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Kalshi says Super Bowl trading volume surpassed $1 billion

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Kalshi says Super Bowl trading volume surpassed $1 billion
Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour on Super Bowl trades, growth of prediction markets and insider trading risk

Kalshi saw more than $1 billion in trading volume on Super Bowl Sunday, reaching a daily record high, according to CEO Tarek Mansour.

That volume was up 2,700% year-over-year, according to the company. The platform allows users to buy event contracts for outcomes in politics, pop culture, financial markets and sports.

“It was an incredible weekend,” Mansour told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Tuesday. “Kalshi was the biggest brand of the Super Bowl this year, without running a Super Bowl ad, and the way we achieved that is the product.”

Mansour said the trading volume for halftime performer Bad Bunny’s opening song exceeded $100 million, while bets on who would perform with Bad Bunny surpassed $45 million.

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The platform’s Super Bowl contracts were not without bumps, though. Co-founder Luana Lopes Lara posted on social media during the game that some users’ deposits were delayed due to high traffic.

“Your money is safe and on the way, it will just take longer to land,” she wrote.

Kalshi has recently come under fire along with other prediction markets as skepticism around the industry builds, with concerns of insider trading. Last week, before the Super Bowl, the platform announced additional efforts to expand its surveillance and enforcement efforts to identify and remove accounts participating in insider trading.

“The insider trading risk is very real for the stock market as well,” Mansour said on Tuesday.

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“As a regulated financial market by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, we have the same rules as the Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange, and we have the same mechanism of enforcement,” he added.

Over the past year, Mansour said the platform has run 200 investigations and frozen the relevant accounts, with some of those referred to law enforcement for prosecution.

Disclosure: CNBC and Kalshi have a commercial relationship that includes a minority investment.

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Call for business rates reform as Scots face cost of living crunch

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Call for business rates reform as Scots face cost of living crunch

One live music bar firm in Glasgow says it is facing a near six-fold increase and may have to lay off staff.

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Delivery firm Evri creates 150 jobs with new Yorkshire fulfilment centre

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The delivery firm said it aims to help smaller businesses provide faster deliveries with the new centre

New Evri site at Barnsley

New Evri site at Barnsley(Image: Evri)

Delivery company Evri has launched a new fulfilment centre in Yorkshire which will create 150 new jobs. The centre at Barnsley has come after a £4m investment from Evri.

The new facility, which is located less than 100 metres from Evri’s existing Barnsley hub, will speed up deliveries. The new site has a 11.59pm order cut-off time for next-day delivery, which Evri says will allow thousands of small and medium-sized businesses to get their goods to their customers as fast as bigger brands.

The facility also provides same-day dispatch, seven days a week, as well as support for Amazon Prime distribution. Evri said the launch of the centre builds on the momentum of Barnsley being named the UK’s first ‘tech town’.

David Saenz, chief commercial officer at Evri Group, said: “The launch of this purpose-built fulfilment facility, designed to meet the needs of the shopper of today and tomorrow, will bring exciting opportunities to some of the UK’s most loved brands as well as our country’s deep reservoir of small and medium-sized companies.

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“We’ve paired cutting-edge fulfilment technology with a direct connection to the Evri Group’s well-established and fast-growing domestic and international networks, meaning whatever the business need, we have a solution.”

Amy Wilshere of sports nutrition and energy drink brand company Furocity, said: “Evri has been an ideal partner to support our growth, and we’re thrilled about the new Barnsley fulfilment hub. The ability to order at midnight, have the package in their network within an hour and be delivered the next day will be amazing for our customers.”

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North East firms win contracts for world-first carbon capture power station

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Barrier Group and Cullum Detuners have sealed contracts for the NZT Power project

A CGI of the NZT Power Station

A CGI of the NZT Power Station(Image: Barrier Group)

Two North East companies are set to play key roles in one of the UK’s most significant low-carbon infrastructure projects. Wallsend, North Tyneside-based Barrier Group and Stockton’s Cullum Detuners have secured contracts for the NZT Power project, which is on course to become the world’s first commercial-scale gas-fired power station equipped with carbon capture technology.

The NZT Power project is anticipated to generate and sustain more than 3,000 jobs throughout the construction phase, delivering long-term economic advantages for Teesside while bolstering the UK’s low-carbon energy infrastructure. Once operational, NZT Power will have the capacity to produce up to 742 megawatts of low-carbon power, equivalent to the annual electricity needs of more than one million UK homes.

