Godrej Capital eyes ₹50,000 cr AUM in 2 years, to launch gold loans by June

Godrej Capital eyes ₹50,000 cr AUM in 2 years, to launch gold loans by June


Manish Shah, MD and CEO, Godrej Capital

Godrej Capital, the financial services arm of Godrej Industries Group, is looking to grow its assets under management (AUM) to ₹50,000 crore in the next two years. The company is also eyeing entry into new product categories including gold loans.   

The company closed the financial year ending March 2026 with an AUM of ₹27,500 crore, up nearly 60 per cent from the ₹17,000 crore in FY25. The company posted profits of ₹375 crore in FY26 compared to ₹175 crore last year.

Speaking at a press conference here on Wednesday, Manish Shah, MD and CEO, Godrej Capital said that the company will look to grow through an expansion of its branch footprint and new product categories. “Today we are in about 100 locations and we want to grow this to over 200 locations. We want to enter new businesses like gold loans, supply chain finance and digital lending,” he said. 

Gold loans is an area of particular focus with the company planning to launch the product by June of this year. Shah said that the target is for a ₹1,000 crore AUM in gold loans by the next two years. 

Godrej Capital includes two entities. Godrej Housing finance focuses on home loans and Godrej finance, an NBFC that specialises in secured and unsecured business loans. The bulk of the company’s AUM comes from Godrej Finance, which has around ₹18,000 crore AUM.

In terms of impact of tariff-led disruption and the war in West Asia , Shah said that the business has shown overall resilience though the company has taken note of possible sectors facing stress and may recalibrate its exposure to some of the impacted sectors like merchandise exports if the issues persist.

On Godrej Capital’s presence in Tamil Nadu, Manish said that the company’s AUM in the state stood at ₹1,570 crore, up from the ₹800 crore in FY25. It operates branches across seven cities including Chennai, Madurai, Coimbatore and Tiruchirappalli among others. 

He said that currently the company’s presence in Tamil Nadu is dominated by small business financing, but the firm intends to grow its housing finance and other segments in the state as well. It is eyeing a AUM of ₹2,800 crore in Tamil Nadu by FY27. 

Interestingly, out of the firm’s ₹1,250 crore of AUM under its ‘Aarohi’ program for supporting women-led business, ₹200 crore are from Tamil Nadu- the highest in the country.  

Published on April 16, 2026



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Rupee ends higher on Iran-US ceasefire hopes, FPI inflows support sentiment

Rupee ends higher on Iran-US ceasefire hopes, FPI inflows support sentiment



The rupee ended higher on Thursday after depreciating for the last four sessions, supported by renewed optimism over a potential ceasefire between Iran and the US, which kept crude oil prices below $100 per barrel, dealers said.

 


The local unit closed at 93.20 per dollar, up 0.2 per cent from 93.38 per dollar on Wednesday. In April, the rupee has appreciated 1.73 per cent and is the fourth-best performing currency among Asian peers so far this month. In FY26, the currency has depreciated 9.85 per cent.

 


“After four sessions of weakness, the Indian rupee gained ground as renewed risk-on sentiment prompted foreign institutional investors to return to the domestic equity markets,” said Dilip Parmar, research analyst, HDFC Securities. “This recovery was bolstered by a declining trade deficit and a reduction in dollar demand.”

 
 


Merchandise trade deficit narrowed materially in March to $20.7 billion from $27.1 billion in February, beating most estimates.

 


Traders said the movement in the currency was largely driven by positive developments in the Iran conflict and tighter limits on banks’ net open positions, which reduced appetite for bets against the rupee.

 


“FPIs were seen selling dollars. Also, around or near 93.36 levels, RBI was also selling dollars, not allowing the rupee to depreciate much. Markets are still factoring some positivity in the talks between the US and Iran,” said a forex dealer with a state-owned bank.

 


Despite the gains, elevated crude oil prices continued to support dollar demand.

