India's Consumer Sector Faces Headwinds Despite Strong H1 FY26 Performance
India's consumer and retail sector saw a strong first half of FY26. GST cuts and a favorable base effect boosted consumption. However, rising input costs from West Asia and monsoon uncertainty now pose risks. The second quarter of FY26 is a critical point as low-cost inventory depletes. Rural demand sentiment is also under pressure.
Better-than-expected consumption growth, driven by GST pass-through
Key inflection; when low-cost inventory runs out and margin pain begins
90%
Revised IMD monsoon forecast, down from 92%, a sentiment risk for rural demand
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Earnings surprise, but with caveats
India's consumer and retail sector has delivered a stronger-than-expected first half of FY26, according to Aditya Mathur, India Consumer and Retail Analyst at BofA Securities. After four to five sluggish quarters, both staples and discretionary have shown meaningful improvement, aided by the flow-through of recent GST cuts to end consumers and a favourable base effect. The bigger positive surprise, Mathur notes, has come from the staples segment, while discretionary categories have broadly held their double-digit momentum.
"Good performance so far, but we are now in a bit of a question mark on how the commodity impact and inflation are going to play out," says Aditya Mathur, talking to ET Now.
The GST–pricing equation
An important nuance in the current pricing cycle is that GST reductions earlier in the year brought consumer prices down across several categories. Now that companies have begun raising prices to offset commodity cost pressures, many products are still cheaper than they were a year ago. This has kept the demand impact of price hikes manageable so far, but Mathur cautions that the relief is unlikely to last. With low-cost inventory set to be exhausted by Q2, the full force of input cost inflation will begin hitting margins, making the second quarter a critical inflection point for the sector.
Tailwinds vs. headwinds
Tailwinds
GST cuts boosting consumer purchasing power
Reservoir levels in decent shape
Jewellery sector resilient
Discretionary double-digit growth holding
Headwinds
Oil-linked commodity cost surge
Price hikes insufficient to restore margins
Monsoon forecast cut to 90%
Rural sentiment under pressure
Monsoon and rural sentiment
The IMD's revised monsoon forecast of 90%, down from an earlier estimate of 92%, adds another layer of uncertainty. Mathur is careful not to call a crop crisis prematurely, pointing to adequate reservoir levels as a partial offset, but flags the sentiment impact on rural markets as the more immediate risk. With inflation already rising and the monsoon outlook uncertain, rural consumer confidence could soften even before any actual crop damage materialises.
Gold and jewellery: supply story intact, demand less certain
Jewellery has been among the most resilient discretionary categories over the past year, but recent headwinds, import duty changes, an austerity appeal from the Prime Minister on gold purchases, and the upcoming Adhik Maas period, have weighed on listed jewellery stocks. Mathur's view is broadly constructive on the supply side, arguing that any tightening of imports accelerates the formalisation of the industry, which is the sector's structural growth driver. However, he acknowledges that near-term demand pressure cannot be dismissed, making this a category to watch rather than chase at current levels.