Up to two million tonnes of CO2 annually will be captured from NZT Power before being transported and stored via the Northern Endurance Partnership (NEP) infrastructure – the UK’s first CO2 transportation and storage infrastructure project. The project is being delivered by a consortium led by Technip Energies with GE Vernova, alongside construction partner Balfour Beatty. Under the terms of the contract, Barrier will oversee the design, engineering and supply of heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems for the new power station turbine hall. Barrier Group secured the deal from energy giant Technip Energies in a transaction that highlights the strength of the region’s industrial supply chain, as well as its expanding contribution to the nation’s net zero goals.

Barrier’s work is being carried out from its North East operations, with its HVAC engineering team, based at the Haverton Hill facility in Teesside, spearheading the engineering phase of the project. The contract encompasses the design and engineering of the hall’s HVAC systems, procurement of specialist equipment and materials, and project management of the package throughout the engineering phase.

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The turbine hall serves as the centrepiece of the combined cycle gas turbine power station, where electricity will be produced from natural gas. Barrier’s HVAC systems will ensure the correct environmental conditions are maintained within the building, supporting both the safe operation of critical equipment and a safe working environment for personnel.

Barrier is currently undertaking the engineering phase of the project, with roughly 10 personnel working directly on the contract, rising to nearly 20 in the latter stages. The award has already bolstered the firm’s headcount with five new engineering roles, strengthening its presence in the Tees Valley, reports Teesside Live.

Kevin Judson, operations director at Barrier Group, said the project marks a significant milestone in broadening its engineering services into major energy infrastructure and decarbonisation projects.

He said: “Being involved in NZT Power is a significant contract award for Barrier and aligns directly with our strategic growth plans. It reflects the strength of our engineering capability and the contribution businesses in the Tees Valley make to nationally important infrastructure projects.

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“This contract enables continued investment in our people and yard facilities, while supporting carbon capture infrastructure that is critical to the UK’s net zero ambitions and the long-term future of heavy industry.”

Barrier’s participation in the project also underpins its longer-term aspirations to grow operations from its River Tees yard, while continuing to develop its engineering and modular construction expertise in support of large-scale industrial projects throughout the region. Meanwhile, Derbyshire-based firm Cullum Detuners Limited has been appointed by Technip Energies to procure, manufacture and install the High Specification Flue Gas Ducting for the project. The project will be overseen from Cullum’s Stockton offices, with fabrication carried out by In-Spec in Middlesbrough.

The contract will see 40 employees engaged on the project for 15 months, with the firm having created 15 new positions off the back of the deal.

Kevin McEneny, sales director at Cullum, said: “This is a landmark project for decarbonised power generation within the UK. We are proud to have been selected to deliver the project which is a testament to our truly local manufacture and delivery strategy. Final module assembly will be performed in the former British Steel Plate Mill. Our project execution strategy secures local jobs and incorporates locally sourced materials and services.”

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Commerce Ministry Launches Cost-of-Living Relief Starting April 1

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Commerce Ministry Launches Cost-of-Living Relief Starting April 1

The Ministry of Commerce is intensifying efforts to reduce the cost of living with new relief measures. These initiatives will be implemented nationwide, aiming to alleviate financial burdens for citizens. The focus is on making essential goods and services more affordable, thereby improving economic stability and enhancing quality of life across the country.

Starting April 1, 2026, the Thai Ministry of Commerce is rolling out national relief measures to stabilize the cost of living amidst energy price fluctuations. Led by Minister Suphajee Suthumpun, these initiatives focus on protecting consumer purchasing power and supporting the agricultural sector.

This initiative is a response to rising costs affecting everyday essentials, ensuring citizens can maintain their standard of living amidst economic challenges.

Consumer Support Measures

The Ministry has tightened price controls and launched large-scale discount campaigns:

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  • “Thais Help Thais” Campaign: Offers discounts of 25% to 50% on over 1,000 essential products from alternative brands. These are available through major retail partners like Makro, Lotus’s, Tops, and Go Wholesale.
  • “Blue Flag” Project Expansion: The program is expanding to over 500 locations nationwide. Mobile units will reach remote areas to provide discounted consumer goods through August 2026.
  • Support for Local Eateries: The Ministry is providing raw materials (rice, oil, eggs, sugar) at cost price to “Khao Kaeng” (curry rice) vendors and small restaurants to keep meal prices affordable.
  • Strict Price Monitoring: The list of controlled products has increased to 71 items, with 21 now requiring prior approval for any price hikes. Violators face fines up to 140,000 baht and 7 years in prison.

