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Thursday, March 05, 2026

Newspaper Summary 050326

 

Coal, aluminium & gold likely to gain from Iran war

Subramani Ra Mancombu Chennai

Coal prices have increased by 18 per cent and aluminium by 6 per cent while gold stands to gain significantly due to the hostilities in the Persian Gulf with the US and Israel pitted against Iran.

“Following the US-Israeli strikes on Iran over the weekend of February 28-March 1, we think gold could reach a new all-time-high above $5,600/oz this week if no signs of de-escalation materialise,” said research agency BMI, a unit of Fitch Solutions.

Gold, which soared to over $5,350 an ounce at the beginning of the week, pared its gains on a strong dollar and fears of a hike in interest rates to below $5,200 by Wednesday evening.

CASH FOR LIQUIDITY

However, analysts said that the selling in gold seen recently, leading to prices see-sawing, is because investors needed cash for liquidity.

Last week, just before the hostilities broke out, ING Think, the financial and economic analysis arm of Dutch multinational financial firm ING, said that though the momentum in gold may moderate, structural drivers underpinning the market are firmly in place and, in some cases, are strengthening.

“...We think gold can still trade higher this week, potentially reclaiming $5,600/oz and posting a fresh all-time-high,” said BMI.

TWO REASONS

It attributed two reasons to this. The first was the lack of certainty surrounding the duration of the current geopolitical risk premium in oil prices.

The second factor for gold being bullish stems from physical disruption to the bullion market if flights are unable to transit through Dubai, which is one of the world’s largest gold refiners.

ING Think said the escalation in the conflict in the Persian Gulf increased upside risks to physical aluminium premiums, rather than materially tightening global supply.

“The Middle East accounts for around 8 per cent of global aluminium capacity and is heavily reliant on the Strait of Hormuz for both metal exports and alumina imports, with key producers being Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain,” it said.

BMI expects aluminium to see the largest gains from disruption in the Middle East, with prices ruling near $3,350/tonne currently.

“Heightened risks of disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, a critical export corridor for Middle East aluminium producers, have compounded existing supply-side concerns. Collectively, the UAE and Bahrain accounted for an estimated 6 per cent of global aluminium output in 2025 (around 4.3 million tonnes),” it said.

FUEL SWITCH

Reports said aluminium also surged in view of Qatar halting production due to the tensions in the Persian Gulf region. It will take at least six months for production to resume at Qatalum, a joint venture between Qatar and Norsk Hydro ASA.

BMI said aluminium prices will likely remain near $3,300/tonne in the coming weeks. Any further material escalation would amplify supply-side pressures and present significant upside risk.

BMI said it sees upside risk for seaborne prices of thermal coal if the Strait of Hormuz disruption affects the availability of Qatari liquefied natural gas (LNG). Qatar has shut down its LNG facilities, a rate event, in view of the crisis after Iranian drones attacked the country’s LNG hub.

“Gas prices have already spiked, with benchmark Henry Hub prices up almost 4 per cent and approaching $3/MMBtu. If the availability of Qatari LNG is constrained for more than a week, a potential winner would be seaborne thermal coal,” said the research agency.

This would be a temporary and significantly more limited repeat of the situation when the Ukraine war broke out in 2022. On Wednesday, Newcastle thermal coal futures (May) ruled at $138 a tonne, a 16-month high.

Qatar accounts for 80 per cent of LNG supply in Asia and 15 per cent globally. Though coal trade is not carried through the Strait of Hormuz, expectations of Japan and South Korea switching to coal have raised prices of Australian and Indonesian coal by 15 per cent since the beginning of this week.


India showing renewed interest in buying Russian crude: Deputy PM

Press Trust of India Moscow

Moscow on Tuesday claimed that India has signalled “renewed interest” in importing larger volumes of Russian crude oil amid disruptions in energy supplies following the closure of the Strait of Hormuz after the US-Israeli strikes on Iran.

“Yes, we are getting signals of renewed interest from India,” Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak told the state-run TV Rossiya 1 on the sidelines of an event in Moscow.

HORMUZ STRAIT CHOKE

Nearly a fifth of the world’s oil supplies and a significant share of liquefied natural gas exports pass through the narrow Hormuz Strait linking the Persian Gulf with global markets.

Any prolonged restriction on the traffic through Hormuz threatens to disrupt energy supplies to major importers, including India, China and Japan. This in turn will potentially drive up global crude prices.


Iran war: India’s smartphone exports may take a blow on disruption to air route, key transfer hubs

Sindhu Hariharan Chennai

With the US/Israel-Iran war turning more complex and prolonged, India’s export momentum in smartphones is likely to come under strain.

India exports smartphones through the air route, with shipments routed to key markets via connecting flights. Dubai International Airport and Hamad International Airport in Qatar serve as major transshipment hubs for onward shipments to Europe, the US and Africa. The security situation in the Gulf countries and the resulting closure of air routes are set to impact this well-oiled export chain.

COST PRESSURE

Surging oil prices triggered by the conflict are also likely to drive up the cost of dollar-denominated import of components such as chipsets and camera modules. These factors, combined with rising freight costs, make exploring alternative export modes more expensive.

If the war prolongs beyond a week or 10 days, exporters might consider chartering flights, but industry sources noted that would come at a stiff cost, especially in the current environment.

Pankaj Mohindroo, Chairman of the India Cellular and Electronics Association (ICEA), said that any disruption in Middle East airspace or key trade corridors could create short-term logistical challenges. If instability persists for a longer period, exports may face temporary delays.

‘TRADE WILL STABILISE’

“However, India’s growing role in global electronics manufacturing and its expanding presence in Middle East markets provide structural strength," Mohindroo said. He added that even in a prolonged scenario, trade flows are expected to eventually stabilise.

The UAE is a vital market for India, serving as a major destination that accounts for approximately 10–13 per cent of India’s overall smartphone exports. In the first nine months of FY26 (April-December), the UAE imported $4.1 billion worth of electronics items from India.


Red flags in corporate tax revenue

Lokeshwarri SK

The new corporate tax regime, launched in 2019, had delivered a massive cut in corporate tax with effective tax rate lowered from the highest rate of 35 per cent to 25 per cent. Companies in the new corporate tax regime, however, had to forego all tax exemptions, incentives or deductions, including MAT credit.

If we take stock of the situation six years later, Indian companies have certainly benefitted from the tax cut. Effective tax rate of all companies has moved down from 29.5 per cent in FY18 to 22.5 per cent by FY24. But the expectations that private capex cycle will take off or job creation will improve have not been met. It can be argued that the demand contraction seen during the pandemic had impeded capital investment or that new capacities are being added in a few sectors such as chemicals, renewables and semiconductors, where demand is good.

Be that as it may, another interesting aspect is that many companies have not yet moved to the new corporate tax regime. Of the total taxable income in 2023-24, around 38 per cent continued to be under the old tax regime, paying tax at the rate of 30 per cent plus surcharge and cess.

This indicates that companies, especially the larger ones, have carried forward tax credits which they are using to reduce their tax liability. The effective tax liability of companies with taxable income exceeding ₹500 crore was just 18.8 per cent, as per latest available data.

With the decline in effective tax rate, corporate tax collections have also been decelerating. The Centre’s move to clamp down on credits given for Minimum Alternate Tax and nudging companies to move to the new tax regime, need to be seen against this background.

LARGE COMPANIES, LOWER TAX

Larger companies, which account for a lion’s share of taxable income, always paid lower tax, thanks to the battery of tax consultants employed by them to advise them on innovative means to reduce tax liability. But the gap between the tax rate of small and big companies appears to have widened of late.

The effective tax rate of companies with profit before tax between 0 to 1 crore was 23.68 per cent in 2023-24. The tax rate moves lower as the size of the company increases with those with profit over ₹500 crore paying tax at the rate of 18.8 per cent only.

Further, the effective tax rate of larger companies has moved down 7.5 percentage points since FY18. The current rate of 18.8 per cent is below the effective tax rate of 22 per cent in the new corporate tax regime. With losses mounting during Covid, companies seem to have accumulated MAT credit which has helped them reduce their tax liability in the years following the pandemic. Other incentives which companies have been using as of FY24 are tax holidays provided to exporters located in Special Economic Zones, accelerated depreciation provided to manufacturing, power generation and transmission businesses, deduction of profits of infrastructure companies and deduction of profits in generation, transmission and distribution of power.

WHAT THE BUDGET DID

In an ideal situation, it is good to lower tax incidence of companies so that they can improve their output and contribute to economic growth. But in the face of sluggish private capex and stagnating pay scales of private sector employees, the Centre cannot be faulted for plugging the gap that is allowing larger companies to lower their tax liability inordinately. With the gross tax revenue getting hit due to income tax and GST rationalisation, the Centre appears to be turning its attention towards corporate tax revenue now.

The Union Budget 2026 laid down that the companies in the old regime will no longer be allowed to use credit brought forward for MAT, to bring down their corporate tax liability. Such set off was being allowed only for companies in the new tax regime, and that too only partially. The rate of MAT was lowered from 15 to 14 per cent.

MAT was introduced in 1987 to check companies from claiming various deductions and exemptions to avoid paying tax. Therefore, if the tax liability of a company was lower than 15 per cent of its book profit, the company was required to pay MAT at the rate of 15 per cent to the exchequer.

However, companies were given a leeway that when the company paid MAT, the difference between tax liability and MAT paid could be carried forward for 15 years and used to reduce tax liability in future.

The Centre has now done away with the practice of allowing the excess tax paid under MAT to be carried forward. Any MAT credit brought forward from earlier years can be set off only up to 25 per cent of the tax liability for the year, and only in the new tax regime.

COLLECTIONS SLOWING

The move to restrict MAT credit and nudge companies to move to the new tax regime appears to be a result of slowing corporate tax collections in recent times.

While the compounded annual growth in income tax collections was 15 per cent between FY18 and FY27 (BE), the growth in corporate tax is a much lower 8.9 per cent. In FY18, corporate tax yielded ₹5.7 lakh crore, amounting to 58 per cent of direct tax collections. But by FY27 (BE), corporate tax is expected to raise ₹12.3 lakh crore, accounting for only 46 per cent of total direct tax collections.

The slowing corporate tax collections are not due to decline in profitability, since profit growth of companies has picked up since FY24 with net profit growing in high double digits in many years. With companies becoming increasingly reluctant to pay tax, it will not be surprising if the Centre now turns its attention towards more measures to improve corporate tax collections.


SEBI revamps AIF reporting norms

Mumbai: SEBI has overhauled the regulatory reporting framework for Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs), replacing the existing quarterly activity report regime with a combination of annual and limited quarterly filings, aimed at easing compliance burdens.

In a circular issued on Wednesday, it said that AIFs will now be required to submit a comprehensive Annual Activity Report within 30 calendar days from the end of each financial year. The first such report, for the year ending March 2026, must be filed by May 31, 2026, through the SEBI Intermediary Portal.

AIFs will also file a limited Quarterly Activity Report in a revised format within 15 days of the end of each quarter, starting with the quarter ending June 2026. No separate quarterly report will be required for the March quarter, as the annual filing will subsume those data points.

The revised reporting formats will be hosted by the Indian Venture and Alternate Capital Association, which will also assist AIFs in implementation.

OUR BUREAU


‘Speed is not always a virtue in finance’

Speed is not always a virtue in finance as it sometimes hides weakness, according to Swaminathan J, Deputy Governor, RBI. “A product can reach ten million people within months. A credit model can approve loans in seconds. A payments platform can process massive volumes,” he said. “This scale is powerful, but it also means that harm can scale quickly if design is poor, controls are weak, or incentives are misaligned,” Swaminathan stated in a recent speech at the 3rd International Finance and Accounting Conference at the Indian Institute of Management (IIM), Jammu. He noted that technology is a force multiplier, amplifying both good and bad design.

