Famous quotes

"Happiness can be defined, in part at least, as the fruit of the desire and ability to sacrifice what we want now for what we want eventually" - Stephen Covey

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Newspaper Summary 230326

 

Defence research stays underfunded

MAJOR DETERRENT. With establishment costs eating into research funding, where does that leave innovation of national importance? By M Ramesh

Data from the Ministry of Defence suggests that India’s spend on defence research has grown far less than headline numbers indicate. The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) spent ₹13,258 crore on R&D in 2014-15. By 2024-25, this had risen 87 per cent to ₹24,793 crore, which, at first glance, appears to signal a steady expansion of research effort. But this is in nominal terms. Adjusted for economy-wide inflation, using the GDP deflator, the real annual growth is only 1.5–2 per cent.

The picture becomes starker when looking at how this money is spent. The portion devoted to specific projects and programmes — missile systems, aircraft engines, radars and the like — has moved from ₹3,770 crore in 2014–15 to about ₹5,900 crore in 2025–26. After adjusting for inflation, this implies virtually no growth in real terms over the period. This also suggests a shift in composition: While overall spending has increased, the share going to R&D projects has not kept pace. A growing proportion of the budget appears to be absorbed by establishment costs rather than programme funding.

Budget trends reinforce this concern. In 2025–26, the allocation for defence R&D was raised by 12 per cent, from ₹23,855 crore to ₹26,817 crore. Yet the revised estimate came in slightly lower, at ₹26,747 crore, indicating that even the allocated funds were not fully utilised. The increase over the previous year’s revised estimate was about 8 per cent. Spending on projects and programmes grew only about 9 per cent in 2024–25. The pattern raises a broader question: Is higher allocation translating into more research?

The Budget for 2026-27 provides ₹29,100 crore for DRDO, a 10 per cent increase year-on-year. Whether this results in a meaningful increase in programme spending — or is again absorbed by costs — remains to be seen.

A WIDER PATTERN

This scenario is not unique to defence research spending. Across six key science departments — science and technology, biotechnology, scientific and industrial research, space, atomic energy, and Earth sciences — government R&D spending rose from ₹28,014 crore in 2020–21 to ₹39,057 crore in 2024–25. That translates to a nominal annual growth rate of about 8.8 per cent. Adjusted for inflation, however, the real growth rate is only 2–3 per cent a year.

The pattern is consistent: headline increases mask modest real expansion. India’s gross expenditure on research and development (GERD) has remained stuck at 0.6–0.7 per cent of the GDP for over a decade. This is not merely because the GDP has grown rapidly, but also because R&D spending has struggled to grow meaningfully in real terms.

EFFICIENCY FACTOR

It can be argued that limited resources have been used efficiently. India’s rank in the Global Innovation Index has improved significantly over the past decade, and government-backed schemes in areas such as biotechnology have helped start-ups raise follow-on funding and generate intellectual property.

But these are, at best, partial indicators. Improvements in innovation rankings reflect a broad set of factors, and start-up success in specific sectors is not a fill-in for sustained investment in core research capabilities. The more fundamental question remains unanswered: What might outcomes look like if real R&D spending grew faster?

For a country seeking technological self-reliance, particularly in sectors such as defence, flat real spending and stagnant programme outlays are not neutral outcomes. They imply a slower build-up of capabilities, regardless of improvements in efficiency at the margins. India may indeed be getting more value out of each rupee, but over the past decade, it has not been putting significantly more real resources into research.


Group of Ministers, Secys to be formed to deal with critical needs of citizens

Our Bureau New Delhi

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday directed the formation of a group of ministers and secretaries to work dedicatedly in a whole of government approach. According to a statement issued following a Cabinet Committee of Security meeting chaired by Modi, the ongoing conflict in West Asia is expected to have significant short, medium, and long-term impacts on the global economy. The meeting, attended by 13 Ministers including the Home, Defence, and Finance Ministers, focused on assessing these effects on India and discussing both immediate and long-term countermeasures.

The committee conducted a detailed assessment regarding the availability of critical needs for the common man, specifically highlighting food, energy, and fuel security. The impact on farmers and their requirements for fertilizer for the kharif season was a key point of discussion. The government stated that measures taken over the last few years to maintain adequate stocks would ensure timely availability, though alternate sources of fertilizers were also discussed to secure future supply.

IMPORT SOURCES

The meeting further deliberated on diversifying sources of imports necessary for the chemicals, pharmaceuticals, petrochemicals, and other industrial sectors. Additionally, the government plans to develop new export destinations to promote Indian goods in the near future.

Modi instructed that all arms of the government must work in coordination to ensure minimal inconvenience to citizens. He specifically called for proper coordination with State governments to prevent black-marketing and hoarding of important commodities.


Demographic fixation

AP set to repeat failed pronatalist projects in China, Japan

The draft Population Management Policy recently unveiled by Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu marks a continuation of the State’s long record of intrusive demographic engineering. The new policy attempts to raise fertility from a total fertility rate of around 1.5 towards replacement levels by offering financial incentives for a third child, extended maternity benefits, subsidized fertility treatments, and childcare support.

Among the southern States, AP has long stood apart for adopting a rigid, neo-Malthusian approach to population control, often at the expense of women’s reproductive autonomy. Previous measures included coercive disincentives, such as barring couples with more than two children from contesting panchayat elections, effectively linking civic participation to reproductive behavior. By focusing narrowly on fertility reduction, other critical dimensions of women’s health have deteriorated; the State now records one of the highest hysterectomy prevalence rates in the country at 8.7 per cent (nearly three times the national average) and a caesarean delivery rate of 42.4 per cent, double the national average. Early marriage also persists, with nearly 29 per cent of women aged 20-24 married before 18.

These statistics suggest systemic distortions where women's bodies become sites of policy excess. International experience offers little comfort, as countries like South Korea, Japan, and China have deployed extensive incentives to boost fertility with limited or no success. Lessons from these nations show that financial incentives may alter the timing of births but rarely change the total number of children families choose to have, as those decisions are shaped by factors like education, housing costs, career pressures, and work-life balance.

AP’s policy raises deeper concerns about rights. Having once imposed limits, the State now encourages larger families without addressing the structural inequities that constrain women's choices. If demographic anxieties regarding labor shortages are driving this shift, less intrusive solutions exist, such as inter-State migration from more populous states like Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. The real challenge is not an absence of people, but how effectively they are educated, employed, and able to move toward existing opportunities.


Betting big on India

The author explains factors that favour India’s rise

BOOK REVIEW. Sudhirendar Sharma Title: Era of India Author: Minhaz Merchant Publisher: Penguin Vintage Price: ₹999

The India growth story is fascinating. During the middle of the Mughal regime in the 1700s, India accounted for 24 per cent of global GDP. In the next 190 years of brutal British colonialism, it had become an impoverished economy accounting for just 3 per cent of global GDP. For half a century after gaining Independence in 1947, India had too small an economy worth taking note of. However, after several years of steady GDP growth since, it overtook Britain and is on track to overtake Japan and Germany as the world’s third-largest economy by 2030.

Using empirical data and research evidence, Minhaz Merchant argues that there won’t be any European country among the world’s three largest economies. The US believes that as India is on economic ascent, it will be the third economy alongside China to drive global growth. Much will, however, depend on how towards the middle of this century, India upgrades itself with digital technologies and artificial intelligence to lead the world. It is expected that by year 2030, an estimated 70 per cent of Fortune 500 companies will have their capability centres located in India. Its technological infrastructure and expanding consumer market will provide a perfect ecosystem for these companies, and through them for India, to grow.

It isn’t as linear as it may seem. The ongoing trade and technology war between the US and China is recasting global alliances. In such a situation, will India act as a balancing pivot between the two warring factions? At this crucial time when the US is pushing an ‘America First’ policy for seeking revival of its hegemony and China is rising as both an economic and military power, not much can be expected from a third party. The geopolitics of global change is turbulent, with the US playing a vital part in its strategic calculations.

Era of India provides an immensely readable perspective on the social, religious, political and economic history of the world. It traces the rise and fall of civilizations from antiquity to the present. History has been complicated as the weapons of war allowed for invasion and colonisation. Much has changed since then; the stockpile of weapons are used instead to influence and enforce change. The book goes a step further to assess the shift in power, triggered by the decline of the West and the rise of the rest. It is an engaging assessment of shifting global power.

GLOBAL POWER TRIAD

History will come full circle, argues Merchant, and applies growth data to prove that three countries — the US, China and India — will exert centripetal force in world affairs in 2050. However, despite economic and military superiority, the three may not be without their own weaknesses and vulnerability. Counting India in this global power triad will favour the US. With India being a major consumer of a variety of products, the US will explore the markets by enforcing a favourable tariff regime to dump its products. Incidentally, India may not have any choice.

As the title suggests, Era of India narrates all that favours the rise of India. But the questions worth asking are: Where does India stand in this emerging world order? How can China’s role in reshaping the world be ascertained? The homogeneity of Chinese society should be an advantage in taking decisions, whereas the noisy, multicultural societies in the US and India may act as deterrents. Understanding China is critical, strategically. It has not only lifted more people out of poverty faster, but is also the only economic power that has moved closer to the size of the US economy. How India leverages its soft power will determine its status amongst the triad. Merchant leaves it for the reader to take a call.


The reviewer is a writer, researcher and academic.


No exam is too hard for AI?

STUDIOUS MACHINES By N Nagaraj

Someone, at some point, perhaps as a joke, decided to call it “Humanity’s last exam”, or HLE. By the time it was published in Nature in January, its designers had already announced a replacement. The replacement is updated continuously; it has to be.

HLE is a benchmark of 2,500 questions assembled by nearly 1,000 experts from 500 institutions across 50 countries, introduced by researchers at the Center for AI Safety and Scale AI. At launch, the best AI models scored under 10 per cent. The live leaderboard now shows 38.3 per cent; the trajectory, more than the absolute score, is the point.

The benchmark was designed in response to a failure in existing tools for measuring AI capability. Frontier models had already exceeded 90 per cent accuracy on MMLU (massive multitask language understanding), which was once considered a serious challenge. When all systems can clear a test, the instrument no longer reveals the differences between them or predicts where they may be in a year.

HLE’s design logic was deliberately adversarial. Questions were submitted by experts across more than a hundred disciplines. Before entering the dataset, each question had to defeat all current frontier models and pass two rounds of expert review. The result was a set of questions that, by construction, no existing AI could reliably answer.

EVALUATION RESULTS

The results confirmed the difficulty. At launch, GPT-4o scored 2.7 per cent, Claude 3.5 per cent, and Sonnet 4.1 per cent. However, scores have climbed rapidly; the live leaderboard now shows Gemini 3 Pro at 38.3 per cent, while Gemini 2.5 Pro reached 21.6 per cent.

Calibration errors across models ranged from 50 per cent to 89 per cent. Calibration measures whether a model’s stated confidence matches its actual accuracy. On HLE, models routinely expressed high confidence while being wrong. This is not a quirk of one system but holds across architectures, suggesting a structural feature of current AI design.

Accuracy improved with more reasoning compute, but only to a point. Beyond roughly 16,000 output tokens, performance declined. The paper also reports an expert disagreement rate of 15.4 per cent, rising to 18 per cent in biology, chemistry, and health. Nearly one in six questions could not be answered consistently even by specialists, making the benchmark harder than any existing AI can reliably handle and harder for any single human expert.