Agricultural Relief

To lower production costs, the “Green Flag Plus” program has been launched:

  • Fertilizer Subsidies: Eligible farmers can receive up to 1,400 baht in discounts via coupons for chemical and organic fertilizers.
  • Direct Factory Access: In collaboration with 26 manufacturers, 10 million bags of fertilizer are being made available at factory-exit prices.
  • Logistics Support: The Ministry is working with Foreign Affairs to expedite shipments of raw materials (fertilizers and petrochemicals) currently delayed in the Strait of Hormuz.

Citizens can report unfair trade practices or unjustified price hikes to the Department of Internal Trade hotline at 1569 or via the Line account @mr.DIT.

These measures include subsidies on essential goods such as food staples and fuel, targeting low to middle-income earners who are most impacted by inflation. By reducing the financial burden on these necessities, the government seeks to stabilize household budgets and stimulate economic resilience across communities.

Additionally, the ministry is launching financial literacy programs to educate consumers on practical budgeting and spending strategies. By empowering individuals with knowledge, the government hopes to foster sustainable financial habits, further contributing to the nation’s economic well-being.

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Home bulls just waiting for the bullets to stop flying

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Home bulls just waiting for the bullets to stop flying

Indian equity indices concluded FY26 with their worst fiscal performance since FY20, with the Nifty and Sensex registering losses. The outlook for FY27 is heavily dependent on the West Asia conflict’s impact on crude oil prices and the rupee, with analysts suggesting a ceasefire could trigger a recovery.

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IMDEX boss calls on support for resources technology disruptors

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IMDEX boss calls on support for resources technology disruptors

The scale up of new technology to improve resources sector productivity needs more industry and government support, according to a mining services veteran.

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At Close of Business podcast April 1 2026

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At Close of Business podcast April 1 2026

Jack McGinn speaks to Tom Zaunmayr about Business News’ recent most influential feature.

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Asia-Pacific digital banking market seen reaching $5.12t by 2033

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Asia-Pacific digital banking market seen reaching $5.12t by 2033

The Asia-Pacific digital banking market is on track to more than double over the next decade, with industry estimates pointing to growth from $2.28 trillion in 2024 to $5.12 trillion by 2033, underscoring the region’s accelerating shift toward mobile-led and online financial services. 

Key takeaways

  • Asia-Pacific’s digital banking market is projected to grow from $2.28 trillion in 2024 to $5.12 trillion by 2033, highlighting strong long-term expansion in the sector. 
  • Rising internet access, over 2 billion smartphone users, and widespread mobile banking adoption are accelerating the shift to digital financial services across the region.
  • Despite growth momentum, increasing cyberattacks and weak encryption coverage remain major risks to the resilience of APAC’s digital banking market.

According to Market Data Forecast, the market is expected to expand at a compound annual growth rate of 9.43%, reaching $2.49 trillion in 2025 as digital financial platforms continue to gain traction across major Asia-Pacific economies. 

A key driver of that growth is the region’s rising digital connectivity. Internet penetration climbed to 55% in 2022 from 48% in 2018, whilst the number of active smartphone users has surpassed 2 billion. 

More than 70% of the population now uses smartphones for online banking, supporting wider adoption of mobile banking apps, digital wallets, and other online financial services.

Market momentum is also being reinforced by country-level developments. South Korea and Singapore continue to lead on connectivity, whilst Australia is using digital banking to improve financial access in rural communities where physical branch networks remain limited. 

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Public policy is playing an equally important role. In the Philippines, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said more than half of adults in rural areas now use digital banking platforms, supported by initiatives such as the National Retail Payment System. 

In Australia, policies promoting open banking and collaboration between banks and fintech firms have helped broaden access to digital financial services. 

Even so, the sector’s expansion is being shadowed by mounting cybersecurity and data privacy concerns. 

The Australian Cyber Security Centre reported that cyberattacks on digital banking platforms are increasing by more than 30% annually, whilst only about 40% of banks in the region are said to have strong encryption systems in place, raising questions over data protection and operational resilience. 

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The outlook, then, is one of strong structural growth tempered by rising operational risk. As digital banking becomes more deeply embedded in everyday financial activity across Asia-Pacific, the pace of market expansion will likely depend not only on connectivity and inclusion but also on how effectively institutions strengthen trust, security, and platform resilience. 

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FII exodus hits record Rs 1.6 lakh crore in FY26 despite strong DII cushion

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FII exodus hits record Rs 1.6 lakh crore in FY26 despite strong DII cushion
Mumbai: Foreign institutional investors (FII) withdrew more than ₹1.6 lakh crore from Indian equities in FY26 – the highest in a financial year – although a record ₹8.5 lakh crore of fresh commitments from domestic funds formed the ideal rearguard against the potentially debilitating FII exits through the worst rupee rout in 14 years.

