Jobs on TAL
All jobsOnsiteFinancefinance5+ years
OnsiteLeadfinance

Lead Credit Analyst - Large Corporates

T D Newton & AssociatesBengaluru, Karnataka, IndiaPosted 19 May 2026

T D Newton & Associates is seeking a Lead Credit Analyst to evaluate large corporate clients in the finance domain. The role involves spreading financial statements, performing ratio analysis, and managing credit exposures. Candidates are expected to conduct SWOT analysis, monitor covenant compliance, and prepare credit recommendations. This position requires an advanced degree and deep expertise in credit risk evaluation.

Matched by TAL

50k new jobs listed every day. Install TAL to find more jobs like this.

Install TAL

Experience

5+ years

Function

Finance

Work mode

Onsite, India

Company

Tier 2

What you will work on

T D Newton & Associates is seeking a Lead Credit Analyst to evaluate large corporate clients in the finance domain. The role involves spreading financial statements, performing ratio analysis, and managing credit exposures. Candidates are expected to conduct SWOT analysis, monitor covenant compliance, and prepare credit recommendations. This position requires an advanced degree and deep expertise in credit risk evaluation.

TAL's take

Quality 45/1005/5 clarityTier 2 company

Stable finance role at a mid-tier firm with clear responsibilities but lacking tech differentiation.

Clear and well-defined responsibilities for a credit analyst role.

Must haves

  • 5+ years of experience
  • Post Graduation degree (MBA, CA, CFA, or FRM)
  • Experience in financial statement analysis
  • Ability to perform financial projections and SWOT analysis
  • Experience managing credit limits and risk ratings

About the company

unfamiliar company, default mid-tier

Posts mentioning T D Newton & Associates

need money advice

I’d like some advice. My brother and I are both young adults(<25) not gonna marry for at least 5-8 years , and we’ve recently started earning more than we’re used to(~3l/month). We don’t want to just waste it on random things, and we want to make sure we’re using it wisely — both to invest and to protect it for the future. What would be some good first steps for people in our situation? Are there common mistakes we can avoid? we are conscious enough to not gamble anything but I am comparing buying gold and bitcoin

Adulting22

To All Directors Out There: Bing Rude Doesn’t Help Your Team in Any Way

I have been with this company for around seven months now. The team and my manager are great, but the director, who is my manager's manager, straight up sucks. He scolds senior members in front of everyone and says we shouldn't use terms like some. Instead, he expects us to explain the entire problem, even if it's related to another team's issue, which feels like complete nonsense. Today, during our call, he started bashing the team, saying you're not doing this, you're not doing that. At one point, a senior member stepped away due to some dependency, and they needed something from the backend logic, so I had to pitch in. But because of the environment he's created, I couldn't debug it properly or provide the requested information. As soon as he left the call, I was able to find the information and shared it with my manager. My manager then said, This is exactly what he was looking for the entire time, and even my senior said they would have provided the same information if they'd been there. This whole thing is making me feel really bad, and I am not sure how to move past it. I feel like shit. Is this a me problem, or is this just how the human brain works?

Software Engineers152

Embracing life through work

Remember I’d read this quote when I was just starting out with my work life. Had noted it down and just chanced upon it again. I know it’s a bit extreme as a thought. As years go by, I’ve started believing in this much lesser. I would give anything for my first company to succeed. That’s the psyche a lot of us enter our first jobs with. Don’t remember but I think this is why I’d noted down the quote. One toxic manager and one startup that is crooked later, you get derailed. You think you need to value your work lesser in the context of the larger life. But it doesn’t give me happiness. I think I’m too much of a Type A, to ever be in a place where I feel I’m not doing enough of what I want to do, with my career. Life can be embraced through work. It just doesn’t need to stop within the confines of your job and company. I’ll try to be more like the fresher me.

Office Gossip62