 


“The oil prices were, however, higher, keeping the dollar well bid near 93.24 levels and not allowing much appreciation in the rupee till afternoon, but towards the close, with FPIs selling dollars, the rupee appreciated towards 93.17. The only point of concern for India was that the crude basket was at $110.52 against oil price of $96.30 per barrel, keeping oil bids up,” said Anil Kumar Bhansali, head of treasury, Finrex Treasury Advisors.

 


The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six currencies, rose 0.18 per cent to 98.03. Brent crude, the global benchmark, was trading 1.65 per cent higher at $96.50 per barrel in futures trade, although prices remained below the $100 mark amid hopes of a de-escalation in the region.



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End of sanctions waiver to tighten crude supply, push up costs

End of sanctions waiver to tighten crude supply, push up costs


Indian refiners will have to yet again re-calibrate their sourcing strategy balancing availability, cost, logistics and above all compliance with various sanctions

The end of waiver on sanctions by the US on purchasing Russian crude oil (on water) is not expected to immediately halt shipments to India. However, refiners will have to recalibrate operations avoiding sanctioned entities and vessels, which will have a bearing on volume and costs, refiners and analysts said.

The 30-day waiver, which expired April 11, allowed delivery and sale of Russian crude oil loaded on tankers between March 12 and April 11.

Licence halt

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on early Thursday said, “We will not be ‌renewing the general licence on Russian oil, and we will not be renewing the general licence on Iranian oil. That was oil that was on water prior to March 11. So all that has been used.”

Refiners, analysts and traders said the situation is “complicated and fluid” with too many variables playing simultaneously. Immediate impact is likely a tightening of supply. However, a severe crude crunch is not being anticipated “at this moment”.

Strategy reset

Besides, Indian refiners will have to yet again re-calibrate their sourcing strategy balancing availability, cost, logistics and compliance with various sanctions. The adjustment is more likely to be operational rather than structural. This will have a bearing on costs, both for purchasing oil and logistics.

“It’s unlikely India will completely halt Russian crude. It is not sanctioned. So, this means legal channels, which means higher costs. We also need to wait for more clarity on what Washington is planning next. There are too many variables playing out right now to point at a clear cut scenario. It’s a developing situation,” said a senior refining sector executive.

With geopolitical uncertainty, no immediate end to conflict in West Asia and the continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz (SoH), there is a supply situation in Middle East Gulf region. This fuels more uncertainty. A clear cut answer will have to wait, said another refining sector executive.

A trade source opined that India has a three-day window to top up on Iranian crude oil as the US sanctions waiver ends on April 19. Roughly 90 million barrels of Iranian oil is estimated to be at sea.

Another refiner said that this could result in tighter supply conditions depending on how quickly alternative sources are secured. However, for India, the end of the Iranian sanctions waiver may require minor adjustments in sourcing strategy, considering it has not purchased any oil from Tehran since 2019.

Normal operations

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas said on Thursday, “All refineries are operating at high capacity with adequate crude inventories, while sufficient stocks of petrol and diesel are being maintained. Retail outlets across the country are operating normally.”

Published on April 16, 2026



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Taiwan market capitalisation tops  trillion on AI boom, overtakes UK

Taiwan market capitalisation tops $4 trillion on AI boom, overtakes UK



Taiwan overtook the UK in stock market value as the island’s tech firms regained favor amid hopes for further de-escalation in the Iran war. 


Taiwan’s market capitalisation rose to $4.14 trillion as of Wednesday, making it the world’s seventh largest, according to data compiled by Bloomberg that show the combined value of companies with a primary listing on the island. The UK’s market was valued at around $4.09 trillion. 


The feat comes after the Taiex Index recouped all losses driven by the Iran war — one of the first major markets to do so — to reach a record high. Heavyweight Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. also renewed its all-time high, buoyed by strong revenue growth that underscores its key role in the global artificial intelligence supply chain. 

 


“Taiwan continues to be treated as an AI hardware proxy,” said Yoon Ng, head of APAC asset management growth solutions at Broadridge Financial Solutions. “As long as AI capex momentum holds, flows should remain supportive.” 


While the size of Taiwan’s $977 billion economy trails the UK’s $4.3 trillion, according to International Monetary Fund’s 2026 estimates, roaring export of AI-related products is boosting growth expectations for the island. 