For overseas buyers, Indian risk assets in FY26 appeared to have been caught in the perfect storm due to the Iran conflict, a lingering uncertainty on tariffs, relatively expensive valuations, an AI-led decline in the business prospects of a $280-billion technology industry, and about 10% rupee slide against the dollar.

FY26 marks the second consecutive financial year of FII outflows and fourth in the previous five years, data from ETIG showed. Last year, FIIs withdrew ₹1.24 lakh crore from stocks and were on track to pull out a similar amount this fiscal year too. But their pace of exit accelerated in March after the start of the Iran war, with the rupee losing 4% in as many weeks. “Since March, the West Asia war raised risk-off sentiment that amplified the sell-off substantially,” said Rupen Rajguru, head, equity investment and strategy, Julius Baer India.

Screenshot 2026-04-01 061729Agencies

Domestic Appetite
“The weak currency is a big factor that eats into the returns of foreign investors and keeps foreign capital at bay this year,” said Rajguru.

Flows from domestic institutions – led by mutual funds, pension funds and insurers – into the stock market have been on an uptrend in the past five years. Their FY26 investments of ₹8.49 lakh crore exceeded total flows into equities in the previous two financial years, underscoring the domestic appetite for stocks despite the market sell-off.
Nifty and Sensex fell 5.1% and 7.1%, respectively, in the fiscal year. Both indices would have ended marginally higher or with modest losses but for the near 9.5% retreat in March – the worst monthly fall since 2020, the onset of the pandemic.
“Typically, one year of losses triggers domestic outflows, but this time, SIP (systematic investment plan) flows have remained largely steady despite 18 months of losses,” said Rajguru.
Retail investors have pumped ₹29,000 crore every month on average into domestic equity schemes in the past financial year. The return of foreign portfolio flows into India in the new financial year would depend on stability in the rupee, peace in West Asia and a decline in crude prices though a rush of overseas investments seem unlikely.

“Given the uncertainties arising out of the war on energy disruption and global reversal of interest rate cycle, the FPI flows are not expected to be positive immediately in the near future,” said Rajesh Iyer, managing director, global investment solutions and asset management, at LGT Wealth India.

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Foreign institutional ownership of Indian companies is at a decadal low, and valuations are around 17 times the estimated price-to-earnings (PE) ratio, below the ten-year average, said Rajguru of Julius Baer India. “A lot of the damage is already done,” he said.

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Rupee tops Asia’s worst performers list with 9.9% slide in FY26

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Rupee tops Asia’s worst performers list with 9.9% slide in FY26
Mumbai: The rupee was the worst performer in Asia against the US dollar in FY26, shows an ET analysis of 10 rival currencies, after the local unit lost 9.88% through a year marked by record exits from Indian equities by overseas investors amid a global scramble for dollar-based assets. Opening the financial year at 85.59 per dollar, the rupee ended at 94.83.
Screenshot 2026-04-01 062318Agencies

Yen Second Worst-performing
This is after the local currency touched a record low of 95.22/$ amid consistent dollar demand throughout the year. Foreign portfolio investors pulled out a record ₹1.6 lakh crore, far exceeding withdrawals in FY22, data from NSDL data showed.

Unrelenting demand for dollars from foreign investors forced the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to intervene in the market by selling dollars to prevent a sharp fall in the rupee.

The Japanese yen, which fell 6.27% against the dollar, was the second worst-performing Asian currency in FY26. By contrast, the Malaysian ringgit gained 9.69% – the best performer on the regional leader-board.

Alok Singh, head of treasury, CSB Bank, expects the rupee to remain under pressure in the half of FY27 before the unit recovers some of its losses and trades in the broad 91-94 per dollar band for the fiscal year.
Bankers said the latest RBI measures would support the rupee. “Capping of banks’ net open position by RBI will help curb speculative trades and prevent a sharp depreciation in the rupee, but the near-term outlook is weak and a little fuzzy due to the Iran conflict, as the dollar-rupee rate will correlate with what happens there,” said Alok Singh.
In a drastic measure to prevent a sharper fall in the rupee, RBI on March 27 asked banks to cap their net open rupee positions in the onshore deliverable market to $100 million at the end of each business day, effective April 10, far lower than the 25% of total capital limit earlier. Despite this, the rupee fell to cross the 95 mark on the last day of trading.
“For now, chances are that the rupee may weaken below 95 per dollar toward 96 or even 97. Persistent dollar outflows and higher oil prices have definitely shifted the rupee band more toward 92-93 per dollar, from the 89-90 expected before this crisis,” Singh said.

Through FY26, RBI maintained that it intervened in the spot market to prevent volatility.

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