NO SHORTCUTS

“Eventually, the future will reward institutions that can combine efficiency and innovation with prudence, and growth with resilience,” the Deputy Governor said. He cautioned that while the “easy path”—such as shortcuts in due diligence, compromises on disclosure, or aggressive sales targets—might be tempting, these compromises compound over time.

“In the age of dashboards and AI, it is easy to forget that accounting is a discipline of clarity,” he added. It forces the recognition of losses, the admission of uncertainty, and the prudent valuation of assets. He observed that the true difference between a good institution and a weak one is not growth speed, but how truthfully it measures itself. Many financial problems start small, often literally in the “small print”.

Finance professionals should therefore endeavor to design and sell products that are suitable, transparent, and fair. The best leaders prevent harm before it occurs rather than waiting for problems to become headlines.

Our Bureau Mumbai


Can Iran sustain a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz?

By N. Madhavan

Iran has ‘closed’ the Strait of Hormuz, causing oil and gas prices to spike. But how long can Iran realistically block this critical passageway, which connects the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea and carries a fifth of global oil, gas and fertilizer shipments? Mint explores:

Has Iran shut the Strait of Hormuz?

On Monday, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), a branch of Iran’s armed forces, announced that the Strait of Hormuz was closed and attacked a few ships passing through the maritime choke point. The announcement quickly caused panic, and most shipping lines have since suspended crude oil, fuel and liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments through the passageway. On Monday, only 28 vessels transited the shipping lane, against the daily average of 138. Oil prices jumped sharply, crossing $80 per barrel, and are likely to soar further if the US-Israel-Iran war drags on.

Has Iran ever closed the strait before?

Iran has never shut the strait for an extended period, though it has threatened to do so several times since the Islamic Revolution in 1979. However, experts suggest this time is different. The Islamic republic is considerably weaker, and closing the shipping route is seen as its best way to inflict pain on the US, its Arab neighbours, and the rest of the world via sky-high oil prices. While the Iranian regime may not be able to implement a total physical blockade due to a strong US naval presence, it can certainly scare ships away with targeted missile attacks.

Can Iran effect a long-term blockade?

Sustainability will depend on Iran's residual military capabilities, what the new leadership wants, and whether there is a change of regime. However, the strait is a double-edged sword for Iran. While it is a powerful strategic lever, a total shutdown would also paralyze the Iranian economy, as nearly 95% of its oil exports—about 1.6 million barrels per day, destined primarily for China—pass through these waters. China gets the bulk of its crude needs from West Asia and will certainly pressure Iran, its ally, to reopen the strait.

How would this affect India?

India is highly vulnerable to any long-term disruption of crude oil supply from West Asia. In January, 55% of its oil purchases (roughly 2.74 million barrels a day) came from this region. India is also scaling back its reliance on Russian crude, with market share plummeting from 33% in 2025 to just 19.3% in January—a 44-month low. Major suppliers include Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE. Higher oil prices will increase India's import bill and fuel inflation.

What happens if the blockade sustains?

West Asian countries such as Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Qatar, Kuwait, and the UAE depend on the Strait of Hormuz to ship their oil and gas. Experts fear an extended disruption could send crude oil prices above $100 per barrel. Gas prices in Europe have already shot up significantly as a result.


Sebi overlap rules likely to push MFs to passive funds

By Apoorva Ajith

Asset management companies (AMCs) may double down and innovate more on passive products following the revision of mutual fund categorization norms, offering investors a wider choice of investment options. Passive funds typically track indexes and do not require active management. While they have been growing steadily in India, a new cap on portfolio overlap may catalyze greater innovation and growth in such products.

The New Mandate

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) mandated fund houses on 26 February to ensure that schemes offered within a single category are meaningfully differentiated. The regulator has capped the portfolio overlap between thematic and sectoral funds and other equity schemes at 50%, excluding large-cap funds.

While Sebi generally permits only one scheme per category in most equity segments, there was previously no limit on the number of sectoral and thematic funds an AMC could launch. This led to a surge in offerings built around similar stocks but packaged under different narratives.

Constraints on Active Strategies

With the 50% cap now in place, maintaining multiple differentiated active strategies within a constrained universe of stocks may prove difficult for fund houses. Passive funds, by contrast, offer a clearer template for expansion. They can be launched across three primary categories: index funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), and Fund of Funds (FoFs).

Swarup Mohanty, vice chairman and CEO at Mirae Asset Investment Managers, noted that while categorization has restricted active fund launches, "mutual funds can innovate in passives," adding that real innovation happens in passives across the globe.

A Trigger for Passive Growth

Experts believe these regulatory restrictions will serve as a significant catalyst. Archit Doshi, senior vice president at Prabhudas Lilladher Capital Group, stated, "The restrictions on portfolio overlap can be a trigger for passive investments."

The shift is already visible in the data:

  • Passive assets under management (AUM) in India have risen from 7.3% of total mutual fund assets to 19.02% over the past five years (as of January).
  • Industry leaders expect India to follow developed markets like the US, where passives form 54% of total mutual fund assets.

The Next Phase: Factor-Based Funds

Innovation in the passive space is expected to move toward factor-based passive funds. These are sub-categories that track indices constructed on specific parameters such as:

  • Higher returns on equity (ROE)
  • Stronger dividend yields
  • Lower volatility or quality metrics

AMCs may also look at creating more sector-specific, structured products within ETFs and index funds, such as those focused on electric vehicles (EVs). While some experts, like Anil Ghelani of DSP Mutual Fund, suggest the shift may not happen "exponentially" overnight, the new guidelines provide clear flexibility for passives that active funds now lack.


Japan in talks with India for Rajasthan rare earth mining

Reuters NEW DELHI

Japan is in talks with India to jointly explore rare earth deposits in the desert state of Rajasthan, two people familiar with the discussions said, as Tokyo seeks to reduce reliance on China for supplies critical to magnet manufacturing.

Exploring New Deposits

Last month, India’s mines minister G. Kishan Reddy announced that three hard rock rare earth deposits containing 1.29 million tonnes (mt) of rare earth oxides had been identified in Rajasthan and Gujarat. Building on a preliminary agreement regarding critical minerals signed between Japan and India last year, Tokyo has expressed interest in the Rajasthan sites and plans to send experts to conduct evaluations.

In Rajasthan, the Japanese government would likely provide extraction technology and funding in exchange for a stable offtake of rare earths. Hard rock deposits require specific extraction techniques that India currently does not possess.

Strategic Diversification

Naoki Kobayashi, deputy director at Japan’s ministry of economy, trade and industry (METI), confirmed that Japan is examining mining projects globally to diversify mineral supplies, though he denied discussions on specific corporate partnerships or technology provision in Rajasthan at this stage.

Both nations share the goal of cutting dependence on Chinese imports. Rare earths are essential for the production of permanent magnets used in:

  • Electric vehicle (EV) motors
  • Wind turbines
  • Fighter jets and drones

Geopolitical Tensions

The talks come amid escalating disputes between Beijing and Tokyo. Last week, China prohibited the export of dual-use items—materials used for both civilian and military purposes—to 20 Japanese entities that Beijing claims supply Japan’s military.

India’s ministry of mines and the Japanese embassy did not respond to requests for comment.


Bank liquidity may come under stress

By Subhana Shaikh

Liquidity buffers of banks are expected to come under stress in the March quarter as large volumes of short-term certificates of deposit (CDs) raised in recent months mature in March, according to analysts.

Heavy Reliance on CDs

Market participants noted that banks leaned heavily on CDs in December and even more so in January to shore up liquidity amid tight funding conditions and sluggish retail deposit growth. CDs are short-term borrowing instruments with maturities ranging from seven days to one year, allowing banks to raise funds from institutions by offering higher interest rates than those paid to retail depositors.

As these instruments fall due, repayments will cause a dip in current liquidity ratios. Anil Gupta, senior vice-president at Icra, stated that CDs outstanding for banks have increased to an all-time high during the last decade, driven by record issuances in December, January, and February.

Regulatory Pressure: The LCR Challenge

The Reserve Bank of India’s liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) norms require banks to hold sufficient high-quality liquid assets to protect against short-term liquidity stress. As CDs near maturity, they are reflected as outflows in the next 30 days, which drags down the LCR.

Specific impacts on major banks during the December quarter (Q3) include:

  • State Bank of India (SBI): LCR fell to 125% from 144% in the prior quarter.
  • HDFC Bank: LCR dropped to 116% from 120%.
  • ICICI Bank: Liquidity buffer dipped to 125%.

A senior treasury official at a private sector bank remarked that the heavy raising of CDs is itself a sign that LCR is under stress because banks are failing to secure sufficient retail deposits.

Maturity Bulge Data

The spurt in CD issuances reflects a widening gap where credit growth (13.4% as of February 15) continues to outpace deposit accretion (11.2%). Issuance totals were as follows:

  • December 2025: ₹1.56 trillion.
  • January 2026: ₹1.48 trillion.
  • February 2026: ₹2.67 trillion.

Systemic Risk or Regular Pattern?

While some expect a sharp decline in LCR for Q4FY2026, others believe the situation is manageable. Rajeev Pawar, treasury head at Ujjivan Small Finance Bank, dismissed fears of a systemic crisis, stating that there is no liquidity crisis in the system right now. He argued that banks should be able to roll over these instruments as part of a regular market pattern. However, analysts at Icra expect the decline to only be partially recouped by revised LCR norms effective April 1, which will feature lower outflow rates on certain other deposits.


Toyota founding family is biggest winner in unit takeover battle

Bloomberg

For Akio Toyoda, the all-but-certain mega buyout of Toyota Industries Corp. is the ultimate legacy play. It will reshape Japan’s biggest business group, tighten his family’s grip over the Toyota group and end a protracted standoff with an American shareholder activist that tested Japan Inc.’s embrace of corporate governance reform.

The Buyout Deal

In what may be the largest-ever Japanese buyout deal, the century-old maker of textile looms that spawned the world’s largest carmaker is poised to become part of a new power centre after an unprecedented battle with Elliott Investment Management, one of the world’s most aggressive activist funds. After forcing Toyota to up the ante twice with higher bids, Elliott agreed on Monday to tender its shares for ¥20,600 apiece, valuing the company at ¥6.7 trillion ($43 billion).

The privatization of Toyota Industries is intended to reinvigorate the affiliate, remaking it as the vanguard of the group’s evolution into next-generation mobility and streamlining its equity holdings. However, critics view it as a power grab. Nicholas Benes, founder of the Board Director Training Institute of Japan, noted it appears to be a "consolidation of influence" to keep the Toyoda family in control of certain assets. A Toyota spokesperson pushed back, stating Akio Toyoda's investment is intended to support the framework as a "capitalist" rather than to lead to control over the group.

A Shield Against Activism

The drama unfolds as Japan’s government pushes companies to undo decades-old cross-shareholdings. Toyota Motor Corp. stock held by affiliates and financial partners has declined to roughly half the levels of five years ago. This unwinding of equity ties has unnerved Japanese industry leaders who worry that activists and short-term investors will pressure them to reduce long-term capital investments.

For the Toyoda family, which owns less than 0.2% of Toyota Motor directly, the loosening of these bonds threatens their role as safekeepers of the founding philosophy. Akio Toyoda saw shareholder backing for his board appointment steadily erode leading up to 2024, signaling that founding family heirs can no longer take their board seats for granted.

The Holding Company Strategy

Behind the scenes, exploratory discussions occurred regarding adopting a holding company structure for the entire group to exert influence with little need for public disclosure. Instead, the group settled on privatizing Toyota Industries, the group’s "progenitor" which owns small stakes in many other Toyota companies worth almost as much as its own market capitalization.

