×

Mideast war dampens India private sector growth, services pick up, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters May 21, 2026 | 12:05 AM

BENGALURU, May 21 (Reuters) – India’s private sector growth eased in May as a manufacturing slowdown driven by the Middle East war and cooling international ​demand offset a marginal pick-up in the service ‌economy, a survey showed.

• The HSBC flash Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), compiled by S&P Global, dipped to 58.1 this month from April’s final reading of 58.2, but was higher than a Reuters ‌poll ​median forecast for 58.0. The 50-mark ⁠separates expansion from contraction.

• ⁠May’s deceleration was primarily centred in manufacturing, where new orders expanded at one of the slowest rates in nearly four years and production growth eased to ​its second-weakest level since mid-2022. The factory PMI dropped to 54.3 in May from April’s 54.7.

• The services ⁠PMI business activity index offered ⁠a slight counterweight, rising to 58.9 from ​58.8.

• New export orders across the private economy grew at ​their weakest pace in 19 months with survey ‌respondents noting the Middle East conflict and travel disruptions dampened international demand.

• Overall input costs went up, driven by manufacturing outlays increasing at the steepest rate since July ⁠2022 amid higher prices for energy, steel, and food. Firms limited the pass-through of these overheads with output charges at ⁠the composite level ‌rising at the weakest pace since ⁠January.

• Service providers hired additional staff at ​the ‌greatest extent in nearly a year, outperforming ​the manufacturing ⁠sector where job creation softened.

• With business optimism retreating to a three-month low, the latest figures suggest persistent cost burdens and cooling global demand are beginning to test the resilience of India’s growth engine.

(Reporting by Anant Chandak; Editing ​by Jacqueline Wong)