logo
Data will decide winners in generative AI era: Clearwater

Data will decide winners in generative AI era: Clearwater

Economic Times6 hours ago
With generative AI changing the way enterprises are run, companies should focus on data, which will be a key differentiator, said Sandeep Sahai, chief executive of Clearwater Analytics, a NYSE-listed investment accounting solution provider.
Sahai said people are not thinking enough about where the data is and getting access to the data, as the focus is more on the large language models (LLM). He explained that having the right data to train matters, since businesses require a high degree of accuracy, and makes sure it doesn't hallucinate.
"I shouldn't say this, but most LLMs are somewhat similar in their capability. There are differences and all are quite powerful. Then the only question is, what are you training on? And if you can get the data right in a spot which is readable, guess what? Then you win. That is what we are focused on," Sahai said. Clearwater Analytics, which manages $9-10 trillion worth of assets and counts companies such as JP Morgan among its clients, has developed its own proprietary model that has been trained on client data in the last two and a half years.
The company recently acquired Enfusion and Beacon, which are in investment management and risk management solutions, respectively, which provide Clearwater Analytics with access to data. "(With the acquisition) We now have the data about trading, accounting, and risk all at one spot. When you think about Google, all the searches everybody does is in one spot. (Similarly), Whoever has the most data wins, those with access to only public data lose eventually," he said.Apart from data, one of the biggest challenges are rapidly changing business models. Sahai likened this to the taxi industry and Uber, where instead of making the taxi industry efficient, it had given way to Uber.He said that with AI, the idea is not to make taxi industry more efficient. "The challenge is really in companies being thoughtful about completely changing. If people think of it like an incremental technology, they will be in trouble," he said.While Sahai argued that it is naive to declare software is dead, he agreed that generative AI will significantly alter the current state of the software companies. "It is going to make them transform, become more efficient and provide value. (But) the software companies that do not innovate will have a hard time," he said. Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. How an auto giant trapped global investors in an INR1,000 crore heist
Fortis Healthcare still heals portfolios, but valuations are running hot.
Swiggy, Tencent backer Prosus gets Rajinikanth fan to script India AI play
IndiGo's GIFT City unit: Simple expansion or is there more to it than meets the eye?
Stock Radar: Rico Auto stock showing signs of bottoming out after about 40% fall from highs; what should investors do now?
GST rationalization: You don't become irrational; 10 stocks, from two sectors, some may get more, some less, some nothing
Focus on core business and ignore the rest: 5 small-caps from different sectors with upside potential of up to 48%
Multibagger or IBC - Part 20: An ICE-to-EV pivot is transforming this small-cap auto ancillary company
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sensex jumps 226 pts; pharma shares gain
Sensex jumps 226 pts; pharma shares gain

Business Standard

time11 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Sensex jumps 226 pts; pharma shares gain

