Govt nominates DFS Secretary Lohiya on central boards of RBI and SBI

Govt nominates DFS Secretary Lohiya on central boards of RBI and SBI


Lohiya took over as Secretary, Department of Financial Services, with effect from June 1, 2026. (Representational image)

The Central government has nominated Sanjay Lohiya, Secretary, Department of Financial Services (DFS), Ministry of Finance, as a Director on the Central Board of Reserve Bank of India and State Bank of India with immediate effect and until further orders.

Lohiya, who is an IAS Officer of 1994 batch (Assam Meghalaya cadre), nomination follows the superannuation of Nagaraju Maddirala on May 31, 2026, as DFS Secretary. Lohiya took over as Secretary, Department of Financial Services, with effect from June 1, 2026.

Published on June 11, 2026



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Gold, silver ETF investors pull out record sums as prices correct

Gold, silver ETF investors pull out record sums as prices correct



Gold and silver exchange-traded fund (ETF) investors are cashing out as precious metal prices cool after a sharp rally. Investors pulled nearly ₹3,000 crore from gold and silver ETFs in May, marking the highest-ever combined monthly outflow from the two categories.

 


Gold ETFs recorded net outflows of ₹725 crore in May, the highest ever for the category and the first monthly redemption in over a year.

 


Gold prices had surged nearly 75 per cent in 2025, before hitting a record high on January 29 this year. Since then, prices have fallen about 17 per cent, prompting investors to lock in gains. Silver has followed a similar pattern, though the correction has been much steeper. Domestic silver prices are currently down nearly 39 per cent from their January peak.

 
 


The sharper decline in silver prices has led to heavier investor withdrawals from silver ETFs. The category witnessed record net outflows of ₹2,133 crore in May, extending its redemption streak to a fourth consecutive month. Investors have withdrawn ₹3,770 crore from silver ETFs over the period.

 


The outflows come after nearly six months of strong inflows into gold and silver ETFs. Both net inflows and folio additions had been scaling fresh highs month after month till January 2026, as soaring precious metal prices drew investors into the category.

 


“After strong inflows of ₹24,040 crore (into gold ETFs) in January, momentum tapered in subsequent months, indicating a gradual cooling in incremental allocations. The reversal appears to have been driven by a combination of profit booking following the earlier rally in gold prices and a shift in investor risk appetite, with some rotation away from safe-haven assets,” said Nehal Meshram, senior analyst, Morningstar Investment Research India.

 


The net folio addition data showed that a lot of investors have been exiting their investments in the two precious metal ETFs. Gold ETFs witnessed a decline in folios for the first time in at least a year, as the accounts shrunk by 134,343 in May. In the case of silver ETFs, the number of accounts have been on the decline for two straight months. The total number of accounts have come down by over 400,000 from the peak of 5.6 million in March 2026.

 

 



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SEBI proposes unified price bands for stocks listed across exchanges

SEBI proposes unified price bands for stocks listed across exchanges


Under the proposal, exchanges would use the closing price from the actively traded exchange to determine price bands and pre-open auction base prices in such cases.
| Photo Credit:
HEMANSHI KAMANI

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) on Thursday proposed a uniform mechanism to determine price bands and pre-open session base prices for stocks listed on multiple exchanges, to address instances of significant price divergence in illiquid securities.

The regulator has proposed that where a stock trades on only one exchange on a given day, the other exchange should use the closing price of the exchange where trading occurred to determine the next day’s price band and the base price for the pre-open call auction session.

Further, where a stock trades on two or more exchanges but remains inactive on one or more of them, the non-trading exchange would use the closing price of the exchange with the highest trading volume for that stock to determine the subsequent day’s price band and pre-open base price.

Price alignment

Currently, stock exchanges apply stock-specific price bands of up to 20 per cent on either side of the previous closing price for stocks not traded in the derivatives segment. Some stocks trade on one exchange but not another for several days, leading to widening differences in closing prices because exchanges apply price bands based on their own previous-day closing prices.

This has been observed particularly in illiquid scrips where persistent buying interest, coupled with non-trading on one exchange, can result in “significant price divergence in the closing prices of the scrips across the exchanges,” SEBI said.

However, if the stock trades on all exchanges or does not trade on any exchange, each exchange will continue to use its latest closing price to set price bands.

The regulator has invited public comments on the proposals until July 2.

For implementation, SEBI has also proposed that stock exchanges enter into agreements or other arrangements to share closing-price data.

Published on June 11, 2026



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Short-term interest rates trigger demand for short-term funds from banks and India Inc

Short-term interest rates trigger demand for short-term funds from banks and India Inc


RBI’s recent measures aimed at attracting foreign currency inflows have softened money market rates meaningfully

There is no let up in demand for short-term funds of up to one year tenor from banks and India Inc despite the economy facing external headwinds due to the West Asia conflict as interest rates have softened at the shorter-end.

