Budget 2026 से पहले Made in India का Boost, Capital Goods aur Auto Sector को Incentives | Paisa Live

Budget 2026 से पहले Made in India का Boost, Capital Goods aur Auto Sector को Incentives | Paisa Live


भारत सरकार अब चाहती है कि Made in India सिर्फ़ एक slogan न रहे, बल्कि ज़मीनी हकीकत बने. Union Budget 2026 से पहले सरकार capital goods और automobile sector को मज़बूत करने के लिए लगभग Rs. 23,000 crore के incentive packages पर काम कर रही है. इन schemes का मकसद देश में manufacturing बढ़ाना और imports पर dependency कम करना है. Construction equipment sector के लिए सबसे बड़ा package तैयार किया जा रहा है, जिससे heavy machines जैसे tunnel boring machines और cranes भारत में बन सकें. वहीं auto sector के लिए advanced components, safety systems और sensors की local production पर ज़ोर होगा. इससे domestic companies, exports और overall economy को बड़ा फायदा मिल सकता है.



Source link

Moody’s changes Shriram Finance rating outlook to positive from stable post MUFG deal

Moody’s changes Shriram Finance rating outlook to positive from stable post MUFG deal


A downgrade of Shriram Finance’s rating is unlikely over the next 12-18 months

Global rating agency Moody’s on January 9 changed Shriram Finance’s rating outlook to ‘positive’ from ‘stable’ and affirmed Ba1 long term corporate family rating (CFR) for the non-banking finance company (NBFC), citing strategic benefits the company will have because of MUFG Bank’s presence as a major investor. 

On December last year, Shriram Finance announced that SFL MUFG Bank plans to acquire a 20 per cent stake in the company through a preferential allotment of shares for about $4.4 billion. The transaction is subject to regulatory approvals and is expected to close in 2026. 

“The investment by MUFG Bank will provide strategic benefits, including a stronger capital base, access to global expertise and funding channels, and will further improve SFL’s funding diversity and risk management practices over time,” Moody’s said.

“The positive outlook reflects our expectation that SFL’s business and financial profile will strengthen, supported by a strong strategic shareholder and a significant capital increase. We expect the company’s capitalisation will materially strengthen after the transaction, its profitability to gradually improve as its cost of funds declines, while its access to onshore and offshore funding will improve,” it added. 

Given the positive outlook, Moody’s could upgrade Shriram’s rating if the company improves its net income to average managed assets to around 3.5 per cent on a sustained basis, maintains a TCE/TMA (tangible common equity to tangible managed assets) ratio above 21 per cent and maintains stable asset quality.

A downgrade of Shriram Finance’s rating is unlikely over the next 12-18 months. Nevertheless, Moody’s said it can downgrade the rating if its asset quality deteriorates significantly amid a worsening operating environment, resulting in lower profitability and capitalisation. Specifically, a sustained increase in its net charge-offs to above 2.5 per cent of its average gross loans, or an increase in its problem loans to gross loans ratio above 7 per cent, combined with weakening access to funding or lower liquidity, will result in a rating downgrade.  

Published on January 10, 2026



Source link

IREDA ने किया Q3 नतीजे का ऐलान, 37 परसेंट से ज्यादा उछला प्रॉफिट; फोकस में शेयर

IREDA ने किया Q3 नतीजे का ऐलान, 37 परसेंट से ज्यादा उछला प्रॉफिट; फोकस में शेयर


IREDA Q3 results: नवरत्न कंपनी इंडियन रिन्यूएबल एनर्जी डेवलपमेंट एजेंसी (IREDA) ने शुक्रवार को तीसरी तिमाही के नतीजे का ऐलान कर दिया. 31 दिसंबर, 2025 को खत्म हुई इस तिमाही में कंपनी के नेट प्रॉफिट में पिछले साल की समान अवधि के मुकाबले 37.5 परसेंट की बढ़ोतरी हुई है, जो 425.4 करोड़ से बढ़कर 584.9 करोड़ हो गया है.

इस दौरान कंपनी का ऑपरेशन से रेवेन्यू 38 परसेंट बढ़कर 2,140 करोड़ हो गया, जो पिछले साल इसी अवधि में 1,699 करोड़ था. नेट इंटरेस्ट इनकम (NII) में भी सुधार हुआ है, जो 34.8 परसेंट की तेजी के साथ अब 897.5 करोड़ हो गई, जबकि Q3 FY25 में यह 665.8 करोड़ थी. 

