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Nishant Gupta named VP, chief strategy at PepsiCo India
GURUGRAM: PepsiCo has handed the strategy reins for India and South Asia to Nishant Gupta, appointing him vice president, chief strategy, transformation and deployment. In a role that blends big-picture thinking with on-ground execution, Gupta will shape the company’s strategic direction while driving large-scale change across one of its most dynamic markets.
Announcing the move, Gupta said he was excited to begin a new chapter at PepsiCo India and South Asia, and credited the vision and trust of Athina Kanioura and Jagrut Kotecha for the opportunity. His mandate, he noted, is clear and ambitious: enable sustainable, profitable growth while building a more resilient future for both the business and the communities it serves.
Gupta arrives with a résumé that reads like a tour of modern consumer transformation. Most recently, he was partner for CPG and Retail at Tata Consultancy Services, where he managed consulting P&L, opened new client relationships, and led transformation programmes spanning go-to-market strategy, digital and AI roadmaps, supply chains, quick commerce and M&A due diligence across India, the Middle East and Africa.
Before TCS, he held senior consulting roles at KPMG and Accenture, advising FMCG, retail and consumer businesses on growth, efficiency and channel strategy. He also brings entrepreneurial experience as co-founder of Farmery, a direct-to-consumer dairy venture that built a full-stack farm-to-home supply chain and broke even within 15 months.
With deep roots in strategy, operations and execution, Gupta now steps into a role where thinking big is only half the job. The other half is making it happen, at scale, in a region that never sits still.
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YES Bank appoints S Anantharaman as chief risk officer
Former Jio Financial Services group chief risk officer takes charge of enterprise-wide risk at the embattled private lender
MUMBAI: YES Bank is not taking chances with risk anymore. The private lender has appointed S Anantharaman as its chief risk officer, a hire that signals the bank’s continued effort to rebuild credibility and tighten the controls that once famously slipped.
Anantharaman arrives from Jio Financial Services, where he served as group chief risk officer and built a risk management architecture spanning lending, payments, insurance broking and asset management from the ground up. Before that, he held the chief risk officer role at Bank of Baroda and senior leadership positions at HDFC Bank and L&T Finance Holdings. Three decades in banking and financial services, in other words, with scars and qualifications to match. He is a chartered accountant and a CFA charterholder.
At YES Bank, his brief is considerable. Anantharaman will oversee the bank’s entire enterprise-wide risk framework, covering credit policy, market risk, operational risk, information security, data governance, analytics, model governance and data privacy. It is, in short, every lever that matters when a bank is trying to prove it has grown up.
YES Bank’s turbulent past needs little rehearsing. What it needs now is exactly what Anantharaman has spent thirty years building: the kind of risk culture that stops problems before they become headlines. The appointment suggests the bank knows it.






