DBC 2335 - Consumer Packaged Goods
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2335
Consumer Packaged Goods
Consumer packaged goods (CPG) are everyday
items that consumers use regularly and often replenish.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2335
Consumer Packaged Goods
Consumer packaged goods (CPG) are everyday
items that consumers use regularly and often replenish.
The Banking Tutor’s Lessons
BTL 866
03-02-2026
Union Budget
2026
In this Issue I am sharing Important points from Budget 2026
(only points related to Bankers from Exam/Interview point of view).
On the sacred occasion of Magha Purnima and the birth
anniversary of Guru Ravidas, the Finance Minister said, as this is the first
Budget prepared in Kartavya Bhawan, it is inspired by 3 kartavyas.
This is Yuva Shakti-Driven Budget emphasizes on Government’s
‘Sankalp’ to focus on poor, underprivileged and the disadvantaged.
The Budget is framed against a backdrop of global economic
uncertainty, supply chain realignments, and evolving investment dynamics, while
reaffirming India’s focus on sustained growth and fiscal discipline.
While presenting the Budget, the finance minister stated that
the government aims to “transform aspiration into achievement and potential
into performance.”
Three Kartavya (duties) guiding this year’s Budget
Accelerating and sustaining economic growth by enhancing
productivity, competitiveness, and resilience amid volatile global dynamics.
Fulfilling aspirations and building capacity by strengthening
human capital, skills, and institutional capabilities.
Advancing Sabka Sath, Sabka Vikas by ensuring equitable
access to opportunities across regions, communities, and sectors.
This year’s Union Budget underscores the
importance of regulatory certainty, ease of doing business, and targeted
reforms to attract long-term capital and deepen India’s integration with global
markets.
Budget theme
Yuva Shakti–driven growth: Converting India’s demographic
dividend into productive capacity through skilling, employment, and enterprise
creation.
Champion SMEs and Micro Enterprises
Recognising MSMEs as a critical driver of employment,
exports, and supply-chain resilience, the Budget introduces targeted measures
to support their scale-up and formalisation.
Key initiatives include:
Creation of Champion SMEs through targeted equity, liquidity,
and professional support
Enhanced access to capital and risk finance to support
growth-oriented enterprises
Institutional support to improve compliance capabilities and
operational efficiency, particularly for MSMEs in Tier II and Tier III
locations
Animation, Visual Effects, Gaming and Comics (AVGC) sector, and
Creative Economy
The Budget recognises the growing role of the creative
economy or the Orange Economy as a source of skilled employment and export
potential.
Tax Reforms
Introduction of a simplified and modernised Income Tax
framework, with redesigned rules and forms to reduce compliance complexity and
improve ease of filing.
Tax holiday till 2047 for foreign companies providing cloud
services using data centre infrastructure in India, aimed at strengthening
India’s position as a global data centre and digital services hub.
Measures to reduce litigation and improve trust-based tax
administration, including rationalisation of penalties, decriminalisation of
minor offences, and integration of assessment and penalty proceedings.
Extension and rationalisation of safe harbour provisions,
particularly for Information Technology and IT-enabled services, to provide
greater certainty on transfer pricing and tax outcomes.
Targeted tax measures to support manufacturing, services, and
export-oriented sectors, including incentives for data centres, cloud services,
toll manufacturing, and bonded warehousing.
Reforms to support foreign investment and global mobility,
including exemptions and simplified tax treatment for non-resident experts and
foreign service providers operating from India.
Rationalisation of customs and indirect tax provisions to
support energy transition, critical minerals, electronics manufacturing, and
export competitiveness.
Continued emphasis on predictability, transparency, and
stability in the tax regime, aimed at improving India’s overall investment
climate and long-term investor confidence.
Customs reforms
Simplification of the customs tariff structure to support
domestic manufacturing, promote export competitiveness, and correct duty
inversion.
Phased removal of long-standing customs duty exemptions on
items manufactured domestically or where imports are negligible.
Incorporation of effective rates from customs notifications
directly into the tariff schedule to improve transparency and certainty for
businesses.
Expansion of duty-free and concessional duty provisions to
support export-oriented sectors, including marine products, leather, textiles,
electronics, and energy transition technologies.
Enhanced trust-based customs systems, including extended duty
deferment periods and greater facilitation for authorised and compliant
importers, to enable faster clearance and reduced transaction costs.
Measures to improve customs processes through automation and
risk-based assessments, supporting smoother movement of goods across borders
and strengthening India’s trade facilitation framework.
Sekhar Pariti
+91 9440641014
Tail Notes
Kartavya Bhavan is a newly constructed, state-of-the-art
government office complex in New Delhi, developed under the Central Vista
Redevelopment Project. It serves as the primary component of the Common Central
Secretariat (CCS), a unified campus designed to consolidate central ministries
and departments that were previously scattered across aging colonial-era
buildings like Shastri Bhawan and Nirman Bhawan. Strategically located on Janpath along the
Kartavya Path (formerly Rajpath), near India Gate and the new Parliament House.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2334
Credit Card
A credit card is a plastic or metal card
issued by a financial institution that allows cardholders to borrow funds to
make purchases, with the obligation to repay the borrowed funds plus interest
and fees.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2333
Service Sector
The service sector of the economy is focused
on the activities that involve helping people, offering support, or performing
tasks, rather than creating or selling physical items.
The Banking Tutor
Recap Daily Banking Concepts – January 2026
2301. Hot
IPO
The term hot IPO refers to an
initial public offering with significant demand. These IPOs are popular,
drawing a tremendous amount of interest from investors and the media even
before they hit the market.
2302. Profit Taking
Profit taking is selling a
security to realize gains after its price has significantly increased.
2303. Backtesting
Backtesting is vital for
traders and analysts as it assesses a trading strategy's potential by applying
it to historical data.
