Anthropic’s launch of new automation plug-ins for its Claude Cowork agent has rattled global technology markets, triggering a sell-off in software stocks and intensifying investor concerns that advanced AI could disrupt labor-heavy outsourcing models. India’s IT services sector has emerged as one of the most exposed to this shift.
What did Anthropic announce?
Anthropic launched plug-ins for its Claude Cowork agent designed to automate specialized tasks across various organizational functions, including sales, productivity, marketing, legal, finance, customer support, and bio research.
- Legal: The plug-in speeds up contract reviews, NDA triage, and compliance workflows.
- Sales: It assists with prospecting, outreach, pipeline management, and deal strategy.
- Enterprise Search: This feature treats all of a company's tools—such as email, chat, and cloud storage—as a single searchable knowledge base.
- Customer Support: Claude acts as a support co-pilot, triaging tickets and researching queries across multiple sources to draft tailored responses.
How did markets react?
The Nifty IT index fell 6.6% on the day of the announcement, led by significant losses in major Indian tech stocks:
- Infosys: -7.99%
- Coforge: -7.6%
- TCS: -7.01%
- LTIM: -6.52%
- HCLTech: -4.85%
- Wipro: -4.51%
This sentiment extended to the U.S. markets, where Indian American Depository Receipts (ADRs) also declined; Infosys ADR fell 5.56% and Wipro ADR dropped 4.83%.
Why did the launch spook investors?
Experts noted that Anthropic’s tools stoked global fears that advanced AI could quickly replace a wide range of outsourced services. Investors are increasingly concerned that foundation models like Claude could bypass traditional SaaS platforms and IT service providers.
Why is India’s IT sector vulnerable?
Indian IT companies have traditionally relied on a labor-intensive, services-led model rather than being product-driven,. Because these firms have historically handled the manual and data-heavy tasks that AI is now capable of automating with far less human involvement, the industry faces:
- Rising competition from AI models.
- Weaker demand for conventional outsourcing.
- Margin pressure across software companies.
The prevailing market view is shifting: AI is no longer seen just as a tool that supports software firms, but as a potential replacement for them.
Impact on other sectors
The launch has also heightened fears within the legal ecosystem, negatively impacting stocks for legal software and publishing companies. While some AI startups are automating legal work, Anthropic stands out as a model builder that can customize AI for specific industry needs. This capability allows it to disrupt traditional legal data providers and the very startups that rely on its models, potentially eroding the core business of legal information services.
Any foreign company providing cloud services through a data center in India will be granted a tax exemption, provided they meet four specific conditions, according to Finance Ministry sources.
The Tax Holiday Proposal
In her Budget speech, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman proposed a tax holiday lasting until 2047 for foreign companies that use Indian data center services to provide cloud services to global customers. The exemption is set to be available from the tax year 2026-27 through 2046-47.
Additionally, the Minister proposed a safe harbour margin of 15% on costs for cases where the Indian data center providing the services is a related entity (a cost-plus center) of the foreign company.
The Four Essential Conditions
To qualify for this tax exemption, a foreign company must satisfy the following requirements:
- The foreign company must be notified.
- The data center services in India must be procured from an Indian company.
- The data center itself must be notified by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY).
- Any services provided by the foreign company to Indian users must be routed through an Indian reseller entity that is also an Indian company.
Objectives and Impact
- Tax Certainty: The move aims to provide certainty to global cloud providers, ensuring their global income is not taxed in India simply because they utilize Indian data centers.
- Level Playing Field: Officials state this creates a level playing field where Indian data centers can confidently pitch their services to global entities without the latter perceiving a tax risk.
- Global Parity: Industry experts, such as Piyush Somani of ESDS Software Solution, noted that this move offers parity with jurisdictions like Ireland and Singapore, which already do not heavily tax such entities.
- Domestic Taxation: Profits derived from domestic activities—such as the data center's services to the global entity and the reseller's services to Indian customers—will remain taxable as they would be for any other domestic firm.
Industry Perspectives
While the move is seen as a way to boost investment in critical infrastructure, some local players have raised concerns. Abhishek Bhatt of the Bharat Digital Infrastructure Association suggested that sectors vital to national security should be reserved exclusively for Indian cloud providers to prevent the country from becoming a "reseller economy".
Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal, in a statement to Parliament regarding the India-US trade deal, emphasized that ensuring the energy security of 1.4 billion Indians is the government's “supreme priority.”
Conflicting Stances on Russian Oil
While the White House insists that India has committed to halting the purchase of Russian oil as part of the trade agreement, Minister Goyal did not directly refute this claim. Instead, he maintained that India's strategy is centered on diversifying energy sourcing based on objective market conditions and evolving international dynamics. He stated that all of India’s actions are taken with this priority in mind.
Details of the Trade Deal
The deal involves significant tariff adjustments:
- US Tariffs on India: Reduced to 18% from 50%.
- Indian Tariffs on US Exports: Reduced to 0%.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt described the agreement as a “great deal and a huge win” for American workers, businesses, and consumers.
Fluid Negotiations
Sources indicates that the final terms regarding Washington’s position on India’s oil purchases remain fluid. It is not yet clear if the US will push the Russian oil issue during the technical negotiations. The deal is expected to be formally signed once the negotiating teams finish the paperwork and finalize a joint statement, which will reflect any final decisions on the oil purchase issue.
Additionally, Goyal noted that India successfully safeguarded its interests in sensitive sectors, specifically agriculture and dairy, within the agreement.
Trent Ltd reported a 41 per cent increase in standalone profit after tax to ₹660 crore for the third quarter ended December 31, 2025, driven by robust growth in its fashion retail business. Revenue from operations grew 16 per cent to ₹5,259 crore.
Financial Highlights
- Operating EBITDA: Rose 23 per cent to ₹822 crore in Q3 FY26.
- EBIT Margin: Expanded to 13.8 per cent from 13.2 per cent a year ago.
- Nine-Month Performance: Standalone PAT grew 24 per cent to ₹1,534 crore, while revenue increased 18 per cent to ₹14,765 crore.
- Consolidated Results: Reported revenue of ₹5,345 crore (up 15%) with PAT at ₹531 crore (7% growth), including the proportionate share from the Trent Hypermarket joint venture.
Aggressive Store Expansion
The company continued its rapid physical expansion during the quarter, adding 17 Westside and 48 Zudio stores, including a Zudio outlet in the UAE. As of December 31, 2025, Trent's total footprint includes:
- 278 Westside stores.
- 854 Zudio stores (including four in the UAE).
- 32 other lifestyle concept stores across 274 cities, spanning over 15 million square feet of retail space.
Leadership Perspective
Chairman Noel N Tata stated that the fashion business achieved category-leading growth despite a higher base. He noted that customer sentiment is gradually improving and the medium-term outlook remains positive, with a continued focus on portfolio growth and enhancing the store experience.
Star Supermarket Update
Trent’s Star supermarket business now operates 79 stores, with own brands contributing over 74 per cent of revenues. While the company acknowledged that Star’s expansion has been slower than anticipated, it plans to accelerate store openings in the coming periods.
Apple’s second-generation AirTag is a slightly improved version of the original tracker, maintaining the same price point of $29 for a single unit and $99 for a four-pack. While some tech enthusiasts expected more after nearly five years, testing suggests the update does not fundamentally change how the device is used.
Key New Features
The latest model includes slightly better wireless range, a 50% louder chime, and the ability to use Precision Finding on an Apple Watch without needing an iPhone. Precision Finding utilizes on-screen arrows to guide users to an item’s exact spot.
Performance Improvements
The increased loudness is considered the most significant enhancement, allowing the device to be heard more clearly in noisy environments like busy restaurants or city streets. Additionally, privacy features have been updated so that both iPhone and Android users receive alerts if an unknown AirTag is found to be traveling with them. Like the original, the tracker is powered by a CR2032 coin cell battery with an estimated year-long life.
Limitations
Despite the range improvements, the AirTag still lacks GPS and on-demand location reporting, making it significantly less useful in rural or wilderness areas compared to dense cities where Apple devices are constantly nearby. Because of these gaps in connectivity, Apple continues to emphasize that the device is intended exclusively for tracking objects, rather than people or pets.
For a gadget meant to be attached to an item and mostly forgotten until needed, the second-generation AirTag is a better version of a proven tool, but it is not considered "upgrade-worthy" for existing users.