To handle the transaction, Toyota used an obscure subsidiary, Toyota Fudosan Co., an unlisted property manager chaired by Akio Toyoda. Toyoda himself pledged ¥1 billion of his own money to the bid, further aligning his family's interests with the group. Independent analyst Travis Lundy suggested this structure gives Toyoda immense control and could make the family "immensely wealthy".

Posterity and Legacy

Akio Toyoda has spent his tenure transforming Toyota into a global powerhouse, maintaining the title of the world’s largest carmaker for six years. Despite his success, his leadership has faced challenges from non-family executives in the past, such as Hiroshi Okuda, who famously stated that "nepotism just doesn’t belong in our future".

Toyoda appears focused on posterity. His son, Daisuke Toyoda (37), is a senior vice president at Woven by Toyota, the subsidiary developing self-driving software. Daisuke is seen as a potential future CEO contender, and the family is keen to maintain a voice in Toyota Motor’s future regardless.

Future Outlook

While Toyota denies plans to transition to a formal holding company structure, the privatization of Toyota Industries serves as a significant test case for other blue-chip Japanese firms. One potential scenario is for Toyota Industries to eventually relinquish its holdings in Toyota Motor and become a holding-like entity itself. As Toyoda stated in a June 2025 video, "If you don’t take action, you can’t create the future".


The ‘orange economy’ offers a path to inclusive growth

By Tulsi Jayakumar

A new term that entered the lexicon after India’s budget for 2026-27 was the ‘orange economy.’ Synonymous with the creative economy, it is emerging as a formidable engine of growth that transcends traditional industrial boundaries. Once viewed as niche, the intersection of culture, technology and intellectual property now accounts for roughly 3.1% of global GDP and 6.2% of all employment. For a country like India, where recent budgetary initiatives recognize the strategic value of creative assets, the growth of this sector offers more than just economic expansion; it presents a data-driven pathway to greater gender parity and social inclusion.

The Creative Advantage for Women

The creative economy is inherently decentralized and knowledge-based, offering a significant ‘creative advantage’: women make up almost half the workforce in cultural and creative industries worldwide, ranking the sector fourth globally in terms of female employment. In many developing countries, the gender gap is not only narrowing within the creative sector but also reversing in some sub-sectors.

This trend is being helped along by targeted interventions in regions with demographic profiles similar to India’s. For instance:

  • The ‘Drone Divas’ initiative in South Africa trained women in drone operation for creative fields like cinematography and architecture, bridging digital and gender gaps in a male-dominated technical space.
  • In Kenya, a ‘Wana Wake’ music performance series and all-women sound-engineering programmes demonstrated that when structural barriers—such as a lack of female mentors—are addressed, women thrive in technical-cultural roles previously closed to them.

Social Inclusion and Identity

Creative expressions often serve as a medium for social commentary and advocacy, allowing communities that have historically been sidelined to reclaim their identity and economic agency. In post-apartheid South Africa, the creative sector has been instrumental in providing opportunities for non-Caucasian Africans, who now make up over 70% of the cultural workforce. The emancipatory potential of the arts is particularly relevant for India’s diverse and youthful population. With nearly 50 million people employed in the creative sector globally—more than three times the number in the automotive industry—the scale of job opportunities is immense.

Bridging the Digital Divide

The shift toward creative services is crucial for social inclusion as it allows a digital artist in a Tier-2 Indian city to compete in a global marketplace. However, with much of rural India lacking high-speed internet, the budgetary push must be paired with aggressive rural connectivity to ensure that the orange economy does not accentuate the digital divide or remain an exclusively urban phenomenon.

Another required policy intervention is a focus on ‘formalization’ to help creators register their businesses and gain access to growth resources and finance. Women in the crafts and fashion sectors often perceive their work as a side activity rather than a formal enterprise; transitioning from a hobby to a sustainable creative business is a significant step toward empowerment.

Resilience and Sustainable Goals

While world trade in goods has seen steep declines, trade in creative services has remained remarkably resilient. This stability provides a vital safety net for informal workers who are most vulnerable to economic shocks. Ultimately, the orange economy is not a zero-sum game; it is a feasible development option that aligns with several Sustainable Development Goals, including SDG 8 (decent work) and SDG 5 (gender equality).

For India to harness this, the policy focus must shift to a holistic ecosystem approach. This includes training in both creative and business skills, ensuring that ‘stage-ready’ artists are supported by ‘market-ready’ teams of managers and technical experts. By investing in creative industries, India can turn its vast cultural heritage into a modern economic engine that rewards originality while helping dismantle social and gender-based hierarchies.


War meets peak OMC earnings

By Ananya Roy

The market’s reaction to the joint US-Israel strikes on Iran wasn't exactly subtle. The war is choking the Strait of Hormuz, hurting tanker flows and causing oil markets to react. Brent is now over $80 a barrel.

Back home, the Nifty 50 index fell 1.2% on Monday, while shares of state-run oil marketing companies (OMCs)—Bharat Petroleum Corp. (BPCL), Hindustan Petroleum Corp. (HPCL) and Indian Oil Corp. (IOCL)—declined around 4%. Even before the latest escalation in Iran, stock prices remained stagnant despite a blockbuster December quarter (Q3FY26) in which OMCs doubled their combined profits year-on-year. The geopolitical developments since then have pushed Brent crude up from $60 a barrel in early January to over $80 a barrel.

The Hormuz Dependency

In light of Trump’s penal tariffs on Russian crude, India now relies more on oil from the Gulf. More than half of India’s imported crude makes its way through the Strait of Hormuz.

OMC margins are composed of two parts:

  • Refining margins: Earned from refining crude into petroleum products.
  • Marketing margins: Earned from selling refined products at retail pumps.

While refining margins are driven by international spreads, typically larger marketing margins are constrained domestically by indirectly capped prices.

Margins Under Pressure

Marketing margins will bear the brunt of the recent escalation. When crude touched $70 a barrel, diesel marketing margins were estimated at ₹1 a litre (down from ₹3 in Q3). With oil over $80 a barrel, diesel margins are likely to have turned negative.

Petrol had held up better until last week, with margins at ₹7 a litre, but rising crude means petrol cracks are swinging violently. According to JM Financial, every $1 per barrel rise in crude above $70 could compress marketing margins by ₹0.55 a litre.

Varying Impact by Company

  • IOCL: The largest domestic OMC by capacity. It has some petrochemical exposure to offset marketing margin hits. Its marketing-to-refining ratio for FY27 is estimated at 1.2, the lowest among OMCs. Its stock has held up better, rallying almost 8% in 2026.
  • HPCL: Stock is down 15% after Q3 earnings disappointed. Its marketing-to-refining ratio is the highest at 2.1, making it more vulnerable to marketing margin shocks.
  • BPCL: Sits in the middle with a ratio of 1.4. It has seen some investor optimism regarding greenfield expansion plans, with the stock down less than 2% this year.

Outlook

Rising geopolitical tensions have made investors less tolerant of expensive multiples. With stocks trading at an EV/Ebitda of around 6, the risk-reward profile appears skewed against investors. While India can manage short disruptions with its strategic petroleum reserves and floating Russian inventories, a prolonged war raises the probability of repeated margin shocks.


Allu Arjun row: going viral comes at a cost for celebrities

By Lata Jha NEW DELHI

The controversy involving actor Allu Arjun taking legal action against a brand strategist over remarks made on a podcast has highlighted a growing challenge for celebrities: reputational risk in the age of short-form videos and AI-generated content. This recent episode underlines how informal digital formats—often driven by virality and algorithmic amplification—have widened the exposure of public figures to allegations that can spiral into legal and commercial consequences.

The Podcast Dispute

Last month, a brand strategist on a podcast claimed that Arjun’s team had issued a list of 42 "dos and don’ts" for conducting interviews with him, including instructions not to look into his eyes or shake hands. The actor’s team refuted the claims and initiated legal action, after which the strategist retracted her statement and issued a public apology. However, despite the retraction, the damage to his reputation was significant.

A Growing Digital Threat

Experts say such incidents illustrate how podcasts, product reviews, and "expose-style" YouTube and Instagram Reels content increasingly frame celebrities as difficult or even unethical. The risks are compounded by AI-led deepfakes that create false scenarios involving public figures. Other stars, including Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Ranveer Singh, and Vivek Oberoi, have also had to approach the courts to stop AI-generated videos or fake accounts from tarnishing their images.

The Loss of Traditional Filters

Rajnish Rawat, co-founder and CEO at Social Pill, notes that the digital space has removed the traditional filters, such as editors or publicists, who used to fact-check stories. Now, with the explosion of long-form podcasts, anyone with a microphone can share a rumor that reaches millions in minutes. Aishwarya Kaushiq, partner at BTG Advaya, adds that platform designs often reward engagement-maximizing content, meaning sensational or provocative claims are more likely to be boosted and circulated out of context.

Aggressive Management Strategies

As a celebrity’s image becomes more valuable in the digital economy, unverified claims can lead to suspended endorsements and contract disputes. Consequently, management and legal teams are becoming far more aggressive. According to Rawat, teams are now using digital listening tools to catch viral clips in their first few hours, allowing them to counter the narrative or issue a legal notice before the content becomes mainstream news. Experts emphasize that any statement framed as an "insider disclosure" of misconduct can have direct and quantifiable consequences on a celebrity’s commercial value.



Wednesday, March 04, 2026

Reflections on Iran War

Reflections on the Iran War

Editor’s Note

This is now a diplomatic fact of the Trump era, and it goes beyond what just happened in Iran.

Happy Mon Jacob

History arrives without fire alarms and prior warnings. The occasions that reshape the world and its order(s) rarely come with the clarity that is often assigned to them in textbooks – clean, neat and linear. On the night of 28 February 2026, while at a conference in Bangalore, I heard about the American and Israeli attacks on Iran, and then the news came through that Ali Khamenei was dead. I couldn’t shake off the strong feeling that something big and consequential had just shifted. The Middle East – the ancient theatre of great empires, even greater prophets, and great power ambitions – has been reordered many times before: after the Ottoman Empire collapsed in 1918, with the discovery of oil, the creation of Israel, the 1979 Iranian revolution, and the 2003 American invasion of Iraq. Each was called a turning point at the time. And each truly was.

I think what happened last Friday (28 February 2026) belongs in that company of momentous historical events. Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, chose to get killed in his home without trying to escape, thereby sending out the message of martyrdom to his followers. A near-nuclear state has been struck by the world’s most powerful military. The rules of diplomatic engagement were publicly discarded. And the institutions the world built, led by the US, after 1945 to prevent exactly this kind of moment, simply watched it happen. To be fair, the UN chief did issue a statement, even if no one even bothered to read it.

For India, located at the intersection of the Middle East, Central Asia, and the Indo-Pacific, bound to the restive region by energy, diaspora, and trade, and navigating a world in which America remains supreme but is no longer reliable or responsible, none of this is some history unfolding in a distant land. India must now think through, clearly and urgently, what this means and how the geopolitics of the region will shape up in the months and years to come.

For India, which does not share America’s desire for regime change but has strong interests in Persian Gulf stability and has enjoyed warm relations with Tehran, this war is closer to home than it looks: one in which we have no direct role but one that will affect its interests. Here are 13 quick reflections to make sense of what is happening in Iran and what it means for international politics.

1. The Futility of Diplomacy in the Age of Trump

The Israeli Ministry of Defence openly confirmed that the operation against Iran had been planned for months, with the start date set just weeks ago. Interestingly, those weeks coincided with American and Iranian negotiators meeting in Geneva, with Oman mediating, aiming for a nuclear agreement. These talks were not a failed peace effort but a cover for a military timeline already decided. Oman also expressed disappointment: “I am dismayed. Active and serious negotiations have yet again been undermined,” said Omani Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi.

