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India’s factory growth stays sluggish in April amid war-led soaring costs, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters May 4, 2026 | 12:06 AM

BENGALURU, May 4 (Reuters) – India’s manufacturing growth edged up slightly in April but remained stuck near a four-year low as ​weak demand and soaring input costs ‌driven by the Middle East war weighed on activity, a survey showed.

• HSBC’s final India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index, compiled by S&P Global, rose to ‌54.7 ​last month from March’s 53.9, ⁠but was lower than ⁠a preliminary estimate of 55.9.

• The index has remained above the 50-mark separating expansion from contraction for almost five years. Still, ​April’s reading marked only a modest recovery from March’s 45-month low.

• Production and ⁠new orders – a key gauge ⁠of demand – each rose at ​the second-slowest pace since mid-2022 as firms cited ​competition, the U.S.-Israel war with Iran and ‌lower order approval.

• Cost burdens climbed to their highest since August 2022 as the war drove up prices for raw materials – especially fuel. ⁠Manufacturers lifted selling prices at the fastest pace in six months.

• Foreign demand provided a bright spot ⁠with export ‌orders expanding at the fastest ⁠pace in seven months.

• Despite subdued ​overall ‌sales, companies hired additional workers at ​the strongest ⁠pace in 10 months with firms citing expansion plans.

• Manufacturers also remained optimistic towards growth prospects and business sentiment reached its second-highest level since November 2024.

(Reporting by Anant ChandakEditing by ​Shri Navaratnam)