Retail yet to fully arrive, leverage demand won’t fade: Dinesh Thakkar, Chairman, Angel One

Retail yet to fully arrive, leverage demand won’t fade: Dinesh Thakkar, Chairman, Angel One


Retail participation in India remains at a very early stage, with shallow investment depth despite a rise in investor accounts, says Dinesh Thakkar, Chairman, founder and CEO of Angel One, pointing to a long runway for deeper market participation. In an interaction with businessline, he said regulatory tightening in derivatives is part of a broader cycle and that “trading is a zero-sum game,” with technology expected to play a key role in moving investors towards long-term wealth creation

How do you see retail participation evolving in India?

Retail participation in India is still at a very early stage, both in terms of the number of investors and the depth of investment. There is potential for 30–40 crore new investors to enter the market over time, but even among those who have already entered, participation remains shallow.

The opportunity is not just about bringing more people into the market, but about enabling deeper participation. The real question is how we position ourselves for the next 10–20 years and move investors from being first-time participants to becoming knowledgeable, long-term investors.

Over the last decade, mutual fund AUM has grown from about ₹11 lakh crore to ₹82 lakh crore. Retail ownership of market capitalisation is now around 19 per cent, higher than FII ownership. That reflects a clear shift towards long-term investing.

Where do you see the biggest opportunity for technology and AI to deepen participation?

Despite equities delivering 14–15 per cent CAGR over the long run, a large part of India is still not investing in equities. The issue is not just affordability — it is trust, awareness and behaviour.

Household equity exposure in India is around 7–8 per cent, compared with about 60 per cent in developed markets like the US. That gap represents the real opportunity. Getting people into the market is one challenge; getting them to allocate meaningfully over time is another.

Technology and AI can help bridge this by improving awareness, building trust and guiding behaviour.

How do you see the recent tightening in derivatives impacting retail?

Trading is a zero-sum game — some people will win and some will lose, and typically those who are newer to the market are more vulnerable.

Policy decisions should be based on long-term investor outcomes, not short-term participation cycles. You have to look at the investor’s overall balance sheet over 5–10 years, not just one product or one phase.

Regulation has always stepped in when excesses build up. The market has moved from badla to futures, then options and now weekly expiries. Whenever speculation becomes excessive, regulation responds. That is part of keeping the market healthy.

How do you see the surge in options trading among retail investors?

A large part of this activity is driven by younger participants taking directional bets. These are not sophisticated investors running hedging strategies. They are looking for leverage, and options are the most accessible regulated product.

Earlier, leverage was more available in the cash market through intraday trading. As that reduced, activity shifted to options. This shows that the segment is fundamentally seeking leverage.

If the market offers a properly designed alternative, such as a leveraged ETF, some of this activity could migrate there. The demand for leverage itself is unlikely to disappear. A customer often starts as a trader and gradually evolves into a long-term investor. SIP inflows have grown from about ₹3,000 crore in 2015 to over ₹30,000 crore now, and that growth has been consistent.

If you shut the gateway product entirely, some investors may not take the next step. Even if they begin with trading, many will, over time, shift towards mutual funds and cash market investing. That is the journey the industry should support.

What role does your platform play in this transition?

Our platform is built to understand the customer by tracking risk appetite, earning patterns and behaviour, and using those insights to support better allocation decisions.

Our role is not just to enable transactions, but to improve investor outcomes over time. Once trust is established, we can guide customers towards the right products and help their journey evolve.

We are building capabilities across wealth and long-term investment solutions so that customers can move beyond smaller investments as they mature. We also see strong demand in this segment, with Ionic Wealth crossing $1 billion in AUM.

AI is a key part of this strategy. By matching solutions to an individual’s profile, tracking behaviour and offering timely guidance, the platform can help investors become more informed and move towards long-term wealth creation.

Do you see tighter regulations having an impact on the broking industry?