टैक्स देने के बाद कितना बचा प्रॉफिट?

इस दौरान कंपनी टैक्स से पहले प्रॉफिट (PBT) बढ़कर 1,718 करोड़ रुपये तक पहुंच गया, जो पिछले साल की समान अवधि में 1,474 करोड़ से 17 परसेंट ज्यादा है. इस बीच, टैक्स के बाद का प्रॉफिट (PAT) 1,381 करोड़ रहा, जो दिसंबर 2024 को खत्म हुए नौ महीनों के लिए रिपोर्ट किए गए 1,197 करोड़ से 15 परसेंट ज्यादा है. 

कंपनी के इन्वेस्टर प्रेजेंटेशन के मुताबिक, IREDA का लोन सैंक्शन भी सालाना आधार पर 29 परसेंट बढ़कर 40,100 करोड़ हो गया, जो पिछले साल इसी अवधि में 31,087 करोड़ रुपये रहा. इस बीच, लोन डिस्बर्समेंट सालाना आधार पर 44 परसेंट उछलकर 24,903 करोड़ हो गया, जबकि दिसंबर 2024 को खत्म हुए 9 महीने की अवधि में यह 17,236 करोड़ था.

कंपनी के प्रदर्शन में गजब का सुधार

कंपनी के CMD प्रदीप कुमार दास ने कहा, “इस तिमाही में IREDA का मजबूत फाइनेंशियल परफॉर्मेंस भारत के रिन्यूएबल एनर्जी ट्रांजिशन को तेज करने के प्रति हमारी प्रतिबद्धता को दिखाता है. लोन डिस्बर्समेंट, नेट वर्थ और प्रॉफिटेबिलिटी में उछाल हमारे स्टेकहोल्डर्स के भरोसे को दिखाती है.”

कंपनी का लोन बुक Q3 में 28 परसेंट बढ़कर 87,975 करोड़ रुपये हो गई, जो पिछले साल इसी तिमाही में 68,960 करोड़ थी. FY25 में अक्टूबर-दिसंबर की अवधि में डिस्बर्समेंट 32 परसेंट चढ़कर 9,860 करोड़ हो गया, जो पहले 7,449 करोड़ था. नेट वर्थ 38 परसेंट बढ़कर 9,842 करोड़ से 13,537 करोड़ हो गई. 

इंडिया रिन्यूएबल एनर्जी डेवलपमेंट एजेंसी लिमिटेड के शेयर शुक्रवार को BSE पर 137.10 पर बंद हुए, जो 4.08 रुपये या 2.89 परसेंट की गिरावट थी.

 

ये भी पढ़ें:

उधर ट्रंप ने लगाया टैरिफ, इधर करीब आए भारत और चीन; खूब करने लगे सामानों का लेनदेन 



Source link

Jio Platforms का Mega IPO, India का अब तक का Biggest Listing Opportunity | Paisa Live

Jio Platforms का Mega IPO, India का अब तक का Biggest Listing Opportunity | Paisa Live


Reliance Group की digital arm Jio Platforms इस साल भारत का सबसे बड़ा IPO ला सकती है। Reports के मुताबिक, कंपनी अपनी लगभग 2.5% stake बेचने पर विचार कर रही है और Morgan Stanley तथा Kotak Mahindra Bank के साथ IPO documents यानी prospectus तैयार कर रही है। अनुमान है कि IPO size $4 billion+ हो सकता है, जिससे Jio Platforms लगभग $4.5 billion जुटा सकती है। कुछ analysts का मानना है कि कंपनी की total valuation $200–240 billion के बीच हो सकती है। SEBI के नए नियमों से भी listing को support मिलेगा। पिछले छह सालों में Jio ने telecom, digital services, technology और AI में तेजी से expansion किया है।



Source link

FPIs dump Indian equities worth ₹3,962 crore in week ended January 9

FPIs dump Indian equities worth ₹3,962 crore in week ended January 9


The cumulative FPI outflow from the cash market stood at ₹8,017.51 crore as of January 2026 till date, according to inputs from Shrikant Chouhan, Head Equity Research, Kotak Securities.

Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) offloaded Indian equities worth ₹3,962.72 crore during the week ended January 9, 2026, marking a continuation of the selling trend from 2025, according to data from the National Securities Depository Limited (NSDL).

The week witnessed heightened selling pressure in the last two trading sessions, with FPIs pulling out ₹1,839.01 crore on January 8 and ₹3,709.81 crore on January 9 from the equity segment. The selling was partially offset by inflows of ₹646.80 crore on January 5, ₹737.37 crore on January 6, while January 7 saw a marginal outflow of ₹16.44 crore.

