Rajive Kumaraswami to be MD and CEO of Chola MS General Insurance

Rajive Kumaraswami to be MD and CEO of Chola MS General Insurance


The Board of Directors of Cholamandalam MS General Insurance (Chola MS) has appointed Rajive Kumaraswami as Managing Director Designate with effect from April 22, 2026. 

Kumaraswami will succeed V Suryanarayananan as Managing Director and CEO of Chola MS from June 1, 2026. 

Suryanarayanan will retire from the Chola MS on May 31, 2026 after two decades with the company and almost thirty years with the Murugappa Group. 

“Under his leadership, Chola MS expanded and diversified its product portfolio, strengthened distribution partnerships, deepened its use of technology, built capable and engaged teams, and further reinforced governance practices,” the Murugappa Group company said in a statement.

Kumaraswami was most recently the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Magma General Insurance Company.  

He began his career with ICICI Limited in project finance and subsequently joined ICICI Lombard General Insurance Company. He was also the Chief Representative for the Indian subcontinent at SCOR SE, the world’s fifth largest reinsurer.  Kumaraswami is an alumnus of the University of Delhi. He is a Fellow Member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India and an Associate Member of the Institute of Cost Accountants of India. 

Published on April 10, 2026



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Greenlight open market buybacks, but stay cautious

Greenlight open market buybacks, but stay cautious


In a recent consultation paper, the market regulator SEBI proposed re-enabling buybacks of shares and other such securities through stock exchanges.

India Inc’s open market buyback offers are set to resume after a year-long pause, following SEBI’s decision to revive the route.

Several industry and market veterans had flagged concerns over the suspension of open-market buyback . Former Infosys CFO and board member TV Mohandas Pai was particularly vocal, urging the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) to allow listed entities to resume buybacks to support stock prices and stabilise markets amid sharp corrections.

In a recent consultation paper, the market regulator proposed re-enabling buybacks of shares and other such securities through stock exchanges.

Change of stance

“Under the open market buyback through stock exchange, there existed a possibility that the entire purchase order of the company could get matched with the sale order placed by one or very few shareholders. There is also a possibility that other shareholders who wanted to participate in the buyback could remain deprived of such opportunity,” SEBI said.

This was viewed as contrary to the principle of equitable shareholder treatment, as acceptance was a matter of chance due to the price-time matching mechanism, rather than a fair and proportionate process.

Another major concern relating to buyback, according to SEBI, was the taxation framework. “At that time, taxation of buy-back was governed by Section 115QA of the Income Tax Act, 1961, which required the company to pay buy-back tax, with no tax liabilities in the hands of shareholders on gains made by successful participants. While some shareholders could offload their entire shareholding through matching orders without paying tax, others who wanted to participate but whose offers did not match remained deprived of tax exemptions, rendering the buy-back from open market through stock exchange inequitable from a taxation perspective,” the regulator noted.

However, the buyback offer through the tender route via bourses continued to be available for corporates, with cash-rich companies preferring this mechanism to return capital.

Buybacks dwindle

Following the restriction on open market buybacks, the number of such offers fell sharply.

In 2022, 58 companies announced buybacks, while both 2023 and 2024 saw 47 each. However, the number plummeted to 14 in 2025, and only three launched the buyback so far in 2026 despite a sharp fall in share prices. Notable companies that used the oprn market route in recent years included IEX, Emami, Natco Pharma, One 97 Communications, Bajaj Auto and ACC.

SEBI is now considering reintroducing the option for companies to buy back their shares directly from the secondary market following changes in the taxation framework that address previous imbalances.

“Accordingly, buy-back of shares or specified securities from open market through stock exchange may be re-introduced, subject to appropriate regulatory provisions and compliance mechanism. The re-introduction of this method of buy-back would provide companies with an additional mechanism for undertaking buy-back, while ensuring equitable opportunity and treatment of taxation for public shareholders,” it further stated.

So far, heavy selling by foreign portfolio investors has largely been absorbed by retail investors and mutual funds. If permitted, corporate buybacks could emerge as a key stabiliser. Their buying would also signal management’s optimism in the company’s future, thereby strengthening overall shareholder sentiment.

Free market proponents never agree with any regulatory intervention in market movements, but many now argue that the time is right to reintroduce the scheme, given SEBI’s view that recent tax changes ensure equitable treatment. However, the regulator must remain vigilant to prevent potential stock price manipulation by some greedy promoters.

