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How to popularise the Budget while earning trillions in revenues

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If the finance minister introduces this wonderful scheme, she will reserve her place in history as the most innovative finance minister ever How To Popularise The Budget While Earning Trillions In Revenues

Dear Finance Minister,

One of the great injustices in the world is insufficient appreciation of the importance of the union budget. Hardly anyone listens to the budget speech and the only thing most people are bothered about is whether their taxes have gone up or down. Nobody, apart from economists and the media, gets worked up over the fiscal deficit. Most people have no clue about the difference between the primary and revenue deficits. Why, just the other day I came across a guy who said he was under the impression that GDP stood for Glorious Drinking Party, which is why he thought we were celebrating India’s having the world’s highest GDP growth rate.

It’s all very disheartening, especially because the task of a finance minister is by no means an easy one. You have to take into account the incessant demands of the middle classes for tax concessions, of the masses for more welfare, of businessmen for more incentives. You have to listen politely to the contradictory advice dished out with reckless abandon by economists, read the fulminations of pundits in the op-ed pages, all the while keeping a wary eye on the rating agencies. And of course, you have a duty to brighten the prospects of your party being re-elected in the imminent state elections.

Furthermore, you have to raise revenues to cater to all these demands while doing your best to avoid increasing taxes and keeping the fiscal deficit under control. You have, in short, the unenviable task of squaring a circle.

But perhaps I can be of assistance. No, no, there is no need to recoil with horror---I am not going to lecture you on asset monetisation and privatisation and listing bonds abroad and so on. But I do have a modest proposal which will serve the twin purposes of both popularising the budget and earning trillions in revenue in the process. The aim is to spread knowledge about the budget to the masses, kindle their interest in it, while at the same time raising funds to meet development and welfare needs. Why, you could even cut taxes.

Simply put, my plan envisages allowing people to bet on the budget. They could bet on what the fiscal deficit could be as a percentage of GDP, what the revenue deficit should be, on the growth in tax revenues envisaged, on budgeted growth in capital expenditure, on the level of internal and extra-budgetary resources, on whether the level of deductions under Section 80 C should be increased, on whether the standard deduction will go up and by how much. In short, they could bet on any number in the budget. Indeed, they could even bet on who you will quote in your speech—Thiruvalluvar or the Mahatma or Tagore. But we shouldn’t allow betting on unrelated things, such as how long your speech is.

The best way to collect these bets is through the post offices spread across the length and breadth of the country. Postmen can readily be turned into bet collectors---it’s an easy job and they are likely to be familiar with the process, since many of them must be queuing up to get lottery tickets every week to supplement their meagre income.

Thanks to the marvels of technology, the bets placed can instantly be collated at a central office. On Budget Day, a certain percentage, say 25 percent, will be deducted from the corpus and the balance distributed to the winning tickets. What’s more, the winners could also be taxed---just as gains from horse racing and other games of skill are taxed now. Keep the minimum betting amount low, so as to increase volumes, and you will be able to garner trillions in revenues.

Within weeks of implementing this grand scheme, people all over the country will be going around with the budget papers in their hands, trying to figure out what the heck it all means. Within months, they would know all about the types of deficits, about the amounts allocated to various departments, about the rates of growth of taxes, about the level of disinvestment receipts, even about section 80JJA.

And you can rest assured that on Budget Day the entire nation will listen with bated breath to every word you utter. In fact, they will study every word you say closely throughout the year, so that they can place the right bets when the budget comes around.

I think PMBJP (Prime Minister’s Betting Janata Programme) would be the right name for this wonderful scheme. And the system could easily be extended to the state budgets, after changing the name to CMBJP, of course.

As for those who may have objections to betting, think of the huge increase in financial literacy such a system would lead to. Think of it as an educational project on which the public would only be too willing to pay.

It will be wonderful if you introduce this scheme in your forthcoming budget. If you do, I am certain you will reserve your place in history as the most innovative finance minister, not just in India, but all over the world.

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Budget should focus on bridging widened inequality in economy, creating jobs: D Subbarao

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Subbarao also opined that experience shows export promotion behind protectionist walls is seldom competitive, so there is a case for reducing the tariffs.

The upcoming Budget should focus on creating jobs and bridging the widened inequality in the economy besides accelerating growth, former RBI Governor D Subbarao said on Thursday while observing that given the continuing need to raise spending on education, health and infrastructure, there is not much leeway for tax cuts.