Fund raising via Certificate of Deposits (CDs) by Banks and via Commercial Papers (CPs) by corporates, primary dealers and all-India financial institutions in the current financial year so far (data up to June 8, 2026) stands comparison with year ago period (full quarter) amid banking system’s credit growth outpacing deposit growth.

In the current financial year (FY27) so far (up to June 8, 2026), banks’ cumulatively mopped up ₹2,18,290 crore via 190 CD issuances against ₹2,55,025 crore raised by 249 issuances in the first three months (Apri-May-June) of FY26, per data sourced from primary capital market information service provider Prime Database.

Similarly, in the current financial year (FY27) so far (up to June 8, 2026), India Inc cumulatively mopped up ₹3,60,219 crore via 1,712 CP issuances against ₹4,50,746 crore raised by 2,166 issuances in the first three months of FY26.

Balanced funding

As per latest RBI data, as of May 31, 2026, incremental credit growth of all scheduled banks at 17.44 per cent was 530 basis points higher than their incremental deposit growth of 12.14 per cent.

Venkatakrishnan Srinivasan, Founder and Managing Partner, Rockfort Fincap LLP, observed that the current softness in money market rates makes short-term funding attractive. So, borrowing via CDs and CPs are expected to be at an all time this fiscal.

However, he cautioned that excessive reliance on CPs and CDs and repeated rollovers could create asset-liability mismatches and refinancing risks, particularly for borrowers funding longer-tenor assets. A balanced funding strategy remains important.

Venkatakrishnan underscored that the movement in CP and CD rates during FY27 has been quite interesting, with the rates moving up as markets reacted to escalating geopolitical tensions in West Asia, rising crude oil prices and concerns regarding inflation and the interest rate outlook.

Moving down

However, following the RBI’s recent measures aimed at attracting foreign currency inflows and supporting the rupee, money market rates have softened meaningfully.

For example, between May 26 and June 10, 2026, 2-3 month Bank CD rates softened to around 6.85-6.90 per cent from 7.48-7.52 per cent earlier, while 12-month Bank CD rates declined to about 7.55 per cent from 7.98 per cent.

Similarly, 2-3 month “A1+” rated PSU and manufacturing company CP rates eased to around 6.92-6.93 per cent from 7.50-7.54 per cent earlier, and Housing Finance Company CP rates softened to around 6.95 per cent from 7.60-7.64 per cent.

Even NBFC CP rates witnessed a decline, with 2-3 month rates moving down to about 7.35-7.50 per cent from about 7.95-8.15 per cent.

Geopolitical pressures

Venkatakrishnan opined that the decline in rates reflects improved market confidence and expectations of better funding conditions arising from FCNR(B) deposit, External Commercial Borrowing and Overseas Foreign Currency Borrowing-related inflows.

However, many issuers remain uncertain about the medium-term interest rate outlook given the evolving geopolitical situation, crude oil volatility and potential inflationary pressures.

Consequently, several borrowers may continue to prefer short-term funding through CPs and CDs rather than locking into longer-term borrowings.

Published on June 11, 2026



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NCLT admits insolvency pleas against Anil Ambani and RInfra arm over ₹1,480 crore dues

NCLT admits insolvency pleas against Anil Ambani and RInfra arm over ₹1,480 crore dues


The statement said the order will be reviewed and challenged before appropriate legal forums
| Photo Credit:
greenleaf123

The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) has admitted two significant insolvency petitions filed by public sector lenders — State Bank of India and Canara Bank, marking a fresh escalation in legal and financial challenges involving entities linked to Anil Ambani and RInfra.

The Mumbai bench of the NCLT admitted State Bank of India’s insolvency plea against Anil Ambani in his role as a personal guarantor for loans extended to Reliance Communications and Reliance Infratel, with dues of around ₹1,200 crore. The loans, sanctioned in 2016, turned delinquent soon after, and despite invocation of Ambani’s s personal guarantee, repayment has not been made.

Responding to the order, a spokesperson for Anil D. Ambani said the matter relates to a disputed personal guarantee allegedly extended in 2016, prior to the enactment of personal insolvency provisions. The spokesperson added that the underlying loans were used by Reliance Communications to repay borrowings from Chinese lenders and that Ambani derived no personal benefit. The statement said the order will be reviewed and challenged before appropriate legal forums.

In a parallel development, the NCLT also admitted Canara Bank’s plea to initiate insolvency proceedings against HK Toll Road Pvt. Ltd., a wholly owned subsidiary of RInfra, over unpaid dues of ₹283 crore. The tribunal held that disputes raised by the company with the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) over alleged wrongful termination of a highway concession cannot dilute its liability toward the lender. It emphasised that insolvency proceedings are confined to determining the existence of debt and default, not adjudicating external contractual disputes.

Published on June 11, 2026



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