RBI Guv calls for sound underwriting standards in meeting with NBFC heads

RBI Guv calls for sound underwriting standards in meeting with NBFC heads


RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra
| Photo Credit:
PTI/KUNAL PATIL

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Sanjay Malhotra on Monday called on non-bank lenders to adopt sound underwriting standards and close monitoring of asset quality in meeting with heads of non-banking financial companies (NBFCs).

The Governor stressed on the criticality of customer-centricity, ethical conduct and responsible lending along with prompt grievance redressal for preserving confidence in the sector and supporting its orderly and sustainable development.

“As part of the Reserve Bank’s ongoing engagement with regulated entities, the Governor, Reserve Bank of India, today held a meeting in Mumbai with the Managing Directors and Chief Executive Officers (MDs & CEOs) of select NBFCs, including Government NBFCs, Housing Finance Companies (HFCs) and Microfinance Institutions,” the RBI said. The Reserve Bank had last held a similar meeting with NBFCs on February 13, 2025.

The participating entities together account for about 53 per cent of NBFC sector assets. Industry participation included the representatives of self-regulatory organisations, Sa-Dhan, the Micro Finance Institutions Network and the Finance Industry Development Council.

The meeting was also attended by Deputy Governors T Rabi Sankar, Swaminathan J, Poonam Gupta and SC Murmu, and the MD & CEO of the National Housing Bank, apart from other senior officers of the Reserve Bank.

Published on January 5, 2026



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अब देश में होंगी छप्परफाड़ नौकरियां, उद्योग जगत उठाने जा रहा ये बड़ा कदम

अब देश में होंगी छप्परफाड़ नौकरियां, उद्योग जगत उठाने जा रहा ये बड़ा कदम


उद्योग जगत के दिग्गजों के एक समूह ने सोमवार को ‘हंड्रेड मिलियन जॉब्स’ (10 करोड़ नौकरियां) नामक एक राष्ट्रीय पहल की शुरुआत की, जिसका उद्देश्य अगले एक दशक में भारत में 10 करोड़ रोजगार के अवसर पैदा करना है. यह पहल ऐसे समय में शुरू की गई है, जब तेज आर्थिक वृद्धि के बावजूद देश अपर्याप्त रोजगार सृजन की चुनौती से जूझ रहा है.

आयोजकों के अनुसार, इस मुहिम की घोषणा सॉफ्टवेयर उद्योग निकाय नैसकॉम के सह-संस्थापक हरीश मेहता, वैश्विक उद्यमी नेटवर्क ‘द इंडस एंटरप्रेन्योर्स’ (टीआईई) के संस्थापक ए जे पटेल और सेंटर फॉर इनोवेशन इन पब्लिक पॉलिसी (सीआईपीपी) के संस्थापक के यतीश राजावत ने की.

संस्थापकों ने कहा कि भारत में कार्यशील आयु की आबादी हर साल लगभग 1.2 करोड़ की दर से बढ़ रही है, जबकि विनिर्माण जैसे पारंपरिक रोजगार क्षेत्र अपेक्षित गति से विस्तार नहीं कर पा रहे हैं. देश के जनसांख्यिकीय लाभांश का पूरा लाभ उठाने के लिए हर साल 80 से 90 लाख नई नौकरियों का सृजन जरूरी है. हालांकि भारत दुनिया की सबसे तेजी से बढ़ती प्रमुख अर्थव्यवस्थाओं में शामिल है, लेकिन रोजगार वृद्धि की रफ्तार उत्पादन विस्तार की तुलना में पीछे रही है.

स्वचालन और कृत्रिम बुद्धिमत्ता (एआई) के बढ़ते इस्तेमाल से कई क्षेत्रों में शुरुआती स्तर की नौकरियों पर दबाव बढ़ा है, जिससे यह चिंता गहराई है कि आर्थिक वृद्धि और रोजगार सृजन के बीच दूरी बढ़ सकती है.