Subbarao also opined that experience shows export promotion behind protectionist walls is seldom competitive, so there is a case for reducing the tariffs.

"Accelerating growth is the objective of every Budget as it should be of this one. But this Budget should pay special attention to bridging the widened inequality in the economy," he told PTI in an interview.

While noting that the COVID-19 pandemic has caused enormous distress to the low-income segments who operate in the informal economy, Subbarao said the upper income segments have not only been able to protect their incomes but have in fact been able to grow their savings and wealth.

Citing the latest World Inequality Report which had said that India is among the most unequal countries in the world, he said,” Such wide inequality is not only morally wrong and politically corrosive, but it will also dent our long-term growth prospects.”

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman is scheduled to present the Union Budget 2022-23 in Parliament on February 1.

“We need job intensive growth. If there is a theme for this Budget, it should be jobs,” he said.

The former RBI Governor pointed out that jobs have been lost because of the growth slowdown and also because of the shift in activity from the labour-intensive informal sector to the capital-intensive formal sector.

“Growth is necessary to generate jobs, but not sufficient,” he said, adding that there is a need for stronger emphasis on improving the ease of doing business through governance reforms so that investment becomes a promising option for both domestic and foreign investors.

Subbarao pointed out that raising the level of exports is good not just for balance of payments reasons but also from a jobs perspective because export production is labour intensive.

“Experience shows that export production behind protectionist walls is seldom competitive. There is a case therefore for rolling down the tariffs,” he said.

Asked if there is any scope for reduction in taxes in the upcoming Budget as that will provide some relief to the poor, Subbarao said as per media reports, this year’s tax collections will be better than the budgeted target which, he said, will be largely offset by lower privatization proceeds and higher expenditure on food and fertilizer subsidies.

“So, the net positive impact on the fiscal deficit is likely to be marginal,” he said. Also, Subbarao noted that the tax buoyancy the country saw this year will dissipate next year as the informal sector revives.

“Besides, given the continuing need to raise spending on education, health and infrastructure, I don’t believe there is much leeway for tax cuts,” he argued.

Asked whether the government should continue with stimulus measures in order to stimulate growth, Subbarao said in the last Budget, the finance minister committed to a fiscal consolidation path of reducing the fiscal deficit to 4.5 per cent of GDP by 2025/26.

“I believe it’s important to operate within that space. Any deviation from the fiscal consolidation path will impair credibility, dent investor sentiment and hurt our growth prospects.” he said.

Asked how big a concern is inflation, Subbarao said inflation has remained in the upper reaches of the RBI’s target band for much of the last two years.

Going forward, he said there will be pressure on inflation because of an unfavourable base effect, rising commodity prices and output price hikes by firms.

“Controlling inflation can go a long way to redress the distress of the poor,” Subbarao observed.

On the risk of stagflation, he  said he thinks that’s being too alarmist.

“Yes, inflation has been persistent over the last two years but note that it is still within the RBI’s target band.  RBI should be able to bring it down to the mid-point of the target band by normalizing the policy,” Subbarao said.

Stagflation is defined as a situation with persistent high inflation combined with low growth.

Retail inflation in India rose to 5.59 per cent in December 2021, while the wholesale price-based inflation eased to 13.56 per cent last month.On economic growth, he said if Omicron remains mild, mobility restrictions are likely to be targeted and decentralized.

“In the base case scenario therefore, we should achieve 9.2 per cent growth for the full year. If in fact these assumptions about Omicron do not hold, there will be a downside risk to the 9.2 per cent growth estimate,” Subbarao said.

Crash in new-age tech IPO stocks sours sentiment in unlisted market

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The meltdown seen in stocks of some of the biggest initial public offerings of last year seems to be driving investors away from the unlisted space as well. Dealers pointed to a sharp decline in trade volumes and investor interest in companies close to going publiclisting gains: Strong listing gains driving retail investors by hordes to  IPOs - The Economic Times.

“As the broader market is giving up the gains before the Union Budget, the unlisted markets too have failed to recover from the recent lows. One rarely sees a rapid fall in unlisted markets as most participants are long-term investors. Hence, if the broader market extends the losses, we may see a rub-off effect in unlisted space but at a slower pace,” said Manan Doshi, Co-Founder of unlistedarena.com.

