Slack demand, competition weigh on Indian onion exports

Slack demand, competition weigh on Indian onion exports


India’s onion exports have come under further pressure this financial year, reflecting a sustained decline driven by changing global market dynamics.

Shipments have slowed primarily due to reduced offtake from key buyers such as Bangladesh and Saudi Arabia, as these countries increasingly rely on their own domestic production, exporters said.

Policy impact

This structural shift in demand has curtailed the shipment volumes, even as competitive pressures are weighing on exports.

The weaker currency of Pakistan, a major competing origin, has enhanced its price competitiveness in international markets, making it more difficult for Indian exporters to defend market share, particularly in price-sensitive destinations.

“Demand is there, but we have lost some markets. Bangladesh, one of the biggest buyer, is not buying from us. Lot of countries have developed their own crop; now even Saudi, a good buyer, is not buying,” said Ajit Shah, President, Horticulture Exporters Association.

“Also, India had imposed a ban 2-3 years ago. So all our traditional buyers shifted to other suppliers like Pakistan, Sudan and Yemen,” he said.

Earlier, these countries used to export in small quantities, about 2-3 months a year. Now they are exporting for 6-7 or even nine months a year, Shah said, adding that as a result, “buyers had started comparing our price with these other suppliers”.

“Our quality is always good as compared to the other suppliers, but now every market is price sensitive. So our quantity, our share of demand has decreased and that’s why the export is not going so much. But it’s not so less also,” Shah said.

According to DGCIS data, India’s onion exports during April-December of the current financial year registered a 22 per cent decline in value terms at $298.69 over the corresponding last year’s $380.08 million on lower prices.

Volumes up

However, the shipment volumes during this period were up 37 per cent at 11.33 lakh tonnes compared to 8.26 lakh tonnes in the corresponding last year.

In fact, onion shipments have been on a downward trend in recent years when a ban was imposed in December 2023 until March 2024 to ease domestic supplies. All restrictions were removed by March 2025 when supplies improved.

Further, Shah said, Bangladesh, when it doesn’t have its own crop, is buying the maximum quantity from from Pakistan, whereas Saudi Arabia is buying from Yemen and Sudan.

“Our prices are similar or up by say $10-50 per tonne, when compared with onions from Sudan or Yemen. However, we are expensive in comparison with Pakistan as there is a vast difference in their dollar rate and our rate. Our dollar-rupee rate is 90.5, while their dollar to Pakistan rupee rate is 280 and that’s the main reason they are cheaper than us in the international market,” Shah said, adding that weaker currency is giving them an edge.

However, Indian onion exports are taking place to countries such as Sri Lanka and West Asian countries, Shah said, adding that the rabi arrivals will be starting soon.

Rabi arrivals

Trade sources said the prices had eased in recent weeks with improving arrivals.

Per the Agmarknet data, the modal prices are hovering in the range of ₹775-1,500 per quintal in Maharashtra, the major producing State.

The all-India average wholesale mandi prices have eased from ₹1,410.44 per quintal a week ago on February 17 to ₹1,085.64 on February 24.

Shah said the rabi onion crop is expected to be bigger than last year.

Published on February 26, 2026



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Broker’s Call:  Bajaj Consumer Care (Buy)

Broker’s Call: Bajaj Consumer Care (Buy)


Target: ₹445

CMP: ₹402.75

Bajaj Consumer Care Ltd (BCCL), part of the Shishir Bajaj group, has a dominant market position with its brand Bajaj Almond Drops Hair Oil (ADHO) commanding over 63 per cent market share in the light hair oil (LHO) category.

Its products are now available in over 4.3 million outlets across India. Project Arohan is BCCL’s strategic Route-to-Market transformation initiative, designed to modernise its distribution network and expand direct retail reach. BCCL targets to increase direct outlet reach by 10 per cent annually for the next four-five years.

