Business
GST cuts ignite car sales boom! Automakers plan to ramp up output by 40%; aim to boost supply, cut wait times – The Times of India
India’s top car makers Maruti Suzuki, Hyundai Motor India and Tata Motors, are gearing up to expand production by 20–40% in the coming months. The ramp up comes after a sharp revival in vehicle demand following the recent Goods and Services Tax (GST) cuts. Maruti Suzuki, the country’s largest carmaker, plans to produce over 200,000 vehicles in November, compared with an average of 172,000 units a month till September, according to people familiar with the company’s plans. The production push will mark a record for the month, which typically sees manufacturers scale back dispatches after the festive season rush, as per an ET report.
Tata Motors has instructed its suppliers to prepare for output of 65,000–70,000 vehicles every month, a notable rise from an average of 47,000 units produced in the first half of the fiscal year. Meanwhile, Hyundai Motor India has started operating two shifts at its second plant in Talegaon, Maharashtra, increasing capacity by up to 20%. Passenger vehicle sales in India hit a record 557,373 units in October, driven by festive-season demand and post-GST price benefits that have depleted dealership stocks. Maruti Suzuki’s retail sales alone jumped 20% to 242,096 units last month. Partho Banerjee, senior executive officer for marketing and sales at Maruti Suzuki, said the company began November with 104,000 vehicles in stock, enough to last 19 days, and 350,000 pending orders. “Our production teams are working overtime, even on a few Sundays, to maximise supplies and reduce wait time,” Banerjee said. Tarun Garg, chief operating officer at Hyundai Motor India, said the GST cuts had a significant impact on sales. “We (at Hyundai) were constrained by capacity (earlier). But now with the Pune plant coming in, we should see an upside (in production) by 20%,” he told ET, adding that the company plans to strengthen its presence through new products and additional capacity. Tata Motors is equally upbeat. The festive season has “brought strong momentum to our retail performance, supported by healthy network stock levels and the positive impact of GST benefits,” said Amit Kamat, chief commercial officer, Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles. He added that the company expects growth to continue in the second half of the fiscal year, supported by a strong order book and upcoming launches. Maruti Suzuki also expects steady growth in the coming months. In its recent post-earnings call, the automaker said it anticipates a 6% rise in industry sales in the second half of FY26, after a 1% decline in the first half. According to S&P Global Mobility, which tracks vehicle production and sales on a calendar-year basis, India’s car market outlook for 2025 remains stable despite temporary disruptions caused by the timing of the GST rate cut. The firm expects the recent demand surge to offset earlier slowdowns and extend into next year. Gaurav Vangaal, associate director for light vehicles in the India subcontinent at S&P Global Mobility, told ET, that before the tax cuts, vehicle production was expected to rise 1–2% in 2026. “We now feel this would be much higher at 6–7%.” In the first six months of this fiscal year, production of cars, sedans and utility vehicles in India rose 3.8% to 2.57 million units, while exports increased 18% to 445,884 units, according to data from the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM). Domestic wholesales, however, dipped 1.4%. SIAM is yet to release wholesale and production data for October.
Business
UPI transactions hit record Rs 29.53 lakh crore in March; volumes cross 22.6 billion – The Times of India
Unified Payments Interface (UPI) transactions touched a record high in March, with both value and volume hitting new peaks, driven by festive spending and financial year-end activity, according to PTI.Data released by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) showed that UPI transactions totalled Rs 29.53 lakh crore in value during March, up 19 per cent from Rs 24.77 lakh crore in the same month last year.On a month-on-month basis, transaction value rose 10 per cent from Rs 26.84 lakh crore recorded in February.In volume terms, UPI registered 22.64 billion transactions during the month, marking a 24 per cent increase from 18.3 billion transactions a year ago. The volume was 20.39 billion in February.Average daily transactions stood at 730 million, with an average daily value of Rs 95,243 crore, as spending picked up during festivals such as Holi and Eid.“The sustained growth in the digital payment ecosystem in India is an affirmation of the penetration of real-time payment systems in the day-to-day life of the people. UPI processed 22.64 billion transactions worth 29.53 lakh crore in March 2026, marking its emergence as one of the trusted payment systems in the country,” said Anand Kumar Bajaj, MD & CEO of PayNearby.UPI now accounts for around 85 per cent of all digital transactions in India and contributes nearly 50 per cent of global real-time digital payments.The platform is operational in seven countries, including the UAE, Singapore, Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, France and Mauritius, with its entry into France marking its first expansion into Europe.NPCI, an initiative of the Reserve Bank of India and the Indian Banks’ Association, operates UPI, enabling real-time peer-to-peer and merchant payments across the country.
Business
Minimum wage rises to £12.71 an hour as firms warn of impact
But Spencer says his business is being squeezed from every angle – as well as minimum wage, he has had increases in business rates, national insurance, and statutory sick pay. He also expects energy bills to go up because of the war in the Middle East.
Business
Visa launches new AI tools to manage the charge dispute process
Visa Inc. signage on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2026.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Visa is launching six new tools using artificial intelligence to modernize the process of disputing credit card charges, the company told CNBC exclusively.
The digital payments company said the tools are designed to reduce the costs and frustration of “outdated” dispute processes for multiple entities involved in the payments process: merchants, issuers and acquirers.
“Some of the challenges are these back-office systems are still largely manual,” Andrew Torre, Visa’s president of value-added services, told CNBC. “We really had to think differently about how we approach this at scale.”
In 2025, Torre said, Visa processed more than 103 million charge disputes globally, marking a 35% increase since 2019.
“Our goal is to streamline this as much as possible,” Torre said. “We’d love to be able to see that growth rate come down.”
Visa’s new tools are part of a larger push by major banks and financial institutions to incorporate AI into their businesses — both internally and in consumer-facing applications. JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs have both said they’re already using AI to hire fewer people. BNY spent $3.8 billion on technology in 2025, or about 19% of its revenue.
Visa said three of its six new tools focus on merchants, allowing them to address potential disputes before they escalate, managing disputes with generative AI responses and providing a deeper level of detail on order insights to manage confusion over unfamiliar charges.
For example, Torre said, many disputes are borne out of cardholders not recognizing a specific charge on their statements. With the new tool, Visa will be able to provide further details to financial institutions to show cardholders that data at a deeper level, according to the company.
The other three tools are built for issuers and acquirers, using predictive AI models to aid in case-by-case analysis, analyzing documents for summaries and auto fill and establishing an AI-powered dispute platform to manage the entire process in one location, Visa said.
“We’ll be able to get them insights and data so they can move from being reactive to proactive,” Torre said.
Torre said Visa’s new AI tools are part of a broader host of solutions for consumers, including a subscription manager announced last week that allows cardholders to cancel unnecessary subscriptions directly on the manager.
The automation will save time, money and unnecessary confusion for both parties, he added. Most of the tools will be generally available later this year, the company said.
“We really believe that disputes in this solution makes it much easier to manage and resolve,” Torre said. “We think it has better outcomes for everyone.”
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