The key equity indices traded with minor gains in the mid-morning trade, extending their five-day rally on hopes of a potential GST rate cut. However, investors remained cautious ahead of the US Federal Reserves annual symposium, awaiting signals on the future direction of interest rates. The Nifty traded above the 25,100 level. Pharma shares advanced after declining for previous three consecutive trading sessions. Trading activity may be volatile today as markets brace for the weekly expiry of Nifty50 futures and options contracts. At 11:30 ST, the barometer index, the S&P BSE Sensex, added 266.44 points or 0.33% to 82,121.70. The Nifty 50 index rose 69.70 points or 0.28% to 25,119.25. The broader market outperformed the frontline indices. The S&P BSE Mid-Cap index added 0.41% and the S&P BSE Small-Cap index rose 0.57%. The market breadth was strong. On the BSE, 2,444 shares rose and 1,357 shares fell. A total of 198 shares were unchanged. Economy: Indias private sector witnessed a sharp acceleration in business activity in August, with robust gains across both manufacturing and services, according to the latest HSBC Flash PMI data. The HSBC Flash India Composite PMI Output Index surged to 65.2 in August, up from 61.1 in July, signaling one of the fastest rates of expansion in over a year. The services sector led the upturn, with the HSBC Flash India Services PMI Business Activity Index climbing to 65.6, compared to 60.5 in July. This marks a significant boost in services output and reflects strong demand conditions and rising new business intakes. Meanwhile, manufacturing also remained firmly in growth territory. The HSBC Flash India Manufacturing PMI Output Index rose to 64.2, up from 62.5 in July. The broader Manufacturing PMI, which includes new orders, employment, and inventories, edged up to 59.8, compared to 59.1 in the previous month. Indias eight core industries grew by 2% in July 2025 compared to the same month last year, according to data released by the Commerce and Industry Ministry on Wednesday. The growth was driven by higher production in steel, cement, fertilisers, and electricity. These eight sectorscoal, crude oil, natural gas, petroleum refinery products, fertilisers, steel, cement, and electricityaccount for 40.27% of the weight in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP), making them key indicators of overall industrial performance. Steel, which holds the highest weight (17.92%) in the index, surged 12.8% in July, buoyed by strong demand from government infrastructure projects. Cement output rose 11.7%, reflecting robust construction and infrastructure activity. Fertiliser production increased 2%, supported by healthy kharif sowing and good monsoon rains. Electricity generation edged up by 0.5%. However, several sectors saw declines. Coal production dropped 12.3% due to heavy monsoon rains. Crude oil and natural gas output fell by 1.3% and 3.2% respectively, while refinery production dipped 1%. Cumulatively, core sector growth for AprilJuly FY26 stood at 1.6% year-on-year. Steel and cement led the gains with growth of 8.5% and 8.9%, respectively. The revised core sector growth for June 2025 stood at 2.2%, pointing to a steady industrial trend in the early months of the fiscal year. IPO Update: The initial public offer (IPO) of Mangal Electrical Industries received bids for 46,78,752 shares as against 52,53,301 shares on offer, according to stock exchange data at 11:18 IST on Thursday (21 August 2025). The issue was subscribed 0.89 times. The initial public offer (IPO) of Patel Retail received bids for 23,77,43,450 shares as against 78,15,612 shares on offer, according to stock exchange data at 11:15 IST on Thursday (21 August 2025). The issue was subscribed 30.42 times. The initial public offer (IPO) of Shreeji Shipping Global received bids for 12,86,82,222 shares as against 1,14,08,600 shares on offer, according to stock exchange data at 11:18 IST on Thursday (21 August 2025). The issue was subscribed 11.28 times. The initial public offer (IPO) of Gem Aromatics received bids for 4,83,59,064 shares as against 97,82,363 shares on offer, according to stock exchange data at 11:18 IST on Thursday (21 August 2025). The issue was subscribed 4.94 times. The initial public offer (IPO) of Vikram Solar received bids for 33,59,55,870 shares as against 4,53,61,650 shares on offer, according to stock exchange data at 11:18 IST on Thursday (21 August 2025). The issue was subscribed 7.41 times. Buzzing Index: The Nifty Pharma index rose 0.88% to 22,039.40. The index shed 0.50% in the previous three trading sessions. Mankind Pharma (up 3.86%), Dr Reddys Laboratories (up 1.25%), Cipla (up 1.24%), Alkem Laboratories (up 1.13%) and Glenmark Pharmaceuticals (up 1.1%), Zydus Lifesciences (up 0.99%), Lupin (up 0.91%), Gland Pharma (up 0.7%), J B Chemicals & Pharmaceuticals (up 0.63%) and Sun Pharmaceutical Industries (up 0.62%) added. Stocks in Spotlight: Jupiter Wagons surged 10.49% after the company said that its material unlisted subsidiary, Jupiter Tatravagonka Railwheel Factory, has received a letter of intent (LoI) for the supply of wheelsets for the Vande Bharat train. Nazara Technologies fell 7.50% after the Lok Sabha passed the Online Gaming Bill, 2025, which bans real money online games citing risks of gambling addiction, money laundering and financial fraud. Global Markets: Asian markets were broadly mixed on Thursday as investors braced for three days of potentially market-moving news from the Federal Reserve's annual symposium in Jackson Hole. Central bankers from around the world will attend the event, which begins later in the day, although the key focus will be Fed Chair Jerome Powell's speech on Friday as traders look for clues on the chances of a September rate cut. Overnight stateside, two of the three key benchmarks ended the session on Wednesday in declines as tech stocks dragged the market lower. The broad market S&P 500 index slipped 0.24% to close at 6,395.78, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite lost 0.67% and settled at 21,172.86. Wednesday marked a fourth day of losses for the S&P 500 and a second negative session for the Nasdaq. Meanwhile, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was the outlier, adding 16.04 points, or 0.04%, and settling at 44,938.31. Minutes from the Fed's July gathering released yesterday, when policymakers voted to keep rates steady, suggested that Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman and Governor Christopher Waller were alone in pushing for a rate cut at the meeting. Fed Chair Powell had said he is reluctant to cut rates because of expected tariff-driven price pressures this summer.

