HDFC Life appoints Vijay Vaidyanathan as Chief Human Resource Officer

HDFC Life appoints Vijay Vaidyanathan as Chief Human Resource Officer


HDFC Life Insurance Company said that it has appointed Vijay Vaidyanathan as its chief human resource officer (CHRO), effective 1 April 2026, on a full-time employment basis.

Vaidyanathan has been associated with HDFC Life since June 2001 and brings over 25 years of experience across insurance distribution, strategic partnerships, and organisational leadership. He has held key roles in Group Sales, Bancassurance, Retail Strategy and Sales, HNI vertical, and Alternate Channels, contributing significantly to strengthening the companys distribution ecosystem.

In addition to business responsibilities, he has been actively involved in organisation-wide strategic and people initiatives, including leading the Employee Wellness & Well-being resource group, serving on the Talent Council, and contributing to employee recognition programmes.

 

He holds a postgraduate degree in Business Management from the University of Mumbai and a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Madras.

HDFC Life Insurance Company is engaged in tbe business for carrying on the business of life insurance.

The companys consolidated net profit fell marginally by 0.07% to Rs 418.19 crore in Q3 FY26, even as revenue from operations surged 71.4% to Rs 29,602.03 crore compared with Q3 FY25.

The scrip declined 2% to Rs 655.10 on the BSE.

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Sebi examining Calcutta Stock Exchange exit application, says MoS finance

Sebi examining Calcutta Stock Exchange exit application, says MoS finance



Capital market regulator Sebi is examining the application seeking voluntary exit of the Calcutta Stock Exchange (CSE) from its business, Minister of State for Finance Pankaj Chaudhary said on Monday.


In a written reply to a question in the Lok Sabha, Chaudhary said Sebi has constituted a Working Group on the matter and appointed a valuation agency for verification and valuation of CSE’s assets and liabilities.


Certain information sought by Sebi from CSE is awaited, he said.


“Sebi would be passing a speaking order giving an exit to CSE from stock exchange business after taking a view on exclusively listed companies of CSE, its assets and liabilities, and relaxation from any regulations in order to facilitate exit,” he said.

 


The Calcutta Stock Exchange (CSE), in its February 18, 2025, letter to the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), sought voluntary exit as a Stock Exchange under the Sebi Exit Policy for stock exchanges. “The proposal is at the stage of examination before SEBI,” Chaudhary said.


Trading on the CSE platform stopped in April 2013.


The Calcutta High Court, in its orders dated February 19, 2024 and August 19, 2024, granted time to CSE to comply with the requirements relating to clearing corporation arrangements and net worth under the Securities Contracts (Regulation) (Stock Exchanges and Clearing Corporations) Regulations, 2018.


The said requirements were not achieved within the stipulated period by CSE. Subsequently, CSE submitted an application on February 18, 2025, seeking exit from the stock exchange business.



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Nifty Outlook: Oil above 0 may trigger 10% Nifty correction, drag P/E to 18x: ICICI Sec

Nifty Outlook: Oil above $100 may trigger 10% Nifty correction, drag P/E to 18x: ICICI Sec



Nifty outlook as Oil surpasses $100/barrel-mark

Brent crude price’s march past the $100 a barrel-mark may have opened the doors for another 10 per cent correction in the Nifty50 index, believe analysts at ICICI Securities. 


An analysis of historical episodes of a surge in crude oil prices showed that a sustained spike in Brent crude futures beyond the $100-mark triggers a negative correlation with the benchmark index, weighing on market sentiment. 


“Crude oil price, at this juncture, is encapsulating the ‘sum of all fears’ arising out of the significant escalation of the conflict in the Gulf region. A sharp rise in crude oil above the $100 per barrel-mark would mean that markets are discounting severe oil supply disruption for a longer period of time,” ICICI Securities said. 

 

In such an environment, Nifty50 index could potentially drop by approximately 10 per cent from the pre-conflict-day level of 25,178. This implies a downside level of 22,660. 


On Monday, Brent crude futures leaped over 25 per cent intraday to hit a high of $116.7 per barrel-mark in the international markets, after major West Asia oil producers cut output amid closure of Strait of Hormuz (SoH) due to the Iran war. 


This is the first time since the Russia-Ukraine war (in 2022) that oil prices have topped the psychological mark of $100. 


By noon, oil prices were mildly off highs at $110/barrel. Notably, Gulf producers are cutting back on oil production as barrels are piling up due to the closure of the SoH, leading to a lack of storage space. 


Over the weekend, Kuwait, the fifth-biggest producer in Opec, announced precautionary cuts to its oil production and refinery output, while Iraq, the second-biggest OPEC producer, has trimmed production from its three main southern oilfields by 70 per cent to 1.3 million barrels per day. 


Why rising crude oil prices halt Nifty rally?


Rising crude oil prices negatively affect equity markets due to their broad impact on inflation, corporate profitability, and external balances. 


For India, which imports nearly 80-85 per cent of its oil requirements – 50 per cent of which comes via the Strait of Hormuz — a sharp rise in crude oil price leads to higher fuel costs, wider trade deficits, and pressure on economic growth.


Oil tops $100/barrel: How much can Nifty fall?


