Aim is to rejuvenate growth for foreseeable future, IndusInd Bank CEO says

Aim is to rejuvenate growth for foreseeable future, IndusInd Bank CEO says


IndusInd Bank is aiming to rejuvenate business growth not just in current year but for the foreseeable future, and is targetting to grow in-line with the banking industry in FY27 and gain market share in FY28, MD & CEO Rajiv Anand told businessline in an interaction. The bank’s loans deposits de-grew on a yearly basis in Q3 FY26 as the management focused on making significant changes in its leadership team, both on assurance and business side. Anand talks about the bank’s business strategy after it suffered material losses due to the discrepancies found in its derivatives portfolio last year and possibility of raising capital going ahead. Excerpts:

When do you see business growth reviving?

There has been a significant change in the team, both on the assurance and business side. By March 31, much of that will be done and a brand new team will be in place. So the intent of the team is to rejuvenate growth, not just for this year but for the foreseeable future. Our ambition is to grow assets and liabilities in line with the market in FY27, and start to gain market share in FY28. And then dominate in some of our focused areas in the third year. That is broadly how the next three year plan looks like.

What would be the spilt between secured and unsecured loans?

Let me put it a bit differently. The vehicle finance business is around ₹1 lakh crore, corporate loans book is around ₹1.3 lakh crore, and microfinance business is about ₹20,000 crore, and all other retail businesses are about ₹50,000 crore. So to that extent, we have a big opportunity to grow our SME loans. We see opportunity in growing secured retail advances like gold loans, affordable housing etc. We don’t have a target on secured-unsecured loan mix as such.

Our largest portion within unsecured loans is micro loans. We want to continue growing micro loan book and expect it to form 7-8 per cent of our loan book. We also understand these loans are cyclical in nature, so we have started to use the credit guarantee scheme. As of now 38 per cent of micro loan book is covered under the credit guarantee scheme and we expect it to be fully covered under the scheme next year. Micro loan segment also helps us meeting PSL guidelines, both agri and small and marginal farmers. Further, slippages have reduced in the micro loan segment in the industry over the last year.

Credit cards are a very large part of our portfolio and it is a critical instrument to maintain engagement with our existing customers. To that extent, yes we do intend to grow this segment. We will be cautiously growing this segment as risk appears elevated in industry. There is a difference now in the way we are building our credit cards business. Earlier, a pre-dominant part of the business was coming from new to bank customers, now we are pivoting to building business on the back of servicing existing customers. We add roughly 150,000 customers at the bank each month, which gives us a large opportunity to engage with this customer base. The breadth and offering we have on credit card side, both on mass and affluent segments is very good. We are confident we will be able to grow this business.

How do you plan to reduce share of bulk deposits?

For any bank, and certainly for IndusInd, building a granular, retail liability franchise is absolutely critical. We have the brand, and distribution of little over 3,000 branches across country. In specific context of our bank, it becomes very critical because we also have a fairly lumpy liability franchise where we have bulk deposits and intent is on reducing dependence on such deposits. We will continue to focus on improving product offering for customers, improving productivity at branches, enhancing salary accounts and getting government business. We are also tapping start-ups, all these measures are towards gaining stickier retail deposits, and it will reduce our cost of funds going forward.

Guidance on NIM…

We are focused on improving return on assets (RoA). As mentioned, we are targeting to grow in-line with industry in FY27 and exiting next fiscal with 1 per cent RoA. As we think about more granular asset businesses, diversifying asset businesses, NIMs could be somewhat lower but we have ample opportunity to be able to make up for it due to lower cost to assets and lower credit cost.

Will you do more leadership hirings?

We have on-boarded a new chief risk officer-designate, as existing CRO will retire in next fiscal. And we have a new chief information officer. We expect more senior leadership hires in retail segment.

When do you plan to raise capital. How much weight do promoters carry in making strategic, important decisions?

As far as capital is concerned, at this moment we don’t need capital. Will we require it after 18-24 months? Yes. By then we would anticipate that growth has come back and it is under those circumstances that we would need capital. Once we decide to raise capital, the question is whether it should be done from a strategic investor or a QIP or other avenues. Those questions will be answered at that period. This is a board run company. All decisions that impact IndusInd Bank have to be decided by the board. That is how we run this bank.