The sentiment in the unlisted space turned after the disastrous debut of One97 Communications, parent of Paytm, on the bourses in November that saw the stock plunge 27 percent from the issue price. Paytm has lost nearly 51 percent since listing, eroding over Rs 70,000 crore of its market value.

In recent sessions, dealers warned of volumes drying up scorched by a simmering sell-off in both global and domestic markets amid fears of interest rate hike in the US and geopolitical tensions in Eastern Europe.

The fears around higher interest rates have hit the shares of new-age technology stocks like Paytm, Zomato, PB Fintech, Nykaa and CarTrade Tech hardest as the net present value of their future earnings sees a sharp downgrade when interest rates rise.

“It was a known fact that there was a good amount of froth in the unlisted markets and as the NASDAQ and the Indian new listings (especially new-age ones) corrected heavily, the unlisted markets also got spooked,” said Aditya Kondawar, COO of JST Investments.

In addition to the broader market sell-off, the disappointment around issue price of recent public offerings like PB Fintech and AGS Transact Tech has also mellowed risk appetite of investors in the unlisted space.

Both PB Fintech and AGS Transact were traded at Rs 1200 and Rs 220 a share in the unlisted market before their IPO. Their IPO price band came in much lower at Rs 980 and Rs 175 a share, respectively.

The pressure on unlisted stocks has not been as much as that in the officially listed space. Shares of API Holdings traded at Rs 107 in unlisted market at the end of December and quoted Rs 98 apiece on January 27. Ixigo-owner Le Travenues Technologies also traded unchanged at Rs 104 during this period.

Shares of Sterlite Power Transmission are down to Rs 1,260 from Rs 1,390 apiece, while those of Mobikwik Systems fell to Rs 860 from Rs 900. HDB Financial, an HDFC Bank arm, has risen to Rs 900 from Rs 895 but Tamilnad Mercantile bank declined to Rs 625 from Rs 640.Kondawar expects the unlisted market to find its mojo back once the listed space reflects some signs of risk appetite among investors. “They will return to vibrancy once the listed markets return to euphoria because while unlisted markets see a lot of interest from long-term investors, in the past few years, investors have been also getting to unlisted markets to make a quick buck,” he said.

Budget 2022 | Six measures the chemical sector expects

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In order to leverage its full potential, some of the bottlenecks and issues in the chemical sector need to be addressed. While in recent years the government has taken several steps in this direction, further support is requiredunion budget: India Budget 2022: Economists prescribe tax relief, higher  capex - The Economic Times

The chemical industry in India is a major sector manufacturing around 80,000 products, and employing ~2 million people. The sector size is estimated to be around $178 billion in FY19, of which specialty chemical is estimated to be around $32 billion.

The industry is poised to witness healthy growth over the next few years driven by growth in domestic consumption, and demand from export market, partly supported by growing diversification of supply chain being adopted by global players under the ‘China+1’ strategy. The growth in sector will aid in achieving government policies such as ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’, and ‘Make in India’

However, in order to leverage the opportunity to its full potential, some of the bottlenecks and issues need to be addressed, which includes anomalies in duty structure, high dependence on imported feedstock for specialty chemicals, low R&D spend, and expected tightening of environmental norms and regulations. While in recent years the government has taken several steps to address some of these issues, further support is required.

Some of these measures, which can be addressed in Budget 2022 are:

Rationalisation Of Duty Structure: The industry has faced duty structure anomalies arising from free trade agreements (FTAs) with several countries, leading to an inverted duty structure for several downstream and intermediate products. This had also resulted in insufficient capacity creation for these products which are used as feedstock for specialty/value-added products.

Further, high duties on key raw materials and building blocks, which are not available domestically, impacted the competitiveness of domestic manufacturers. While, in recent years some of the duty structure related issues have been addressed, such as reduction in basic customs duty on Naphtha from 4 percent to 2.5 percent in Budget 2021, and some of the anomalies under the FTAs have been rationalised.

However, further rationalisation in duty structure is needed, with reduction in duties for key raw materials and building blocks, and addressing the instances of an inverted duty structure by increasing duties on intermediates/downstream product to encourage domestic production of value-added products.

Incentives For Exports: Incentives for boosting exports in the chemical sector can be announced. Schemes such as Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products (RODTEP) can be extended to the chemical sector as well.

