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Manojit Saha is the Banking Editor at Business Standard based in Mumbai, tracking the financial sector for over two decades, with a focus on central bank and monetary policy making. He also contributed to Business Standard’s digital offering – The Banking Show – with interviews with business leaders, CEOs, and important policymakers. He anchored panel discussions comprising CEOs from banking, insurance, NBFCs and fintech industry for the Business Standard BFSI Insight Summit, Business Standard-IMGC India Mortgage Leadership Conclave, among others.
Manojit Saha is the Banking Editor at Business Standard based in Mumbai, tracking the financial sector for over two decades, with a focus on central bank and monetary policy making. He also contributed to Business Standard’s digital offering – The Banking Show – with interviews with business leaders, CEOs, and important policymakers. He anchored panel discussions comprising CEOs from banking, insurance, NBFCs and fintech industry for the Business Standard BFSI Insight Summit, Business Standard-IMGC India Mortgage Leadership Conclave, among others.
RBI?s approval in place, but insurance regulator uncomfortable with valuation
Kingfisher's lenders wanted it as precondition to consider additional funding
SBI cuts education loan rates 25-100 bps others reduce home loan rate, waive processing fees
Picking different strategies for different business is the name of the game at Reliance Capital
Ministry says capital infusion if loans extended only to productive sectors
Banks' deposit growth plummets as a result, worrying RBI
Central bank meets bankers to discuss possible dispensation
Bankers fear leakage of price-sensitive data if proposal is implemented
Finance ministry proposes loans to farmers be treated as cash credit, not demand credit
Banks stuck with miles purchased from Kingfisher Airlines, halt fresh buys
SBI keeps IDBI waiting for proposal to set up infra development fund
May approach Reserve Bank for increase in held-to-maturity cap
Public sector banks seek more time to form human-resource norms
Carrier immediately needs Rs 2,500 crore as working-capital loans to clear dues