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India’s budget retains focus on infrastructure and manufacturing

1

WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

India drop funding for Iran port; government weighs 49% FDI cap in state banks

Good afternoon, friends. India’s national budget for FY 2027 has landed, setting off a whirlwind of headlines as investors and policymakers across the globe tune in.

The big story today: India has raised public capital expenditure to INR 12.2 tn for FY 2027, maintaining state spending as the main driver of growth for another fiscal year. Manufacturing and infrastructure remain key priorities on the policy agenda. Economist Salman Anees Soz tells EnterpriseAM that this Budget signals continuity, not reinvention: big sectoral allocations without a new growth agenda.

And quietly- New Delhi has cut all funding for Iran’s Chabahar port, raising fresh questions over India’s long-sought access to Central Asia and Europe, as US sanctions may force India out of the project.

Meanwhile: India and the Arab League have set an ambitious trade target of USD 500 bn by 2030, with a focus on green energy initiatives, startups, and tech innovation.

All of that and more, below.

Watch this space

CORRIDOR WATCH — India has made no budgetary allocation for the Chabahar port project in Iran in its latest budget, after setting aside INR 1 bn (USD 10.9 mn) last year, later revised to INR 4 bn (USD 43.6 mn), The Week reports.

Why it matters: The port is being developed under a framework involving India, Iran and Afghanistan and has been positioned by New Delhi as a key maritime route to Afghanistan and Central Asia, bypassing Pakistan. The funding cut raises fresh uncertainty over New Delhi’s long-planned access route to Central Asia, Russia and the EU following US sanctions against India’s involvement in the port, imposed last year. India did secure a six-month sanctions waiver for the project which will expire in April. If the US sanctions persist, India may be forced to withdraw from the project.

India has shifted financial obligations linked to the project, estimated at about INR 11 bn (USD 120 mn), to Tehran following new US trade and sanctions measures, while the Indian government maintains that “existing Chabahar is not an option,” the news outlet added. The budget move has been described as a “tactical freeze, not a retreat” and India’s foreign ministry said last month it was in talks with the US on issues related to the Chabahar project.


FINANCE — The Indian government is holding inter-ministerial consultations to more than double the foreign direct investment ceiling in state-owned banks to 49% from the current 20%, Reuters reports, citing a senior finance ministry official. The proposal, still under discussion with the Reserve Bank of India, aims to aid public sector banks access fresh capital while the government retains a minimum 51% stake.

Why it matters: By narrowing the gap between public banks and private lenders (which are permitted upto 74% FDI), New Delhi is targeting passive institutional inflows, potentially exceeding USD 4 bn.

In context: As Emirates NBD clears institutional hurdles for a proposed USD 3 bn acquisition of Indian private lender RBL Bank, the discussions to raise the 49% FDI cap are specifically designed to attract this exact profile — sovereign wealth pools from developed markets, including the UAE and Saudi Arabia, eyeing stable, long-term yield backed by the Indian state.

As part of the Union Budget, Nirmala Sitharaman announced a high-level committee to review the banking system and chart reforms aligned with India’s long-term economic vision toward 2047, citing stronger balance sheets, record profitability and improved asset quality. This comes amid rising foreign investor interest in India’s financial sector.


CAPITAL MARKETS — India is moving to tap diaspora pockets for its equity markets following sustained selling by Foreign Institutional Investors. A non-resident Indian (classified under Foreign Exchange Management Act) can acquire up to 10% of the stake in a listed Indian company, up from the current 5% of limit. Similarly, a group of non-resident shareholders can hold up to 24% equity in a listed firm, Bloomberg reports.

Why now? Foreign investors pulled more than USD 3 bn out of Indian equities in January, extending net outflows of over USD 18 bn recorded last year. The INR has fallen 2.3% so far this year, the weakest performance among Asian currencies over the period amid tepid foreign investors.

