The Nikkei Markit India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) -- a gauge of manufacturing performance -- fell to 52.1 in September from 52.6 in August, indicating that growth in the sector lost some momentum.
"The Indian manufacturing industry lost momentum in September as growth of new orders eased from August's 20-month high," said Pollyanna De Lima, Economist at IHS Markit that compiles the data and author of the report.
"Output is still rising at a decent clip and the sector looks likely to have delivered a stronger contribution to GDP growth in second quarter of 2016-17, with the quarterly reading for the PMI output index up from 51.4 during April- June to 53.6," Lima added.
The new orders from abroad for India-manufactured goods expanded markedly in September at the fastest pace in 14 months.
Also Read
On the prices front, the survey found the average purchase costs rose at a faster pace in September, but it was weak in comparison to the long-run trend.
"Although inflation rates edged higher, these remain weak by historical standards and indicate that we may still see RBI loosening monetary policy in 2016," Lima added.
The next policy review is scheduled to be announced tomorrow and the latest PMI survey may add to the clamour for rate cut by RBI. Bankers and experts are divided on whether the rates would be lowered or kept unchanged.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content