In the City, we have a simple rule for spotting a bubble: when the Treasury sends a trade envoy, the peak is usually in the rearview mirror. But in the case of India’s booming ‘blue gold’ drinks sector – a loose term for premium spirits, craft beers and imported wines – the froth may yet have legs. The UK’s trade delegation is currently touring Mumbai and Delhi, peddling British brands to a rapidly expanding middle class that has developed a taste for single malts, gin and craft ales. The question is whether this is smart market timing or a late-stage scramble for yield.
Let’s look at the numbers. India’s alcohol market is forecast to grow at an annual rate of 6-8% over the next five years, driven by demographics and disposable income. The ‘blue gold’ moniker refers to the exorbitant import duties that can make a bottle of Scotch cost twice its London price. For British distillers, this is both a curse and an opportunity: tariffs are high, but margins are fatter if you can navigate the labyrinth of state-level regulations. The trade envoy’s brief is to push for tariff reductions and standardised licensing, a familiar song and dance that usually ends with more red tape.
From a portfolio perspective, UK spirits exports to India have risen 15% year-on-year, but that’s from a low base. The real action is in premiumisation: Indian consumers are trading up from local whisky to imported single malts, a shift that mirrors China’s thirst for cognac a decade ago. The risk is that the market is already pricing in this growth. Diageo and Pernod Ricard have piled in, and valuations for mid-tier brands are looking stretched. Market efficiency suggests that if the trade envoy is making news, the easy money has been made.
Fiscal reality intrudes. The Indian government is unlikely to slash duties on alcohol, a key revenue source, when it is nursing a fiscal deficit. Any concessions will be incremental, and the benefit will flow to importers rather than consumers. The siren song of ‘blue gold’ is that it sounds like a sure thing, but the experience of British exporters in China shows that official enthusiasm rarely translates into a level playing field.
For the UK Treasury, this is about capital flight: keeping domestic brands afloat by opening foreign markets. But the real story is the massive capital outflow from India, where inflation and a weak rupee are eroding the spending power of the very consumers that trade envoys are courting. The yield on 10-year gilts may be stable, but the volatility in emerging market currencies is a stark reminder that the City’s profits often come with hidden risks.
The bottom line: India’s ‘blue gold’ boom is genuine, but the trade envoy’s visit is more a photo opportunity than a pivot. For investors, the thirst for growth should be tempered by a sobering dose of fiscal discipline. Cheers to that.