The authors clarify that high performance on HLE would not constitute evidence of artificial general intelligence (AGI). Instead, it would demonstrate expert-level performance on close-ended academic questions.

DYNAMIC TESTING

While MMLU took years to saturate, HLE is showing pressure within months. The designers acknowledge this by announcing HLE-Rolling, a dynamically updated version intended to stay ahead of the models. Once a benchmark is published, it becomes a target for developers, and the instrument and the thing it measures cease to be independent. The inability to build a stable yardstick suggests that capability is moving faster than the ability to define what is being measured.

BUSINESS CONSEQUENCES

For businesses, this has significant consequences:

  • Unstable Claims: Procurement decisions are often made on capability claims built on benchmark performance; if benchmarks are unstable, so are those claims.
  • Confident Wrongness: A model that cannot signal its own uncertainty is unsuitable for contexts where errors compound, such as credit assessment, medical triage, and document-intensive work. Confident wrongness is operationally worse than uncertain wrongness because it removes the incentive for a human check.
  • Short Shelf-life: The pace of improvement means current understandings of AI capability have a short shelf-life. Regulatory and planning assumptions require revision cycles that most institutions are not designed to support.

The scores are rising so fast that it may not be possible to decide, in any meaningful way, which model is leading. At the margins of a high-difficulty benchmark, the difference between the best and the second-best is often just statistical noise.


Kochi to repeat water metro feat in Mumbai

WINNING IDEA. By V Sajeev Kumar

In a landmark step towards redefining urban mobility in India, Kochi Metro Rail Limited (KMRL) has submitted a detailed project report (DPR) for developing a modern passenger water transport (PWT) system across the Mumbai Metropolitan Region, in collaboration with the Maharashtra Maritime Board (MMB). Building on the success of the Kochi Water Metro, the proposed initiative aims to leverage Mumbai’s extensive coastline and waterways to create an integrated, efficient and environmentally sustainable transport network tailored to the region’s unique geography.

The proposed PWT system is envisioned as a low-emission, eco-friendly alternative that will enhance regional connectivity, reduce congestion on existing road and rail corridors, and support economic growth and tourism. The DPR outlines a comprehensive approach for developing both new and existing routes, including the construction of modern terminals and upgradation of existing jetties.

The proposed network includes 11 new routes supported by 24 terminals, which will be integrated with 25 existing terminals, including six common terminals serving both systems. The total route length would increase to over 215 km from the existing 128 km. The project envisages a fleet of 148 boats for the proposed routes and 49 boats for the existing network, alongside six emergency response vessels. The estimated cost of the project is ₹6,067 crore.

The routes would connect key urban centres and growth corridors across the Mumbai Metropolitan Region, including Vasai and Mira Bhayander, Kalyan-Dombivli and Thane, Airoli, Vashi and the Navi Mumbai International Airport, as well as prominent coastal and business hubs such as the Gateway of India, Bandra, Worli and Nariman Point. These corridors are expected to significantly improve multimodal integration and last-mile connectivity, offering commuters a faster and more comfortable alternative to conventional modes of transport. The project also focuses on the development of new terminals and the modernisation of existing infrastructure, ensuring seamless integration with other modes of public transport. The key terminals at Gateway of India, NMIA and Nariman Point are being aligned with the parallel infrastructure initiatives undertaken by the MMB to maximise efficiency and commuter experience.


MF equity cash holdings up by ₹4,000 crore in Feb

Suresh P Iyengar Mumbai

Mutual fund houses have increased the cash holding of equity schemes by ₹4,000 crore to ₹2.10 lakh crore in February against ₹2.06 lakh crore logged in January due to the market volatility, according to a JM Financial report. However, steady systematic investment plan (SIP) inflows and the recent fall in markets opening up fresh buying avenues have kept the cash holdings under check.

Part of the cash build-up could also be due to eight equity schemes raising ₹3,955 crore through NFOs last month. In January, four equity NFOs mopped up ₹806 crore. The inflows through SIP in the last 11 months of this fiscal were up 10 per cent at ₹3,17,502 crore against ₹2,89,352 crore logged in the whole of FY25.

Akshat Garg, Head-Research & Product at Choice Wealth, said that less than 5 per cent cash holding of MFs does not necessarily mean there is no redemption pressure but it is simply under manageable limits. “If there was real stress in the system, cash levels would have moved up sharply as fund managers prepared for outflows. That is clearly not happening right now,” he added.

The MF ecosystem is heavily supported by consistent SIP inflows, which continue to remain strong even during volatile phases. These steady inflows act as a natural counterbalance to redemptions, allowing fund managers to manage liquidity without holding excessive cash. In fact, in a falling market, holding higher cash could actually become a drag if the markets rebound quickly, which is why most funds prefer to remain close to fully invested.

The gross redemption from equity schemes reduced to ₹36,098 crore in February from ₹41,639 crore in January. However, a consistent sharp fall in equity markets may scare new MF investors, leading to higher redemptions and lower inflows. Gibin John, Senior Investment Strategist, Geojit Investments, noted that MFs continue to receive strong and steady SIP inflows of around ₹29,000-₹30,000 crore per month, providing consistent liquidity support.

Despite the huge volatility and the recent meltdown in markets, the overall equity asset under management has increased 16 per cent to ₹35.39 lakh crore in February against ₹30.57 lakh crore in April 2025. However, the March numbers will be crucial as the Sensex has already fallen 7 per cent so far this month to 74,533 on Friday from 80,239 on March 2.

AT A GLANCE

  • Mutual fund houses have increased the cash holding of equity schemes to ₹2.10 lakh crore in February from ₹2.06 lakh crore in January.
  • SIP inflows in the last 11 months of FY26 were up 10% at ₹3,17,502 crore against ₹2,89,352 crore in FY25.
  • The gross redemption from equity schemes reduced to ₹36,098 crore in February from ₹41,639 crore in January.

India’s silent newborn crisis

CRITICAL WINDOW. A heel-prick blood test 48-72 hours after birth can detect congenital hypothyroidism By Kishore Kumar

India is confronting a silent, yet entirely preventable postnatal crisis. One in every 1,000 babies born in India has congenital hypothyroidism (CH) which, if left undetected, can lead to permanent intellectual disability.

CH occurs when a baby is born without a thyroid gland or an underdeveloped or poorly functioning one. The thyroid produces thyroxine (T4), a hormone essential for brain development, growth and metabolism. In the earliest weeks of life, thyroxine plays a decisive role in neuronal development and brain maturation; this period represents a narrow but critical window.

If adequate thyroid hormone is not available during this time, the consequences can include irreversible intellectual disability, stunted physical growth, hearing impairment and delayed motor development. The most alarming aspect is that affected babies almost always appear completely normal at birth. Without screening, there are no obvious clinical signs to alert families or healthcare providers.

Globally, the incidence of CH is one in 2,500-3,000 live births. In India, given the higher prevalence and an estimated 26 million births annually, at least 10,000 babies are born with CH each year. That means roughly 27 babies each day and one baby each hour. Every one of these infants could lead a normal, productive life if diagnosed and treated within two weeks of birth through mandatory early newborn screening.

AFFORDABLE TEST

CH is identified using a simple heel-prick blood test conducted 48–72 hours after birth. The test measures thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels and, when implemented at scale, costs approximately ₹50 per baby. While treated infants can achieve normal development, untreated CH can reduce IQ by 30-50 points. The difference between a healthy future and lifelong disability rests on testing a single drop of blood.

The lifetime care of a child with severe intellectual disability includes special education, medical consultations, and long-term dependency. In a country where out-of-pocket healthcare expenditure is high, this can push households into financial distress and intergenerational disadvantage.

THE PATH FORWARD

The next phase of progress must focus on safeguarding neurodevelopment and ensuring quality of life. Most developed nations have implemented universal newborn screening for CH for nearly six decades, virtually eliminating it as a cause of avoidable cognitive impairment. India still lacks mandatory nationwide screening.

Universal newborn screening for CH must be integrated into all public and private birthing facilities. This requires policy mandates, structured funding, standardised testing protocols, and centralised data monitoring systems to ensure compliance and accountability.

The science is unequivocal; the screening test is simple and affordable, and the treatment is effective. What is missing is collective will. Protecting a child’s brain at birth is a vital necessity.


Sports economy doubled in four years, crossed $2 billion-mark in 2025 : WPP Media report

Cricket business alone grew 17.9 per cent to ₹16,704.2 crore last year By Meenakshi Verma Ambwani, New Delhi

India’s sports economy crossed the $2 billion-mark for the first time in CY2025, reaching ₹18,864 crore ($2.13 billion) and marking a 13.4 per cent growth over the previous year. Sports ad spends, the largest industry component, rose 19.8 per cent to ₹9,571 crore, while sponsorship spends grew 7 per cent to ₹7,943 crore. Additionally, athlete-oriented endorsement deals were valued at ₹1,350 crore, up 10.3 per cent from 2024.

According to Vinit Karnik, MD – Content, Sports and Entertainment at WPP Media, South Asia, the industry has doubled from ₹9,530 crore in 2021. He noted that CY2025 represents a structural inflection point where sports has moved from an emerging market to a story of consolidation and scale, reflecting deep advertiser confidence.

Cricket continues to dominate, contributing nearly 89 per cent of the total industry. Despite a ban affecting real money gaming (RMG) players, cricket media spends reached ₹9,026 crore in 2025. Furthermore, IPL franchises achieved a milestone by crossing the ₹1,000 crore-mark in cumulative team sponsorship revenues. Karnik stated that the void left by RMG players was filled by other sectors, proving that cricket's commercial foundation has broadened beyond a single advertiser cohort.

SPORTS REVENUES

Conversely, emerging sports revenues declined by 12.2 per cent in 2025 to ₹2,159.9 crore. This drop was attributed to the postponement of the Indian Super League and a lack of major non-cricketing multi-nation tournaments. Emerging sports now account for 11 per cent of the total industry, though event-based tournaments like the Neeraj Chopra Classic provided some positive momentum.


Market Value Repurchase and the Mitigation of Mortgage Lock-in

 The "core innovation" of the Danish mortgage system is the right of a borrower to repurchase their outstanding mortgage at its current market value. This feature distinguishes Danish fixed-rate mortgages (FRMs) from those in the United States, where mortgages can generally only be prepaid at par.

The Mechanism of the Buy-Back Innovation

In the Danish model, mortgage lending is governed by the "balance principle," where specialized mortgage banks fund loans by issuing covered bonds with identical cash flows. Because these bonds are traded in a deep secondary market, their prices fluctuate with interest rates.

The buy-back innovation allows a borrower to:

  • Realize Capital Gains: When interest rates rise, the market price of the underlying covered bonds falls. A borrower can purchase these bonds at a discount in the secondary market and deliver them to the lender to retire their debt below its face value.
  • Self-Execute Transactions: Unlike alternative mechanisms like mortgage assumability or portability, which often require discretionary lender approval and complex re-underwriting, the buy-back right is contractually self-executing at observable market prices.

Mitigating the "Lock-In" Effect

The primary macroeconomic value of this innovation is its ability to eliminate interest-rate-induced "lock-in". In the U.S. system, households with low-coupon mortgages face a strong financial disincentive to move when market rates rise, as they would forfeit the embedded value of their cheap debt by prepaying at par.

