T20 World Cup final: India beat New Zealand by 96 runs

T20 World Cup final: India beat New Zealand by 96 runs


India beat ‌New Zealand by ​96 ⁠runs in the final ‌at the ‌Narendra ‌Modi ⁠Stadium on ⁠Sunday to become the ​first ‌team to retain the men’s Twenty20 ‌World ​Cup title.

Put into ⁠bat, India posted a ‌commanding total of 255-5 and restricted ‌their opponents ​to 159 in 19 ⁠overs.

Led by Sanju Samson’s 46-ball 89 and equally destructive half-centuries from Abhishek Shamra (52 off 21 balls) and Ishan Kishan (54 off 25 balls), defending champions India put on a powerful batting show to post a massive 255 for five.

In reply, New Zealand lost all their top batters by the time the innings entered the halfway stage.

Opener Tim Seifert smashed 52 off 26 balls, but the rest of the top-order disappointed in the stiff chase.

Axar Patel dismissed the dangerous Finn Allen (9) and Glenn Phillips (5) while Jasprit Bumrah removed Rachin Ravindra (1) in the powerplay. Then, Hardik Pandya and Varun Varun Chakravarthy picked up a wicket each, while Axar returned to send back Daryl Mitchell (17).

Earlier, New Zealand bowlers were all at sea after inviting India to bat in the winners-take-all contest with Samson and Abhishek going berserk from the word go, lashing the ground with sixes and fours.

They raised a quick-fire 98-run stand in just 7.1 overs to provide a great platform, and Kishan carried forward the good work with his brisk knock.

Scoreboard at Close of Play of Final Between India and New Zealand on Sunday at Ahmedabad, India

India Win by 96 Runs

India – 1st Innings

– Sanju Samson c (Sub) b James Neesham 89

– Abhishek Sharma c Tim Seifert b Rachin Ravindra 52

– Ishan Kishan c Mark Chapman b James Neesham 54

– Hardik Pandya c Mitchell Santner b Matt Henry 18

– Suryakumar Yadav c Rachin Ravindra b James Neesham 0

– Tilak Varma Not Out 8

– Shivam Dube Not Out 26

– Extras 0b 0lb 0nb 0pen 8w 8

– Total (20.0 overs) 255-5

Fall of Wickets: 1-98 (Sharma), 2-203 (Samson), 3-204 (Kishan), 4-204 (Yadav), 5-226 (Pandya)

Did Not Bat: Patel, Vinod, Bumrah, Singh

Bowling

| Bowler | Ov | Md | Rn | Wk | Econ | Ex |

|———————|—-|—-|—-|—-|——-|—-|

| Matt Henry | 4 | 0 | 49 | 1 | 12.25 | 4w |

| Glenn Phillips | 1 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 5.00 | |

| Jacob Duffy | 3 | 0 | 42 | 0 | 14.00 | 1w |

| Lockie Ferguson | 2 | 0 | 48 | 0 | 24.00 | 3w |

| Mitchell Santner | 4 | 0 | 33 | 0 | 8.25 | |

| Rachin Ravindra | 2 | 0 | 32 | 1 | 16.00 | |

| James Neesham | 4 | 0 | 46 | 3 | 11.50 | |

New Zealand – 1st Innings

– Tim Seifert c Ishan Kishan b Varun Chakaravarthy 52

– Finn Allen c Tilak Varma b Axar Patel 9

– Rachin Ravindra c Ishan Kishan b Jasprit Bumrah 1

– Glenn Phillips b Axar Patel 5

– Mark Chapman b Hardik Pandya 3

– Daryl Mitchell c Ishan Kishan b Axar Patel 17

– Mitchell Santner b Jasprit Bumrah 43

– James Neesham b Jasprit Bumrah 8

– Matt Henry b Jasprit Bumrah 0

– Lockie Ferguson Not Out 6

– Jacob Duffy c Tilak Varma b Abhishek Sharma 3

– Extras 4b 1lb 0nb 0pen 7w 12

– Total (19.0 overs) 159 all out

Fall of Wickets: 1-31 (Allen), 2-32 (Ravindra), 3-47 (Phillips), 4-70 (Chapman), 5-72 (Seifert), 6-124 (Mitchell), 7-141 (Neesham), 8-141 (Henry), 9-152 (Santner), 10-159 (Duffy)

