As geopolitical tensions and economic instability ripple across key source markets, Delhi's hospitality and retail sectors are recalibrating for a fundamentally altered visitor landscape.
As micro-entrepreneurs thrive in Hauz Khas Village and beyond, traditional employers scramble to compete for skilled workers—reshaping how Delhi's job market values experience, ambition, and risk.
As property prices in central Delhi surge beyond reach, a new class of investors and developers is betting big on affordable housing schemes in the periphery—and early movers are seeing returns that rival traditional luxury segments.
As international visitor numbers surge past pre-pandemic levels, a diverse ecosystem of businesses—from five-star hotels to heritage tour operators—is capitalising on Delhi's emergence as a must-visit global destination.
As hybrid work reshapes demand and suburban corridors gain traction, Delhi's commercial real estate landscape is undergoing a significant recalibration.
Geopolitical instability in Venezuela, the Middle East and South Asia is reshaping shipping costs, supply chains and margins for businesses across the National Capital Region.
As India's capital grapples with slowing hiring, talent shortages, and rising operational costs, employers and workers alike face an uncertain employment landscape in 2026.
Operators across the capital's hospitality chains and quick-service restaurants face mounting pressures from inflation, real estate hikes, and weakening consumer spending in the second half of 2026.
Rising operational costs, sectoral slowdown, and skills mismatch are squeezing employers across the capital, leaving thousands of job-seekers in limbo.
As venture funding dries up and operational expenses soar, Delhi's emerging tech entrepreneurs are grappling with a perfect storm of headwinds that could derail the capital's bid to rival Bangalore and Mumbai.
As capital inflows slow and hiring patterns shift, understanding the data behind Delhi's employment trends becomes crucial for workers and businesses navigating 2026.
Priya Sharma's journey from street food vendor to restaurant mogul offers a blueprint for how local enterprises are capturing Delhi's competitive eating-out market.
Rising inflation, volatile rupee movements, and geopolitical tensions are creating unprecedented challenges for financial advisors and retail investors across the capital.
As multinational firms escape congested metros, commercial property rates in South Delhi and the NCR tech corridor are soaring—and a specific class of investor is riding the wave.
Founders and investors in the Capital's tech hubs are recalibrating expansion plans as Middle Eastern instability and trade friction create both headwinds and unexpected opportunities.
As Middle Eastern tensions and currency volatility ripple across markets, Delhi's commercial property sector faces unprecedented headwinds—forcing landlords and tenants to rethink long-held assumptions about growth.