Noida International Airport secures security clearance

Noida International Airport secures security clearance


File photo: Noida International Airport, in Uttar Pradesh.
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After missing several completion deadlines, the Noida International Airport (NIA) has now secured security clearance from the Bureau of Civil Aviation Security (BCAS), sources told businessline.

Notably, the airport had missed multiple completion deadlines, including those scheduled for late 2024 and April 2025.

This approval, sources said, marks a significant milestone in the airport’s journey toward operational readiness and confirms that the aviation security infrastructure, systems, and procedures at Noida International Airport meet the regulatory requirements for the commencement of these operations.

According to sources, the airport will proceed with the remaining regulatory steps, including the receipt of the aerodrome license and approval of the Aerodrome Security Programme.
Upon completion of these requirements, sources said the Noida International Airport will work with the relevant authorities to plan the formal inauguration and commencement of operations.

Last month, NIA Chief Executive Christoph Schnellmann told businessline that the operational readiness process would involve finalising airline networks and route plans, as well as completing slot filing and approval procedures with the DGCA and other stakeholders.

Once slots are approved, airlines typically begin commercial preparations such as opening ticket sales and initiating customer outreach ahead of launch.

On the city side, the airport is preparing surface connectivity to support passengers from the first day of operations.

Mobility options

Schnellmann had pointed out that the mobility options will include intercity and long-haul bus services, airport taxis and cab aggregators, supported by intelligent traffic management systems to regulate traffic flow.

Looking ahead, he said long-term connectivity could be strengthened through a proposed Regional Rapid Transit System link from Ghaziabad and a planned high-speed rail corridor between Delhi and Varanasi, with a stop at the airport.

On airline partnerships, IndiGo will be the launch carrier at NIA. The airport has also entered into a strategic partnership with Akasa Air, which plans to operate both domestic and international services, while Air India Express is set to begin flights as well.

Discussions are under way with other Indian carriers, and airlines from the Middle East and Southeast Asia have also expressed interest in operating from the airport, Schnellmann had said.

Once operational, the airport, in its first phase (with one runway and one terminal), will have the capacity to handle about 12 million passengers annually.

Upon completion of the fourth phase, total capacity is expected to increase to 70 million passengers per year.

Published on March 5, 2026



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R N Ravi new West Bengal Governor, Lt Gen Syed Ata Hasnain (retd) named Bihar Governor

R N Ravi new West Bengal Governor, Lt Gen Syed Ata Hasnain (retd) named Bihar Governor


File photo: Tamil Nadu Governor RN Ravi
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BIJOY GHOSH

Tamil Nadu Governor R N Ravi has been appointed West Bengal Governor and Lt Gen Syed Ata Hasnain (retd) named new Bihar Governor as part of major gubernatorial appointments effected by President Droupadi Murmu on Thursday night.

Ravi succeeds C V Ananda Bose, who resigned earlier in the day.

President Murmu has accepted Bose’s resignation, a communique issued by her office said.

Kerala Governor Rajendra Vishwanath Arlekar will discharge the functions of Governor of Tamil Nadu, it said.

Vinai Kumar Saxena, Lt Governor of Delhi, has been appointed as Ladakh’s LG in place of Kavinder Gupta, who has been named Himachal Pradesh Governor.

Taranjit Singh Sandhu has been named Delhi LG, the communique said.

Himachal Pradesh Governor Shiv Pratap Shukla has been made Telangana Governor in place of Jishnu Dev Varma, who has been appointed Maharashtra Governor.

Nand Kishore Yadav has been appointed as Nagaland Governor, the communique said.

Published on March 5, 2026



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Indian basmati exporters seek Covid-type relief after Iran war disrupts shipping

Indian basmati exporters seek Covid-type relief after Iran war disrupts shipping


A close-up of basmati rice grains stacked for sale inside a shop at a wholesale market in Kolkata, India, January 13, 2026. REUTERS/Sahiba Chawdhary
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SAHIBA CHAWDHARY

Rice exporters have urged Indian government’s agri export promotion body APEDA to urgently take up some of the issues including freight and insurance rates as well as logistics with top officials of the Commerce and other related ministries to mitigate the impact of disruptions triggered by the Iran war.

