1. THE SEAMLESS LINK
The budget's narrative of continuity and stability, focusing on laying a five-year foundation for structural transformation, sets the tone for India's economic trajectory. This approach, designed to align the nation's growth with global themes rather than succumbing to populist pressures, underpins the macroeconomic and sectoral priorities unveiled for FY27. The Finance Minister's address underscored a deliberate strategy to foster resilience and competitiveness.
Macroeconomic Stability and Fiscal Path
The government reinforced its commitment to fiscal consolidation in the Union Budget for FY27. Projections indicate a fiscal deficit of 4.3% of GDP, a marginal improvement from the revised estimate of 4.4% for FY26. This path is supported by a projected nominal GDP growth rate of 10% for the fiscal year. The debt-to-GDP ratio is targeted to decline to 55.6% in FY27, down from 56.1% in the revised estimates for FY26, signaling a gradual strengthening of public finances. Capital expenditure remains a cornerstone of the growth strategy, with an allocation of ₹12.2 lakh crore for FY27, continuing the focus on infrastructure development. Gross market borrowing is slated at ₹17.2 trillion, with net market borrowings estimated at ₹11.7 trillion.
Sectoral Focus and Future Growth Drivers
The budget emphasizes future-facing sectors critical for global integration, including biopharma, electronics manufacturing, rare earth metals, and semiconductors. While support for MSMEs and legacy industries continues, the primary thrust is on fostering innovation and productivity hubs through urban development and skill initiatives. Defence spending receives a strategic push, reflecting India's geopolitical positioning. Attention is also directed towards diversifying growth drivers through tourism, alongside initiatives promoting creativity in workforce development.
Bond Market Reforms and Investor Sentiment
For fixed income markets, the budget introduced measures aimed at deepening liquidity and flexibility. The introduction of Total Return Swaps (TRS) on corporate bonds seeks to enhance market depth and risk management tools. Incentives for large municipal bond issuances are also proposed to support infrastructure financing. However, foreign portfolio investors remain cautious, influenced by higher yields in developed markets and geopolitical uncertainties. The delay in India's inclusion in the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Index until mid-2026 remains a factor, although prior inclusion in JPMorgan's index brought substantial inflows. Equity outflows have added pressure on the domestic currency.
Market Reaction and Strategic Outlook
The immediate market reaction to the Union Budget on February 1, 2026, was volatile. A significant hike in the Securities Transaction Tax (STT) on futures and options contracts, increasing from 0.02% to 0.05% for futures and from 0.1% to 0.15% for options, triggered sharp sell-offs in benchmark indices like the Sensex and Nifty. These indices tumbled initially but subsequently recovered, suggesting investors were processing the longer-term implications beyond the derivative tax adjustment. The budget also expanded access for overseas individual investors in Indian equities, raising the individual investment limit to 10% and the aggregate cap to 24%. The strategy for fixed income leans towards cautious accrual, with potential duration plays contingent on future index inclusions.
The 'Continuity Budget' Rationale
Basant Bafna, Head of Fixed Income at Mirae Asset Mutual Funds, noted that the budget's primary theme is continuity and stability, signaling a long-term vision focused on structural transformation rather than short-term gains. This deliberate strategy aims to build economic resilience and enhance competitiveness by prioritizing future-facing sectors and fiscal discipline over populist measures. The market’s initial knee-jerk reaction to the STT hike contrasts with the budget's underlying intent for sustained, disciplined growth.