calender_icon.png 2 July, 2026 | 10:15 PM

Credit outlook for FY27 positive for healthcare services

02-07-2026 09:06:40 PM

July, 2026, Mumbai: 

In its maiden credit outlook report, India's Sectoral Credit Outlook 2026, Brickwork Ratings (BWR), a home-grown ratings agency, has rated consumer goods and healthcare services as two key sectors with a positive outlook. The consumer goods sector is expected to witness a revenue growth of 17.3% CAGR in the 2025-2030 period on account of credit growth, GST cuts, unlocking of demand from Tier-II/Tier III cities, and premiumisation.

Meanwhile, tailwinds for the healthcare services sector include strong interest and debt coverage ratios, a medical tourism market of an estimated USD 13 billion, and expansion of the Ayushman Bharat Program to senior citizens over the age of 70. The India's Sectoral Credit Outlook 2026 marks Brickwork Ratings’s first comprehensive annual assessment of credit quality across 25 key sectors. “Built on our proprietary five-parameter credit framework—comprising revenue growth, operating margin, gearing, ISCR, DSCR—the report provides investors, lenders, policymakers and corporates with a credible, forward-looking view of India's evolving credit landscape,” said Manu Sehgal, CEO, Brickwork Ratings.

BWR expects a stable credit outlook across 22 of its 25 rated sectors in FY27, supported by resilient domestic demand, sustained government capital expenditure, healthy balance sheets, improving operating margins, and predictable cash flows despite geopolitical uncertainties. Technology, automobiles, telecom, infrastructure, logistics, industrials, and power generation benefit from deleveraging, policy support, export opportunities under new trade agreements, and long-term demand visibility. 

Of the 25 sectors across 8 industry clusters rated in the report, BWR has given a negative-to-stable rating to the Power Distribution segment. “The weakness in the segment is on account of an elevated and unsustainable debt levels reflected in the weak credit profile and continued cash gap created due to muted / delayed tariff hikes. DISCOMS which have identified and reduced distribution losses and improved collection efficiency will be better positioned to curb losses and meet the LPS terms,” said Niraj Rathi, Senior Director – Ratings, Brickwork.