Thursday, May 21, 2026

India Considers Seeking Dollars from NRIs and Raising Interest Rates — Can the Rupee Still Be Saved?


See All News by Ravish Kumar    « Previously


India Considers Seeking Dollars from NRIs and Raising Interest Rates — Can the Rupee Still Be Saved?

The Reserve Bank of India is now reportedly considering an NRI dollar deposit scheme and sovereign dollar bonds. Yes, the same government that spent years claiming India had become a golden bird under its watch is about to go door-to-door, asking NRIs for dollars to save the rupee. Bloomberg’s Anup Roy reports that the central bank is exploring ways to raise dollars, including hiking interest rates, because the rupee is in free fall. A 12% drop against the dollar in just one year. RBI has been selling dollars, but it isn’t working. And when interest rates go up, your EMIs will shoot up, fuel prices will rise again, school fees, taxi fares — everything. This isn’t because of Iran. This is the result of 13 years of economic mismanagement by the Modi government.

The Confession of a Devotee

Surjit Bhalla, the economist who rarely missed a chance to applaud the Modi government, has finally admitted that the economy is sinking. In a column that broke the camp’s silence, Bhalla noted that India’s GDP averaged 6% over the last 35 years — and 13 of those years belong to this government. He can’t explain why the BJP keeps winning elections despite a crumbling economy. He says he does not doubt the electoral process, but his own numbers raise uncomfortable questions: how does a party win mandate after mandate when the ground beneath everyone’s feet is giving way? Vote deletions running into crores, 27 lakh voters disenfranchised, counting centre videos demanded but never released by the Election Commission — as Scroll reported. Bhalla might not ask, but we must.

The Growth That Never Was

Bhalla is not the first to say the India growth story is a lie. Arvind Subramanian in 2019 showed GDP was overstated by about 2.5% between 2011 and 2017. Real growth was closer to 4.5%, not 7%. Former chief statistician Pronab Sen raised the alarm as early as 2017. Ashok Modi’s “India Fake Growth Story” paper drew vicious trolling. Professor R. Nagaraj of IGIDR flagged the figures in 2015. Arun Kumar, Rajeshwari Sengupta, Pramod Sinha, Ravindra Dholakia — all have been telling us for years that the emperor has no clothes. Bhalla is just a late arrival at the truth.

The favourite slogan — “India is the fastest growing major economy” — collapses the moment you remove the word “major”. Since 2014, India ranks 9th in GDP growth among all countries, and 8th in per capita GDP growth. In dollar terms, the picture is even grimmer.

Per Capita GDP Growth (Dollar Terms, Annual Average since 2014)
Bangladesh
8.3%
Ethiopia
7.2%
India
4.7%

India trails Bangladesh and Ethiopia in per capita dollar income growth. Source: Surjit Bhalla compilation, IMF data.

Metric India's Rank
GDP Growth (since 2014) 9th
Per Capita GDP Growth 8th
Per Capita Growth (Dollar Terms) 16th

Yet the propaganda machine kept running. Ministers repeated the lie, and the Prime Minister himself declared, “140 crore Indians are not satisfied with being the fastest growing economy, we want to be the third largest soon.” The reality is a country struggling to touch 6% when it needs 8% to even pretend it can develop.

Distraction as Policy: Cow, Bulldozer, Toffee

While the economy bled, what were we debating? Pakistan. Cow. Muslims. Madrasas. Bulldozer justice. DJ dance in front of mosques. The government and its godi media manufactured a permanent circus so that nobody would notice the hollowing out of the nation’s economic foundation. Free rations for 80 crore people were not a sign of a caring state — they were an admission that prosperity never reached them. In Bihar, over 1.5 crore women got ₹10,000 each during elections — vote-buying, plain and simple. Forty percent of graduates are unemployed. Sixty percent of BA degree holders don’t find a permanent job in the first year, and those who do earn meagre salaries. When young Indians started calling themselves cockroaches in protest, the government silenced them: social media accounts deleted, the “Cockroach Janata Party” Twitter account banned even as its Instagram outpaced the BJP’s follower growth.

The Credibility Trap and the AI Blindspot

Former RBI Governor D. Subbarao, in a widely discussed Hindustan Times article, says the rupee’s fall cannot be blamed only on oil prices. He warns of a credibility trap: if the world sees the RBI trying and failing to defend the rupee, it signals that the situation is beyond control, triggering a capital flight panic. India has also missed the AI bus. Global money is now chasing markets that lead in technology and AI, and India, despite all the chest-thumping, is a marginal player. Subbarao calls it a margin player. This, too, has battered the rupee. Remember the stock market frenzy after COVID? People pulled money from banks and poured it into equities without any underlying economic expansion. Companies weren’t investing, but stock prices soared. That bubble has now burst, and the common retail investor has been destroyed — two years of negative returns, and not a word about it in the prime-time debates.