Published on April 10, 2026



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गुजरात: जामनगर में ‘वाइल्डलाइफ एंड वेटरनरी यूनिवर्सिटी’ स्थापित करेगा अनंत अंबानी का ‘वनतारा’

गुजरात: जामनगर में ‘वाइल्डलाइफ एंड वेटरनरी यूनिवर्सिटी’ स्थापित करेगा अनंत अंबानी का ‘वनतारा’


रिलायंस इंडस्ट्रीज के एग्जीक्यूटिव डायरेक्टर अनंत अंबानी की ओर से स्थापित वन्यजीव संरक्षण पहल वंतारा ने गुजरात के जामनगर में ‘वंतारा यूनिवर्सिटी’ स्थापित करने की योजना का अनावरण किया है. वन्यजीव संरक्षण और पशु चिकित्सा विज्ञान को समर्पित दुनिया के पहले इंटीग्रेटेड ग्लोबल यूनिवर्सिटी के रूप में प्रचारित इस संस्थान का टारगेट विशिष्ट शिक्षा में एक नया मानक स्थापित करने का है.

यह यूनिवर्सिटी पशु कल्याण, वैज्ञानिक नवाचार और दीर्घकालिक संरक्षण के सिद्धांतों पर आधारित है. यह भारत की ज्ञान परंपराओं से प्रेरणा लेते हुए पशु चिकित्सा, वन्यजीव देखभाल और संरक्षण के क्षेत्र में भविष्य के पेशेवरों को तैयार करने की कोशिश करती है.

प्राचीन नालंदा यूनिवर्सिटी से लेते हैं प्रेरणा- अंबानी

इस पहल पर बोलते हुए अंबानी ने कहा कि यह यूनिवर्सिटी संकट में फंसे जानवरों को देखने के उनके व्यक्तिगत अनुभवों और देखभाल प्रणालियों में कमियों को पहचानने से प्रेरित है. उन्होंने आगे कहा कि यह संस्थान प्राचीन नालंदा यूनिवर्सिटी की भावना और “आ नो भद्राः क्रतवो यंतु विश्वतः” यानी ‘सभी दिशाओं से हमारे पास कल्याणकारी विचार आएं’ के दर्शन से प्रेरणा लेता है, ताकि जीवन की रक्षा के लिए प्रतिबद्ध पीढ़ी का निर्माण किया जा सके.

स्थापना स्थल का प्रतीकात्मक डिज़ाइन इस विज़न को दर्शाता है. नालंदा से जुड़ी प्राचीन विंध्य भूगर्भीय संरचना से प्राप्त ‘बिजोलिया सैंडस्टोन’ के दो ब्लॉकों को इस परिवेश में शामिल किया गया था, जो भारत की सीखने की स्थायी परंपरा को रेखांकित करते हैं.

हिंदू रीति-रिवाजों के अनुसार आयोजित स्थापना समारोह में शिक्षा जगत, संरक्षण, विज्ञान और सार्वजनिक जीवन की प्रमुख हस्तियां शामिल हुईं, जिनमें अंबानी के शिक्षक और गुरु भी थे. एक मुख्य अनुष्ठान में भारत भर के जैव विविधता से समृद्ध क्षेत्रों, जंगलों और आर्द्रभूमि से लेकर शुष्क क्षेत्रों और हिमालयी परिदृश्यों से इकट्ठा की गई मिट्टी, जल और पत्थर रखे गए, जो देश की पारिस्थितिक विविधता और प्राकृतिक विरासत में यूनिवर्सिटी की जड़ों का प्रतिनिधित्व करते हैं.

दृष्टिकोण और वैश्विक शैक्षणिक महत्वाकांक्षाएं

वंतारा यूनिवर्सिटी को एक बहुविषय केंद्र के रूप में डिजाइन किया गया है, जो वास्तविक दुनिया के संरक्षण अभ्यासों को शैक्षणिक शिक्षा के साथ जोड़ता है. वंतारा के परिचालन अनुभवों का लाभ उठाते हुए संस्थान का लक्ष्य क्षेत्रीय अनुभव को संरचित शैक्षणिक कार्यक्रमों, पेशेवर प्रशिक्षण और वैश्विक स्तर पर प्रासंगिक रूपरेखाओं में बदलना है.

