
“Output growth eased across both manufacturing and services as the energy shock unfolds,” said Pranjul Bhandari, chief India economist at HSBC. Manufacturing activity weakened more sharply, with the PMI falling to 53.8 in March from 56.9 in February. Market volatility and consumer uncertainty linked to the conflict led to the slowest rise in factory output since August 2021. The services PMI eased to 57.2 from 58.1.
Inflationary pressures intensified during the month. Input costs, including oil, energy, food, aluminium, steel and chemicals, rose to a 45-month high, while selling prices increased to a seven-month high.
“Cost pressures intensified, but companies are absorbing part of the increase by squeezing margins,” said Bhandari.