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Brokerages may tap bonds and CPs as bank funding turns ‘unsuitable’

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Brokerages may tap bonds and CPs as bank funding turns 'unsuitable'
Mumbai: Revised central bank guidelines on capital market exposures may prompt equity brokers to increase their funding reliance on the bond market and commercial papers (CP), and that could weigh on sector profitability, according to research reports.

The new Reserve Bank of India (RBI) rules on bank funding to capital market intermediaries state that all borrowing will now require 100% collateral – including at least 50% in cash for many facilities – making the bank channel uneconomical for most intermediaries.

The RBI norms aim to curb leveraged trading in equity and commodity markets and reduce systemic risk for banks.

Brokerages may tap bonds and CPs as bank funding turns ‘unsuitable’
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New RBI guidelines effective April 1, 2026, mandate 100% collateral for bank funding to capital market intermediaries, including significant cash margins. This will likely push equity brokers towards bond markets and commercial papers, increasing funding costs and potentially impacting sector profitability and market liquidity.


Earlier, brokers were not required to fully cover the loan, and partial security, promoter guarantees and other flexible arrangements were widely used.
The new guidelines, effective April 1, 2026, mandate 100% collateral with strict haircut and cash-margin requirements. Haircuts on equity collateral are raised to at least 40%, up from roughly 25% earlier.


IIFL Capital expects lower speculative and leveraged volumes in cash and derivatives markets once the rules take effect, particularly in the near term as intermediaries adjust balance sheets and liquidity.
The tightened framework restricts banks’ ability to fund leveraged activity across equity and derivatives markets, raising capital requirements for brokers and proprietary trading firms. Cost Inflation
Analysts said the new rules will increase funding costs, compress margins and lower returns on equity, with proprietary traders – who account for 30-50% of market volumes – facing the steepest impact as leverage becomes more expensive.

“We believe credit facilities with 100% (or higher) collateral will make the bank channel unsuitable for brokers, and they will only use it for short-term mismatches,” JM Financial Institutional Securities said in a report.

Brokerages that relied heavily on bank lines for margin trading facilities (MTF) or working capital will face the most significant shift, analysts said.

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According to JM Financial, Angel One – which raised half of its total funding of ₹3,400 crore in FY25 – will now have to depend more on CPs, non-convertible debentures (NCDs) and NBFC borrowing.

Groww, which is largely equity-funded, is also expected to tap the market for borrowings as its MTF book expands rapidly.

Under the new framework, RBI has restricted banks from providing finance for proprietary trading or investment positions of capital market intermediaries (CMIs).

“These measures will directly affect proprietary traders (props) and brokers by increasing capital requirements, compressing margins, and lowering ROE. Market liquidity may also be impacted, as prop traders contribute 30-50% of cash and derivatives volumes,” Devesh Agarwal, senior VP, IIFL Capital, said in a note.

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Analysts also said brokers will face tighter liquidity because banks must apply minimum haircuts of 40% on equity collateral, 25% on ETFs/REITs/InvITs, and 15-40% on debt securities, depending on rating. These high haircuts significantly reduce usable collateral value, raise effective funding costs and push intermediaries toward bond markets for more flexible borrowing structures.

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iOS 26.4 Beta Lets You Generate Custom Apple Music Playlists Instantly Using Just Text Prompt

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Apple Music

Apple is improving music discovery with a new feature in the iOS 26.4 beta: Playlist Playground.

For those curious about this update, it’s an AI-driven addition to Apple Music where users can now generate fully customized playlists using nothing more than a simple text prompt. This makes curation faster, smarter, and highly personalized.

AI-Powered Playlist Creation

Apple Music

With Playlist Playground, manually selecting songs is no longer necessary. Users can type a mood, theme, or idea, such as evening breeze, city pop, dance songs, and even old songs from the ’50s. Apple Music instantly generates a curated playlist of 25 songs, complete with a custom title.

MacRumors reported that this feature also supports refinement through additional prompts, giving users control over genre, vibe, or era. Further personalization options allow selection of custom cover art and a unique playlist description, creating a fully tailored music experience.

How to Access Playlist Playground

Currently available in the iOS 26.4 developer beta, Playlist Playground can be accessed by opening Apple Music, navigating to the Library tab, and tapping the “+” button to create a new playlist. If the option does not appear immediately, restarting the app or device often resolves the issue.

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Like traditional playlists, creations made with Playlist Playground can be shared publicly and displayed on your Apple Music profile, making it easy to showcase personalized playlists to friends and followers.

While Playlist Playground is currently limited to developers, Apple is expected to release a public beta in the near future, with a full rollout planned for spring 2026.

Originally published on Tech Times

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Nebius: A Gift At Current Consolidation – Cloud Super Cycle Continues

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Nebius: A Gift At Current Consolidation - Cloud Super Cycle Continues

Nebius: A Gift At Current Consolidation – Cloud Super Cycle Continues

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Restaurants raising prices 'to keep doors open'

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Restaurants raising prices 'to keep doors open'

The Pavilion took to social media to reveal cost pressures

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BlackRock Advantage International Fund Q4 2025 Commentary

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BlackRock Advantage International Fund Q4 2025 Commentary

BlackRock Advantage International Fund Q4 2025 Commentary

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Opinion: Tech metals a dollar driver

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Opinion: Tech metals a dollar driver

OPINION: The AI-linked commodity boom is a tailwind for the Australian dollar.