Production Linked Incentives (PLI) Schemes: Extension of the PLI schemes for more chemical segments would support the domestic manufacturing sector, and encourage capacity additions. Currently the PLI scheme has been extended to the Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) and key starting materials (KSMs).

Cluster-Based Development: Any fiscal incentives/budgetary allocation for cluster-based development under existing programmes such as PCPIR/plastic parks (Petroleum, Chemicals and Petrochemicals Investment Region) or other such programmes will also help in domestic capacity creation. Such cluster-based development will also be beneficial for environmental and social risk management, due to shared facilities enabling better compliance with tightening environmental norms.

Research and Development: In order to produce more value added products, it will be necessary for the domestic industry to increase its R&D spend. Any incentives/rebates for R&D-related capital expenditure by the industry will be favourable.

Schemes For MSME Sector: MSMEs account for significant share of domestic chemical manufacturing, and specific schemes targeting this segment to enable technology upgrade, and ESG compliance (domestic and exports) can help the MSME sector move up the chemical value chain, increase its product offerings, and improve competitiveness.

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Sensex, Nifty stage sharp recovery led by metals, telecom, power, financials and pharma

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After slumping 1028 points to 56,404, the Sensex was trading at 57,506 at 9.30 am up 15 points or 0.03 per cent.

Business News, Economic News, Market News, Share Market News, Indian Stock  Market News recovered from a fall of over 1000 points in the morning amid mixed global cues, as metals, telecom, power, financials and pharma stocks bounced back.
After slumping 1028 points to 56,404, the Sensex was trading at 57,506 at 9.30 am up 15 points or 0.03 per cent. It recorded an intraday high of 57,529. The Nifty 50 which also recovered was trading at 17,190, up 22.90 points or 0.24 per cent, near its intraday high of 17,192. It recorded an intraday low of 16,836.80.

More than Rs 17.54 trillion of investors' wealth has been wiped out over five sessions. Since 17 January, the 30-pack Sensex has declined over 3,300 points and the Nifty 1,100 points, falling 5.4 pOvernight, US stocks ended higher after suffering staggering losses. The US Fed will start its two day meeting on Tuesday and the outcome will come on January 26. The wait has led to a selloff across the world. Analysts expect the Fed will roll back its easy liquidity measures amid higher inflation and indications of multiple interest rate hikes this year.
ercent each during the period.


Also, new-age firms that have listed in the last few months at high valuations have taken a beating, dampening investor sentiment. Rising COVID cases in India, which have remained above three lakh for some days now, are also causing concern.

Early trends this earnings season indicate that high input costs continue to be a bugbear, as also delayed kharif (monsoon) crop harvesting due to unseasonal rains, and the virus.


Explainer: Why is PTC India Financial Services under the scanner for corporate governance?

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The Securities and Exchange Board of India has pulled up PFS, barring the non-banking financial company from holding a board meeting until it addresses the corporate governance issues and submits a report on action taken within four weeksPTC India Financial Sinks 16% Over Corporate Governance Issues

PTC India Financial Services (PFS) has been taking heat for lapses in corporate governance and compliance after three of its independent directors quit last week.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has pulled up PFS, barring the non-banking financial company (NBFC) from holding a board meeting until it addresses the corporate governance issues and submits a report on action taken within four weeks.

Shares of PFS and parent PTC India have plummeted for three consecutive sessions. But what has caused all this?

The trigger

On January 19, Kamlesh Shivji Vikamsey, Thomas Mathew T and Santosh B Nayar resigned from the post of independent director of PFS on concerns over lapses in governance and compliance. They submitted similarly worded resignations and other supporting documents.

The three directors said that former bureaucrat Rakesh Kacker had also previously written to the management highlighting lapses in corporate governance before his tenure ended at PFS in end-December. Kacker was also on the board of the parent entity PTC; he resigned on January 21.

Why did the directors resign?

The independent directors have made six allegations--one pertains to the appointment of another director, while the other five pertain to operations and corporate governance issues.

