MUMBAI: Barring another wave of COVID-19 infections, the worst is over for India’s economy and policymakers may soon have more room to support a recovery, the central bank said in its January bulletin released on Thursday.
“Recent shifts in the macroeconomic landscape have brightened the outlook, with GDP in striking distance of attaining positive territory and inflation easing closer to the target,” the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said in an article on the state of the economy.
“If these movements sustain, policy space could open up to further support the recovery,” it added.
The RBI slashed interest rates early last year to cushion the shock from the coronavirus crisis, but has left rates unchanged in recent months, cautious of rising inflation.
The RBI expects Asia’s third-largest economy to contract by 7.5 percent in the current fiscal year to March, but analysts believe it is likely to escape recession and see modest growth in the current quarter.
Growth will be mostly consumption driven, the RBI said.
The need to kickstart investment is growing more urgent to secure a durable turnaround and a sustainable growth trajectory, the RBI said.
It also added that the cash sitting idly on the balance sheet of companies and banks and the funds parked with it at the reverse repo must find their way toward productive sectors and into real spending on investment activity, before it imposes a persistent deflationary weight on real activity.
The RBI said stress on financial sector balance sheets could increase, but banks are in a better position now than they were during the 2008 global financial crisis.
It also noted a “vigorous resumption” of government spending which acts as an important growth driver when all other components of GDP are in deep retrenchment due to the pandemic.
“Recent high frequency indicators suggest that the recovery is getting stronger in its traction and soon the winter of our discontent will be made glorious summer,” the RBI wrote, quoting William Shakespeare.
Central bank: India has seen the worst, barring another wave of COVID-19
https://arab.news/4mxfq
Central bank: India has seen the worst, barring another wave of COVID-19
- ‘Recent shifts in the macroeconomic landscape have brightened the outlook’
- Central bank: Growth will be mostly consumption driven
Dubai Aerospace to buy Macquarie AirFinance in $7bn deal
- Combined fleet to total 1,029 aircraft across 79 countries
- Acquisition adds 37 airline customers, expands into seven new countries
- Deal expected to close in H2 2026, subject to regulatory approvals
DUBAI: Dubai Aerospace Enterprise said on Thursday it will buy aircraft leasing firm Macquarie AirFinance for an enterprise value of about $7 billion, creating a combined fleet of 1,029 planes and one of the world’s biggest lessors.
The sale, which followed a competitive bidding process, underscores strong investor appetite for aircraft assets as Boeing and Airbus struggle to ramp up production to meet airline demand.
The global aircraft leasing market is dominated by AerCap Holdings N.V. and SMBC Aviation Capital, both based in Ireland.
The Macquarie AirFinance deal would lift DAE into the top tier, analysts said.
“(It) ... fast tracks Dubai Aerospace Enterprise to the forefront of global aircraft leasing,” said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade, adding that the deal also diversifies the Dubai state-owned lessor’s customer base and increases exposure to newer aircraft, even as supply constraints at major manufacturers persist.
The combined fleet will serve 191 airlines in 79 countries, with narrowbody jets accounting for about 70 percent of the portfolio, DAE said.
The acquisition, which adds 37 airline customers including carriers in seven countries where DAE has no presence, will be funded through a mix of debt and equity.
DAE CEO Firoz Tarapore said the deal would create a “bigger, stronger, more diversified and well-capitalized” company, adding that the combined entity’s scale would support more competitive pricing and a broader customer offering.
DAE is owned by the Investment Corporation of Dubai, the main investment arm for the government of the emirate. The company acquired Dublin-based AWAS, the world’s tenth biggest aircraft lessor, in 2017.
Macquarie AirFinance is owned by Australia’s diversified investment service provider Macquarie Group.
The deal has been approved by DAE’s board and is subject to regulatory approvals, DAE said in a statement.
It is expected to close in the second half of 2026.










