West Asia Conflict May Cut India Inc Profitability by 200 Basis Points: Crisil
Quick Look
- A prolonged West Asia conflict could reduce India Inc's operating profitability by 200 basis points due to supply chain issues and rising costs, Crisil Ratings predicts.
- Despite this, strong company balance sheets are expected to maintain overall credit quality, though sectors like ceramics and airlines face severe stress.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
A prolonged conflict in West Asia is causing supply chain disruptions, elevated fuel and freight costs, and pricing pressures for Indian companies. Crisil Ratings conducted a stress test on 34 sectors, assuming crude oil prices at $110 per barrel and supply disruptions lasting nine months.
A prolonged West Asia conflict poses a risk to India Inc's profitability. Crisil Ratings predicts a significant drop in operating margins due to supply chain issues and rising costs. However, strong company balance sheets are expected to protect overall credit quality. Some sectors like ceramics and airlines face severe stress. Other export-oriented sectors might benefit from a weaker rupee.
A prolonged conflict in West Asia could shave nearly 200 basis points off India Inc’s operating profitability this fiscal, even as overall corporate credit quality remains resilient due to stronger balance sheets and sustained domestic demand, Crisil Ratings said on Monday.
In a stress test covering 34 sectors accounting for around 65% of its rated corporate debt, the ratings agency said companies are grappling with supply-chain disruptions, elevated fuel and freight costs, pricing pressures and a depreciating rupee as the geopolitical crisis stretches into its third month.
Crisil said it assumed crude oil prices averaging $110 per barrel this fiscal under the stress scenario, compared with its earlier base-case assumption of $95 per barrel, along with prolonged supply disruptions lasting nine months.
“Managing costs and profitability will be a bigger challenge than achieving topline growth,” said Subodh Rai, Managing Director, Crisil Ratings.
According to the agency, 22 of the 34 sectors analysed could witness operating profitability decline by more than 10% because of higher inventory costs and limited ability to fully pass on rising expenses to consumers immediately.
However, Crisil said robust corporate balance sheets would cushion the impact on credit quality. It expects only eight sectors, accounting for around 10% of rated corporate debt, to see material pressure on credit profiles.
India Inc’s median gearing has halved over the past decade to around 0.5 times as of March 2026, while interest coverage has doubled to over five times, giving companies sufficient financial flexibility to absorb profitability shocks, the report noted.
The ceramics sector is expected to face the sharpest stress, with revenue potentially falling by more than one-third and profitability halving due to gas shortages and supply disruptions.
Airlines are also likely to come under severe pressure from airspace closures, higher aviation fuel prices and rupee depreciation, with profitability estimated to decline by around 50%.
Other sectors facing moderately negative impact include polyester textiles, specialty chemicals, flexible packaging, auto components, diamond polishing and basmati rice exports.
Crisil said crude-linked industries would struggle to fully pass on higher raw material costs, while auto component makers may face delayed pass-through of increased freight and input expenses.
At the same time, export-oriented sectors such as pharmaceuticals, readymade garments, textiles, shrimp processing and electronics manufacturing could benefit from rupee depreciation.
The agency added that most Indian companies either maintain natural hedges through trade flows or have adequate forex cover, limiting the impact of currency volatility. It also noted that foreign-currency borrowings form a relatively small and largely hedged portion of India Inc’s debt.
Crisil maintained a “stable but cautious” outlook on overall corporate credit quality, warning that any prolonged escalation in the conflict could worsen inflationary pressures and disrupt demand further.
“While our outlook for India Inc’s credit quality remains stable, supported by strong corporate balance sheets and steady domestic demand, we maintain a cautious stance because of the uncertain trajectory of the West Asia conflict,” said Somasekhar Vemuri, Senior Director, Crisil Ratings.
Sectors where Crisil sees operating profitability declining more than 10% under the West Asia stress scenario:
Ceramics
Airlines
Polyester textiles
Diamond polishers
Specialty chemicals
Flexible packaging
Auto components
Basmati rice
Diversified large EPC
Consumer durables
PVC pipes
Paints
Auto CV
Construction — roads and bridges
Logistics
Fertilisers
Agro chemicals
Auto PV
Oil — downstream
Tyres
FMCG
Cement
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Operating profitability for India Inc to decline by nearly 200 basis points.
Very likely
Significant revenue fall and profitability halving for the ceramics sector.
Very likely
Profitability decline of around 50% for the airlines sector.
Very likely
Open Questions
- How long will the West Asia conflict continue?
- What further impact will rising crude oil prices have on inflation?
- Will companies be able to pass on increased costs to consumers?
- What specific government measures might be implemented to mitigate the impact?