“An economic storm is coming, the kind India has never seen... Modi went and ate toffee with Meloni and made videos... When he returns, the storm will hit the poor, the farmers, the youth... Then he will fold his hands and say, ‘Hang me, it’s not my fault.’” — Rahul Gandhi, months before the rupee rout.

The Amrit Kaal Scam

In December 2023, when the cracks were already visible, the government launched “Viksit Bharat 2047” and the “Voice of Youth” campaign. The Prime Minister spoke of an Amrit Kaal — a golden era — and asked everyone to work beyond limits. But to hit the developed-country target, India needs 8% annual GDP growth. The reality is stuck around 6%. UN DESA projects 6.4% for 2026-27, down from 7.5% in the previous year. Journalist Anindya Chakravarty pointed out that GST was supposed to add 2% to GDP. Since its introduction, average growth (excluding COVID) is 6.3%. Without GST, would growth have been 3.5-4.3%? The numbers scream that the much-touted reform didn’t deliver.

When Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman suddenly tweeted a string of rhetorical questions defending Jan Dhan, Mudra loans, and free grain, Congress’s Pawan Khera held a press conference that few channels cared to show. The facts he laid out were devastating: 15 crore Jan Dhan accounts are inoperative, 62% of the remaining hold less than ₹1,000. The central government has collected ₹43 lakh crore in petroleum taxes over 12 years. Public sector oil companies earned ₹12,400 crore in just a few hours from price hikes. Whose Amrit Kaal is this? The middle class is being crushed, and the finance minister’s threadbare defence was met with silence.

The Trump Factor: Toffees and Trade-offs

Prime Minister Modi’s foreign visits are assessed by the number of hugs, toffee moments, and dance reels, not by outcomes. Why did relations with Trump sour? What did India concede? Rahul Gandhi alleges that the Prime Minister traded national data to get Adani’s case cancelled in the US. The Telegraph’s Hans van Leeuwen wrote that “Trump trampled Modi’s dreams.” Yet the BJP’s supporters, who are also Trump supporters, don’t ask. India wants to know how much of this economic devastation is linked to those backroom compromises. If Modi wants India to be taken seriously, says the expert, he must turn the economy into a powerhouse that can rival China. Instead, manufacturing has declined over the last decade, India’s global industrial output is one-tenth of China’s, and deep-tech investment is abysmal. Winning elections by any means and running an economy are two different things. Controlling power, resources, and the media can win votes. Economic reality is like sand — it slips through even the tightest fist.

The Final Illusion

As the common citizen is pushed towards poverty and the middle class is pulverised, the godi media will switch on the Vishwaguru stories again. If you have enjoyed these fairy tales so far, you have no right to ask why the rupee is in a ditch. You should thank the Modi government: every time you are in pain, it expertly distracts you from your own wound.

Facts

  • Rupee depreciated 12% against the dollar in one year; RBI exploring NRI dollar deposits and rate hikes.
  • India’s average GDP growth over 35 years is 6%, with 13 years under the Modi government.
  • Since 2014, India ranks 9th in GDP growth, 8th in per capita GDP growth, and 16th in dollar-term per capita growth.
  • Bangladesh (8.3%) and Ethiopia (7.2%) outpaced India (4.7%) in per capita dollar income growth.
  • 40% of graduates unemployed; 60% of BA graduates lack a permanent job in the first year.
  • 15 crore Jan Dhan accounts are inoperative; 62% of the rest hold less than Rs 1,000.
  • Central government collected Rs 43 lakh crore from petroleum taxes in 12 years.
  • UN DESA projects India’s GDP growth at 6.4% for 2026-27, down from 7.5% previously.
  • India’s share in global industrial output is about one-tenth of China’s.

Criticisms

  • The Modi government has hollowed out the Indian economy while using statistical jugglery and a captive media to sell a fake growth story.
  • For 13 years, communal polarisation, bulldozer theatrics, and manufactured nationalism were used to hide catastrophic unemployment, inflation, and a falling rupee.
  • Electoral integrity has been compromised through mass voter deletions, opaque counting, and direct vote-buying with free rations and cash handouts.
  • Flagship schemes like Jan Dhan are a sham — the majority of accounts are either dead or near-empty, while crony capitalists thrive.
  • The government extracted Rs 43 lakh crore from citizens via fuel taxes while offering 5 kg of free grain as a sleight-of-hand to manufacture consent.
  • The Prime Minister’s personal equations with foreign leaders, especially Donald Trump, appear to have compromised national interests, with possible data-for-legal-relief deals going unquestioned.
  • The ‘Viksit Bharat’ and ‘Amrit Kaal’ narratives are cynical election props that mask the brutal math: India needs 8% growth, barely manages 6%, and the middle class is being systematically destroyed.
  • A subservient ‘godibachi’ media launders the government’s failures, deletes dissenting voices, and converts every economic disaster into a Toffee-and-Dance spectacle.