‘हंड्रेड मिलियन जॉब्स’ मिशन उद्यमिता, कौशल विकास और श्रम-प्रधान उद्यमों को भारत की रोजगार रणनीति के केंद्र में रखता है. इस पहल का लक्ष्य रोजगार सृजन को आर्थिक वृद्धि का एक प्रमुख मानक बनाना है, ताकि विभिन्न क्षेत्रों में विकेंद्रीकृत, टिकाऊ और गरिमापूर्ण आजीविका सुनिश्चित की जा सके. हरीश मेहता ने कहा कि यह पहल उद्यमियों, सूक्ष्म, लघु एवं मध्यम उद्योगों और नियोक्ताओं को सशक्त बनाने का एक संगठित प्रयास है, जिसमें कौशल, उद्यम, डेटा और नीति के बीच बेहतर तालमेल के जरिए अगली पीढ़ी के लिए लचीली और सम्मानजनक आजीविका तैयार की जाएगी.

वहीं, ए जे पटेल ने कहा कि स्टार्टअप और छोटे उद्योग, जो भारत के सकल घरेलू उत्पाद में करीब 30 प्रतिशत का योगदान देते हैं और सबसे बड़े नियोक्ता हैं, उनका विस्तार महानगरों से बाहर भी होना चाहिए. उन्होंने जोर दिया कि अगर देश को हर साल 80-90 लाख नौकरियां पैदा करनी हैं, तो उद्यमिता को आम लोगों के लिए व्यवहारिक बनाने वाली ढांचागत बाधाओं को दूर करना होगा.

ये भी पढ़ें: ट्रंप की चेतावनी से बाजार सतर्क, 322 अंक लुढ़ककर सेंसेक्स बंद, जानें 6 जनवरी को कैसी रहेगी मार्केट की चाल



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Feed inflation biggest stress for dairy farmers as prices of all inputs are up, says Nova dairy’s Saluja

Feed inflation biggest stress for dairy farmers as prices of all inputs are up, says Nova dairy’s Saluja


Feed inflation is the biggest stress for dairy farmers with prices of corn, soybean meal, cottonseed cake and fodder all increasing, and small farmers unable to absorb the shock, said Ravin Saluja, Director at Nova Dairy (Sterling Agro Products).

“Milk prices don’t rise instantly to match feed costs, so the math becomes unviable. When farmers cut back on quality feed, fat and SNF (solids-not-fats) levels drop, and they get lower payouts as a result. So they’re squeezed both ways,” he told businessline in an online interaction. Over the past year,  many farmers struggle to maintain productivity, especially those with 4-6 animals. The situation calls for better fodder planning, more silage adoption, and timely government intervention during inflation peaks so that farmers don’t lose income stability, said Saluja.

Stating that feed inflation remains the biggest risk, he said even a small spike affects farmer viability. The second risk for the dairy farmer is erratic weather, which directly impacts fodder and productivity. The third is the growing issue of adulteration from unorganised players, which threatens consumer trust across the category.

Subsidising consumers

On the government subsidising milk consumers by capping prices, the Nova Dairy director said that though it looked good politically, it distorted the dairy value chain. “If MRPs (maximum retail prices) are capped, the pressure moves backwards to processors and ultimately to farmers. Milk is a highly cost-sensitive product, with feed, labour, transport, packaging and energy all influencing the final price,” he said.

Ravin Saluja, Director at Nova Dairy (Sterling Agro Products)

When the government sets retail prices too low, there’s nowhere to go when things get tough. Processors can’t pay more to buy what they need, and farmers feel the pinch. “If people need help, it makes more sense to support low-income consumers directly instead of trying to control the whole market. Price caps just weaken the supply chain, drag down quality, and scare off investment. The only thing that actually works is sustainable pricing; farmers and processors both need to earn enough to stay in business,” said Saluja.

However, he said the government could step in and help farmers out with subsidies or quick fixes when feed prices jump. “That gives some relief, but it doesn’t really tackle the real problems. Export restrictions may stabilise domestic availability, but they also block opportunities for processors when global markets are favourable,” the Nova Dairy director said.

