Tuesday, February 03, 2026
The budget may need some help.
"Indian stock markets witnessed a historic surge on Tuesday, 3 February," so that, "The combined market capitalisation of BSE-listed companies increased to Rs 467.35 trillion from Rs 455 trillion in the previous session, translating into a gain of more than Rs 12.5 trillion in a single day." The reason for the euphoria was that "After prolonged negotiations, US President Donald Trump confirmed that reciprocal tariffs on Indian goods would be reduced to 18%, a steep cut from the earlier 50%." Mint. The rupee which had sunk to a record low of 92.043 against the US dollar on 28 January, joined in the celebrations, appreciating over 1% to close at 90.423 on 03 February. Investing.com. "After months of tariff threats...New Delhi has finally sealed a trade deal with the United States - not by yielding early but by waiting out the noise." "Even as talks dragged on, New Delhi quietly accelerated trade engagement elsewhere, signing five trade agreements over the past year - including a landmark pact with the European Union." ET. On the other hand, White House Deputy Press Secretary Kush Desai hailed the deal as "Another historic victory for American workers, farmers and industries." ET. US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer claimed that Indian tariffs on US industrial goods will fall from 13.5% to zero and also tariffs "for a variety of things...tree nuts, wine, spirits, fruits, vegetables, etc, they're going down to zero." ET. After two decades of negotiations, India and the European Union clinched a free trade deal last month. In it, "Tariffs on premium European wines will also be cut in stages, falling from 150% to as low as 20% over seven years, while lower priced wines are excluded." TT. In the trade deal between India and the United Kingdom customs duty on Scotch whiskey will come down from 150% to 75% and thereafter gradually to 40% over the next decade. ET. If India is to cut duties on US wines and spirits to zero in one fell swoop, both the EU and the UK may demand the same concessions and, since both agreements are yet to be ratified by their respective parliaments, they could be sent back for re-negotiations. "Replacing Russian crude with market-priced oil could see India's import bill rise by as much as $4 billion (Rs 362 billion at today's exchange rate of 90.50) (MC) but a report by State Bank of India (SBI) Research claimed that switching to Venezuelan heavy crude could cut our impost bill by $3 billion. "It noted that a discount of USD 10-12 per barrel on Venezuelan crude would be sufficient to make the choice economically neutral for Indian importers." ANI. Why should Venezuela give a discount when we have already agreed to Trump's demand? Some sectors like leather and textiles may see some benefits but the nation could incur a large deficit. That brings us to the Budget. But, that's another story.
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