TORONTO — Xanadu Quantum Technologies Ltd. shares have skyrocketed nearly 195 percent year-to-date as of mid-April 2026, turning the newly public photonic quantum computing pioneer into one of the hottest — and most volatile — names in a sector still years from widespread commercial payoff.
Xanadu Quantum Stock Surges 194% YTD: Buy the Photonic Computing Hype or Sell Before Reality Bites in 2026?
The stock, trading under the ticker XNDU on both Nasdaq and the Toronto Stock Exchange, closed recently around $25 after a roller-coaster debut in late March. It opened its first trading day near $10, popped as high as $28 in early sessions, and has since delivered eye-popping gains fueled by quantum sector excitement, fresh capital from its SPAC merger and technical milestones in error-corrected qubits. Yet with a market capitalization hovering near $650 million to $8.5 billion depending on share class calculations, thin revenues and massive cash burn, analysts and investors are sharply divided on whether to buy more shares or lock in profits before the long road to fault-tolerant quantum computers tests market patience.
Xanadu went public on March 27, 2026, following shareholder approval of its business combination with blank-check company Crane Harbor Acquisition Corp. The deal brought in approximately $302 million in gross proceeds, including a $275 million PIPE financing that drew participation from semiconductor giant AMD and Canadian institutional investors. The transaction valued the combined entity at about $3.1 billion pro forma enterprise value, with roughly $455 million in net cash at closing assuming minimal redemptions.
The listing made Xanadu the first pure-play photonic quantum computing company on major exchanges, a distinction the company has leaned into heavily in investor presentations. Unlike superconducting or trapped-ion approaches pursued by competitors such as IBM or IonQ, Xanadu’s platform relies on photons — particles of light — processed through silicon chips and integrated photonics. Proponents argue this approach offers advantages in scalability, room-temperature operation and networking potential for distributed quantum systems.
Chief Executive Christian Weedbrook, who holds a reported 51.8 percent stake, has positioned the company around a multi-year roadmap targeting fault-tolerant quantum systems by 2029-2030. In its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results released April 9, Xanadu highlighted progress on its Aurora modular photonic quantum computer, a 60 percent reduction in optical loss, and demonstration of 12 logical Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill (GKP) qubits with real-time error correction. The company also announced 10 new strategic partnerships across hardware, manufacturing, supply chain, research and commercial applications.
Advertisement
Additional tailwinds include government support. Xanadu is participating in Canada’s Quantum Champions Program and a potential C$390 million funding package for Project OPTIMISM, as well as DARPA initiatives. Earlier partnerships with Mitsubishi Chemical produced breakthrough quantum algorithms for extreme ultraviolet lithography used in next-generation semiconductor manufacturing, while collaboration with AMD aims to accelerate hybrid quantum-classical computing for aerospace and engineering.
Yet the financial picture remains that of a pre-revenue growth story. Full-year 2025 revenue stood at roughly C$3.45 million, while net losses reached C$58.49 million. The company entered 2026 with a strengthened balance sheet thanks to the SPAC proceeds, which management says will fund manufacturing scale-up, expansion of its open-source PennyLane software platform and continued R&D. PennyLane has become a standard tool for quantum machine learning, used by nearly half of global quantum developers.
The quantum computing sector as a whole has struggled in 2026 despite high-profile listings. Many stocks in the space have underperformed broader markets amid skepticism over near-term monetization. Xanadu’s own post-debut trading reflected that volatility: shares experienced wild swings on day one, briefly sinking before rebounding, and have continued to show sharp daily moves typical of speculative technology names.
Analysts remain cautious about assigning formal price targets, with limited Wall Street coverage so far. Some observers note that while Xanadu’s photonic approach and software ecosystem provide differentiation, the path to useful, fault-tolerant quantum advantage — where quantum machines solve problems intractable for classical supercomputers — could still take years. Commercial revenue may initially come from cloud access to its systems, hybrid quantum-classical applications in chemistry and materials science, and partnerships rather than outright hardware sales.
Advertisement
For investors considering a position, the bull case rests on several factors. The fresh capital runway reduces immediate dilution risk. Technical milestones in error correction and modular architectures suggest steady progress toward scalability. Growing interest from governments and large industrials in quantum for cybersecurity, drug discovery and optimization could accelerate adoption. AMD’s involvement and Nvidia ecosystem ties add credibility in the broader AI-hardware narrative, as quantum may one day complement classical computing for specific workloads.
