Dedicated intelligence coverage of India's geopolitical, economic, and strategic position as it navigates the most consequential global energy and security crisis since 1973.
India's central bank has mounted its most aggressive currency defence since 2013 — deploying an estimated $12–15 billion across spot, forward, and offshore markets as oil-driven inflation and global risk-off sentiment drive the rupee to record lows.
The Indian rupee crossed ₹92 per US dollar this week — a record low driven by the triple impact of the Iran war: soaring crude prices, Hormuz supply disruption, and global investor flight to the dollar. Over $3 billion has been pulled from Indian equities in March alone. The Reserve Bank of India has deployed an estimated $12–15 billion from its $723 billion forex reserve to prevent a slide toward ₹95+, operating across spot, forward, and NDF markets simultaneously.
MUFG Research warns that if Brent sustains at $100/bbl, USD/INR ends the year at ₹95.50. In a tail-risk scenario with oil at $120/bbl and energy shortages, ₹97.50 or higher becomes achievable. Every $10/bbl increase in oil prices widens India's current account deficit by 0.4–0.5% of GDP. India's CAD is already tracking toward 3% of GDP — double the baseline forecast. The rupee's depreciation also means every barrel is ~10% more expensive for Indian refineries than last year, compounding the raw price impact.
Former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan publicly warned that the Hormuz shock "will hurt the US" through its cascading effect on Asian and emerging market economies. India's economy, while more domestically oriented than many peers, cannot escape the arithmetic: 90% import-dependent on crude, with 75% of those imports historically routed through Hormuz.
With 91% of LPG, 50% of LNG, and 75% of crude imports routed through Hormuz, India is experiencing a cascading supply shock rippling from cooking gas through agriculture to power generation.
India's most acute vulnerability is LPG — 91% of which comes from the Gulf. Domestic prices jumped ₹60/cylinder in one week, the sharpest single-week increase in over a decade. The government has ordered refineries to halt all petrochemical production and divert 100% of propane and butane to household cooking gas. Qatar supplies 50% of India's LNG; with that supply halted, fertiliser plants and power grids are running on Tier 2 priority — capped at 70% of requirement. Indian cement companies, importing half their petcoke from Saudi Arabia and UAE, are now bidding for expensive US coal as emergency alternatives.
The agricultural impact is severe and underreported. The Middle East accounts for 70% of basmati rice demand — the Indian Rice Exporters Federation has advised halting all fresh Gulf shipments as cargo insurance is unavailable for Gulf-bound vessels. Iran supplies 23% of India's apple imports and 39% of almonds. The entire Middle East agricultural export trade has been declared "force majeure" by Indian exporters. The government's emergency 30-day US Treasury waiver — allowing India to buy stranded Russian oil at sea — has provided a critical bridge, but it is not a sustainable solution if the crisis extends through Q2.
Iranian Ambassador Fathali indicated Indian vessels may be allowed Hormuz passage as a goodwill gesture — potentially the most consequential back-channel development of the war for any non-belligerent nation.
Iran's Ambassador to India Mohammad Fathali stated that Iranian authorities were "considering allowing some Indian vessels to pass through the Strait of Hormuz as a goodwill gesture" during ongoing bilateral discussions. Precedent exists: two Indian-flagged gas carriers and a Saudi tanker with 1 million barrels destined for India were reportedly allowed passage in mid-March. India has notably not expelled Iranian diplomats — unlike Saudi Arabia, which declared five Iranian embassy staff persona non grata this weekend.
If formalised, an Indian Hormuz exemption would be strategically significant on multiple levels. Iran demonstrates selective leverage over the blockade — it is not a binary open/shut decision but a negotiating tool. India demonstrates strategic autonomy from the US-led coalition. And the pressure campaign develops its first visible crack. India and Pakistan have both deployed destroyers to escort tankers in the Gulf of Oman — but not inside the strait itself. The arrangement would test whether Washington — which issued India a Russian oil waiver — would tolerate parallel Iran diplomacy. Every oil-importing developing nation is watching New Delhi's approach as a template.
Home Minister Amit Shah introduces the Central Armed Police Forces Bill in the Upper House today, covering restructuring of India's seven paramilitary forces with over one million personnel — the most significant security legislation of 2026.
A 2am explosion uprooted the gate and boundary wall of a property in Ghagwal sector, 10km from the International Border. No casualties. FIR registered, forensic samples collected, senior officers on site.
Global gold fell to a near four-month low of $4,372/oz on strong dollar and rising rate expectations. Indian MCX markets opened sharply lower despite wedding season supporting retail demand at the physical level.
The expo launches as India's electronics hardware exports hit $38.58 billion in FY25 — a 32.47% year-on-year surge — as New Delhi accelerates positioning as a global manufacturing alternative to China.
Delhi Assembly's budget session commences. Election Commission expected to release West Bengal's first supplementary voter list today as part of SIR process — a pre-election exercise ahead of state polls.
Air India and Air India Express operating 30 scheduled and non-scheduled flights to and from the West Asia region on March 23, maintaining services to Jeddah, Muscat, Riyadh and UAE despite regional conflict.
India's strategic position in the Iran war is unique and underappreciated. As one of Iran's largest pre-war trading partners and a major crude importer, India has both leverage with Tehran and vulnerability to the conflict's continuation. The quiet diplomatic track — allowing Indian vessels Hormuz passage — is New Delhi operating exactly as it has in every major global crisis since 1947: maintaining strategic autonomy, talking to all sides, and extracting maximum benefit from competing powers without formal alignment.
The economic maths are stark. India imports 90% of its crude oil. Every week the Hormuz closure continues adds approximately ₹0.15–0.20 to the import cost per dollar of oil, compounds fertiliser and LPG shortages that ripple directly into food prices, and depletes the 25-day strategic reserve buffer by another three to four days. The RBI cannot indefinitely deploy forex reserves to defend the rupee — $12–15 billion in one week is significant even against $723 billion total reserves.
The most important variable for India in the next 72 hours is not who wins the Trump-Iran standoff — it is whether India secures a formalised Hormuz passage agreement before that standoff resolves. If the strait reopens on US terms, India's leverage evaporates. If it stays shut, India needs guaranteed supply lanes regardless of what Washington thinks about New Delhi's Iran diplomacy.
India's 25-day strategic reserve gives it a narrow but real window to navigate the crisis without catastrophic domestic disruption. The RBI's forex intervention buys time. The Iran back-channel is the most important diplomatic move. New Delhi's refusal to choose sides — quietly buying Russian oil, quietly talking to Tehran, publicly supporting international law — is India's most important strategic asset. The risk is if the crisis extends to six to eight weeks, none of these buffers hold.