Disclaimer: This writeup was generated with the assistance of AI (DeepSeek). While AI has been used to organize and present the information, the facts, data points, and criticisms referenced are based on public reporting and documented analysis. Readers are encouraged to verify claims independently and consult original sources.


See All News by Ravish Kumar    « Previously

Life is not a rehearsal


Lessons in Investing    All Buddhist Stories    « Previously


Personal Finance  |  Mindfulness  |  Life Design

Life Is Not a Rehearsal

Why your financial future is inseparable from your purpose — and how Buddhist thinking might be the most practical money advice you'll ever receive.

10 min readFinancial Planning & Philosophy

5 Key Takeaways

  1. Always ask "For what?" -- Every financial or career decision must be viewed in its bigger context. Money is not the goal; it is the tool that enables the goal.
  2. You are one of three types of people -- Average Joe, the Vulnerable, or the Progressive Alpha. Knowing which you are is the first step to becoming who you want to be.
  3. The conveyor belt is optional -- A job that serves only someone else's dream makes you a pawn. Building a personal brand built on genuine purpose makes you the player.
  4. Thoughts precede destiny -- We become what we think. Mindfulness -- being aware of the origin of your thoughts -- is not spiritual luxury; it is a practical life skill.
  5. Purpose is the real currency -- A lifetime cashflow model can show you the financial future. But only a clear "why" can tell you whether that future is worth having.

Are You Prepared?

There is a pattern in the way people talk about time. University students in their second year look back fondly at their first. Third-year students can't wait to earn money. New graduates miss university terribly. And workers, a few years in, are already tired -- longing for the freedom they once had.

The common thread running through all of this? Change is constant. It has always been constant. And the people who thrive are not the ones who resist change -- they are the ones who prepare for it.

This piece is about preparation. Not just financial preparation, though that matters enormously. It is about preparing your mind, clarifying your purpose, and refusing to become a passenger in your own life.

"Life is not a rehearsal. Be prepared, and invest in building your dream. Otherwise, you'll end up working for someone else, building theirs."

The Story of Mike & Eileen: Seeing Your Financial Future

Consider a couple -- let's call them Mike and Eileen. After selling their business, they found themselves holding £400,000 and no idea what to do with it. On paper, things looked comfortable. In reality, the numbers told a very different story.

Eileen wanted financial security. Mike wanted the finer things in life. Both are entirely valid desires -- but they were pulling in subtly different directions, and nobody had sat down to map the journey.

A lifetime cashflow model was built for them. Think of it as a financial GPS: you enter your income, spending, savings, goals, and life events, and it shows you -- visually -- whether your money lasts or runs out. Blue means you're fine. Red means trouble is coming.

Scenario Outcome What It Meant Status
Carry on as-is, current spending Savings depleted in 12 years University funds for children eliminated Red Zone
Maintain desired lifestyle fully Money runs out at age 72 No safety net, no legacy Red Zone
Start a new business with a plan Strong business growth Financial pressure lifted significantly Improving
Restructure business + reclaim one day/week Higher profits + family harmony Stronger marriage, present parenting, sustained wealth Blue Zone

When Mike asked, "What must I do to make this all blue?" -- that was the real beginning. Not of a financial plan. Of a life plan.

A few years later, with the business thriving, something unexpected surfaced: the family was not happy. Mike had been pouring everything into work, convinced he was doing it "for them." His children, when asked, said they needed him -- not his money. One structural change -- freeing up one day every week -- reduced stress, improved efficiency, and, most importantly, repaired his marriage.

The financial outcome improved because the human outcome improved. That is the bigger picture.


The Three Types of People

Over years of working with individuals and families, a pattern becomes clear. People generally fall into one of three categories when it comes to how they navigate wealth, decisions, and life itself.

Type 01

Average Joe

A life of modest ups and downs that averages out to flat. Not a failure -- but not fulfillment either. The conveyor belt running on autopilot.

Type 02

The Vulnerable

Repetitive mistakes. Reactive decisions. Fragile to change. Often not by choice -- circumstances, habits, or a lack of guidance compound over time.

Type 03

Progressive Alpha

Gets better with time. Hires experts. Thinks in decades. Holds purpose as a compass. Uses wealth as a tool, not a trophy.

