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India’s services growth slows to 14-month low as Middle East war hits demand, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Apr 6, 2026 | 12:13 AM

BENGALURU, April 6 (Reuters) – India’s services sector grew at its weakest pace in 14 months in March as the Middle East war dampened domestic demand, a ​survey showed on Monday, though overseas orders hit ‌a near record while input cost pressures were at their most intense since mid-2022.

Here are the key details:

• The final HSBC India Services Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), compiled by S&P Global, fell to 57.5 in ‌March ​from February’s 58.1, but was higher ⁠than a preliminary estimate of ⁠57.2.

• New business – a key gauge for demand – rose at the slowest pace since January 2025 with firms citing competition, difficult market dynamics and fading domestic demand.

• ​Business activity was constrained by the impact of the Middle East war on demand, market conditions and tourism, according ⁠to survey respondents.

• Growth in ⁠foreign orders climbed to the second-highest since the ​index was added to the survey in September 2014, topped ​only by June 2024.

• Input costs rose at the ‌fastest pace in 45 months.

• Prices charged to clients climbed at the quickest rate in seven months but lagged cost inflation by the widest margin in close to three years. ⁠Services firms transferred part of their additional cost burdens to clients but continued to absorb some of it, the survey showed.

• Employment ⁠expanded for a ‌third straight month and at the strongest ⁠pace since June 2025 as business confidence ​strengthened ‌to its highest in nearly 12 years. Firms ​were optimistic ⁠about improving demand and market conditions.

• The slowdown in services, combined with manufacturing growth hitting a near-four-year low, pushed the overall Composite PMI to 57.0 in March from 58.9, marking the weakest expansion in nearly three-and-a-half years.

(Reporting by Anant ChandakEditing ​by Shri Navaratnam)