Bowling

| Bowler | Ov | Md | Rn | Wk | Econ | Ex |

|———————|—-|—-|—-|—-|——-|—-|

| Arshdeep Singh | 4 | 0 | 32 | 0 | 8.00 | 5w |

| Hardik Pandya | 4 | 0 | 36 | 1 | 9.00 | 1w |

| Axar Patel | 3 | 0 | 27 | 3 | 9.00 | |

| Jasprit Bumrah | 4 | 0 | 15 | 4 | 3.75 | 1w |

| Varun Chakaravarthy | 3 | 0 | 39 | 1 | 13.00 | |

| Abhishek Sharma | 1 | 0 | 5 | 1 | 5.00 | |

Published on March 8, 2026



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Income Tax crackdown targets restaurants in ₹70,000‑crore scam

Income Tax crackdown targets restaurants in ₹70,000‑crore scam


Under the lens. The I-T sleuths, after analysing around 60 terabytes of data of 1.77 lakh food joints through AI and data analytics forensic tools, found out that restaurants were indulging in massive under billing of sales in tax fillings. The transactions were done over seven years from 2019.
| Photo Credit:
JOTHI RAMALINGAM B

The Income Tax department on Sunday launched a nationwide survey at 60 to 70 locations to unravel a deeply entrenched software-based network that restaurants across States and Union Territories use for massive tax evasion. The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), under the Ministry of Finance, decided to go in for a crackdown across the country after a routine inspection at biryani restaurants in Hyderabad last month unravelled concealed sales, widely estimated to be around ₹70,000 crore.

Sources privy to the CBDT offensive stated that the survey began on Sunday morning across 60 to 70 locations, covering restaurants as well as common software data management company. At least four popular restaurants in the national capital were covered in the survey, including a leading foods joint on Pandara Road and another one known for offering North Indian curries. According to sources, there are six restaurant locations in Tamil Nadu, two in Kerala and four in Gujarat where the sleuths carried out surprise check of records and data to expose the racket.

Tax evasion

Sources said a comprehensive picture of tax evasion would appear after the survey gets over. The I-T sleuths, after analysing around 60 terabytes of data of 1.77 lakh food joints through AI and data analytics forensic tools, found out that restaurants were indulging in massive under billing of sales in tax fillings. The transactions were done over seven years from 2019.

Sources said one of the companies under inspection uses Petpuja — a point-of-sale (PoS) billing and restaurant management software used by a large number of eateries across the country. It manages orders, billing, inventory, GST records and payment tracking and stores data on central servers, allowing restaurants to manage bills digitally.

The IT officials were astonished to find out the common modus operandi: of manipulating the software, restaurants would initially record all sales and later delete them at the time of filling GST. The software had inbuilt features to allow mass deletion of data periodically within seconds. According to officials, it also enabled reducing the value on bills — another under-invoicing tactic to pay less taxes.

So far, the I-T department, in its initial round of digging of data at Hyderabad, found out that about₹13,317 crore worth under billing was identified, specifically from deleted invoices. According to a broad assessment, I-T officials suspect that more than 27 per cent of restaurants are indulging in such tax malpractices, making themselves richer at the expense of the government exchequer.

Published on March 8, 2026



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Upper-layer NBFCs seek risk-weight rejig amid heightened regulatory scrutiny

Upper-layer NBFCs seek risk-weight rejig amid heightened regulatory scrutiny


Regulatory scrutiny by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has increased sharply over the past years and on par with universal banks
| Photo Credit:
ANUSHREE FADNAVIS

Non-banking finance companies (NBFCs), especially the ones classified under upper-layer category, are seeking lowering of risk weights across loan categories, saying regulatory scrutiny by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has increased sharply over the past years and on par with universal banks.

“Large NBFCs’ regulatory scrutiny has increased sharply. We have to mark higher risk-weights across loan categories in comparison to banks, while also making higher provisions as we follow the ECL model and also maintain higher capital adequacy ratio,” said a senior official at a large NBFC, adding that NBFCs have nudged the regulator about lowering risk weights in their last meeting with the RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra.