GoM on rate rationalisation meets to discuss Centre's GST rate cut proposal
GoM on rate rationalisation meets to discuss Centre's GST rate cut proposal

Business Standard

time41 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

GoM on rate rationalisation meets to discuss Centre's GST rate cut proposal

A crucial meeting of the GoM of state finance ministers on GST rate rationalisation began on Thursday as they started deliberation on the Centre's proposal to reduce tax slabs to 5 and 18 per cent. The 6-member Group of Ministers (GoM) on rate rationalisation is chaired by Bihar Deputy Chief Minister Samrat Choudhary. The other members are Uttar Pradesh Finance Minister Suresh Kumar Khanna, Rajasthan Health Minister Gajendra Singh, West Bengal Finance Minister Chandrima Bhattacharya, Karnataka Revenue Minister Krishna Byre Gowda and Kerala Finance Minister K N Balagopal. The Centre has proposed reforms in GST by reducing the number of slabs under Goods and Services Tax (GST) to 2 (5 and 18 per cent) from 4 (5, 12, 18, and 28 per cent). "The rate rationalisation will provide greater relief to the common man, farmers, the middle class and MSMEs, while ensuring a simplified, transparent and growth-oriented tax regime," Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had told the Group of Ministers (GoMs) constituted by the GST Council on Compensation Cess, Health & Life Insurance, and Rate Rationalisation on Wednesday. Thereafter, the GoM on insurance met on Wednesday evening and discussed the Centre's proposal to exempt GST on health and life insurance policies for individuals. The proposal is likely to have a revenue impact of Rs 9,700 crore per year, however, most states were on board. The states also stressed that the GST Council should devise a mechanism to ensure that the GST cut benefits reach policyholders. The GoM on rate rationalisation in its meeting on Thursday will discuss the Centre's proposal of classifying goods and services as 'merit' and 'standard' and levying 5 and 18 per cent rates. Besides, a special 40 per cent rate has been proposed on 5-7 items, including sin goods. The centre's proposal entails eliminating the 12 and 28 per cent slabs, with 99 per cent of items in the 12 per cent bracket being reclassified to 5 per cent and 90 per cent in the 28 per cent slab coming down to 18 per cent.

Centre, states stare at fiscal tensions from India's big tax cut proposal
Centre, states stare at fiscal tensions from India's big tax cut proposal

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Centre, states stare at fiscal tensions from India's big tax cut proposal