The bear case is equally compelling. Quantum computing remains capital-intensive with long development timelines and high technical risk. Xanadu faces competition from better-funded players and established tech giants. Current revenues are negligible compared with the lofty valuation, implying investors are paying a steep premium for future potential. Any delays in milestones, regulatory hurdles around quantum encryption standards or broader market rotation away from speculative tech could trigger sharp pullbacks. Repair costs for specialized photonic hardware and talent retention in a competitive field add operational challenges.
Short interest stood at around 345,000 shares as of late March, relatively modest but indicative of some skepticism. Beta near 0.45 suggests the stock has not yet moved in perfect lockstep with broader markets, though that could change as trading volume increases and more institutions build positions.
Broader context matters. Quantum stocks often trade on narrative and milestone news rather than traditional fundamentals. Xanadu’s April 2026 analyst day at the Nasdaq MarketSite generated strong engagement, according to the company, helping sustain momentum. Yet with the sector still in the “hype versus reality” phase, disciplined position sizing is essential.
Advertisement
Retail investors drawn to the story should weigh personal risk tolerance carefully. Those bullish on quantum’s long-term disruption potential may view dips as buying opportunities, especially given the post-listing cash position. More conservative investors might wait for clearer revenue traction, additional government contracts or proof points on error-corrected qubit scaling before adding exposure.
For existing holders, the decision to sell some shares could depend on portfolio construction. Locking in partial gains after the massive YTD run reduces downside while keeping skin in the game for potential upside catalysts such as new partnerships, further technical breakthroughs or inclusion in quantum-focused exchange-traded funds.
As April 2026 progresses, Xanadu’s management will likely provide more color on capital allocation, manufacturing facility plans and commercial pipeline during upcoming earnings calls or investor events. The company has emphasized building quantum computers that are “useful and available to people everywhere,” a mission that resonates with both scientific and commercial audiences.
Ultimately, buying or selling Xanadu stock in 2026 comes down to time horizon and conviction in photonic quantum’s edge. Short-term traders may continue to ride volatility around news flow. Long-term believers in quantum computing’s transformative power could see the current valuation as reasonable entry given the de-risking provided by public listing and partnerships. Skeptics will point to historical precedents of early-stage tech valuations that soared before crashing when commercialization lagged expectations.
Advertisement
With roughly $455 million in net cash and a clear technology roadmap, Xanadu enters its public life with more resources than many quantum peers. Whether that capital translates into sustained shareholder value will depend on execution over the coming quarters and years — a high-stakes bet in one of the most exciting yet uncertain frontiers of computing.
Investors should monitor upcoming filings, technical updates and sector sentiment closely. In a year already marked by quantum listings and volatility, Xanadu stands out as both a pioneer and a reminder that revolutionary technology often requires revolutionary patience — and carries revolutionary risk.
A JetBlue aircraft lands under the DC skyline featuring the U.S. Capitol building, near United Airlines, American Airlines and Delta Airlines aircraft on the tarmac at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, U.S. January 25, 2025.
Jim Urquhart | Reuters
A U.S. lawmaker is urging the CEOs of the country’s largest airlines to lower prices if and when the cost of jet fuel declines after a massive run-up this year prompted carriers to raise surcharges, bag fees and fares.
Advertisement
“If airline pricing is truly tied to global fuel costs, then it must be truly responsive when those costs decline,” U.S. Rep Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., wrote to the CEOs of Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, JetBlue Airways and Southwest Airlines, according to a letter that was seen by CNBC. “I call on you to publicly commit to lowering costs associated with air travel should jet fuel prices decline. The American people deserve fairness and pricing models that do not only reflect market conditions, but also economic justice.”
Fuel is airlines’ biggest expense after labor. Jet fuel reached an average of $4.88 a gallon in New York, Houston, Chicago and Los Angeles on April 2, according to Argus, up about 95% since the Feb. 28 attacks by the U.S. and Israel on Iran started. The climb was steeper in other regions that don’t produce as much oil or jet fuel as the U.S.
