Comments on the Report of the SEBI Technical Group on Social Stock Exchange
This post captures comments by Dvara Research to the report of the SEBI Technical Group on Social Stock Exchange
Assessing Transparency of Indian Banking System’s Public Risk Disclosure Regime – A Regulation Based Approach
In this paper, we assess the public disclosure regime of the Indian banking sector & provide our recommendations that RBI can consider implementing to enhance the transparency of disclosures
Our Response to RBI’s Discussion paper on Revised Regulatory Framework for NBFCs – A Scale-Based Approach, 2021
In this blog post, we share our responses submitted to the RBI to the questions posed in the discussion paper
Regulatory and Supervisory Approaches for NBFCs
Non-Banking Finance Companies (NBFCs) play a critical role in the credit ecosystem by acting as last-mile financiers for the unbanked and underserved segments of the Indian economy,
Expanding Access To Bank Credit By Building The NBFC Periphery
he current approach is making NBFCs safer but requiring banks to become riskier, write Nachiket Mor and Dwijaraj Bhattacharya.
Read more at: https://www.ndtvprofit.com/bq-blue-exclusive/expanding-access-to-bank-credit-by-building-the-nbfc-periphery
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To avoid Yes Bank-like shocks, let differentiated banking licenses address financing gaps
India urgently needs a range of entities to solve for the vast diversity in its credit intermediation requirements, including in infrastructure financing.
Response dated 15 January 2021 to the Working Document: Enforcement Mechanisms for Responsible #AIforAll released by the NITI Aayog in November 2020
This research note intends to offer a solution-oriented feedback to the Working Document: Enforcement Mechanisms for Responsible #AIforAll (Working Document) released by the NITI Aayog in November 2020.
Fixing India’s Banks: Making Banking Boring Again
The best banks are boring banks, whose strength is in the maturity of their processes for managing capital, writes Nachiket Mor.
Why We Need Banks… And Getting Indian Banking Right
Banks in India will need to work hard to build a well-functioning ‘internal market’, which at the moment is quite broken.
Finding the common man in the capital markets
SEBI needs to clearly define who a retail consumer is and ensure that this definition is inclusive enough that it accounts for the universe of consumers that are susceptible to the mis-selling of financial products and services