π Morning, folks!
Markets extended their losing streak to a seventh straight session, marking the longest slide in three months. Meanwhile, the western markets are holding well despite Tariff-manβs surprises. The S&P 500 was up 0.53% over the week and the Nasdaq was up 1.13%.
π‘ Spotlight: Chevron is setting up a $1 billion R&D center in India focused on advanced engineering and geotechnical analysis for global energy projects.
The facility, called ENGINE, will support carbon capture, gas production, and refinery tech, creating 600 new jobs
Anyway, easy news day today. Letβs get through it and leave you to better things. β
1 Big Thing: Indiaβs tax code gets a rewrite βοΈ
Indiaβs income tax law is getting its biggest revamp in over six decades.
The Income Tax Bill 2025, tabled in Lok Sabha yesterday, aims to simplify, modernize, and declutter the tax system.
The deets: the bill trims the tax rulebook from 823 pages to 622, removes outdated provisions and cuts legal jargon. The term assessment year is goneβtax year (AprilβMarch) is in.
Why it matters: the Income Tax Act, 1961 had been amended so many times that it became a legal maze, fueling tax disputes and endless litigation. The new bill cleans that up, making compliance easier and reducing ambiguity.
Few structural changes:
Central Board of Direct Taxes gets more autonomy β the tax board can now tweak compliance rules and digital tax monitoring without waiting for Parliament.
Tax rates & deductions tabled β everything from salary exemptions to TDS rates is neatly structured for clarity.
Formula-based calculations β key computations (like Written Down Value) now follow standard formulas for consistency.
Whatβs unchanged: no changes to tax slabsβindividual tax rates stay the same. But the bill reinforces the governmentβs βtrust first, scrutinize laterβ approach, prioritizing self-compliance over aggressive scrutiny.
Zoom out: the bill is set to take effect from April 1, 2026. If passed, it would mark the most significant tax overhaul in Indiaβs history.
Less paperwork, fewer disputes, and a smoother system? Weβll take it.
2. ITC doubles down on convenience π
Mint reports, ITC is in talks to acquire pre-made breakfast foods giant, MTR Foods, for a whopping $1.4 billion.
MTR, a 100-year-old brand, is a household name in breakfast mixes, ready-to-eat meals, snacks, and beverages, especially in South and West India.
The context: ITC is pushing deeper into Southern markets, where MTR has a stronghold. The companyβs food-innovation portfolio is also eyeing a pan-India expansion over the next 3β5 years, with Western India as its next target.
The bigger plan: ITC has been building out its food empire for a while now. It acquired Sunrise Foods in 2020 to boost its spices and ready-to-cook offerings. More recently, in Feb 2025, it snapped up Prasuma, a leading frozen and ready-to-cook food brand.
Despite the buzz, the stock closed nearly 1% lower today and has been under pressure this whole year.
While we are on acquisitions, π
ONGC and NTPCβs joint venture, ONGPL, has acquired a 100% stake in Ayana Renewable Power for βΉ19,500 crore.
Ayana is one of Indiaβs leading renewable energy companies, specialising in large-scale solar and wind power projects.
The bigger picture: India is on an aggressive clean energy push, aiming for 500 GW of renewable capacity by 2030.
This deal brings ONGC and NTPC closer to their own net-zero targets.
3. Deals that made noise π
1. Bharat Forge signed two major aerospace deals at Aero India 2025.
The company is teaming up with Liebherr-Aerospace to set up a Pune-based facility for landing gear components.
Inked an MoU with VEDA Aeronautics to develop Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) and high-speed aerial weapons.
FYI, Bharat Forge is traditionally an auto components giant but has been doubling down on defense and aerospace.
The move aligns with Indiaβs Make in India push for defense manufacturing.
2. Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) inked a 14-year LNG supply deal with ADNOC Gas, securing 1.2 million tonnes per year.
ADNOC is the state-owned oil company of the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
IOC is Indiaβs largest integrated energy company spanning across oil, gas, petrochemicals, and alternative energy sources.
India is pushing to increase natural gas usage to 15% of its energy mix by 2030. This is ADNOCβs second major LNG deal with an Indian company this week.
Why it matters: the deal supports India's goal of increasing natural gas to 15% of its energy mix by 2030.
Despite the massive contract, IOCβs stock remained largely flat on Tuesday.
4. Nazara misses the mark π―
Nazara, one of Indiaβs only gaming pure-play stocks, reported strong growth but weak profits for its third quarter, flustering investors.
Revenue surged 67% YoY to βΉ534.7 crore, but net profit dropped 53.6% to βΉ13.7 crore as expenses piled up.
Driving the numbers: Nazaraβs core gaming segment grew 53% YoY, fueled by acquisitions like Fusebox Games and solid performance from Animal Jam.
Nazaraβs playbook lately has focused on buying gaming assets, plugging them into its distribution and monetising them further.
In this quarter, the company snapped up some more games including CATS: Crash Arena Turbo Stars and King of Thieves, which helped secure direct revenue streams.
Zoom out: Indiaβs gaming industry is expected to hit $8.6 billion by 2027. Nazara has momentum, but cost pressures and shrinking margins show the market is getting competitive.
Despite the dip in profits, Nazaraβs stock closed 1.3% higher.
5. Chart of the day β Beer on the rise π
India is projected to consume 3.4 billion liters of beer in 2025, a new all time high.
Evolving tastes of a younger India are the the center of this trend. So is urbanization and generally a bit more disposable income as well.
What else are we snackinβ πΏ
β‘Fast charge: Tata.ev and Tata Power to install 500 fast-charging stations across metro cities.
π Back in the game: Coinbase is in talks with the Indian government to resume operations after a year-long pause.
β Power cut: Adani Green exits $442 million Sri Lanka power project after cost negotiations on a $1 billion deal stalled.
π₯€IPL refresh: Campa Cola replaced Thums Up as IPL 2025βs co-presenting sponsor in a βΉ200 crore deal with Reliance.
π No deal: Honda and Nissan call off merger talks, ending discussions on business integration.
And thatβs a wrap. Pour yourself an extra one this weekend.
Weβll be back like clockwork on Monday!
Hit that π if you liked this issue.