The goal is not to judge which category you currently occupy. The goal is to know that Progressive Alpha is a choice -- one available to everyone willing to think differently.

Escaping the Conveyor Belt

There is a useful thought experiment about a bakery. Imagine walking in for a Danish pastry and being given a full health assessment instead. "Looking at you, sir, you could do with a salad." Absurd, right?

And yet -- that is precisely what most people need, and almost never get, from the professionals they pay. Most jobs are transactional. You ask for something; you receive the nearest available thing. Nobody sees the bigger picture. Nobody asks "for what?"

When you work purely to fulfil someone else's brief -- without understanding your own values or direction -- life becomes a loop: wake up, commute, complete tasks, come home, sleep, repeat. Until one day you stop, look back, and wonder what it could have been.

"Do you want to be a pawn in a system -- or the architect of one that works for you and those who matter to you?"

Building a personal brand -- one rooted in genuine purpose and expertise -- is what separates those who serve a system from those who direct one. This is not about ego. It is about alignment between what you do and why you do it.


The Buddhist Case for Financial Clarity

There is a chain of causation that most people never examine:

~ Thought
->
! Decision
->
* Action
->
@ Outcome
->
# Destiny

We spend enormous energy optimising for outcomes -- better returns, smarter investments, sharper strategies. But if the thought that originates the decision is selfish, fearful, or reactive, every step downstream is compromised.

Mindfulness, in this context, is not incense and meditation cushions. It is the practical discipline of becoming aware of a thought before it becomes a decision. It is the ability to sense what can go wrong before it actually goes wrong -- and to ask whether the action you are about to take aligns with your deeper purpose.

Abstain from all sinful and unwholesome actions, perform wholesome and pious actions, and continue purifying the mind.

-- The Buddha, on the universal path

A pure mind sees things as they are -- not as fear distorts them, or greed inflates them. It recognises that all things are impermanent: markets rise and fall, businesses change, families evolve. And in that impermanence, it finds not anxiety but direction.

A life of purpose, after all, reveals the purpose of life.

Three Generations of Financial Reality

Understanding where we stand today requires looking at where we came from.

Generation Work & Income Reality Retirement Outlook Financial Mindset
Grandparents' era Job for life. Stable, predictable income Final salary pension -- income for life guaranteed Live within means. Loans frowned upon. Saving was default
Parents' era Pensions phased out for new joiners. Transition generation Lived longer post-retirement -- pension schemes became "too expensive" Inherited some saving discipline; began to shift toward consumption
Our generation Multiple job changes. Gig economy. No guaranteed pension Retirement linked to volatile stock market performance Easy credit = live for today, not tomorrow. Bills are a stretch. Savings are scarce

The pension safety net is gone. The job-for-life is gone. What remains is entirely in your hands -- and that is both the terrifying and empowering truth of modern financial life.


A Short Fable: The Baker Who Saw the Bigger Picture

A man walks into his neighbourhood bakery and asks for a Danish pastry. Simple enough.

The baker pauses. "Before I do that," he says, "I need to understand your weekly calorie intake."

The man stares. "I'm in a bakery."

"Yes. But I am in the business of your health, not just your hunger. And looking at you -- a salad might serve you better."

"You don't even sell salads."

"Not yet," the baker replies. "But I see the bigger picture."

The man leaves, mildly irritated and slightly grateful. He does not buy the pastry. He does, however, book a check-up he had been avoiding for two years.

The moral: Most professionals sell you what they have. The rare ones ask what you actually need. The difference between the two is the difference between a transaction and a transformation.

The one question worth returning to, always: For what?


Lessons in Investing    All Buddhist Stories    « Previously

The way to protect your wealth


Lessons in Investing    All Buddhist Stories    Lessons from Ven. Mahindasiri Thero    « Previously    Next »


Inner Guide Program — Buddhist Teachings

The Six Drains
on Wealth

A timeless teaching of the Supreme Buddha on how to protect the prosperity you earn

Namo Buddhaya. Wealth, in the modern world, requires more than hard work to sustain. The Supreme Buddha identified six specific patterns of behaviour that quietly, and sometimes catastrophically, erode everything a person has built. These are not moral judgements — they are economic warnings wrapped in ancient wisdom.

