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Oil Price Today (June 22): Crude oil rises above $80 as Iran shuts Strait of Hormuz again. What are experts saying?

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Oil Price Today (June 22): Crude oil rises above $80 as Iran shuts Strait of Hormuz again. What are experts saying?
Oil prices moved higher on Monday as shipping activity through the Strait of Hormuz slowed and early talks between U.S. and Iranian officials under an interim peace agreement got off to a difficult start.

Reuters reported that shipping data showed a sharp decline in the number of vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz on Sunday after Iran announced it had once again closed the waterway, accusing Israel and the United States of violating the interim peace agreement.

Crude oil price on June 22

Brent crude futures rose 54 cents, or 0.67%, to $81.11 a barrel, after briefly touching $82.30 at the start of trading. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures gained $2.02, or 2.64%, to $78.62 a barrel ahead of the contract’s expiry later on Monday. The more actively traded August contract advanced $1.43 to $77.28 a barrel. U.S. markets were closed on Friday due to a holiday, resulting in no settlement.
Adding to market uncertainty, U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to resume attacks on Iran, even as U.S. Vice President JD Vance met Iranian officials on Sunday for the first discussions under the interim deal. Tehran, meanwhile, said Washington had failed to honour its commitment to halt fighting in Lebanon.

Also read: Global Market Today: Asian stocks slip, oil up on peace doubts

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In Lebanon, Israeli strikes killed at least 20 people on Saturday, according to the state news agency NNA. The attacks came a day after a ceasefire with Hezbollah took effect in an effort to stop months of escalating violence.


Despite Monday’s gains, oil prices had fallen more than 8% last week amid expectations that cargoes stranded inside the Gulf would be released and that U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil could eventually be lifted under a U.S.-Iran agreement.

Where are prices headed?

Despite the recent slide in oil prices, a complete reopening of Hormuz is expected to be a complex process. It will require careful coordination of vessel movements, the restart of oil wells, repairs to infrastructure and agreement on de-mining operations. Some shipowners also remain wary of operating conditions in the strait and the wider Persian Gulf.
Analysts note that global oil inventories were depleted during the extended disruption of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and will take time to rebuild. Stockpiles could continue falling before fresh Gulf supplies begin reaching international markets.Last month, Saudi Aramco Chief Executive Officer Amin Nasser cautioned that disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz could delay a return to stability in global oil markets until 2027. According to Nasser, prolonged interruptions could affect nearly 100 million barrels of oil supply each week. Saudi Aramco remains the world’s largest oil producer.

Morgan Stanley described the oil market as being in “a race against time,” warning that some of the factors that have limited the rise in prices could weaken if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed through June.

The brokerage noted that higher U.S. crude exports and softer Chinese demand have so far helped absorb part of the supply shock. However, it cautioned that global supplies could tighten again if disruptions in the strategic shipping route continue, particularly beyond the period during which the U.S. and China are able to cushion the impact.

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(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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SolarEdge's Outlook: Revenue Is Up, Execution Is Everything

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SolarEdge's Outlook: Revenue Is Up, Execution Is Everything

SolarEdge's Outlook: Revenue Is Up, Execution Is Everything

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Sampo buys back 1.44 million shares in week 25

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Sampo buys back 1.44 million shares in week 25

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Goldman Sachs Large Cap Value Insights Fund Q1 2026 Commentary

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Goldman Sachs Mid Cap Value Fund Q4 2025 Commentary

Symbol for decreasing value. Dice placed on stacks of coins form the word value

AKart Design/iStock via Getty Images

Market Review

US large cap equities (S&P 500 Index) fell by 4.33% in the first quarter of 2026, with Value outperforming Growth stocks. Sector performance was mixed, with strength concentrated in Energy and Industrials, while Information Technology and Financials lagged. Macro dynamics

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Sneaky Multiplication Symbols Trip Up Solvers

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Nancy Guthrie

Monday’s edition of The New York Times’ popular word-grouping game served up a deceptively layered grid built around mathematical symbols, pronunciation terminology, and a category requiring solvers to spot hidden explosive sound effects buried within ordinary words.

