Under the scanner! RBI probes Standard Chartered on lapses in derivative sales to SMEs
The Reserve Bank of India raised concerns about processes at the London-based lender following sales to small and medium-sized enterprises of target redemption forwards, a product that can cause significant losses, the people said. Buyers of those contracts were not adequately informed about the risks involved, they said, asking not to be identified discussing private information.
The RBI's review of Standard Chartered is ongoing, with focus on derivative products and risk governance, according to the people. There is no indication of any formal enforcement actions at this time, they said.
The banking regulator has also flagged issues relating to Standard Chartered's maintenance of reserves and the accounting treatment of forward rate agreement trades in previous financial years, the people said.
'The RBI conducts annual inspection of banks,' a Mumbai-based spokesman for Standard Chartered said in an emailed statement. 'While we don't want to comment on specifics, observations, if any, are highlighted and addressed as part of normal process.'
It's part of the RBI's routine examination of all banks in India to ensure compliance and soundness of the financial system. While inspection reports are not made public, it's not too uncommon for the RBI to issue directives or actions on their findings.
The RBI didn't respond to requests for comment.
Standard Chartered has been operating in India for more than 165 years, making it one of the oldest foreign banks in the country, according to its website. It operates a network of 100 branches across 42 cities with its primary business segments in the country being corporate and investment banking, as well as wealth and retail banking.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
27 minutes ago
- Time of India
Jammu: Top bosses of Hyderabad-based company booked for fraud with Falcon app
The Crime Branch of Jammu and Kashmir Police has booked the managing director of a Hyderabad-based Capital Protection Force Pvt Ltd for a multi-crore investment app scam . One of the complainants in the matter was an army officer who lost money investing in the 'Falcon Invoice Discounting app,' an officer said. Productivity Tool Zero to Hero in Microsoft Excel: Complete Excel guide By Metla Sudha Sekhar View Program Finance Introduction to Technical Analysis & Candlestick Theory By Dinesh Nagpal View Program Finance Financial Literacy i e Lets Crack the Billionaire Code By CA Rahul Gupta View Program Digital Marketing Digital Marketing Masterclass by Neil Patel By Neil Patel View Program Finance Technical Analysis Demystified- A Complete Guide to Trading By Kunal Patel View Program Productivity Tool Excel Essentials to Expert: Your Complete Guide By Study at home View Program Artificial Intelligence AI For Business Professionals Batch 2 By Ansh Mehra View Program Rajasthan native Major General Rajat Jagani alleged that he was duped of more than Rs 2.21 crore by the company and named its managing director Amardeep Kumar , directors Anita Kumari and Sandeep Kumar, and several other key executives, as the main culprits. He claimed that Amardeep Kumar, an Indian national currently living in Dubai, is the main accused in the Falcon app fraud . Jagani said the firm duped thousands of Indian investors of crores by falsely promising high returns through a ponzi-style scheme, the crime branch officer said. Live Events Another complainant, Pardeep Kumar Gupta, a resident of Jammu's Lakhdatta Bazar area, alleged that he lost Rs 62 lakh investing in the app after being promised "high returns." Gupta alleged that the executives of Capital Protection Force misled investors with fabricated vendor profiles via social media promotions, fake deals, and claimed to have partnerships with reputed multinational companies. Jammu Senior Superintendent of Police (Crime) Benam Tosh said an FIR has been registered in connection with the matter at the Economic Offences Wing Police Station.


India.com
39 minutes ago
- India.com
Meet Sanjay Agarwal, brain behind AU Small Finance Bank, India's biggest..., his net worth is Rs...
Sanjay Agarwal (File) Building a successful banking venture is not as an easy task for finance entrepreneurs, especially in India, where the banking sector is dominated by large banks owned by giant corporations and the state. However, Sanjay Agarwal, the man who recently got the nod from RBI for India's newest universal bank, not only built a small yet successful small finance venture, but transformed it into the country's biggest Small Finance Bank (SFB). Who is Sanjay Agarwal? Born in Rajasthan, Sanjay Agarwal earned a Bachelors Degree in Commerce from Government College, Ajmer, and later aced the CA exam from the from the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India, to become a Chartered Accountant. Agarwal's academic excellence was recognized by the institute, who awarded him a gold medal for his topping the CA exam in 1995. After acing the CA exam, Sanjay Agarwal, instead of joining some major finance firm, decided to launch his own finance venture which would cater to the financial needs of people living in Rajasthan's rural and semi-urban areas, where banking facilities were unavailable at the time. How AU Small Finance Bank was born? In 1996, a year after he cleared the CA exam, Sanjay Agarwal launched Au Financiers, small finance venture aimed at catering to unbanked rural and semi-urban population in Rajasthan. Over the years, Au Financiers, which began as a humble vehicle finance firm, grew into the AU mall Finance Bank (SFB), the largest small finance bank in India. Sanjay Agarwal currently serves as the Managing Director and CEO of the AU Small Finance Bank, and was honored with the 2018 Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award for his contribution in the banking and finance sector. India's newest commercial bank Under Sanjay Agarwal's leadership, AU Small Finance Bank has now transitioned into a full-service commercial bank after receiving 'in-principle' approval from the Reserve Bank of India on August 7, 2025– the first in almost a decade– to become a Universal Bank. Bandhan Bank was the last financial institution to receive this approval from RBI in 2015. AU SFB's transition into a full-fledged universal bank is a nod to the years of dedicated growth and trust the institution has built under the leadership of Sanjay Agarwal. Sanjay Agarwal net worth According to Forbes, Sanjay Agarwal has a net worth of $1.3 billion (about Rs 11,500 crore), making him one of the wealthiest individuals in India.