Budget 2026 has brought borrowing concerns to the forefront of India’s financial markets, as the government’s plan to raise ₹17.2 lakh crore through dated securities is higher than anticipated. This elevated borrowing is expected to weigh heavily on the bond market, potentially pushing 10-year Government Security (G-Sec) yields up by another 5-10 basis points, which tightens financial conditions even as the RBI seeks to stimulate the economy.
Breakdown in Monetary Transmission
While central banking theory suggests that RBI rate cuts should lead to lower funding costs and cheaper borrowing, this has not happened as expected. Despite the RBI delivering 125 bps in cumulative rate cuts since early 2025, both short-term and long-term interest rates have actually risen. The G-sec yield recently hit an 11-month high of 6.72%, resulting in a steepening yield curve that signals a breakdown in monetary transmission.
Liquidity and Deposit Imbalance
The disconnect in yields is largely driven by persistent tight liquidity. Factors contributing to this include:
- Shrinking Surplus: The banking system’s liquidity surplus fell to ₹0.57 lakh crore by late January, well below the comfortable range of ₹1.5-2 lakh crore.
- Credit vs. Deposit Growth: As of December 31, the credit-to-deposit ratio hit a record 81.75%, with credit growing at 14.5% while deposits grew at only 12.7%.
- Competition for Funds: Banks are being forced to compete aggressively for deposits, which leaves less capital for government securities and pushes up short-term rates.
Additional Borrowing Pressures
Beyond the central government, States and Union Territories plan to borrow approximately ₹5 lakh crore in Q4 FY26. This surge is expected to push up State Development Loan (SDL) yields by 10-15 bps, potentially lifting corporate bond yields and further complicating monetary transmission.
External and Global Influences
External factors have added to market volatility:
- Global Jitters: Weakness in the rupee, uncertainty regarding the India-US trade deal, and delays in Indian bonds being included in Bloomberg’s Global Aggregate Index have contributed to market anxiety.
- US Treasury Yields: Despite a pivot by the US Fed, US 10-year yields have stayed above 4.2% due to fiscal deficit concerns.
- Risk Premiums: Foreign portfolio investors require a spread of at least 300-350 bps over US Treasuries to compensate for currency risk, keeping Indian yields elevated to prevent capital outflows.
The Way Forward
The persistence of these pressures suggests they are primarily structural rather than cyclical. While RBI liquidity infusions and open market operations (OMOs) offer short-term relief, they are not substitutes for stronger deposit growth, disciplined government borrowing, and credible inflation management. To restore transmission, the government must prioritize fiscal discipline and contain borrowing needs to ease pressure on the bond market.
Cooling speculation, ignoring ownership
The Budget’s decision to raise derivative STT without addressing equity cash transactions corrects excess at the top, but does little to reward behaviour at the base.
Budget 2026-27 lacked headline-grabbing reform announcements for capital markets, leading to an initially disappointed market response. While the budget enhances stability, it is questionable whether it effectively provides incentives for long-term capital accumulation.
Spot-Derivatives Imbalance
India’s capital markets have matured with increased retail participation and a shift from bank deposits to market-linked instruments, yet trading volumes and speculative leverage still outweigh genuine equity ownership. The Budget attempts to address this by raising the Securities Transaction Tax (STT) on derivatives to curb speculative activity. Specifically, STT on futures contracts has been increased to 0.05 per cent (from 0.02%), while the tax on options premium and exercise has risen to 0.15 per cent and 0.125 per cent, respectively.
While this measure is justified for financial stability, it only addresses one side of the problem. The cost of equity cash markets, which support long-term ownership, has not fallen, and STT on delivery-based trades remains the same at both entry and exit. This creates a structural bias that continues to favor frequent trading over lasting ownership.
Significant Asymmetry
A household investor building long-term wealth currently pays more in transaction taxes than a short-term trader using leveraged derivatives. This is problematic because delivery-based investing provides patient risk capital, encourages new listings, and stabilizes price discovery, whereas leveraged trading primarily provides liquidity and hedging. When systems reward financial engineering over straightforward ownership, behavior follows those incentives.
