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Manufacturing & Production

Oil Prices & Rupee Depreciation – Cost Amplification

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Cost Pressures

Oil Price Levels

Crude oil sustained at $85-95 per barrel, driven by geopolitical tensions and supply constraints, remains elevated relative to historical averages.

Rupee Depreciation

The Indian rupee has depreciated 3% to 5% against USD in FY26, increasing import costs for all dollar-denominated purchases.

Combined Import Cost Inflation

The cumulative effect of oil prices and rupee depreciation drives 8-10% import cost increases across manufacturing sectors.

Wholesale Price Inflation

Wholesale inflation at 2-3% reflects elevated input cost pressures across the economy.

Most Vulnerable Sectors

Sectors experiencing the highest cost pressures include:
– Fertilizers: Input costs increase 10-15%
– Petrochemicals: Raw material volatility
– Plastics: Resin cost inflation
– Textiles: Natural fiber price increases
– Coatings: Solvent and pigment cost pressures

Mitigation Approaches

Companies are implementing hedging strategies against crude oil exposure. Supply chain diversification reduces dependency on import sources. Price increases, though limited by competition, are being implemented selectively. Import substitution investments reduce long-term import dependency. Margin compression is being managed through operational efficiency improvements.

Outlook

Oil volatility is expected through 2026 as geopolitical tensions persist. Rupee stabilization depends on current account performance and FDI flows. Manufacturing margins face sustained pressure requiring operational excellence and cost management discipline.

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