According to Ajit Velonie, Senior Director at Crisil Ratings, NBFCs assign 100 per cent risk weight on most retail loan categories (except housing loans) such as vehicle loans, MSME/ loan against property and loans against gold jewellery, while banks assign 75 per cent on the same loans which qualify as regulatory retail portfolio.

“In corporate loans, too, banks assign 20 per cent risk weight on AAA rated corporates, 30 per cent on AA corporates and 50 per cent on A-rated corporates, while for NBFCs there is no linkage to ratings, and they assign 100 per cent on corporate loans,” added Velonie.

NBFCs have been seeking a rejig in risk-weights, especially on retail loans, as such loans form around 90 per cent of industry assets under management. With enhanced regulatory scrutiny and strong buffers, NBFCs are asking the regulator to take a relook and harmonise NBFCs’ risk-weights for some retail lending segments.

Funding aid

NBFCs have long been demanding a dedicated re-finance window — similar to the National Housing Bank (NHB) for housing finance companies (HFCs) — and approval for large NBFCs to accept public deposits, a licence which the RBI has not granted to any large NBFC since decades.

A host of NBFC sector officials say that large institutions such as Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) and Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) tend to invest primarily in Central or State government securities. Within corporates, it is primarily in non-convertible debentures (NCDs) issued by large-sized, AAA- or AA-rated NBFCs.

“Funding from banks for NBFCs overall had squeezed after the RBI hiked risk-weight on bank loans to NBFCs [which has now been rolled back]. However, we have seen an increase in bank lending to NBFCs over last three months. On the other hand, funds raised through other avenues such as NCDs remains a challenge for many A- or BBB-rated entities,” said Velonie.

This is largely due to stricter investment guidelines governing insurance and pension funds. Even mutual funds do not invest in lower than AA rated NBFCs’ NCDs as their credit risk factor could rise.

Published on March 8, 2026



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Oil market chaos set to deepen as more Gulf giants cut output

Oil market chaos set to deepen as more Gulf giants cut output


The chaos that has gripped the oil market looks set to deepen in the coming days, with more production being shut off as the war in Iran keeps the Strait of Hormuz closed to tankers, and the US considers widening its range of targets in the country.

The United Arab Emirates and Kuwait have already started reducing oil production as storage runs down, joining Iraq.

Others may be forced to follow as oil tankers continue avoiding the narrow waterway, rapidly reducing the number of empty ones available for loading.

Once all the tankers are loaded, the region’s remaining on-land storage will fill even quicker.

The upheaval, now in its ninth day, shows no sign of imminent resolution, meaning a strip of water that normally handles a fifth of the world’s oil is impassable for commercial ships. About a third of the region’s production can theoretically bypass Hormuz, with Saudi Arabia already diverting huge amounts of crude to its Red Sea coast for export.

Iran has vowed not to back down in the face of US and Israeli strikes that began on Feb. 28. President Donald Trump responded on Saturday by saying the US would now consider targeting areas and groups of people in Iran that were not previously aimed for.

The attacks will continue “until they surrender or, more likely, completely collapse!” he said in a social media post.

For oil analysts, executives and traders, that has meant ever-louder warnings that the war is bringing crude to a tipping point, and closer to the psychological $100-a-barrel threshold. Brent already climbed 30% last week — its biggest jump in six years, putting it just dollars from that mark.

Other markers tied closely to the region have already soared through that level. Futures tied to Abu Dhabi’s flagship Murban crude closed at $103 a barrel on Friday, while Oman crude futures were at $107. Chinese crude oil futures on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange ended, in US dollar terms, at $109.

“Every additional day of disruption adds pressure, and in that scenario there is effectively no ceiling to prices in the short term,” said former trader Stefano Grasso, a senior portfolio manager at Singapore-based fund 8VantEdge Pte. 

For one, there are growing threats to oil infrastructure — raising the risk of disruptions that could outlast attacks in the area. Saudi Arabia intercepted drones that were heading toward the 1-million-barrel-a-day Shaybah oil field over the weekend. Strikes in Bahrain and Qatar have also continued.

There is also the continued blockage of the Strait of Hormuz. Over the past days, only Iran-linked tankers and two bulk carriers, which claimed to be Chinese-owned, have been seen transiting.

