India

Intelligence for Better Decision Making

US Tariff Surge Reshapes India’s Export Landscape and Drives New Trade Initiatives
Jan. 21, 2026 | Geopolitics & Defense

Indian exporters face steep challenges after the United States imposed a 50% tariff on labour-intensive goods, prompting policy responses and new trade talks.

**The United States, which accounted for 19.3% of India’s total exports before the tariffs, has applied one of the highest rates globally.**
Without a free-trade agreement, India’s textiles, handicrafts, apparel, gems and leather sectors have borne the brunt of the levies. The steep duties have injected uncertainty into markets, pressured the rupee and led the government to set aside $5 billion to support affected exporters.

**India has sought to diversify its markets through free-trade agreements, but Barclays Plc economists warn that recently signed or proposed deals will not generate enough new business to offset US losses.**
Its existing FTAs with Oman and New Zealand involve relatively small trade volumes, and while India has agreements in place or under negotiation with 16 of its top 20 export destinations—covering 51% of total trade—it still struggles to turn those pacts into tangible export growth and industrial strengthening.

**If the 50% duties remain, roughly 70% of India’s shipments to the US will face severe headwinds.**
Leather, apparel, jewellery, home furnishings and marine goods confront both high American tariffs and competitive pressures in alternative markets, driving India to pursue new alliances that offer preferential access to these key sectors.

**Negotiations with the European Union have reached an advanced stage, with officials aiming to conclude an FTA at a summit in New Delhi on January 27, 2026, timed to coincide with a state visit by European Council President António Luís Santos da Costa and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who will also participate in India’s Republic Day celebrations.**
Policymakers see the pact as a critical step toward export diversification and deeper trade engagement with a leading economic bloc.

**As the United States and the EU exchange tariffs—as part of disputes over Greenland, the US imposed a 10% levy on imports from Denmark, France, Germany and the UK on February 1, rising to 25% by June 1—the EU is seeking stronger ties with alternate partners, notably India.**
This dynamic may open additional opportunities for Indian exporters.

**India has also benefited from growing shipments to China amid US–China trade tensions, suggesting it can capitalize on shifting global supply chains.**
Officials regard the India–EU FTA as a strategic chance to bolster India’s reliability as a supplier and to mitigate risks from disruptions in major markets. They hope an expedited implementation of the deal will yield improved trading terms and a more diversified platform for exporters.

**Beyond the EU, India continues FTA talks with the United Arab Emirates, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom to reduce trade barriers and modernize its protectionist stance.**
Economists caution, however, that even these sizable markets cannot fully replace the scale and potential of the US market, leaving India with the ongoing challenge of translating negotiated trade agreements into sustained export growth and enhanced competitiveness across its diverse industrial sectors.
SIR Voter List Revision Sparks Political Disputes and Supreme Court Intervention
Jan. 21, 2026 | Politics

The Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls has ignited disputes from Rajasthan to West Bengal, as parties clash over alleged manipulations and legal interpretations.

**In Rajasthan, the Congress Party accuses the Bharatiya Janata Party of executing a plan to delete Opposition supporters from voter lists.**
Congress leaders Govind Singh Dotasra and Tikaram Jully say that after BJP national general secretary B.L. Santosh’s January 3, 2026 visit, party agents coordinated to mark about 4.5 million electors as “absent, shifted or deceased” in the draft rolls. Data from December 17 to January 14 shows BJP representatives filed far more deletion applications than their Congress counterparts, with roughly 140,000 Form 7 deletion requests surfacing in constituencies such as Jhunjhunu and Mandawa. The Congress demands a forensic audit to trace the origin and distribution of thousands of allegedly fake, centrally printed computerized forms handed to BJP-associated MLAs and candidates. The BJP rejects these allegations as baseless.

**Meanwhile in West Bengal, the SIR exercise spurred legal moves and political reactions.**
Trinamool Congress general secretary Abhishek Banerjee praised a Supreme Court ruling that preserved nearly one crore names at risk of removal, declaring it a victory for Bengal voters and a rebuff to attempts to threaten voting rights. He contrasted West Bengal’s outcome with those in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat, and described the upcoming assembly elections as a broader struggle over resource allocation and political accountability rather than simply a referendum on Mamata Banerjee’s leadership or a two-thirds majority.