What farmers need

 What farmers need is predictability in feed availability, veterinary support, and procurement systems that reward quality consistently. “One-off subsidies don’t fix the larger problems in the supply chain. Improving fodder production, strengthening village-level infrastructure and creating price transparency would protect farmers far better than temporary measures,” he said.

On the opportunity side, value-added dairy continues to grow rapidly in paneer, curd, flavoured milk, ghee and specialised powders. There is also strong potential in exports, especially if global prices remain stable. “Technology-led improvements in procurement, testing and traceability can lift efficiency across the chain. The industry is moving towards scale and quality, and organised players with strong systems will benefit the most,” said the Nova Dairy director.

Referring to structural reforms in the dairy industry, Saluja said 3 things are essential. The first is uniform quality-based pricing at the village level, measuring fat and SNF accurately, and paying farmers fairly for quality. The second is improving procurement infrastructure, such as chilling centres, testing facilities and transport networks, to reduce losses and middlemen involvement. The third is increasing processing capacity in surplus regions so farmers would not be forced to sell at distressed prices during the flush season.

Adulteration’s economic impact

“Better data on supply and demand will also help stabilise planning. Without structural discipline, farmers remain vulnerable to seasonal swings and irregular pricing,” the Nova Dairy director said.

Dwelling on adulteration, he said it was more common than people think. “Watering down milk is still the most frequent issue, but there are also cases where starch, urea, detergents, or neutralisers get added just to pass basic tests. This comes mostly from the unorganised supply chains where there is no proper testing, no cold chain and no accountability. The economic impact is huge,” said Saluja. 

As a result, genuine processors end up competing with artificially low input costs. Farmers also lose because adulterated supply pulls down procurement prices in some pockets. “Worst of all, it erodes consumer trust. When customers start doubting basic milk quality, the entire industry pays the price, not just the culprits,” he said.

Reality over surplus

Though India being “milk surplus” is largely a headline, he said the reality on the ground was uneven. “Surplus is seasonal and concentrated in a few states, while demand centres are elsewhere. Farmers don’t benefit from higher retail prices because their payout depends on local supply pressure and the capacity of plants around them,” said Saluja. 

For processors, packaging, logistics, energy and compliance costs keep rising, reflected in MRPs. Though retail prices go up, procurement prices don’t follow suit. “The core issue is that the value chain is not aligned. Until India invests more in processing and value-added capacity, farmers will continue facing low returns even in surplus years,” he said.

Regional imbalance in the dairy industry is real and has consequences. States such as Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and parts of Madhya Pradesh produce far more than they consume. But, large urban markets such as Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Bengaluru and Chennai depend heavily on incoming supply. 

Hurting mismatch

“This naturally keeps procurement prices lower in production-heavy belts and retail prices higher in demand-heavy zones. For processors, it means planning long routes, maintaining strong chilling points, and absorbing transport costs. For farmers, it means their payouts are influenced more by local availability than national demand<” he said. 

The processing capacity in surplus regions has to be boosted, and logistics between States will have to be sorted out. “Or else, this mismatch keeps hurting everyone involved,” said Saluja.

The Nova Dairy director said sustainability is not a special project anymore and has become a regular part of business. “We are using less water thanks to recycling systems and better cleaning processes. Energy use is down, too, since we’ve set up heat recovery, upgraded boilers, and brought in more automation,” he said. 

On the waste side, the effluent treatment plants are regularly upgraded, and strict norms on discharge are followed. “A lot of packaging is shifting to lighter and more recyclable formats. These steps make the plants more responsible, but they also improve cost stability and reliability. In dairy, sustainable practices actually strengthen long-term productivity,” said Saluja.

Published on January 5, 2026



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Sensex, Nifty drop from record highs as IT stocks tumble

Sensex, Nifty drop from record highs as IT stocks tumble


Market sentiment remained guarded as geopolitical tensions escalated following US military action in Venezuela over the weekend.

Markets surrendered early gains to close lower on Monday, with benchmark indices witnessing sharp profit booking after touching fresh all-time highs amid geopolitical concerns and weakness in heavyweight IT stocks. The Sensex declined 322.39 points, or 0.38 per cent, to close at 85,439.62, while the Nifty slipped 78.25 points, or 0.30 per cent, to settle at 26,250.30.