“FII investment in early 2026 has begun with the continuation of the trend of the previous year. In 2025 FIIs had net sold equity for ₹166283 crores impacting the performance of the Indian market and also weakening the rupee by about 5 per cent,” said Dr V K Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist, Geojit Investments Limited.

The cumulative FPI outflow from the cash market stood at ₹8,017.51 crore as of January 2026 till date, according to inputs from Shrikant Chouhan, Head Equity Research, Kotak Securities.

“At the beginning of 2026 the expectation was that FIIs will turn buyers on improvement in GDP growth and corporate earnings. Also the market expectation was that the much delayed US-India treaty will materialise early in the year. But geopolitical developments took a turn for the worse with the US intervention in Venezuela and absence of positive developments on the trade talks,” Vijayakumar added.

US trade tensions affect sentiment

The sell-off intensified after negative commentary from the US commerce secretary, which gave the impression that the trade agreement will be further delayed. “This impacted the market sentiments and FIIs continued selling by increasing the volume of selling in the last two trading days. The total FII selling (cash market) through 9th January stood at ₹11,784 crore,” he said.

The debt segment saw mixed activity during the week. Debt under Foreign Allocation Route (FAR) recorded net inflows of ₹2,938.13 crore across the five trading days. However, Debt under General Limit witnessed net outflows of ₹64.17 crore, while Debt-VRR (Voluntary Retention Route) saw outflows of ₹721.08 crore during the week.

“Global equity markets continued to witness a risk-on rally, while Indian markets widely underperformed. Global market performance was driven by geopolitical events in Venezuela, continued optimism on AI and improving earnings growth expectations in the US for Q4CY25,” said Chouhan.

Indian markets priced in increasing trade and disruption risks based on news flows and a tepid Q3FY26 earnings season. On the economy front, the National Statistical Office estimated FY26 real GDP growth at 7.4 per cent, implying 6.9 per cent growth in 2HFY26.

“The market sentiments have turned so weak that despite DII buying of ₹17,900 crore in January through 9th, Nifty drifted down by 618 points in the week ending 9th January,” Vijayakumar noted.

Sectoral rotation by FPIs in late December reflected valuation discipline and changing macro cues. “Strong buying in IT was led by attractive valuations, rupee depreciation, and optimism around AI-led growth and heightened expectations of US interest rate cuts, which improved the outlook for discretionary technology spending and earnings visibility,” said Pranay Aggarwal, Director and CEO of Stoxkart.

“In contrast, FPIs sold FMCG due to stretched valuations and weak volume growth, pared financial services on profit booking, regulatory overhang and margin concerns, and reduced auto exposure amid demand moderation, pricing pressure,” Aggarwal added.

FPI flows to remain volatile

Looking ahead, FPI flows are expected to remain volatile. “Any further negative news on the US-India trade tariffs could exacerbate selling by the FIIs, who have sold shares worth over ₹5,000 crores last week. Although, a small relief rally could be a possibility after the recent correction, the geopolitical concern and the currency depreciation will keep investors on the edge,” said Sachin Neema, fund manager at Garud Investment Managers.

“It appears that if FIIs are to turn buyers in India sentiments have to improve with positive developments on US-India trade agreement and uptick in earnings growth,” Vijayakumar concluded.

More Like This

REUTERS
FILE PHOTO: Gold and silver bars are stacked in the safe deposit boxes room of the Pro Aurum gold house in Munich, Germany.

Published on January 10, 2026



Source link

Gold investors stay bullish after record rally in 2025

Gold investors stay bullish after record rally in 2025


After one of the most explosive rallies in modern market history, few investors expect gold to pull off a repeat in 2026. But many top money managers are still betting on further gains, arguing that the forces that propelled bullion to a record remain in place.

Gold surged 65 per cent in 2025 — its strongest performance in nearly half a century — as retail and institutional investors piled in alongside central banks. In a year where almost every tailwind supporting the precious metal collided, from falling interest rates to geopolitical tensions, bullion even pushed through an inflation-adjusted high that had held since 1980.

Bloomberg spoke with more than a dozen money managers, whose firms collectively handle trillions of dollars of assets, to gauge sentiment after the historic year. Most of them said they’ve opted not to take too much money off the table, holding conviction in the metal’s longer-term appeal.