Why it matters: Wealth managers and alternative investment funds will target Indian diaspora and family-offices based in financial hubs including Abu Dhabi and Dubai for capital market investments. Diaspora investors are seen as longer-term capital allocators compared with global portfolio funds.

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Happening today

India’s Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar will begin his 3-day visit to the US which will run through Thursday, 5 February. Jaishankar will attend a ministerial meeting on critical minerals convened by the US Secretary of State Marco Rubio while also holding talks on India-US trade agreement amid 50% tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump, according to The Hindu.

The big story abroad

It’s a quiet Monday morning in the global business press, with one story dominating the headlines — the gold and silver crash. Bloomberg is out with a piece looking at the role Chinese speculators played in the metals’ rally and subsequent crash. The rally seen by gold, sustained over years by central banks hedging against potential losses from the USD, was intensified in recent weeks by a wave of buying from Chinese investors and equity funds.

Then came the selloff: As soon as the greenback started heading upwards, boosted by news of Kevin Warsh’s nomination as Fed Chair, Shanghai cashed out its holdings in gold. The fallout saw the metal dropping at one point by more than USD 200 an ounce in ten minutes.

Silver was another casualty of the sudden twist of fate, dropping by 27% on Friday — its biggest drop on record.

^^ We have more on the rebound of the USD and gold crash in this morning’s Planet Finance.

CLOSER TO HOME- Egypt, Qatar, Turkey to broker US-Iran talks this week: The Trump administration is reportedly open to a diplomatic solution with Iran, as Egypt, Qatar, and Turkey work to broker a sitdown in Ankara this week, Axios reported, citing sources it says are in the know. Negotiations would involve a meeting between White House envoy Steve Witkoff and high level Iranian officials to discuss averting the breakout of a regional war.

Circle your calendar

Check out our full calendar on the web for a comprehensive listing of upcoming news events, national holidays and news triggers.

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THE BIG STORY TODAY

Budget 2026: India expands capex raised USD 133 bn while doubling down on manufacturing

Doubling down on state-led growth model: India’s Union Budget 2026-27, presented by finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Sunday, kept the state-led growth strategy intact, raising public capital expenditure to INR 12.2 tn (USD 133 bn) for FY 2027 (starting in April) from INR 10.9 tn (USD 119 bn) in the current fiscal. Government spending will continue to be the primary engine of the economy, relying on massive infrastructure outlays and a patchwork of sector-specific incentives to drive manufacturing but without introducing a new growth framework.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background and outside sources.)

The approach reflects continuity rather than a shift in growth strategy, Economist Salman Anees Soz told EnterpriseAM. “The government is still leaning on the same two pillars — public capital expenditure to hold up growth, and a manufacturing narrative to signal long-term competitiveness. India still needs infrastructure and deeper supply chains. But there is no new growth model in this Budget,” Anees told EnterpriseAM, adding that the announcements read as sectoral allocations rather than a unified economic strategy.

Manufacturing push without a private-investment engine

Key initiatives to bolster manufacturing:

  • An enhanced outlay to INR 400 bn (USD 4.8 bn) has been announced for the electronics components manufacturing scheme announced in 2025.
  • The budget allocated an INR 100 bn (USD 1.2 bn) for a new scheme that envisions a global biopharma manufacturing hub in India.
  • The government has also announced the second phase of its semiconductor manufacturing scheme to “to produce equipment and materials, design full-stack Indian IP, and fortify supply chains.”
  • Rare earth corridors: A proposal to establish dedicated corridors in Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu to promote mining and processing of rare earth minerals. This builds on the existing programs on critical minerals and expands spending on recycling initiatives.
  • For textile manufacturing, the government will provide support capital for machinery and tech upgrades, while continuing work under its earlier textile park scheme, which includes seven integrated textile manufacturing hubs. Duties on shuttle-less looms have been reduced to nil.
  • Data centre build out: A 20-year tax holiday for foreign companies providing global cloud services using Indian data centres as well as simplified tax compliance norms.