This is now a diplomatic fact of the Trump era, and it goes beyond what just happened in Iran. Unlike what diplomacy is supposed to do, the Geneva talks were used as a tactic to keep the adversary engaged, manage international appearances, and buy time for military plans. Well, it’s not that diplomacy failed; in fact, it was never meant to succeed. Diplomacy was used as deception in this case. The lesson Pyongyang, Islamabad, Beijing, and even New Delhi might learn is that diplomacy with Trump’s Washington could just be theatre and deception.

A militia that answers to Khamenei is perhaps more easily controllable than one that answers to no one. The Gulf states, which quietly welcomed Iran’s defanging, could now face the challenge of ungoverned Shia armed groups across the region with little to hold them back

2. The Pakistan-Saudi Pact: Much Ado About Nothing

When Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed the mutual defence pact last year, it caused a lot of concern and anxiety in New Delhi. Clearly, a formal mutual defence agreement between a powerful Sunni monarchy and India’s nuclear-armed neighbour-adversary was not something India could ignore. But it is fair to say that concern has now been settled by events. Iran struck Saudi territory directly, and Pakistan did nothing. To be fair, a few days earlier, when the Taliban and Pakistan were openly fighting a war, the Saudis didn’t come to Islamabad’s aid either. So let’s say that the Pak-Saudi pact has been tested by real-life events and has been shown to be exactly what I had expected: a diplomatic gesture, not a real strategic commitment.

This shows something India has long known instinctively: signing defence agreements is easy, but honouring them is hard. Historically, India has avoided formal military alliances because they create obligations that can’t always be met and expectations that can backfire.

3. The Death of the Supreme Leader May Not Be the End of the Road for the Regime.

The killing of the 86-year-old Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Iranian Supreme Leader since 1989 and the architect of post-revolutionary Iran’s ideology for nearly four decades, is the single most consequential event of this war. But to believe that this ends the Iranian regime decisively may be an overzealous reading.

Iran’s constitution says that an interim leadership council is supposed to take power while the Assembly of Experts choose a new Supreme Leader. But such an orderly transition might not happen given the ongoing war. So, with no powerful and genuine alternatives with the ability to take over the reins in Tehran, the regime machine may end up reasserting itself. The IRGC, which is in control of vast economic and military assets, may have no interest in a transition that weakens its power. History offers some evidence of what might happen now: In Iraq and Libya, removing authoritarian leaders did not lead to the creation of a liberal democracy but state collapse, civil war, and forces far more hostile to stability than the regimes removed.

The talks were not a failed peace effort. They were a cover for a military timeline that had already been set. Well, it’s not that diplomacy failed; in fact, it was never meant to succeed

4. Middle East’s Headless Militias

Khamenei’s death may also have removed the religious and political anchor of Iran’s regional militia network, considering that Khamenei, as the Wali al-Faqih or the Supreme Jurist, provided religious authority to groups like Hezbollah. With that authority now gone and no clear successor, the Axis of Resistance faces an existential crisis but will not disappear easily. Hezbollah, already weakened after Nasrallah’s killing in 2024, is a militia unsure of its future. The Iraqi PMF could split along local interests, with some escalating violence on their own and others focusing on domestic power struggles. The Houthis resumed Red Sea attacks within hours of the strikes.

This might eventually become the strategic miscalculation Israel and Washington may come to regret. Dismantling the head of a network does not dismantle the network; it decentralises it, and the splintered groups might take shapes and forms not easily controllable. Al-Qaeda after bin Laden, the Taliban after Mullah Omar are great examples to show that decapitation of terrorist and militant organisations fragments them into autonomous, less controllable cells. A militia that answers to Khamenei is perhaps more easily controllable than one that answers to no one. The Gulf states, which quietly welcomed Iran’s defanging, could now face the challenge of ungoverned Shia armed groups across the region with little to hold them back.

5. Gaza Goes Dark

The political and humanitarian tragedy in Palestine has often been overshadowed by bigger regional conflicts, and the Iran war could do just that in the days ahead. Israel’s strategy was that removing Iran would cut off support for Hamas and the wider resistance. While that is debatable since the Palestinian national cause doesn’t rely on Iranian funding, in global media, diplomacy, and the Security Council focus, Gaza is already off the radar. The questions of justice and humanitarian tragedy remain, but the world’s attention has moved on.

Dismantling the head of a network does not dismantle the network; it decentralises it, and the splintered groups might take shapes and forms not easily controllable

6. The Offshore Superpower: Power Without Consequences

The United States has mastered the art of war without consequences at home, which has made it more willing to go to war. The bombs fall somewhere else, and the human and material cost of war is paid by someone else. On top of that, no international law or Security Council resolution can stop American actions, whether in Venezuela or Iran.

We have seen this play out in Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Afghanistan. The script is consistent: the US acts, the region absorbs the cost, the US eventually disengages, and the space left behind is occupied by forces more hostile to stability than the regimes that were removed. There is simply no historical reason to believe Iran will be different. The consequences will be borne by Iran’s neighbours, including India.

7. The UNSC is Dead, and the Board of Peace is Dead on Arrival.

France called for an emergency Security Council session on Iran. The outcome was predictable and revealing: the United States blocked any resolution critical of the strikes, while Russia and China blocked anything Washington supported. The Council issued a statement, but the war went on. Let’s be clear: an institution meant to ensure global security, where the five countries most likely to start wars also have the power to block any action, is not a true “security council” but a veto club. This may be one of the final nails in the UNSC’s coffin.

What makes this worse is that no alternative institution is ready to step in. The NPT regime, meant to prevent nuclear proliferation, has failed badly. The ICJ issues rulings that no one enforces or targets only weak players. The General Assembly passes resolutions that few pay attention to anymore. There is no effective international body with the authority, will, or power to act when a permanent Security Council member chooses to go to war, justified or not. None. The world is, quite literally, on a short fuse today.

8. China: The Superpower That Merely Watches

As missiles rained down on Iran, China, a close partner of Tehran, only said it was “highly concerned” and called for an end to the fighting. That was it. When Russia invaded Ukraine four years ago, China called for peace while supporting Moscow economically. When Israel bombed Gaza over a year later, China made statements but did nothing to stop the violence. Now, China is watching again.

This pattern reveals a clear strategy adopted by Beijing: it maximises its options by minimising its commitments. Standing by Iran in good times maximises its energy and geopolitical options, but doing so when Iran is down costs Gulf relationships that it needs for oil. China seeks to benefit from geopolitical contradictions by simply refusing to act. But a power that aspires to lead a multipolar world, and is a near superpower, but refuses to lead in any crisis, cannot be an alternative pole in world politics. Thus, the smaller and middle powers hoping for a counterweight to American unilateralism will soon discover that China offers little global leadership.

9. American Hegemony: Real, But Increasingly Brittle

The attacks on Iran and the strike in Venezuela show that American military supremacy is clear. No other country could carry out such precise, well-planned strikes. But let’s be clear: this is an overwhelming force used against a much weaker, sanctions-hit adversary with no nuclear weapons and no ability to threaten the US homeland. That’s not a military victory worth boasting about.

It’s also important to note that Washington avoids confronting powerful countries like China or Russia. Its decision not to fully back Ukraine against Russia has sent a message to its Asian allies. Many of America’s allies now believe that if a conflict over Taiwan arises, the US might not come to defend the island against a strong Chinese military.

Diplomacy was used as deception in this case. The lesson Pyongyang, Islamabad, Beijing, and even New Delhi might learn is that diplomacy with Trump’s Washington could just be theatre and deception

10. Connectivity Woes

The Strait of Hormuz, which carries 20% of the world’s oil and a third of its LNG, is now a conflict zone, and Iran has reportedly closed it. Even a partial disruption of this route sends energy prices soaring, especially for countries like India. India’s Chabahar port plans and the billion dollars invested there could be at risk.

The IMEC corridor, which has grand plans to link India through the Gulf to Europe via Israel, now faces an entirely new regional reality. New geopolitical developments could undo the economic geography IMEC was designed for. While the American companies will benefit from the spoils of war and reconstruction, China, with its own deep pockets, will benefit too. India has neither the financial firepower nor the institutional framework to compete at scale. This is something to think about in the days ahead.

11. India’s Response: The Art of the Balanced Message

Foreign Minister Jaishankar acted quickly. Within hours of the strikes, he called Israeli FM Gideon Sa’ar, repeating India’s call for “dialogue and diplomacy to de-escalate tensions.” That evening, he called Iranian FM Seyed Abbas Araghchi, expressing India’s “deep concern at the recent developments.” Two calls, two warring sides, but one message: India is not taking sides.

MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal posted the official statement: “India is deeply concerned at the recent developments in Iran and the Gulf region. We urge all sides to exercise restraint, avoid escalation, and prioritise the safety of civilians. Sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states must be respected.”

That last sentence is the most important part of India’s statement. It doesn’t name the United States or Israel. But by invoking sovereignty and territorial integrity in the context of a military strike on a UN member state, India sends a clear diplomatic message. In other words, India signals, without saying it outright, that it sees the strikes as violating international law. Equally notable is what India didn’t say: when Iran retaliated by striking US bases in Qatar, Kuwait, the UAE, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia, India said nothing specific about those attacks. Was self-defence the reason for that silence? I don’t know.

12. Delhi Three-Way Tightrope

India is trying to manage three relationships pulling in different directions at once. The United States, despite Trump, remains India’s key security and technology partner and the anchor of the Quad and Indo-Pacific. So openly criticising American military action isn’t politically or strategically wise. Israel is a close defence partner and source of critical military technology, especially when Delhi faces military challenges. Iran is a regional neighbour with whom India has strong relations, connectivity through Chabahar, and deep cultural ties, and which is a key alternative oil supplier to the Gulf.

There is no way Delhi can reconcile these three pulls, and from Jaishankar’s phone calls and tweets, it appears that India is not trying to reconcile them either. It is keeping all three doors open and treating each relationship on its own merit.

Al-Qaeda after bin Laden, the Taliban after Mullah Omar are great examples to show that decapitation of terrorist and militant organisations fragment them into autonomous, less controllable cells

13. What Next: Transition, Continuity, or Collapse?

From where I sit in Delhi, the most important question in the coming weeks isn’t military but political: what will happen to Iran, and who will take charge?

The first scenario is regime continuity. The IRGC and the clerical establishment close ranks, the Assembly of Experts selects a successor, and the regime survives. It could be a more militant, more unpredictable Iran with wounded pride and, with more youngsters in its ranks, seeking to take revenge and accelerate whatever remains of its nuclear programme in underground facilities that survived the strikes.

The second scenario is a managed transition toward reformist leadership led by those long arguing for engagement with the world using the succession crisis to take the country in a different direction. This is what Washington and Jerusalem would hope for. As of now, it is the least likely, given that the IRGC controls the muscle, the money, and the street militias that enforce order. And it is highly unlikely that America will deploy boots on the ground to change that equation as it once did in Iraq.

The third scenario, and by far the most dangerous one, is fragmentation: a succession crisis the regime cannot manage, combined with active bombardment, growing anger among an already unhappy population, and long-suppressed demands for change, producing not a new government but prolonged internal conflict. Also consider the possibility of warlordism, regional separatism among Iran’s Kurdish and Baloch minorities, and competing armed factions. All this would be catastrophic for regional stability, global energy markets, India’s diaspora, and any prospect of resolving the nuclear question.

Delhi must start considering each scenario now, as all have major implications for India. For now, New Delhi should quietly reach out to Tehran, whoever is in charge, and use any back-channels still open to stay in touch. Staying in touch is the option for now.

The world is holding its breath to see what Iran becomes. So is India.

Debt burden by country

 


Tuesday, March 03, 2026

Newspaper Summary 040326

 

Mutual funds take a shine to bank stocks

ROBUST PERFORMANCE. Nifty Bank Index has appreciated 24 per cent over a one-year period

Suresh P Iyengar & K Ram Kumar | Mumbai

The banking sector’s robust health, signified by credit growth, improving asset quality, stable profitability, and stake buys by foreign banks and institutions in private sector banks, has prompted mutual funds (MFs) to increase their weightage in the sector. This has led to a significant rise in their stakes in various banks over the last year.

