Societe Generale economist Kunal Kundu expects India’s April headline Shopper Value Index (CPI) inflation to rise to three.9% year-on-year from 3.4% in March, pushed by food-and-beverages and gas elements. He highlights conflict-related vitality shocks, supply-chain stress in greens and edible oils, and rising pipeline dangers from fertilisers, El Niño-linked climate and low dam storage as key upside threats to India’s inflation outlook.
Meals, gas and climate dangers carry CPI
“We anticipate India’s headline CPI inflation for April to print at 3.9% yoy, a notable step-up from 3.4% yoy in March. We attribute this rise to conflict-related worth pressures and a renewed firming in food-and-beverages (F&B) and fuel-linked elements after a benign stretch. Whereas inflation would nonetheless be throughout the RBI’s tolerance band, the upward drift displays the primary clear pickup that emerged in March, largely pushed by these two channels.”
“The near-term narrative begins with meals, given its outsized weight within the CPI basket and the truth that current month-to-month volatility has been led by perishables and key cooking inputs. There’s a seen firming in choose greens (e.g., tomatoes and cauliflower), and there’s a significant threat that broader supply-chain stress might start to filter into the general meals invoice. Traditionally, when vegetable and edible oil costs rise in tandem, the impulse tends to turn out to be extra broad-based inside meals (contemporary and processed), reinforcing meals inflation as a key propagation channel into headline CPI.”
“We anticipate the April CPI print to supply a clearer learn on the vitality impulse, despite the fact that India’s administered gas pricing might mute rapid retail transmission. That stated, whereas the operation Epic Fury could also be over, true financial ache will manifest within the months forward. Over time, nonetheless, inflationary results can nonetheless floor by means of (i) LPG and family gas changes, and (ii) increased freight and enter prices that progressively feed into items and companies pricing.”
“Past rapid meals/gas prints, we’re monitoring pipeline dangers, notably fertilisers and imported agricultural enter costs, as these would possible form inflationary expectations of households over the approaching month. That is particularly related because the economic system faces triple whammy of i) pricey and sparse availability of fertilisers, ii) heatwave and potential monsoon failure exacerbated by among the many strongest El Niño seen in current historical past and iii) a sharply decrease water storage capability in main dams.”
(This text was created with the assistance of an Synthetic Intelligence instrument and reviewed by an editor.)