“It doesn’t matter how rich you are, how wealthy you are — if you keep on doing these six things, it will start to drain off. And one day, you will end up as a poor person.” — The Supreme Buddha

Five Key Takeaways

  1. 01
    Addiction compounds its cost. Intoxicants begin small but grow into daily financial obligations that are almost impossible to break — destroying both health and wealth simultaneously.
  2. 02
    Frequency is the trap, not the act. Celebrations and social events are fine in moderation. It is the compulsive, habitual repetition of spending on pleasure that bleeds a fortune dry.
  3. 03
    Your social circle is a financial variable. The quality of your friendships directly affects the direction of your money. Takers and enablers are wealth sinks; choosy, principled friendship is a form of financial discipline.
  4. 04
    Idleness is its own kind of loss. Laziness does not merely pause income — it creates a compounding deficit where time, opportunity, and momentum are all squandered together.
  5. 05
    Wealth protection is as important as wealth creation. Earning money is not enough. Knowing which behaviours to avoid is the other half of financial security — a lesson the Buddha taught 2,500 years ago.

The Six Drains, Explained

01

Intoxicating Drinks and Drugs

The Buddha’s first warning is about addiction — not just in its moral dimension, but in its purely financial one. What begins as a small, occasional expense becomes a daily obligation you cannot refuse. The biology of addiction is unforgiving: the body escalates its demand, requiring more substance to achieve the same relief. The wallet follows the nervous system downward. Fortunes have dissolved into bottles and powders. The warning is blunt: no level of wealth is immune once dependence takes hold.

02

Frequenting Festivals and Parties

There is nothing wrong with celebration. The teaching is precise: it is the frequency that corrupts. The person whose social calendar is an unbroken chain of events — concerts, ceremonies, parties — spends perpetually on clothes, drinks, travel, and appearances. These are not investments. They are performances of pleasure that leave no residue except a lighter account. Discipline in social spending is not austerity; it is the quiet, unglamorous act of choosing the future over the moment.

03

Loitering in the Streets at Night

This teaching carries a layer that goes beyond the obvious. When you are absent from your home without purpose, your property, your household, and your loved ones are left unguarded. The Buddha was speaking practically: wandering without intent is an invitation to loss on multiple fronts — through theft, negligence, and the vulnerability that comes from absence. Purposeful movement through the world protects what you have built. Aimless wandering does not.

04

Gambling

Gambling is the most transparent of the six drains, and yet the most seductive. The mathematics are merciless: the house wins consistently, and the gambler’s psychology — the chase, the near-miss, the brief triumph — is engineered to encourage further loss. Occasional wins create the illusion of a skill or a system that does not exist. The Buddha identified this not as a moral failing but as a structural one: no sustainable wealth is built on variance and hope.

05

Associating with Evil Friends

The Buddha’s teaching on friendship is cold-eyed and sociologically sharp. Some people are takers: they appear when resources are abundant and vanish when they are not. Beyond outright exploitation, bad company also shapes behaviour — friends who drink will normalise drinking, friends who gamble will normalise gambling. The circle we keep is not merely a social comfort; it is an environment that either accelerates or arrests our financial and personal growth. Choose accordingly.

06

Laziness

The final drain is the most personal. Unlike the others, laziness requires no external enabler — it is the enemy within. The person who cannot rise early, cannot commit to effort, cannot endure the discomfort of consistent work will simply never build the wealth that the other five drains can erode. The Buddha does not moralize; he states the arithmetic plainly: if you do not put in, you cannot protect what was never there.

At a Glance: The Six Drains

# Drain Mechanism of Loss Nature
01 Intoxicating Drinks & Drugs Addiction creates unavoidable daily expenditure Physical
02 Frequenting Festivals Habitual social spending with no return Social
03 Loitering at Night Property and household left unguarded Behavioural
04 Gambling Structural negative expectancy; chronic loss Financial
05 Bad Friendships Exploitation by takers; normalisation of vice Social
06 Laziness Zero income generation; compounding missed opportunity Internal

A Final Word

The Buddha’s teaching is neither a sermon nor a scold. It is a system. Avoid these six patterns and the money you earn has a chance to compound, to accumulate, to become the foundation of a dignified life. Ignore them, and even extraordinary income becomes a river pouring into sand. The wisdom is 2,500 years old. The arithmetic has not changed.

Namo Buddhaya

Lessons in Investing    All Buddhist Stories    Lessons from Ven. Mahindasiri Thero    « Previously    Next »
Tags: Buddhism,Investment,

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Standard Chartered Reveals AI-Driven 2030 Job Cut Roadmap

See All Articles on Layoffs    « Previously


Standard Chartered’s AI-driven 2030 roadmap: 7,000+ roles on the line

The London-headquartered banking giant is betting big on automation, setting out a plan that will reshape its global workforce and redefine how a 170-year-old institution operates in the cross-border economy.

A leaner, AI-powered future

Standard Chartered has drawn a line in the sand: by 2030, more than 15% of its corporate function roles will disappear. That translates into at least 7,000 positions across the bank’s worldwide operations, primarily in back‑office and support services. The lender employs roughly 80,000 people today, with an outsized footprint in Asia‑Pacific, West Asia and Africa, as well as a significant presence in India where it runs around 100 branches across 43 cities.

