India’s Core Sector Growth Drops to 0.5% in May, Weakest in Seven Months

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23'Jun 2026 Published

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Shoonya Team
India’s core sector growth

Data released by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry on Monday showed the Index of Eight Core Industries expanded by just 0.5%, its slowest pace since October 2025.

The May data showed weakness across 5 key infrastructure segments, especially coal, petroleum refinery products, crude oil and natural gas.

The Index of Eight Core Industries tracks coal, crude oil, natural gas, refinery products, fertilisers, steel, cement and electricity.

Which Core Industries Contracted in May 2026?

Five of the eight sectors reported a decline in output during May.

Sector May 2026 Performance Key Detail
Coal-9.3%10-month low
Petroleum refinery products-8.7%42-month low
Crude oil-4.6%Worse than April’s 3.9% fall
Natural gas-4.9%Weakest in three months
Fertilisers-0.9%Contraction eased from April

The sharpest pressure came from coal and refinery products, while crude oil and natural gas also remained weak.

Which Sectors Supported the Core Sector Index?

Only three sectors recorded growth in May: electricity, cement and steel.

Growing Sector May 2026 Growth Key Detail
Electricity8.7%Strongest support to the index
Cement8.4%Three-month high
Steel5.0%Growth slowed to a 13-month low

Electricity generation rose strongly due to higher demand from households during extreme heat conditions. Cement output also improved, while steel remained positive despite slower growth.

Why Does the Eight Core Industries Data Matter?

The eight core industries make up about 40% of the Index of Industrial Production.

This makes the core sector data an early indicator of broader industrial activity. A weak reading can signal pressure on manufacturing, construction and energy-linked sectors before the full IIP data is released.

Final Outlook: Will Industrial Growth Recover?

India’s core sector growth remained positive in May, but the 0.5% reading shows that industrial momentum weakened sharply.

Going ahead, the key factors to watch will be coal production, refinery output, energy demand, cement activity and the next IIP release. If weakness in petroleum-linked sectors continues, it could weigh on broader industrial growth.

Source: Business Standard
Disclaimer: This content is for education and awareness purposes only and should not be considered investment advice or a recommendation. Investments in securities markets are subject to market risks. Read all the related documents carefully before investing.

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