Private engine missing: While the government is increasing its capital push in manufacturing, a credible second engine of growth is missing — “without a serious push to improve private investment conditions and productivity at scale, public spending and selective industrial schemes cannot carry growth on their own,” according to Anees.

The lack of an integrated industrial strategy is most visible in India’s approach to critical and strategic supply chains, Anees argues, stating that reducing India’s dependence on China in critical minerals “requires far more than corridor announcements.”

As a result, private investment has not picked up meaningfully for many years. “There has been some improvement in parts of the private sector, but nothing comparable to earlier investment cycles. India is sending more investment abroad than it is receiving. That reflects confidence and return issues in the domestic investment climate.” Anees said.

Customs reform

The budget also announces trade-facilitation measures including a new Customs Integrated System, a single digital clearance window, risk-based audits and expanded non-intrusive scanning. These measures amount to incremental modernisation rather than a full overhaul of the customs architecture.

“India’s biggest challenge remains inconsistency and discretionary enforcement. What is permitted at one port often becomes a dispute at another. That unpredictability is far more damaging than the absence of technology,” Anees pointed out.

Gift City tax holiday extension

The government has doubled the tax holiday for businesses establishing operations in Gujarat’s International Finance Tec-City (Gift City) to 20 years. Many Gulf based companies including SWFs, ins. firms and banks will benefit with an extended tax holiday as more firms line up to establish offices in the Gift city.

The missing reform agenda

The main gap in the budget is the absence of an economy-wide reform agenda focused on private-sector growth. “Instead of setting up multiple committees for different sectors, the country should establish a “high-level, cross-sector commission focused specifically on bolstering private-sector growth and job creation,” Anees said.

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DIPLOMACY

India, Arab eye USD 500 bn trade target by 2030

India and the 22-member League of Arab States are aiming to raise bilateral trade to USD 500 bn by 2030, from the current USD 240 bn, as top diplomats including foreign ministers met in New Delhi for the India-Arab Foreign Ministers’ Meeting. The summit culminated into a joint Delhi Declaration, released by India's Foreign Ministry.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background and outside sources.)

Why this matters: To hit the USD 500 bn target by 2030 — a 108% increase from current levels — the corridor requires a compound annual growth rate of roughly 15.8% over the next five years. While fossil fuels remain a bedrock of bilateral trade, the new roadmap pivots toward Green Hydrogen and strategic petroleum reserves. This secures India’s immediate energy needs while aligning with the Arab region’s post-oil diversification.

Energy dependence to interoperability: Alongside trade, the roadmap is a move to institutionalize a tech and trade corridor prioritizing certain future growth sectors: health tech, fintech, agritech, and green technologies. The summit also announced the creation of India-Arab Space cooperation group and initiatives on linking startup ecosystems.

The forum adopted an economic cooperation agenda for 2026-28 focussed on energy, environment, agriculture, food security, digital tech, startups, tourism and culture. The talks reflected shifts in the global order, particularly in the Middle East with both sides seeking to capitalize on shared economic growth and demographic strengths, India’s Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar said.

Local currency for trade: The ministerial agreement to explore a local currency settlement system (similar to the 2023 India-UAE MoU) is an attempt to insulate regional trade from USD volatility. If scaled across the 22-member League, it could significantly lower transaction costs for Indian exporters in sectors like gold, food, and pharmaceuticals.

In context: We covered the scope of roadblocks faced by India in settling trade bills with the UAE in INR and why its adoption remains difficult.

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TRADE

UAE’s non-oil trade hits AED 3.8 tn record

The UAE’s non-oil foreign trade hit AED 3.8 tn last year, marking a record high and a 26.8% rise y-o-y, according to a post on X from Prime Minister Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum and state news agency Wam. The results come as average global trade saw a smaller 7% uptick, Foreign Trade Minister Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi told Wam. Non-oil foreign trade hit AED 2.8 tn in 2024.