In contrast, the sources highlight several key differences in the Danish context:

  • Stable Mobility: Danish moving hazards remain largely insensitive to interest rate increases. Households can relocate at nearly constant rates even when prevailing market rates substantially exceed their existing mortgage coupons because they do not lose their embedded capital gains.
  • "U-Shaped" Refinancing Hazards: While U.S. refinancing activity disappears when market rates exceed existing coupons, Danish households actively refinance in both falling-rate and rising-rate environments. When rates rise, they repurchase discounted debt to realize capital gains and often refinance into higher-coupon, par-priced mortgages.

Supporting Institutional Factors

The effectiveness of this innovation is reinforced by other elements of the Danish system:

  • Tax Incentives: Capital gains realized from these discounted buy-backs are not taxable in Denmark. Furthermore, because mortgage interest is tax-deductible, households are incentivized to refinance into higher-rate mortgages to increase their future tax shields, a trade-off similar to corporate capital structure theories.
  • Beliefs about Interest Rates: Households who view high interest rates as transitory may aggressively buy back discounted debt, intending to refinance again when rates eventually decline.

Implications for the U.S. Market

Counterfactual experiments in the sources suggest that introducing this Danish-style buy-back option into the U.S. market would substantially reduce lock-in and preserve household mobility. The model predicts that the cost of adding this option would be modest, increasing equilibrium mortgage rates by an average of only 18 basis points. This is because the "windfall" investors currently receive from movers who must prepay discounted mortgages at par—which currently exerts downward pressure on rates—is relatively infrequent.


The empirical findings from the Danish mortgage market demonstrate that the buy-back model fundamentally alters household behavior during interest rate cycles, particularly by enabling debt reduction when rates rise and preserving mobility. These findings are based on comprehensive administrative micro-data covering the universe of Danish households from 2010 to 2024.

The sources document three primary empirical facts:

1. The "U-Shaped" Refinancing Hazard

The data reveal that Danish refinancing behavior follows a distinct "U-shape" relative to the "coupon gap" (the difference between a borrower's existing rate and the current market rate),.

  • Positive Gaps (Standard Refinancing): Consistent with U.S. evidence, refinancing hazards increase sharply when the mortgage coupon exceeds the market rate, as borrowers move to lock in lower borrowing costs. Notably, Danish borrowers refinance at faster speeds (approximately 300 bps/month) compared to U.S. borrowers (200 bps/month), suggesting fewer financial or behavioral frictions.
  • Negative Gaps (Discounted Buy-Backs): Unlike in the U.S., where refinancing disappears when rates rise, Danish hazards rise markedly when market rates exceed coupons by more than 200 bps. Households actively repurchase their debt below par to realize capital gains. For example, during the sharp rate hikes of 2022–2023, some households realized gains of nearly 30% of their mortgage's face value. In 2022 and 2023 alone, there were approximately 100,000 discount mortgage repurchases.

2. Elimination of the "Lock-In" Effect

The most striking empirical finding is that Danish moving hazards are nearly flat across negative coupon gaps.

  • Insensitivity to Rates: While U.S. moving rates fall sharply as interest rates rise (estimated at a 57–120 bps annual decline for every 100 bps rate increase), the corresponding effect in Denmark is economically negligible.
  • Preserved Mobility: Danish households continue to relocate at nearly constant rates even when market rates substantially exceed their existing coupons because they can move without forfeiting the embedded capital gains in their mortgages. Aggregate data shows that despite the surge in rates in 2022, FRM moving rates returned to pre-pandemic levels rather than collapsing as they did in the U.S..

3. Drivers of Behavioral Responses

The sources use empirical evidence to identify why Danish households optimally replace low-coupon debt with higher-coupon debt:

  • Tax Incentives: Because mortgage interest is tax-deductible (at an effective flat rate of 33% in Denmark) and capital gains from buy-backs are not taxable, households find it profitable to realize a lump-sum gain now in exchange for higher future tax shields,.
  • Refinancing Frictions: The data suggests Danish households face very low frictions; for instance, at origination, borrowers have almost no ability to negotiate rates, as nearly all mortgages cluster at a single publicly observable coupon rate (R² of 0.92 for origination month),.

4. Comparison to Alternative Mechanisms

Empirical registry data confirms that the buy-back right is the preferred tool for Danish households. While "mortgage assumptions" (allowing a buyer to take over a seller's rate) are technically legal in Denmark, they are rarely used. Between 2020 and 2023, there were fewer than 2,500 assumed mortgages, compared to the hundreds of thousands of discount repurchases during the same period. This suggests that contractually self-executing buy-back rights are far more effective than discretionary mechanisms like assumption or portability.


The institutional framework of the Danish mortgage system is a highly specialized and stable capital-market-based structure that enables unique borrower behaviors, such as the buy-back right, while maintaining financial stability through strict matching principles.

The Balance Principle and Funding Model

At the core of the framework is the "balance principle," which requires specialized mortgage banks to fund every loan by issuing covered bonds with identical cash flows.

  • Risk Distribution: This design ensures that the mortgage bank bears no interest rate or prepayment risk, as these are passed directly to bond investors.
  • Secondary Market: Because these bonds are traded in deep secondary markets, their prices fluctuate based on market interest rates.
  • Borrower Innovation: The framework grants borrowers the contractual right to repurchase their outstanding debt by buying the corresponding bonds in the secondary market and delivering them to the lender. This allows borrowers to retire debt at a discount when interest rates rise and bond prices fall.

Taxation and Financial Incentives

The institutional effectiveness of the buy-back model is heavily reinforced by the Danish tax code:

  • Interest Deductibility: Mortgage interest is classified as "negative capital income" and is tax-deductible at an effective flat rate of 33%.
  • Tax-Exempt Capital Gains: Crucially, capital gains realized by households through discounted buy-backs are not taxable.
  • The "Trade-Off" Strategy: These tax rules create a powerful incentive for households to engage in "upward conversion"—repurchasing discounted low-coupon debt and refinancing into higher-coupon mortgages. By doing so, households realize a tax-free lump-sum gain while increasing their future tax shields through higher interest deductions.

Credit Risk and Regulation

The framework distinguishes between market risks (interest rate/prepayment) and credit risks:

  • Bank Accountability: While investors bear interest rate risk, mortgage banks retain the credit risk.
  • Safety Mechanisms: This risk is managed through conservative regulations, including a loan-to-value (LTV) limit of 80% for owner-occupied homes, full recourse against borrowers, and efficient foreclosure procedures.
  • Contribution Fees: Mortgage banks charge a separate "contribution fee" to compensate for credit risk, which is distinct from the mortgage coupon received by investors.

Implementation and Comparison

The sources contrast this "self-executing" contractual framework with alternative mechanisms like mortgage assumability or portability. While those alternatives rely on discretionary lender approval and complex re-underwriting, the Danish buy-back right operates automatically through existing refinancing infrastructure at observable market prices.

For potential implementation in the U.S. Agency market, the sources suggest that instead of moving to a covered bond system, the framework could be adapted by modifying the prepayment terms of agency MBS to allow borrowers to prepay at the lesser of par or current market value.


The tax-free status of buy-back gains in Denmark is a fundamental driver of household financial behavior, particularly through a strategy known as "upward conversion". This tax treatment, combined with the deductibility of mortgage interest, encourages households to actively manage their debt in ways that are largely absent in other markets like the United States.

The influence of this tax-free status on household decisions is characterized by the following mechanisms:

1. Incentivizing "Upward Conversion"

In a rising interest rate environment, the market value of a low-coupon mortgage falls. The tax-free status of capital gains allows Danish households to repurchase this debt at a discount and realize the gain without any tax liability. Households often then refinance into a new, higher-coupon mortgage at par. This creates a specific financial trade-off:

  • Immediate Gain: The household receives an immediate, tax-exempt lump-sum gain by retiring their debt below its face value.
  • Future Tax Shields: While the new mortgage has a higher interest rate, those interest payments are tax-deductible at an effective flat rate of 33%. By "monetizing" the discount on their old mortgage, households effectively increase their future tax deductions, lowering the present value of their lifetime tax liabilities.

2. Driving Refinancing During Rising Rates

This tax structure explains why Danish refinancing activity follows a "U-shape," rising even when market interest rates exceed a borrower's existing coupon (a "negative coupon gap"). In the U.S., where debt forgiveness is generally treated as taxable ordinary income, such refinancing activity almost entirely disappears when rates rise. In Denmark, however, the ability to realize these gains tax-free makes high-coupon, par-priced mortgages more attractive on an after-tax basis than holding onto a discounted low-coupon mortgage.

3. Eliminating the "Lock-In" Effect

The tax-free nature of these gains is a primary reason why Danish household mobility remains insensitive to interest rate hikes.

  • In systems without this feature, households are "locked in" to their homes because moving would require them to prepay their discounted mortgage at par, forfeiting its embedded value.
  • In Denmark, because the gain from buying back the mortgage at its discounted market value is not taxed, households can move and "crystallize" those gains to help finance a new property. This allows moving hazards to remain nearly flat even when market rates are substantially higher than existing mortgage coupons.

4. Comparison to the U.S. Context

The sources note that even if the U.S. adopted a similar buy-back right, the effect would be significantly dampened unless the tax code were also modified. Under current U.S. law, capital gains from debt forgiveness are typically taxable, and mortgage interest deductibility is weaker and more capped than in Denmark. Modeling suggests that if the U.S. implemented buy-back rights without taxing the gains, refinancing hazards for negative coupon gaps would become much more pronounced.


The economic mechanisms of the Danish mortgage buy-back model revolve around a unique contract design that allows borrowers to manage the market value of their debt, thereby preserving mobility and enabling debt reduction during rising interest rate cycles,. These mechanisms are driven by the interaction of secondary bond market pricing, specific tax incentives, and household expectations,.

1. Market Value Repurchase and Capital Gain Realization

The central economic mechanism is the repurchase-at-market-value right. Unlike the U.S. system, where mortgages must be prepaid at par, Danish borrowers can repurchase their debt at its current market value when interest rates rise and bond prices fall,,.

  • Monetizing Debt: This allows households to "crystallize" or monetize the embedded capital gains in their mortgages,.
  • Eliminating Lock-In: Because moving does not require forfeiting the value of a low-coupon mortgage—borrowers simply buy it back at a discount—household mobility remains insensitive to interest rate hikes,.
  • Investor Windfalls: In par-prepayment systems like the U.S., investors receive a "windfall" when movers prepay discounted debt at par. The Danish mechanism eliminates this windfall, leading to slightly higher equilibrium rates (estimated at ~18 bps for the U.S.) but greater borrower flexibility,.

2. The Tax-Shield Mechanism ("Upward Conversion")

A powerful driver of the Danish model is the "upward conversion" strategy, which mirrors the corporate finance "trade-off theory" of capital structure,.

  • The Trade-Off: Households balance the fixed costs of refinancing against the benefit of an increased tax shield,.
  • Tax Arbitrage: Because mortgage interest is tax-deductible (at a 33% rate) and capital gains from buy-backs are tax-exempt, it is often optimal for a household to replace a low-coupon, discounted mortgage with a higher-coupon, par-priced mortgage,. This increases future tax deductions while providing an immediate, tax-free lump-sum gain,.

