India-US trade: Exports rebound in November; supply-chain shifts and holiday restocking drive recovery, says GTRI
India’s exports to the US bounced back in November after two months of dip. The rebound was largely supported by supply-chain adjustments and pre-holiday season inventory restocking, according to the Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI).
This recovery came despite the US imposing 50 per cent tariffs on Indian goods since August.
GTRI said the rebound came after a sharp fall in exports earlier in the year, triggered by uncertainty surrounding impending tariff hikes. GTRI Founder Ajay Srivastava said US buyers initially delayed orders and ran down inventories. “Once the higher tariffs became certain, exporters and US buyers began adjusting, absorbing part of the cost, renegotiating prices, and shifting toward less-affected or hard-to-substitute products,” he said.
However, the think tank also warned that this recovery might not last. They claimed that it was more about adjusting to tougher tariffs rather than a permanent improvement. The think tank also added that businesses were using short-term strategies to cope with the new trade environment.
Get an chance to win ₹5000 Amazon Voucher by taking part in India's Biggest Habit Index! Take the survey here
November India-US trade snapshot amid higher tariffs
- Exports to the US rose 22.61 per cent in November to $6.98 billion, reversing declines seen between May and September.
- Smartphones (largest export item): Exports fell from $2.29 billion in May to $884.6 million in September, before rising to $1.8 billion.
- Gems and jewellery: Slumped from $500.2 million in May to $202.8 million in September, then rebounded to $406.2 million.
- Machinery and mechanical appliances: Declined to $516.8 million in September, before nearly returning to peak levels at $614.6 million in November.
- Pharmaceuticals: Shipments rose to $669.2 million in November, but remained below May levels.
- Mineral fuels and oils (tariff-exempt): Fell from $291.5 million in May to $251.5 million in September, before climbing to $274.3 million.
GTRI said the rebound came after a sharp fall in exports earlier in the year, triggered by uncertainty surrounding impending tariff hikes. GTRI Founder Ajay Srivastava said US buyers initially delayed orders and ran down inventories. “Once the higher tariffs became certain, exporters and US buyers began adjusting, absorbing part of the cost, renegotiating prices, and shifting toward less-affected or hard-to-substitute products,” he said.
However, the think tank also warned that this recovery might not last. They claimed that it was more about adjusting to tougher tariffs rather than a permanent improvement. The think tank also added that businesses were using short-term strategies to cope with the new trade environment.
Get an chance to win ₹5000 Amazon Voucher by taking part in India's Biggest Habit Index! Take the survey here
Expand
Top Comment
n
null
1 day ago
We can use gobar gas and rare earths extracted from our ghand. With rupee low this should help a lot with exports. Free world so good. We should isolate Iran and ditch Russia. Then we should fight China so free world can relax. Icing on cake will be to liberate Taiwan. Then we can shake our ghand and do mujh ra together with pakistan and bangladesh. Sonce they are free world and garden of democracy as per US. That's the high iq genius strategy we should have.Read allPost comment
Popular from Business
- Gold price hits record high! Yellow metal jumps to $4,383.76 in early trade — What's driving the rally?
- Why linking Google Sign-In makes accessing TOI+ easier
- From March 1, Air India to stop non-stops to San Francisco from Mumbai, Bengaluru
- Trai's '12-minute-per-hour' cap: Regulator asks broadcasters to comply with limit; 'no express stay on regulation'
- Groww, Lenskart & more: Stock recommendations by brokers for today — check details
end of article
Trending Stories
05:39 Bangladesh to scale back diplomatic presence in India? What its FM Touhid Hossain said- Hijab row: Doctor whose naqab was pulled by Nitish Kumar fails to join duty; officials report no contact
04:19 A reunion without laughter: The last goodbye to Sreenivasan- Bengal Babri row: Suspended TMC MLA Humayun Kabir floats new party; CM Mamata hits back
- Saudi Arabia honours Asim Munir: Pakistan army chief conferred King Abdulaziz Medal of Excellence; defence ties in focus
- 'A big hug from me': Smriti Mandhana touches hearts as she replies to young Kashmiri fan
09:41 India-New Zealand FTA: Zero duty on 100% Indian exports - what the deal means for trade, MSMEs & Indian workers & students
Featured in Business
- US markets today: Wall Street opens higher in holiday-shortened week; S&P 500 nears record
12:45 India-New Zealand FTA: Pact allows dairy processing for re-export; Piyush Goyal rules out market opening- Railway stocks rebound: IRCTC and Jupiter Wagons lead gains; Budget capex hopes lift stocks
- Worldwide US alert: Embassy offers pointers to H-1B, H-4 visa applicants amid social media checks; what has changed
- 'Neither free nor fair': New Zealand foreign minister opposes India FTA; dairy, immigration cited
- Stats overhaul: New inflation and GDP base year series slated for February; IIP to follow in May
Photostories
- Discover the secret of financial success according to your birth date
- Top 10 richest countries in the world in 2025
- 7 simple fruit plants ideal for a lush balcony garden
- 6 quirky book titles that instantly spark curiosity at first glance
- Soya chunks vs Soya chaap vs Baked beans: Which has more protein and nutrition
- Kashmir: Chillai Kalan arrives as fresh snowfall turns the Valley into a winter wonderland — what exactly is it?
- Fatty liver disease, social media myths and the risk of self-diagnosis
- From Japan to Ukraine: 7 weird yet wonderful Christmas traditions from different countries that bring families and people together
- Major relief for Bengaluru commuters: Kamaraj Road between Cubbon Road-Cauvery Emporium junction likely to reopen next year inJanuary
- Surfing Santa: 5 countries in the world that celebrate summer Christmas
Up Next