Unlike previous restructuring waves triggered by cost pressures or regulatory tightening, this one is explicitly driven by artificial intelligence and end‑to‑end automation. Chief Executive Bill Winters made clear that the reductions aren’t just about trimming fat – they’re about building what he calls “a more focused, streamlined, and efficient organization” that can deliver the bank’s strategy at greater scale and pace. The bank has already hit its 2026 medium‑term financial targets a year early, giving management the confidence to overlay a technology‑led transformation on top of strong commercial momentum.

Facts & figures at a glance

MetricDetail
Total workforce~80,000 employees globally
Planned reduction (corporate functions)>15% by 2030
Estimated job impactOver 7,000 roles
Primary areas affectedBack‑office, support services, operations
Key marketsAsia‑Pacific, West Asia, Africa; largest international foreign bank in India
Return target 2028>15%
Return target 2030~18%
Hong Kong share reactionShares moved higher post‑announcement

Profit targets climb as AI takes the wheel

Alongside the headcount reduction, Standard Chartered raised its long‑term profitability ambitions. The bank now expects to deliver returns comfortably above 15% by 2028, climbing toward 18% by the end of the decade. Executives pointed to a combination of restructuring savings, growth in higher‑margin businesses, and the productivity gains unlocked by automation as the engines behind those numbers.

0% 10% 15% 20% 15%+ (2028) ~18% (2030) Return on tangible equity targets
Projected trajectory based on bank’s public investor update. Intermediate years not disclosed.

The dual message – headcount reduction plus higher returns – signals that Standard Chartered is no longer treating AI as an experiment. It’s embedding intelligent automation into the core operating model, a shift that the bank believes is difficult for competitors to replicate quickly, given its unique cross‑border network.

Takeaways

  • AI is redrawing banking employment. The 7,000‑role reduction is not a one‑off efficiency drive; it’s a structural move that mirrors actions at tech giants like Meta, where automation is actively replacing human‑driven workflows.
  • Back‑office roles bear the brunt. Corporate functions and support services are the primary target, while revenue‑generating and relationship‑facing roles are expected to be more insulated – though reskilling will become essential.
  • Profitability leap depends on execution. Hitting 18% returns requires flawless deployment of AI tools, sustained growth in high‑margin segments, and the ability to retrain or redeploy staff whose jobs are transformed.
  • Geopolitical wildcards remain. The bank operates in regions exposed to conflict and energy price shocks. Earlier this year it set aside precautionary provisions related to West Asia tensions, and rising loan‑loss concerns could test the strategy’s resilience.

The bigger picture: more than a restructuring

Standard Chartered’s announcement is the latest chapter in a multi‑year transformation. After grappling with weak performance and regulatory pressure, the bank had already simplified its structure and sharpened its focus on cross‑border trade and investment flows. Now AI is accelerating the timeline. Winters described the bank’s ability to combine network and product capabilities as “difficult to replicate”, and that perceived moat is being reinforced with technology that can process complex, multi‑jurisdictional transactions faster and with fewer people.

The move also lands at a moment when financial markets across Asia‑Pacific are jittery. Analysts warn that a prolonged West Asia conflict could push up loan‑loss provisions for regional banks. Yet Standard Chartered appears willing to push forward with its efficiency agenda even against that uncertain backdrop, betting that a lighter, smarter cost base will prove essential whichever way the macro winds blow.

Conclusion

Standard Chartered’s 2030 roadmap is a clear signal that AI has moved from pilot programs to boardroom‑level workforce strategy. Over 7,000 roles will be reshaped or removed, back‑office functions will shrink, and the bank is targeting significantly higher returns as it automates. In an industry built on trust and human relationships, one of the oldest names in global banking is proving that the next chapter will be written in code.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Real Estate in India Is Riskier Than You Think


Lessons in Investing    « Previously


Real Estate in India Is Riskier Than You Think

Buying a home is the biggest financial decision most Indians will ever make. Yet, the market is often painted with a single brush: property prices only go up, renting is throwing away money, and the earlier you buy, the richer you get. These myths persist because we only hear the success stories. The relative who made a 5x return on a flat in 1998 rarely mentions the piece of land stuck in litigation, or the under‑construction apartment that took ten years and endless stress to deliver. Real estate is far more nuanced – and far riskier – than the dinner‑table conversations suggest.