It has now diversified its portfolio to a broader hair and coconut oil space with the launch of Bajaj 100% Pure Coconut Oil in FY22, which has now captured about 2 per cent market share in India. Further, in February 2025, BCCL acquired Vishal Personal Care (owner of Banjara’s brand) strengthening its position in the South Indian skincare & hair oil market.

BCCL reported robust Q3FY26 numbers with Revenue/EBITDA/PAT growing 30.6 per cent/113.9 per cent/83.2 per cent respectively. EBITDA margin expanded about 710 basis points, on the back of strategic pricing and mix improvements.

At current value, the stock trades at FY26E/27E Bloomberg consensus PE of 29.4x/25.5x respectively, which looks reasonable given its dominant market position in LHO category, strategic product portfolio diversification and aggressive direct reach expansion through its Project Arohan.

Published on February 26, 2026



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Income Tax Act 2025: HRA, Foreign Income, PAN और Audit Rules में बड़े Changes | Paisa Live

Income Tax Act 2025: HRA, Foreign Income, PAN और Audit Rules में बड़े Changes | Paisa Live


Income Tax Act 2025 के rollout के साथ 1 April 2026 से HRA claims, foreign income reporting, PAN applications और audit compliance norms में बड़े बदलाव लागू होंगे। अब HRA claim करते समय Form 124 में landlord relationship disclose करना mandatory होगा। Foreign income और FTC claims के लिए Form 44 के तहत ज्यादा documentation जरूरी होगा। PAN applications में duplicate check और सही declaration अनिवार्य रहेगा। Form 26 के तहत audit remarks का direct tax impact evaluate करना होगा। कुल मिलाकर 2026 से tax compliance और transparency काफी सख्त होने जा रही है, जहां proper documentation के बिना risk बढ़ सकता है।                 



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Tiruppur knitwear industry seeks Centre’s support for worker housing as FTAs boost order inflows

Tiruppur knitwear industry seeks Centre’s support for worker housing as FTAs boost order inflows


A hostel for knitwear workers at Tiruppur
| Photo Credit:
Supplied

With India signing a series of Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), the knitwear industry in Tiruppur, the country’s largest apparel export cluster, has sought the Centre’s support for the construction of large-scale affordable rental housing for workers, citing growing challenges in labour retention.

Industry sources said organised worker accommodation would be critical to attract and retain labour, as Tiruppur is expected to see a sharp increase in hiring over the next few months following higher order inflows triggered by FTAs and recent tariff changes announced by the US .

At present, individual companies arrange accommodation for their employees. However, exporters are now willing to pool resources and develop large hostels with government support. The proposal draws inspiration from the large worker housing facilities built for mobile phone manufacturing units in the Oragadam–Sriperumbudur industrial cluster, leveraging the Affordable Rental Housing component under PMAY-U 2.0.

According to the Tiruppur Exporters’ Association (TEA), the estimated cost of establishing hostel facilities is around ₹2 lakh per bed. It has proposed hostel capacities ranging from 250 to 1,000 beds and has sought removal of the 18 per cent GST on rent deducted towards worker accommodation.

Tiruppur employs nearly 10 lakh workers, of whom about 3.5–4.5 lakh are migrants from 19 States. Women account for nearly 70 per cent of the workforce. Nearly one lakh workers commute daily from nearby districts.

Major constraint

The lack of organised, affordable housing has become a major constraint in sustaining growth and meeting export commitments,” said N Thirukkumaran, Chairman, Esstee Exports India Ltd, Tiruppur, and Secretary of TEA.

In a representation sent to the Central government, the association said investment in worker housing would yield tangible productivity gains.

Shorter commutes and improved living conditions could boost efficiency by 15–20 per cent, while quality accommodation could reduce labour turnover by 30–40 per cent, significantly lowering recruitment and training costs.

Among other measures sought are a 40 per cent capital subsidy on hostel construction, capped at ₹80,000 per bed; simplification of land-use regulations to permit worker hostels on industrial land; permission to use common infrastructure such as power supply and sewage treatment plants; and waiver of land development charges and building approval fees.

