Wholesale prices are up — your bills could be next
Indian consumers may soon feel the pinch a little harder.
Your budget could be heading for a price hike, even if the warning signs haven’t fully reached the grocery bill yet. Global analytics firm Crisil has flagged that a sharp surge in wholesale inflation may soon enter everyday household expenses, and today’s relatively soft retail inflation could get costlier in the months ahead.
In its latest Quickonomics note, the firm highlighted an increasing gap between Wholesale Price Index (WPI)-based inflation and Consumer Price Index (CPI)-based inflation, arguing that the current mismatch may not last.
April 2026 saw WPI inflation climb steeply to 8.3%, a dramatic rise from 3.9% in March, while CPI inflation rose only marginally to 3.48% from 3.40%. The wholesale inflation spike was primarily driven by the ongoing Middle East conflict, which has pushed up global commodity prices and intensified pressure on energy and industrial inputs. According to CRISIL, the full impact of these disruptions has not yet materially reflected in consumer inflation.
The report stated, “In April 2026, WPI-based inflation (at 8.3%) decisively surpassed a benign CPI, which printed 3.5%, hit by the West Asia conflict. The upside risk to inflation from the conflict is yet to materially reflect in CPI. Between March and April, CPI inflation moved gradually to 3.48% from 3.40%, while WPI inflation spiked to 8.3% from 3.9%, reflecting higher input and energy costs.”
This means that while households are currently seeing relatively moderate retail inflation, producers and manufacturers are already facing a much sharper rise in costs.
CRISIL explained that this divergence stems from the way the two inflation measures are structured.
The latest wholesale surge has been especially pronounced in fuel and raw material categories.
Between February and April:
Such increases matter because higher production costs often do not remain confined to factories for long.
From wholesale, into consumer’s pockets
Crisil warned that sustained wholesale inflation tends to feed into consumer inflation over time as businesses pass on higher costs to protect margins. While the transmission is not immediate, sectors facing prolonged cost pressure may eventually raise prices for end-consumers.
That could affect fuel, transportation, packaged products and a wide range of household essentials.
The agency expects CPI inflation to average 5.1% this fiscal, significantly above last fiscal’s 2%.
“Rising WPI inflation means higher input costs for industry. This puts pressure on the margins of companies. Faced with significant rise in input costs, companies will start passing the same to end-consumers (WPI to CPI transmission) to avoid excessive pressure on margins,” the ratings firm said.
Among the factors expected to push retail inflation higher are persistently elevated crude prices, increased domestic fuel costs, depreciating rupee that raises import expenses, and possible food inflation due to heatwaves and an expected below-normal monsoon linked to El Nino. At the same time, a statistical low-base effect from last year’s unusually soft CPI reading could further exaggerate the inflation climb.
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In its latest Quickonomics note, the firm highlighted an increasing gap between Wholesale Price Index (WPI)-based inflation and Consumer Price Index (CPI)-based inflation, arguing that the current mismatch may not last.
April 2026 saw WPI inflation climb steeply to 8.3%, a dramatic rise from 3.9% in March, while CPI inflation rose only marginally to 3.48% from 3.40%. The wholesale inflation spike was primarily driven by the ongoing Middle East conflict, which has pushed up global commodity prices and intensified pressure on energy and industrial inputs. According to CRISIL, the full impact of these disruptions has not yet materially reflected in consumer inflation.
The report stated, “In April 2026, WPI-based inflation (at 8.3%) decisively surpassed a benign CPI, which printed 3.5%, hit by the West Asia conflict. The upside risk to inflation from the conflict is yet to materially reflect in CPI. Between March and April, CPI inflation moved gradually to 3.48% from 3.40%, while WPI inflation spiked to 8.3% from 3.9%, reflecting higher input and energy costs.”
CRISIL explained that this divergence stems from the way the two inflation measures are structured.
- WPI captures price movements in wholesale markets and is more closely tied to production costs and commodity cycles, making it highly responsive to global disruptions.
- CPI, on the other hand, tracks the prices consumers pay for goods and services and includes a broader basket, including services.
The latest wholesale surge has been especially pronounced in fuel and raw material categories.
Between February and April:
- Crude petroleum inflation soared from -1.3% to 88.1%
- Furnace oil jumped from -15.5% to 74.2%
- Natural gas rose from -4.7% to 24.9%
- Minerals accelerated from 11.5% to 12.1%
| WPI inflation rate (%) | Feb-26 | Mar-26 | Apr-26 |
| Minerals | 11.5 | 3.2 | 12.1 |
| Crude petroleum | -1.3 | 51.6 | 88.1 |
| Natural gas | -4.7 | 3.9 | 24.9 |
| Liquefied petroleum gas | -4.6 | -1.5 | 10.9 |
| Furnace oil | -15.5 | 9.7 | 74.2 |
| Manufacture of vegetable and animal oils and fats | 0.4 | 1.7 | 4.4 |
| Manufacture of basic chemicals | 3.4 | 4 | 7.8 |
| Manufacture of fertilisers and nitrogen compounds | 1.3 | 2.6 | 3.6 |
| Manufacture of paint, varnishes and similar coatings | -0.3 | 0.1 | 2.2 |
| Manufacture of plastics and synthetic rubber in primary form | -0.3 | 1.8 | 8.8 |
| Manufacture of polyester chips or polyethylene terephthalate chips | -4.5 | 5.5 | 16.7 |
| Manufacture of rubber and plastic products | -0.2 | 1 | 2.1 |
| Manufacture of other non-metallic mineral products (glass and ceramic) | 0.5 | 1.3 | 2.3 |
| Manufacture of basic metals | 4.9 | 4 | 7 |
Such increases matter because higher production costs often do not remain confined to factories for long.
From wholesale, into consumer’s pockets
Crisil warned that sustained wholesale inflation tends to feed into consumer inflation over time as businesses pass on higher costs to protect margins. While the transmission is not immediate, sectors facing prolonged cost pressure may eventually raise prices for end-consumers.
That could affect fuel, transportation, packaged products and a wide range of household essentials.
The agency expects CPI inflation to average 5.1% this fiscal, significantly above last fiscal’s 2%.
“Rising WPI inflation means higher input costs for industry. This puts pressure on the margins of companies. Faced with significant rise in input costs, companies will start passing the same to end-consumers (WPI to CPI transmission) to avoid excessive pressure on margins,” the ratings firm said.
Among the factors expected to push retail inflation higher are persistently elevated crude prices, increased domestic fuel costs, depreciating rupee that raises import expenses, and possible food inflation due to heatwaves and an expected below-normal monsoon linked to El Nino. At the same time, a statistical low-base effect from last year’s unusually soft CPI reading could further exaggerate the inflation climb.
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