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Iran-US nuclear talks in Geneva end without deal amid war fears

Iran-US nuclear talks in Geneva end without deal amid war fears


Omani Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi meets with U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and U.S. President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, in Geneva, Switzerland, February 26, 2026.
| Photo Credit:
OMAN NEWS AGENCY

Iran’s foreign minister says indirect talks with the US over the Iranian nuclear program are some of the country’s “most intense and longest rounds of negotiations.” Abbas Araghchi made the comments Thursday in an interview with Iranian state television. He offered no specifics but said “what needs to happen has been clearly spelled out from our side.” The US has yet to offer a comment on the talks. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Iran and the United States held hours of indirect negotiations Thursday over Tehran’s nuclear program but walked away without a deal, leaving the danger of another Mideast war on the table as the US has gathered a massive fleet of aircraft and warships in the region.

Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi, who mediated the talks in Geneva, said there had been “significant progress in the negotiation” without elaborating.

But just before the talks ended, Iranian state television reported that Tehran was determined to continue enriching uranium, rejected proposals to transfer it abroad and sought the lifting of international sanctions, indicating it was not prepared to meet US President Donald Trump’s demands.

Trump wants a deal to constrain Iran’s nuclear program, and he sees an opportunity while the country is struggling at home with growing dissent following nationwide protests. Iran also hopes to avert war, but maintains it has the right to enrich uranium and does not want to discuss other issues, like its long-range missile program or support for armed groups like Hamas and Hezbollah.

Al-Busaidi said technical-level talks would continue next week in Vienna, the home of the International Atomic Energy Agency. The United Nations’ atomic watchdog likely would be critical in any deal. But neither the Americans of the Iranians offered any immediate comment.

A very terrible scenario

The stakes could hardly be higher.

If America attacks, Iran has said US military bases in the region would be considered legitimate targets, putting at risk tens of thousands of American service members. Iran has also threatened to attack Israel, meaning a regional war again could erupt across the Middle East.

“There would be no victory for anybody — it would be a devastating war,” Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told India Today in an interview filmed Wednesday just before he flew to Geneva.

“Since the Americans’ bases are scattered through different places in the region, then unfortunately perhaps the whole region would be engaged and be involved, so it is a very terrible scenario.” Ali Vaez, an Iran expert with the International Crisis Group, said it was a good sign that the Americans did not walk away immediately when Iran presented its latest proposal on Thursday.

“There might still not be a breakthrough at the end of this day, but the very fact that the US team is returning shows that there is enough common ground between the two sides,” he said.

Geneva talks are the third meeting since June war

The two sides held multiple rounds of talks last year that collapsed when Israel launched a 12-day war against Iran in June and the US carried out heavy strikes on its nuclear sites, leaving much of Iran’s nuclear program in ruins even as the full extent of the damage remains unclear.

Araghchi represented Iran at the talks. Steve Witkoff, a billionaire real estate developer and friend of Trump who serves as a special Mideast envoy, headed up the US delegation with Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner. The talks again were mediated by Oman, an Arab Gulf country that’s long served as an interlocutor between Iran and the West.

The two sides adjourned after around three hours of talks and resumed the discussions later.

During the break, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei said diplomats held “very intensive” negotiations. He said the Iranians felt there were “constructive proposals” offered on both nuclear issues and sanctions relief.

Trump wants Iran to completely halt its enrichment of uranium and roll back both its long-range missile program and its support for regional armed groups. Iran says it will only discuss nuclear issues, and maintains its atomic program is for entirely peaceful purposes.

US suspects Iran is rebuilding its programme

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters Wednesday that Iran is “always trying to rebuild elements” of its nuclear program. He said that Tehran is not enriching uranium right now, “but they’re trying to get to the point where they ultimately can.” Iran has said it hasn’t enriched since June, but it has blocked IAEA inspectors from visiting the sites America bombed. Satellite photos analysed by The Associated Press have shown activity at two of those sites, suggesting Iran is trying to assess and potentially recover material there.

The West and the IAEA say Iran had a nuclear weapons program until 2003. After Trump scrapped the 2015 nuclear agreement, Iran ramped up its enrichment of uranium to 60 per cent purity — a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90 per cent.

US intelligence agencies assess that Iran has yet to restart a weapons program, but has “undertaken activities that better position it to produce a nuclear device, if it chooses to do so.” Some Iranian officials have spoken openly about the country’s readiness to produce a bomb if that decision is taken.

Threat of military action sparks war fears

If the talks fail, uncertainty hangs over the timing of any possible US attack.

If the aim of potential military action is to pressure Iran to make concessions in nuclear negotiations, it’s not clear whether limited strikes would work. If the goal is to remove Iran’s leaders, that will likely commit the US to a larger, longer military campaign. There has been no public sign of planning for what would come next, including the potential for chaos in Iran.