United declined to comment. The other carriers didn’t immediately respond for requests for comment.
Delta reported a $2 billion headwind from fuel this quarter and said it would “meaningfully” scale back its capacity plans, something other carriers are likely to discuss when they report results next week.
Advertisement
Lower capacity can drive up fares, especially if demand remains robust. A drop in fuel prices, meanwhile, can encourage airlines to expand capacity, doing the opposite to pricing.
When asked what will happen if fuel prices decline from recent highs, Delta CEO Ed Bastian last week said that “fuel recapture is going to be important. No matter what we do, and the degree in which we can retain any of the pricing strength that we talked about from industry rationalization, that will certainly help us boost our margins this year and clearly into next year as well.”
Consumers willing to shell out more to travel have been driving the airline industry. Bastian last week told analysts that demand has held up.
Advertisement
“I think the higher-end consumer, the premium consumer is candidly immune or becoming more immune to the headlines and not delaying their investment in the experience economy, waiting to see what the next headline is going to be, on the margin,” he said.
European aviation is staring down the barrel of a fuel crisis that could ground flights across the continent by June, the International Energy Agency has warned, with reserves thinning at an alarming pace and replacement supplies proving stubbornly difficult to secure.
In its latest monthly oil market report, the Paris-based watchdog, which counsels 32 member states on energy security, said Europe was sitting on roughly six weeks’ worth of jet fuel. Unless the bloc can source at least half of the volumes it would ordinarily draw from the Middle East, stocks will hit a critical threshold within weeks.
The warning comes as the Strait of Hormuz, the artery through which the bulk of Gulf jet fuel flows to international markets, remains effectively shut. Iran moved to close the waterway more than six weeks ago in retaliation for joint American and Israeli military strikes, and the blockade has sent kerosene prices soaring and rattled airline finance directors from Luton to Lisbon.
Speaking to the Associated Press, IEA executive director Fatih Birol did not mince his words: flight cancellations, he cautioned, could be weeks away if the taps remain shut.
Historically, Europe has leaned on the Gulf for around three-quarters of its imported jet fuel. The IEA noted that refineries in other major exporting nations, South Korea, India and China chief among them, are themselves heavily reliant on Middle Eastern crude, meaning the disruption has, in its own phrasing, jammed the gears of the global aviation fuel market.
Advertisement
European buyers are now scrambling to plug the gap. American refiners have sharply accelerated jet fuel exports in recent weeks, but the IEA reckons that even if every barrel leaving US shores were routed to European airports, it would cover only a little over half the shortfall.
Under the agency’s modelling, a replacement rate below 50 per cent would trigger physical shortages at selected airports, forcing cancellations and what analysts politely term “demand destruction”. Even if three-quarters of the missing volumes can be replaced, the same squeeze is expected to bite by August. The upshot, the IEA concluded, is that European markets will need to hustle considerably harder to attract cargoes from alternative sources if inventories are to hold through the summer peak.
The financial strain on carriers is already acute. Fuel typically accounts for between 20 and 40 per cent of an airline’s operating costs, and the benchmark European jet fuel price touched a record $1,838 (£1,387) per tonne at the start of April, more than double the $831 recorded before hostilities erupted.
Brussels, for its part, is treading carefully. The European Commission said this week there was no evidence of shortages within the EU but conceded that supply issues could surface in the near future. A spokesperson confirmed that crude flows to European refineries remained stable with no immediate need to tap strategic reserves, adding that oil and gas coordination groups were now meeting weekly. Commission president Ursula von der Leyen is expected to unveil a package of energy measures next week.
Advertisement
The mood at Europe’s airports is less sanguine. Airports Council International, the continent’s airport trade body, wrote to the Commission last week warning that fuel shortages could materialise unless the Strait of Hormuz reopens within three weeks.
The pressure is already showing on airline balance sheets. In a trading update on Thursday, EasyJet said it had absorbed £25m of additional fuel costs in March alone as a direct consequence of the Middle East conflict, and that was despite the Luton-based low-cost carrier having hedged more than three-quarters of its jet fuel requirement at pre-war prices. The airline flagged near-term uncertainty over both fuel costs and passenger demand, a combination that rarely bodes well for earnings.