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's surprise move to lower consumption taxes within three months is set to spark tough negotiations with states, who will have to shoulder the bulk of the revenue losses. Modi proposed a major rejig of the complex goods and services tax last week, a move many businesses had been pushing for since the system was rolled out in 2017. Stocks rallied as investors bet lower taxes on everyday goods would boost consumer spending and help offset the drag on economic growth from higher US tariffs. The tax proposals — which still need to be approved — are expected to squeeze government revenue, especially for state governments. Economists such as Gaura Sen Gupta at IDFC First Bank estimate the total cost to the exchequer at Rs 1.8 lakh crore ($20.7 billion) annually, with the federal government facing a net revenue hit of about 0.15% of the gross domestic product and states incurring losses of roughly 0.36% of GDP. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Tiger meeting her former zookeeper after 5 years. See what happens next! Story To Hear Undo The uneven hit is likely to sharpen fiscal tensions between New Delhi and the states, which have sparred with Modi's government over revenue-sharing in the past. Some states say they were not adequately compensated for losses when the GST was introduced, leaving them with limited ways to raise revenue on their own. Harpal Singh Cheema, the finance minister of Punjab, told reporters on Wednesday that his state has been losing 210 billion rupees annually since the introduction of the GST, and called for a new mechanism to compensate states for such losses. Wealthier opposition-ruled southern states have also long argued that much of the tax revenue they generate is diverted north, where Modi's ruling party holds greater sway. Live Events 'States fear a further loss in revenue, which in turn increases their dependence on the center in framing their budget targets,' said Shumita Deveshwar, chief economist at Lombard, adding that she still views the reforms as 'positive.' Bloomberg State reactions, so far, have been mixed, with some leaders like Thomas Isaac, the former finance minister of Kerala, calling the move 'devastating' in a post on X, while others say they need more time to weigh the impact. Thangam Thennarasu, the finance minister of Tamil Nadu — an opposition-ruled southern state often in conflict with the Modi government — said they will need to 'study the proposed GST rationalization' and consult other departments to assess the revenue hit. Karnataka's Revenue Minister Krishna Byre Gowda told local media that 'any major shock in GST will fundamentally affect the fiscal health of the states.' To further complicate matters for the opposition, the changes are likely to be announced by the Hindu festival of Diwali in October, which comes ahead of elections in the eastern state of Bihar, where the GST cuts could be used by Modi's government to sway voters. 'Any GST cut, if passed on to the consumers and customers, has a potential to create goodwill for the ruling coalition in Bihar,' said Rasheed Kidwai, a fellow at New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation. The state is run by a local party led by Nitish Kumar, one of Modi's main allies in the coalition that controls the lower house of the national parliament. The government is pursuing the overhaul with urgency. Home Minister Amit Shah began planning talks with state and federal ministries in July to build consensus, the Indian Express reported. Modi also called on states to support the GST revamp days after he announced the move. States are heavily reliant on GST revenue, which accounts for more than 40% of their tax receipts. Before the GST's introduction, Indian states had the autonomy to levy and raise their own taxes on goods and services. The unified GST stripped states of that power, leaving them able to independently tax only a few items such as petroleum products and alcohol. States such as Punjab, Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal, and Kerala are facing fiscal stress due to weak revenue mobilization, elevated fiscal deficits, heavy debt burdens, and poor quality of expenditure, according to a report by a government think tank Niti Aayog. Officials in New Delhi said federal and state revenues would dip in the short-run after the changes but should be gradually offset by stronger consumption. States can also raise taxes on alcohol and petroleum to bolster their coffers, the officials told reporters, asking not to be identified to discuss private matters. Bloomberg The tax proposals are being discussed this week by a panel of state finance ministers from both Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party and opposition parties. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Wednesday presented the federal government's recommendations at the panel meeting. The final recommendations of the panel would then be submitted to the GST Council — which is headed by the finance minister — and comprises all state finance ministers. The council is expected to take up the issue next month or in early October. The council has the final say on tax rate changes. Most decisions so far have been passed by consensus, but proposals can be put to a vote if needed and require a three-fourths majority to pass. In such a scenario, the ruling BJP — which governs 21 of 28 states and eight union territories — would have little trouble pushing the measures through, said Kidwai. 'While they have the majority states, for a democracy to function, the government must take everyone on board,' said Neerja Chowdhury, a New Delhi-based political analyst. The 'trust deficit' between opposition-ruled states and the federal government 'needs to be addressed for the GST reforms to sail through.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store