  1. • PFS’s managing director and chief executive officer Pawan Singh did not allow “Mr Ratnesh” to join and function as director finance and chief financial officer despite board approvals for the appointment. The independent directors said that the company was in violation of the Companies Act, 2013 as Singh took the decision “unilaterally” and did seek board approval, nor gave an explanation.
  2. • The directors also alleged that the company did not disclose the forensic audit report (FAR) relating to a loan account of NSL Nagapatnam Power and Infratech for two years between November 2018 and December 2020. Due to ongoing stress in the project, insolvency proceedings were initiated in the project for which bridge loan was taken by NSL and the promoter company of NSL made a one-time settlement (OTS) offer to the company in March 2020. But when the FAR came to light, PFS’s audit committee recommended that the matter should be reported to Reserve Bank of India (RBI) as suspected fraud and the board wanted to defer the decision on OTS till RBI responded.
  3. • The management took no action on corporate governance issues highlighted by former PTC head Deepak Amitabh in a board meeting held on August 5, 2021.
  4. • The management made changes in conditions of loans, without prior approval of the board. The independent directors cited two examples—both pertaining to highway projects—and expressed concerns that there may be more such instances.
  5. • The management blatantly ignored communications from the independent directors where they called for-- documentation pertaining to the appointment and joining of Ratnesh, request for professional help of legal counsel, meeting of nomination and remuneration committee to fill up the vacancy of a lady independent director, and action needed after the withdrawal of nomination of Renu Narang from the board of the company that rendered the nomination and remuneration committee dysfunctional.
  6. • The management did not provide the independent directors with the information sought by them.

What has the management done in response?

The management has refuted the allegations, questioned the intent of the independent directors and formed an internal committee for investigation. They have sent a status report to the RBI, SEBI and the two stock exchanges.

The management has started the process of appointing new independent directors and has sought SEBI approval to hold a board meeting in their absence.

The management also said that while the former chairman Deepak Amitabh raised concerns over the corporate governance practices of the company in a board meeting on August 5, 2021, the board provided a clean corporate governance report on the same day for the financial year ending March 31, 2021. They also pointed out that on September 24, 2021 the ex-chairman addressed the shareholders of the company at the 15th Annual General Meeting, appreciating the firm and mentioning no concern related to corporate governance.

What regulatory action has been taken?

SEBI has barred PFS from holding a board meeting until the company submits an action report within four weeks. This effectively means that the company is unlikely to get an exemption for a board meeting for the next one month.

The RBI and even the ministry of corporate affairs are soon expected to ask the company for an explanation.

What next?

All eyes would be on the action report PFS has to submit to SEBI in the next four weeks.

As a listed NBFC, the company falls under the purview of both RBI and SEBI. Authorities could direct the company to conduct an independent audit of the corporate governance issues.

The management has been in talks with key investors to assuage their concerns. They may have to take some more action soon to allay their concerns as the selloff in the shares of PFS and parent PTC continues.

PTC, formerly known as Power Trading Corporation of India, holds a 65 percent stake in PFS. State run-power sector companies NTPC, Power Grid Corporation of India, Power Finance Corporation and NHPC together own a 16.2 percent stake in PTC.

Sequence of events

August 5, 2021: Former PTC Chairman Deepak Amitabh raises concerns over the corporate governance practices of PFS in a board meeting.

October 13, 2021: Amitabh resigns from the post of chairman and managing director with effect from November 5, citing personal reason. He joined the company in 2003 and held the top position since 2012.

November 6, 2021: Rajib Kumar Mishra, who was director of marketing at PTC, was given the additional charge of CMD’s position till a regular appointment was done.

January 14, 2022: PFS directors were sent a notice informing them of a board meeting to be held on January 22. The independent directors claimed that the board meeting was invalid as the notice was not served to all the directors of the board and the agenda did not include the corporate governance issues raised by them earlier.

January 19, 2022: Vikamsey, Mathew and Nayar resign from the board of PFS, citing lapses in corporate governance.

January 20, 2022: PTC and PFS refute allegations made by the independent directors who resigned.

January 21, 2022: PTC and PFS hold press meet to announce they have formed an internal committee for investigation. They question the intent of the independent directors.

January 22, 2022: PFS has to call off the board meeting after SEBI pulls them up, barring them from holding a press meet until they submit an action report in four weeks.

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What should investors do with Reliance Industries post Q3 earnings: buy, sell or hold?

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Reliance Industries reported a net profit of Rs 20,539 crore in the third quarter of 2021-22, up 37.9% year-on-year as all business verticals saw strong growth, the oil-to-chemical (O2C).What Should Investors Do With Reliance Industries Post Q3 Earnings: Buy,  Sell Or Hold?

