FY 2025–26 was not just challenging year for global trade, it marked a clear shift in how trade operates. What earlier felt like temporary disruptions have now become structural realities.
Geopolitical tensions, policy-led industrial shifts, and tighter financial conditions have collectively reshaped trade flows. Growth remained modest, with global trade expanding in the 2.5%–3% range, reflecting weak demand and persistent supply-side challenges.
But beneath this moderation lies a deeper transition, towards regionalisation, supply chain resilience, and more efficient use of capital.
1. Geopolitical Disruptions and Trade Route Reconfiguration
The current trade crisis across regions has stood out as one of the most significant disruptors of the year, affecting global trade.
Exporters face:
Transit delays of 10–14 days
Freight cost spikes of 30%–50% in peak periods
For Indian exporters, especially in engineering goods, textiles, and perishables, this meant slower cash realisation and greater working capital lock-in.
At the same time, instability in the Middle East kept crude prices volatile, moving within the $75–$95 per barrel range, adding pressure on input costs.
What changed:
Delays are no longer logistical—they are financial, directly extending cash cycles and locking working capital.
2. China+1: From Strategy to Execution
The China+1 strategy moved decisively from boardroom discussions to on-ground execution.
India’s electronics exports crossed $35–40 billion
Specialty chemicals and pharma intermediates recorded strong double-digit growth. Global sourcing from India increased by 15%–20% in select sectors
This shift was supported by government initiatives like the PLI schemes, with commitments exceeding ₹2 lakh crore.
What changed:
Supply chains are now more distributed and multi-layered, creating new opportunities, but also increasing the need for liquidity across supplier tiers.
3. US/EU Policy Shifts and Rising Trade Barriers
Developed markets intensified their industrial strategies:
The US expanded subsidy-driven manufacturing in clean energy and semiconductors
The EU pushed stricter compliance through mechanisms like CBAM
Tariff and non-tariff barriers increased across key sectors
For exporters, this translated into higher compliance costs and shifting demand patterns.
What changed:
Competitiveness is no longer just price-led, it is increasingly policy and compliance-driven, requiring both operational and financial readiness.
4. Commodity and Currency Volatility
Volatility remained a constant throughout the year:
Industrial metals fluctuated by 15%–25%
Agri-commodities saw supply shocks due to climate factors
The rupee traded in the ₹82–₹85/USD range
At the same time, global interest rates stayed elevated, with benchmarks in advanced economies holding at 4%–5.5%.
What changed:
Margins are increasingly exposed to external variables, making financial planning and hedging critical.
5. Freight Instability and Supply Chain Redesign
Freight markets saw repeated disruptions:
Container rates surged 2x–3x during peak disruptions
Port congestion and delays became frequent
Inventory cycles lengthened across sectors
Businesses responded by rethinking their supply chains—moving towards nearshoring, diversified sourcing, and multi-modal logistics.
What changed:
Supply chains are being redesigned for resilience—but this comes with higher capital requirements.
6. Demand Trends: Uneven and Sector-Specific
Global demand remained inconsistent:
Advanced economies grew slowly (~1%–2% consumption growth)
Emerging markets showed pockets of resilience
Sector-wise divergence became more pronounced:
Engineering goods & electronics: steady growth
Textiles & discretionary segments: demand pressure
Energy & essential commodities: stable demand
India’s overall exports (goods + services) remained resilient at $760–780 billion.
What changed:
Uncertain demand cycles are leading to longer receivable periods and increased credit exposure.
India’s Response: Aligning with a Changing Global Order
India’s approach this year moved beyond incentives towards building a more structured and scalable trade ecosystem.
Export Promotion Mission (EPM): Expanding the Export Base
The Export Promotion Mission focused on coordinated growth:
- Strengthening district-level export hubs (ODOP)
- Improving access to credit for MSMEs
- Driving sector-specific and market-focused strategies
Despite global challenges:
- Merchandise exports remained around $430–450 billion
- MSMEs contributed nearly 45%–48% of total exports
What changed:
A larger exporter base is emerging, but it also increases the need for accessible and scalable financing solutions.
Interest Subvention: Supporting Liquidity
Interest equalisation schemes continued to provide 2%–3% support for MSME exporters, helping offset high borrowing costs.
However, rising delays and transaction costs meant that working capital pressures persisted.
GIFT City: Strengthening Financial Infrastructure
GIFT City continued to position itself as a global financial hub by:
Enabling foreign currency trade financing
Attracting international financial institutions
Expanding cross-border financial capabilities
What changed:
Trade finance is gradually shifting towards globally integrated financial ecosystems.
ITFS: The Next Phase of Trade Finance
Marked a shift toward digitised, platform-driven trade finance with faster access and improved transparency.
Digitised receivables financing
Faster access to liquidity
Greater transparency and risk assessment
What changed:
India is not just supporting exports-it is building the financial and institutional backbone required for scalable trade growth.
Financing Implications: Now at the Core of Trade Strategy
Across FY 2025–26, there is a shift towards modern trade finance solutions and it is becoming central to trade strategy.
Businesses are dealing with:
- Longer working capital cycles
- Higher cost of capital
- Increased risk exposure
This is driving adoption of:
- Off-balance-sheet financing
- Faster invoice-to-cash mechanisms
- Multi-tier financing models
- Outlook: FY 2026–27 and Beyond
Global trade is expected to stabilise, with growth projected at 3%–3.5%. However, structural changes will continue.
Key trends ahead:
Global trade is expected to stabilise gradually, but the structural shifts will persist.
- Continued supply chain regionalisation
- Policy-driven trade corridors
- Greater digital adoption in trade finance
- Increased focus on ESG and compliance
Conclusion: Preparedness as a Differentiator
FY 2025–26 has reinforced a clear reality, uncertainty is no longer temporary. It is embedded in the system.
In this environment, success will depend on:
- Financial agility
- Resilient supply chains
- Timely access to liquidity
For Indian businesses, this is also a moment of opportunity. Those who align their trade operations with strong financial strategies will not just adapt, they will lead.