Tightening is necessary and is healthy for long-term growth. The industry has adapted to regulatory changes across cycles. Retail participation is still underpenetrated, and investment depth remains low. As long as this underpenetration exists, the growth runway remains strong. What matters is ensuring minimal scope for manipulation and timely regulatory action. That is what builds trust. India also needs a healthy derivatives market. For foreign investment to remain strong, there has to be sufficient participation on both sides. Regulators understand this and have strong surveillance systems. Over time, such interventions strengthen the market.

What is your outlook on markets and FPI participation?

Current market levels offer a reasonable entry point, and volatility should be seen as an opportunity. Geopolitical events create short-term uncertainty, but the broader economy and corporate earnings remain resilient. Over the coming quarters, earnings growth should improve and reflect in stock prices.

Foreign investors may move in and out tactically, but they cannot remain structurally underweight on India for long. Over the past couple of years, flows have fluctuated, but India’s long-term growth story remains strong.



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UP govt scraps ₹25,000 crore Puch AI MoU over financial, disclosure gaps

UP govt scraps ₹25,000 crore Puch AI MoU over financial, disclosure gaps


(file photo)Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath
| Photo Credit:
ANI

The Uttar Pradesh government has cancelled its proposed ₹25,000 crore MoU with Puch AI after due diligence flagged concerns over the start-up’s financial capacity and lack of credible backing.

In a post on X on Thursday, Invest UP said the agreement, signed on March 23, was reviewed as per State protocols, but the company failed to furnish the required details within the specified timelines. Following checks revealed insufficient net worth and weak financial linkages relative to the scale of the proposed project, prompting the government to terminate the MoU in the interest of transparency and probity.

The agreement, announced on Monday by Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, included the development of AI parks, data centre infrastructure, AI Commons, and an AI university in the State. However, it quickly drew scrutiny from industry observers, who questioned the execution capability of the less-than-a-year-old start-up, which lacks detailed public financial disclosures. Media reports indicate the company posted revenue of about ₹42.9 lakh as of March 31, 2025.

Amid the concerns, the Chief Minister eventually clarified that the MoU—signed via Invest UP—was non-binding and exploratory in nature, with any further approvals contingent on detailed evaluation. He added that proposals failing to meet the required criteria would be terminated.

Founded in 2025, Puch AI offers a voice-first AI assistant, including a WhatsApp-based interface focused on Indic languages and regional accents. The platform provides features such as image and video generation, voice assistance, fact-checking, and multilingual support.

Published on March 27, 2026



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SEBI clears six IPOs, one withdrawn

SEBI clears six IPOs, one withdrawn


SEBI has cleared six initial public offerings including those of Vishvaraj Environment, Prasol Chemicals, SAEL Industries, NoPaperForms Solutions, Symbiotec Pharmalab and Shah Investor’s Home, while Jindal Supreme (India) withdrew its proposed IPO.

Vishvaraj Environment, a leading developer of water utility and wastewater management projects, plans to raise ₹2,250 crore through the proposed IPO.

The company’s initial public offering comprises a fresh equity issuance of ₹1,250 crore and an offer for sale (OFS) of ₹1,000 crore by the promoter selling shareholder, Premier Financial Services.

The company plans to use proceeds to repay loans of ₹545 crore and fund capex for three projects of ₹415 crore, besides general corporate purposes.

JM Financial, Axis Capital and DAM Capital Advisors are the book-running lead managers to the issue.

Symbiotec Pharmalab will raise ₹2,180 crore through its IPO comprising fresh issue of equity shares worth up to ₹150 crore and an offer for sale of up to ₹2,030 crore by existing promoters and investors. The funds will be used for debt repayment and general corporate purposes.

Prasol Chemicals plans to raise ₹500 crore through IPO. The company will issue fresh equity shares of ₹80 crore and an offer for sale of up to ₹420 crore by existing shareholders.

Info Edge-backed NoPaperForms Solutions will raise ₹500 crore to ₹600 crore through fresh equity issuance and offer for sale. The SaaS platform provider filed its draft papers for the IPO last November.