The US has promised to bolster financial protection and potentially provide military escorts, and announced on Friday that it would roll out maritime reinsurance for the Persian Gulf region. The facility will cover losses up to about $20 billion “on a rolling basis”, according to a statement.

For shipowners and charterers operating in the region, however, the cost of insurance is not the major concern holding up traffic. Instead, they worry about the safety of vessels and crew, and say they would need full naval escort — along the lines of Operation Prosperity Guardian, a coalition to safeguard shipping in the Red Sea — or preferably an end to hostilities.

Other US moves to dampen oil price increases include allowing India to access Russian oil currently held in floating storage in the region. Washington has also floated tapping its strategic petroleum reserve or even intervening in futures markets — officials have since downplayed these ideas, while Trump has brushed off inflationary worries even as US gasoline prices spike.

“This is an excursion,” he said on Saturday. “We figured oil prices would go up, which they will, they’ll also come down, they’ll come down very fast.”

Import-dependent Asia, which leans heavily on the Middle East, is feeling the most immediate pain. 

In Japan — which takes over 90 per cent of its crude from the region — refiners are asking for the option of drawing on national oil reserves. Others, including China, have curbed fuel exports to preserve supply and keep domestic prices controlled.

South Korea is considering reinstating an oil price cap for the first time in 30 years, state news agency Yonhap reported on Sunday, citing government officials.

In northwest Europe, meanwhile, the price of jet fuel soared to an all-time high of $1,528 a ton — the equivalent of more than $190 a barrel — on Thursday, according to figures from General Index that go back to 2008. The impact on jet fuel is particularly sharp because half of the European Union’s imports typically pass through Hormuz.

For analysts at ING Groep NV, the base case is now four weeks of disruption — two of full upheaval and two weeks of 50%, said Warren Patterson, the bank’s head of commodities strategy in Singapore. 

“This scenario doesn’t necessarily mean that we see a full end to the conflict in this time period,” he said. “But if US and Israeli strikes degrade Iran’s ability to attack vessels and enforce a closure of the Strait of Hormuz, we could see flows starting to normalize.”

The bank’s most dramatic scenario is a three-month, full disruption to oil and liquefied natural gas flows. This would likely see oil prices spiking to records through the second quarter, the bank’s analysts wrote in a note.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

Published on March 8, 2026



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मिडिल ईस्ट तनाव का बाजार पर असर, टॉप कंपनियों की वैल्यू 2.81 लाख करोड़ रुपये घटी; जानें डिटेल

मिडिल ईस्ट तनाव का बाजार पर असर, टॉप कंपनियों की वैल्यू 2.81 लाख करोड़ रुपये घटी; जानें डिटेल


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Top Companies Market Cap Fall: पश्चिम एशिया में बढ़ते युद्ध तनाव का असर अब भारतीय शेयर बाजार पर भी साफ दिखाई देने लगा है. वैश्विक स्तर पर बढ़ी अनिश्चितता और ऊर्जा सप्लाई को लेकर चिंता के बीच निवेशकों का रुख सतर्क हो गया है. जिसका असर बड़ी कंपनियों के शेयरों पर भी पड़ा है. 

लगातार बिकवाली के दबाव की वजह से देश की कई दिग्गज कंपनियों के मार्केट कैप में गिरावट दर्ज की गई है. जिससे निवेशकों को तगड़ा नुकसान उठाना पड़ा हैं. आइए आंकड़ों से समझते है इस पूरे मामले को…..

टॉप 8  कंपनियों की वैल्यू घटी

पिछले हफ्ते बाजार में बनी कमजोरी का असर देश की शीर्ष कंपनियों पर भी देखने को मिला. बीते पूरे सप्ताह की बात करें तो, देश की 10 सबसे बड़ी कंपनियों में से 8 के मार्केट कैप में गिरावट दर्ज की गई.

इस दौरान इन कंपनियों की कुल बाजार पूंजीकरण में करीब 2,81,581.53 करोड़ रुपये की कमी आई. जिससे बाजार की कुल वैल्यूएशन पर भी दबाव नजर आया. 