According to data from primeinfobase.com, MFs increased their shareholding by more than 1 per cent between December 2024 and December 2025 in several banks, including AU Small Finance Bank (SFB), Axis Bank, Bandhan Bank, Bank of Maharashtra, Federal Bank, HDFC Bank, and ICICI Bank.

“Overall, the banking system is doing very well with non-performing assets at multi-decade lows and improving credit growth," said VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Investments. He noted that the RBI’s Financial Stability Report highlights a revival in credit demand, with sectors like MSMEs, retail, and segments of the corporate sector borrowing more. This credit growth and better asset quality are expected to result in impressive profit numbers.

Bank Stocks Sizzle

The sector's strong fundamentals are reflected in the Nifty Bank Index, which appreciated 24 per cent over a one-year period. Mangesh Kulkarni, Head-Portfolio Management Services at Almondz Financial Services, stated that bank stock valuations remain very attractive despite sustained financial performance. He further noted that funds are re-directing investments from IT stocks to bank stocks.

Significant increases in MF stakes were seen in Equitas SFB (up 7.7 percentage points to 45.2 per cent) and Ujjivan SFB (up 19.99 percentage points to 23.82 per cent), following AU SFB's in-principle approval from the RBI in August 2025 to convert into a universal bank. MFs' stake in AU SFB itself rose by 5.5 percentage points to 22.61 per cent.

RBL Bank saw a substantial 22 percentage point jump in MF stake (reaching 34.44 per cent) following Emirates NBD Bank’s decision to acquire a controlling stake via a $3 billion infusion. MFs also increased stakes in IDFC First Bank (up 6.37 pp to 10.93 per cent) and Federal Bank (up 2.25 pp to 37.78 per cent). These increases coincide with significant investments from global firms like Warburg Pincus, ADIA, and Blackstone in these specific banks.

Among public sector banks, MFs showed a preference for the Bank of Maharashtra, increasing their stake by 4.47 pp to 5.32 per cent. SBI was the only other PSU bank where MFs increased their shareholding by more than 1 per cent (up 1.41 pp to 13.64 per cent).

MF Shareholding in Banks

BankMF stake as of Dec-end 2025 (%)Percentage points change over Dec-end 2024
AU Small Finance Bank22.615.50
Axis Bank32.394.80
Bandhan Bank11.793.55
Bank of Maharashtra5.324.47
Equitas SFB45.207.70
Federal Bank37.783.25
HDFC Bank23.092.38
ICICI Bank26.092.08
IDFC FIRST Bank10.936.37
Kotak Mahindra Bank21.183.74
RBL Bank34.4422.00
South Indian Bank11.908.11
State Bank of India13.641.41
Ujjivan SFB23.8219.99
YES Bank3.582.84

Source: primeinfobase.com


USTR report acknowledges gaps in India-US trade deal negotiations

TARIFF TUSSLE. It has sought ambitious targets, even though the Supreme Court ruled against Trump tariffs

Amiti Sen | New Delhi

Gaps remain on “sensitive issues” in the US-India bilateral trade deal talks, even as both nations continue to work towards an agreement intended to “open the Indian market for American products” and reduce India’s 2025 trade surplus of $58.2 billion. These findings were part of the US President’s 2026 Trade Policy Agenda and 2025 annual report.

Tariff Cuts

The report, released by the United States Trade Representative (USTR) on Monday, reiterated aggressive targets for the trade deal despite a recent adverse US Supreme Court judgement regarding the Donald Trump regime’s reciprocal tariffs.

“Under the interim agreement, India will eliminate or reduce tariffs on all US industrial goods and a wide array of US food and agricultural products, including dried distillers’ grains (DDGs), red sorghum for animal feed, tree nuts, fresh and processed fruit, soybean oil, wine and spirits, and additional products,” the report noted, reflecting a joint statement issued by the two countries on February 6.

USTR Jamieson Greer stated that the administration aims to capitalise on the past year's successes to advance American prosperity. Greer noted that President Trump is “flipping the script” on decades of non-reciprocal trade practices and that American producers are already benefiting from an “America First” approach. However, some experts suggest that because talks have not concluded and no text has been signed, New Delhi is under no obligation to adhere to the original negotiated terms.

SC Verdict

The balance of negotiations has seemingly tilted in favour of India following the US Supreme Court judgement. This ruling led to the replacement of a 25 per cent reciprocal tariff on India (which was to be 18 per cent under the interim pact) with short-term global tariffs of 10 per cent, the same rate applied to other countries.

Despite this changed landscape, the USTR report maintains ambitious obligations for India:

  • Addressing long-standing barriers to trade in US medical devices.
  • Eliminating restrictive import licensing procedures that delay market access or impose quantitative restrictions on US ICT goods.
  • Addressing non-tariff barriers (NTBs) affecting US food and agricultural products.

The two nations also plan to strengthen economic security alignment to enhance supply chain resilience. Since the reciprocal tariff programme was announced in April 2025, the US has signed Agreements on Reciprocal Tariffs (ARTs) with several nations, including Argentina and Indonesia, while framework deals have been announced with India, the EU, and Japan.

India Seeks Clarity

In response to the US Supreme Court judgement invalidating reciprocal tariffs, India postponed sending its negotiating team to Washington, citing a need to study the implications. Despite the legal shift, President Trump asserted on February 20 that “the India deal is on” and that “nothing changed” regarding the pact.


Iran war: India has 50 days of crude, fuel stocks, says govt

ON WATCH. Control room set up to monitor Strait of Hormuz situation round-the-clock VITAL CORRIDOR. Nearly 40-50% of India’s crude imports pass through the Strait of Hormuz, a key global energy choke point Our Bureau | New Delhi

The government is actively reviewing the conflict scenario in West Asia, top government officials said on Tuesday, adding that India has crude oil stocks for 25 days and an equal volume of refined petroleum products stocks, which is sufficient to address supply disruptions for 50 days. India consumes around 5.6 million barrels of petroleum products, with approximately 67 million consumers visiting retail outlets daily.

Generally, 40 per cent of India’s crude oil imports (around 2.6-2.7 mb/d) pass through the Strait of Hormuz. However, in recent years, as domestic refiners increased procurement from West Asia—including Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE—the volumes passing through this strategic energy choke-point have increased to around 50 per cent.

Oil Minister Hardeep Singh Puri stated that India is “well stocked with crude oil and inventories of key petroleum products, including petrol, diesel and ATF” to handle short-term disruptions.

24X7 Monitoring

The Petroleum Ministry has established a 24/7 control room to continuously monitor the situation, receiving input from refiners, shippers, and other stakeholders. There are expectations that the situation may “cool somewhat” in the next two weeks.

“We have overall around 50 days of stock for oil, which is sufficient. Besides, there is crude in the strategic petroleum reserves (SPRs), which is additional. We can also source from other regions, such as the US, South America and West Africa, which is also happening as we speak. Refiners are outsourcing replacements as and when needed,” an official noted.

On February 9, in the Rajya Sabha, Minister Puri noted that India holds roughly 4.094 million tonnes (mt) of crude stocks in SPRs, representing 77 per cent of the total 5.33 mt capacity. At full capacity, these reserves would last for nine-and-a-half days.

No Price Hike

Government sources indicated there are no immediate plans to raise retail prices for petrol and diesel. However, the general consensus is that if the conflict extends beyond 10-15 days, crude oil prices will likely surpass $82 per barrel.


India-based airlines begin repatriation of stranded nationals from West Asia

BACK IN HOMELAND. Domestic carriers are operating dedicated services from the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Oman

Rohit Vaid | New Delhi

India-based airlines on Tuesday commenced special operations to repatriate stranded Indian nationals from West Asia following recent airspace disruptions that led to widespread cancellations and air fare volatility. These repatriation efforts come even as Indian airlines cancelled scores of flights to the region, with a total of 357 flights cancelled on Monday alone.

Air India and Air India Express

Air India welcomed back 149 passengers from Dubai on flight AI916D, which landed in Delhi at 10:58 hrs IST on Tuesday. Earlier that day, 143 cockpit and cabin crew members of Air India and Air India Express, who had been stranded in Dubai, arrived in Delhi on flight AI918D.

To facilitate the return of more passengers, Air India is deploying wide-body aircraft, including Boeing 777 and 787 planes, on its services to Jeddah and Dubai. While the airline has extended the suspension of its regular West Asia services until midnight on March 3, it has activated alternative corridors—routing through the Red Sea, Egypt, and the Mediterranean—to sustain connectivity to the UK, Europe, Canada, and the US.

Air India Express has resumed services to Muscat, operating six flights from cities including Delhi, Kochi, and Mumbai, though its operations to Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE remain suspended until midnight on March 3.

SpiceJet and IndiGo

SpiceJet operated four special flights on March 3 from Fujairah to Delhi, Mumbai, and Kochi. Ajay Singh, Chairman and Managing Director of SpiceJet, stated that the airline’s priority is to support citizens facing uncertainty and it stands ready to operate more services subject to regulatory approvals. Scheduled flights between Fujairah and Delhi/Mumbai are expected to restore from Wednesday.

IndiGo was scheduled to operate 10 special relief flights from Jeddah to India on March 3. The airline plans to progressively reinstate select scheduled services from Wednesday, including 13 return flights to destinations such as Muscat, Jeddah, Madinah, and Athens.

Rising Fares and Logistical Constraints

The crisis has led to a significant rise in international airfares. Industry insiders noted that ticket prices have increased 10-15 per cent for Europe-bound flights and by 30-35 per cent on certain continental US routes, driven by supply constraints and the need for longer alternative routings to bypass constrained zones.


US’ Asian allies fear war will sap defences against China

Reuters | Tokyo

Japanese lawmakers gathered on Monday at the ruling party’s offices in Tokyo to question bureaucrats about evacuation plans, energy stocks, and the legal basis for US action. However, one query posed at the closed-door meeting reflected a deeper fear haunting Asia’s corridors of power since US President Donald Trump’s weekend attacks unleashed chaos in West Asia: how the region would respond to a hole left in its defences if Washington diverted ships from bases used to counter China’s military flexing, nuclear-armed North Korea, and to protect democratic Taiwan.

Indo-Pacific Stability

Chen Pu-hsun, a lawmaker in Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party who sits on the Parliament’s Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee, stated that a prolonged conflict could harm “stability and peace in the Indo-Pacific”. Chen added that Taipei must prepare for Beijing to step up coercion while the US is distracted.

While President Trump has indicated that US operations in the Middle East may last four or five weeks, he also noted they could be sustained far longer. He plans to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping at the end of March, though Beijing has not yet confirmed the visit.

Strategic Diversion

Regarding the regional tensions, China’s foreign ministry reiterated on Tuesday that Taiwan is an internal matter and Beijing will not tolerate foreign interference. Neither the US State Department nor the Defence Department responded to requests for comment.

According to a report released last month by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), approximately 40 per cent of US navy ships are currently stationed around the Middle East.


Indian shipowners seek Centre’s help for safe passage via Strait of Hormuz

Aneesh Phadnis | Mumbai

Indian shipowners have sought the Central government’s intervention to ensure the safe passage of oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz.

In a letter to Union Shipping Minister Sarbananda Sonowal, the Indian National ShipOwners’ Association (INSA) stated that there are currently 27 Indian-flagged vessels in the region. While the majority are located in the Persian Gulf, some are positioned in the Gulf of Aden.

“...are waiting to load additional cargo and given the limited strategic reserves that India holds, we are certain that it is extremely important that our ships are able to gain free and safe passage through the Straits,” wrote INSA CEO Anil Devli in the letter sent on Monday.