The share price of Reliance Industries (RIL), which reported a healthy set of numbers for the December quarter, slipped into the red after opening higher in the morning session on January 24 following weak market conditions.

Billionaire Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries reported a net profit of Rs 20,539 crore in the third quarter of 2021-22, up 37.9 percent year-on-year as all business verticals saw strong growth, the oil-to-chemical (O2C), telecom and retail conglomerate said on January 21.

The net profit of the company was boosted by a one-time gain of Rs 2,836 crore from the sale of its upstream shale gas assets in Eagleford in Texas, USA, with which the company exited from the shale gas play in North America.

The consolidated revenue for the country’s most valuable company by market capitalisation rose 52.2 percent YoY to Rs 209,823 crore in the quarter. The company said that it clocked record earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBIDTA) led by its O2C, oil and gas, retail and digital services.

Also read: Reliance Retail Q3 result | Net profit jumps 23% to Rs 2,259 crore backed by festive sales

The Jio Platforms business reported gross revenue of Rs 24,176 crore in the December quarter, up 13.8 percent after adjusting for Interconnect Usage Charges (IUC).

RIL said that healthy subscriber addition of 34.6 million was to some extent offset by the churn due to SIM consolidation and repurposing of customer retention.

Catch all the market action on our live blog

At 10.39 am, the stock was trading at Rs 2,449.85, down Rs 28.25, or 1.14 percent, on the National Stock Exchange. It touched an intraday high of Rs 2,504.10 and an intraday low of Rs 2,443.20.

Here's what brokerages say about the stock post December quarter earnings:

Morgan Stanley 

The firm has maintained its overweight call on the stock with the target at Rs 2,925 per share. "The firm reported 5 percent beat on earnings driven by higher telecom ARPUs, upstream gas EBIDTA and retail margin. However, the telecom subscriber churn is a key negative. Overall earnings upgrade story is firmly in play," it said.

Jefferies 

The research firm has maintained its buy call on the stock with the target at Rs 2,950 per share. RIL's EBITDA growth of 6 percent was ahead of estimates on a large beat in retail. Strong network expansion, revenue beat and profitability improvement were the key highlights.

Jio's subscriber churn was a disappointment, but strong margin performance surprised positively. Refining remains firm, while petchem has hit a soft patch on weak Chinese demand. Forecast 22 percent adjusted EPS CAGR over FY22-24, it said.

CLSA

The research firm has maintained its outperform rating with the target at Rs 2,850 per share. Q3 standalone EBITDA, EBIT and profit of 3-6 percent was ahead of estimates. The big upstream beat is partly offset by a slight miss in O2C. Higher retail profit drove a 6-7 percent consolidated EBITDA/EBIT beat. The brokerage firm has raised EPS estimates by 3-7 percent.

Macquarie

The firm has retained its underperform call with the target at Rs 2,850 per share. Retail revenue momentum, improved E&P profit are the positives. Refining margin improvement and lower-cost debt refinancing were the key positives. Jio subscriber churn, low tax rate, one-off disposal gain were the negatives. It raised FY22-24 EPS estimates by 1-2 percent on a higher energy division margin.

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Current economic landscape may not allow government to go for fiscal consolidation immediately: YES Bank chief economist

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"Expenditure needs are clearly cut-out and the government should not shy away from them to attain its objective of fiscal consolidation. The good thing is that resource generation might not be the biggest problem in FY23 as, with sticky inflation, nominal growth for the economy is likely to be close to 14 percent in FY23 on top of the 17.6 percent estimated for FY22.

It is that time of the year when markets await the Union Budget. From the time COVID-19 hit, the government has agreed to take a large GFD/GDP ratio (gross fiscal deficit/gross domestic product) in its stride, allowed for a sharp increase in its borrowing programme, leading to a significant increase in the public debt/GDP ratio. Expectedly, there are some calls for a fiscal consolidation, lest the debt becomes overly burdensome for future generations to pay or financial stability becomes an issue.

Can the government go for a fiscal consolidation immediately? The current economic landscape may not allow them to do so. The economy was anyways slowing over many quarters before COVID-19, implying structural impediments. With COVID-19, these impediments have probably only strengthened and thus the economy would need to be on policy crutches for full recovery to take shape.