In a letter to the Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) Chairman Abhishek Dev, the Indian Rice Exporters Federation (IREF) Director-General Vinod Kumar Kaul said exporters are facing an acute shortage of containers, suspension or cancellation of vessel calls to the West Asian region, and sharp increase in the logistics costs.

Pointing out that domestic basmati rice prices are down 7–10 per cent since the start of the crisis, adding pressure on exporters’ working capital and contracted realisations, Kaul said that the cargo space availability is a major issue and fuel/risk charges are highly uncertain. Basmati exporters fear that fuel/risk charges may escalate further in the coming days.

Freight charges up 20%

International freight rates have risen by an estimated 15-20 per cent, while war-risk surcharges and insurance premiums for Gulf-bound shipments have increased significantly. Bunker fuel price / marine fuel oil (MFO) rates have increased from $520/tonne to $700, an increase of 35 per cent in less than a week, IREF said in a statement.

“Our exporters cannot absorb abrupt freight, fuel and insurance shocks while shipments are delayed or rolled,” said Dev Garg, vice-president of IREF. Time-bound relief and clear advisories are essential to protect contracts, cash flows and India’s export commitments, he said.

Among the key measures sought by IREF include waiver of port-related charges, including storage and demurrage, in cases where cargo is rolled due to vessel cancellations or steep freight increases beyond exporters’ control.

Force majeure-type

Kaul has requested necessary actions after consulting Customs authorities and the Reserve Bank of India to ease operational, documentation and payment-related issues, including amendments in shipping documents, destination changes, and settlement procedures. He has suggested an official advisory be issued by APEDA, recognising the disruption as a force majeure–type event, so that it would help prevent contractual penalties.

“Considering delays in cargo movement and buyer payments, we request necessary advisories to banks be issued to provide temporary working capital support/ad-hoc facilities and suitable time-bound relaxations to ease shortages arising from the current disruption, similar to support extended during the COVID period,” Kaul said in the representation.

Published on March 5, 2026



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Iran’s olive branch sparks Sensex surge; index reclaims 80,000

Iran’s olive branch sparks Sensex surge; index reclaims 80,000


Equity benchmarks staged a sharp recovery on Thursday, snapping a three-session losing streak, after rumours surfaced that Iran had conditionally offered to abandon its nuclear programme raised hopes of de-escalation in the ongoing US-Israel-Iran conflict. The BSE Sensex surged 899.71 points, or 1.14 per cent, to close at 80,015.90, while the Nifty 50 gained 285.40 points, or 1.17 per cent, to settle at 24,765.90. Earlier in the session, both indices had given up a portion of their intra-day gains after an initial surge.

The catalyst for the rally was a combination of geopolitical and trade-related developments. The US announced security and insurance guarantees for commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, including the possibility of military escorts for oil tankers, easing fears of disruption to global energy supplies. Separately, a US Deputy Secretary indicated that India-US bilateral trade deal negotiations are nearing completion. Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Investments, said: “…investor sentiment improved after comments from the US deputy secretary suggested that an India-US trade deal may be nearing completion… Market momentum strengthened toward the close after reports that Iran had conditionally offered to abandon its nuclear program…”

Broader markets outperformed the frontline indices. The Nifty Midcap 100 and Nifty Smallcap 100 indices gained 1.52 per cent and 1.58 per cent, respectively. On the BSE, 2,749 stocks advanced against 1,515 declines, while 133 remained unchanged. However, 381 stocks hit fresh 52-week lows, against only 66 at 52-week highs, reflecting lingering stress in pockets of the market.

Broad-based gains

Sectorally, the gains were broad-based. The Nifty Metal index advanced 2.29 per cent, supported by supply disruptions in West Asia, including shipment interruptions and smelter shutdowns that tightened global supply. The Nifty Infra index rose 2.21 per cent, Nifty Auto climbed 1.86 per cent and the India Defence index gained 2.5 per cent, buoyed by expectations of higher defence spending amid escalating West Asia tensions. The Nifty IT index was the lone sectoral loser, slipping 0.59 per cent, partly weighed down by the rupee’s recovery.

