Auto sales: Domestic passenger vehicle sales plunged nearly 31 per cent in July, according to data from industry body SIAM. That marked the worst drop since December 2000 when the industry sold a fifth of the vehicles it sells currently.

Job cuts: News agency Reuters earlier this month reported automakers, component manufacturers and dealers had already cut 3.5 lakh jobs.

Consumption: Many analysts have flagged a weakening consumption over the past few weeks, affecting production and sales across sectors. Parle Products, the country's largest biscuit maker, has said it might lay off up to 10,000 workers as slowing economic growth and falling demand in the rural heartland could cause production cuts.

Contagion effect: Fears of a contagion effect surfaced last year, after the collapse of Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS) highlighted a liquidity crunch in the non-banking financial services sector.

Frauds in banking sector: The RBI in its annual report said frauds in the banking system increased 74 per cent to Rs. 71,543 crore in financial year 2018-19. The average lag between the date of occurrence of frauds and their detection by banks was 22 months, the RBI noted.

FDI liberalisation: In its bid to push investments and revive growth, the government has announced a range of measures in the past few days, including easing of FDI or foreign direct investment norms in four sectors. Analysts say the relaxation of norms is likely to make India a more lucrative market for global retailers such as Apple and IKEA.

Investor sentiment: Last week, the government took a slew of steps - including a reversal of higher taxes on foreign investors as announced in Budget - to push growth, as it aims to make the country a $5-trillion economy in five years. The government has also said that more measures are in the pipeline and would be brought in the coming weeks.

FII outflow: Foreign institutional investors have pulled out a net Rs 29,384 crore from Indian equities so far since July, after net purchases worth Rs 82,910 crore in the past five months, data from NSDL shows. According to CARE Ratings chief economist Madan Sabnavis, the withdrawal of higher taxes on FPIs can support dollar inflows, but it does not have a direct bearing on GDP growth.

Financial markets: As of Thursday's close, the S&P BSE Sensex benchmark index has declined 2,839.13 points - or 7.11 per cent - since the budget announcements on July 5, following a year-to-date gain of 3,839.73 points (10.65 per cent). A poll of over 50 strategists - who cited worries about the ongoing economic slowdown and weak corporate earnings - by Reuters showed the Sensex index will gain to 38,400 by the end of the calendar year 2019.