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Dinesh Kumar Khara says RBI’s new guidelines balance customer protection and growth

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Dinesh Kumar Khara says RBI’s new guidelines balance customer protection and growth
Fresh regulatory moves by the Reserve Bank of India are set to reshape how banks sell financial products, fund acquisitions and lend to market intermediaries. In an interview with ET Now, Dinesh Kumar Khara Former Chairman, SBI shared his views on the implications.

Mis-selling norms signal stricter oversight

Khara said concerns around mis-selling have been building for years, with regulators stepping in to reinforce trust.

“When it comes to mis-selling, this was something which was brewing for quite some time… banking is a business of trust… unless it is right selling, there could be a challenge. Banks had introduced need assessment, delinked incentives from sales targets and looked at persistency ratios. But now RBI has defined mis-selling clearly and even indicated it could impact the licence… punitive measures are very strict… it is a clear reflection of the regulator’s intent.”

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He added that while the financial impact may be limited in size, customer experience and trust are critical.

Refund rules may need careful implementation
On proposals like refunds and compensation, Khara highlighted both safeguards and operational realities.
“Even now there is a free look period of about 30 days… insurance is a push product… need assessment is important. RBI has even said it could impact licensing. Bundling practices will need to change… recordings and documentation can help verify claims. The intent is welcome, but implementation may need tweaking.”M&A financing a welcome structural change
Khara described the new acquisition financing norms as a positive shift that could keep deals within the domestic banking system.

“M&A financing has been introduced for the first time… opportunities were earlier funded by foreign banks. Final instructions are more relaxed… unlisted acquisitions are permitted and leverage can be refinanced… very pragmatic steps and a welcome move.”

Broker funding rules aimed at curbing speculation
On tighter norms for broker financing, he said the focus is on reducing speculative excesses.

“The intent is to curb speculative trading fuelled by liberal funding… reducing exposure and increasing cash collateral will ensure right financing, while market making and working capital will continue to be funded.”

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The takeaway
The regulatory direction underscores stronger customer protection alongside deeper financial market development. For banks and financial firms, adapting quickly to tighter conduct standards while leveraging new financing opportunities will be key.

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Coles Defends Pricing Practices in Federal Court, Denies Misleading Shoppers

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Coles

Coles is locked in a court battle with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) and denies misleading shoppers with its pricing practices.

ACCC previously accused Coles of breaching the law with its “Down Down” promotion.

Coles Denies Misleading Customers

According to a report by The Guardian, ACCC accused Coles of offering “illusory” discounts on many common household products.

However, Coles denies doing this and claims that the promotional prices it offered are genuine discounts.

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“What they would be concerned with when they’re walking down the aisle trying to work out what to buy today for their shopping is whether the claimed discount … was fair dinkum,” John Sheahan KC. Sheahan represents Coles in its federal court battle.

“So long as the was price is a genuine price, not contrived or ephemeral, then the consumer’s interest is appropriately satisfied,” he added.

ACCC’s Argument

According to ABC News, ACCC used three prices Coles charged on a tin of dog food to show that the supermarket chain has been misleading shoppers.

Between April 2022 and February 2023, the supermarket offered a 1.2 kilogram loaf of Nature’s Gift Wet Dog Food for $4, said ACCC legal counsel Garry Rich.

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The price then went up by 50 per cent to $6 after. This lasted for seven days. On the eighth day, it went down to $4.50, a promotion that Coles labelled as “Down Down.”

This third price is 13 per cent more than the initial $6 shoppers were previously paying for the same product.

“It did not disclose that a reasonable consumer would not have understood that Coles had increased the price to $6 for just seven days, immediately before the promotion, and that for 296 days before that, the price was $4,” ACCC’s legal counsel argued.

However, Sheahan dismissed the argument by saying, “In the end, all prices are temporary. Nothing lasts forever.”

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Asia FX drifts lower as dollar firms ahead of Fed, econ. cues

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Asia FX drifts lower as dollar firms ahead of Fed, econ. cues

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Hyatt Hotels chairman steps down over Jeffrey Epstein ties

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Hyatt Hotels chairman steps down over Jeffrey Epstein ties

Billionaire Thomas Pritzker said he had exercised “terrible judgement” in keeping contact with Epstein.

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Northern California Intermediate Tax-Exempt Fund Q4 2025 Commentary (NCITX)

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Northern California Intermediate Tax-Exempt Fund Q4 2025 Commentary (NCITX)

Northern Trust Asset Management is a global investment manager that helps investors navigate changing market environments in efforts to realize their long-term objectives.

Entrusted with $1.2 trillion in assets under management as of March 31, 2024, we understand that investing ultimately serves a greater purpose and believe investors should be compensated for the risks they take — in all market environments and any investment strategy. That’s why we combine robust capital markets research, expert portfolio construction and comprehensive risk management in an effort to craft innovative and efficient solutions that seek to deliver targeted investment outcomes.

As engaged contributors to our communities, we consider it a great privilege to serve our investors and our communities with integrity, respect and transparency.

Northern Trust Asset Management is composed of Northern Trust Investments, Inc., Northern Trust Global Investments Limited, Northern Trust Fund Managers (Ireland) Limited, Northern Trust Global Investments Japan, K.K., NT Global Advisors, Inc., 50 South Capital Advisors, LLC, Northern Trust Asset Management Australia Pty Ltd, and investment personnel of The Northern Trust Company of Hong Kong Limited and The Northern Trust Company. Note: This account is not managed or monitored by Northern Trust Asset Management, and any messages sent via Seeking Alpha will not receive a response. For inquiries or communication, please use Northern Trust Asset Management’s official channels.

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