India macro outlook brightens on lower oil prices, June FX package: HSBC

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India macro outlook brightens on lower oil prices, June FX package: HSBC

Synopsis

HSBC Global Investment Research has turned 'cautiously constructive' on Indian markets, citing $6.4 billion in bond inflows since early June, a rupee poised to outperform Asian peers, and a GDP forecast upgrade to 6.3% for FY27. The June FX package — rarely scrutinised in full — is quietly reshaping India's financial conditions from the ground up.

Key Takeaways

HSBC Global Investment Research says India's macro backdrop has improved on falling oil prices and the June FX package .
Foreign bond inflows have reached $6.4 billion since early June; equity flows have turned slightly positive in the past fortnight.
The June FX package includes deposit incentives for overseas Indians, cheaper FX swaps, tax concessions for overseas bond investors, and a wider investible bond universe.
HSBC raised its FY27 GDP forecast to 6.3% from 6% .
The firm forecasts the INR could outperform several Asian currencies, backed by a balance of payments surplus.
Broader constructive outlook is contingent on actual inflows and RBI liquidity or FX action.

India's macroeconomic backdrop has improved meaningfully, driven by falling global oil prices and a June foreign exchange package that has eased domestic financial conditions and attracted fresh capital inflows, according to a report by HSBC Global Investment Research released on Wednesday, 8 July 2025. Foreign investors have signalled growing confidence, with $6.4 billion in bond inflows recorded since early June and equity flows turning slightly positive over the past fortnight.

What the June FX Package Includes

The June FX package encompasses deposit incentives for overseas Indians, cheaper foreign exchange swaps for public sector undertakings and banks, tax concessions for overseas bond investors, and a wider universe of investible bonds. According to the HSBC report, these measures have collectively loosened domestic financial conditions. Notably, yields declined across instruments even before inflows driven by the package had gathered full pace — a signal that market expectations alone were doing some of the heavy lifting.

Currency and Equity Outlook

HSBC Global Investment Research forecasts that a balance of payments surplus, combined with improved investor sentiment, could enable the Indian rupee (INR) to outperform several other Asian currencies. On equities, the firm said a steadier rupee, better liquidity, lower oil prices, and stronger nominal GDP growth should be broadly supportive — though it cautioned that foreign institutional investor (FII) preference for the artificial intelligence (AI) theme may cap the scale of inflows even as sector rotation continues. The firm described its overall stance as 'cautiously constructive on Indian markets.'

Bond Market and Dollar Credit

Government bonds appear more 'overvalued' relative to 2013 levels, the report noted, but structural enhancements in 2026 — including the removal of the Foreign Institutional Investor tax and a broader investible bond set — could improve India's prospects for inclusion in global bond indices, supporting the asset class. In dollar credit, easier onshore conditions via improved domestic liquidity could reduce pressure on offshore USD corporate issuances by making local funding more competitive, according to the report.

GDP Forecast Raised

HSBC Global Investment Research recently raised its FY27 GDP growth forecast to 6.3% from an earlier estimate of 6%, reflecting the improved macro environment. The firm noted the shift in market tone: 'Falling oil prices and India's supportive FX package have improved the market outlook from risk-off towards gentle risk-on. Compared to 2013, FX and equities seem undervalued per our multi-asset model, and rates are benefiting from structural improvements.' It added that its broadly constructive stance across asset classes will depend significantly on actual inflows and the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) liquidity or foreign exchange actions going forward.

Point of View

Not a cyclical blip. The June FX package has rarely received granular attention in mainstream coverage, yet its multi-pronged design — covering diaspora deposits, PSU swaps, bond taxation, and index eligibility — suggests a deliberate attempt to broaden India's external funding base rather than defend the rupee reactively. The risk is execution: $6.4 billion in bond inflows is encouraging, but FII appetite for AI-linked US assets remains a formidable competing pull. If global risk sentiment sours or oil reverses, the 'gentle risk-on' framing could unravel quickly. The RBI's next move on liquidity will be the real signal to watch.
NationPress
8 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Why has India's macro outlook improved in mid-2025?
India's macroeconomic outlook has improved due to falling global oil prices and a June foreign exchange package that has eased domestic financial conditions and attracted capital inflows, according to HSBC Global Investment Research. Bond inflows have reached $6.4 billion since early June, and equity flows have turned slightly positive.
What does the June FX package include?
The June FX package includes deposit incentives for overseas Indians, cheaper foreign exchange swaps for public sector undertakings and banks, tax concessions for overseas bond investors, and a wider universe of investible bonds. These measures have collectively loosened domestic financial conditions, with yields declining even before inflows gathered pace.
What is HSBC's GDP forecast for India in FY27?
HSBC Global Investment Research has raised its FY27 GDP growth forecast for India to 6.3% from an earlier estimate of 6%, reflecting the improved macroeconomic environment and stronger nominal growth prospects.
How is the Indian rupee expected to perform against other Asian currencies?
HSBC forecasts that a balance of payments surplus and improved investor sentiment could enable the Indian rupee to outperform several other Asian currencies. A steadier rupee, combined with better liquidity and lower oil prices, is seen as broadly supportive for Indian equities as well.
What risks could limit India's market upside despite the improved outlook?
HSBC flagged that FII preference for the AI investment theme globally may cap the scale of inflows into Indian markets. The firm also noted that its broadly constructive stance depends significantly on actual inflows materialising and on the Reserve Bank of India's liquidity or foreign exchange actions.
Nation Press
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