India Ratings and Research (Ind-Ra) on Tuesday said reciprocal tariffs will exacerbate stress for medium, small and micro enterprises (MSMEs) but mid-sized corporates have a greater cushion against unanticipated financial shocks. With the worsening of operating conditions owing to the escalation of tariff war in April 2025, Ind-Ra expects MSMEs to turn more vulnerable, especially in the sectors where the impact of tariff war is negative. As of March 31, 2024, the agency's analysis suggested that 23 per cent of MSMEs remained stressed compared to 11 per cent for MCs (mid-corporates).
MCs are better positioned than pre-COVID levels to manage business cycles. A study of 1,898 listed and unlisted MSMEs and 1,055 MCs highlights that MCs have a greater cushion against unanticipated financial shocks than MSMEs, given their healthy financial metrics. "Capex intensity is usually low as MSMEs grapple more with working capital issues than MCs, and need adequate finance at competitive rates to manage those. Additionally, MSMEs - unlike MCs - are largely promoter-driven entities and lack a capable second line of management who have the knowledge and skill sets to bargain with lenders/suppliers/customers," Neermoy Shah, Associate Director - Emerging Corporates at Ind-Ra, said.

Ind-Ra opined that the reciprocal tariffs will exacerbate stress for MSMEs, with revenue below Rs 250 crore and investment in plant and machinery below Rs 5 crore as of March 31, 2024, with moderate to high intensity. The credit profile of these entities has reverted to pre-COVID level, but the improvement has lagged that of MCs with revenues ranging between Rs 250 crore and Rs 1,000 crore as of March 31, 2024. Ind-Ra believes that any demand slowdown could impact MSMEs more than MCs, although a reduction in interest rates and an improvement in systemic liquidity could provide a cushion.
MSMEs Capex has modestly picked up post-COVID but remains lower than historical levels. Lastly, the lack of improvement in the coverage ratios of MSMEs and the percentage of loss-making MSMEs further highlights the vulnerability of MSMEs to exogenous shocks. Externally, the sluggish consumption trends and global slowdown in the face of tariff war 2.0 may put a strain on MSMEs operating and credit metrics, Ind-Ra said.
On April 2, US President Donald Trump announced that it will impose reciprocal tariffs on countries with which it has a tariff imbalance. On April 9, the US administration authorised a 90-day pause on the implementation of most reciprocal tariffs, reverting to a universal rate of 10 per cent on almost all targeted countries, while raising tariffs on most goods from China to 145 per cent. Later on April 16, the US further hiked tariffs on exports from China to 245 per cent.
(PTI)
More From GoodReturns

Gold Rate in India Rises Over Rs 37,000/24K in Three Days; Will Jump in Gold Price Today Continue on 31 March?

Gold Rate Today Continues Rally, 24K Jumps Over Rs 35000 in 2 Days; 22K & 18K Gold, Silver Prices in Delhi

LPG Gas Cylinder Prices Hiked Again From April 1; 19 KG LPG Gets Costlier By Rs 218; 14.2 KG LPG Unchanged

New PAN Card Rules From April 1, 2026: How To Apply For New PAN Card Via Protean, E-Filing Portal?

5 New Shares On One Soon: Anil Agarwal's Vedanta Demerger To Take Place in April, Says Report

Fresh Drop in Gold Rate Today; Silver Stable: Latest 22K, 24K, 18K Gold & Silver Prices in Delhi on 30 March

Govt Approves PDS Kerosene Distribution in 21 States for 60 Days, Sets 5,000 L Storage Limit Amid LPG Crisis

Gold Rate in India After 20% Slide from Record Highs; Will Gold Price Today Jump to Rs 1.50 Lakh on 30 March?

Bank Holiday Today, Tomorrow & More: Banks Are Closed On March 31, April 1, April 2, April 3; Here's Why

Bank Holiday In April 2026: Banks To Be Closed For 14 Days; Good Friday, Baisakhi To Akshaya Tritiya

Gold Price in India Rallies Rs 47400/100 Gm in 5 Days Amid Rupee Fall, Iran-US War, Silver Shines | March 31



Click it and Unblock the Notifications