FIEO Hails US-Iran MoU as ‘Defining Turning Point’ for India’s Global Trade
New Delhi:
Port Wings News Network:
The Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO) has welcomed the signing of the historic US-Iran Memorandum of Understanding and hailed it as a significant breakthrough that promises to reshape global trade dynamics.
S C Ralhan, President, FIEO, stated that “For the Indian export-import community, this development is an macro-economic breather, acting as a powerful catalyst for growth after months of regional disruptions. The conflict in West Asia suppressed India’s trade volume, with exports to the Middle East suffering a sharp contraction during peak disruptions. Core sectors bore the brunt of this instability. With the cessation of hostilities and the broader economic integration of the region, we anticipate an immediate and robust revival in order books.”
A stable West Asia unlocks pent-up consumer and industrial demand, paving the way for Indian exporters to scale up their presence and accelerate shipment trajectories over the next few fiscal quarters, observed Ralhan.
“As a nation dependent on imports for over 85% of its crude oil requirements, global energy prices dictate our domestic manufacturing cost structures. The threat to regional supply chains previously drove Brent crude to elevated levels, spiking India’s wholesale inflation. Following the MoU, Brent crude has corrected sharply toward the US$78 per barrel range. This cooling of the geopolitical risk premium directly lowers the import bill, reduces fuel-led inflation, and dramatically softens input costs for heavily crude-dependent export sectors like plastics, paints, textiles, and chemicals, improving our global competitiveness,” added FIEO Chief.
The currency market has responded with immediate optimism to the easing of the energy bottleneck. The reduction in dollar demand from oil refiners, combined with robust foreign capital inflows, has given the Indian Rupee a firm footing, strengthening it significantly down toward 94–94.50 against the US Dollar.
For exporters, a stable and predictable currency ensures safer hedging, protects margins, and eliminates the volatility that historically plagued long-term trade contracts. Reduced pressure on the Current Account Deficit (CAD) gives the overall economy strong fiscal maneuvering room.
Logistically, this MoU is a game-changer. The immediate reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly half of India’s crude imports and a vast chunk of container traffic passes, is the single most significant relief for global supply chains.
“The lifting of the US naval blockade and the restoration of normal traffic eliminate long maritime detours, and make our exports to EU, US and West Africa much competitive. Exporters were previously crushed by exorbitant freight fees and prohibitive ‘war-risk’ insurance premiums. Normalization will slash these overheads, ensuring smoother, faster, and remarkably cheaper transit times to West Asia and European destinations,” Ralhan further added.
Furthermore, President FIEO said that “We have started the fiscal on an extremely positive note with double digit growth in each of the two months and with situation becoming further positive, we are firmly on our course to achieve the target of US$ 1 trillion of merchandise and services exports, as announced by the Government.”











