AI Generated by Fortune India
India's current account slips into $2 billion deficit in May from year-ago surplus as trade gap widensJuly 15, 2026, 20:16 IST
Loading AI Hub...
Disclaimer : Certain content on this page, including summaries, timelines, FAQs, glossaries, highlights, insights, and other supplementary informational features, maybe generated or assisted by artificial intelligence tools. While reasonable efforts are made to review and verify such content, AI generated output may occasionally contain errors, omissions or inconsistencies. Readers are advised to independently verify any information before relying upon them for professional, legal, financial, medical or other decisions. The publisher along with its affiliates and contributors do not warrant accuracy of AI-generated content and disclaim any liability, loss or damage arising from its use.

India's current account slips into $2 billion deficit in May from year-ago surplus as trade gap widens

/2 min read

ADVERTISEMENT

The biggest drag on the current account came from merchandise trade, where the trade deficit widened to $27.9 billion in May from $22.6 billion a year ago.
India's current account slips into $2 billion deficit in May from year-ago surplus as trade gap widens
Merchandise exports increased to $46.1 billion from $38.7 billion, but imports rose at a faster pace to $74 billion from $61.3 billion, leading to a wider gap between the two. 

India's current account slipped into a $2 billion deficit in May 2026 from a $0.7 billion surplus a year earlier, as a wider merchandise trade deficit offset healthy services exports and stronger remittance inflows, according to preliminary data released by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Wednesday.

The current account records a country's transactions with the rest of the world, including trade in goods and services, investment income and remittances. A deficit means the country paid out more foreign exchange than it received during the period.

Sign up for Fortune India's ad-free experience
Enjoy uninterrupted access to premium content and insights.

Merchandise trade gap widens

The biggest drag on the current account came from merchandise trade, where the trade deficit widened to $27.9 billion in May from $22.6 billion a year ago.

Merchandise exports increased to $46.1 billion from $38.7 billion, but imports rose at a faster pace to $74 billion from $61.3 billion, leading to a wider gap between the two.

The services sector, however, continued to provide support. Net services exports stood at $15.7 billion, broadly stable from $15.8 billion in May 2025, with services exports rising to $33.4 billion. Services exports include sectors such as information technology, business services, financial services and travel.

India also received $13.6 billion in net transfers, primarily remittances sent home by Indians working overseas, up from $10.5 billion a year earlier.

Capital flows turn negative

The capital account, which tracks foreign investments and other capital flows, recorded a $2.4 billion deficit in May compared with a $3.7 billion surplus in the same month last year.

The deterioration was largely due to foreign portfolio investment (FPI) outflows. FPIs were net sellers of $4.7 billion during the month, compared with net inflows of $1.3 billion in May 2025. FPIs refer to overseas investors buying and selling Indian stocks, and bonds, and are generally considered more volatile than long-term investments.

Meanwhile, net foreign direct investment (FDI) stood at -$0.1 billion, compared with a positive $0.9 billion a year ago. While gross FDI inflows into India remained at $2.4 billion, overseas investments by Indian companies also stood at $2.4 billion, resulting in a marginally negative net figure.

Considering the combined impact of the current account and capital account, India's overall balance of payments recorded a $4.4 billion deficit in May, compared with a $4.4 billion surplus in the corresponding month last year.