Global policies typically distinguish between speculation and investment by offering lower transaction costs or tax deferrals for long-term ownership. India’s current STT framework blurs this distinction.
Treatment of Capital Gains
A similar lack of completeness is found in long-term capital gains (LTCG) taxation. While stability in these taxes is welcome, the current regime is not especially competitive or aligned with the goal of deepening equity ownership. There remains a notable gap in incentives for longer holding periods.
If transaction costs and exit taxes stay high for delivery-based equity, households—who are encouraged to move savings from deposits to markets—may gravitate toward products offering leverage or short-term gains, which is the very behavior regulators wish to restrain.
Necessary Policy Shifts
While the Budget advances corporate bond markets and municipal bond issuance, these effects will be slow. To truly support the 2047 Viksit Bharat vision, policy must move from "cooling speculation" to "actively incentivizing ownership". Proposed solutions include:
- Restructuring STT so delivery-based transactions are taxed at significantly lower rates than derivatives or only upon exit.
- Explicitly exempting delivery-based trades while raising levies on leveraged products to align costs with economic purpose.
- Promoting holding duration through reduced tax rates for extended periods or indexation benefits to reward patience.
Conclusion
Budget 2026-27 correctly signals caution and resists excessive leverage, but capital market reforms must go beyond restraint. India's growth requires markets that simultaneously curb speculation and incentivize ownership. Until tax and transaction policies make this clear distinction, the transition from trading to investing will remain unfinished.
‘MF space to more than double in 5 yrs’
KV Kamath, Chairman of Jio Financial Services, stated that India’s mutual fund industry is expected to more than double over the next five years. This growth is projected to be driven by an economy expanding at 10 per cent annually and a massive reallocation of capital from low-interest savings accounts into higher-return investment accounts.
Current Market Dynamics
Speaking at the Jio Blackrock event, ‘Investing for a new era,’ Kamath noted that the Indian mutual fund industry currently has assets under management (AUM) of close to $900 billion. This growth has been largely powered by systematic inflows into equity schemes.
Kamath emphasized that product design and the use of technology are key drivers in attracting a new generation of participants. Notably, about one-fourth of the investors in the Jio Blackrock mutual fund are first-time investors, most of whom are investing through online modes.
A Compelling Growth Story
Kamath described India’s transformation as a process that began just four to five years ago and has created a clear pathway for the future. He expressed confidence that the country is set for at least 10 per cent year-on-year growth for the next 20 years.
Within just seven months of its launch, the Jio Blackrock Mutual Fund has already secured 1 million customers. Rob Goldstein, Chief Operating Officer at Blackrock, remarked that there are very few places in the world where such rapid growth would even be an aspiration.
Strategic Advantages
The industry views the Indian mutual fund space as being wide open for further expansion. By combining Blackrock’s global technology with the Jio brand and its extensive distribution reach, the partnership aims to deliver unique investment solutions to the Indian market.
Why are Indian IT stocks getting battered?
The Indian IT services sector faced a massive sell-off on Wednesday, February 4, 2026, with the Nifty IT index plummeting nearly 6 per cent, marking its worst performance in six years. This sharp decline followed the debut of new artificial intelligence (AI) tools that rattled technology investors worldwide.
The AI "Double Whammy"
The primary trigger for the fall was a combination of announcements from two major AI players, Palantir and Anthropic.
- Palantir: The firm reported full-year earnings and announced updates to its Hivemind AI software, granting it decision-making capabilities. Crucially, the software can now autonomously migrate data from legacy systems—a task that has long been a staple of the business for Indian IT firms.
- Anthropic: On January 30, the San Francisco-based company launched plug-ins for its Claude Cowork AI agent. These tools are designed to automate specialized tasks in marketing, legal, sales, finance, enterprise search, and customer support.
Financial Impact on Industry Giants
The launch of these AI offerings wiped off between ₹1.76 trillion and ₹2 lakh crore in market capitalization from India’s 13 largest IT services firms. Major IT stocks closed significantly lower on the day of the announcement:
- Infosys: Down 7.37% to 7.99%
- TCS: Down 6.99% to 7.01%
- Coforge: Down 7.6%
- LTIMindtree: Down 6.52%
- HCLTech: Down 4.85%
- Wipro: Down 4.51%
This negative sentiment extended to the U.S. markets, where Infosys ADR declined 5.56% and Wipro ADR fell 4.83%.