यूनिवर्सिटी वन्यजीव चिकित्सा और सर्जरी, पोषण, व्यवहार विज्ञान, आनुवंशिकी, महामारी विज्ञान, वन हेल्थ, संरक्षण नीति और पशु आवास डिजाइन जैसे विषयों में स्नातक, स्नातकोत्तर, फेलोशिप और विशिष्ट पाठ्यक्रम देने योजना बना रही है. ये कार्यक्रम वंतारा की मौजूदा क्षमताओं के हिसाब से विशेष कॉलेजों में आयोजित किए जाएंगे.

सामाजिक और आर्थिक रूप से पिछड़े छात्रों की मदद के लिए स्कॉलरशिप शुरू की जाएगी, जिससे संस्थान की सुविधाओं तक व्यापक पहुंच सुनिश्चित हो सके.

परिसर में उन्नत शैक्षणिक और क्लिनिकल बुनियादी ढांचे के साथ-साथ अंतर्राष्ट्रीय सहयोग और आवासीय सुविधाएं भी होंगी. यह वन्यजीव स्वास्थ्य, संरक्षण प्रथाओं और पशु कल्याण को मजबूत करने पर केंद्रित क्रिया-उन्मुख अनुसंधान को प्राथमिकता देगा. शैक्षणिक मॉडल प्राकृतिक पारिस्थितिकी तंत्र को वैज्ञानिक देखभाल और दीर्घकालिक प्रबंधन रणनीतियों के साथ जोड़ते हुए, ‘इन-सिटू’ और ‘एक्स-सिटू’ दोनों प्रकार के संरक्षण को एकीकृत करेगा.

संरक्षण शिक्षा और इनोवेशन के लिए कोशिशें

यूनिवर्सिटी का शुभारंभ भारत में संरक्षण-केंद्रित शिक्षा के विस्तार की व्यापक कोशिशों का हिस्सा है. समारोह के दौरान वंतारा ने ‘वंतारा यूनिवर्सिटी फाउंडिंग फेलोज’ कार्यक्रम और ‘एवरी लाइफ मैटर्स’ स्कॉलरशिप जैसी पहलों की घोषणा की, साथ ही ज्ञान को सुरक्षा के साथ जोड़ने का आह्वान किया.

एक शैक्षणिक संस्थान से कहीं बढ़कर वंतारा यूनिवर्सिटी एक ऐसे दृष्टिकोण को दर्शाती है, जो वैज्ञानिक कठोरता के साथ करुणा को जोड़ता है. इसका घोषित दृष्टिकोण इस बात पर जोर देता है कि वन्यजीवों की सुरक्षा के लिए केवल जागरूकता ही नहीं, बल्कि मजबूत प्रणालियों, कुशल पेशेवरों और निरंतर संस्थागत समर्थन की भी जरूरत है.



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Sharp fall in prices hit gold ETF inflows in March

Sharp fall in prices hit gold ETF inflows in March


After the steady rally in recent times, the sudden fall in precious metal prices made investors trim down their investment in gold and silver exchange traded funds.

Inflows into gold ETFs fell by 56 per cent to ₹2,266 crore against the record inflow of ₹5,255 crore logged in February as the sudden fall in prices scared investors.

The gold ETFs have mopped-up an investment of ₹24,040 crore in January supported by strong risk aversion, portfolio rebalancing and momentum in gold prices.

Despite the month-on-month slowdown, the category had a strong quarterly inflow of ₹31,561 crore in March quarter. The trend suggests that gold continues to be used both as a tactical hedge and as a strategic portfolio allocation.

The assets under management of gold ETFs were down at ₹1.71 lakh crore (₹1.83 lakh crore) last month due to mark-to-market loss, according to the Association of Mutual Funds in India data released on Friday.

Nehal Meshram, Senior Analyst, Morningstar Investment Research India, said that while the pace of inflows has moderated sequentially, investor interest in gold-backed products remained positive.

The positive flows in March suggest that gold continues to retain investor interest as a diversification tool amid market uncertainty and macro volatility. Gold ETFs remain appealing because they offer a metal liquid, transparent, and convenient way to gain exposure to gold without the frictions of holding physical gold, he added.

Gold prices fell 8 per cent to ₹146,126 in March as investors shifted their bets to crude oil from the yellow metal.

The LBMA gold prices fell 12 per cent in March to $4,608 an ounce, its weakest month since June 2013.