A company official said, housing is essential to ensure business continuity, retain skilled workers and meet delivery schedules. Worker welfare has become central to competitiveness in global apparel markets.

During FY25, Tiruppur recorded knitwear exports worth ₹44,747 crore (around $5.4 billion), accounting for nearly 68 per cent of India’s total knitwear exports. The cluster has about 2,500 registered exporters and nearly 20,000 standalone manufacturing and support units.

Published on February 26, 2026



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Nifty holds ground near 25,500 as bears and bulls battle to a draw on F&O expiry day

Nifty holds ground near 25,500 as bears and bulls battle to a draw on F&O expiry day


Markets closed virtually flat on Thursday, February 26, as monthly futures and options expiry-day jitters, persistent global uncertainty and weak banking and FMCG stocks kept bulls on the back foot — even as a last-hour recovery pulled the Nifty back from the day’s lows.

The Sensex ended at 82,248.61, down 27.46 points or 0.03 per cent, while the Nifty 50 settled at 25,496.55, gaining a marginal 14.05 points or 0.06 per cent. The session’s intraday range on the Nifty was a tight 172 points, underscoring the absence of any strong directional trigger.

Sudeep Shah, Head of Technical and Derivatives Research at SBI Securities, noted that the index “ended virtually unchanged, forming a small-bodied candle with a pronounced lower shadow, suggesting buying interest emerging near support zones.” He added that for the past ten consecutive sessions, Nifty has oscillated within a range of 25,885–25,327, with flattened moving averages and a horizontal RSI reinforcing the consolidation. “Any sustainable move above 25,660 will lead to a sharp upside rally up to the 25,800 level,” Shah said, pegging the immediate support at 25,380–25,350.

Ajit Mishra, SVP Research at Religare Broking, pointed out that “the Nifty’s ability to hold above the 25,400 level suggests that support remains intact,” but cautioned that “the risk of further correction could persist until the index decisively surpasses the immediate hurdle at 25,600.”

Among Nifty 50 constituents, Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles (TMPV) led gains, rising 2.93 per cent to close at ₹393.05. Eicher Motors climbed 2.70 per cent to ₹8,224, while BEL added 2.28 per cent to ₹449.30. Shriram Finance gained 2.01 per cent to ₹1,107.70 and Max Healthcare rose 1.69 per cent to ₹1,106.45.

On the losing side, Trent declined 1.56 per cent to ₹3,861, Coal India slipped 1.50 per cent to ₹432, and Eternal fell 1.48 per cent to ₹246.50. Tata Consumer Products shed 1.31 per cent to ₹1,157, while HDFC Bank dropped 1.28 per cent to ₹896.

Sectorally, Nifty Healthcare, Nifty Pharma and Defence indices rallied over 1 per cent, with defensive buying driving outperformance. Nifty Media and Nifty FMCG were the weakest performers. Nifty Bank closed at 61,187.70, up 144.35 points or 0.24 per cent, while Nifty Financial Services edged down 0.11 per cent to 28,309.85.

The broader market told a more encouraging story. The Nifty Midcap 100 outperformed sharply, rising 0.66 per cent or 392.05 points to 59,798.15, forming a sizeable bullish candle. The Nifty Smallcap 100 ended nearly flat at 17,117.65. On BSE, advances stood at 2,080 against 2,124 declines. A total of 109 stocks hit 52-week highs, while 258 touched 52-week lows.

Ponmudi R, CEO of Enrich Money, flagged that “reports of the Reserve Bank of India’s temporary liquidity support measures winding down by March are raising questions around near-term funding conditions,” adding to the cautious undertone.