The Shah Investor’s Home IPO consists of a fresh issue of 54 lakh equity shares. The company provides a comprehensive suite of services including mutual fund distribution, margin funding, and stock lending and borrowing.

Published on March 27, 2026



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The Latest Fixed Deposit Interest Rates: Mar 27, 2026

The Latest Fixed Deposit Interest Rates: Mar 27, 2026


A fixed deposit is a trusted way to maintain liquidity and earn an assured rate of return on the capital. Interest rates vary from one bank to another. Let’s take a comprehensive look at the interest rates on offer today.

Bank <1
year
1 to 2
years
2 to 3
years
3 to 5
years
w.e.f
FOREIGN BANKS
DBS Bank 6 6.6 6.4 6.4 Mar 25
Deutsche Bank 5 7 6.25 6.25 Jul 25
HSBC 4.1 5.5 5.35 5.5 Jul 17
Standard Chartered 5.75 6.6 6.5 6.5 Aug 29
INDIAN: PUBLIC SECTOR BANKS
Bank of Maharashtra 5.25 6.65 5.25 5.25 Jan 31
Bank of Baroda 6 6.6 6.5 6.4 Jun 12
Bank of India 5.5 6.6 6.3 6.25 Mar 02
Canara Bank 5.5 6.6 6.25 6.25 Mar 17
Central Bank of India 5 6.2 6.25 6 Dec 10
Indian Bank 4.75 6.6 6.15 6.05 Mar 03
Indian Overseas Bank 5.5 6.6 6.4 6.1 Dec 15
Punjab National Bank 5.6 6.6 6.3 6.1 Feb 24
Punjab & Sind Bank 4.85 6.75 6 5.95 Feb 16
State Bank of India 5.9 6.45 6.4 6.3 Dec 15
UCO Bank 6.3 6.45 6.1 6 Dec 11
Union Bank 6.1 6.6 6.25 6 Feb 11
INDIAN: PRIVATE SECTOR BANKS
Axis Bank 5.75 6.45 6.45 6.45 Mar 27
Bandhan Bank 4.20 7 7.25 7.25 Mar 25
CSB Bank 6.75 7 6.5 5.75 Sep 10
City Union Bank 6.25 7 6.5 6.25 Mar 11
DCB Bank 6.5 7.15 7.15 7.15 Mar 19
Dhanlaxmi Bank 5.25 6.95 6.25 7 Mar 26
Federal Bank 6 6.7 6.75 6.4 Mar 12
HDFC Bank 5.75 6.45 6.45 6.5 Mar 06
ICICI Bank 5.5 6.3 6.45 6.5 Mar 27
IDBI Bank 5.8 6.45 6.5 6.35 Feb 23
IDFC First Bank 6.5 7.4 7 7 Mar 19
IndusInd Bank 6.25 7 6.9 6.65 Sep 25
J & K Bank 6 6.75 7.25 6.65 Feb 11
Karnataka Bank 5.75 6.65 6.15 6.15 Aug 01
Kotak Bank 6 6.7 6.7 6.4 Feb 11
Karur Vysya Bank 6.65 6.55 6.55 6.55 Sep 26
RBL Bank 6.05 7.2 7.2 7 Sep 24
South Indian Bank 5.9 6.8 6.2 6.2 Mar 21
Tamilnad Mercantile Bank 6.4 7.1 6.6 6.6 Jan 08
TNSC Bank 6.85 7.6 7.1 6.85 NA
Yes Bank 6.5 7 7 7 Mar 05
SMALL FINANCE BANKS
AU Small Finance Bank 6.35 6.9 7.1 7 Jan 12
Equitas Small Finance Bank 6.35 6.9 7.4 7 Mar 02
ESAF Small Finance Bank 4.75 8 7.25 6 Mar 01
Jana Small Finance Bank 7 8 7.5 7.77 Mar 23
Suryoday Small Finance Bank 6.5 7.6 7.25 7.9 6-Mar
Utkarsh Small Finance Bank 6 7.5 7.5 7.25 Dec 01
Ujjivan Small Finance Bank 6 7.45 7.25 7.2 5-Aug

Compiled by BankBazaar.com from respective bank’s website as on the date mentioned above. Note that fixed interest rates may be subject to a revision after a specified tenure depending on the bank’s T&Cs.

