Aditya Rangroo
Aditya Rangroo is a business correspondent at The Tribune who brings together **market data, corporate developments and everyday consumer experience** to show how India’s economy is changing. He works as a Principal Correspondent in the Delhi bureau and has about 15 years of business journalism experience with multiple media brands, which gives his reporting a seasoned, wide-angle view on finance and enterprise. His recent work ranges from commodity price updates and corporate valuations to trade diplomacy, retail innovation and diaspora stories, making his coverage broader than a typical single-segment finance reporter.
Value of India’s top 10 companies falls
Rangroo devotes consistent attention to **corporate valuations and market shifts**, treating them as a way to read the health and direction of India Inc. In his report on the value of India’s top 10 companies falling by Rs 11 lakh crore in 2025, he focuses on how large-cap companies move as a group, anchoring the story in hard numbers and report-based analysis. He applies a similar data-led lens to sector-specific coverage such as India’s tyre exports hitting an all-time high of Rs 27,312 crore in FY 2025-26, using export figures and year-on-year comparisons to show where manufacturing and trade are gaining momentum. His article on gold and silver prices slipping marginally on a Saturday brings this macro view down to **day-to-day commodity moves**, translating price action in bullion into straightforward takeaways for readers who track precious metals as an investment or savings vehicle. Across these pieces, the pattern is clear: he writes short, tightly framed stories that foreground the numbers but still explain what they mean for businesses, markets and individual investors.
India, Nepal launch cross-border remittance mechanism
A second strand in his work is **cross-border trade and financial connectivity**, where he reports on policy decisions and bilateral initiatives that shape money flows. In his coverage of the India–Nepal launch of a cross-border remittance mechanism, he highlights how the new system is designed to strengthen bilateral financial connectivity, focusing on practical implications for workers and families who depend on remittances. He extends this focus on international economic ties to higher-level trade diplomacy, such as reporting on Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal concluding India–US trade deal talks with USTR Ambassador Jamieson Greer. Here he tracks the state of negotiations and the forward-looking discussions around market access and investment, positioning India within a global trade landscape rather than treating business purely as domestic news. Together these stories show that he covers finance not just as prices and corporate results, but as **cross-border systems** that matter to both policy makers and everyday users.
Get paid to shop: Inside the world of mystery shopping
Rangroo also writes about **consumer experience and emerging business models**, using feature-style pieces to explain how companies are changing the way they interact with customers. In “Get paid to shop: Inside the world of mystery shopping,” he explores the niche industry of mystery shopping as a tool for brands to assess service quality, outlining how companies commission shoppers, what they look for and how individuals can earn by taking part. The story shows his willingness to step away from purely financial indicators and investigate the mechanics of customer experience from a business point of view. That same curiosity about how companies operate informs his coverage of corporate risk events such as Tata Electronics confirming a cyber breach after a data leak, where he reports on the incident in the context of technology, data security and its implications for a major industrial player. Across these articles, he combines narrative detail with explanation of business incentives, making **operational and customer-facing aspects of commerce** accessible to readers who may not come from a technical or financial background.
‘Somethings never change’
Alongside core business coverage, Rangroo sometimes writes **diaspora and culture stories with an economic and social edge**. In a diaspora feature headlined “‘Somethings never change’: UK citizen for 20 years, Indian-origin author decides to wear sari,” he profiles an Indian-origin author’s choice to wear a sari, framing it as a statement about identity and continuity rather than fashion alone. His business reporting also touches the intersection of industry and society, as in his piece on the book “Punjab at Crossroad,” which discusses Punjab’s industrial growth and agrarian stress. That article uses a book release to open up larger questions about regional industrialisation, agricultural challenges and the structural issues facing the state’s economy. These stories show that, when the subject demands it, he is comfortable moving beyond balance sheets and trade figures to explore **how economic shifts play out in people’s lives, cultural choices and regional narratives**.
Across his assignments, Rangroo’s distinguishing trait is a **combination of data-rich reporting and human-centred angles** within the broad field of business and finance. He writes concise news pieces on markets, exports and trade talks, in-depth explainers on consumer-focused business practices, and occasional profiles or book-based features that tie economic themes to personal and cultural stories. For organisations looking to understand how their story fits into India’s economic landscape—from corporate performance and cross-border finance to consumer behaviour and diaspora narratives—his work shows a reporter who consistently connects the numbers to the people and policies behind them.
4 more finance journalists.
Anam Khan
Anam Khan is a BNN Bloomberg journalist whose reporting stands out for tying energy markets, critical minerals and business conditions directly to Canada’s economic outlook and financial policy. She covers business, energy, mining, financial markets and economic policy, and she explains what shifting data, commodity prices and Bank of Canada decisions mean for companies and households. Her work connects hard data, sector detail and policy implications, from oil prices and inflation to lithium, graphite, small-business closures and tariff pressure on manufacturing. She reports through interviews and analysis, using executives, economists, strategists and resource-sector leaders to walk readers through scenarios and trade-offs. Her past reporting includes coverage for a national public broadcaster, and she often builds explainers around expert reactions, market voices and what happens next.
Anand Sinha
Anand Sinha stands out for tracking how large holders, institutional investors, and core infrastructure shape the crypto market through price moves, on-chain data, and corporate actions. He writes about cryptocurrencies and listed crypto stocks for Yahoo Finance, often through stories originally reported for TheStreet’s crypto desk. His beat centers on XRP, whale activity, Coinbase, MicroStrategy, Robinhood, Circle, crypto ATMs, and fintech products tied to digital assets. He also covers Web3, DeFi, blockchain, and fintech. His reporting is short and direct, built around key numbers, dates, wallet records, and market reactions. He uses on-chain data to explain extreme trading outcomes and keeps the focus on how money and power flow through the crypto economy.
Andrew Galbraith
Andrew Galbraith focuses on how real portfolios work, cutting through sales pitches and market noise for everyday investors. He is an investment reporter with The Globe and Mail’s personal finance team and writes the Investor Clinic column, applying a “first, do no harm” approach to reader portfolios. His work centres on individual investor decisions, from choosing ETFs, covered-call strategies and DIY brokerages to reacting to geopolitical headlines, global markets and debt risks. Drawing on qualitative investment research and prior global markets reporting, he tests fads and advice against data, diversification, costs, behaviour and long-term outcomes. He treats reader cases as disciplined investing lessons, explains complex topics in plain language, scrutinizes platforms as environments that shape habits and frames major events as context for careful capital allocation rather than cues for speculative trading.
Arjun Deiva
Arjun Deiva turns complex company fundamentals into clear, data-driven equity screens that surface concise lists of investable ideas. He is a monthly financial columnist for The Globe and Mail’s Number Cruncher section, with more than 50 stock-screening articles published since 2020. He focuses on companies with resilient cash flow, strong balance sheets and attractive valuations across Canadian and global markets, often during periods of volatility or uncertainty. His screens target fast-growing Canadian firms at reasonable valuations, beaten-down TSX names with solid growth, discounted U.S. tech and semiconductor leaders, AI-focused large caps, defensive dividend growers and precious metals producers. Each column applies transparent, repeatable rules grounded in balance-sheet and cash-flow metrics, long-term valuation ranges and clear themes, and his CFA and CAIA designations underpin the technical rigor of his list-based investment ideas.