3. The Balance Principle and Funding Matching

The model operates through the "balance principle," where specialized mortgage banks match each loan by issuing covered bonds with identical cash flows.

  • Risk Transfer: Interest rate and prepayment risks are passed directly to bond investors in a deep secondary market,.
  • Competitive Pricing: This ensures that the buy-back right is contractually self-executing at transparent, publicly observable market prices, eliminating the need for bilateral negotiation or discretionary lender approval,.

4. Behavioral Frictions and Opportunity Arrivals

Economic behavior in the model is constrained by stochastic opportunity arrivals and fixed costs,.

  • Inattention: Households do not adjust continuously; instead, opportunities to refinance ($\lambda$) or move ($\psi$) arrive according to Poisson processes,.
  • Fixed Costs: Refinancing involves transaction costs ($\kappa_\lambda$), and moving involves net relocation costs or benefits ($\kappa_\psi$). These costs create "inaction regions" where borrowers only act if the coupon gap (positive or negative) is large enough to overcome the transaction friction,.

5. Heterogeneous Beliefs and Rate Persistence

Beyond tax incentives, the model accounts for divergent expectations regarding interest rate movements,.

  • Transitory Beliefs: If a household believes that high interest rates are transitory (mean-reverting faster than the market expects), they are more likely to aggressively buy back discounted debt,.
  • Bridge Financing: Borrowers may view a higher-coupon refinance as a "temporary bridge," intending to refinance again when rates eventually decline.

6. Secondary Economic Drivers

  • LTV and Contribution Fees: Refinancing a discounted mortgage reduces the outstanding principal, which lowers the Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio. This can lead to a lower "contribution fee" (credit fee) charged by the bank, providing an additional minor incentive for buy-backs.
  • Liquidity Extraction: Discounted buy-backs allow households to extract home equity as liquid funds, which can be particularly valuable for liquidity-constrained households facing large expenditures.

Counterfactual experiments in the sources suggest that introducing a Danish-style buy-back option into the U.S. mortgage market would substantially reduce interest-rate-induced lock-in and preserve household mobility, even in high-rate environments. Under the current U.S. system, households with low-coupon mortgages are discouraged from moving because doing so would require them to prepay their debt at par, thereby forfeiting its embedded value. A buy-back option would allow them to relocate without this financial penalty by retiring their debt at its discounted market value.

Impact on Mortgage Rates

The sources indicate that the equilibrium cost of adding this option to U.S. mortgages is relatively modest:

  • Average Increase: Mortgage rates would rise by an average of only 18 basis points.
  • Reasoning: Currently, U.S. mortgage investors receive a "windfall" when borrowers must prepay discounted mortgages at par due to moving. While the buy-back right eliminates this windfall, the effect on rates is small because such move-related prepayments are relatively infrequent.
  • State-Dependency: The pricing effect is highest when rates are low (approximately 40 bps) and negligible when rates are high, which means it would not significantly worsen affordability during periods of high interest rates.

Institutional and Tax Challenges

While the buy-back right effectively preserves mobility, its ability to stimulate refinancing in a rising-rate environment (as seen in Denmark) is more constrained in the U.S. due to different institutional frameworks:

  • Capital Gains Taxation: Unlike in Denmark, where buy-back gains are tax-exempt, U.S. law generally treats debt forgiveness as taxable ordinary income. Without a tax exemption, the incentive to refinance into a higher-coupon mortgage just to realize the gain is significantly weakened.
  • Interest Deductibility: The U.S. offers weaker interest deductibility (due to the 2017 TCJA and caps on principal) compared to Denmark’s 33% flat rate, further reducing the benefit of the "upward conversion" strategy.

Implementation in the U.S. Market

Implementing this reform would require different adjustments depending on the market segment:

  • Agency Market: This would involve modifying agency MBS prepayment terms to allow borrowers to prepay at the lesser of par or current market value. This would require a revised GSE guarantee but would not necessitate a total overhaul of existing secondary market infrastructure.
  • Jumbo Market: Lenders who hold mortgages in portfolios would need accounting and regulatory adjustments. Currently, accepting a discounted payment would trigger immediate P&L losses for banks, discouraging them from participating even if the transaction is economically sound.

Comparison with Alternative Mechanisms

The sources argue that buy-back rights are superior to other proposals like mortgage assumability or portability.

  • Self-Executing: Buy-back rights are contractually self-executing at transparent market prices and do not require discretionary lender approval or complex re-underwriting.
  • Low Take-Up of Alternatives: Mechanisms like assumability are already formally available for FHA and VA loans but have seen negligible take-up (well under 0.05% annually) because they face severe practical frictions and lender "gatekeeping".

Implementing a Danish-style buy-back right in the U.S. would primarily involve modifying existing contract terms rather than overhauling the entire secondary market infrastructure. The sources suggest this reform could significantly reduce interest-rate-induced "lock-in" with a modest impact on mortgage rates.

Implementation in the Agency Market

For the U.S. agency market (GSE-backed loans), implementation would focus on the prepayment rules within mortgage-backed securities (MBS):

  • Contractual Modification: Borrowers would be granted the right to prepay at the lesser of par or current market value.
  • Standardized Pricing: To ensure transparency for investors, the "market value" would be determined using standardized models or publicly available indices, such as TRACE transaction prices for agency MBS with similar maturities and coupons.
  • GSE Guarantees: The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) would likely need to adjust GSE guarantee terms to allow principal payments at market value while still ensuring timely interest payments to investors.
  • Minimal Disruption: The sources emphasize that this would not require a transition to the Danish "covered bond" system; it would preserve the existing MBS, TBA, and servicing infrastructure.

Implementation in the Jumbo Market

In the jumbo segment, where banks often hold loans in their own portfolios, the challenges are primarily accounting-related:

  • Accounting Losses: Under current rules, accepting a discounted payoff would trigger an immediate Profit and Loss (P&L) loss for the bank because these loans are often marked at par on balance sheets.
  • Regulatory Reform: Reducing these barriers would require reforming accounting and regulatory capital rules so that balance sheet valuations better reflect mark-to-market values, thereby removing the disincentive for banks to accept economically sound discounted repurchases.

The U.S. Taxation Hurdle

The sources identify U.S. tax law as a major constraint that would dampen the effect of the buy-back right compared to Denmark:

  • Taxable Gains: Unlike in Denmark, where buy-back gains are tax-exempt, U.S. law generally treats debt forgiveness as taxable ordinary income.
  • Impact on Refinancing: While the buy-back right would still restore household mobility, the incentive to actively refinance into higher-rate mortgages (to realize capital gains) would be much weaker in the U.S. unless accompanied by a tax exemption.

Equilibrium Pricing and Economics

Counterfactual modeling indicates the cost of adding this option is relatively low:

  • Modest Rate Increase: Equilibrium mortgage rates would rise by an average of only 18 basis points.
  • State-Dependent Cost: The price increase would be highest when market rates are low (roughly 40 bps) and negligible when rates are high—precisely when affordability concerns are most acute.
  • Superiority to Alternatives: The sources argue that buy-back rights are superior to assumability or portability because they are contractually self-executing. Mechanisms like assumability are already available for FHA/VA loans but are rarely used because they require discretionary lender approval and complex re-underwriting.

Newspaper Summary 220326

 

Six passive equity funds to buy the dip

By Aarati Krishnan

With the Iran conflict stretching on and foreign portfolio investors selling stocks aggressively, the market mood has shifted from cautious optimism to gloom. For retail investors, deciding which specific stocks to buy during such volatility is a daunting task, as different sectors like crude-sensitive airlines or domestic consumption face varying headwinds. Instead of trying to decipher these complexities, an easier route to capitalise on the market fall is to buy passive funds.

Indian fund houses currently offer a roster of 677 index funds and Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs). Based on an analysis of these offerings, there are six types of index funds suitable for different investor profiles, provided they have a minimum time horizon of five years.

For New Equity Investors

Those making their debut in equity funds can consider a Nifty100 index fund or a Nifty LargeMidcap 250 fund.

  • 1. Nifty100 Index Fund: This index owns the top 100 stocks by market capitalisation, representing the official large-cap universe. It is often a better choice than its popular sibling, the Nifty 50, because it is more diversified and has a better return record. Over the last 20 years, it has delivered an average return of 12.6 per cent compared to 12.2 per cent for the Nifty 50, with a much lower probability of losses. Its valuation has recently corrected to 20.2 times PE from a 2024 peak of 25.3.
    • Recommended Funds: Bandhan Nifty100 Index Fund (lowest expense ratio at 0.10 per cent) and Axis Nifty 100 Index Fund.
  • 2. Nifty LargeMidcap 250 Index Fund: This index offers a neat 50-50 weight split between the top 100 and the next 150 stocks. It has a superior risk-reward profile compared to the Nifty500, delivering an average 14.4 per cent CAGR over five-year periods. While it rarely delivers capital losses over a five-year holding period, it is currently pricier than the Nifty100 with a PE of nearly 24.
    • Recommended Funds: Zerodha Nifty LargeMidcap 250 Fund (0.27 per cent expense ratio), HDFC, or ICICI Pru.

For Aggressive Investors

  • 3. Nifty Smallcap 250 Index Fund: For those with a high risk tolerance, this index skims the "creamy layer" of the small-cap universe by focusing on the top 250 names below the mid-cap layer. It is highly volatile, having nosedived 70 per cent in its worst year, but it managed a 40 per cent CAGR in its best five-year spell over the last two decades. The index PE has corrected from over 35 times in 2024 to 24 times currently.
    • Recommended Fund: Motilal Oswal Nifty Smallcap 250 Index Fund (0.33 per cent expense ratio).

For Defensive Investors

Defensive investors looking for a smoother journey during market mayhem have three distinct options:

  • 4. Nifty 500 Value 50 Index Fund: This fund selects the 50 best-scoring stocks from the Nifty 500 based on an aggregate of PE, Price-to-Book, Price-to-Sales, and dividend yield ratios. It has trounced the Nifty100 significantly in the last five years with a 29.4 per cent CAGR and restrict losses during downturns. Its portfolio currently features a modest PE of 9.7 times.
    • Recommended Fund: Axis Nifty 500 Value 50 Index Fund (0.17 per cent fee).
  • 5. Nifty Dividend Opportunities 50 Index Fund: This index targets companies with high and stable dividend yields, which acts as an anchor for stock prices when growth visibility is low. It offers lower return volatility (14.5 per cent standard deviation) compared to the Value 50 index.
    • Recommended Fund: Nippon India ETF Dividend Opportunities 50.
  • 6. Nifty 100 Low Vol 30 Index Fund: This "volatility-killing" index picks 30 large-cap stocks with the lowest standard deviation of daily returns. While it may lag in aggressive bull markets, it outperforms by holding steady during turbulent phases, managing a 12.9 per cent CAGR over the last five years.
    • Recommended Fund: Mirae Asset runs a fund tracking this index.

Battle scars

By Nishanth Gopalakrishnan

The past three weeks since the start of the US-Israel-Iran war have been quite painful for global markets. Equities, commodities, bonds and currencies have been invariably volatile. Secularly, equities have declined, and bonds have cracked as yields spiked. Commodities, except for crude and natural gas, have fallen as well. As the dollar strengthened, other major currencies depreciated against it.

