In recent years, there has been an upsurge of difficulties in   Indian finance, rooted in the `financial regulatory architecture' -   the block diagram of which agency does what. A lot of what is found   in India's present block diagram is rooted in obsolete   legislation.
On   the SEBI/IRDA   problem about ULIPs, Vivek Kaul is writing a series of good   pieces in DNA:   Why IRDA seems an industry lobby and not a regulator,   Guess   what got SEBI's goat?. Also   see Jayanth   Varma in Financial   Express. Deepak   Shenoy has a good post showing why ULIPs are bad for your   health.
Jayanth     Varma smells a rat when insurance companies, banks and NBFCs     in India have been exempted from IFRS. And, see his     Indian example of rules versus principles.
Shobhana     Subramanian in the Indian Express on FSDC.
Ila Patnaik in the Indian Express   and T. K. Arun   in the Economic Times both come at the idea of unification of   all financial supervision into a single agency. On this subject, you   might like to also   see an   old piece of mine in Business Standard.
read this somewhere "Focus on return on equity, not earnings per share" very interestin line http://tinyurl.com/MotilalMarketCommentary
ReplyDelete"An investor needs to do very few things right, as long as he or she avoids big mistakes" does that make sense? well it did for me !!! http://tinyurl.com/Motilal-YT-1
I think IRDA is lacking in there decision making as location changing as hydrabad.
ReplyDeletethey are the majors of Indian financial industry RBI,SEBI,IRDA but i dont see they are as good as tobe.
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