Ajit Mishra, SVP Research at Religare Broking, noted: “…a sharp surge in the final hours helped the index retest the hurdle near the 24,800 level… Elevated crude oil prices and lingering geopolitical uncertainties continue to keep participants cautious.”

Among individual stocks, Mazagon Dock was a standout gainer, surging around 8 per cent on reports of a potential ₹99,000-crore defence deal. BSE Ltd rose over 4 per cent after receiving SEBI approval to launch index derivatives on two additional indices — Sensex Next 30 and BSE Focused Midcap Index. Adani Ports and Hindalco Industries were among the top Nifty performers. On the losing side, Tech Mahindra and ICICI Bank were the key laggards, weighed down by profit booking and subdued sectoral sentiment.

Decline in fear

Market volatility cooled sharply. India VIX plunged nearly 15.53 per cent to close at 17.8575, signalling a meaningful decline in fear among participants. Siddhartha Khemka, Head of Research at Motilal Oswal Financial Services, said: “…broader markets also rebounded after three consecutive sessions of losses… The India Defence index rose 2.5 per cent, supported by broader market recovery and renewed investor interest amid escalating tensions in West Asia…”

The Indian rupee staged a modest recovery, trading at 91.50 against the US dollar, gaining 0.55 paise, supported by suspected RBI intervention. Jateen Trivedi, VP Research Analyst at LKP Securities, said: “…the recovery suggests efforts to stabilise the currency amid rising volatility driven by geopolitical tensions and commodity price movements… dollar index movement and developments in the West Asia conflict will remain key drivers for the rupee as FII’s position gets influenced on crude rates.” Technically, support for the rupee is placed near 91.10, with resistance at 92.00.

Gold traded in a sideways range between ₹1,60,000 and ₹1,63,000, with CME gold hovering near the $5,150 level. Trivedi added: “…market focus now shifts to key US data releases — Initial Jobless Claims, Unemployment Rate and Nonfarm Payrolls. These data points will play an important role in shaping expectations around the Federal Reserve’s interest rate outlook…”

Global sentiment

Global sentiment also provided a tailwind. Asian markets rebounded, with South Korea’s KOSPI surging 10-12 per cent after the government activated a $68-billion market stabilisation fund, while Japan’s Nikkei gained nearly 1.8 per cent.

Technically, the Nifty holds immediate support at 24,600-24,550, while resistance is positioned at 24,920-24,950. Aakash Shah, Technical Research Analyst at Choice Equity Broking, noted the RSI at 37.55 has recovered from oversold levels, though follow-through buying is needed for confirmation. Bank Nifty is expected to consolidate between 58,000 and 60,000 in the near term, with a breakout above 59,400 or breakdown below 58,000 determining the next directional move.

Looking ahead, markets will closely track geopolitical developments in West Asia, global crude oil prices and Friday’s US Nonfarm Payrolls data. Analysts expect the Nifty to consolidate between 24,300 and 25,200 in the coming sessions, with a sustained close above 25,000 needed to confirm continuation of the recovery. A breakdown below 24,300 could, however, expose the index to deeper support around 24,200-24,000.

Published on March 5, 2026



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RBI data suggest end of repo rate cut transmission into lending rates

RBI data suggest end of repo rate cut transmission into lending rates


Weighted average lending rate on fresh rupee loans of banks rose 39 bps to 8.67 per cent in January 2026 from 8.28 per cent in December 2025
| Photo Credit:
utah778

The transmission of repo rate cuts into lending and deposit rates may be over, as interest rates on fresh loans went up even as interest rates on fresh deposits barely came down, going by RBI data for January 2026.

This development comes amid deposit growth (at 12.42 per cent year-on-year) lagging credit growth (14.40 per cent) as on January 31, 2026.

That transmission of the repo rate cuts into lending rates may have concluded can be gauged from the fact that the weighted average lending rate (WALR) on fresh rupee loans of scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) rose 39 bps to 8.67 per cent in January 2026 from 8.28 per cent in December 2025.

WALR in December 2025 had declined by 43 bps from 8.71 per cent in November 2025.

The Reserve Bank of India’s rate-setting monetary policy committee cumulatively reduced the policy repo rate by 125 basis points (bps) during the February-December 2025 period from 6.50 per cent to 5.25 per cent.