Structural and Macroeconomic Worries
Investors are increasingly concerned that advanced AI could replace a wide range of outsourced services, allowing foundation models to bypass traditional SaaS platforms and IT providers. Automation tools reduce the demand for human labor in tasks like coding, software development, and maintenance, which directly reduces the billing capacity for services-led firms.
Beyond AI, macro uncertainty has already been dampening demand for IT services. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and tariff fluctuations under U.S. President Donald Trump have led many Fortune 500 firms to reduce their tech spending, diverting funds instead toward their primary businesses.
Divergent Views on the Future
Analysts are currently divided on the long-term outlook for the sector:
- Jefferies expects automation to "ruin the party," predicting AI will limit IT services market growth to a 1.5-3% CAGR through 2029.
- HDFC Securities is more optimistic, suggesting the sector is positioned for a growth recovery starting in 2026 as AI eventually boosts revenue.
Industry leaders have also offered differing perspectives. Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani sought to assuage fears, comparing the AI debut to the Industrial Revolution and calling it a "once-in-several-centuries opportunity". Conversely, TCS CEO K. Krithivasan expressed caution regarding the implementation of agentic AI, while HCLTech CEO C. Vijayakumar noted strong demand for Gen-AI being embedded into every new deal.
WHAT STATES SOUGHT AND WHAT THEY GOT
The 16th Finance Commission has finalized the distribution of the Centre’s tax revenues among states for the next five years, starting from FY27. This period marks a recalibration of the fiscal compact between the Centre and states, requiring the commission to reconcile competing demands from a diverse set of stakeholders.
Weighty Considerations and State Divergence
The commission had to balance two primary objectives: rewarding states that have controlled population growth and achieved higher income levels, while supporting those with lower per capita incomes and higher fertility rates. While there was general convergence among the 28 states on which criteria to adopt, there was significant divergence on the weightage that should be assigned to each.
For example, the per capita income distance—the markup or deficit of a state's per capita income compared to the average of the top three large states—has the highest weightage at 42.5%. While all states agreed on this criterion, their preferred weights ranged from just 15% (Haryana) to 55% (Manipur). Poorer states sought higher weightage for this factor, while economically better-off states preferred it to be lower.
Key Changes in the 16th Finance Commission’s Criteria
The commission introduced several shifts in the methodology for horizontal devolution:
- Contribution to India’s GDP: A new efficiency criterion introduced with a 10% weight to reward economic performance.
- Population (2011): The weightage was increased to 17.5% from 15%.
- Income Distance: The weight was reduced to 42.5% (from 45%) to accommodate the new efficiency criteria.
- Area: Reduced to 10% from 15%.
- Demographic Performance: Reduced to 10% from 12.5%, with the metric changing to manage aging society risks.
- Tax and Fiscal Efforts: This 2.5% weight was removed entirely, as efficiency is now captured by the GDP contribution metric.
Devolution and Impact
While many states demanded an increase to a 50% share of total tax revenues, the 16th Finance Commission has retained vertical tax devolution at 41% for the 2026–31 period.
The inclusion of the GDP contribution has lifted the shares of richer and better-performing states, such as Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, and Gujarat. Conversely, some poorer states have seen marginal declines in their share of the divisible pool:
- Uttar Pradesh: Share fell from 17.9% to 17.6%.
- Bihar: Share fell from 10.1% to 9.9%.
However, even these states are expected to see an increase in the absolute amount they receive as the Centre’s tax revenues accelerate over the next five years.
A Major Policy Shift
In a significant departure from previous commissions, the 16th Finance Commission has scrapped post-devolution revenue gap grants. The panel felt that covering state deficits encourages inefficiencies and that states have sufficient room to levy additional taxes. This move is intended to curb state-level profligacy and urge states to improve tax efficiency and rationalize untargeted subsidies.
‘Subsidies can’t be rolled back abruptly, reforms will be gradual’
Expenditure Secretary V. Vualnam stated in an interview that while the government is outlining a gradual course correction for India's subsidy and spending framework, subsidies continue to serve critical national needs and cannot be withdrawn abruptly. The goal is to achieve a rationalization of these spends through constant engagement between the ministry of agriculture, the department of food and public distribution, the department of fertilizers, and the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR),.