Some banks/FIs allow fixed rate only for a definite period and thereafter prevailing floating rates are made applicable.



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ईरान वॉर ने निकाला रुपये का दम, डॉलर के मुकाबले टूटकर 94.82 पर पहुंचा, और कितना गिरेगा?

ईरान वॉर ने निकाला रुपये का दम, डॉलर के मुकाबले टूटकर 94.82 पर पहुंचा, और कितना गिरेगा?


Dollar vs Rupee: मिडिल ईस्ट में बढ़ते तनाव और कच्चे तेल की उछलती कीमतों के बीच भारतीय रुपया शुक्रवार को बड़ी गिरावट के साथ अपने अब तक के सबसे निचले स्तर 94.82 प्रति डॉलर पर पहुंच गया. अंतरबैंक विदेशी मुद्रा बाजार में रुपया 94.18 पर खुला था, लेकिन दिनभर दबाव में रहने के बाद यह और टूटकर रिकॉर्ड स्तर पर बंद हुआ. इससे पहले यह 93.96 के स्तर तक गिर चुका था, जो उस समय का निचला स्तर था.

मुख्य विपक्षी दल Indian National Congress ने रुपये में आई इस ऐतिहासिक गिरावट को लेकर केंद्र सरकार पर निशाना साधा है. कांग्रेस ने प्रधानमंत्री नरेन्द्र मोदी का एक पुराना वीडियो साझा करते हुए मौजूदा स्थिति पर सवाल उठाए और सरकार की आर्थिक नीतियों की आलोचना की.

पार्टी का कहना है कि रुपये की कमजोरी देश की आर्थिक स्थिति और नीति प्रबंधन पर सवाल खड़े करती है. वहीं, सरकार की ओर से आमतौर पर ऐसे मामलों में वैश्विक कारणों जैसे कच्चे तेल की कीमतों में उछाल, डॉलर की मजबूती और भू-राजनीतिक तनाव को प्रमुख वजह बताया जाता है.

रुपये में रिकॉर्ड गिरावट

इस गिरावट की मुख्य वजह Foreign Institutional Investors की लगातार बिकवाली, डॉलर की मजबूती और Middle East में जारी भू-राजनीतिक तनाव को माना जा रहा है. वैश्विक स्तर पर डॉलर की मजबूती भी रुपये पर दबाव बना रही है, जहां डॉलर इंडेक्स छह प्रमुख मुद्राओं के मुकाबले बढ़त में बना हुआ है.

घरेलू शेयर बाजारों में भी इस अस्थिरता का असर साफ दिखा. BSE Sensex 1,690 अंक से ज्यादा यानी 2.2 प्रतिशत टूटकर 73,583 के स्तर पर बंद हुआ, जबकि Nifty 50 में भी करीब 487 अंकों की गिरावट दर्ज की गई. बाजार में यह कमजोरी विदेशी निवेशकों की निकासी और वैश्विक अनिश्चितता के कारण देखने को मिली. भारी बिकवाली की वजह से निवेशकों के करीब 8.5 लाख करोड़ रुपये डूब गए.

शेयर बाजार में गिरावट

वहीं, अंतरराष्ट्रीय बाजार में Brent Crude Oil की कीमतें बढ़कर करीब 109.8 डॉलर प्रति बैरल तक पहुंच गई हैं, जिससे भारत जैसे आयात-निर्भर देशों पर अतिरिक्त दबाव पड़ रहा है. कच्चे तेल की ऊंची कीमतें न केवल महंगाई बढ़ाती हैं, बल्कि चालू खाता घाटा और मुद्रा पर भी नकारात्मक असर डालती हैं.