The following points provide a visual stock-taking of the market's current state:

  • Equity indices slide
  • Sovereign yields firm up
  • Energy costs more, metals fall
  • Dollar gains
  • Auto, Oil & Gas – sectors worst hit

Resistance holds

By Akhil Nallamuthu

Weak structure suggests continuation of the decline

Nifty 50 (23,115) and Nifty Bank (53,427) were down 0.2 per cent and 0.6 per cent respectively over the last week. While both indices tried to overturn the trend, the attempt met with a strong resistance resulting in a decline. Here is our analysis of charts and the derivatives data of both indices:

NIFTY 50

Nifty futures (March) (23,141) was down 0.3 per cent last week. During the first half, the contract rallied and made a high of 23,876 on Wednesday. However, on Thursday, it witnessed a considerable fall. Consequently, despite a recovery on Friday, the contract posted a weekly loss.

Although 23,000 is a support ahead, given the strength of the bears, we expect Nifty futures to see a further decline, potentially to 22,700. Support below 22,700 is at 22,500. Only a decisive breakout of 24,000 can turn the outlook positive. Until then, the intermittent rises are likely to be seen as selling opportunities, leading to the arrival of fresh short positions.

While Nifty futures was down 0.3 per cent for the week, the outstanding open interest of the contract saw a decline from 200 lakh contracts to 172 lakh contracts. By definition, this indicates long unwinding. However, from a broader picture, the data shows that some shorts have exited over the last week, reflected in cumulative open interest dropping from 242 lakh contracts to 228 lakh contracts.

Yet, there are shorts in the system and the strong sell-off in the second half of last week indicates that the bears hold the upper hand over the bulls. That said, the Put Call Ratio (PCR) of Nifty March options stood at 1.1 on Friday, showing some positive bias. But considering all factors, the probability of a decline remains high.

  • Strategy: Retain the short trade suggested last week at 23,750, but revise the stop-loss from 24,200 to 23,500 to lock in some profits. Exit the trade at 22,700. For fresh positions, one can wait and short Nifty futures if it inches up to 23,300, with a target of 22,700 and a stop-loss of 23,500.

NIFTY BANK

Nifty Bank futures (March) (53,554) saw an uptick during the first half of last week, but the rally did not sustain. While the contract made a high of 55,660 on Wednesday, what followed was a sharp decline, leading to a weekly loss of 0.7 per cent.

The contract is now trading near a support at 53,500. This base helped Nifty Bank futures rebound last week, but we expect it to give up this time, eventually leading to a decline in upcoming sessions. A breakdown below 53,500 can open the door for a fall to 51,850; the next support is at 50,500. If the contract bounces off 53,500 again instead of breaching it, we might see a rise to 54,500 or 55,000. For the trend to turn bullish, Nifty Bank futures should break out of 55,500.

As March futures dropped last week, the outstanding open interest decreased from 22.6 lakh contracts to 19.4 lakh contracts, indicating unwinding of long positions. However, unlike in Nifty futures, cumulative open interest marginally increased from 32.2 lakh to 32.4 lakh contracts, hinting that bears are calling the shots at a broader level. Supporting the bearish inclination, the PCR of March options stood at 0.80. Overall, Nifty Bank futures appears weaker than Nifty futures.

  • Strategy: Retain the short position recommended last week at 55,400. Revise the stop-loss from 56,750 to 54,800. Exit at 51,850. For fresh trades, wait for a rise to 54,200 and then short the contract with a target of 51,850 and a stop-loss of 54,800.

Broad Trend Summary

  • Long unwinding seen in March index futures.
  • Rallies fail near key levels.
  • Sell-on-rise strategy preferred.

Free fall

By Gurumurthy K

US MARKET OUTLOOK: US benchmark indices are being beaten down badly

The Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and the NASDAQ Composite indices continue to get beaten down. All three indices were down for the fourth consecutive week, dropping about 2 per cent each last week. The Dow Jones, down about 6 per cent, has tumbled the most in the last four weeks.

While the US 10Yr Treasury Yield has surged for the third consecutive week, this surprisingly has not aided the dollar index, which fell about a per cent last week. Here is the analysis of how low benchmark indices could fall and the outlook for the dollar:

DOW JONES (45,577.47)

As expected, the Dow Jones fell, breaking below the support at 46,450, clearing the way for a potential fall to 45,000. The region between 45,000 and 44,900 is a strong support zone where the index has good chances to bounce back toward 46,000–46,500. however, a break below 44,900 could lead to further downside at 44,200–44,000. The preference is to see the Dow sustain above 44,900 on its first test to trigger a bounce.

S&P 500 (6,506.48)

Resistance at 6,750 capped the upside last week, and the index fell below 6,600 as expected. The downside is now open to 6,400–6,380, after which a bounce back toward 6,600 is expected. Intermediate support exists around 6,460–6,450; if this holds, a corrective bounce to 6,550–6,600 may occur before the fall to 6,400–6,380.

NASDAQ COMPOSITE (21,647.61)

The index may see a rise to 21,900–22,000, but thereafter it is likely to fall back again. This leg of the decline could drag the NASDAQ Composite down to 20,300–20,000 in the coming weeks.

DOLLAR OUTLOOK

The dollar index (99.50) failed to achieve a strong follow-through rise last week, oscillating around 100. However, the bias remains positive. Strong support in the 99–98.85 region should limit the downside, and a fresh rise from this zone could take the index to 101 in the short term. In the medium term, the index has the potential to breach 101 and rise to 103–104.

TREASURY YIELD

Support at 4.18 per cent held well, and the US 10Yr Treasury Yield (4.38 per cent) touched a low of 4.17 per cent before surging beyond the expected 4.3 per cent level. The outlook remains bullish with strong momentum, and the yield has the potential to target 4.6 per cent.


Failed attempt

By Gurumurthy K

INDEX OUTLOOK: The benchmark indices have room to fall more from here before finding a bottom

Nifty 50, Sensex, and the Nifty Bank index witnessed a very good bounce in the first half last week. However, a sharp fall in HDFC Bank’s share price on Thursday played spoilsport, and benchmark indices gave away all gains to close the week in the red. On the charts, there is room for further decline before a bottom is found, though important supports are approaching.

Market Data and FPI Activity

  • Sector Performance: The BSE Oil & Gas index fell the most last week, down 3.3 per cent, while the BSE Telecom index outperformed with a 2 per cent gain.
  • FPI Selling: Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) remain on a selling spree, with a net outflow of about $3.84 billion last week and $9.57 billion so far in March.

NIFTY 50 (23,114.50)

  • Short-term View: The outlook remains weak. Intermediate support is around 22,900; a break below this could drag Nifty to 22,300–22,200, followed by an expected bounce. If it sustains above 22,900, it may trade in a range of 22,900–24,000. Surpassing the crucial 24,000 resistance is necessary to ease downward pressure.
  • Medium-term View: Support at 22,200–22,000 is crucial. A bounce from there and a rise past 24,000 could target 26,000–26,400. The rally toward 28,000–30,000 depends on sustaining above 22,000 and breaching 26,400.

NIFTY BANK (53,427.05)

  • Short-term View: Poised near a crucial support of 53,300, which it is expected to break, potentially leading to a fall to 52,200–52,000. A bounce from 52,000 could take it back to 54,000–56,000.
  • Medium-term View: As long as it stays above 52,200–52,000, the broader bullish view remains intact, with the potential to reach 60,000 in coming weeks and 64,000–65,000 in the medium term.

SENSEX (74,532.96)

  • Short-term View: Resistance at 77,000 held well, keeping the downside open toward 73,000–72,800. A bounce after this fall could return the index to 76,000–77,000. Decisively crossing 77,000–77,500 is required for a positive outlook.
  • Medium-term View: Levels of 72,800 and 72,250 are critical. A strong bounce and rise past 77,500 could target 85,000–86,000.

NIFTY MIDCAP 150 (20,226.90)

  • Short-term View: Resistance at 21,000 is holding, but the outlook is mixed. Below 21,000, it remains vulnerable to breaking support at 19,800, which could drag it to 19,200–19,000. A break above 21,000 is needed to revisit 22,800.
  • Extended Fall: If it declines below 19,000, a further drop to 18,300–18,000 is possible.

NIFTY SMALLCAP 250 (14,791.95)

The index failed to rise back above 15,000, keeping a potential fall to 14,000 alive. Support at 14,000 is strong; a bounce from there could start a new uptrend toward 22,500–23,000 in the long term. A break below 14,000 would invalidate the bullish view and could lead to 13,000 or lower.


Key Supports

  • Nifty 50: 22,200, 22,000
  • Sensex: 72,800, 72,250
  • Nifty Bank: 52,200, 52,000

Telcos engage with Mumbai Metro body for network infra along new line

By Vallari Sanzgiri, Mumbai

The Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI) is currently in talks with Mumbai Metro authorities regarding the establishment of network infrastructure along the newly constructed aqua line. Industry sources have confirmed that discussions are underway between the COAI and the Mumbai Metro Railway Ltd (MMRCL) to manage ACES infrastructure following the termination of its third-party contract.

Exploring Options

The metro authority has the option to offer 'right of way' to telecom service providers (TSPs), allowing them to build joint infrastructure with one TSP acting as the lead operator. Based on the commercial feasibility of the existing infrastructure, MMRCL intends to issue a fresh call for a service provider that offers lower charges for the use of space for telecom equipment. Previously, telecommunications companies had expressed concerns regarding the unviable rates offered by MMRCL's selected partner for the use of its network equipment. Consequently, services from Vodafone Idea (Vi) and BSNL, which were previously provided via ACES, have been switched off on the metro line.

A spokesperson for Vi confirmed that their services on the Mumbai metro line are currently impacted due to the termination of the primary contract with ACES. The company stated it remains committed to working with MMRCL to explore options for reinstating services as soon as possible.

Government Engagement

In response to these developments, ACES has reached out to Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and the Union Ministry of Communications to request a meeting on the matter. Additionally, Indus Towers has been seeking a "comfort letter" from all telcos to engage with metro authorities for in-building solutions. ACES has advised Indus to adopt a "wait and watch" approach until their discussions with the government conclude.

Despite the current disruptions, telcos remain optimistic about reaching a favorable resolution. This optimism is rooted in prior government orders that recognize metros as "public spaces," where established TSPs are granted preference for providing services.


Airtel ‘mobile connects’ Navi Mumbai airport

Airtel has become fully functional at Navi Mumbai International Airport Ltd, with Jio Infocomm’s network expected to follow shortly.

In-Building Coverage Confirmed Adani Airport CEO Arun Bansal confirmed the commencement of services on Friday via a LinkedIn post, stating, “Finally, fantastic In-building coverage at Navi Mumbai airport by leading Mobile Operator. Thanks Airtel for giving great consumer experience”.

While Airtel is now functional, sources indicate that Jio is currently addressing a few remaining dark spots within the airport building and is expected to operationalise its services soon. Additionally, both telecom giants are preparing to have their in-building solutions (IBS) ready for the inauguration of the Noida International Airport on March 28.

Resolution of Infrastructure Conflicts These developments mark the conclusion of right-of-way (RoW) conflicts at two of India's major airports. Airport authorities had previously argued that they had already installed mobile network infrastructure themselves after multiple discussions with telecom service providers (TSPs).

However, the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) intervened, recognising airports as a “public entity” and directing authorities to allow telcos to set up their own network infrastructure.