In the worst-case scenario, ICICI Securities said that the Nifty 50 could decline about 10 per cent from its pre-conflict level of around 25,178, while market valuations could compress with the index’s price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio to around 18x, closer to post-pandemic lows. Currently, Nifty50’s P/X stood at 21.4 x as of March 6, 2026. 


“The earnings yield could rise to ~5.6 per cent (highest in the post-Covid era), while the relative spread of bond yield over earnings yield could dip to around 100bps; thereby, increasing the relative attractiveness of equities over bonds (assuming bond yields do not spike),” the brokerage said. 


Market-cap to GDP ratio (m-cap/GDP ratio) – widely known as the Buffett Indicator of valuation — could drift closer to 110 per cent as the drawdown in mid and smallcap stocks could be higher, it said. 


Impact of higher crude oil prices on Indian economy


A sustained spike in crude, ICICI Securities noted, would have broader macroeconomic consequences. India’s net oil import bill stood at around $122 billion in the previous financial year (FY250, equivalent to about 3.1 per cent of the GDP. 


A 10-per cent rise in crude oil prices could raise the import bill by about $12 billion or 0.3 per cent of GDP, potentially widening the current account deficit and putting pressure on the balance of payments. 


“Rising crude prices could also push up inflation because fuel components such as petrol, diesel and LPG have a higher weight in the consumer price index.  


Elevated inflation, in turn, may affect demand and corporate earnings as companies face higher fuel and raw material costs,” the brokerage said.


Sectors to avoid right now


In this backdrop, the brokerage said that industries such as automobiles, aviation, oil marketing companies, city gas distribution firms, building materials, industrials, and consumer companies could see margin pressure in the near-term. 


Export-oriented sectors with exposure to the Gulf region, including financials and real estate, may also face additional risks if the geopolitical situation worsens, it said. 


That said, sharp spikes in oil prices may create volatility but could also offer opportunities. 


“Temporary spikes in crude oil prices have created buying opportunities in the past.  Last instance of the negative correlation of crude prices and Nifty was witnessed in 2022. The resulting volatility created the foundation for the big equity rally seen over CY23,” it said. 
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Disclaimer: View and outlook shared belong to the respective brokerages/analysts and are not endorsed by Business Standard. Readers’ discretion is advised.



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HDFC Life appoints Vijay Vaidyanathan as Chief Human Resource Officer

Dollar index soars to three month high as crude surpasses $100 per barrel


The dollar index is soaring at a three month high on Monday morning in Asia amid boiling energy prices and escalating tensions in Middle East. DXY strengthened well past 99.50 mark in early trades and is currently trading at 99.31, a tad lower from the days high. Mounting concerns that a prolonged Middle East conflict could lead to longer-term disruption of global energy supplies has benefited the greenback. Oil was up more than $115 per barrel, a three and half year high, adding to inflationary concerns and complicating the Federal Reserves policy outlook, reinforcing expectations that rate cuts may be delayed. It has pulled back from early Asian levels but still hovers above $100 per barrel mark. The counter has registered a 27% jump on Monday morning following a 36% spike on Friday.

 

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Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content

First Published: Mar 09 2026 | 11:50 AM IST



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HDFC Life appoints Vijay Vaidyanathan as Chief Human Resource Officer

Wall Street Sell-Off Deepens Amid Oil Surge and Mideast Tensions


Major indexes tumbled as crude topped $90 on U.S.-Iran escalation.

The Nasdaq plunged 361.31 points (1.6%) to 22,387.68, the S&P 500 tumbled 90.69 points (1.3%) to 6,740.02 and the Dow slumped 453.19 points (1%) to 47,501.55.

Wall Street faced a sell-off amid surging crude oil prices, with U.S. futures topping $90 a barrel. The spike stemmed from the escalating U.S.-Iran conflict spreading across the Middle East, raising fears of a global energy crisis as the seventh day brought intensified Israeli airstrikes and U.S. warnings of dramatic attack surges.

President Trump demanded Iran’s “unconditional surrender” on Truth Social, vowing U.S. involvement in selecting its future leaders to rebuild it stronger. A Labor Department report fueled negativity, showing a 92,000 job slump in Februarymissing expectations of a 60,000 gainwhile unemployment edged up to 4.4%.

 

Semiconductor stocks moved sharply lower dragging the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index down by 3.9% to its lowest closing level in almost two months. Transportation stocks were substantially weak, as reflected by the 3.5% plunge by the Dow Jones Transportation average. Steel, networking, financial and housing stocks also witnessed significant weakness while oil producer stocks were among the few groups to buck the downtrend amid the spike by the price of crude oil.

Asia-Pacific stocks turned in a mixed performance. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index jumped by 1.7% and Japan’s Nikkei 225 Index climbed by 0.6%, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index slid by 1%. Meanwhile, the major European markets have all moved to the downside on the day. While the U.K.’s FTSE 100 Index slumped by 1.2%, the German DAX Index declined by 0.9% and the French CAC 40 Index fell by 0.7%.

In the bond market, treasuries saw considerable volatility over the course of the session before closing modestly higher. As a result, the yield on the benchmark ten-year note which moves opposite of its price, dipped 1.3 bps to 4.13%.

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