The association requested the government to convey this request to the authorities in both Iran and Israel. INSA noted that such intervention would ensure the safety of Indian ships and the Indian citizens on board, while also securing a safe supply chain for crude oil and LPG imports.


AI won’t take India’s tech jobs away

With its talent, scale and adaptability, India is well-positioned not merely to survive the AI revolution, but to lead it.

NEW OPPORTUNITIES. With GCCs scaling up and IT firms having strong hiring plans, AI will only redefine the kind of jobs that will be in demand.

AJAI CHOWDHRY

The recent AI Impact summit had some takeaways: The world’s fourth-largest economy — a rising power powered by talent, entrepreneurship and demographic strength, is not going to be an AI spectator. There is a decisive shift to building AI-embraced infrastructure for highways, energy, telecom, and so on. Union IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnav says India expects to attract $200 billion of AI investments over the next two years.

Investments and the Consumer Market

Why are global AI/tech companies pouring in investments into India? It’s India’s consumer market they are after. Already 100 million ChatGPT users are there, mostly consumers.

For decades, India’s $300 billion tech services sector, employing nearly six million people, was known primarily for cost arbitrage. The anxiety around AI shrinking tech jobs is overblown. Yann LeCun, godfather of AI and Meta’s former chief AI scientist, has consistently argued that fears of AI causing mass permanent job losses are misplaced and absurd. LeCun views AI as an amplifier of human intelligence rather than a replacement.

Historical Resilience

The Indian IT industry has endured many disruptions: the dotcom crash of 2000-02 that saw massive project cancellations, pricing pressure and delayed payments; the Global Financial Crisis (2008-09), a recession where clients froze IT spending, renegotiated contracts and currency volatility was the norm; visa and immigration restrictions; and the Covid pandemic — leading to project delays and client uncertainty.

Historically, IT services have faced economic downturns, tech disruptions, political and regulatory pressures, talent and margin pressures. Yet the industry has shown strong resilience by shifting from cost arbitrage to value creation, manpower-based model to now digital and AI led services and IP + AI based revenue.

History suggests technology has enabled new kinds of jobs. The last few decades’ rise of Indian IT services companies was because of multiple new technologies, including the internet, cloud, and mobile. These actually created more jobs even as they led to productivity improvements across industries. When outsourcing reduced enterprise software costs, IT budgets did not contract — they expanded. As prices fell, volumes surged. Why should this time be different?.

Automation vs. Human Insight

ChatGPT’s high-voltage debut in 2023 intensified the debate around AI and job loss. Automation has compressed low-value work — repetitive coding, application maintenance, documentation and some BPO tasks that once required large teams.

AI can generate code in seconds, create testing scripts and draft documentation automatically. Boards are asking whether companies can run leaner. Yet, for enterprise-level adoption, and to ensure stable, secure operations, human insight is vital in software testing and coding, and this will ensure that jobs remain intact or even grow, even as there is some displacement in low-end roles.

Next Level of Productivity

We are entering a different orbit of productivity. AI writes the first draft of code; engineers focus on refining, contextualising and solving complex domain problems. Value shifts from billable hours to faster, higher-quality outcomes. India’s IT services firms operate across four major business areas: implementation of large enterprise packages, customised software development, R&D exports, and infrastructure management. R&D services, advanced engineering and complex transformation projects are hard to replace; they may expand. Code generation is only one slice of the enterprise technology lifecycle.

The real complexity lies in integrating new systems into legacy environments, securing them, deploying them at scale and maintaining them over time. Also, the AI tools for enterprise are different; IT services companies focus on solutions for enterprises and not consumer. Estimates suggest AI could represent a $300-400 billion opportunity for IT services companies by 2030 — spanning AI strategy consulting, data preparation, process redesign, legacy modernisation and governance frameworks to ensure AI systems are secure and trustworthy.

Growth of GCCs

If AI were truly hollowing out India’s tech industry, we would see a slowdown in Global Capability Centres (GCCs) setting up here. The opposite is happening. According to IT industry body Nasscom, by the end of 2025, there were more than 1,750 GCCs in India employing around two million, and their numbers are growing.

Over the past few years, multinational corporations have set up their own GCCs in India — in-sourcing work rather than outsourcing it. Instead of handing projects entirely to service providers, they are building captive technology and R&D centres. IT services firms have adapted by creating GCC partnership models, supporting these centres with specialised expertise, overflow capacity and advanced engineering skills.

Conclusion

Companies such as TCS, Infosys, and Wipro plan to hire 10,000-40,000 graduates this year. Demand is shifting, not vanishing. The real change is in skills. There is no substitute for strong computing fundamentals. Engineers must understand core programming before relying on AI tools.

The real question is not whether AI will take away jobs. It is whether India will move up the value chain fast enough. With its talent, scale and adaptability, India is well-positioned not merely to survive the AI revolution, but to lead it.


The writer is Chairman, EPIC Foundation and MGB (Mission Governing Board), National Quantum Mission. Views are personal.


Iran war may slow pace of coffee exports

Vishwanath Kulkarni | Bengaluru

Even as coffee exports gather pace with the completion of the harvest, exporters are increasingly concerned about the escalating conflict in West Asia, fearing an impact on shipments. The uncertainty has already begun to disrupt logistics, with some shipping lines suspending cargo bookings to parts of the region.

The apprehension of exporters is significant, given that West Asia and North Africa together account for nearly 20 per cent of India’s coffee exports. “We are concerned over the West Asia problem as some shipping lines have said they will not accept any cargo to the region, while others are not clear. West Asia is a big market for Indian coffee,” said Ramesh Rajah, President, Coffee Exporters Association.

Key Markets

During calendar year (CY) 2025, UAE was the fourth largest buyer of Indian coffees after Italy, the Russian Federation and Germany. Other key buyers in the West Asian and North African region include Turkey, Jordan, Kuwait, Egypt and Libya. These countries collectively accounted for approximately 20 per cent of the total 3.84 lakh tonnes (lt) exported in 2025.

As per Coffee Board data, for CY25, specific import tonnages included:

  • UAE: 21,172 tonnes
  • Turkey: 17,073 tonnes
  • Libya: 14,133 tonnes
  • Jordan: 11,178 tonnes
  • Egypt: 7,650 tonnes
  • Kuwait: 5,957 tonnes

Freight Rates and Logistics

Beyond direct shipping disruptions, the trade fears an increase in freight rates due to rising oil prices. “Oil prices have already jumped 10 per cent and that’s going to have an obvious impact on freight rates, which could be a bigger variable,” said Praveen Kumar Kolimarla of Agrani Coffee and Commodities. Currently, most Indian coffee cargo is being routed around Africa to reach the main market in Europe.

Export Performance

Coffee exports saw a significant 40 per cent jump during January-February this year, reaching 80,931 tonnes compared to 57,966 tonnes in the same period last year. In dollar value terms, shipments rose 38 per cent to $405 million in these first two months. “We have seen a big pickup in shipments in the first two months and the demand is from Europe and West Asia,” Praveen noted.

India-grown coffees specifically saw a 46 per cent increase in the January-February period, reaching 62,923 tonnes. For CY25, total Indian coffee exports crossed a record $2 billion mark, up 22 per cent year-on-year, driven by high prices and strong demand from Russia.


Tata Motors, Mahindra & Mahindra clarify on Indonesia orders; say there is no material impact

NOT AFFECTED. Tata Motors and M&M clarified that they had not received any official notice on suspension of orders

Amit Vijay Mohile | Mumbai

Tata Motors and Mahindra & Mahindra in back-to-back regulatory filings have countered media reports that Indonesia had suspended vehicle imports from them. The clarifications followed exchange queries and share price volatility triggered by a March 2 report.

Both companies confirmed that they had not received any official notice of suspension, and there had been no significant impact on their businesses. Together, they are set to supply 1,05,000 vehicles to Agrcinas Pangan Nusantara as part of Indonesia’s Koperasi Desa/Kelurahan Merah Putih project, which is a State-backed initiative focused on rural mobility.

Contract Secured

Tata Motors referenced its disclosure from February 10, in which its subsidiary, PT Tata Motors Distribusi Indonesia, secured a contract for 70,000 vehicles. The company dismissed the media reports, stating, “The articles in Indonesia (reproduced in India) reflect a domestic policy discussion on imports and local manufacturing, rather than any demand or execution risk related to the order we received”.

They stressed that “the order and the advance payment we have received are programme-driven,” with plans to start supplies soon and deliver in phases. “The published article has no material impact on the company”.

Mahindra & Mahindra highlighted its announcement from February 4 of a record 35,000 units export order for Scorpio Pik Up light commercial vehicles. The company confirmed that it had received an advance payment and added, “To date, we have not received any further communication from Indonesia regarding the suspension of the order”.

Expert Claim

Despite both OEMs asserting that “all is well,” a senior industry analyst who spoke to businessline said that the situation highlights the risks for Indian OEMs pursuing scale in politically sensitive markets. Large deals tied to government programmes often clash with host countries’ push for localisation and domestic production.

“Competitors like China’s BYD have already established a foothold through factories; Indian companies must consider similar investments,” the analyst stated, emphasising that while export success brings contracts, a sustainable presence requires adaptation. “For Tata and Mahindra, achieving success may rely on shifting from pure imports to joint ventures, phased local assembly or technology transfers to align with host-country priorities”.


Bounce bags $5 m to expand electric fleet for gig workers

Our Bureau | Bengaluru

Bengaluru-based electric mobility start-up Bounce has raised $5 million in an internal funding round to expand its electric scooter fleet for gig workers across India. The company stated that the funds will support fleet expansion, entry into new cities, and infrastructure for delivery workers.

Bounce manufactures electric scooters and rents them to gig workers serving quick commerce and food delivery platforms. The company currently operates thousands of scooters in multiple cities.

“Bounce is often seen as an EV manufacturer. But that is only part of the story,” said Vivekananda Hallekere, CEO and Co-founder. He explained that the company is building the infrastructure that supports India’s online commerce, as every quick commerce order, food delivery, and last-mile package depends on a gig worker who needs electric mobility. Hallekere added, “We build the vehicles and we run the fleet. That combination of manufacturing and years of fleet operations experience is what sets us apart and is very hard to replicate”.

The company follows a vertically integrated model. Bounce is backed by several prominent investors, including Accel, B cap, Qualcomm, and Peak XV.

(With inputs from intern Tejaswini S)


Telangana meets record 18,139 MW peak demand

Our Bureau | Hyderabad

Telangana State power utilities successfully met a record peak electricity demand of 18,139 MW on Tuesday morning, marking the highest peak demand ever recorded in the State. According to Deputy Chief Minister Bhatti Vikramarka Mallu, this milestone reflects Telangana’s economic growth, operational efficiency, and excellent coordination.

Despite being geographically smaller, Telangana has reached a level where its peak load matches or even surpasses those of much larger States. For instance, Telangana's peak demand is now comparable to States like Madhya Pradesh (approximately 19,900 MW) and Rajasthan (between 19,600–20,600 MW). Furthermore, the State recorded a higher peak demand than industrialised States such as Punjab, Haryana, Jharkhand, and Chhattisgarh.

Monday, March 02, 2026

Newspaper Summary 030326

 

SECURITY IN FOCUS

Physical security of data centres in the spotlight amid rising geopolitical risks

Sindhu Hariharan Chennai

The reports of an incident and the resulting downtime at Amazon’s Data Centre (DC) in the UAE due to the US-Iran war has highlighted the critical nature of DCs, and has moved security and resiliency up the agenda of the sector globally, including in India. Analysts and DC operators told businessline that India’s geopolitical stability is relatively better today but stress that preparedness is critical and the sector should build its physical and cyber resiliency.

Consulting firms that help operators set up DCs note that in addition to hard and physically resilient exteriors, one should also consider measures to combat electronic warfare.