Faisal Kawoosa, Chief Analyst and Founder of Techarc, noted that preventing TSPs from installing their own infrastructure would have led to service degradation. He explained that standard WiFi connectivity is insufficient to support the lakhs of users typically present at airport premises. Following the resolution at these airports, telcos are now looking for a similar settlement regarding infrastructure conflicts on Mumbai’s new metro line.


Trump mulls ‘winding down’ war

RISING TENSIONS. Iranian media: Natanz enrichment facility targeted; Israel steps up airstrikes on Hezbollah Reuters Dubai/Washington

President Donald Trump said the US was considering “winding down” its military operation against Iran, as Iran and Israel traded attacks on Saturday and Iranian media reported that the nuclear enrichment facility in Natanz had been attacked. In a social media post, Trump claimed the US was close to meeting its objectives but insisted that other nations should take the lead in policing the Strait of Hormuz, noting that its near-closure threatens a global energy shock.

Mixed Messaging

The Trump administration has sent conflicting signals regarding its goals in the war, which is now entering its fourth week. Within a 24-hour period, Trump suggested the conflict could wind down as the Iranian threat was being eliminated, even while US marines and heavy landing craft were simultaneously heading to the region on an unclear mission. On Truth Social, Trump stated, “We are getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great military efforts in the Middle East with respect to the terrorist regime of Iran”.

Lashes Out at NATO

Trump also accused NATO allies of “cowardice” for their reluctance to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, noting they had not been consulted about the war.

Recent Strikes

As fighting continued, Iranian media reported that US-Israeli forces attacked the Shahid Ahmadi-Roshan Natanz enrichment complex on Saturday morning. While technical experts found no radioactive leak or risk to nearby residents, Israel claimed it was unaware of any such strike. Additionally, Israel attacked Beirut, stating it was targeting the Iran-backed Lebanese militia. This marked the deadliest spillover since Hezbollah began firing on Israel in support of Tehran on March 2.


Valuation Radar: The Good, The Bad, The Ugly

Sector Valuation and Return Table The following data, disseminated by S&P BSE, highlights the performance and valuation of various sector indices as of the reporting date:

Sector IndexP/EP/BVWeekly Return (%)Monthly Return (%)Annual Return (%)
Nifty 5020.23.1
-0.2-9.6-0.3
Sensex20.54.0
0.0-10.0-2.4
Auto31.76.0
1.6-11.412.6
Bankex14.32.1
-0.5-12.54.6
Capital Goods50.813.3
-0.4-3.39.9
Consumer Durables58.015.0
-0.5-7.5-1.8
FMCG32.57.2
-1.4-8.8-9.7
Healthcare37.56.4
-1.1-1.82.0
IT21.55.9
0.3-9.1-21.8
Metal19.83.2
1.2-4.720.4
Oil & Gas8.61.5
-3.3-10.45.8
Power32.64.4
0.00.66.9
PSU11.42.2
-0.8-7.117.2
Realty34.14.4
-1.9-15.1-18.4
Teck25.27.5
1.0-8.3-13.4

Market Performance Overview During the past week, the Nifty 50 declined by 0.2 per cent, while the Sensex remained flat. BSE Auto was the top performer with a 1.6 per cent gain, followed by BSE Metal (1.2 per cent) and BSE Teck (1 per cent). The steepest weekly declines were seen in BSE Oil & Gas and BSE Realty, which fell by 3.3 per cent and 1.9 per cent respectively.

Guide to Interpreting the Metrics The listings provided aim to help investors sift through companies based on their fundamentals and monitor financial performance across the S&P BSE 500 index.

  • CMP (Current Market Price): The closing price on the BSE as of the last traded day.
  • EPS (Earnings per Share): Net profit per outstanding share for the last trailing 12 months.
  • PE (Price Earnings Ratio): The ratio of market price to EPS; a primary metric for determining if a stock is cheap or expensive.
  • PB (Price to Book Value): Stock price relative to net worth, which is particularly relevant for banks and asset-heavy firms.
  • Sales and Profit (Qty): Percentage growth in net sales and profits for the latest reporting quarter compared to the previous year, adjusted for one-off items.
  • Sales and Profit (TTM): Similar to "Qty" but covering the trailing twelve-month period.
  • Wkly Rtn (Weekly Return): Percentage change in stock price over the last week.
  • ROCE (Return on Capital Employed): Indicates the returns generated on the capital used by the business.
  • DER (Debt Equity Ratio): Total loans divided by shareholder funds, indicating a company's level of indebtedness.
  • Yearly High and Low: The price range the stock has occupied over the past year.

The analysis uses consolidated numbers where available to provide a holistic view of finances for the top 500 listed companies, chosen for their liquidity and management quality.


MF redemptions more certain

POLICY-WISE. SEBI formalises short-term borrowing, keeps related costs away from investors By Kumar Shankar Roy

Mutual funds, primarily liquid and overnight schemes, routinely face a timing mismatch between when they pay investors and when they receive cash from underlying instruments. Simply put, mutual funds sometimes have to pay investors before money from their own investments comes in. Redemption proceeds are typically paid out the next business day morning, while inflows from TREPS (Tri-Party Repo Dealing System) and reverse repo often arrive later the same day. To bridge this gap, mutual funds enter into formal same-day borrowing arrangements with financial institutions such as banks.

A March 13 SEBI circular operationalises this practice under new SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 2026, effective April 1. It sets clear rules for such borrowing, exempts same-day borrowing from the 20 per cent cap, and clarifies who bears the cost and risk.

Timing Gap

Schemes, especially liquid and overnight ones, need a liquidity buffer to manage these timing differences. To prevent delays in payouts, funds borrow for a few hours until receivables are credited later in the day. While such arrangements already exist, the absence of explicit regulatory detailing leaves room for variation in implementation.

Mutual fund schemes can generally borrow up to 20 per cent of assets for redemptions, investor payouts or certain trade settlements, for up to six months. But this cap will not apply to same-day borrowing, subject to SEBI’s conditions.

Usage Rules

The SEBI circular lays down a clear framework for same-day borrowing:

  • Approval and Disclosure: The asset management company (AMC) and the mutual fund’s trustees must approve this borrowing policy, and it must be disclosed on the AMC’s website.
  • Restricted Purpose: The use of intraday borrowing is restricted to specific purposes: meeting redemption obligations, paying interest or income distribution cum capital withdrawal (IDCW), and related payouts to unit holders. It cannot be used for broader leverage or investment activities.
  • Asset-Backed: The fund can borrow only against money that is assured to come in the same day. Eligible receivables include maturity proceeds from TREPS and reverse repo, proceeds from government securities and treasury bills, interest on such securities, and sale proceeds of these instruments.

Cost Burden

A key clarification in the circular relates to who bears the cost of such borrowing. SEBI states that any cost of intraday borrowing must be borne by the AMC and not charged to the scheme. Further, if there is any delay or shortfall in receiving the expected funds due to unforeseen events or settlement issues, the resulting cost or loss must also be absorbed by the AMC. This effectively ring-fences operational cash mismatches, ensuring investors do not bear these operational costs through the scheme.

ETF Clause

The market regulator also addresses borrowing by equity-oriented index funds and ETFs (exchange-traded funds). Stock exchanges will introduce a closing auction session—a final price-setting window at market close—from August 3, 2026. If these funds are unable to complete all their sale transactions during market hours, they may borrow only to participate in this closing auction session.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Newspaper Summary 210326

 The article titled "Welfare Push" (headlined in the full text as "Govt planning expanded worker cover") by Dalip Singh is reproduced below:

Govt planning expanded worker cover

WELFARE PUSH. Labour Ministry examining domestic, international models to draw up social security scheme for gig employees

The Union Labour and Employment Ministry is considering expanding social security with insurance cover to at least 32 crore unorganised, gig and platform workers to fulfil the mandate provided by the four Labour Codes, which are in the final stages of implementation.

The Employees’ State Insurance Corporation (ESIC), under the Labour and Employment Ministry, is going through various domestic and international models in its initial deliberations to arrive at a suitable scheme for expanding social security coverage for the unorganised, gig and platform workers, Ministry sources said.

SUBSIDY MODEL

Broadly, the Ministry is exploring a worker’s voluntary contribution plus government subsidy to move forward in this direction to overcome constrained public resources. Presently, it is voluntary for the unorganised workers. After the proposed scheme is implemented, it will be easy for unorganised workers to onboard because large numbers will reduce the premium for the proposed insurance scheme, Ministry sources said.

“The social security can be tax funded or partly tax funded. But the most important part is how to generate income since the government does not have money to make the scheme completely tax funded,” they said.

The Ministry has roped in the VV Giri National Labour Institute to carry out impact analysis on the four Labour Codes. Director General of the Institute Arvind told businessline: “The survey will begin after three to four months to assess the impact of various aspects of the four codes on workers and employers”.

TAX FUNDED

India has multiple welfare schemes, which operate mostly on a fully tax funded model and a few on contribution basis, but they are fragmented. Key among the central schemes are:

  • Pradhan Mantri Suraksha Bima Yojana: An accident insurance (₹2 lakh cover) available to individuals aged between 18 and 70 years, at a very low annual premium of ₹20, auto-debited from individual bank accounts.
  • Pradhan Mantri Jeevan Jyoti Bima Yojana: A life insurance scheme providing ₹2 lakh cover against death due to any cause to bank account holders aged between 18 and 50 years, with an annual premium of ₹436.
  • Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana: A health scheme.
  • Pradhan Mantri Shram Yogi Maandhan: An old age pension scheme.

However, there is currently no universal insurance coverage for the unorganised, gig and platform workers.

A BIG CHALLENGE

The Ministry is looking to plug the social security gap, which officials believe is very challenging given its volume and the complex nature of the unorganised sector. As per the e-shram portal, there are 31 crore unorganised registered workers, but the figure goes up to 50 crore according to NITI Aayog. There are also about one crore gig and platform workers.

Since welfare schemes must be provided to workers and their families, the total coverage could reach 128 crore persons (calculating for 32 crore workers with an average family size of four). These workers are mostly spread across 32 cities, including metros and 23 tier-II cities.

Legal Framework:

  • Section 109 of the Code on Social Security, 2020: Tasks the Central government with framing schemes for life and disability cover, health and maternity benefits, old age protection, and education for unorganised workers.
  • Section 114: Covers gig and platform workers.
  • Funding: The Code specifies funding by the Centre, the States, or both, as well as through corporate social responsibility (CSR) programmes.

Several countries provide insurance to informal workers through state-funded, contributory, or hybrid systems, with Thailand being one of the most cited models.


The article titled "Large lenders rein in retail loan GNPAs" by Yashaswani Chauhan is reproduced below:

Large lenders rein in retail loan GNPAs

DATA FOCUS.

The retail loan books of both private and public sector banks increased sharply in the years after the pandemic as banks chased loans from individuals to grow business. Sharp practices adopted by some of these lenders, as highlighted by the RBI, have led to an increase in risk and bad loans.

However, data revealed as a response to an unstarred question in the Lok Sabha show that the largest lenders, such as SBI, HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank, managed to contain the gross non-performing assets (GNPA) in retail loans between April and December 2025. But many private sector banks, led by Axis Bank, continued to register a rise in bad retail loans.