Also Read:- As economies limp out of pandemic, here’s how CII wants policymakers to steer post-COVID recovery


A look at the data will make this clear. Advance GDP estimates (AE) published recently indicate that India is likely to grow at a real rate of 9.2 percent in FY22. The worry is weak private consumption demand and the still-frail consumer sentiment. The AE indicates that the private consumption expenditure will still be lower than the pre-COVID-19 level in FY22 by 2.9 percent. And, even more important is the fact that per capita GDP in FY22 at constant prices is at Rs 1,07,801 and this continues to be lower than the level of Rs 1,08,645 in FY20.

Government's policy focus has principally been on reforms strategies that boost the production sector. However, the missing link here is consumption demand and thus getting private investment demand back on track merely through the enablers of PLI (production linked incentive), etc, may not work as underutilisation of capacity remains high. Even the low interest rates of the central bank and negative real rates have not enthused credit flows for investment purposes.

Also read - Budget 2022: India set for modest fiscal consolidation amid slow economic recovery

With the onset of Omicron, the challenges of Budget-making have probably increased. The economy continues to remain multi-speed: both on the production side as also on the demand side. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has already removed the liquidity comfort from the system and some banks have gone ahead and increased the deposit rates. Sooner than later, the harsh tightening that the US Fed is launching itself into could mean that RBI would have to raise the repo rate.

With the economy still tender, the fiscal cannot contract when RBI is tightening. The role of the fiscal should continue to remain redistributive, try and push up job growth in the economy and continue its resource support for schemes such as the MNREGS (Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme). While the government has been leading investments, there could be some worries with the implementation part, evident in the slow pace of capital expenditure in the current financial year. Thus, to provide a push to the economy, the government will have to better strategise the implementation of projects that will also enable job growth and help stabilise consumption demand.

eas that cry for attention are healthcare and education sectors. COVID-19 has exposed the need for large investments in both these areas. In the last budget, the healthcare sector allocations were raised by 137 percent, but this included the cost of vaccines as also water and sanitation. The need of the hour is to improve the healthcare and education infrastructure (access to education for poor in backward areas has been impacted). Health and education remain important as they can have implications for the future productivity of the workforce. Private-public participation could be the way forward here.

Expenditure needs are clearly cut out and the government should not shy away from them to attain its objective of fiscal consolidation. The good thing is that resource generation might not be the biggest problem in FY23 as, with sticky inflation, nominal growth for the economy is likely to be close to 14 percent in FY23 on top of the 17.6 percent estimated for FY22. This is likely to be beneficial for tax collection. Our calculations indicate that the government may target for a GFD/GDP of 5.8 percent for FY23, but with the GFD remaining large at Rs 15.4 trillion, entailing a borrowing programme of close to Rs 13 trillion.

Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts on Moneycontrol.com are their own and not those of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.

As economies limp out of pandemic, here’s how CII wants policymakers to steer post-COVID recovery

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Confederation of Indian Industries urges policymakers to tackle two-speed recovery among other things Growth appears to be limping back after COVID battered economies around the world, thanks to policy support from governments as well as vaccination drives.

The Rise of the 'Gig Economy': A Case Study of Uber - Studying EconomicsHowever, to ensure that the recovery is even and sustained, policymakers need to tackle seven key issues going by a blog post from the Confederation of Indian Industries (CII).

Here’s a detailed look at them:

Tackle two-speed recovery

Recovery is two-speed with widespread differences, both inter-country and intra-country. The developed world, with much higher fiscal support and access to vaccines, has recovered much faster than developing and low-income countries. Within countries, contact-based sectors have been slower to pick up. The more vulnerable sections of society bore greater brunt of loss of jobs and livelihoods. Economic realities of a two-speed recovery have exacerbated inequalities making them stark and intense as never before. To address this, inclusion will have to be a key component of all policymaking.

Institutionalise pandemic preparedness

COVID is not over yet. Concerns caused by the recent mutation show how fragile the recovery is. Also, COVID is not the last pandemic that the world will have to deal with. Given the severity of the health and economic crisis and the scale of loss of lives that pandemics can cause, countries should institutionalise pandemic preparedness.

Gradual easing of monetary policy

Led by the United States, governments and central banks across the world have been literally printing money leading to a surfeit of liquidity. However, this cannot continue forever, and the hope is that the withdrawal of this policy would be gradual. The process will place the dynamics of inflation, monetary policy, fiscal deficits and interest rates centre stage in the global economic thinking, and countries should start preparing for this beginning 2022.