Madan Sabnavis, Chief Economist, Bank of Baroda, observed that banks may be upping the spreads on fresh loans linked to external benchmarks such as the repo rate, resulting in increase in the WALR of these loans. External benchmark-linked loans such as retail and MSME loans account for almost 60 per cent of banks’ overall loans.

He said: “There’s a limit to which banks can keep lowering the interest rates….Yield of the 10-year benchmark Government security is fairly intransigent in the 6.65-6.70 per cent range. And the fact that banks are now no longer able to pass on repo rate cuts as they’re losing deposits itself shows that the transmission is over.”

Marginal cost up

The one-year median marginal cost of funds-based lending rate (MCLR) of SCBs increased to 8.45 per cent in February 2026 (back to the December 2025 level) from 8.40 per cent in January 2026, per RBI data on lending and deposit rates.

The weighted average domestic term deposit rate on fresh rupee term deposits of SCBs just about nudged down to 5.66 per cent in January 2026 (5.67 per cent in December 2025).

V Rama Chandra Reddy, Head – Treasury, Karur Vysya Bank, said: “I think, the lending rates have bottomed out….banks are either increasing spreads on fresh floating rate loans or giving more fixed rate loans.”

Sabnavis said that banks’ are raising short-term bulk deposits to offset the relatively slower growth in retail deposits (as compared to loan growth). And this explains why the deposit rates are sticky.

Published on March 5, 2026



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Google’s Play Store concessions fail to impress Indian entrepreneurs fighting antitrust case

Google’s Play Store concessions fail to impress Indian entrepreneurs fighting antitrust case


Indian entrepreneurs who led the antitrust fight with the tech giant in India, are not impressed and see it as a status quo in terms of their case against Google.

Google may have ended its five-year antitrust battle with Epic Games on Wednesday but Indian entrepreneurs who took the tech giant to court in India say that Google’s policies are still “rent-seeking” and the overhaul does not change it.

Google announced major concessions to its Play Store policies on March 4, and this includes allowing alternative payment systems inside apps, making third-party app stores easier to install on Android, letting developers direct users to external payment sites, and lowering app store commissions for developers among others. The reforms apply globally in platform policy in phases with a 2027 rollout for markets like India.

Antitrust fight

However, Indian entrepreneurs who led the antitrust fight with the tech giant in India, are not impressed and see it as a status quo in terms of their case against Google.

“The fundamental question remains — what services are we actually paying for? For any significant download volume, we are already forced to spend massive amounts on advertising within their own platform. To then demand an additional transaction fee for a customer we acquired and a payment they didn’t process is rent-seeking at its worst,” Shaadi.com founder Anupam Mittal told businessline.

When asked if Google’s recent changes address India’s concerns, he says that Google is “attempting to bypass the spirit of the CCI’s previous orders” by rebranding their fees. “Earlier, when the law turned against Google Play Billing, they introduced ‘User Choice Billing’ (UCB). Now, they have unbundled the commission into a ‘Service Fee’ and a ‘Payment Fee’. By allowing third party billing but still demanding a heavy ‘Service Fee’, the total cost to the developer remains virtually unchanged,” he said.

Unfair levy

Murugavel Janakiraman, founder, Matrimony.com, another vocal critic and part of the complainants, said that despite the changes, developers will still have to pay a fee to Google to host their apps, which is akin to a cut on revenue. It is still an unfair levy and this has been the core issue in why we took the tech company to court earlier, and the case is still under investigation, he added.

Shaadi.com, Matrimony.com, along with other Indian start-ups and industry bodies like Alliance of Digital India Foundation (ADIF), moved the Competition Commission of India (CCI) back in 2020 alleging anti-competitive practices by Google which had then made the use of Google Play billing mandatory.

Google then subsequently introduced User Choice Billing to comply with the CCI order. User Choice Billing allows developers to show users an alternative billing system alongside Google Play Billing. However, the companies still argued that Google’s service fee levy was unfair and that the tech giant was abusing its monopoly power over the Android app marketplace.

Google did not respond to businessline’s queries on whether its policy overhaul impacts the current litigation in India.

Published on March 5, 2026



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