CEPA agreements were credited with driving the rise, with 14 new agreements coming into effect by the end of last year. Trade agreements led to an uptick in trade with India (+15%), Turkey (+15%), Malaysia (+22%), and Australia (+37%).

Why it matters: India and the UAE are seeking to expand bilateral trade to USD 200 bn by 2032, half of which will come from non oil trade. However, India’s exports to the UAE have stagnated with UAE doubling its exports from USD 26.1 bn in 2015 to USD 63.4 bn in 2025. As a result the bilateral trade remains tilted in favour of UAE with a USD 27 bn trade deficit record in 2025.

The details: On the export side, non-oil trade volumes surpassed AED 813 bn, up 45.5% from 2024’s figure and accounting for 21.6% of total trade. That’s lower than imports, which came in at AED 2.1 tn during the year, up 25.7% y-o-y. However, re-exports — which came in at AED 830.2 — helps nearly bridge the gap between both.

The results put the Emirates 95% of the way toward its goal of reaching AED 4 tn in non-oil foreign trade by 2031 — which was already expected to be brought forward to 2027, Dubai Media Office said last summer.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background and outside sources.)

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5

ALSO ON OUR RADAR

India tops the list of new business inflows into the RAK Economic Zone

India emerged the largest source of new businesses at the Ras Al Khaimah Economic Zone (Rakez) in 2025, accounting for 33% of the 19k companies registered during the year, WAM reports.

Rakez’s new registrations rose 44% y-o-y, taking its total business community beyond 40k firms. Services-led licences dominated additions, with strong interest from consultancies, trading firms and digital-first enterprises using the emirate as a base for regional expansion.

Why it matters: The emirate of Ras Al Khaimah is rivalling Dubai as the soft-landing hub for Indian small and medium enterprises as well as tech startups by pricing licenses at AED 6k — nearly 60-70% cheaper than premium Dubai freezones. Rakez also signed an MoU with the UAE-India CEPA Council in late 2025 specifically to fast-track Indian startups into the emirate.

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PLANET FINANCE

USD rebound sends gold crashing

A week of sharp market swings showed how quickly crowded trades can reverse. Tns of USD shifted as consensus bets stumbled, revealing the delicate positioning beneath an otherwise resilient bull market, Bloomberg reports. Precious metals bore the brunt of the volatility, with gold seeing its sharpest drop in decades and silver suffering a record-breaking plunge.

What happened? The USD index posted its biggest single-day gain since May, strengthening the greenback and unwinding the debasement trade that had fueled metals. The rebound crushed short-USD positions, sending gold down more than 9% and silver about 27% in a single session while triggering the worst relative day for emerging-market equities versus US stocks since May.

The selloff followed an extended period of crowding where gold had been trading around 44% above its long-term trendline — a premium last seen in 1980. Long gold was already flagged as the most crowded global trade, according to Bank of America’s fund manager survey for January, leaving markets vulnerable to a violent correction once sentiment turned.

What drove everyone to metals? The ever-increasing uncertainty taking over the global stage since January, fueled by unpredictable decisions made by the Trump administration, such as the sudden military operation in Venezuela and the looming threat of attacks on Iran.

“The unthinkable has been happening daily. The rally was obviously too much too fast,” Nicky Shiels, analyst at MKS Pam, told the Financial Times.

The Warsh effect: The selloff accelerated after US President Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve chair, with his hawkish reputation reviving uncertainty over the future path of rate cuts, according to Bloomberg analysts.

Investors weigh next moves: Some investors who rode gold’s rally are now questioning whether the pullback signals an early warning or just a pause. Jeff Muhlenkamp, whose USD 270 mn fund has benefited from the rally, told the business news service that the drop complicates exit decisions, as selling too soon risks missing further upside.