For SME operators in the aviation supply chain, ground handlers, charter firms, regional carriers and the small logistics businesses that depend on dependable air freight, the coming weeks will be a test of cash reserves and commercial nerve. With prices at record highs and supply far from guaranteed, the summer schedule is shaping up to be the most precarious Europe’s aviation sector has faced in a generation.
Amy Ingham
Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.
Perth-based drone manufacturer Innovaero will collaborate with Australian munitions company NIOA to develop a range of modular warheads and launch systems for loitering munitions.
The U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building stands after it was reported the IRS will lay off about 6,700 employees, a restructuring that could strain the tax-collecting agency’s resources during the critical tax-filing season, in Washington, D.C., Feb. 20, 2025.
Kent Nishimura | Reuters
A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox.
Advertisement
For seven years, wealthy Americans faced a looming deadline to take advantage of tax provisions that were set to expire at the end of 2025. While the One Big Beautiful Bill Act alleviated much of the uncertainty by making most of the cuts permanent, lawyers and tax accountants say the ever-shifting tax code requires constant planning.
With this year’s Tax Day now behind us, here are five of the most important planning strategies wealthy investors and high earners are thinking about for next year and beyond.
1. Long-short tax-loss harvesting
Last year’s tax bill permanently raised the estate tax exemption to $15 million per person, up from $13.99 million. (It was initially set to be cut in half at the end of 2025.)
The higher threshold has prompted a shift in focus from minimizing federal estate taxes to lowering taxes on income and capital gains. Minimizing capital gains has become crucial after several years of strong market gains, according to Mitchell Drossman, head of national wealth strategies in Bank of America’s chief investment office. The S&P 500 has surged more than 75% since the beginning of 2023.
Advertisement
“The biggest tax story to me is a capital gains and investing story,” said Drossman. “You have lots of clients who are sitting on significant gains.”
Investors are increasingly turning to long-short tax-loss harvesting, an aggressive form of a popular strategy, in order to minimize capital gains, Drossman said. With traditional tax-loss harvesting, investors sell losing assets to offset realized gains on others. Long-short tax strategies, on the other hand, borrow against the portfolio to buy short positions expected to fall and maintain long positions expected to thrive.
“If there’s natural volatility in the markets, you have, now, a greater amount of an asset base to choose from in terms of harvesting losses,” he said. “But when you look at your overall portfolio, you’re still kind of neutral.”
2. Bonus depreciation
The 2025 tax bill renewed bonus depreciation, allowing businesses to deduct the full cost of qualifying assets like machinery, computers or vehicles the first year they are used.
Advertisement
Adam Ludman, head of tax strategy at J.P. Morgan Private Bank, said many clients with operating businesses are investing with bonus depreciation in mind, such as buying private jets.
Real estate developers and investors are trying to get the most bang for their buck by assessing which parts of their properties can be depreciated faster, according to Ludman. For instance, while a commercial building can take 39 years to depreciate, a parking lot can be depreciated over 15 years, allowing owners to recover costs faster.
Get Inside Wealth directly to your inbox
3. Changing domiciles
A wave of blue states are considering new taxes on top earners and high-net-worth individuals in order to cover cuts in federal aid. California’s one-time billionaire tax proposal may end up on the November ballot, while Maine and Washington have recently passed millionaire taxes.
Jane Ditelberg, chief tax strategist for Northern Trust Wealth Management, said a growing number of clients are asking how to change their tax status as these proposals gain traction. Depending on their state, residents can avoid state-level taxes by creating trusts in states with favorable trust income laws like Delaware.
Advertisement
The most straightforward way to avoid local taxes is to change your domicile, which is easier said than done, according to Jere Doyle of BNY Wealth. The senior estate planning strategist based in Massachusetts, which imposes a millionaire tax, said he has had clients move to New Hampshire and establish residency before selling their businesses.
But clients are often loath to take the steps necessary to establish intent not to return, Doyle said. For instance, moving to Florida may not be enough to avoid Massachusetts taxes if you refuse to sell your Martha’s Vineyard home, he said.
“Everyone thinks that if they spend 183 days in another state, you’re domiciled in that state. That’s not necessarily true. Each state’s a little bit different,” he said. “You [have] got to change where you vote, where your car is registered, even where your doctors are, what clubs you belong to, golf clubs, country clubs, things like that.”