On the currency front, the Indian rupee strengthened against the US dollar, aided by foreign fund inflows and softer global commodity prices. However, early gains were pared as importers bought dollars and the greenback rebounded on geopolitical tensions. Dilip Parmar, Research Analyst at HDFC Securities, noted that “traders are now focused on the high-stakes US-Iran nuclear negotiations currently underway in Geneva,” with spot USDINR support at 86.70 and resistance at 87.08.

On the commodities front, MCX April gold futures hovered around ₹1.60–1.62 lakh per 10 grams, supported by safe-haven demand. MCX silver consolidated near ₹2.80–2.85 lakh per kg after recent gains, with the pause attributed to profit-booking rather than any structural reversal.

Looking ahead, Siddhartha Khemka, Head of Research at Motilal Oswal Financial Services, expects “markets to remain range-bound amid a mixed global backdrop, with stock-specific action driven by domestic demand themes and policy-linked opportunities.” He flagged India’s expected formalisation of $8.6 billion in defence agreements with Israel — including technology transfer of the Iron Dome and Iron Beam systems — as a potential market catalyst, along with a Canada-India leadership meeting focused on defence, energy and AI partnerships. For Bank Nifty, Shah sees a breakout above 61,500 on strong volumes as a potential trigger for a rally toward 62,000–62,500 in the near term.

Published on February 26, 2026



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Banks’ G-Sec portfolio grows at a slower clip amid pick up in credit growth

Banks’ G-Sec portfolio grows at a slower clip amid pick up in credit growth


The aggressive OMO purchase auction of G-Secs conducted by the Central bank is also resulting in the overall portfolio of these securities gradually coming down
| Photo Credit:
designer491

Banks’ investment in central government securities (G-Secs) and State Government Securities (SGS) grew at a slower clip of 3 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) as on January 31, 2026 amidst credit growth picking up momentum.

The aforementioned development also comes in the backdrop of deposit growth lagging credit growth and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) conducting a series of open market operation (OMO) purchase auction of G-Secs to provide liquidity to the banking system.

Banks’ investment in G-Secs and SGS’ grew at a higher clip of 11 per cent y-o-y as on January 24, 2025.

The differential between credit growth and deposit growth widened to 198 basis points as on January 31, 2026, from 109 basis points as on January 24, 2025.

As on January 31, 2026, deposit growth at 12.42 per cent y-o-y (10.20 per cent as on January 24, 2025) was lower than credit growth of 14.40 per cent (11.29 per cent).

The aggressive OMO purchase auction of G-Secs conducted by the Central bank is also resulting in the overall portfolio of these securities gradually coming down.

Considering that Banks have to park 18 per cent of the deposit they mobilise in Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) securities (G-Secs and SGS’), they should have invested ₹5,05,251 crore in these securities during the January 24, 2025 to January 31, 2026 period. However, they invested only ₹1,96,804 crore, per RBI data.

Venkatakrishnan Srinivasan, Founder & Managing Partner, Rockfort Fincap LLP, observed that strong credit growth has reduced incremental demand for government securities.

“As banks channelise funds into loans amid healthy credit demand, their appetite for additional G-Sec holdings moderates. Loans typically offer higher returns than sovereign bonds, and expanding credit absorbs liquidity that might otherwise have flowed into G-Secs,” he said.

V Rama Chandra Reddy, Head – Treasury, Karur Vysya Bank, attributed the slower pace of growth in Banks’ investment portfolio to the sale of excess SLR securities (G-Secs) at the OMO purchase auctions. This way, the Central bank is helping banks’ bridge the gap between credit and deposit growth.

He estimated that the RBI infused liquidity amounting to about ₹6.70 lakh crore via OMO purchase auctions in the current financial year so far.

With Banks’ investment portfolio growing at a slower clip as compared to credit portfolio, their Investment-Deposit ratio has declined to 27.52 per cent as on January 31, 2026, from 30.04 per cent as on January 24, 2025 even as Credit-Deposit ratio rose to 82.54 per cent from 81.11 per cent.

Published on February 26, 2026



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