The Nifty 50 opened strong at 26,333.70 and scaled a fresh all-time high of 26,373 during early trade but failed to sustain elevated levels as selling pressure intensified through the session, dragging the index to an intraday low of 26,210. The Sensex opened at 85,640.05 against its previous close of 85,762.01.

“Indian equity markets touched fresh all-time highs but witnessed selling pressure from higher levels as investors turned cautious,” said Ashika Institutional Equities in its market commentary. “The benchmark Nifty index scaled a new lifetime high of 26,373 during the session; however, profit-taking emerged near the top, dragging the index lower to test the crucial 26,200 support zone by the close.”

IT stocks emerged as the biggest laggards, with Infosys declining 2.03 per cent to close at ₹1,607.10, HCL Technologies falling 1.85 per cent to ₹1,609.80, and Wipro dropping 1.71 per cent to ₹264.40. The IT index shed over 1.5 per cent, becoming the worst-performing sectoral index. HDFC Bank also weighed on sentiment, declining 1.87 per cent to ₹982.90, while ONGC fell 1.62 per cent to ₹237.56.

“Losses were led by IT heavyweights such as HCL Technologies, Infosys and Wipro, following cautionary brokerage commentary and concerns over potential US tariff actions,” noted Gaurav Garg, Research Analyst at Lemonn Markets Desk.

Market sentiment remained guarded as geopolitical tensions escalated following US military action in Venezuela over the weekend. “President Donald Trump’s renewed remarks on potential tariff hikes against Indian imports linked to India’s continued purchases of Russian oil added a layer of geopolitical caution to global markets, keeping risk appetite in check during today’s session,” said Ponmudi R, CEO of Enrich Money.

On the positive side, defence and realty stocks outperformed. Bharat Electronics surged 3.03 per cent to ₹415.35, emerging as the top gainer on the Nifty. Nestle India jumped 2.66 per cent to ₹1,313.80, while Eicher Motors gained 1.89 per cent to ₹7,473. Maruti Suzuki advanced 1.76 per cent to ₹17,259, and Axis Bank rose 1.63 per cent to ₹1,287.60. The Nifty Realty index surged 2.1 per cent on strong business updates from multiple realty companies, while Consumer Durables gained 1.1 per cent.

Broader market performance was mixed. The Nifty Midcap 100 declined 0.16 per cent to 61,265.70, while the Nifty Smallcap 100 outperformed, gaining 0.53 per cent to close at 17,926.40. The Nifty Bank slipped 0.18 per cent to 60,044.20 after touching a fresh all-time high of 60,437 in early trade. “Bank Nifty continued to hover near its all-time high territory, but the session highlighted visible supply pressure at elevated levels,” observed Ponmudi R.

Market breadth tilted towards declines, with 2,545 stocks falling against 1,723 advancing on the BSE, while 203 remained unchanged. A total of 209 stocks hit 52-week highs, while 144 touched 52-week lows.

The Indian rupee weakened further, losing ground in nine out of the past ten trading sessions. “This weakness is primarily fueled by ambiguity surrounding bilateral trade agreements between Washington and New Delhi, alongside a sluggish domestic stock market triggered by an exodus of foreign capital,” said Dilip Parmar, Research Analyst at HDFC Securities. “In the coming days, the USDINR spot pair faces resistance near the 90.45 threshold, while downward movement is expected to find support around the 89.90 mark.”

Gold continued its strong momentum, with MCX gold surging ₹2,000 to trade near ₹1,37,900, while Comex gold rallied nearly $100 to around $4,435. “The momentum in bullion remains strong as a data-heavy week in the US lies ahead, with ADP employment, Non-Farm Payrolls, unemployment rate, and initial jobless claims expected to inject heightened volatility into prices,” said Jateen Trivedi, VP Research Analyst at LKP Securities.