1. Real Estate Is Not a Single Asset Class

Just as stocks are split into small‑cap, mid‑cap, and large‑cap, real estate spans a spectrum of risk and return profiles. A plot in a developing suburb, an under‑construction apartment in a metro, and a ready‑to‑move‑in flat in a prime location are as different as a penny stock is from a blue chip. On top of that, every city, micro‑market, and even individual building has its own dynamics. The common thread that ties them all together, however, is sentiment.

When people feel optimistic about jobs and the economy, they buy. When uncertainty creeps in, they delay or exit. Sentiment is the first domino; everything else – project quality, builder reputation, price – comes later. Understanding this emotional foundation is critical because it explains why prices can stagnate for years or fall abruptly, even in so‑called “hot” markets.

2. The Construction Stage Spectrum: From Small‑Cap to Blue Chip

A useful way to think about risk is to map the construction stage to equity investing:

Construction Stage Equity Analogy Risk Profile Typical Expectation
Early launch (just a plan) Small‑cap stock Very high – delays, legal issues, developer funding crunches possible High upside but high probability of capital erosion or long lock‑in
Mid‑level construction Mid‑cap stock Moderate – some visibility, but still subject to external shocks Reasonable appreciation with manageable risk
Near completion (OC applied) Blue‑chip stock Lower – limited scope for delay, quality largely visible Steady, inflation‑indexed returns; lower gains
Ready‑to‑move‑in (post‑OC) Fixed deposit Minimal project risk (location and market risks remain) Capital preservation; appreciation tracks broader market trends

The earlier you enter, the greater the discount you must demand – because you are, in effect, funding the developer’s risk. And in India, developers face a maze of approvals, environmental clearances, and judicial interventions that can stall a project for months or years, often through no fault of their own.

3. The Price Illusion: Under‑Construction Discounts and the 30% Rule

Many buyers believe under‑construction properties are always cheaper than ready homes. The truth is more subtle. If the price gap does not adequately compensate for the risk, you are better off waiting. A practical rule of thumb is the 30% discount rule: buy an under‑construction unit only if the price is at least 30% lower than the expected final (ready) price of a comparable property in the same micro‑market.

Example:
Ready‑to‑move‑in price in the area: ₹1.5 crore
Under‑construction quote: ₹1.2 crore
Discount = (1.5 – 1.2) / 1.5 = 20%
Verdict: Not enough cushion. The risk of delays, quality compromise, or price stagnation can easily wipe out that 20% advantage.

Had the under‑construction price been ₹1.05 crore (a 30% discount), the risk‑reward would be more justifiable.

This buffer is the minimum “hazard pay” for taking on the many uncertainties that lie between a blueprint and a finished home.

4. City‑Wise Construction Realities: Timelines and Risks

Construction speed and the underlying developer model vary dramatically across India’s major cities, directly affecting your exposure.

City Typical High‑Rise Completion Time Dominant Model Investor‑Friendliness
Mumbai ~5 years (60‑floor tower) End‑user focused; tall buildings require deep foundations Slow but relatively transparent; resale demand from actual occupants
Gurugram Often 4‑5 years (30‑floor tower) Investor‑driven; artificial scarcity and “house‑full” narratives common High FOMO risk; exit liquidity depends on finding the next buyer
Bengaluru ~3 years (30‑35 floors) Efficient, clinical operations; less marketing hype Most predictable; shorter lock‑in, lower delay risk
Pune 3‑3.5 years Balanced approach; good construction pace and buyer orientation Comparable to Bengaluru, with healthy end‑user demand
Average High‑Rise Completion Time by City 0 1 2 3 4 5 Mumbai 5y Gurugram 4.5y Bengaluru 3y Pune 3.2y

Longer timelines amplify funding risk and the chance of regulatory or legal delays.

5. RERA: A Shield, Not a Panacea

The Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act has undoubtedly improved transparency: mandatory project registrations, escrow accounts, and standardised sale agreements have curbed many old‑world malpractices. However, RERA is a quasi‑judicial body and lacks direct enforcement powers. Many large developers maintain legal teams that outweigh their construction teams; they can – and do – challenge RERA orders in higher courts. For the buyer, this means RERA provides valuable safeguards but is not a silver bullet. If a project stalls, getting your money back or forcing completion can still be a multi‑year ordeal.

6. Picking a Developer: Brand Name vs. Quality

In Indian real estate, a “branded” developer often guarantees delivery but not necessarily quality. Several marquee names have delivered apartments on time only to face buyer backlash over peeling tiles, weak plumbing, or inferior fixtures. The premium for a branded developer can be as high as 25‑30% over an unbranded competitor – but you may not feel that premium in the finished product.