“Most big DCs have hardened shells, blast-resistant or windowless facades, perimeter stand-offs, access controls, fire suppression, and multiple power and fibre paths. Operators are now going to seriously consider radar and radio frequency jammers and hardening the centres’ roofs to be able to withstand aerial attacks,” said Prashant Thakur, Executive Director & Head — Research & Advisory, ANAROCK Group.

As for post-incident protection, Thakur notes there is now a specialised war-risk coverage insurance product for companies, and recent events may lead large enterprise tenants to urge DC players to look at dedicated war-risk and related coverage. “Most standard property and business-interruption policies for data centres don’t cover war, and they often limit coverage for political violence unless specific riders have been added,” he said.

Sunil Gupta, Founder, Yotta, stresses that while the Indian DC industry is safe, it is important to ensure redundancies are in place and tested continuously. Redundancies should include diversifying network capacity across different directions, such as westward sub-sea fibres (towards West Asia and Europe) and eastward fibres (towards Singapore/Malaysia).

Roopesh Kumar, Head of Data Centre Projects at Sify Technologies, notes that "acts of god and acts of war are both substantially covered" by the company. All their locations are complemented with live 24x7 disaster recovery (DR) locations in different geographies and multi-mode redundant networks to ensure uptime regardless of the threat.

Rachit Mohan of JLL adds that most players practice a three-site architecture for network redundancies, and Indian regulators like the RBI place a strong emphasis on high-resilient DCs, often requiring Tier 4 ratings.

Analysts estimate that West Asia has around 170-270 third-party data centres, primarily in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, with another 100 under development. Equinix, a major regional player, stated that its UAE data centres remain fully operational and all employees are safe.


ORDERS BOOST

Manufacturing PMI rose to 4-month high in Feb

Our Bureau New Delhi

With strong domestic demand, the manufacturing sector in India recorded its highest upturn in production volumes for four months in February, S&P Global reported on Monday. The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to a four-month high of 56.9 in the said month.

While manufacturing is considered an important source of job multiplier, job creation in the month was at a slower pace. “India’s final manufacturing PMI reflected an acceleration in manufacturing activity in February. Output expanded at a faster rate for a second month, supported by stronger domestic orders,” said Pranjul Bhandari, Chief India Economist at HSBC. However, new export orders continued the slowing trend that began in mid-2025, somewhat restricting employment creation in the manufacturing sector.

PMI Manufacturing is derived based on responses from purchasing managers of 400 companies. An index above 50 represents expansion, while below 50 means contraction. According to the survey report, goods producers indicated that demand buoyancy, marketing initiatives, and rising client requirements underpinned another expansion in new business intakes. Moreover, the pace of growth was historically elevated and the strongest since last October. Output also rose at the fastest pace in four months, one that was above its long-run average.

According to panel members, efficiency improvements, healthy underlying demand, rising intake of new work, and tech investment collectively boosted production volumes. “One area where growth took a step back was new export orders. February’s increase was the slowest in 17 months, with the rate of expansion broadly converging towards its long-run average. Where external sales rose, monitored companies cited gains from Asia, Europe, West Asia and the US,” the report said.

On job creation, the report said that factory employment expanded only slightly, nevertheless at the quickest pace in four months. “One factor that supported additional hiring was a further increase in outstanding business volumes at manufacturers in India. Although marginal, the rate of backlog accumulation strengthened to a seven-month high,” it said.

Looking ahead, the report highlighted that year-ahead assessments of output volumes remained positive as 16 per cent of companies forecast growth and fewer than 1 per cent anticipate a reduction. “Boding well for the outlook were marketing efforts and favourable demand conditions, qualitative survey data showed,” it added.


Amaravati gearing to receive its elite residents

From a ghost town to a power centre, the new AP capital is readying to fulfil its dream

G Naga Sridhar Vijayawada

Amaravati, the new capital of Andhra Pradesh, is all set to welcome a set of influential residents. MLAs, senior bureaucrats, and judges, who are currently living in rented premises in Vijayawada, will soon move into their official homes in the new capital. From a near-deserted stretch of scrubland just two years ago, Amaravati has transformed into a bustling hive of activity as it races towards its dream of becoming a power centre.

The tree-lined avenues look welcoming. There are smart signs indicating new buildings coming up and connecting roads to the highways. Thirty-six villas, two residential apartment towers, and individual bungalows for senior bureaucrats and ministers are nearing completion. The units are expected to be handed over to the government officials in a phased manner in the coming months. At present, many officials commute weekly between Hyderabad and Vijayawada, returning to work on Monday mornings.

Relaunch of Works

Amaravati already houses a functional Secretariat, Assembly, and the Andhra Pradesh High Court, built during the 2014-19 tenure of the Telugu Desam Party government led by N. Chandrababu Naidu. Construction of other works had stalled when the previous government under Mohan Reddy proposed shifting the executive capital away from Amaravati.

Following its return to power, the NDA government resumed the stalled works. Coming up rapidly is the General Administration Department Tower, a 49-storey structure (excluding the basement and ground floor), while the Heads of Departments Tower will rise 39 storeys high.

According to a senior official of the Amaravati Growth and Infrastructure Corporation, work is advancing on schedule to meet the Chief Minister’s deadline of finishing the infrastructure of the new capital by 2029. The State government has awarded contracts worth ₹50,000 crore to various companies for projects.


China denies supersonic missiles deal with Iran

Beijing

China on Monday denied reports of finalising a deal with Iran to sell CM-302 supersonic anti-ship missiles before the joint US-Israeli airstrikes on the country. If delivered, the missiles would be among the most advanced military hardware to be transferred to Iran by China in recent years, according to media reports.


Oil stocks shield China’s refiners from Iran war

A hoard of Iranian oil on tankers at sea, and swelling onshore inventories in China, will provide an initial cushion for the world’s biggest importer from the fallout of the conflict in West Asia. There’s over 46 million barrels of Iranian crude in Asia, with close to 80 per cent of the ships anchored in the Singapore Strait and off the Chinese coast, per Kpler Ltd. China also stockpiled crude at onshore sites over the past year. — BLOOMBERG


QatarEnergy halting LNG production may impact India’s gas consumption

Rishi Ranjan Kala New Delhi

The decision to stop liquefied natural gas (LNG) production by QatarEnergy — which accounts for roughly one-fifth of global trade — could lead to a decline in demand for the commodity by price-sensitive Indian buyers. The world’s fourth-largest LNG importer bought 35.72 billion standard cubic meters (BSCM) of the super chilled commodity in FY25 for $14.9 billion, of which 40-42 per cent was from Qatar.

On Monday, QatarEnergy stated that due to military attacks on its operating facilities in Ras Laffan Industrial City and Mesaieed Industrial City, it has ceased production of LNG and associated products. QatarEnergy’s 77 million tonne per annum (mtpa) export facility at Ras Laffan is among the world’s largest, and the news has already rattled markets, with European benchmark gas futures surging to multi-year highs.

ASIA HEAVY

This development is significant because the majority of QatarEnergy’s clients are Asian economies, including India. Global LNG supplies are already under pressure due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and expected retaliation by Iran following the killing of its supreme leader in a joint US-Israel offensive.

Sehul Bhatt, Director at Crisil Intelligence, noted that developments in West Asia could increase pricing and procurement risks for crude oil and LNG, posing substantial challenges for India, which has import dependencies of more than 85 per cent and 50 per cent for those items, respectively. He added that sustained disruptions would keep prices elevated and tighten availability, necessitating strategic planning for energy security.

TRADE-OFF

India typically reduces its consumption of LNG if prices rise. A price range of $6-8 per million British thermal units (mBtu) is generally considered a safe bet for domestic buyers. As global supply expands, India has been positioning itself as a benchmark-driven swing buyer, selectively accessing spot and short-term cargoes when international prices align with domestic alternatives.

Kenneth Foo of S&P Global Energy noted in January 2026 that India is increasingly stepping into spot markets during price dislocations between markers like the West India Marker (WIM), Henry Hub, and Brent-linked pricing. While India imported just under 26 mtpa of LNG in 2025, an additional 3.5–4 mtpa of long-term contracted volumes is set for delivery starting in 2026. This higher term supply may leave limited scope for spot LNG in 2026, particularly if prices become uncompetitive compared to alternatives like propane, naphtha, and fuel oil.


It is déjà vu for the cashew industry

V Sajeev Kumar Kochi

Escalating tensions in West Asia have pushed India’s cashew industry into a state of déjà vu, causing significant disruptions to logistics, payments, and key export markets. J Rajmohan Pillai, Chairman and Managing Director of Beta Group (owner of the NutKing brand), noted that Iran had become a vital growth market for Indian cashews, with trade frequently routed through Dubai.

However, as hostilities intensified in early 2026, shipments worth hundreds of crores of rupees were left stranded. Iranian buyers have largely halted fresh orders following the closure of major ports like Bandar Abbas and the freezing of critical banking channels.

Market Impact and Competition

Iran was a major purchaser of premium grades such as W180 and W210, and its sudden withdrawal from the market has created a temporary glut of high-quality kernels within India. This has led to sharp wholesale price volatility, with domestic prices softening as exporters attempt to liquidate stocks originally destined for Tehran. The industry's heavy reliance on UAE-based payment routes has now become a significant liability.

With military strikes occurring near regional hubs, the financial bridge for these transactions has effectively collapsed. Meanwhile, competitors in Vietnam are aggressively targeting the US and Chinese markets, putting further pressure on India’s market share during this period of uncertainty.

Logistics and Quality Risks

The crisis is expected to drive up war-risk insurance premiums, making shipments to Gulf destinations more expensive. Furthermore, the diversion of vessels via the Cape of Good Hope to avoid Red Sea risks for US and European routes could add 15-20 days to transit times and increase freight costs by $200-400 per container.

Pillai warned that for a seasonal product like cashews, such delays can lead to quality deterioration and result in missing critical holiday demand windows. On the raw material side, imports from West Africa are likely to become more expensive, raising landed prices in Kollam due to surging global crude oil prices. Additionally, a weaker rupee against the US dollar has squeezed margins for Indian processors who are already struggling against intense Vietnamese competition.


‘98.44% of withdrawn ₹2,000 banknotes returned’

Mumbai

The Reserve Bank of India on Monday said 98.44 per cent of the ₹2,000 banknotes previously in circulation have been returned. It announced the withdrawal of ₹2,000 banknotes from circulation on May 19, 2023. The total value of ₹2,000 banknotes in circulation has declined to ₹5,551 crore on February 28, 2026, from ₹3.56 lakh crore on May 19, 2023, the release said. — PTI

What the smoke signals from Dubai portend

By Chocko Valliappa

For the past 24 hours, the author has been confined indoors in Dubai, watching smoke hang near the horizon from a 63rd-floor apartment overlooking the Burj Khalifa. The distant sounds are described as unsettling, marking a point where geopolitics moves from headlines to the skyline and theory becomes personal. Drawing on four decades of experience working with global CEOs and building businesses across seven countries, the author observes that wars rarely begin because of a single event; instead, they start when multiple strategic clocks strike at once.

The Four Strategic Clocks

  1. The Political Clock: In the US, election cycles shape foreign policy narratives, and projecting strength toward Iran—an unresolved strategic chapter since 1979—gains domestic credibility. In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has faced sustained political pressure, and the October 7 attacks shifted national security from a policy debate to existential urgency. Leaders under such strain rarely choose passivity.
  2. The Nuclear Clock: Israel’s doctrine focuses on preventing adversaries from crossing irreversible nuclear thresholds. If decision-makers believe the window toward weaponization is closing, pre-emption begins to look more decisive than slow, uncertain diplomacy. Military action during negotiations is often utilized for leverage rather than as an abandonment of talks.
  3. The Clock of Regional Instability: Iran sits within a volatile arc involving Pakistan-Afghanistan tensions, unrest in Balochistan, and various proxy alignments. The author notes that risk is rarely linear; instability in one node amplifies vulnerability in others, especially as Chinese and Russian strategic presence increases.
  4. The Energy and Currency Clock: Since the mid-1970s, the global oil trade has been largely denominated in US dollars, creating the petrodollar system that underpins American monetary primacy. Recently, this architecture has shown stress as India and China expand purchases of Russian oil through alternative arrangements and Iran trades outside traditional dollar channels. If oil flows migrate away from dollar settlement, it impacts foreign exchange reserves and long-term monetary influence.