Volatility picked up during the session, with India VIX rising 6.06 per cent to 10.02. “We expect markets to remain firm with a positive bias, supported by better-than-expected Q3 business updates and expectations of a capex pickup ahead of the Union Budget, though there could be some volatility on the back of global geopolitical developments,” said Siddhartha Khemka, Head of Research at Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

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The rupee has lost 53 paise since December 30, 2025, when it closed at 89.75 a dollar.
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Published on January 5, 2026



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Sundaram Alterantes aims to raise ₹2,000 crore realty fund my March

Sundaram Alterantes aims to raise ₹2,000 crore realty fund my March


Sundaram Alterantes on Monday said it is planning to raise up to ₹2,000 crore real estate fund by March this year.

The alternative investment arm of the Sundaram Finance group said it has already raised ₹1,000 crore in the SA Real Estate Credit Fund V over the last three months and aims to raise another ₹500-1,000 crore by March, as per an official statement.

“As the fundraise progresses toward its final close, our focus remains on disciplined capital deployment, capital protection, and building long-term investor relationships,” SA’s Managing Director Karthik Athreya said.

SA claimed it to be the first ESG-aligned offering in the realty sector and added that it attracted commitments from insurance companies, family offices, corporate treasuries, and ultra-high-net-worth investors besides the sponsor commitment from the group.

The fund will be deployed in performing credit opportunities in the residential sector, the statement said, adding that SA prioritises capital protection and downside risk management through conservative loan-to-value structures and collateral coverage.

Since 2017, Sundaram Alternates has raised over ₹3,800 crore across five real estate credit funds, delivered 18-19 per cent in internal rate of returns and maintained a ‘zero capital loss’ record even in headwinds like NBFC liquidity stress, RERA and GST implementation, and the Covid-19 pandemic.

Published on January 5, 2026



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Exclusive: वेनेजुएला पर अमेरिकी हमले से अब कैसे पूरी तरह बदल जाएगा तेल का खेल


venezuela Oil Crisis: दक्षिण अमेरिकी देश वेनेजुएला इस समय गहरे संकट के दौर से गुजर रहा है. दुनिया के सबसे बड़े तेल भंडार वाले इस देश पर अमेरिकी हमले का असर सिर्फ वाशिंगटन तक सीमित नहीं रहने वाला, बल्कि आने वाले दिनों में इसका प्रभाव वैश्विक स्तर पर महसूस किया जा सकता है. भारत की बात करें तो फिलहाल कोई सीधा लाभ नजर नहीं आता, लेकिन दीर्घकाल में यह घटनाक्रम भारत के लिए अवसर भी पैदा कर सकता है.

अगर वैश्विक तेल बाजार में वेनेजुएला की दोबारा एंट्री होती है और वहां निवेश के रास्ते खुलते हैं, तो भारतीय रिफाइनर्स और तेल कंपनियों को बड़ा फायदा मिल सकता है. इसी उम्मीद का असर सोमवार को शेयर बाजार में देखने को मिला, जब रिलायंस इंडस्ट्रीज के शेयर में करीब एक प्रतिशत की तेजी आई और यह 52 हफ्ते के उच्चतम स्तर 1,611.80 रुपये पर पहुंच गया. इससे कंपनी का मार्केट कैप बढ़कर करीब 22 लाख करोड़ रुपये हो गया.

कैसे बदलेगा तेल का खेल?

तेल एवं गैस सेक्टर की अन्य कंपनियों में भी मजबूती देखने को मिली. हिंदुस्तान पेट्रोलियम 1.85 प्रतिशत की तेजी के साथ इंट्रा-डे में 508.45 रुपये पर पहुंचा. ओएनजीसी 1.16 प्रतिशत चढ़कर 246.80 रुपये, इंडियन ऑयल कॉर्पोरेशन 1.03 प्रतिशत की बढ़त के साथ 168.79 रुपये और ऑयल इंडिया 0.47 प्रतिशत की मजबूती के साथ 432.45 रुपये पर कारोबार करता नजर आया.