Ensuring Food and Fertilizer Security
- Food Security: Food subsidies remain essential to guarantee food security for the poorer sections of the population across different regions, even as declining poverty levels are acknowledged. For the coming financial year, the food subsidy is estimated at ₹2.27 trillion, slightly lower than the revised estimate of ₹2.28 trillion for the current year. A major portion of this expenditure is directed toward the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY), which provides free rations to more than 810 million beneficiaries.
- Fertilizer Availability: Fertilizer subsidies represent a firm government commitment to ensuring that farmers have adequate supplies for their crops. The projected fertilizer subsidy for the next financial year is ₹1.7 trillion, down from the revised estimate of ₹1.86 trillion for FY26. Of this, the total subsidy for urea is projected at ₹1.16 trillion, while non-urea fertilizers are allocated ₹54,000 crore.
Optimization through Technology
The government is actively exploring ways to optimize fertilizer use through data and technology due to concerns about overuse and its impact on soil health.
- Agri-Stack: Results from pilot projects using platforms like Agri-Stack in states such as Haryana and Madhya Pradesh have shown encouraging results in mapping fertilizer consumption patterns,.
- Scaling Up: These efforts will be scaled up in a step-by-step manner without diluting the core commitment to providing farmers with necessary inputs,.
The Bharat VISTAAR Initiative
Announced in the budget to bolster rural infrastructure and farm productivity, the Bharat VISTAAR initiative will be anchored by the ministry of agriculture.
- Linking Databases: The program will link AgriStack with ICAR’s knowledge databases.
- Empowering Farmers: The primary aim is to ensure farmers are better informed about the correct types and quantities of fertilizers, as well as appropriate crop choices. This is expected to enable more efficient input use over time.
Future Outlook and Strategy
Addressing concerns regarding fertilizer prices amid global geopolitical disruptions, Vualnam noted that careful planning and better targeting would help contain fiscal pressures. Additionally, the government maintains a continued emphasis on capital expenditure, as infrastructure creation has been yielding strong results for the economy.
Online ratings run into court hurdle after Chiranjeevi film
The concern is not criticism itself, which is legitimate, but distorted market signalling.
A recent court order to restrict ratings and reviews on online ticketing platforms for Telugu star Chiranjeevi’s latest film, Mana Shankara Vara Prasad Garu, has reopened a debate over whether online feedback mechanisms are shaping audience opinion or distorting it. The move, specifically aimed at platforms such as BookMyShow, highlights the need for preventive protection during a movie’s most commercially sensitive period—the window immediately surrounding its release.
Market Signalling vs. Genuine Criticism
Industry experts argue that early ratings on ticketing and aggregation platforms directly influence footfall, distributor confidence, and overall box office performance. The primary concern for the film industry is not legitimate criticism, but rather distorted market signalling. When ratings are driven by non-viewers or coordinated campaigns, they stop reflecting consumer opinion and instead become a form of reputational interference.
The court order is intended to pause or neutralize these potentially misleading signals rather than silence genuine feedback. Coordinated down-rating campaigns, fan-driven rivalries, ideological backlash, and automated activity can manipulate perception before audiences have even seen the film. In the past, major releases like Laal Singh Chaddha, Brahmastra, and Raksha Bandhan have been targets of such online trolling.
Structural Challenges and Fan Aggression
Trade experts note that fan clubs, particularly in southern India, can be extremely aggressive, making such court orders necessary to curb negative campaigning by opposing groups. Legal professionals emphasize that the purpose of these orders is to stop market manipulation, not to stifle criticism.
Platforms like IMDb and Rotten Tomatoes often face sudden bursts of low ratings within hours of a trailer release, frequently driven by bots. Currently, there is no reliable system to identify the genuineness of such ratings. While these court orders offer temporary relief, they generally stop short of addressing the deeper structural problems of the rating ecosystem.
Broader Impact and Platform Response
This issue of skewed perception through coordinated ratings extends beyond cinema to app stores, e-commerce platforms, and global content aggregators. While most platforms use moderation tools to detect abnormal spikes or flag suspicious activity, these measures are not always sufficient. Legal experts clarify that while genuine reviews constitute free speech, fake reviews or news have a significantly damaging effect.