2304. Angel Capital
Angel capital is capital
invested in a start-up venture or small
business expansion by an angel investor. Angel investors are typically
individuals, partnerships or investment groups who consciously seek higher rates
of return than is available in more traditional investments. An angel investor
typically seeks returns on investment of 20-25 percent or more per year.
2305. Hostile Bid
A hostile bid is a specific
type of takeover bid that bidders present directly to the target firm's
shareholders because management is not in favor of the deal. Bidders generally
present their hostile bids through a tender offer.
2306. Discount Window
The discount window is a
central bank lending facility meant to help commercial banks manage short-term
liquidity needs. Banks that are unable to borrow from other banks in the money
market may borrow directly from the central bank's discount window paying the
discount rate.
2307. Cookie Jar Accounting
Cookie jar accounting or
cookie jar reserves is an accounting practice in which a company takes a
quantity of large reserves from an economically successful year and incurs them
against losses from less successful years.
2308. Window Dressing
“Window dressing” is commonly
used to refer to the way a pedestrian facing the window of a retail business is
presented to make their goods look most appealing. However, when it is
referenced by the finance world, the term means something slightly different.
In finance, window dressing refers to the efforts taken to make the financial
statements of a business look better before they are publicly released"
2309. Big bath accounting
Big bath accounting is an earnings management technique where a company intentionally takes a large, one-time charge against income to make current results appear worse, with the goal of improving future earnings. This is often done by writing down assets or recognizing unexpected liabilities in the current period, which reduces net income but leads to lower expenses and higher profits in subsequent periods. The primary goal of big bath accounting is to "clean the slate" for future performance.
2310. Bag Holder
A bag holder is an informal
term used to describe an investor who holds a position in a security that
decreases in value until it descends into worthlessness. In most cases, the bag
holder stubbornly retains their holding for an extended period, during which
time the value of the investment goes to zero.
2311. Banana republic
In economics, a banana
republic is a country that's dependent on exporting a single product or
commodity, and has an economy that's controlled by foreign corporations. The
term is often used to describe countries in the tropics that are run
despotically. The term "banana republic" was coined in 1904 by
American author O. Henry. Characteristics of banana republic is Economic
instability, Political instability, Social inequality, Exploitation of
resources.
2312. White Knight
In economics, a white knight
is a company or investor that buys a target company to prevent a hostile
takeover. The white knight is a friendly defense strategy that's preferable to
a hostile takeover by an unfriendly bidder, also known as a black knight.
2313. Acquisition Premiums
An acquisition premium is the
difference between a company's estimated fair value and the price paid to
acquire it during a merger or acquisition.
2314. Pure Discount
Instrument
A pure discount instrument is
a type of security that pays no income until maturity. It is also known as a
zero-coupon bond (or simply zero-coupon) or a deep discount bond.
2315. Defined Contribution
Plans
A defined contribution (DC)
plan is a retirement savings plan where employees contribute a fixed amount or
percentage of their pay that grows tax-deferred until retirement.
2316. Dividend Discount Model
The dividend discount model
(DDM) is a valuation method that predicts a company's stock price based on the
present value of its future dividend payments.
2317. Unicorn
The term unicorn refers to a
privately held startup company with a value of over $1 billion.
2318. Position Trader
A position trader buys an
investment for the long term in the expectation that it will appreciate in
value. This type of trader is less concerned with short-term fluctuations in
price and the news of the day unless they alter the trader's long term view of
the position.
2319. Capital Employed
Capital employed measures the
total amount of money that a company spent to achieve profitability.
2320. S&P 500 Index
The S&P 500 is a stock
market index weighted by market capitalization that is made up of 500 of the
largest public companies in the United States.
2321. Hit The Bid
"Hit the bid" is a
term used when a trader agrees to sell at the bid price, the highest price a
buyer is willing to pay for a security or asset.
2322. Day Trading
Day trading is a fast-paced
form of investing in which individuals buy and sell securities within the same
day. The goal is to profit from short-term price movements in stocks, options,
futures, currencies, and other assets.
2323. Exchange-Traded Fund
(ETF)
An exchange-traded fund pools
a group of securities into a fund and can be traded like an individual stock on
an exchange.
2324. Unemployment Rate
The unemployment rate is the
percentage of the labor force that does not have a job but is actively pursuing
employment.
2325. Dividends
Dividends are a percentage of
a company's earnings paid to its shareholders as their share of the profits.
2326. Raw Materials
Raw materials are basic
materials used in the production or manufacturing of goods which can be either
direct or indirect based on their role in the production process.
2327. Private Equity
Private equity is an
investment class where firms raise capital to acquire and manage private
companies or take public companies private, with the goal of ultimately selling
them for a profit. These investments typically require significant capital
commitments over several years.
2328. Tokenized Equity
Tokenized equity refers to
representing ownership in a company or asset through digital tokens on a
blockchain.
2329. Mutual Fund
A mutual fund is a financial
vehicle in which shareholders put their money together to invest in securities
(e.g., stocks, bonds, money market instruments). A fund manager chooses the
best investments, and every investor shares in the profits if the investments
do well.
2330. Extended Trading
Extended trading is conducted
by electronic exchanges either before or after regular trading hours. Volume is
typically lower, presenting risks and opportunities.
2331. Compound Interest
Compound interest is interest
on a loan or deposit added to the previous balance, which in turn increases the
interest paid in the following period.
Sekhar
Pariti
01-02-2026 +91
94406 41014
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2332
Risk-return
trade-off
Risk-return trade-off is
a trading principle that establishes a direct relationship between risk and
potential returns.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2331
Compound
Interest
Compound interest is
interest on a loan or deposit added to the previous balance, which in turn
increases the interest paid in the following period.