Conclusion: The Cost of Miscalculation

The current conflict is not about a single provocation but the convergence of these layered power structures. Watching the Dubai skyline serves as a reminder of the fragility of global integration, particularly for the nine million Indians affected in the region.

A recurring lesson from global business leadership is that predictability is stability; markets function when red lines and hierarchies are clear. Uncertainty is ultimately more dangerous than hostility. History suggests wars begin when leaders conclude that time itself is working against them. Geopolitics, like business, is about timing, but the cost of miscalculation is measured in stability itself rather than just capital.

The writer is Founder and MD, Vee Technologies, and Vice-Chairman, The Sona Group.


QUICK EDIT: India’s manufacturing sector is doing better than we thought

India’s manufacturing sector is doing better than we thought, as the Union statistics ministry’s revised GDP estimates showed last week. The purchasing managers index (PMI) could have a told-you-so moment, given how it has been showing robust readings now for an extended period. The HSBC India Manufacturing PMI, compiled by S&P Global, rose to a four-month high of 56.9 in February. A reading above 50 indicates expansion in activity while one below points to contraction.

While China’s index has been in a long slump, India’s has been in expansion zone by several points for a comfortable stretch. Our rejig of GDP estimation now takes the informal sector into account better and has also sorted out potential price-linked distortions. The sector seems well-placed to expand its share of the economy, as we have long aimed for.

To be sure, our exports have been flagging and the war in West Asia has upped uncertainty over world trade and currency movements. Input costs could also escalate if energy gets costlier as a result of an oil choke. Domestic impulses of growth are crucial. In this context, a factory sector boom is reassuring. This momentum must see no let-up.


Manufacturing activity surges at fastest pace in four months

Manufacturing activity in India surged at its fastest pace in four months in February, driven by domestic demand for goods amid a mild uptick in international orders, according to the seasonally adjusted manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) released by S&P Global.

The seasonally adjusted HSBC India PMI—a gauge derived from measures of new orders, output, jobs, supplier delivery times, and stocks of purchases—rose from 55.4 in January to a four-month high of 56.9 in February. A reading above 50 indicates an overall increase in activity, while a reading below 50 shows contraction.

According to S&P Global, a major improvement in domestic demand for goods fuelled new order intakes and spurred the greatest upturn in production volumes in four months. Efficiency improvements, healthy underlying demand, and tech investment collectively boosted production volume.

While domestic demand was buoyant, international sales expanded at a comparatively mild pace. Growth in new export orders was the slowest in 17 months, with the rate of expansion broadly converging toward its long-run average.

“India’s final manufacturing PMI reflected an acceleration in manufacturing activity in February. Output expanded at a faster rate for a second month, supported by stronger domestic orders. However, growth in new export orders continued its slowing trend that began in mid-2025, somewhat restricting employment creation in the manufacturing sector,” said Pranjul Bhandari, chief India economist at HSBC.

Despite the slowing export trend, goods producers indicated that demand buoyancy and marketing initiatives underpinned another expansion in new business intakes, the strongest pace since last October. Manufacturing output also rose at a rate above its long-run average.


Donald Trump spent years denouncing U.S. intervention. Now he’s toppling foreign leaders.

In May of last year, while addressing a chamber of Arab leaders in Riyadh, President Trump declared that the era of American-led regime change had come to an end. He criticized "Western interventionalists" for lecturing others on governance and stated that "nation builders wrecked far more nations than they built". However, just nine months later, he reversed this position by launching Operation Epic Fury, the largest U.S. military operation in the region in twenty years, aimed at urging Iranians to "take over" their government with the support of U.S. force.

This jarring shift contrasts with the "America First" movement that fueled his political rise, which was built on denouncing "forever wars" and opposing the toppling of foreign regimes by force. Administration officials indicate that the decision to launch the operation was driven by frustration over Iran's refusal to cut a nuclear deal, personal grievances, and a new belief following a January operation in Venezuela that regime change could be achieved without the long-term commitment seen in Iraq.

A New Playbook

Trump was emboldened by the success of the U.S. operation that deposed Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro. He believes he has found a new playbook to bring down hostile leaders and extract concessions while leaving the transition to the local population, avoiding open-ended U.S. involvement. This blueprint is also being discussed for use in Cuba, which the administration recently designated as an "unusual and extraordinary threat".

Despite the intended "one and done" approach, critics and experts warn of significant risks. In Iran, the joint military mission with Israel resulted in the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and many top officials on Saturday. This decapitation of a government for a nation of 92 million people risks triggering a wider regional conflict that could mire the U.S. in another prolonged Middle Eastern war. Furthermore, the U.S. military is reportedly burning through scarce air-defense interceptors faster than it can replace them.

Domestic and International Fallout

The operation has sparked a test of Trump’s grip on a Republican Party that remains fractured over foreign involvement. Cabinet members like JD Vance, Pete Hegseth, and Tulsi Gabbard built their political brands on skepticism of such interventions. Senator Rand Paul expressed his opposition on social media, stating, "I must oppose another Presidential war".

Public opinion also appears to be souring; a recent Wall Street Journal poll showed that 53% of voters disapprove of Trump’s priorities, believing he is engaging in unnecessary foreign affairs instead of focusing on the economy.

Personal Motivations

Trump’s more aggressive stance in his second term is also viewed as personal. His worldview has been long shaped by the 1979 Iran hostage crisis, and he has recently faced assassination plots and death threats from Tehran. He has also accused both Maduro and the Iranian government of meddling in U.S. elections.

While Trump has previously cast himself as the "president of peace," he now frames the Iran operation as the culmination of that identity, claiming it will eradicate a "murderous regime" that has threatened Americans for decades. He has indicated that "heavy and pinpoint bombing" will continue "as long as necessary" to achieve peace in the Middle East, with officials suggesting the operation could take several weeks.


The heavy cost of being comfortably numb

In the weeks after a breakup, 32-year-old Shubhika Joshi, a Mumbai-based product manager, found herself scrolling instinctively rather than sitting with her own thoughts. Clinicians identify this as a growing psychological pattern known as a "discomfort deficit"—a reduced capacity to stay with psychological, emotional, and interpersonal difficulty long enough for it to be integrated or resolved.

A Life Without Friction

Modern life has become highly efficient at eliminating friction, allowing people to "ghost" difficult conversations and return to a state of calm without letting the nervous system complete its natural cycle of activation and recovery. This is often called "experiential avoidance," where discomfort is treated as the problem itself rather than the information it carries. Behaviors like infinite scrolling, overworking, or oversleeping serve to short-circuit emotional experiences.

Relief is Not the Same as Recovery

Modern self-care culture frequently confuses immediate relief with genuine restoration. While healthy self-care expands your "window of tolerance," avoidance disguised as self-care leaves problems unresolved and can generate anxiety and stagnation. Emotional intelligence coach Taylor Elizabeth suggests evaluating choices by asking: "Does this choice help me face my life with more confidence tomorrow, or am I using it to escape what I don’t want to feel today?".

Effects of Unprocessed Distress

A significant effect of low discomfort tolerance is the inability to hold contradictory truths or ambivalence, such as "This hurts and I can survive it". When tolerance is low, the psyche seeks simplification—someone must be wrong, or the feeling must disappear immediately—which causes modern conflicts to escalate quickly. Furthermore, unprocessed distress begins to infect other areas, leading to dropped motivation and strained relationships.

The Adaptive Nature of Avoidance

Our nervous systems are neuroplastic and adapt to what we do repeatedly; if we constantly meet discomfort with distraction, the brain learns that discomfort is dangerous and must be escaped. While younger generations are often blamed for this, therapists note that instant relief is available to all age groups and that very few modern systems allow people to experience discomfort without risking stability or status.

Small Steps to Better Tolerance

Rebuilding tolerance requires intentional, small-scale exposure, much like rebuilding physical strength. Recommended steps include:

  • Staying in a difficult conversation slightly longer.
  • Delaying distraction by a few minutes.
  • Allowing uncertainty without seeking an immediate resolution.
  • Noticing the urge to escape and pausing before acting on it.

The goal is to teach the nervous system that while a situation is uncomfortable, it is survivable. In a culture designed to eliminate friction, learning to stay with oneself may be a radical psychological act.


The Iran war puts more than oil on India’s radar

A flare-up in crude prices will worsen if lose-lose dynamics set in. Yet, that may be the milder fallout of the US-Israeli war on Iran. Uncertainty hangs thicker over its hard global impact.

The American-Israeli attack on Iran raises a number of vital questions for India and the rest of the world, delving into which is necessary to make the best of a bad situation. The prices of oil and liquefied natural gas have begun to rise as Iran attempts to choke the Strait of Hormuz, through which about one in every fourth barrel of all seaborne crude oil moves. If this grip lasts, it will make energy imports dearer, weaken the rupee and give inflation a cost-push. India’s central bank would need to keep knock-on effects under watch; likewise, at another level, the volume and direction of capital flows.

For now, stockpiles of oil are in focus. If tankers that carry almost a fifth of the world’s daily usage cannot exit the Gulf, import-reliant countries could soon run acutely short. The US and China have large reserves. India’s strategic storage would easily help tide over more than a week, and oil companies have stocks as well. Still, India may need to resume shipments from Black Sea ports if US and Venezuelan supplies cannot fill the gaps. Since high fuel costs would not suit US President Donald Trump as mid-term polls approach, his political interest lies in shrugging off the use of Russian oil to plug shortfalls. But then, Iran would need to ship oil out of the Gulf too, so its retaliatory blockade may be short-lived. As with any war, however, lose-lose dynamics risk setting in.

The war has already spread around the Gulf and Levant, with Saudi oil facilities targeted too; if Iran-aligned Houthi forces in Yemen try to clamp the Suez Canal as well, already volatile freight and insurance costs could rise further. With China in the same boat as India, perhaps Asia’s big two could exercise some diplomatic clout to minimize sealane disruption. How any scenario pans out depends on how long hostilities last. Reports suggest that Iran’s battered regime is prepared to draw out the conflict and make it as costly for the US and Israel as possible.

Whether the US-Israeli attack rallies Iranians in favour of the regime or against it is a matter of conjecture for now. Internally, what began as a rebellion born of economic hardship may turn into a test of the Islamic Republic’s institutional frame and its ideological appeal. Given how Iran’s alleged push for nuclear weapons led the geopolitical narrative in the war’s run-up, it is unfortunately certain that other middle powers will take away the lesson that they are safer with an arsenal of nukes of their own than without one.

When Trump began his presidency with rhetoric of ending wars and focusing on America, the world had no inkling that the US would turn violator-in-chief of Pax Americana—the US-set world order based on a consensus of rules. Regime change in Venezuela has swiftly been followed by the same aim in Iran, with fist-waves over Greenland as an interlude. ‘Might is right’ has been spelt out as the new maxim. This makes an arms race all but inevitable, with nuclear options back on the table. If Germany cannot count on the US defence umbrella, nor can Japan or South Korea.

The world has grown fraught with geopolitical dangers we had hoped to leave behind. As the interest of countries in US power declines, so might their stake in its economic dominance. This could impact not just the US economy, which borrows heavily from abroad, but the world of capital as we know it. Uncertainty doesn’t just hover over an oil bill; it foreshadows the future, and India must prepare appropriately.

Author: OUR VIEW