In response to the situation, a BookMyShow spokesperson stated that the platform is law-abiding and strictly complies with all court orders. The company maintained that its audience ratings and reviews are a key part of the discovery experience and are published only from verified users who have purchased tickets through the platform and actually watched the film.
REEL CHECK
- Preventive Protection: The move signals a need for protection during a movie's most commercially sensitive moments.
- Misleading Signals: Ratings driven by non-viewers or organized campaigns fail to reflect actual consumer opinion.
- Organized Hostility: Fan rivalries and ideological backlash can heavily influence audience perception.
- Informal Ecosystem: Experts believe the largely informal ratings ecosystem can often work against the success of films.
India needs a smarter financial system rather than a bigger one
The budget’s measures to deepen market infrastructure and mobilize long-term funds could strengthen India’s bond ecosystem.
India’s budget for 2026-27 signals a growing recognition that its financial challenge is no longer one of scale alone, but of structure and effectiveness. Measures such as the introduction of a market-making framework for corporate bonds, the development of total return swaps and bond-index derivatives, incentives for large municipal bond issuances, and the creation of mechanisms such as the Infrastructure Risk Guarantee Fund and real estate investment trusts (REITs) linked to central public sector enterprises (CPSEs) point to an attempt to deepen long-term, market-based finance and improve risk distribution beyond banks. These initiatives reflect an emerging policy shift away from volume-driven credit expansion towards improving market infrastructure, liquidity, and institutional participation.
Effectiveness Over Volume
India’s economic story is often told through large reassuring numbers: trillion-dollar GDP milestones, record tax collections, and booming equity markets. Yet, for large parts of the economy, finance still does not work as it should, raising the question: Does India need a larger financial system or a more effective one?
While India’s non-financial corporate credit-to-GDP ratio remains around 55–60%, far below China’s nearly 180%, depth is not simply about the quantity of credit. What ultimately matters is how finance is structured: who receives it, at what maturity, how risks are shared, and whether savings are transformed into productive capital. India’s score on the IMF’s Financial Development Index clarifies this; while it rose from 0.12 in the early 1980s to 0.54 by 2020, the improvement was driven by efficiency and market functioning rather than sustained balance-sheet expansion. Since the mid-2010s, this momentum has slowed, and the depth of financial institutions has stagnated.
Structural Imbalances
Household balance sheets illustrate the problem starkly: nearly 80% of Indian household wealth is concentrated in real estate and gold, with bank deposits accounting for much of the rest. The result is a paradox: India saves a great deal, but those savings do not reliably become productive investment.
Corporate finance shows a similar imbalance. Shallow corporate bond markets—which are only about 18–20% of GDP compared to 80–120% in advanced economies—force firms to rely on banks and internal accruals. This matters because bond markets provide long-term funding and risk dispersion; when they are underdeveloped, banks are forced to carry risks that should be spread across investors, making lending cycles volatile.
The Role of Institutional Investors
The sharpest contrast with mature systems lies in institutional investors. Pension and insurance assets in India amount to less than 30% of GDP, whereas in countries like Canada or the Netherlands, these pools exceed 150–200%. This "patient capital" is vital for financing infrastructure and energy transitions without overwhelming banks.
The latest budget attempts to address this gap through complementary asset-creation and risk-mitigation. The Infrastructure Risk Guarantee Fund is intended to de-risk long-term lending, while recycling CPSE real estate through REITs aims to expand the supply of stable, yield-generating instruments suited to institutional portfolios.
Transactional vs. Balance-Sheet Liquidity
India has excelled at transactional liquidity; digital payments have transformed daily life into a near-frictionless public utility. However, balance-sheet liquidity—the capacity to absorb and distribute risk—remains thin. In mature systems, shocks are cushioned across banks, bondholders, insurers, and pension funds. In India, risk still flows back to banks and the sovereign, which is why credit booms are often followed by painful clean-ups.
The budget's measures aim to deepen market infrastructure and channel long-term funds into infrastructure and real estate, which should strengthen the broader bond-based financing ecosystem.
Saumitra Bhaduri is a professor at the Madras School of Economics.