Not necessarily, if South East Asia makes a couple of river preserves and the USA goes through the motions and legalizes Asian Arownana even Indian Asian Arowana farms would be busy and could justify a healthy price tags. I still think Asian Arowanas could become even more popular outside Asian markets much more than they already are.
Many people in India call Arowana to be Vaasthu or goodluck fish.
Arowanas are very popular here, but most of the people wont go for an asian because of the expensive price tag.
People here (most of them) dont want to spend so much on a fish.
So they settle for a silver, australian or green mostly.
Remember China and India are the largest markets in the world. So more customers.
So if Indian farms began to breed asian aros, to increase the local sales they have to bring the prices down in India.
In international market to get well established they should give quality fishes for very good competitive prices.
But quality is not something you can achieve in a short term, even if Indian farms breed asian aros its hard to compete with countries like Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia interms of quality initially.
So reducing the prices will be a good option to compete in international market.
When there is more output, the demand comes down and hence the prices comes down.