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Prada unveils lunar spacesuit layer for NASA moon mission

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Prada unveils lunar spacesuit layer for NASA moon mission

Italian fashion house Prada and Axiom Space have unveiled a jointly developed next-generation lunar spacesuit layer scheduled to be worn during NASA’s upcoming Artemis IV moon landing mission, currently targeted for early 2028. 

The Houston-based space infrastructure developer announced Sunday that the liquid cooling and ventilation garment (LCVG) will act as an inner layer of the spacesuit and will protect astronauts “when they explore the lunar surface for the first time in more than 50 years.”

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The partnership marks the first time a luxury fashion brand has been directly involved in spacesuit development. 

“The future of space exploration will not be built by any one entity alone, and our partnership with Prada is proof of that,” Axiom Space CEO Dr. Jonathan Cirtain said. 

PRADA PARTNERS TO MAKE SPACESUITS FOR NASA’S ARTEMIS III LUNAR MISSION

gray spacesuit lining on manequin

The inner-layer liquid cooling and ventilation garment designed by Prada and Axiom Space is unveiled at a press event in New York City, U.S., June 7, 2026.  (Heather Khalifa/Reuters / Reuters)

Prada reportedly contributed its expertise in advanced 3D modeling, high-tech knitting and specialized fabrics to help design the garment. 

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“By bringing together the best in both aerospace engineering as well as luxury craftmanship and advanced product development, we have developed a garment that neither company could have created independently, and that is exactly the kind of cross-industry thinking that will define the next era of human spaceflight,” Cirtain added. 

Axiom said the garment is designed to be thermally regulating and comfortable enough to support spacewalks lasting up to eight hours, while also withstanding the harsh conditions of the lunar South Pole

“It manages their thermal environment, supports their breathing, and does it all while they’re pushing their bodies to the limit,” Axiom Space Senior Vice President of Spacecraft Development Russell Ralston said. “The work we have done with Prada has taken that capability to a level we could not have achieved alone.” 

NASA ANNOUNCES THREE NEW MOON MISSIONS AS AGENCY RACES TO BUILD PERMANENT LUNAR BASE BY END OF 2026

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panel discussion with four members and spacesuit models to the side

Sonya Gavankar McKay, director of digital strategy at Axiom Space; Russell Ralston, senior vice president and general manager of extravehicular activity at Axiom Space; Jonathan Cirtain, chief executive officer and president of Axiom Space; and Loren (Gabby Jones/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

According to the announcement, the LCVG pumps cold water through a network of tubes positioned over major muscle groups to draw heat away from the body and release it into space. It also includes a backup cooling system in case the primary system fails. 

The garment also features a separate ventilation system that continuously circulates oxygen across the astronaut’s face, removing exhaled carbon dioxide, which is then routed into a life-support system for filtering and reuse. 

The inner layer is designed to be worn directly against the skin beneath the suit’s outer protective AxEMU shell, which the companies previously unveiled in 2024. 

white close up of spacesuit

A close-up view of a lunar spacesuit developed by Prada and Axiom Space for NASA’s future moon missions. (Axiom Space )

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“When we unveiled the AxEMU, we announced that the collaboration between Prada and Axiom Space would continue beyond that first milestone,” Prada Group Chief Marketing Officer and Head of Sustainability Lorenzo Bertelli said. 

“Today, we are proud to present a new achievement born from the unique combination of Axiom Space’s pioneering expertise and Prada’s know-how in design, patternmaking, and advanced materials, ahead of humanity’s return to the lunar surface,” he continued. “We look forward to continuing this collaboration with Axiom Space, pushing boundaries and exploring new frontiers together.” 

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India eyes major bond index entry as tax exemptions sweeten appeal

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India eyes major bond index entry as tax exemptions sweeten appeal
India plans to make a renewed pitch for inclusion of its sovereign debt in major global bond gauges, including the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Index, after exempting foreign investors from capital gains and withholding taxes and vastly widening the investable pool of long-dated securities, officials said.

