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Fitch Retains India's Credit Rating at 'BBB-' on Robust Growth, External Finances

The proposed 50% US tariffs on India pose a moderate downside risk to its 6.5% GDP growth forecast for the current fiscal

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  • Fitch Ratings retained India’s sovereign credit rating at ‘BBB-’ with stable outlook, citing robust growth and strong external finances.

  • Proposed 50% US tariffs on India pose a moderate downside risk to Fitch’s 6.5% GDP growth forecast for FY26, unchanged from FY25.

  • India’s medium-term growth potential is estimated at 6.4%, supported by public capex, private investment, and favourable demographics.

Fitch Ratings on Monday retained India's sovereign credit rating at 'BBB-' with a stable outlook on robust growth and external finances.

The proposed 50% US tariffs on India pose a moderate downside risk to its 6.5% GDP growth forecast for the current fiscal, the agency said.

"India's economic outlook remains strong relative to peers, even as momentum has moderated in the past two years," Fitch said, adding the ratings are supported by its robust growth and solid external finances.

'BBB-' is the lowest investment grade rating and comes within a fortnight of another global rating agency S&P upgrading India's credit rating by a notch to 'BBB'. This was S&P's first upgrade for India in over 18 years.

Another global rating agency Morning DBRS, had, in May this year, upped India's rating to 'BBB', citing structural reforms.

Fitch's forecast of GDP growth at 6.5% in the fiscal year ending March 2026 (FY26) is unchanged from FY25, and well above the 'BBB' median of 2.5%.

It estimates India's medium-term growth potential at 6.4%, led by strong public capex, a private investment pick up and favourable demographics.

"Proposed goods and services tax (GST) reforms, if adopted, would support consumption, offsetting some of these growth risks," Fitch added.

The Centre has proposed to the Group of Ministers on GST rate rationalisation a 2-tier rate structure of 5 and 18% for 'merit' and 'standard' goods and services, and a 40% rate for 5-7 goods. The proposal entails doing away with the current 12 and 28% tax slabs.

"The government's deregulation agenda and GST reforms should support incremental growth. Passage of other significant reforms, especially on land and labour laws, seems politically difficult. Still, some state governments are likely to advance such reforms. India has signed several bilateral trade agreements, but trade barriers remain relatively high," Fitch said.

The rating agency said a strengthening record on delivering growth with macro stability and improving fiscal credibility should drive a steady improvement in India's structural metrics, including GDP per capita, and increase the likelihood that debt can trend modestly downward in the medium term.

Fitch, however, flagged fiscal metrics as a credit weakness, given the high deficits and debt compared to 'BBB' peers.

"Lagging structural metrics, including governance indicators and GDP per capita, also constrain the rating," the agency said. 

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