation. When the RBI cuts the repo rate, it reduces the cost of overnight borrowing for banks. Ideally, banks then reduce their lending rates — making home loans, business loans, and EMIs cheaper. In practice, this process is slow and incomplete.
Section 301 of the US Trade Act of 1974 authorises the US Trade Representative (USTR) to investigate foreign “acts, policies, or practices” that are “unreasonable or discriminatory” and burden US commerce. If the investigation finds violations, the US can impose retaliatory tariffs. The process requires: (1) formal investigation announcement, (2) public comment period, (3) determination, and (4) tariff action — typically taking 6–18 months in total. This is longer than IEEPA, but far more legally robust.
The PMI (Purchasing Managers’ Index) is a monthly survey of purchasing managers at manufacturing or services companies. It is a “diffusion index” — above 50 means more respondents report improvement than deterioration (expansion); below 50 means the opposite (contraction). The HSBC India Manufacturing PMI surveys ~400 companies across output, new orders, employment, supplier deliveries, and inventories. India’s March 2026 final PMI: 53.8 — expansion, but the slowest in nearly 4 years.
Stagflation is the simultaneous combination of stagnating growth AND rising inflation. It is an economist’s nightmare because the conventional policy toolkit creates contradictions: to fight inflation you raise rates (which slows growth further); to support growth you cut rates (which fuels inflation further). Classic historical example: US in the 1970s after the OPEC oil embargo. India has periodic oil-driven “near-stagflation” episodes — 2008, 2012, and now potentially 2026.
India’s Unified Payments Interface (UPI) is operated by NPCI (National Payments Corporation of India) and processes over 18 billion transactions per month — more than all other countries’ real-time payment systems combined. The RBI’s Payments Vision 2028 builds on this foundation, targeting: expanded UPI internationalisation (India-Singapore, India-UAE, and more corridors), MSME credit scoring from payment data, fraud compensation frameworks, and seamless cross-border remittances for India’s ~$118 billion annual inflow.
India produces approximately 20% of global generic pharmaceutical exports by volume — earning the title “pharmacy of the world.” It supplies roughly 47% of all generic prescriptions dispensed in the United States. India’s pharma sector exports ~$27 billion annually globally, of which ~$8.7 billion goes to the US market in FY26. Key companies: Sun Pharma (#1 by revenue), Dr. Reddy’s, Cipla, Lupin, Aurobindo, Divi’s, Torrent. The sector employs over 3 million people directly and another 3 million indirectly.
📈 Markets Reopen After 3-Day Break | RBI MPC Deliberations Begin
India’s equity, derivatives, and currency markets resume after the Good Friday long weekend. Any Iran war developments, Trump statements, or crude oil swings over the weekend will be absorbed in Monday’s open — expect a volatile gap-up or gap-down. GIFT Nifty futures (which trade on weekends) will pre-signal the direction. The RBI MPC also convenes its first day of deliberations on April 6.
🏦 RBI Monetary Policy Decision — Governor’s Statement 10 AM, Press Conference 12 PM
The most critical domestic event of the week. Markets are near-unanimously pricing a hold at 5.25%. All eyes will be on: (1) revised FY27 CPI and GDP forecasts, (2) language on policy stance (neutral vs hawkish shift?), (3) any new rupee-support or liquidity measures, and (4) Governor Malhotra’s guidance on the rate cycle outlook for FY27. Bond yields and the rupee will react in real time; equities open for the second hour of trading as the statement lands.
🇺🇸 US March CPI Data — Critical Global Trigger for Emerging Markets
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics releases its March 2026 CPI reading. A hotter-than-expected number could kill residual Fed rate-cut hopes, strengthen the US dollar, widen the US-India rate differential, and add fresh pressure on the rupee. A cool number would ease dollar strength and give emerging markets including India a breather. With India’s RBI and US CPI both landing on April 8, the day promises exceptional volatility across bonds, currencies, and equities.
💼 IT Sector Q4 FY26 Earnings Begin — TCS and Infosys in Focus
India’s IT sector has been the market’s bright spot in early April — rising 1.8–3.5% on April 2 on earnings anticipation. TCS and Infosys are expected to report Q4FY26 results this week. Watch for: USD revenue growth, deal wins (Total Contract Value), EBIT margins, headcount trends, and management commentary on US demand in a tariff-uncertain environment. Strong results could confirm IT’s role as a defensive sector during macro stress; weak guidance could reverse the recent rally and test the Sensex’s fragile recovery.
🛢️ Iran War Developments — The Overarching Macro Variable
Trump’s April 2 statement — that the US could strike Iran “extremely hard” in 2–3 weeks if no deal — keeps geopolitical risk on a hair trigger. Any credible ceasefire signal could push Brent toward $80, dramatically improving India’s import bill, CAD, and rupee. Any escalation — particularly targeting Iranian oil infrastructure or Kharg Island — could send Brent to $120–130, widen India’s CAD by $20–30 billion, and force the RBI into emergency forex interventions. This single variable dominates all others for India’s macro outlook in Q1 FY27.