On the other hand, silver ETFs outflow moderated to ₹684 crore against outflow of ₹826 crore in February. The silver AUM stood at ₹79,806 crore (₹91,975 crore) with the sharp fall in prices.

Nitin Agrawal, CEO, Mutual Funds, InCred Money, said that moderation in Gold ETF flows points to a renewed optimism around equities.

The broader takeaway, he said, is that despite industry AUM decline, investor confidence remains intact on equity with a more diversified approach of investing.

Looking ahead, precious metals could find support from elevated geopolitical tensions, including Israel’s continued operations in Lebanon and ongoing risks in the Strait of Hormuz, even as efforts towards regional stability persist, analysts said.

Published on April 10, 2026



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PMMY at 11: Funding the unfunded, powering MSME-Led growth

PMMY at 11: Funding the unfunded, powering MSME-Led growth


Ashok Chandra, MD & CEO, Punjab National Bank
| Photo Credit:
cueapi

When Prime Minister launched the Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana on April 8, 2015, the stated mission was simple: “Funding the Unfunded.” Eleven years later, the scheme has evolved into one of the world’s largest micro-credit programmes, fundamentally altering how India’s smallest entrepreneurs access formal finance establishing itself as a critical pillar in the nation’s financial inclusion architecture.

As of March 2026, PMMY has disbursed loans worth ₹40.07 lakh crore through more than 57.79 crore accounts. The scale of disbursement—exceeding the GDP of many mid-sized economies—reflects both the latent demand among micro-entrepreneurs and the institutional capacity built to service it.

The scheme emerged from a recognition that India’s micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSME) sector, which contributes approximately 30 per cent of GDP and 45 per cent of exports, remained chronically underserved by formal credit channels. Prior to PMMY, an estimated 5.77 crore micro-units operated outside the formal banking system, relying on informal moneylenders charging usurious rates or foregoing expansion altogether due to capital constraints.

PMMY operates through a three-tier institutional framework comprising the Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency Ltd. (MUDRA), Member Lending Institutions (MLIs) including public sector banks, private banks, regional rural banks, microfinance institutions, and non-banking financial companies, and the beneficiaries themselves. This architecture enables credit flow from formal financial institutions to the last mile without requiring borrowers to pledge collateral — a structural barrier that had historically excluded millions from institutional finance. The scheme has helped strengthen local businesses, supply chains, and rural economies. This structure has enabled scale, reflected in the steady rise in sanctions from ₹1.37 lakh crore in FY16 to ₹5.74 lakh crore in FY26.

The scheme’s graduated loan categories have proven instrumental in enabling enterprise growth. The original three tiers — Shishu (up to ₹50,000), Kishor (₹50,000 to ₹5 lakh), and Tarun (₹5 lakh to ₹10 lakh) — were designed to match credit availability with business maturity. Later on the October 2024

introduction of Tarun Plus, extending loan limits to ₹20 lakh signals a policy intent to support graduation, shifting the focus from subsistence-level activity to enterprise expansion.

Perhaps more significant than aggregate disbursement figures is the scheme’s reach into previously excluded demographics. Over 12 crore accounts belong to first-time borrowers, underscoring PMMY’s role in creating new entrepreneurs rather than merely refinancing existing businesses.

Women have emerged as the predominant beneficiaries, holding two third share in the number of loan accounts sanctioned. Further, more than half of MUDRA loan account holders belong to Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Classes— a distribution that speaks to the scheme’s effectiveness in reaching economically weaker sections.

Public sector banks have served as the primary delivery mechanism, leveraging their extensive branch networks to reach semi-urban and rural borrowers. The operational efficiency of the lending ecosystem is evident in the narrow gap between sanctioned and disbursed amounts — ₹5.74 lakh crore sanctioned versus ₹5.65 lakh crore disbursed in FY25-26 alone.

The role of Digital cannot be undermined here as the integration has further strengthened the delivery architecture. Platforms such as the Jan Samarth portal have streamlined application and disbursement processes, while credit guarantee mechanisms administered by National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company have mitigated lender risk. These developments are consistent with broader trends in India’s financial system towards digitisation and risk-sharing frameworks.

There are more than 7.94 crore . registered MSME units on Udyam portal out of which more than 7.88 are micro units and as per estimates MSME sector still have a substantial ₹30 lakh crore addressable credit gap. Bridging this gap is key to unlocking India’s full entrepreneurial potential.

