Transparency in political financing is about to get a digital upgrade: Perplexity AI, the search company behind the eponymous AI-powered platform, is getting ready to launch a feature that will let users in India see the stock holdings of their elected representatives.
The move could mark a significant step toward greater accountability in how public officials manage their personal finances.
Chief Executive Officer Aravind Srinivas confirmed the development on X, formerly Twitter, and said that the feature will go live in the next few weeks.
The move has engendered both excitement and skepticism among Indians, who are keen to see if such a tool could actually help lift the lid on the country’s political asset management.
Perplexity Finance to Track Indian Politicians’ Stock Holdings, A New Era of Financial Transparency?
Perplexity Finance already offers Americans the chance to track trading activity and equity positions for their politicians. The platform pulls its data from financial disclosure filings submitted to US government ethics bodies, allowing users to search for holdings either by company name or by individual politician.
Interested in which lawmakers hold shares in a particular tech company? The platform can tell you. Want to know what’s in a specific politician’s portfolio? That information is also there.
The Indian version would work likewise, taking information from public documents including annual asset declarations, election affidavits, and declarations of financial interests required under different regulatory acts. These could be filings as required by the Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, along with declarations filed with the Election Commission of India.
If implemented as intended, Indian users will have access to the current holdings and trading activity of politicians, effectively creating a searchable database of political finances that has never existed in such an accessible format before.
The announcement has generated a lot of online buzz, from enthusiastic support to cautious pessimism. Many users welcomed the move as a much-needed accountability tool. “Excited to see real financial disclosures soon,” one user commented, while talking about how this feature could bring in much-anticipated meaningful transparency in public life.
However, others have spoken to practical realities that might diminish the system’s effectiveness in the Indian context.
Perplexity’s Challenge in Tracking Indian Political Assets
A number of commenters noted that politicians often do not hold assets in their own names, but instead use relatives or benami, proxy arrangements to disguise true ownership. “Indian politicians typically don’t invest using their own name,” wrote one skeptical user, highlighting a challenge that could make it impossible for the platform to paint a comprehensive picture.
Besides the technical difficulties with tracking assets held through proxies, Perplexity may face regulatory challenges. Some users believe that the feature could attract unwanted government attention and lead to restrictions or a ban on the service.
“Better not to get into dirty waters with the Babus. Otherwise, the public might have to lose another great product to ‘policy’,” warned one commenter, using the colloquial term for bureaucrats.
Another user was more candid: “This will make or break you for Indian market.” The comment reflects the careful balance that Perplexity needs to strike between transparency and India’s complex regulatory environment.
Notwithstanding the misgivings, proponents say that the feature meets a very legitimate need for accountability. Although Indian politicians must declare their assets via various statutory mechanisms, it has conventionally been very difficult to access and comprehend such information.
Details are buried in long affidavits or scattered across several regulatory bodies, and it is well-nigh impossible for ordinary citizens to develop any clear idea about the financial interests of their representatives.
Can Perplexity Finance Transform Political Scrutiny in India’s Democracy?
By consolidating the data into a searchable, user-friendly format, Perplexity Finance could democratize access to information that technically has always been public but practically has been hard to obtain. The tool could help voters spot potential conflicts of interest, track changes in politicians’ wealth over time, and make more informed decisions at the ballot box.
The closer the launch date gets, the more eyes will be set on how Perplexity weathers the storms ahead. Will the platform compile data properly despite the prevalence of proxy holdings? Can it function outside of the reach of regulatory bodies? And most importantly, will it actually deliver on the promise of greater transparency?
The coming weeks will yield the answers as Perplexity Finance forays into the Indian market potentially unleashing a new watermark of political accountability in the world’s largest democracy.




