CAD likely to be 1.5% in 2015-16: HSBC

The CAD in the first half of fiscal year 2014-2015 was 1.9 percent of GDP (USD 18 billion).

New Delhi: The current account deficit is likely to remain at "manageable levels" of around 1.5 percent of GDP in the current fiscal despite a marginal rise in oil prices and sluggish manufacturing exports, said an HSBC report.

"While risks on the current account deficit are building (rising oil prices, domestic demand recovery and sluggish manufactured exports), we expect the CAD to remain at manageable levels," HSBC Chief India Economist Pranjul Bhandari said in a research note.

Though the above factors pose a potential risk to the CAD going forward, Bhandari said: "We think the external accounts will remain at manageable levels (CAD will remain at the 1.5 percent of GDP) as long as oil remains under USD 80 and lower inflation keeps gold imports at reasonable levels".

As per the official data, India's exports contracted by about 14 percent in April to USD 22 billion due to a sharp dip in petroleum, gems and jewelery shipments, registering decline for the fifth straight month.

The slump in exports is mainly due to global slowdown and softening of crude, metal and commodity prices.

Imports too declined by 7.48 percent to USD 33 billion, leaving a trade deficit of USD 11 billion in April.

Even as gold imports shot up in March and April, HSBC said it is expected to "moderate further over the next few months".

The CAD, which is the difference between the inflow and outflow of foreign exchange, was 1.7 percent of GDP (USD 32.4 billion) in 2013-14.

The CAD in the first half of fiscal year 2014-2015 was 1.9 percent of GDP (USD 18 billion).

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