India PMI drops to 57.4 in June as cost pressures, softer demand weigh on growth
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
India's private sector activity moderated in June 2025, with the HSBC Flash India PMI Composite Output Index slipping to a preliminary reading of 57.4 from 59.3 in May, according to the latest PMI data released on Tuesday. While the reading still signals a sharp pace of expansion, it marks the weakest growth since March, as geo-political tensions, rising input costs, and softening demand conditions combined to temper momentum.
Key Developments
The HSBC Flash India PMI Composite Output Index — a seasonally adjusted measure of month-on-month change in combined manufacturing and services output — fell by 1.9 points in June. Growth of manufacturing output softened as inventory-building lost steam following several months of elevated activity. Aggregate employment also expanded at a slower pace compared to recent months.
New orders continued to rise strongly overall, though the pace of demand growth eased, limiting how much companies could raise output levels. Export trends were mixed: services exports accelerated, while goods export growth hit its weakest point since March 2023.
What the Data Shows on Costs
Private sector companies continued to report month-on-month increases in expenses, driven by higher prices for chemicals, food, fuel, gas, metals, and utilities. Despite this, the overall rate of input cost inflation eased for the third successive month, reaching its lowest level since January. Cost pressures remained more pronounced in manufacturing than in services, according to the PMI data.
What Economists Said
Pranjul Bhandari, Chief India Economist at HSBC, noted that new export orders remained resilient and the order-to-inventory ratio ticked up, 'pointing at resilient manufacturing activity down the line.' She added that 'input costs across the private sector rose, but at the slowest pace in five months,' offering some relief on the inflation front.
Business Outlook and What Comes Next
Despite the moderation, companies remained confident of an increase in output over the coming 12 months relative to current levels, suggesting the underlying growth impulse is intact. Notably, this is the weakest composite PMI reading in three months, but a reading above 50 still denotes expansion — India's private sector has now remained in growth territory for an extended stretch. Markets and policymakers will watch whether geo-political headwinds and cost pressures persist into July, which could test the durability of India's services-led growth story.