Business
MLB Opens 2026 Season With Yankees-Giants on Netflix, New ABS Challenges
Major League Baseball kicks off its 2026 regular season Wednesday night with a marquee Opening Night matchup between the New York Yankees and San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park, broadcast exclusively on Netflix in the league’s first streaming-only national game. The traditional Opening Day slate follows Thursday with 11 games, featuring star pitchers and defending champions chasing history in a campaign already shaped by a busy offseason and groundbreaking rule changes.

The Yankees, seeking their first World Series title since 2009, send newly acquired left-hander Max Fried to the mound for his first Opening Day start with the club and fourth overall. Fried faces Giants ace Logan Webb, who makes his fifth consecutive Opening Day assignment. The game begins at 8:05 p.m. ET and marks Netflix’s debut as an MLB broadcast partner, available internationally with multiple language options.
Thursday’s full Opening Day card highlights several compelling storylines. Paul Skenes, the reigning National League Cy Young winner, takes the ball for the Pittsburgh Pirates against the New York Mets at Citi Field in a 1:15 p.m. ET contest aired on NBC and Peacock. Skenes helped Team USA finish second in the recent World Baseball Classic and enters the season as one of the game’s most dominant young arms.
The Los Angeles Dodgers, aiming for a third straight championship after winning in 2024 and 2025, host the Arizona Diamondbacks in the evening national telecast. Yoshinobu Yamamoto is expected to start for the Dodgers after closing out the 2025 World Series. Other notable Thursday games include the Detroit Tigers visiting the San Diego Padres with Tarik Skubal on the mound, and a battle of 2025 division winners as the Seattle Mariners host the Cleveland Guardians.
Six teams — the Athletics, Blue Jays, Braves, Marlins, Rockies and Royals — open their seasons Friday, March 27, completing the staggered start that makes 2026’s Opening Week the earliest in recent memory.
A major innovation debuts Wednesday: the Automated Ball-Strike Challenge System, or ABS Challenge. Each team begins games with two challenges to review an umpire’s strike or ball call using Hawk-Eye tracking technology. Successful challenges do not count against the limit, adding strategy and reducing missed calls without fully automating the strike zone. The system, tested extensively in the minors and spring training, was approved by the Joint Competition Committee and will first appear during the Yankees-Giants game.
Offseason moves reshaped several rosters. The Dodgers added high-profile talent including Kyle Tucker, while the Mets and Pirates underwent significant changes. The Yankees retained core pieces around Aaron Judge, who homered multiple times in spring training exhibitions. Several teams return largely intact, including the Tigers, who rode strong pitching to contention in 2025.
Power rankings entering the season place the Dodgers firmly atop most lists, followed by clubs like the Mariners, Blue Jays and Cubs in varying order. The Philadelphia Phillies, who won the NL East in 2025 but fell short in the postseason, remain contenders alongside the Mets and other NL clubs.
Baseball fans can expect familiar traditions alongside fresh elements. Ballparks will feature ceremonial first pitches, parades of past heroes and fireworks in many cities. Attendance is projected to remain robust after strong 2025 figures, with Opening Day often drawing sellout or near-sellout crowds regardless of weather.
The 162-game grind begins amid ongoing discussions about pace of play. While the pitch clock and other recent rules remain, the ABS Challenge introduces a new tactical layer that could slightly extend certain at-bats but aims to improve accuracy on the game’s most frequent calls.
Minor league experiments this season include moving second base slightly in some leagues, stricter limits on batter timeouts and checked-swing reviews, but those do not affect the majors yet. MLB continues evaluating potential future changes based on fan and player feedback.
Streaming and television coverage expands again in 2026. Beyond Netflix’s Opening Night, regional sports networks, MLB.TV and national packages on ESPN, Fox and others will carry the bulk of games. Fans without cable can access many contests through streaming services.
Injuries and roster battles dominated spring training chatter. Several clubs dealt with key players recovering from surgery or managing workload, but most projected starters appear ready for Opening Day. Depth remains critical in a long season where health often determines playoff fates.
Young stars like Skenes, Yamamoto and emerging talents from the 2025 rookie class will shoulder heavier expectations. Veterans such as Judge, Freddie Freeman (if healthy with the Dodgers) and others provide leadership as teams chase October glory.
The 2026 schedule features balanced interleague play and divisional rivalries that intensify early. The Yankees’ West Coast trip to open against the Giants sets an intriguing tone, pitting two historic franchises with passionate fan bases against each other.
Commissioner Rob Manfred has emphasized growing the game globally while maintaining its American roots. International broadcasts, including Netflix’s multilingual options, align with that vision following successful World Baseball Classic viewership.