Mint
39 minutes ago
- Mint
Billions flow to new hedge funds focused on AI-related bets
Leopold Aschenbrenner emerged last year as a precocious artificial-intelligence influencer after publishing a widely read manifesto. Then he decided to try his hand at stock picking. The 23-year-old with no professional investing experience quickly raised more money for a hedge fund than most pedigreed portfolio managers can when they strike out on their own. As valuations of Nvidia, OpenAI and other artificial-intelligence companies continue to soar, so do investments in hedge funds hoping to ride the AI wave. Aschenbrenner's San Francisco-based firm, Situational Awareness, now manages more than $1.5 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. He has described the firm as a 'brain trust on AI." His strategy involves betting on global stocks that stand to benefit from the development of AI technology, such as semiconductor, infrastructure and power companies, along with investments in a few startups, including Anthropic. He told investors he plans to offset those with smaller short bets on industries that could get left behind. Situational Awareness gained 47% after fees in the first half of the year, one of the people said. In the same period, the S&P 500 gained about 6%, including dividends, while an index of tech hedge funds compiled by research firm PivotalPath gained about 7%. Aschenbrenner, a native of Germany, briefly worked as a researcher at OpenAI before being pushed out. He named Situational Awareness after the 165-page essay he wrote about the promise and risks of artificial superintelligence. He recruited Carl Shulman, another AI intellectual who used to work at Peter Thiel's macro hedge fund, as director of research. The firm's backers include Patrick and John Collison, the billionaire brothers who founded payments company Stripe, as well as Daniel Gross and Nat Friedman, whom Mark Zuckerberg recently recruited to help run Meta's AI efforts. Graham Duncan, a well-known investor who organizes the Sohn Investment Conference, is an adviser. 'We're going to have way more situational awareness than any of the people who manage money in New York," Aschenbrenner told podcaster Dwarkesh Patel last year. 'We're definitely going to do great on investing." In another sign of the demand for Aschenbrenner's services, many investors agreed to lock up their money with him for years. Other recent launches include an AI-focused hedge fund from Value Aligned Research Advisors, a Princeton, N.J.-based investment firm founded by former quants Ben Hoskin and David Field. The fund, launched in March, has already amassed about $1 billion in assets, a person familiar with it said. VAR also manages about $2 billion in other AI-focused investment strategies. VAR's investors have included the philanthropic foundation of Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz, according to regulatory filings reviewed by fund-data tracker Old Well Labs. Veteran hedge-fund firms are entering the fray, too. Last year, Steve Cohen tapped one of his portfolio managers at Point72 Asset Management, Eric Sanchez, to start an AI-focused hedge fund that Cohen planned to stake with $150 million of his own money. Assets at the fund, called Turion—after AI theorist Alan Turing—now exceed $2 billion, people familiar with the matter said. Turion is up about 11% this year through July after it gained about 7% last month, the people said. It is no surprise that thematic funds are springing up to capitalize on the AI frenzy. In years past, hedge funds that specialized in the transition to clean energy and investing with an environmental, social and corporate-governance lens proliferated in response to client demand. Identifying a winning theme isn't the same thing as trading it well. Investors' tastes can be fickle; many prominent ESG hedge funds have either shrunk or gone out of business. The market swoon that followed the January release of an advanced, low-cost language model from Chinese company DeepSeek showed the fragility of the valuations of AI winners, though the market has roared back since then. AI-focused investors argue the long-term trend of development and adoption are inevitable, even if there are bumps along the way. With only so many publicly traded companies that operate in the AI-adjacent economy today, stock picking funds often pile into the same positions as one another and more generalist hedge funds. Vistra, a power producer that supplies the juice to AI data centers, was a top-three U.S. position of both Situational Awareness and VAR Advisors as of March 31, according to their most recent securities filings. Other hedge-fund managers are debuting funds to make investments in privately held AI companies and startups. Gavin Baker's Atreides Management teamed up with Valor Equity Partners to launch a venture-capital fund earlier this year that has raised millions from investors including Oman's sovereign-wealth fund. Each firm separately invested in Elon Musk's xAI. At least one portfolio manager is planning an AI hedge fund as a comeback vehicle. Sean Ma wound down his Hong Kong-based firm, Snow Lake Capital, after it agreed to pay about $2.8 million to settle Securities and Exchange Commission charges last year that the firm participated in stock offerings of companies that it had also bet against. Ma took over an investment firm called M37 Management in Menlo Park, Calif., earlier this year. He is currently fundraising for a hedge fund focused on AI software and hardware.