Looking ahead to Viksit Bharat 2047, PMMY’s role will be pivotal in realising a $30-trillion-plus economy anchored in formal, resilient MSMEs. With formalisation accelerating via Udyam and digital public infrastructure, the scheme can evolve from micro-credit provider to a full-spectrum enabler—facilitating equity linkages, skill-credit convergence, and green financing for sustainable units. Policy priorities include expanding guarantee covers under CGTMSE, real-time data portals for performance tracking, targeted awareness in low-penetration regions, and incentives for lenders to support higher-ticket, repeat borrowers.

Reducing the residual credit gap through account aggregator frameworks and ONDC integration will be critical. As India transitions from job-seeker to job-creator economy, PMMY’s legacy of trust-based lending offers a replicable model: when the state guarantees potential over collateral, entrepreneurship flourishes at the grassroots. Sustained analytical rigour in monitoring outcomes will ensure the scheme not only survives but drives the next phase of inclusive, self-reliant growth.

After 11 years, PMMY has evolved into a cornerstone of India’s inclusive growth strategy. By enabling millions of small entrepreneurs — especially women and marginalised groups. It has powered MSME-led development, strengthened grassroots economies and advanced the vision of Atmanirbhar Bharat.

The writer is the MD & CEO of Punjab National Bank

Published on April 10, 2026



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Sa-Dhan’s new microfinance sector guardrails to focus on early risk identification, stronger governance frameworks

Sa-Dhan’s new microfinance sector guardrails to focus on early risk identification, stronger governance frameworks


The RBI-recognised Self-Regulatory Organisation (SRO) also unveiled HR Standards to be adopted by the micro-finance sector
| Photo Credit:
Naturecreator

Sa-Dhan on Friday released the third edition of its microfinance sector guardrails, which place emphasis on data-led decision-making, early risk identification, stronger governance frameworks and customer-centric practices.

The RBI-recognised Self-Regulatory Organisation (SRO) for the microfinance and impact finance sector also unveiled HR Standards to be adopted by the micro-finance sector so as to bring more uniformity and efficiency in acquiring and managing the workforce

The new sectoral guidelines — Sankalp 3.0 — has been designed as a structured, outcome-driven framework that balances regulatory expectations with industry ownership, according to a Sa-Dhan statement.

“The guidelines focus on ensuring that growth in the sector is sustainable, responsible, and aligned with long-term customer well-being. It further introduces a more participatory approach to policy adoption through a consultative process involving multiple stakeholders and based on the study outcomes,” the SRO said.

Sa-Dhan observed that the new set of guardrails come in the wake of an improved situation in the micro-finance sector with regards to collection efficiency and better asset quality. However, it decided to continue the existing guardrails — Sankalp 1.0 and Sankalp 2.0 — for some more time; so that a better recovery of the sector is possible.

Sankalp 1.0 (July 2024) and Sankalp 2.0 (April 2025) focused on stabilising portfolios, promoting responsible lending, strengthening credit discipline and improving the use of credit bureau data.

Speaking a Sa-Dhan conclave, Satish Marathe, Member, Central Board of RBI, suggested that the RBI should consider constituting a steering committee for micro-finance so as to have regular interactions between the two and sort out any issues being faced.

Jiji Mammen, Executive Director and CEO of Sa-Dhan, said, “Sankalp 3.0 is a natural progression of the journey we started with the earlier editions. While Sankalp 1.0 and 2.0 helped stabilise the sector and build discipline, the current environment demands a sharper and more forward-looking approach.

“The new guardrails focus on early identification of risks, stronger governance and deeper customer protection. Our aim is to ensure that the sector grows responsibly while continuing to serve its core purpose of financial inclusion. Sankalp 3.0 reflects the collective thinking of the industry and provides a practical roadmap for institutions to navigate current challenges with confidence.”

K Paul Thomas, Chairman of Sa-Dhan and Managing Director & CEO of ESAF Small Finance Bank, noted that the microfinance sector has shown resilience over the years, but it must continue to evolve with changing realities. So, Sankalp 3.0 is an important step in strengthening the sector’s foundation.

“Sankalp 3.0 brings together regulation, data, and industry experience to create a balanced framework for growth. By focusing on governance, transparency, and customer well-being, these guardrails will help build greater trust and long-term sustainability in the sector,” he said.

Published on April 10, 2026



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