In absolute terms, the State Bank of India reported the highest retail GNPA at ₹11,168 crore as of December 31, 2025. This was, however, almost unchanged from the ₹11,109 crore at the end of March 2025. HDFC Bank, which has the second-largest retail loan GNPA, recorded a decline of 8 per cent in the first three quarters of FY26. ICICI Bank, too, recorded a decline of 11 per cent.

RBI’s regulatory tightening, along with a revival in credit demand from industry, appears to have made larger banks exercise more prudence in retail lending. An increase in interest rates also appears to have decreased demand.

PRIVATE VS PUBLIC

But many private sector banks have reported higher growth in retail GNPAs. Axis Bank witnessed the steepest increase between April and December 2025, rising 23 per cent to ₹7,381 crore. IDBI Bank followed with 21.64 per cent growth. Bandhan Bank, IDFC First and IndusInd Bank were the other private lenders in the top six, recording the highest growth in retail GNPAs. Bank of Baroda was the only public sector lender in the list.

In contrast, public sector banks topped the list of banks recording the highest decline in retail GNPAs. Indian Bank reported the steepest fall, with retail GNPA declining 39 per cent to ₹958 crore. Canara Bank saw a 37 per cent drop to ₹1,451 crore. Bank of India, Punjab National Bank and Union Bank of India posted double-digit declines. Federal Bank was the only private sector lender in this list.

Prof Anil Sood of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Complex Choices (IASCC) noted that PSBs are structurally less exposed. “PSBs are not major players in the retail market; the pressure to grow their retail loan book is limited. It is not surprising that the quality of their retail assets is better than that of the private sector chasing volume for growth,” he said, adding that PSBs had a lower share in credit cards and unsecured personal loans.

Vivek Iyer, Partner and Financial Services Risk Leader, Grant Thornton Bharat, said the divergence among peers reflects the differences in risk appetite. “Customer acquisition strategies are designed based on the demographic profile aligned very closely to the risk profile,” he said.

Experts are of the view that while retail credit growth may be nearing its peak, GNPA levels could rise for a few more quarters before stabilising.


The article titled "Govt’s ₹20,000 cr scheme to ease MFIs’ funds crunch" is reproduced below:

Govt’s ₹20,000 cr scheme to ease MFIs’ funds crunch

Our Bureau Mumbai The scheme comes amid a sharp decline in bank funding to microfinance institutions

The government has rolled out a ₹20,000 crore Credit Guarantee Scheme for Microfinance Institutions 2.0, a move the industry body Microfinance Industry Network (MFIN) said would help revive credit flow to underserved segments and ease funding constraints in the sector.

The scheme comes amid a sharp decline in bank funding to microfinance institutions (MFIs), particularly small players. According to MFIN, bank lending to the sector dropped nearly 70 per cent between the fourth quarter of FY24 and the third quarter of FY26, severely impacting liquidity.

LOAN PRICING

Loans under the scheme will be priced at a capped rate linked to the EBLR or 1-year MCLR plus 2 per cent. In turn, MFIs must lend at least 1 percentage point below their average rate over the past six months. Loans will have a maximum tenure of three years, including a one-year moratorium.

Exposure is capped at 20 per cent of an MFI’s AUM, with absolute limits of ₹100 crore for small, ₹200 crore for medium and ₹300 crore for large MFIs. The scheme also mandates that at least 5 per cent of the loans go to small MFIs and 10 per cent to mid-size players. Credit guarantee cover ranges from 70 per cent for large MFIs to 75 per cent for medium and 80 per cent for small MFIs.

ASSET QUALITY

The launch also coincides with improving asset quality metrics. Portfolio at Risk (PAR) for 31-90 days declined to 1.6 per cent from 3.2 per cent a year ago, indicating better repayment.

However, constrained liquidity has weighed on growth, with the industry’s portfolio standing at ₹3.15 lakh crore as of December 31, 2025, a 7.3 per cent sequential decline. The funding crunch has had a direct impact on borrowers, with MFIN estimating that nearly 50 lakh customers lost access to formal credit due to reduced lending activity.


The article titled "India plans LPG imports from Russia, Japan; shipments to arrive mid-April" by Rishi Ranjan Kala is reproduced below:

India plans LPG imports from Russia, Japan; shipments to arrive mid-April

Rishi Ranjan Kala New Delhi

As the conflict in West Asia intensifies, throttling 60 per cent of India’s consumption, the government is scouting for cargoes of the key cooking fuel from Russia and Japan, while also depending on the US for a major share of the lost cargoes. Besides prioritising domestic liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) consumption over commercial use, sources said that India has also intensified diplomatic efforts to secure cargoes of the critical commodity — the main cooking fuel for more than 33 crore consumers.

TALKS UNDERWAY

“Cargoes are being sought from Russia, which are expected to start from next month. Talks are ongoing. Deliberations are also on to explore LPG from Japan, albeit the quantities will be low. Japan cargoes, if fixed, should reach India by mid-April. At this point, the objective is to arrange as much as possible from wherever possible,” said one of the sources.

On Thursday, Randhir Jaiswal, spokesperson for the Ministry of External Affairs, said India aims to secure LPG from all available sources, including Russia, to meet domestic fuel needs.

LPG MARKET TIGHT

“The silver lining is the ongoing diplomatic dialogue between Iran and India. This engagement helped enable Indian-flagged LPG carriers to transit the region, setting a positive precedent,” said Charles Kim, Associate Director for LPG at S&P Global Commodities at Sea. Continued cooperation could support the passage of additional Indian-linked ships, keeping vital supply routes workable for India and offering some relief to the broader market, he added.

Besides, India is already in talks with the US to procure more propane cargoes. The world’s second-largest importer procured nearly 4,80,000 tonnes of US-origin LPG in the first two months of 2026, corresponding to around 11 very large gas carriers (VLGCs). It has already secured a term tender for 2.2 million tonnes of US-origin LPG for 2026 – equivalent to about four VLGCs per month, said S&P.

SHIFT IN IMPORTS

According to S&P Commodities At Sea (CAS), India’s weekly LPG imports fell to 265,000 tonnes in the week to March 19, from 322,000 tonnes on March 5. West Asian inflows to India declined to just 89,000 tonnes in the week to March 19, representing only 34 per cent of total imports, the lowest share since January.

Alternative regional supplies increased to 176,000 tonnes in the week to March 19, up from zero the previous week when West Asia accounted for 100 per cent of imports, CAS data showed. LPG prices have also risen amid persistent supply disruptions. Platts, part of the S&P Global Energy, assessed FOB AG propane and butane cargoes $9 per tonne higher day over day at $648 per tonne and $642 per tonne, respectively, on March 18.


The article titled "India leads OTT content spend growth in Asia-Pacific" by Vallari Sanzgiri is reproduced below:

India leads OTT content spend growth in Asia-Pacific

Vallari Sanzgiri Mumbai

Indian content platforms are driving spends in the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region, as per data from Ampere Analysis, shared in a Content India Trends report. Offerings such as crime dramas and family content garnered a strong demand, particularly from the Middle East and the US.

Over the last five years, Indian media powerhouses and global streamers have driven the content spend trend, going from 8 per cent of $20.4 billion in 2021 to an estimated 12 per cent of $22 billion in 2026. JioStar, Zee Entertainment and Sony India, commissioned the bulk of titles in 2025, the data showed.

ONLINE POWERHOUSE

JioStar led with around 140 commissioned titles while runner-up Zee commissioned around 80 titles in the year. Sony commissioned around 50 titles. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, the US and the Philippines were the top markets for such content, with scripted content dominating globally at 88 per cent.

Hannah Walsh, Principal Analyst, Ampere Analysis, speaking at the Content India Summit 2026, organized by Dish TV, said India had become a global content powerhouse, producing over 24,000 titles in January 2026, with 19,000 available internationally.

Taking a five-year outlook, Daoud Jackson, Senior Analyst, OMDIA, estimated online video in India to nearly double the revenue of traditional TV, becoming the main driver of growth in 2030. Jackson also noted how India produced a quarter of all YouTube videos globally in 2025.


The article titled "Edible oil sector seeks balanced policy" is reproduced below:

Edible oil sector seeks balanced policy

Our Bureau Mangaluru

The Solvent Extractors’ Association of India (SEA) has stated that the vegetable oil and oilseed sector is at a crucial juncture due to global disruptions, weather uncertainties, and domestic fundamentals. In a monthly letter to members, SEA President Sanjeev Asthana emphasized that a balanced approach—combining policy support, market intelligence, and stakeholder collaboration—is essential to navigate the current landscape.

INFLATIONARY PRESSURES

Asthana noted that elevated crude oil prices directly increase the production and transportation costs of edible oils, leading to inflationary pressure in India. Furthermore, volatility in freight and insurance premiums has raised the landed cost of imported edible oils. To maintain price stability, he called for:

  • Strict monitoring
  • Cautious procurement strategies
  • Strong policy support

He added that coordinated efforts across the export-import ecosystem would significantly help ease these burdens.

WEATHER CONCERNS

The sector is also facing significant weather-related risks. Emerging signals now point toward a strong El Niño, potentially a "Super El Niño" phase, shifting away from previous La Niña expectations. While parts of South America may see favorable conditions, there are production risks in Asia.

For India, this development raises serious concerns about below-normal monsoon rainfall, which could adversely affect kharif oilseed sowing, leading to lower acreage and tighter domestic supplies.

Based on the provided excerpts from the March 21, 2026, edition of the Delhi Mint, there are two sections on page 02 that discuss the film Dhurandhar: The Revenge.

Film Review (Main Section)

"One of the biggest films of the year so far returns with its sequel. Before it continues the bloody ascent of Hamza (Ranveer Singh) in the Karachi underworld, Dhurandhar: The Revenge gives us the origin story promised in the final moments of the first film. Yet, the film feels long and a tad too brutal, and misses the electric, swaggering presence of Akshaye Khanna as Lyari gangster Rehman Dakait (whom Hamza killed at the end of part 1). Director Aditya Dhar can fashion hard, serrated action but he loses himself in the invention of new brutalities, writes Uday Bhatia. The violence would be a lot more monotonous if it wasn’t for..."

(Note: The source text for this specific review blurb ends here in the provided document.)


Summary from "New on Screens"

"With the monster success of the first film, the anticipation for the sequel, in theatres just three months later, is unprecedented in recent Hindi cinema. Aditya Dhar’s Dhurandhar: The Revenge continues the story of Hamza/Jaskirat (Ranveer Singh), an Indian spy who rises to the top of the underworld in Lyari, Karachi. (In theatres)"


Based on the provided sources from page 02 of the March 21, 2026, edition of the Delhi Mint, the coverage regarding cortisol is split into two sections. However, please note that in the source text, the specific header "How to prevent cortisol spikes" is followed by text regarding fashion designer Manish Malhotra, indicating a likely layout mismatch in the original document excerpts.