“We continue to expect gold to rally in 2026, as the drivers of its strong run remain intact,” said Ian Samson, a portfolio manager at Fidelity International. Samson trimmed his position during a frenzied stretch of October but has since added back, citing central bank buying, declining interest rates and high fiscal deficits as supportive factors.

Investors also pointed to waning confidence in major developed-market currencies — driven by attacks on central bank independence and rising sovereign debts — as a key pillar of support for bullion. Swelling public debt in advanced economies fueled political discord through last year, from a congressional standoff in the US and paralysis in France, to scrutiny of a record budget under Japan’s new leadership. 

Anti-fiat currency play

Gold is “basically an anti-fiat currency play now more than anything else,” said Mike Wilson, chief investment officer and strategist for Morgan Stanley. That view gained traction in the latter months of 2025, as the so-called debasement trade took hold and investors from Ken Griffin to Ray Dalio pointed to gold’s rise as a warning signal. 

Wilson advises allocating 20 per cent of one’s portfolio into real assets, including gold, as a hedge against inflation, replacing the traditional 60/40 stocks and bonds mix with a 60/20/20 split. He noted that the debasement story has gone mainstream.

“When everybody understands the story, you have to ask yourself: Well, is it priced now?” Wilson said. “I don’t think it’s fully priced, only because I don’t see the change in behaviour yet. I don’t see the fiscal discipline anywhere in the world. In fact, I see the opposite.”

Darwei Kung, head of commodities and a portfolio manager at DWS Group, said his firm is holding a slightly larger-than-usual allocation to gold-related investments and expects to maintain that stance into 2026.

Kung sees the metal’s price increasing modestly by the end of the year. But he also expects short-term trading opportunities as gold is buffeted by broader market forces. 

Pension and insurance funds showed increasing interest in gold through 2025, with some that had never held the asset before taking positions of around 5 per cent of their strategic asset allocation, said Massimiliano Castelli, head of global sovereign markets strategy at UBS Asset Management. They were drawn by strong returns and gold’s potential to hedge against downside elsewhere in their portfolio, he added.

“Of course, we don’t see the same upside potential of last year, when gold was basically the best asset class of all,” said Castelli. “But we are still bullish on gold.”

History offers a note of caution. Outsized rallies have often been trailed by long stretches of lacklustre performance. Bullion hit a record $1,921 an ounce in 2011, driven by fallout from the global financial crisis, but it took another nine years to return to that level. A prolonged bear market also followed gold’s record 127 per cent surge in 1979.

Even so, gold remains lightly owned by US investors. Despite the record rally, gold exchange-traded funds account for just 0.17 per cent of private US financial portfolios, according to a December Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysis — six basis points below the 2012 peak. The bank estimates that each bout of buying that increases gold’s share of US portfolios by 0.01 per cent would lift prices by about 1.4 per cent.

Continued central bank buying is expected to remain the most significant driver of further price gains, with Goldman Sachs expecting purchases of about 80 tonnes a month in 2026. The pace of buying jumped in 2022, after the immobilisation of Russia’s foreign-exchange reserves underscored the appeal of bullion, which cannot be frozen.

Gold is one of the few assets that allows investors to build “liquid wealth outside of the US sphere of influence,” said Thomas Roderick, a portfolio manager at hedge fund Trium Capital LLP, who has pared his gold position slightly since October but still has “decent risk in the trade.”

China reserves

For Roderick, China’s accumulation of gold in particular sits at the core of his bullish thesis, as the country looks to deploy proceeds from vast trade surpluses into assets insulated from US interference.

China won’t say “gold is too expensive, let’s accumulate more Treasuries,” Roderick said. “That just doesn’t work for them from a geopolitical perspective.”

Central banks rarely sell their positions, meaning demand from the institutions is seen as a stable source of support for prices. But while the monetary institutions may have lit the fuse for gold’s rally, rapid inflows from institutional and retail investors helped supercharge it through the second half of last year. 

The more gold held by speculative investors, the higher its correlation becomes to other risk assets, according to Shaniel Ramjee, co-head of Multi-Asset at Pictet Asset Management.

Still, Ramjee currently holds a weighty 8 per cent allocation to gold, paring back during October’s spike in speculative activity before adding back through December as more fast money was washed out.

“In this environment where we see the majority of the buying from big central banks, that keeps us more comfortable having a higher weight in the portfolio,” Ramjee said. “We think gold will be moving higher this year, but in a much more careful and steady pace.”

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2026 Bloomberg L.P.

Published on January 10, 2026



Source link

YouTube
Instagram
WhatsApp