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Manojit Saha is the Banking Editor for Business Standard and is based in Mumbai. He has been tracking the financial sector for over two decades, with a focus on the Reserve Bank of India and monetary policy. He has also contributed to Business Standard's digital offering - The Banking Show - with interviews with business leaders, CEOs and key policy makers. He has anchored panel discussions between CEOs from banking, insurance, NBFCs and fintech industry for the Business Standard BFSI Insight Summit, and the Business Standard-IMGC India Mortgage Leadership Conclave, among others.
Manojit Saha is the Banking Editor for Business Standard and is based in Mumbai. He has been tracking the financial sector for over two decades, with a focus on the Reserve Bank of India and monetary policy. He has also contributed to Business Standard's digital offering - The Banking Show - with interviews with business leaders, CEOs and key policy makers. He has anchored panel discussions between CEOs from banking, insurance, NBFCs and fintech industry for the Business Standard BFSI Insight Summit, and the Business Standard-IMGC India Mortgage Leadership Conclave, among others.
Central bank expects the liquidity crunch to continue for some more time
Interview with MD & CEO, Axis Bank
Q&A with MD, CEO, Axis Bank
Some banks may still want direct equity infusion from govt
Current market capitalisation of public sector banks is a fraction of capital requirements
Interview with MD, LIC
SBI's very own 'Kingfisher man'
RBI dubs the 10 years from 2010-2020 as the 'decade of retirement'
The finance ministry is notorious for delaying key appointments that come under its purview, and leave key roles headless for months
The rating agency cuts ratings of PNB, BoB and Canara Bank on concerns over worsening asset quality
Goldman Sachs stays neutral on SBI, notes NPAs peaked
May force other banks to follow to remain in competition despite margin squeeze
Chidambaram also asks these not to rush for bulk deposits to bloat balance sheets
Bankers say capital not an issue corporate lending is dry due to high interest rates and supply bottlenecks
Bankers say even though capital isn't an issue, the corporate lending pipeline is dry due to high interest rates and supply bottlenecks
Bankers said the criteria for CMD had been relaxed due to lack of eligible candidates
Stock up 10% in Nov on healthy asset quality, robust margins
Interview with Governor, Reserve Bank of India