How the Game Works

The New York Times’ Connections game asks players to sort sixteen words into four hidden groups of four. Categories run from yellow, the easiest, through green and blue, and finally purple, which is almost always built on a twist rather than a straightforward theme. Players get four mistakes before the puzzle ends, and the daily reset happens at midnight in each player’s own time zone.

Monday’s Four Categories

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The themes and answers for the June 22, 2026, NYT Connections puzzle were as follows:

Yellow Group: Dominant — ALPHA, HEAD, LEAD, PRIMARY.

Green Group: Multiplication Indicators — BY, TIMES, the multiplication dot symbol, and X.

Blue Group: Pronunciation Descriptors — SHORT, SILENT, SOFT, STRESSED.

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Purple Group: Starting With Explosive Onomatopoeia — BANGKOK, BOOMER, POPSICLE, POWDER.

A Puzzle Built on Elegant Misdirection

Puzzle #1107 initially appears straightforward, but several cleverly placed red herrings make Monday’s board more difficult than it first seems. Puzzle #1107 earned praise from many players for its elegant misdirection. As players reported, several words appeared capable of fitting into multiple groups, especially “Alpha,” “Boomer,” and “X.” Many community discussions highlighted how the puzzle encouraged solvers to chase false patterns before the actual categories emerged.

The symbol X in particular created confusion for many players working through the grid. The symbol X can double as a variable, a signature cross, or a structural shape, which might distract solvers from its mathematical function alongside the multiplication dot and the word TIMES. Similarly, PRIMARY could look like a school level alongside words like HEAD or SHORT, adding another layer of potential misdirection before the correct grouping became clear.

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Breaking Down the Categories

The yellow category centered on words that all convey a sense of dominance or primacy, bringing together ALPHA, HEAD, LEAD, and PRIMARY in a relatively accessible grouping that experienced players were generally able to identify early.

The green category required solvers to recognize four distinct ways of expressing multiplication, gathering BY, TIMES, the raised dot symbol commonly used in algebra, and X — itself one of the puzzle’s more cleverly disguised entries given its multiple potential meanings throughout the grid.

The blue category gathered terms used to describe how letters or sounds are pronounced in language, bringing together SHORT, SILENT, SOFT, and STRESSED — a grouping that required solvers to think specifically about linguistic terminology rather than more common everyday usages of those same words.

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The Purple Category’s Wordplay Twist

As is typical for Connections puzzles, the purple category delivered the day’s most inventive challenge. Rather than relying on direct definitions, it required players to recognize hidden sound-effect prefixes embedded within otherwise ordinary words. The category brought together BANGKOK, BOOMER, POPSICLE, and POWDER — four words that each begin with a term functioning as an explosive onomatopoeia: BANG, BOOM, POP, and POW, respectively.

A Mixed Reaction From Solvers

Reactions to Monday’s puzzle varied depending on how quickly individual solvers spotted the underlying wordplay. One solver described their experience navigating the grid without making any mistakes, despite some uncertainty along the way. “This was one of those games of Connections where I made zero mistakes despite being uncertain about every group,” the solver wrote, adding disappointment that the group containing two of the puzzle’s more unusual symbolic tiles turned out to be the relatively easier green category rather than something more challenging.

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Another solver described a similarly clean run through the puzzle, working through the categories in an order that started with the trickier sections. “I didn’t make any mistakes this time,” the solver wrote. “Here’s the order I solved them in: green, yellow, purple, blue.”

Comparing Today’s Puzzle to Recent Editions

Compared with recent NYT Connections puzzles from earlier in June, Monday’s challenge leaned more heavily on hidden word structures than obvious synonym groupings. Some experienced players, however, described it as one of the more approachable puzzles of recent weeks, even with the purple category’s wordplay twist factored in.

Strategy Tips for Future Puzzles

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Puzzle strategists recommend separating the linguistic pronunciation terms first to quickly tidy up the board, then recognizing the mathematical operations early to avoid getting confused by the symbolic entries before tackling the clever wordplay hidden in the purple category. More broadly, Connections veterans continue to advise scanning for the most clearly defined categories first, watching closely for words that might plausibly fit into multiple groups, and treating any word that seems to fit too easily into an obvious category as a potential red herring worth reconsidering before locking in a guess.