गौरतलब है कि जब भी भारतीय रुपया कमजोर होता है, तो इसका सीधा असर महंगाई पर पड़ता है. आयातित वस्तुएं महंगी हो जाती हैं, खासकर कच्चा तेल, जिससे पेट्रोल-डीजल और रोजमर्रा की चीजों के दाम बढ़ सकते हैं. इससे सरकार का राजकोषीय घाटा भी बढ़ता है, क्योंकि सब्सिडी और आयात बिल दोनों पर दबाव आता है. इसके अलावा, विदेश में पढ़ाई करने वाले छात्रों के लिए खर्च बढ़ जाता है, क्योंकि उन्हें डॉलर में अधिक भुगतान करना पड़ता है.

हालांकि, रुपये में गिरावट का एक सकारात्मक पहलू भी है. इससे निर्यातकों को फायदा होता है, क्योंकि उन्हें US Dollar में भुगतान मिलता है और कमजोर रुपये के कारण उन्हें अधिक रुपये मिलते हैं. इससे आईटी, फार्मा और टेक्सटाइल जैसे निर्यात-आधारित सेक्टर्स को बढ़ावा मिल सकता है. यानी, जब तक पश्चिम एशिया में तनाव कम नहीं होता और कच्चे तेल की कीमतों में स्थिरता नहीं आती, तब तक रुपये पर दबाव बने रहने की आशंका जताई जा रही है.

ये भी पढ़ें: मिडिल ईस्ट के बीच 200 डॉलर तक पहुंच सकता है कच्चा तेल, नई वॉर्निंग से वैश्विक बाजार में हड़कंप



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Gold rises on dip-buying but heads for fourth weekly loss

Gold rises on dip-buying but heads for fourth weekly loss


​Gold rose on Friday on bargain-hunting but ⁠remained on track for a fourth straight weekly loss, as the US-Israel war with Iran stoked inflation concerns, lifted the dollar and reinforced expectations of ‌higher interest rates.

Spot gold rose 1.1 per cent to $4,425.39 per ounce as of 1018 GMT. Gold was set for ‌a weekly loss of 1.4 per cent so far having touched a ‌four-month ⁠low of $4,097.99 on Monday. US gold futures for April ⁠delivery gained 1 per cent to $4,421.30.

“The initial knee-jerk liquidity needs have been met, and now gold is able to perform,” said Nitesh Shah, commodity strategist at WisdomTree. “Savvy investors ​have been using the ‌dip in prices as an opportunity to build.”

Brent crude rose to nearly $110 a barrel, even as US President Donald Trump extended a pause in attacks on Iran’s energy plants for 10 ‌days.

The US has also sent thousands of troops to ​West Asia, with Trump weighing whether to use ground forces to seize Iran’s strategic oil hub ⁠of Kharg Island.

Since the war began, oil prices have surged, fuelling inflation concerns that would typically support bullion as an inflation hedge. ‌However, higher interest rates tend to weigh on non-yielding gold.

Traders have priced out any chance of US rate cuts in 2026 and see a 40 per cent% chance of a rate hike by year-end, per CME Group’s FedWatch Tool. The market was expecting two cuts before the war began.

“Bullion is trying to rebound after ‌the recent selloff, but it is clear that we will remain in volatile ​territory until there is more clarity about the US-Iran situation,” said Swissquote analyst Carlo Alberto De Casa.

Softer ⁠bullion prices attracted some buying in India this week, though many ⁠held off in anticipation of a further price drop.

Meanwhile, the Turkish Central Bank’s gold reserves posted their largest weekly ‌drop since August 2018 amid fallout from the Iran war.

Spot silver rose 1.1 per cent to $68.74 per ounce. Spot platinum gained ​2.5 per cent to $1,872.87, while palladium rose 1.7 per cent to $1,376.66.

Published on March 27, 2026



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