There is also uncertainty about what any military action could mean for the wider region. Tehran could retaliate against the American-allied nations of the Persian Gulf or Israel. Oil prices have risen in recent days in part due to those concerns, with benchmark Brent crude now around USD 70 a barrel. Iran in the last round of talks said it briefly halted traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf through which a fifth of all traded oil passes.

Satellite photos shot Tuesday and Wednesday by Planet Labs PBC and analysed by the AP appeared to show that American vessels typically docked in Bahrain, the home of the US Navy’s 5th Fleet, were all out at sea. The 5th Fleet referred questions to the US military’s Central Command, which declined to comment. Before Iran’s attack on a US base in Qatar during the closing days of the war last June, the 5th Fleet similarly scattered its ships at sea to protect against a potential attack.

Published on February 27, 2026



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Telangana government plans salary cuts for employees neglecting parents

Telangana government plans salary cuts for employees neglecting parents


Chief Minister A Revanth Reddy made the announcement while addressing newly recruited Group-I and Group-II officers at the Marri Channa Reddy Human Resources Development Institute.

The Congress government in Telangana has announced that it will introduce a law in the upcoming Assembly budget session to cut the salaries of government employees who neglect their parents by 10–15 per cent.

Chief Minister A Revanth Reddy has made this announcement here on Thursday, while addressing a new cohort of Group-I and Group-II employees at the Marri Channa Reddy Human Resources Development Institute (MCHRD).

He said that the institute would soon enter into an agreement with Harvard University (the United States). “Experts in administration from Harvard would visit the institute and offer training to officials in public administration,” he said.

Alleging that the erstwhile Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) Government had failed in conducting recruitment for Group-I vacancies, he said that out of about six lakh candidates, as many as 582 candidates were selected for Group-I posts and 1,775 were selected for Group-II posts.

Published on February 26, 2026



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BMC Budget 2026-27 | ₹80,952 Crore | Roads, Water, Health & Infrastructure Highlights | Paisa Live

BMC Budget 2026-27 | ₹80,952 Crore | Roads, Water, Health & Infrastructure Highlights | Paisa Live


Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) ने 2026-27 का ₹80,952 Crore का budget announce किया है, जो पिछले साल से 8.77% ज्यादा है। इस budget में साफ दिख रहा है कि focus infrastructure, roads और basic services को मजबूत करना है। Coastal Road, major roads, bridges और traffic projects के लिए भारी allocation है, साथ ही water supply, sewerage treatment और storm water drainage पर भी ध्यान दिया गया है। Health sector में ₹7,456 Crore रखा गया है, जिसमें hospitals expansion, TB control और AI-based diabetic eye checkups शामिल हैं। Education और environment के लिए schools upgrade, air pollution control और electric sweepers पर काम होगा। Revenue sources में property tax, development fees और octroi compensation शामिल हैं। Video में जानिए budget का पूरा breakdown और BMC की priorities।



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Mineral exploration: NITI Aayog panel suggests coordination between Centre, States

Mineral exploration: NITI Aayog panel suggests coordination between Centre, States


The National Critical & Strategic Minerals Committee, constituted by NITI Aayog, on Thursday called  for coordinated action involving the Central, State governments, public sector undertakings and private mining companies to accelerate exploration.

The second meeting of the National Critical & Strategic Minerals Committee, constituted by NITI Aayog, was held at Singareni Bhavan here under the chairmanship of DK Singh. 

Observing those critical minerals were central in supporting India’s long-term economic growth, clean energy transition and technological advancement, the committee said minerals such as lithium, rare earth elements, cobalt and nickel were essential for renewable energy systems, electric vehicles, electronics, defence and advanced manufacturing sectors.

While India possessed reserves of certain critical minerals, limited exploration and mining activities had led to continued import dependence. With demand projected to rise significantly, the Committee called for coordinated action involving central and state governments, public sector undertakings and private mining companies.

There was a need to accelerate exploration, strengthen research and development, and foster strategic partnerships to harness the country’s untapped mineral potential, the panel members said in their deliberations. 

SCCL

Buddhaprakash Jyoti, Chairman and Managing Director of Singareni Collieries Company (SCCL) and Member of the Committee, said SCCL was commitment to the National Critical Mineral Mission. 

The company was exploring the extraction of Rare Earth Elements (REEs) from overburden and clays in coal seams of its opencast mines, he added. 

Efforts are also underway to recover valuable minerals from fly ash and bottom ash generated at the Singareni Thermal Power Plant. “These initiatives reflect SCCL’s commitment to sustainable mining and responsible resource utilisation,’’ he said, according to a release. 

Published on February 26, 2026



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