स्टेट बैंक ऑफ इंडिया को हुआ सबसे ज्यादा नुकसान

मार्केट कैप के हिसाब से देश की प्रमुख बैंक में शामिल स्टेट बैंक ऑफ इंडिया को इस अवधि में सबसे ज्यादा नुकसान झेलना पड़ा. पिछले चार कारोबारी दिनों के दौरान बैंक के मार्केट कैप में 53,992.96 करोड़ रुपये की गिरावट आई. जिसके बाद इसकी कुल बाजार वैल्यू घटकर 10,55,567.27 करोड़ रुपये रह गई.

इन कंपनियों को भी हुआ नुकसान

आईसीआईसीआई बैंक के मार्केट कैप में 46,936.82 करोड़ रुपये की गिरावट दर्ज की गई. इसी तरह एचडीएफसी बैंक के मार्केट कैप में 46,552.3 करोड़ रुपये की कमी आई. इंफ्रास्ट्रक्चर क्षेत्र की कंपनी लार्सन ऐंड टुब्रो को 45,629.03 करोड़ रुपये का नुकसान हुआ.

वहीं बजाज फाइनेंस के मार्केट कैप में 28,934.56 करोड़ रुपये और टीसीएस के मार्केट कैप में 28,492.44 करोड़ रुपये की गिरावट दर्ज की गई.

दो कंपनियों की वैल्यू में बढ़त

जहां ज्यादातर दिग्गज कंपनियों के मार्केट कैप में गिरावट देखने को मिली, वहीं इस दौरान दो कंपनियां ऐसी भी रहीं जिनकी बाजार वैल्यू बढ़ी. इनमें रिलायंस इंडस्ट्रीज और इंफोसिस शामिल हैं. बीते हफ्ते रिलायंस इंडस्ट्रीज का मार्केट कैप 14,750.39 करोड़ रुपये बढ़कर 19,01,583.05 करोड़ रुपये पर पहुंच गया.

वहीं आईटी कंपनी इंफोसिस की बाजार वैल्यू में 3,459.99 करोड़ रुपये की बढ़ोतरी हुई और इसका मार्केट कैप बढ़कर 5,30,546.54 करोड़ रुपये के आंकड़े पर पहुंचा है. 

डिस्क्लेमर: (यहां मुहैया जानकारी सिर्फ़ सूचना हेतु दी जा रही है. यहां बताना जरूरी है कि मार्केट में निवेश बाजार जोखिमों के अधीन है. निवेशक के तौर पर पैसा लगाने से पहले हमेशा एक्सपर्ट से सलाह लें. ABPLive.com की तरफ से किसी को भी पैसा लगाने की यहां कभी भी सलाह नहीं दी जाती है.)

यह भी पढ़ें: ईरान-इजरायल युद्ध के बीच विदेशी निवेशकों का भरोसा डगमगाया, 4 दिन में निकाले 21,000 करोड़ रुपये….



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Russia says international law effectively dead, calls for UNSC P-5 summit

Russia says international law effectively dead, calls for UNSC P-5 summit


Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov
| Photo Credit:
RAMIL SITDIKOV

Russia has said international law is effectively dead amid escalating tensions in West Asia following the US-Israeli strike on Iran, and called for reviving President Vladimir Putin’s proposal to convene a summit of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the current global situation underscores the need to revisit Putin’s proposal, first made before the Covid-19 pandemic, for a summit of the P-5 — Russia, the US, China, France and the UK — to discuss global security and stability.

“We have all lost what we call international law… I don’t even understand how anyone can be called upon to follow the norms and principles of international law. It effectively no longer exists,” Peskov said in an interview with the state-run Rossiya TV.

He said international law exists “de jure” (by law) but no longer “de facto” (in fact).

“We cannot tell anyone to follow international law, follow which law? Nobody can formulate today what it is,” he said.

Referring to the sharp escalation following the US-Israeli attack on Iran, Peskov said the situation in the region has become significantly destabilised.

“The region has become significantly destabilised, and the cumulative effect of the vast number of regional conflicts and unresolved issues is resulting in both economic and political consequences,” he said.

Meanwhile, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the US should clarify its broader plans and explain how they relate to existing international norms.

“We talk a lot about wanting to define what kind of world we live in… We believe the US should explain its plans and how this all relates to what previously defined certain norms,” he said in a programme on state TV.

Published on March 8, 2026



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