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and finance ministry officials may also reach out to the Basel-based Bank for International Settlements (BIS) for talks, they said. BIS has been given a special tax-exempt status in the latest rejig. BIS invests significantly in government securities (G-secs) and enjoys tax-free status everywhere.

India to Pitch for Bond Indices Entry AgainETMarkets.com

Latest policy steps seen upping India’s chances; finmin, RBI to tap newly tax-exempt BIS, others

India eyes major bond index entry as tax exemptions sweeten appeal
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India is set to reapply for inclusion in major global bond indices. This follows significant tax exemptions for foreign investors on capital gains and withholding taxes. The country has also expanded its long-dated securities pool. Officials are engaging with global index operators and the Bank for International Settlements. These moves aim to attract substantial foreign investment into Indian government bonds.


With the latest development, it is expected to bring $7-11 billion into India, one of the officials said. “We would be talking to them (global bond index operators)…There is regular engagement in any case,” said a second official, adding that major concerns have been considerably addressed.
Global Relevance
Issues expressed by bond operators earlier include tax benefits, market access and settlement, as per the official cited.


Clarity on trade settlement oversight is also likely to lift the likelihood of India’s inclusion in the Bloomberg Global gauge, which is tracked by multiple bulge-bracket funds worldwide for passive allocations into fixed income instruments. Even before formal inclusion talks are held, India should draw investments of about $5 billion into specified bonds immediately, market participants told ET.
“We expect these tax exemptions to make investing in Indian government bonds compelling for many foreign investors, and also significantly strengthen the case for inclusion in the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Index, especially if these bonds are made eligible for Euroclear settlement,” said Parul Mittal Sinha, head of markets (India and South Asia), Standard Chartered Bank. “We expect incremental inflows of approximately $5 billion in Indian government bonds from FPIs in the immediate future in response to these announcements, aided by tax exemptions and expectations of improved performance of the rupee versus other Asian currencies.”India has been a part of the JP Morgan Global Bond Index-Emerging Markets from June 2024, Bloomberg’s EM Local Currency Government Index from January 2025, and the FTSE Russell Emerging Market Index since last September. However, Bloomberg’s Global Aggregate Bond Index—one of the world’s most widely used indices—deferred its India inclusion in January, signalling further evaluation of key operational and market infrastructure issues. Back then, Bloomberg’s index services had cited infrastructure bottlenecks related to trading workflows and complex fund registration processes to defer its decision to include Indian instruments on its global gauge.

Typically, index inclusion makes global funds tracking those benchmarks to allocate capital proportionately to the country’s weight. This can potentially spur additional annual foreign fund flows worth tens of billions of dollars into India, lower the government’s borrowing cost and deepen the bond market, analysts said. Higher inflows can also help reverse the rupee fall.

Welcome Moves
A raft of government announcements on Friday brightened prospects of inclusion in the remaining major global indices, said analysts.

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Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) faced a 12.5% long-term capital gains (LTCG) tax on listed shares and bonds held longer than 12 months and a 20% withholding tax on interest earned on G-secs.

The government brought in an ordinance to scrap these levies. It also added G-secs in tenors of 15-, 30- and 40 years, as well as sovereign green bonds, to the list of specified securities under the fully accessible route for FPIs investments. Earlier, the facility was only available for papers with tenors of up to 10 years.

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Spain's visitor numbers hit new highs as tourists avoid Middle East

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Spain's visitor numbers hit new highs as tourists avoid Middle East

The European country had 9.1 million international visitors in April, the most ever for that month.