Here are the relevant sections as they appear:

Raging past the point of exhaustion

An increasing number of people are living in a state of constant activation: poor sleep, non-stop stimulation, emotional overload, late meals, too much caffeine, and almost no real decompression. Such chronic stress keeps cortisol levels elevated, and this in turn can further interfere with sleep, digestion, reproduction and growth-related processes. It makes a person seem like they are high-functioning and this state is often mistaken for ambition or productivity, writes fitness and wellness coach Luke Coutinho. High cortisol is not a problem by itself. The real problem is a body that never gets the signal that it is safe. Coutinho explains

How to prevent cortisol spikes

Designer Manish Malhotra will return to the Lakmé Fashion Week x FDCI runway this weekend after a break of several years, and he plans to debut his prêt collection as well as his accessory line. While couture will always remain the foundation of the brand, he says that the demand for the craftsmanship, attention to detail and sense of glamour of luxury fashion has extended to ready-to-wear as well. Prêt also gives designers a chance to work with lighter silhouettes and challenges them to think about designing clothes for comfort. Manish Mishra speaks to the designer about his upcoming prêt collection, the role of


Based on page 12 of the March 21, 2026, edition of the Delhi Mint, here is the reproduced book review by Somak Ghoshal:

Love and revenge in the time of the coronavirus

Ashok Ferrey’s latest novel, Hot Butter Cuttlefish, is set in the fictional lakeside village of Kalabola in Sri Lanka during the covid-19 years. The protagonist, Malik, is a recently divorced personal trainer who has relocated to this sleepy outpost, leaving behind his life in the city of Colpetty in the hope of some peace and quiet. But new adventures find him in exile as he becomes inadvertently involved in the lives of the local aristocrat fallen on hard times, 58-year-old Arthur, and his prospective bride, a 23-year-old woman called Chanchala, who has her heart fixed on the estate owned by her betrothed’s family.

The narrative intersperses Malik’s first-person narrative with a third-person omniscient voice, heightening the unreliability of his characters. As soon as the reader begins to trust their intentions, they start acting in ways that raise suspicions about their motives. Is Chanchala, the nubile beauty, solely drawn to Arthur (referred to as the “suddha”, or brown sahib, by the locals) for his inheritance?. Or is there a flicker of affection in her scheming heart?. For that matter, is Malik keen to intervene in this odd pair’s lives out of goodwill or self-interest?. Can the personal trainer who ends up acting as a proxy therapist to his clients keep himself out of trouble?.

As with all his novels—The Ceaseless Chatter of Demons (2016) being a personal favourite—Ferrey is effortlessly funny in Hot Butter Cuttlefish, even when he is dealing with subjects that are decidedly not amusing. Humour, as he told poet and writer Tishani Doshi in an interview in The Hindu in 2019, is a by-product of his writing. His stories dive deep into the Sri Lankan mindset, or what passes for it—the stoic passivity with which ordinary people react to misfortunes, authoritarian politicians, and other turbulences in their lives.

Kamala’s brute strength of mind and body, as well as her dithering between loathing and loyalty for Arthur, complicate the plot, especially during the topsy-turvy ethos of the covid era. Their domestic squabbles take on violent turns, as Kamala’s visceral hatred for Chanchala, whom she calls “vaisey” (or loose woman), reaches a fever pitch. As the pandemic spreads, people begin to die like flies. But even as Kamala is afflicted by the disease, she manages to recover with great aplomb and is promptly turned into a mascot for a miracle cure peddled by her cousin Biju, an unscrupulous minister. Just as Arthur had once rejected Kamala, she too had turned down Biju’s offer of marriage in the past.

Years later, as the three meet under changed circumstances, she appears as a raging saviour, threatening to expose Biju's frauds as he attempts to buy the estate below market rate. “Some atavistic memory of a feudalism long gone, some little whiff of primeval fear, rose up in his throat,” Ferrey writes, as Kamala confronts Biju, who beats a retreat, despite his political influence. If this isn’t true love, what is?. Or is it perhaps the long-awaited revenge of the underdog?.

It is a cleverly plotted novel, nimble-footed in its unfolding, acerbic and entertaining as a social satire. Ferrey is especially sharp in his critique of the colonial hangover that looms large over the psyche of his people. If the pace does sag in the middle, the gossipy, small-town energy never allows the story to become boring. Partly standing in for the author, Malik is a slippery character, hard to fathom. His monologues are endearing to begin with but get repetitive.


Hot Butter Cuttlefish: By Ashok Ferrey, Penguin Random House India, 240 pages, ₹499.


Based on page 08 of the March 21, 2026, edition of the Delhi Mint, here is the article Prague’s metamorphosis as it appears in the sources:

Prague’s metamorphosis

In hindsight, 18 is probably not the age to read Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis. I stumbled upon the book by accident, raced through its 80-odd pages and was shell-shocked for a few days. For someone who’d grown up on a strict but voracious diet of Agatha Christie, Arthur Conan Doyle and Erle Stanley Gardner, I did not comprehend much of it, but the dark helplessness of a man suddenly finding himself turned into an insect on waking up one morning wasn’t lost.

When I finally got a chance to visit Prague 20 years later, I found Kafka everywhere, as statues, sculptures and souvenirs. Ironically, in his work, Prague lives only by allusion, never overtly. It is a theme that is explored in considerable detail at the Franz Kafka Museum in Mala Strana, which is dimly lit by design to reflect the author’s penchant for gloom. Yet, the city itself is full of life and joy.

The brooding Prague Castle, labyrinthine streets, towering spires and stone facades of ancient buildings are interpreted as claustrophobic and...

(Note: The text for this article ends abruptly in the provided source material as the next column begins.)

Based on page 17 of the March 21, 2026, edition of the Delhi Mint, here is the article Centre invites bidders to set up rare earth magnet plants by Manas Pimpalkhare:

Centre invites bidders to set up rare earth magnet plants

₹7,250 crore incentive scheme for five plants aims to secure supply chain, build local capacity

The Centre on Friday launched a ₹7,280-crore incentive programme, inviting bidders to build five rare-earth magnet plants to secure its critical mineral supply chain. The scheme aims to build local capacity for a crucial component used in sectors such as defence, electronics, renewable energy, and automobiles.

Prospective applicants can submit their bids to establish integrated sintered neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) magnet manufacturing facilities in India and can be eligible for availing capital subsidy as well as sales-linked incentives under the government’s rare earth permanent magnet (REPM) scheme, the ministry said in a statement. The scheme provides a capital subsidy of ₹750 crore for setting up five processing units and a sales-linked incentive of ₹6,450 crore for all beneficiaries upon commencement of production.

The scheme received the Cabinet’s assent on 26 November, and official guidelines were notified on 15 December. The raw material required—rare earth oxides—will be supplied to the three lowest bidders by the only rare earth miner in the country, state-run India Rare Earths Ltd (IREL). The seven-year scheme targets an annual capacity of 6,000 tonnes, providing two years for construction followed by five years of sales-linked incentives.

The scheme was created in response to the global supply chain disruption caused by China's halt to exports of rare-earth magnets in April last year, amid an intense tariff war between Beijing and Washington, DC. China accounts for about 60% of the world's rare earth mining and 90% of processing capacity.

Despite its mining and refining strengths, India lacks midstream capacity to produce rare-earth magnets, leaving manufacturers entirely dependent on imports. A pre-bid meeting will be held on 7 April, following which interested parties can bid for magnet-making capacity in the range of 600-1,200 tonnes, according to the global tender floated by the project management agency, Industrial Finance Corp. of India (IFCI). Technical bids will be opened on 29 May. Bidders will have to pay ₹4.5 lakh as the tender fee and ₹1 crore as earnest money deposit.


Based on the March 21, 2026, edition of the Delhi Mint, here is the article Conflict throws up rare winner in Great Eastern Shipping (initially titled "War throws up rare winner in Great Eastern Shipping" on page 18) by Nehal Chaliawala:

Conflict throws up rare winner in Great Eastern Shipping

As war roils the Persian Gulf and the global economy feels its shockwaves, just across the Arabian Sea in Mumbai sits Great Eastern Shipping Co. Ltd, one of the few winners of a conflict that nobody but a few wanted.

India's largest private ship-owner, with a fleet of 40 vessels, is benefiting as global ship chartering rates surge amid the war entering its fourth week on Saturday. The Baltic Dirty Tanker Index (BDTI) and the Baltic Clean Tanker Index (BCTI), which track the prices of unrefined crude and refined oil product tankers, respectively, have doubled from their 12-month averages, according to data.

GE Shipping is the operator of Jag Laadki, which was only the fourth vessel to cross the Strait of Hormuz since Iran blockaded the strategic passage two weeks ago. Carrying around 81,000 tonnes of crude oil, the vessel reached the Mundra port on Wednesday. Jag Prakash, another GE Shipping vessel, has also managed to cross the strait, as per reports.

The company’s shares have gained more than 27% since the beginning of 2026, compared to a 12% correction in the Sensex over the same period. Experts said that, unlike smaller Indian shipping companies that focus on logistics between Indian ports, most of GE Shipping’s fleet transits on international routes, giving it the full advantage of the elevated global freight rates. The company owns five crude carriers, 16 refined petroleum product tankers, five liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) vessels, and 14 dry bulk carriers that move materials such as iron ore and coal.

Notably, the company has gradually increased its exposure to the spot market over the past 12 months, enabling it to fully capitalise on market volatility. Per-day freight rates in the spot market, where vessels are chartered for a voyage, are nearly twice as much as those for one-year leases.

A year ago, GE Shipping had about a fifth of its crude and product tankers and about 30-40% of its dry bulk carriers on time charter. Presently, the entirety of its crude fleet is on the spot market, and the share of dry bulk carriers on the spot market has gone up to 80-85%.

“Typically, on the shipping segments, we have about between 15% and 20% of the capacity on time charter... In crude, we are 100% on spot currently,” G. Shivakumar, executive director and chief financial officer at GE Shipping, said on an investor call. All five of the company’s LPG carriers remain on time charter, he added.

“Companies like GE Shipping are very substantially exposed to global shipping markets. Currently, exposure to the spot market would greatly help them because rates have skyrocketed,” said Amit Oza, director at Astramar Shipping & Trading Services. Large shipping companies like GE Shipping have strong research teams that analyze market conditions and geopolitical scenarios to advise their chartering teams on how much exposure to maintain in the spot market.

GE Shipping reported consolidated revenue of ₹1,737 crore during the quarter ended 31 December, up 16% year-on-year. Profit was up by over a third to ₹813 crore. The consolidated financials include income from subsidiary Greatship (India) Ltd, which is a major player in offshore oilfield services. The company had gross debt of ₹1,049 crore as of 31 December and was net cash-positive at ₹7,277 crore.


Based on the Media Marketing Initiative on page 13 of the March 21, 2026, edition of the Delhi Mint, here is the article REC Showcases ‘Green Multiplier’ Pavilion at BES 2026:

REC Showcases ‘Green Multiplier’ Pavilion at BES 2026

The REC Limited Pavilion was inaugurated at the summit by Union Ministers Manohar Lal, Pralhad Joshi and Shripad Naik, in the presence of senior officials including Power Secretary Pankaj Agarwal and REC CMD Jitendra Srivastava. Designed as a contemporary, technology-driven space, the pavilion highlights the theme “Financing India’s Energy Abundance”.

At its core is the concept of the “Green Multiplier,” reflecting REC’s role in accelerating sustainable development by expanding access, opportunity and clean energy adoption. Through its immersive design and vibrant visual identity, the pavilion captures the spirit of India’s energy transition, symbolising growth, resilience and a shift towards a low-carbon future. It underscores REC’s commitment to enabling a greener, more inclusive energy ecosystem aligned with the nation’s long-term sustainability goals.