The Taiex gauge has risen 16% so far this month. It gained as much as 0.7% on Thursday, extending its rally to an eighth straight session — the longest winning streak since 2025. 


Foreigners bought a net $8.9 billion of Taiwanese shares in April, putting the market on track for its biggest monthly inflow ever after a record $28.7 billion outflow in March. 


Meanwhile, the UK’s FTSE 100 Index gained less than 4% this month, amid lingering concerns over sticky inflation and interest rates that are higher than in the rest of Europe. 


Still, equities in the UK are luring back investors amid geopolitical uncertainty, boosted by a significant exposure to the energy and defensive sectors. A flurry of strategists including at Barclays Plc, Citigroup Inc. and HSBC Holdings Plc are favoring the FTSE 100 either as a geopolitical hedge or as a preferred exposure in the current environment. 


“The commodity-based sectors of energy and basic materials, which could benefit from elevated energy and metal prices, represent nearly a fifth of the UK market cap,” said HSBC strategists including Duncan Toms. “In 2022, the UK stood out as one of the best markets in a backdrop of global stagflation.” 


A Bank of America Corp. survey in April showed the UK is the second-most favored market in Europe after Switzerland, a similar position to last month’s survey. It was the second least-preferred in February. Still, a net 16% of global fund managers are underweight British stocks, compared with 15% last month. 



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Fintech IPO plans hit pause as weak rupee, retail pullback weigh on timing

Fintech IPO plans hit pause as weak rupee, retail pullback weigh on timing


With macroeconomic uncertainty persisting, most investors expect IPO activity in the fintech space to remain muted in the near term, with a revival contingent on currency stability and improved market confidence
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Public listing plans of new-age fintech companies are being deferred as a weakening rupee, volatile macroeconomic conditions and a sharp drop in retail investor participation dampen sentiment in India’s primary markets.

Several start-ups that were preparing to tap the public markets are now recalibrating timelines, with investors advising caution amid currency pressures and valuation concerns. The rupee, among Asia’s weakest performers this fiscal, has added to cost pressures for companies with global exposure, while market volatility has made pricing more challenging.

“The question for quality fintech companies has never really been ‘can you IPO?’ — it’s always been ‘should you, and when?’,” said Arjun Malhotra, General Partner at Good Capital. “A weakening rupee and macro volatility create real headwinds for companies with dollar-denominated costs or international exposure. But for domestically anchored fintechs with strong unit economics, this is more a timing question than an existential one,” he added.

Investors said the current phase is pushing start-ups to strengthen fundamentals rather than rush to list. Many venture-backed fintech firms are focusing on profitability, cost discipline and building predictable revenue streams before approaching the market.

“Patience holds the key,” said Brijesh Damodaran, Managing Partner at Auxano Capital. “With a weakening rupee making foreign capital expensive and macro volatility increasing risk, it’s the long game. Companies need to demonstrate four to six quarters of consistent profitability and cash-flow positivity before considering a listing,” he added.

The slowdown in retail investor participation, which had been a key driver of strong IPO demand during the market’s peak phase, has further altered the equation. Market participants said the earlier frenzy often enabled aggressive pricing, a trend that is now reversing.

“Retail participation is a signal of market mood, not business quality,” Malhotra said. “During the peak years, it masked weak listings— companies could price aggressively and get away with it. What’s left now is the real question: would institutional investors want to own this at this price?”

As retail demand cools, fintech companies are increasingly being pushed to rely on institutional investors for anchor commitments and long-term capital support. This shift is expected to bring greater discipline to pricing and valuation strategies.

Damodaran added that softer retail interest is acting as a “reality check” for issuers. “To offset lower retail participation, companies must secure stronger institutional anchors and ensure pricing that supports long-term post-listing stability rather than short-term gains,” he said.

With macroeconomic uncertainty persisting, most investors expect IPO activity in the fintech space to remain muted in the near term, with a revival contingent on currency stability and improved market confidence.

Published on April 16, 2026



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