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Screwworm border closure fuels beef boom in Mexico, gloom in Texas

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Screwworm border closure fuels beef boom in Mexico, gloom in Texas


Screwworm border closure fuels beef boom in Mexico, gloom in Texas

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FDVV: Quality, Growth, And Yield Is Why I Continue To Like It

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FDVV: Quality, Growth, And Yield Is Why I Continue To Like It

FDVV: Quality, Growth, And Yield Is Why I Continue To Like It

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Oil prices edge higher after strikes on Israel test ceasefire

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Oil prices edge higher after strikes on Israel test ceasefire

Iran said the attacks, its first since an April ceasefire, are the start of “a full week” of strikes

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Sanderson staunch as 2030 cynics circle

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Sanderson staunch as 2030 cynics circle

Amber-Jade Sanderson says critics of the energy transition need to look at what’s happening on the ground.

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Asia markets tumble as tech rout deepens

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Asia markets tumble as tech rout deepens
Asian markets plunged on Monday as investors slammed the brakes on the red-hot AI rally, while Israeli strikes on Beirut sent oil prices and the dollar higher.

An 8% drop for South Korea’s chip-heavy KOSPI benchmark triggered a 20-minute trading halt and has it down almost 17% from last week’s record high.

Japan’s Nikkei fell 3.5% in early trade, though ‌U.S. S&P 500 ⁠and Nasdaq ⁠100 futures made small gains.

The Nasdaq had dropped 4.2% on Friday, with selling concentrated in semiconductor stocks after a hot jobs report ramped up expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate hikes, putting the brakes on what has been a sparkling AI-led rally.

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Two-year Treasury yields rose more than 11 basis points on Friday and benchmark 10-year Treasury futures were about five ticks lower early on Monday morning in Asia.


“The AI-drives-everything narrative frayed last week,” said Bob ⁠Savage, head ‌of markets macro strategy at BNY.
“Whether this is a healthy pause in the nine-week equity rally or a top remains the key question. The ⁠IPO focus on SpaceX and Anthropic is part of the pause – whether to make room for the new market cap or to rethink value.” INFLATION AND ECB AHEAD

The week ahead is headlined by the giant SpaceX listing, expected to price on Thursday and trade on Friday, but will also have inflation in focus with U.S. consumer price data due on Wednesday and central bank meetings in Canada and Europe.

Last week, bitcoin notched its heaviest weekly drop since the collapse of crypto exchange ‌FTX in late 2022, falling about 16%. It was hovering just shy of $63,000 on Monday.

SpaceX’s debut is expected to be followed by other mega IPOs in the coming months from Anthropic ⁠and OpenAI, raising so much money that brokers are nervous it could draw down other assets.

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The Middle East situation also remains delicate, and Brent crude futures were up about 2.6% to $95.45 a barrel on Monday morning after an Israeli attack on Beirut prompted Iran to direct a salvo of missiles at Israeli targets.

OPEC+ agreed on Sunday to the fourth increase in its oil output targets in as many months.

In currency trade the dollar was firm and holding above 160 yen and pushed the Australian dollar to $0.7038. The euro hovered at $1.1518.

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Wall Street ends sharply lower as chips stocks slide

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Wall Street ends sharply lower as chips stocks slide

Wall Street’s nine-week winning streak has ended with a thud as red-hot technology stocks suffered their ‌largest daily decline since April 2025 after a hot May jobs report fuelled fears of a hawkish policy pivot from the US Federal Reserve.

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Labor gets 'message' after historic poll for One Nation

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Labor gets 'message' after historic poll for One Nation

Labor insists it’s implementing “big changes” as voters abandon the major parties, with new polling showing Pauline Hanson’s right-wing party is the most popular for the first time.

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The Best IPO Stock Buying Strategy: How to Avoid Early Volatility

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The Best IPO Stock Buying Strategy: How to Avoid Early Volatility

IPO fever has gripped Wall Street as investors await the stock-market debuts of SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI.

Traders see this crop of initial public offerings as a generational chance to cash in on the artificial-intelligence boom that has catapulted major stock indexes to new highs. Yet history shows that navigating newly public companies can test the mettle of even the most bullish growth investors.

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