**A three-judge Bench led by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant directed that Class 10 admit cards issued by the West Bengal Board must serve as valid proof of identity and date of birth during the SIR process, overturning the Election Commission of India’s stance that only pass certificates or results were admissible.**
Senior advocate Kalyan Banerjee demonstrated that admit cards alone carry the date of birth, whereas pass certificates do not, prompting the Court to insist on accepting documents that carry a presumption of correctness. The Election Commission’s counsel acknowledged the earlier misrepresentation and agreed to consult the Commission before responding to the Court.

**The Supreme Court also ordered the public display of approximately 1.25 crore voter names flagged for “logical discrepancies” at gram panchayat bhavans, block offices and ward offices, enabling affected individuals to submit documentation or objections.**
These discrepancies involve mismatches in parent names and implausible age differences relative to the 2002 voter list. To support the process, the Court instructed the state government to allocate sufficient manpower to State Election Commission offices and directed district authorities to follow Election Commission and state guidelines. The West Bengal Director General of Police must maintain law and order throughout the SIR exercise, which parties are contesting on grounds of alleged arbitrariness and procedural irregularities.

Monitored Intelligence for India - Jan. 21, 2026


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Erudite Risk takes an all risks approach to intelligence reporting. We categorize key intelligence into one of 40 different risk intelligence categories.

The goal is to provide intelligence that allows decision makers to avoid being blindsided by what they may have missed, while informing them to make better decisions as well.

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Erudite Risk also includes operations categories so you can monitor the environment for better decision making. Everything is tied together--what happens in risk affects operations and what happens in the market impacts risk profiles.

We categorize key intelligence into one of 30 different operations intelligence categories.

Different roles and functions within the organization can monitor different key issue areas. HR may monitor employment, wages, regulations, labor and management relations, etc., while P&L leaders may monitor overall developing trends.

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Amid global gold rush, India and China are dumping US treasuries

The Economic Times | English | News | Jan. 21, 2026 | Geopolitical Conflict and Disputes

Central banks worldwide continue to accumulate gold amid rising prices, emphasizing gold’s role as a strategic reserve asset during economic and geopolitical uncertainty. India and China have notably reduced their holdings of US Treasuries while increasing gold reserves, signaling a significant shift in reserve management rather than short-term portfolio changes.

India's Reserve Bank (RBI) lowered its US Treasury holdings to about $190 billion by October 2025, a decline of $50.7 billion from the previous year, while increasing gold reserves to 880.18 metric tonnes. Gold now represents 13.6% of India’s foreign exchange reserves, up from 9.3% a year earlier, indicating a deliberate diversification in response to rising fiscal pressures and volatility in advanced economies’ bond markets.

Globally, foreign holdings of US Treasuries have shifted unevenly; countries like Japan, the UK, and others have increased exposure, whereas China, Brazil, India, Hong Kong, and Saudi Arabia have reduced theirs. China’s reduction in US debt reached its lowest level since 2008 at $682.6 billion by November 2025, continuing a long-term trend amid growing concerns about US debt sustainability and geopolitical tensions. Concurrently, China has expanded its gold reserves continually, viewing gold both as a hedge against financial risks and geopolitical vulnerabilities.

The strategies of India and China reflect a broader reassessment of the global financial landscape. Both nations see gold as a safer, non-liability asset providing resilience amid fiscal stress, bond market volatility, and escalating geopolitical risks. Their moves away from US Treasuries toward increased gold holdings represent a structural shift to safeguard future economic stability rather than short-term currency speculation.

Sun Pharma places non-binding offer for US-based Organon in its boldest global bet ever

The Economic Times | English | News | Jan. 21, 2026 | UndeterminedMergers & Acquisitions

Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd, led by Dilip Shanghvi, has submitted a non-binding all-cash offer to acquire US-based Organon, marking its boldest global move. Sun Pharma has arranged $10-14 billion in bridge financing from banks across Wall Street, Europe, and Japan to demonstrate commitment, with due diligence expected to begin soon. Sun’s pursuit of Organon intensified in late 2025, coinciding with Organon’s sale of its postpartum hemorrhage treatment system to Laborie Medical as it refocused on its women’s health biopharma portfolio.