The bill limits top-earning donors in two ways. First, starting this year, donors who itemize will only be able to deduct charitable contributions in excess of 0.5% of their adjusted gross income, or AGI.
Second, taxpayers in the 37% tax bracket will have their itemized deductions reduced by 2/37th of the value. This ceiling reduces the effective tax benefit from 37% to 35%.
Ditelberg said many clients accelerated their charitable giving last year before these new rules took effect. She said she anticipates clients will continue to “bunch” their donations, by giving a larger sum in one year rather than spreading it over multiple years, so they only trigger the 0.5% haircut once, either through their foundations or donor-advised funds.
5. Opportunity zones
The tax bill also offered an incentive for business owners and real estate owners to postpone selling their assets. The bill made permanent the qualified opportunity zone program, which allows investors to defer capital gains by rolling them over into a fund that invests in a low-income community.
Advertisement
The opportunity zone funds created under the first Trump administration still exist, but you can only defer the taxes until the end of the year. The new opportunity zones, which have yet to be designated, come with enhanced benefits, especially for investors in rural communities. For instance, if you hold your investment in a qualified rural opportunity fund for five years, your capital gains are reduced by 30% for tax purposes.
But you only have 180 days to roll over your gains, and the new opportunity zone rules don’t take effect until 2027, Ditelberg noted.
“If you’re thinking of incurring a major gain, you may want to defer it until August or September, instead of doing it in May or June, if you think you would like to take advantage of the opportunity zone deferral,” she said. “I think we’re going to see people who are incurring gains in the second half of this year.”
That said, investors are waiting to see what the new funds entail. Drossman said some clients are reluctant to invest in opportunity zones again after their previous investments underperformed.
Advertisement
“It’s a classic example of not letting the tax-tail wag the dog because these need to be sound investments,” he said. “Like with all investments, there is an element of risk and return.”
It has secured backing in a round led by the Development Bank of Wales
Left to right: Cai Gwinnutt, co-founder of Openmoove; Mike Rees, Investment Executive at the Development Bank of Wales; Ross McKenzie, CEO and co-founder of Openmoove.
Cardiff-based property tech venture Openmoove is looking to scale-up following a £700,000 equity investment round boost.
The tech start-up has secured £350,000 equity from the £20m Wales Technology Fund, managed by the Development Bank of Wales, matched with a £335,000 investment from early-stage venture firm, HAATCH and a group of Welsh angel investors. The deal marks the second time HAATCH and the Development Bank have invested together.
Founded in 2024 by Ross McKenzie and Cai Gwinnutt, Openmoove has developed a business to business platform designed to streamline the workflows of estate agents, conveyancers and mortgage brokers, helping reduce administration, improve communication and make property transactions easier to manage for all parties involved.
It has spent the last 18 months building and refining its product, testing it with early customers and securing commercial interest from major estate agency groups and conveyancers. The investment will now enable the business to scale up its team, accelerate market activity and roll out the platform more widely.
Advertisement
The funding is expected to create six jobs in Cardiff in the coming months. Chief executive Mr McKenzie brings extensive experience in the property sector, having held senior roles at Purplebricks and Countrywide before founding Cardiff-based estate agency Isla-Alexander. The firm’s chief technology officer Mr Gwinnutt, brings 20 years of experience across start-ups and engineering, with previous roles including OnExamination, Amplyfi, Cyber Innovation Hub and Tramshed Tech.
Mr McKenzie said:“We’ve spent the last 18 months building the product, working closely with estate agents, conveyancers and mortgage brokers, and proving there is real demand for a better way to manage the property transaction process. This investment gives us the backing to scale up, build our team in Cardiff and start rolling the platform out more widely.
“We’re proud to be building Openmoove in Wales. This is a Welsh business, founded by two people who have grown up and built their careers here, and we’re excited to be creating jobs in Cardiff as we move into the next phase of growth.”
Mr Gwinnutt added:“Our focus has been on creating technology that fits around the systems professionals already use, rather than forcing them to change behaviour or adopt a completely new way of working. We’ve developed a market-ready product, tested it with early customers and are now in a strong position to accelerate our growth.“This funding allows us to keep building with intent — expanding the team, strengthening the platform and taking a product that will improve the way property transactions happen.”