विशेषज्ञों की राय इस पूरे घटनाक्रम को लेकर बंटी हुई है. जियोजीत इन्वेस्टमेंट्स के मुख्य निवेश रणनीतिकार वी.के. विजयकुमार का कहना है कि 2026 की शुरुआत में वेनेजुएला पर अमेरिकी हमले ने बड़े भू-राजनीतिक बदलावों के संकेत दे दिए हैं. इससे वैश्विक जियोपॉलिटिक्स और ज्यादा अस्थिर हो सकती है. ईरान में विरोध प्रदर्शन तेज हो सकते हैं, रूस-यूक्रेन युद्ध के और लंबा खिंचने की आशंका है, वहीं चीन भी इन हालातों का फायदा उठाकर ताइवान को लेकर आक्रामक कदम उठा सकता है. हालांकि, उनका मानना है कि लंबे समय में वेनेजुएला संकट से भारत को तेल कीमतों में राहत मिल सकती है.

क्या होंगे बड़े असर?

वरिष्ठ पत्रकार रुमान हाशमी के मुताबिक, जिस तरह से अमेरिकी राष्ट्रपति डोनाल्ड ट्रंप रूस से तेल आयात को लेकर भारत पर दबाव बना रहे हैं और अब वेनेजुएला में सीधे हस्तक्षेप कर वहां की सत्ता पर पकड़ मजबूत करने की कोशिश कर रहे हैं, उससे वैश्विक तेल कारोबार पर दूरगामी असर तय है. उन्होंने कहा कि ट्रंप कोलंबिया और ब्राजील को भी चेतावनी दे रहे हैं और भारत पर अतिरिक्त टैरिफ लगाने की बात कर रहे हैं. जिस तरह इराक में सत्ता परिवर्तन के बाद वहां की सरकार अमेरिका के प्रभाव में आ गई थी, वैसा ही परिदृश्य वेनेजुएला में भी देखने को मिल सकता है.

हाशमी ने यह भी स्पष्ट किया कि रूस से तेल आयात करना भारत का राजनीतिक नहीं बल्कि आर्थिक फैसला है. वैश्विक तेल बाजार में भारत की अहम भूमिका है और इसे यूक्रेन युद्ध को फंड करने से जोड़ना गलत है.

कुल मिलाकर, वेनेजुएला पर अमेरिकी हमले के बाद वैश्विक तेल बाजार में बड़ी उथल-पुथल के संकेत मिल रहे हैं. इन घटनाओं का असर आने वाले दिनों में तेल की कीमतों, भू-राजनीतिक समीकरणों और भारतीय ऊर्जा कंपनियों की रणनीति पर साफ तौर पर दिखाई दे सकता है.

भारत पर क्या असर?

भारत के नजरिए से देखें तो वेनेजुएला के साथ उसके रिश्तों की बुनियाद काफी हद तक तेल आयात पर टिकी रही है. अमेरिकी प्रतिबंधों के चलते 2021 और 2022 में दोनों देशों के बीच कच्चे तेल के कारोबार में तेज गिरावट आई थी, लेकिन हालात बदलने के साथ 2023-24 में यह व्यापार दोबारा रफ्तार पकड़ता नजर आया. इस दौरान वेनेजुएला से भारत का पेट्रोलियम आयात बढ़कर करीब 1 बिलियन डॉलर तक पहुंच गया.

द फाइनेंशियल एक्सप्रेस की एक रिपोर्ट के मुताबिक, दिसंबर 2023 में भारत कुछ समय के लिए वेनेजुएला के कच्चे तेल का सबसे बड़ा खरीदार भी बन गया था. हालांकि मौजूदा स्थिति में चीन वेनेजुएला के कच्चे तेल का सबसे बड़ा आयातक बना हुआ है. यह आंकड़े साफ तौर पर दिखाते हैं कि वैश्विक प्रतिबंधों और भू-राजनीतिक तनावों के बावजूद भारत और वेनेजुएला के बीच ऊर्जा सहयोग फिर से मजबूत होने लगा है, जो भविष्य में भारत की ऊर्जा सुरक्षा के लिहाज से अहम भूमिका निभा सकता है.

ये भी पढ़ें: अमेरिका ने जारी की 120 देशों की लिस्ट, भारत की अनदेखी, जानें क्या है ट्रंप के ये हैरान करने वाले आंकड़े



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