As pitchers and catchers reported weeks ago and position players joined later, optimism filled clubhouses. Managers spoke of new energy after the long winter, with players eager to test themselves against the best.
For fantasy baseball enthusiasts and casual fans alike, Opening Day signals the unofficial start of spring. Predictions, projections and bold calls flood social media and broadcasts in the days leading up.
No matter the final standings in October, the 2026 season begins with hope in every dugout. From small-market rebuilders to big-spending contenders, each of the 30 clubs starts with a clean slate and 162 opportunities to make history.
Wednesday’s Netflix broadcast promises high production values and accessibility for new viewers. Thursday’s packed slate ensures something for everyone, whether rooting for a powerhouse or an underdog.
As the first pitches fly in San Francisco and across the league in coming days, baseball once again captures the nation’s attention. The boys of summer — or in this case, an early spring — return, promising drama, surprises and the timeless joy of America’s pastime.
Business
These Companies Foster Careers Better Than Others. Here’s How.
The 22 companies that got high marks across the board in the
Where You Work Matters List share several practices, from hiring people early in their careers to training them relentlessly and aiding their advancement.
The list, created by the Burning Glass Institute and the Schultz Family Foundation, seeks to evaluate how good companies are for early-career opportunities, career growth and job stability.
Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
Business
Oil Price Today (March 26): Crude oil above $100 again as Iran rejects US proposal to end war. $150 in sight?
Even as it reviews the proposal, Iran has no plans to engage in talks to end the expanding conflict, its foreign minister said on Wednesday. Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump warned that Washington would intensify pressure if Tehran does not accept that it has been “defeated militarily,” according to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.
Crude oil price on March 26
Brent crude futures gained $1.13, or 1.1%, to $103.35 a barrel by 0051 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude rose $1.08, or 1.2%, to $91.40 a barrel. Both benchmarks had fallen more than 2% on Wednesday.Iran said U.S. outreach appeared significant, keeping oil markets highly sensitive to further developments in negotiations and military actions.
The reported 15-point proposal from Trump, delivered via Pakistan, includes demands such as eliminating Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium, halting enrichment activities, restricting its ballistic missile programme and cutting funding to regional allies, according to three Israeli cabinet sources familiar with the plan.
The conflict has severely disrupted shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, a key route that typically handles around one-fifth of global crude oil and liquefied natural gas supplies. The International Energy Agency has described the situation as the largest oil supply disruption on record.
Iran has outlined a set of conditions for ending the conflict, stating that the first requirement is a complete halt to attacks and assassinations. It has called for firm guarantees to prevent any recurrence of war, along with a clear mechanism to assess and ensure compensation for war-related damages. Tehran also emphasised that hostilities must end not only against Iran but also against resistance groups across the region.
Additionally, it has demanded recognition of its sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz. Until these conditions are met, Iran said its defensive operations will continue.
Further tightening supply concerns, about 40% of Russia’s oil export capacity remains offline following Ukrainian drone strikes, a disputed pipeline attack and tanker seizures, based on Reuters calculations using market data.
What lies ahead?
International brokerage Macquarie has said that even if tensions ease in the near term, oil prices are likely to find support in the $85–$90 range, with a gradual move back toward $110 until normal flows through the Strait of Hormuz resume. The note added that if disruptions persist through April, Brent could still climb to $150 per barrel.
Looking ahead, crude prices could move higher from current levels. According to Kayanat Chainwala of Kotak Securities, oil may rise to $120 per barrel in the near term and potentially touch $150 if the conflict continues.
Nuvama Institutional Equities echoes the same view. The continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which handles around 20 million barrels per day, could push crude prices to the $110–150 per barrel range.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Business
RBA ready to shift up a gear as the neutral rate rises
The Iran war will hurt consumers by pushing up prices and slowing the economy but the Reserve Bank must act to contain inflation expectations, an official says.
Business
XMVM: Impressive Value Characteristics But Unappealing Quality And Performance (XMVM)
Vasily Zyryanov is an individual investor and writer.He uses various techniques to find both relatively underpriced equities with strong upside potential and relatively overappreciated companies that have inflated valuation for a reason.In his research, he pays much attention to the energy sector (oil & gas supermajors, mid-cap, and small-cap exploration & production companies, the oilfield services firms), while he also covers a plethora of other industries from mining and chemicals to luxury bellwethers.He firmly believes that apart from simple profit and sales analysis, a meticulous investor must assess Free Cash Flow and Return on Capital to gain deeper insights and avoid sophomoric conclusions.While he favors underappreciated and misunderstood equities, he also acknowledges that some growth stocks do deserve their premium valuation, and its an investor’s primary goal to delve deeper and uncover if the market’s current opinion is correct or not.
Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.
Business
Stock Market Holiday: Are NSE, BSE open or closed today on 26 March for Ram Navami celebration? Check now
The calendar features two shortened weeks, with next holidays being Mahavir Jayanti and Good Friday. The following week will have only three trading sessions, resulting in a long weekend. Markets will remain closed on Tuesday, March 31, for Shri Mahavir Jayanti, and again on Friday, April 3, for Good Friday.
Is MCX open?
India’s largest commodity exchange, the Multi Commodity Exchange of India (MCX), will remain shut for trading in the first session (9 am to 5 pm). Trading will resume in the evening session between 5 pm and 11:30 pm.MCX’s yearly calendar announces 16 trading holidays in 2026, during which the exchange will observe partial or full closures. The next holiday this month will be on March 31, 2026, for Shri Mahavir Jayanti. However, the market will be closed in the morning session only and will resume trading in the evening session.
The largest agri-commodity bourse, the National Commodity & Derivatives Exchange Limited (NCDEX), will remain closed in both sessions.
Stock market holidays in 2026
In total, there are 16 stock market holidays scheduled for 2026, of which three have already passed. After today and the two next week, trading will be suspended on 10 more occasions over the remaining nine months.Following Good Friday, the next holiday in April will be on April 14 for Dr Baba Saheb Ambedkar Jayanti, followed by Maharashtra Day on May 1 and Bakri Id on May 28.
In the second half of the year, trading will be suspended on Muharram on June 26, Ganesh Chaturthi on September 14 and Gandhi Jayanti on October 2. These will be followed by Dussehra on October 20, Diwali Balipratipada on November 10 and Guru Nanak Jayanti on November 24. The final market holiday for 2026 will be Christmas on December 25.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Business
US oil prices rise as investors assess Middle East de-escalation
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures climbed more than $1 to $91.42 a barrel at the open and were up 93 cents, or 1%, at $91.25 a barrel as of 2225 GMT.
WTI lost 2.2% on Wednesday.
Iran is still reviewing a U.S. proposal to end the war in the Gulf despite an initial response that was negative, a senior Iranian official told Reuters on Wednesday, indicating that Tehran had so far stopped short of rejecting it outright.
U.S. President Donald Trump will hit Iran harder if Tehran fails to accept that the country has been “defeated militarily,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said.
Iranian officials publicly scorned the prospect of any negotiations with the Trump administration. But an apparent delay in delivering a formal response to Pakistan, which delivered a 15-point proposal on behalf of Washington, appeared to signal that at least some figures in Tehran may be considering it.
Business
Towns’ talking points ahead of election
The countdown is on to the 2026 Scottish elections – voters will be heading to the polls in just six weeks.
With a third of MSPs not seeking re-election, it will be a very different parliament to the last.
The BBC’s Scotland correspondent Lorna Gordon went to the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse constituency to find out some of the key issues on voters’ minds.
Filmed and edited by Morgan Spence
Produced by Paul Ward
Business
Octopus boss: We've seen a 50% rise in solar panel sales since start of Iran war
The UK giant is optimistic but chief executive Greg Jackson tells the BBC he is making contingency plans.
Business
GLP-1s primed to reshape food and beverage landscape

GLP-1s primed to reshape food and beverage landscape
Business
Car-Sized Asteroid 2026 FM3 to Fly Past Earth Closer Than Moon Tonight
A car-sized asteroid designated 2026 FM3 will make a relatively close flyby of Earth late Wednesday, passing at a distance of about 148,000 miles — roughly 60% of the average Earth-moon separation — but posing no risk of impact, NASA officials said.
The asteroid, roughly 15 feet (about 4.5 meters) across, will reach its closest approach at 10:07 p.m. EDT on March 24, or 0207 GMT on March 25, traveling at approximately 12,168 mph (19,580 km/h) relative to Earth. Discovered just days ago, the space rock highlights both the frequency of near-Earth object flybys and the improving capabilities of planetary defense networks to detect them early.

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, tracks thousands of near-Earth objects (NEOs) through its Center for Near-Earth Object Studies. Asteroid 2026 FM3 appears on the agency’s “Next Five Asteroid Approaches” list as a car-sized object, underscoring that small bodies routinely pass within lunar distances without threat. For context, the moon orbits Earth at an average of 238,855 miles (384,400 kilometers).
“This is a routine close approach for objects of this size,” said a NASA spokesperson. “Asteroids like 2026 FM3 are too small to cause damage even if they were on a collision course, as most would burn up in the atmosphere. Our monitoring systems confirm it will safely pass by.”