Advertisement
Mike Rees, investment executive at the Development Bank of Wales, said: “Ross and Cai have combined deep sector knowledge with strong technical expertise to build a compelling platform in a large and important market. They have made significant progress in a short space of time, developing the product, securing early commercial interest and setting out a clear route to growth.
“Our investment from the Wales Technology Fund will help Openmoove scale from Cardiff, create new jobs and build on the commercial foundations already in place. It is also encouraging to be investing alongside HAATCH again, demonstrating the value of co-investment in supporting ambitious Welsh businesses with high-growth potential.”
India’s mining and metals sectors are flashing opportunity signals, with spot price surges in coal and iron ore creating a compelling earnings catalyst for Coal India and NMDC, according to Siddhartha Khemka, Head of Retail Research at brokerage firm Motilal Oswal.
“Coal India is expected to see a 6% QoQ volume growth while NMDC is likely to see a strong 20% QoQ volume growth,” Khemka told ET Now, adding that rising e-auction premiums stand to materially boost Coal India’s profitability. The stock is his preferred pick within the mining space, underpinned by a structural demand thesis: India’s thermal power requirements are set to climb sharply, driven by an expected intense summer season and the longer-term electricity appetite of AI infrastructure and data centres.
Motilal is pencilling in approximately 9% sequential revenue growth for the sector, with realisations improving by Rs 4,000–5,000 per tonne on a sequential basis. Hot-rolled coil prices are seen rising by Rs 6,700 per tonne and rebars by Rs 10,000 per tonne. Base industrial metals are the standout performers — aluminium and copper are tracking 13%–16% sequential improvement, supported by constrained supply and robust global demand. Chinese export prices and EU prices have also firmed, with the latter up around 9% sequentially.
Within non-ferrous metals, Khemka singles out Nalco, citing strong alumina volumes, higher alumina prices, a debt-free balance sheet, and a multi-year capacity expansion roadmap. On the ferrous side, Jindal Stainless earns a place in his portfolio for its shift toward higher value-added products and its exposure to firming nickel prices. Alongside Coal India, these three names constitute his metals picks for the current cycle.
Advertisement
Banking: The Tide Turns Toward Private
Live Events
The Q4 earnings season is set to expose a widening gulf between India’s private and public sector banks. Khemka projects aggregate earnings growth of roughly 12% year-on-year for private banks, against a meagre 2% for their PSU counterparts, a gap he attributes squarely to base effects and the NIM recovery dynamic now unfolding. With the Reserve Bank of India having held rates steady, banks that spent much of the last financial year passing on cuts to borrowers are beginning to see margins stabilise and recover. “With the status quo maintained, they will be able to see a stronger NIM improvement,” Khemka said. SBI remains Motilal Oswal’s top pick in the large-bank space. Khemka forecasts a 13% earnings CAGR over the next two to three years, with return on assets of 1.1% and return on equity of approximately 16% — all while the stock continues to trade at a meaningful discount to HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank. “Despite the ups and downs in the market, in the industry, in the environment, SBI has been delivering on a consistent basis,” he said. ICICI Bank follows closely. After a period of valuation-driven caution, a time correction in the stock has brought multiples to more comfortable levels. Khemka sees domestic loan growth of around 12%, steady NIMs of approximately 4.3%, and best-in-class asset quality supporting a re-rating toward 2.2 times one-year forward adjusted price-to-book, up from current levels near 1.8 times.
The auto sector delivered a strong Q4 on volumes, with the overall segment clocking 23% growth. Tractors led at 33%, followed by two-wheelers at 25% and commercial vehicles at 22%, the latter benefiting from a cyclical recovery. Passenger vehicles lagged at 15%. Input cost pressures are a headwind, but Khemka remains bullish on two-wheelers, tractors, and CVs as the three sub-segments to watch.
Advertisement
Within consumption, jewellery has proven resilient despite gold’s sharp rally, making Titan its top pick in discretionary. Radico Khaitan is expected to deliver strong numbers in the liquor space. Among staples, Marico screens well. Quick-service restaurants show early signs of recovery but face near-term uncertainty from LPG supply disruptions.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
You must be logged in to post a comment Login