Organon, spun off from Merck Sharp & Dohme in 2021, carries $8.9 billion in debt and has been seeking buyers through Morgan Stanley, facing potential competition from global pharma and private equity firms, though no Indian bidders besides Sun have shown interest. Organon's market cap was $2.28 billion as of early 2026, following stock volatility tied to leadership changes and sales malpractice reports. The company reported $1.60 billion in third-quarter 2025 revenue, with slight revisions to its annual revenue and EBITDA margin guidance.

If completed, this acquisition would be the largest ever by an Indian pharmaceutical company, surpassing Sun’s $4 billion Ranbaxy deal in 2014. Sun Pharma’s FY25 revenue was $6.19 billion with an EBITDA of $1.82 billion, and the combined leverage post-acquisition would reach approximately 2.5 times net debt to EBITDA, offset by substantial cash reserves. The deal aims to enhance Sun Pharma’s innovation capabilities and bolster its US portfolio with specialized women’s healthcare products and biosimilars, addressing previous portfolio gaps.

Organon plans to expand EBITDA and accelerate growth from 2026 onward, continuing its R&D pipeline and maintaining strategic acquisitions. Organon’s legacy includes pioneering research on blockbuster drugs like Merck’s Keytruda. This acquisition aligns with Sun Pharma’s recent moves to strengthen its innovative drug offerings, including prior acquisitions of Checkpoint Therapeutics and Concert Pharma, highlighting a strategic shift towards specialized and branded pharmaceuticals in the US market.

India’s retreat from Russian oil sends China’s Urals imports to a nearly three-year high

The Economic Times | English | News | Jan. 21, 2026 | Shifting Geopolitical Alliances

China's imports of Russian Urals crude have surged to the highest level since mid-2023, driven largely by a sharp reduction in Indian purchases amid Western sanctions and ahead of the European Union's ban on products derived from Russian oil. Indian refiners, including Reliance Industries, have significantly scaled back their Russian crude imports since December 2025 due to sanctions pressure and the EU's impending restrictions, with Reliance halting imports entirely in January 2026.

The drop in Indian demand has allowed China to increase its intake of discounted Russian crude, offsetting losses in Venezuelan oil supplies following U.S. actions against the OPEC producer. China’s Urals crude imports reached about 405,000 barrels per day in January 2026, with total seaborne Russian crude imports nearing 1.4 million barrels per day. Overall Russian crude shipments to China exceeded 1.5 million barrels per day in December 2025, up from approximately 1.2 million barrels per day earlier in 2025.

Indian refiners' reduced Urals crude imports in December hit their lowest level since December 2022, falling to 929,000 barrels per day from averages above 1.2 million barrels per day in recent years. The decrease is linked to the EU's ban on fuels produced from Russian crude, which requires refiners supplying Europe to avoid Russian crude for at least two months before sale eligibility. In contrast, China, which exports minimal oil products to Europe, is benefiting by acquiring discounted Russian crude.

Eastern China's independent refiners in Shandong province, particularly Shandong Yulong Petrochemical—which faces UK and EU sanctions—have significantly ramped up Russian crude purchases after receiving new 2026 import quotas. Since November 2025, Shandong's demand for Russian crude has increased by about 250,000 barrels per day. Other local refineries previously linked to Sinochem are expected to increase Russian crude buying directly under their new quotas.

Prices of Urals crude delivered to China have fallen sharply, with discounts reaching up to $12 per barrel against ICE Brent in late 2025, making it cheaper than comparable Iranian Light crude, which carried an $8 per barrel discount. Both Urals and Iranian Light currently offer discounts of about $10 per barrel for March deliveries. The Russian ESPO blend, China’s primary imported grade, saw discounts widen to $7-8 per barrel in early 2026, compared to $5-6 in December 2025 and even trading at a premium in September 2025.

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