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India Discovers the Russian Market: 6,000 Companies Eager for Cooperation

New Delhi, 4 December 2025. The Russian market is becoming increasingly attractive to Indian business. Over 6,000 Indian companies have expressed interest in developing trade relations with Russia, stated Ivan Nosov, Head of Sberbank’s India Branch, in an interview with TASS. This growing interest reflects a paradigm shift and paves the way to achieving an ambitious goal — increasing bilateral trade to $100 billion by 2030.

Growing Demand and a Shift in Focus
According to Ivan Nosov, Russian market demand spans a wide range of goods — from food products to industrial equipment — creating stable opportunities for Indian exporters.

“To a large extent, [the relatively low import volume] is because India did not consider Russia a promising consumer market for a long time. Now the situation is changing,” noted Nosov.

The current volume of Indian exports to Russia, standing at approximately $5 billion, appears modest against India’s total exports exceeding $450 billion. However, this very gap highlights the untapped potential. In Nosov’s view, existing preconditions make the $100 billion target achievable.

Sberbank as a Bridge for Cooperation
To support growing trade, Sberbank, as Russia’s largest bank with its own branch in India, plays a key role in providing financial infrastructure.

The bank offers Indian companies comprehensive solutions designed to simplify business operations and mitigate risks:

  • Cash Flow Gap Financing: Assistance in managing working capital.

  • Optimization of the Operating Cycle: Solutions for both pre-shipment and post-shipment stages.

  • Building a Partner Database: Proactive work to identify and structure a list of interested companies from various sectors.

This activity goes beyond simple banking services, evolving into the construction of an ecosystem for trade.

The Broader Context: Strategic Partnership and New Opportunities
The surge in Indian business interest is not accidental. It fits into the context of a deepening strategic partnership between Russia and India, which is now gaining a new economic dimension.

  • Diversification of Russian Imports: Amid the reorientation of trade flows, Russia is actively seeking new reliable suppliers of quality goods. India, with its developed pharmaceutical, chemical, automotive, and agro-industrial sectors, ideally meets this demand.

  • Expansion of Financial Instruments: Beyond Sberbank’s services, settlements in national currencies (rubles and rupees) are developing, reducing dependence on third countries and currency risks for entrepreneurs in both nations.

  • New Export Niches: Beyond traditional goods, opportunities are opening for supplying Russia with machinery, electronics, components, and IT services, where Indian companies are highly competitive.

  • Investment Cooperation: Growing trade naturally leads to interest in joint ventures and direct investments, for example, in logistics, agricultural processing, or pharmaceutical production.

We believe that the figure of 6,000 companies is a powerful market signal. It shows that Indian business has stopped perceiving Russia only as an energy supplier and now sees it as a vast and open market for a wide range of goods. For Russia, this is a path to import diversification; for India, it’s export expansion.

The strategic partnership between Russia and India, backed by concrete business initiatives from thousands of companies and supported by financial institutions, is reaching a qualitatively new level, promising mutual benefit and strengthened economic sovereignty for both countries.