MARKETS THIS MORNING-

It is shaping up to be another eventful week for markets, as investors digest the latest fluctuations in gold and silver prices, the USD’s rebound after hitting lows not seen in years, and Trump’s nominee for Jay Powell’s replacement as Fed chair. Asia-Pacific markets were in the red this morning in early trading, with South Korea’s Kospi leading losses.

Sensex

81,240

+0.64% (YTD: -5%)

NIFTY 50

24,946

+0.5% (YTD: -4.6%)

ADX

10,314

+0.3% (YTD: +2.9%)

DFM

6,518

+1.3% (YTD: +6.4%)

Tadawul

11,213

+0.4% (YTD: +6.9%)

EGX30

46,973

-1.4% (YTD: +12.3%)

Boursa Kuwait

8,096

+0.07% (YTD: -2.5%)

QSE

11,351

+0.1% (YTD: +5.3%)

S&P 500

6,939

-0.4% (YTD: -1.3%)

FTSE 100

10,200

-0.2% (YTD: -2.9%)

Euro Stoxx 50

5,926

-0.3% (YTD: +2.7%)

Brent crude

USD 65.54

-5.4%

Natural gas (Nymex)

USD 3.63

-16%

Gold

USD 4,646

-4.5%

BTC

USD 76,940

-2.6%

The values in the table above are listed according to the market position as of 3:30pm IST / 2pm GST.


FEBRUARY

2-8 February (Monday-Sunday): IndOman International Film Festival, Muscat.

3-6 February (Tuesday-Friday): ChemTECH World Expo, Jio World Convention Centre, Mumbai.

9-10 February (Monday-Tuesday): Pune International Business Summit (PIBS), SL Kirloskar Convention Center, JW Marriott, Pune.

14-18 February (Saturday-Wednesday): IHGF Delhi Fair (Spring), New Delhi.

16-20 February (Thursday-Friday): India-AI Impact Summit, Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.

25 February (Wednesday): World Sustainable Development Summit, Taj Palace, New Delhi.

MARCH

4 March (Wednesday): Holi.

12 March (Thursday): ET Entrepreneur Summit & Awards, Bengaluru.

19-22 March (Thursday-Sunday): Bharat Urja Manthan - Global Energy Conclave, New Delhi.

20 March (Friday): Eid Ul-Fitr.

23-25 March (Monday-Wednesday): Indiasoft: International IT Exhibition & Conference, New Delhi

23-25 March (Monday-Wednesday): Smart Cities Expo, Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.

23-25 March (Monday-Wednesday): Plastiworld India, Jio World Convention Centre, Mumbai.

31 March (Tuesday): Mahavir Jayanti.

Signposted to happen sometime in March 2026

  • Election Commission of India is expected to announce polling dates for elections in the states of Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal, Assam, and the union territory, Puducherry.
  • Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s visit to India.

APRIL

3 April (Friday): Good Friday.

23-25 April (Thursday-Saturday): Rail & Metro Technology Conclave, Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.

29 April-2 May (Wednesday-Saturday): Bharat Buildcon, Yashobhoomi, Dwarka, Delhi.

7-10 April (Tuesday-Friday), India Rubber Expo, ITPO, Pragati Maidan, Delhi.

MAY

1 May (Friday): Buddha Purnima.

26 May (Tuesday): Eid Ul-Adha.

JUNE

24-25 June (Wednesday-Thursday): India Homeland Security Expo, Bharat Mandapam, Pragati Maidan, New Delhi.

26 June (Friday): Muharram.

Signposted to happen sometime in 1H 2026:

AUGUST

15 August (Saturday): Independence Day.

26 August (Wednesday): Prophet Mohammad’s Birthday.

OCTOBER

2 October (Friday): Gandhi Jayanti (Mahatma Gandhi’s Birthday).

20 October (Tuesday): Dussehra.

NOVEMBER

24 November (Tuesday): Guru Nanak Jayanti.

DECEMBER

8-11 December (Tuesday-Thursday), Expand North Star, Dubai.

25 December (Friday): Christmas Day.

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