HomeNewsBusinessEconomyCAD may widen to 3% in September quarter on higher crude prices, gold imports: ICRA

CAD may widen to 3% in September quarter on higher crude prices, gold imports: ICRA

ICRA expects the current account deficit to widen sharply to USD 19-21 billion or 3 percent of GDP in Q2 (July-September) FY2019, from the modest USD 7 billion in Q2 FY2018, led by higher crude oil prices and gold imports, the credit rating agency said in a statement.

December 03, 2018 / 14:22 IST
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CRUDE-OIL
CRUDE-OIL

India's current account deficit is likely to rise to 3 percent of GDP in the July-September quarter of current fiscal, from 2.4 percent in the preceding quarter, driven mainly by high crude oil prices, ICRA said on Monday.

ICRA expects the current account deficit to widen sharply to USD 19-21 billion or 3 percent of GDP in Q2 (July-September) FY2019, from the modest USD 7 billion in Q2 FY2018, led by higher crude oil prices and gold imports, the credit rating agency said in a statement.

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"CAD would widen to USD 68-73 billion (2.6 percent of GDP) in FY 2019 from USD 48.7 billion in FY2018 (1.9 percent of GDP), if the price of the Indian basket of crude oil averages at USD 72/barrel in FY2019," ICRA Principal Economist Aditi Nayar said.

The CAD, which is the difference between the inflow and outflow of foreign currency, stood at 1.9 percent of GDP in 2017-18 fiscal and 0.6 percent of GDP in 2016-17.