Bring down emissions

The challenge of climate change requires urgent and substantive action by all. The earth’s carbon dioxide levels are the highest in the last three million years. Therefore, it is crucial to bring down emissions substantially within this decade itself to be able to achieve the goal of limiting temperature increases to 1.5 degrees.

Address disruption from tech adoption

The pandemic has fast-tracked technology adoption, which brings with it the issues of disruptions, dislocations, and friction. Policymaking needs to address these challenges.

Supply chains must prepare for black swans

The pandemic has caused unprecedented supply chain shocks leading to global shortages such as that of semiconductors. These shortages have affected businesses across the globe, due to their dependence on the complex just in time global supply chains. The shortages led to lower capacity use in user industries, in spite of demand being there. This in turn impacted investment and capacity expansion decisions. Economies need to deal with these shortages and plan for mitigating the impact of any such future global events on supply chains.

Implementing Universal Basic Income

In a two-speed world, economic policy should re-visit the idea of Universal Basic Income (UBI) as a social protection tool and a demand stabiliser. While the implementation would be easier for the developed world with resources available at its disposal, developing countries like India also need to start deliberating on some form of UBI.

Share Market Closing Note

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Sensex, Nifty recover smartly to end off days low; PSU banks fall, FMCG outperforms

Share Market Closing Bell! Sensex, Nifty end on a positive note – IT stocks  and Reliance Industries lead the surge | Zee Business

Sensex, Nifty recover smartly to end off days low; PSU banks fall, FMCG outperforms

CLOSING BELL Updates: All sectoral indices barring FMCG ended in the red with the midcap and smallcap indices shedding 2 percent each

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Topic :- Time:3.00 PM

Huge sell off happened in the market in last trading hour. Nifty spot if manages to close above 17600 level then expect some pull back in coming sessions and close below above mentioned level will result in some further fall. Avoid open positions for Monday. Though Nifty and Banknifty are showing some recovery now still its better to avoid.


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Topic :- Time:2.30 PM

CRUDOIL Trading View:

CRUDEOIL is trading at 6270.If it breaks and trade below 6260 level then expect some decline in it and if it manages to trade and sustain above 6285 level then some upmove can follow in it.

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Topic :- Time:1.30 PM

GOLD Trading View:

GOLD is trading at 48256.If it breaks and trade below 48220 level then expect some decline in it and if it manages to trade and sustain above 48300 level then some upmove can follow in GOLD.

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Topic :- Time:1.00 PM

Nifty recovered from its day lows however it is still trading in red zone. Nifty spot if manages to trade and sustain above 17680 level then some can be seen in the market and if it breaks and trade below 17640 level then some decline can follow in the market.

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Topic :- Time:12.30 PM

COPPER Trading View:

COPPER is trading at 758.60.If it manages to trade and sustain above 759.20 level then some upmove can follow in it and if it breaks and trade below 757.80 level then some decline can be seen in the Nifty.

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Topic :- Time:12.00 PM

Yet another day yet another fall. Nifty is falling continuously. All recovery hopes are on Reliance number now. Nifty spot if manages to trade and sustain above 17660 level then expect some further upmove and if it breaks and trade below 17620 level then some decline can be seen in the market.

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Topic :- Time:11.55 AM

Just In:

Paytm shares hit record low of Rs 980, discount to issue price at 54%.


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Topic :- Time:11.30 AM

News Wrap Up:

1. Sensex down 500 points, Nifty near 17,600; MidCap index slips 1%

2. AIIB to invest $150 mn in development of data centers serving Asia

3. FPIs look to Budget for clarity on REIT, InvIT taxation rate

4. Seeking foreign investment, India to open $1 trn govt bond market

5. Reliance Industries may post strong growth in net profit, sales for Q3

6. Zomato slips 5%, nears record low; market cap falls below Rs 1-trn mark

7. Shoppers Stop surges 18%, hits 52-week high on strong Q3 earnings

8. Adani Wilmar to hit capital mkt with Rs 3,600 crore-IPO on January 27


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Topic :- Nifty Opening Note

Indian Stock Market Trading View For 21 Jan,2022

Global cues will dictate trend. Reliance result will have deep impact on the further market movement.

Nifty spot if manages to trade and sustain above 17780 level then expect some further upmove and if it breaks and trade below 17700 level then some decline can follow in the market. Please note this is just opening view and should not be considered as the view for the whole day.


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