How do you separate the reliable from the risky? Three practical checks can help:

  • Track record: Visit the developer’s last three to five completed projects. Talk to residents. Look at the finishing, maintenance, and how grievances were handled.
  • Legal agreement: Read the builder‑buyer agreement carefully. If it’s full of escape clauses (force majeure defined broadly, one‑sided cancellation terms), the developer is already planning an exit.
  • Lender’s confidence: Ask which banks are financing the project and at what interest rate. If lenders – who do rigorous due diligence – are charging high rates or have imposed strict conditions, treat that as a red flag.

7. Opportunity Cost: Should You Rent and Invest Instead?

A common argument for buying early is leverage: you pay 20% now (say, ₹40 lakh for a ₹2 crore property) and hope to benefit from price appreciation on the full asset value. But that leverage cuts both ways. If the project stalls, your ₹40 lakh is locked, and you’re still paying pre‑EMI interest or losing rent.

Contrast this with investing the same ₹40 lakh in a diversified equity mutual fund. Assuming a modest 10‑12% annual return over five years, the maths is illuminating:

Scenario: Invest ₹40 lakh in a mutual fund for 5 years
At 10% CAGR: ₹40 lakh × (1.10)5 = ₹40 lakh × 1.6105 ≈ ₹64.42 lakh
At 12% CAGR: ₹40 lakh × (1.12)5 ≈ ₹70.5 lakh
Meanwhile, if you had bought under‑construction and the project completes on time, your ₹2 crore home may appreciate by, say, 5‑6% annually, reaching about ₹2.55‑2.70 crore. But you would have paid stamp duty, registration, interest during construction, and faced illiquidity. The net gain is often far less impressive than it appears on paper. The decision to rent and invest often wins when you factor in flexibility, lower stress, and the ability to buy a ready home with a larger down payment later.

8. The Liquidity Conundrum: Selling in the Secondary Market

Unlike stocks, you cannot sell a fraction of your home. It’s an all‑or‑nothing asset. When you decide to sell, the price is not what your broker tells you when you are buying; it’s what a genuine buyer is willing to pay. Brokers often inflate valuations when they sense you are a buyer, but the moment you become a seller, the same property suddenly has “market challenges” – oversupply, high interest rates, geopolitical tensions, you name it.

The true test of your property’s value is whether your broker can actually bring a buyer at your expected price, not the feel‑good number they quote over the phone. Overpricing and holding on for an unrealistic amount is one of the costliest mistakes. If your property is not likely to appreciate meaningfully in the near term (a common scenario in many mature micro‑markets), selling today – even at a slight discount – and redeploying the capital elsewhere can be a far smarter financial move.

FACTS

  • 30% Discount Rule: Buy under‑construction only if the price is at least 30% below the expected ready‑to‑move‑in value, to compensate for delay, quality, and legal risks.
  • Mumbai high‑rise completion: Approximately 5 years for a 60‑floor tower; the deeper the foundation, the longer the timeline.
  • Bengaluru efficiency: 30‑35 floor projects often finish in 3 years, making it one of the most predictable metro markets.
  • RERA’s limitation: It is a quasi‑judicial body without direct enforcement powers; large developers frequently challenge orders in court.
  • Branded developer premium: Can be 25‑30% over unbranded, but does not guarantee superior quality – only higher certainty of delivery.
  • Sentiment rules: Real estate prices are driven first by sentiment, then by location, builder reputation, and price. Ignoring sentiment cycles can be financially damaging.
  • Liquidity trap: Selling a single property is difficult; overpricing based on broker‑supplied valuation is the most common reason homes remain unsold for years.

CONCLUSIONS

Real estate in India is not the safe, one‑way bet it is often made out to be. It demands the same rigour you would apply to any major investment: research, diversification, and a clear exit plan. The most critical takeaways are:

  1. Assess the stage, not just the price. Treat under‑construction like a high‑risk investment and demand a substantial margin of safety.
  2. Don’t rely solely on RERA. Use it as a transparency tool, but never assume it will rescue you swiftly from a stuck project.
  3. Judge the developer by their past, not their marketing. Physical inspections, legal documents, and lender confidence reveal far more than a glossy brochure.
  4. Weigh the opportunity cost carefully. Renting and investing the surplus can often outperform a leveraged, illiquid property purchase over a 5‑year horizon.
  5. Be realistic about resale. Your home’s value is what a ready buyer pays today, not what a broker whispered in your ear when you bought. Cut your losses early if the market has peaked.

Buying a home is an emotional milestone, but letting emotions dictate the financial logic is a recipe for regret. The Indian real estate market offers genuine opportunities – if you approach it with eyes wide open and a healthy scepticism of the prevailing myths.

Disclaimer: Written by DeepSeek. Deepseek is an AI and can make mistakes. Use this information as a starting point, not as financial or legal advice.


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