The asteroid belongs to the Apollo group of near-Earth asteroids, whose orbits cross Earth’s path around the sun. Such objects originate primarily from the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, perturbed over time by gravitational interactions with planets.
At 15 feet wide, 2026 FM3 is comparable in size to a compact car. If it were to enter Earth’s atmosphere — which it will not — it would likely produce a bright fireball visible for hundreds of miles but cause no ground damage. Larger objects, roughly 80-100 feet across, are the threshold for potential regional effects, while those exceeding 0.6 miles (1 kilometer) could pose global hazards.
Wednesday’s flyby occurs amid heightened public interest in planetary defense. NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission in 2022 successfully altered the orbit of a small moonlet, demonstrating that kinetic impactors could deflect hazardous asteroids years in advance. The agency’s NEO Surveyor mission, scheduled for launch later this decade, will enhance infrared detection of dark, hard-to-spot objects.
Amateur and professional astronomers may attempt to observe 2026 FM3, though its small size and rapid motion make it challenging for backyard telescopes. At closest approach, the asteroid will appear as a faint, fast-moving point of light requiring precise ephemeris data and dark skies. Professional observatories equipped with larger instruments or radar, such as those at Goldstone or Arecibo’s successor facilities, sometimes characterize such objects during close passes.
The discovery of 2026 FM3 came via the Zwicky Transient Facility at Palomar Observatory in California, part of a global network scanning the skies nightly for transient events. Many small asteroids are found only days or weeks before their closest approaches, yet orbital calculations quickly rule out impact risks.
NASA maintains a catalog of more than 35,000 known NEOs, with roughly 2,300 classified as potentially hazardous asteroids (PHAs) — those larger than 460 feet (140 meters) whose orbits bring them within 4.65 million miles (7.5 million km) of Earth. Objects the size of 2026 FM3 fall well below PHA criteria and are monitored primarily for scientific value.
Close approaches like this one provide opportunities to study asteroid composition, rotation and surface properties. Radar observations during flybys can reveal shape, spin rate and even loose rubble-pile structures common among small bodies. Data from such encounters refine models of solar system formation and help assess long-term deflection strategies.
Wednesday’s event follows a string of recent small-asteroid flybys. In early March, a bus-sized object designated 2026 EG1 passed about 198,000 miles from Earth, closer than the moon, just days after discovery. Another bus-sized asteroid, 2026 FQ2, made a more distant pass on March 24 at over 1.5 million miles. These frequent encounters demonstrate that Earth resides in a dynamic cosmic neighborhood where small bodies pass harmlessly on a near-weekly basis.
Public fascination with asteroids has grown with missions like OSIRIS-REx, which returned samples from Bennu, and Japan’s Hayabusa2 from Ryugu. These primitive bodies contain clues to the solar system’s early chemistry and the delivery of water and organic molecules to early Earth.
For skywatchers hoping to catch a glimpse, experts recommend checking astronomy apps or websites providing real-time tracking. However, 2026 FM3’s small size and speed mean it will not be visible to the naked eye. Those with moderate telescopes and accurate pointing data might detect it as a streaking dot against background stars.
The flyby occurs as global efforts to catalog and characterize NEOs accelerate. The International Asteroid Warning Network and Space Mission Planning Advisory Group coordinate responses to any future threats. No known asteroid larger than 100 feet poses an impact risk in the next century, according to current assessments.
Scientists emphasize that while Hollywood dramatizations often depict doomsday scenarios, the reality of small asteroid flybys is routine and educational. “These events remind us of the importance of continued vigilance and investment in planetary defense,” one astronomer noted. “Most asteroids are benign neighbors, but understanding them helps prepare for the rare larger threats.”
As 2026 FM3 speeds past Earth at more than 12,000 mph, it will continue its journey around the sun, returning for future approaches decades or centuries from now. Its brief visit offers a moment to appreciate the vastness of space and the technological prowess allowing detection of objects mere feet across millions of miles away.
NASA and international partners continue refining detection and tracking systems. The Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile, set to begin full operations soon, will dramatically increase the discovery rate of NEOs, potentially finding thousands of new objects annually.
For now, residents of Earth can rest easy. The car-sized visitor will zip by harmlessly, a fleeting reminder of the solar system’s constant, mostly peaceful motion. Observers with clear skies and proper equipment may catch a scientific thrill, while the rest can simply marvel that humanity can spot and track a car-sized rock hurtling through space from millions of miles away.
After tonight’s encounter, attention will shift to the next listed approaches, including additional small objects on March 25. None currently pose any risk, continuing the pattern of safe passages that have protected Earth throughout human history.
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