The Game’s Continued Popularity

Connections has become one of the most consistently popular offerings in the Times’ expanding games portfolio since its debut in June 2023, regularly ranking as the second-most-played game published by the newspaper, trailing only Wordle. A new puzzle is released daily, making Connections one of the most popular word games available today, with regular solvers often comparing notes on recent puzzles and tracking their personal streaks across consecutive days of play.

With Monday’s puzzle now solved by players who successfully navigated the deceptive overlap between ALPHA, BOOMER, and X across multiple potential categories, attention turns to Tuesday’s edition, puzzle number 1108, when a fresh sixteen-word grid and an entirely new set of hidden categories will be waiting for the Connections community’s next daily challenge.

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Minerals 260 Shares Rise 5.1% as ASX Explorer Extends Remarkable Year-Long Rally

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Minerals 260 Shares Rise 5.1% as ASX Explorer Extends Remarkable

Shares of Minerals 260 Ltd rose 5.11% on Monday, climbing 4.75 cents to close at 97.75 cents, as the Perth-based mineral exploration company continued a year-long rally that has made it one of the standout performers on the Australian Securities Exchange’s small-cap resources sector.

A Company Built Around a Diverse Project Portfolio

Minerals 260 Ltd is a mineral exploration company. The company’s projects include the Moora Project, Aston Lithium-Lithium, Uranium & Rare Earth Element Project, Koojan JV Project, Dingo Rocks, and Yalwest. The company is headquartered in West Perth, Western Australia, and was founded on June 4, 2021.

The flagship Moora Project sits close to home for the Perth-based company. The 100%-owned Moora Project is located 140 kilometers northeast of Perth in the Wheatbelt Region of Western Australia. The Moora Project consists of three granted exploration licenses and one exploration license application registered in the name of the company’s subsidiary, ERL (Aust) Pty Ltd.

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The company’s portfolio also extends to a significant northern exploration tenement. The Aston Project is located in the Gascoyne Region of Western Australia, approximately 850 kilometers north of Perth and 100 kilometers northeast of the township of Gascoyne Junction. The Aston Project consists of 15 granted exploration licenses and two exploration license applications.

Spun Out From a Major Lithium Producer

The company’s origins trace back to a corporate restructuring involving one of Australia’s better-known lithium producers. Minerals 260 Ltd operates as a blank check company. It is a special purpose acquisition company which was incorporated for the purpose of spinning out the Moora project and the Koojan JV project from Liontown Resources Limited.

A Remarkable Year of Share Price Growth

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The scale of Minerals 260’s rally over the past 12 months ranks among the most dramatic of any ASX-listed exploration company. Over the past year, Minerals 260 Limited has showed a 434.48% increase. Separate data tracking a slightly different timeframe put the gain even higher, with shares last closing at AU$0.84 and the price having moved by +542.31% over the past 365 days. In terms of relative price strength, the Minerals 260 share price has outperformed the ASX All Ordinaries Index by +517.63% over the past year.

A Recent All-Time High

That extended rally pushed the stock to a fresh record earlier this year. MI6 reached its all-time high on May 14, 2026, with a price of 0.920 Australian dollars, a level not far removed from where the stock now trades following Monday’s gain. The stock’s all-time low of 0.100 Australian dollars was reached on August 13, 2024, underscoring just how dramatically the company’s valuation has transformed over less than two years.

Strong Momentum Against the Broader Market

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The stock’s outperformance has been particularly pronounced when measured against broader market benchmarks. Over the past six months, Minerals 260’s share price has outperformed the ASX All Ordinaries Index by +166.43%. As of a recent closing price of AU$0.84, shares in Minerals 260 were trading +98.41% higher than their 200-day moving average — a clear indication of sustained upward momentum over an extended period.

A Sizable Market Capitalization for a Small-Cap Explorer

The company’s rapid share price appreciation has translated into a substantial overall market value relative to typical small-cap mineral exploration peers. Minerals 260 Limited has a market capitalization of 1.79 billion Australian dollars, which has increased by 3.93% over the last week alone, reflecting continued investor interest even amid the stock’s already substantial prior gains.

Analyst Price Targets Suggest Further Room to Run

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Despite the stock’s already dramatic appreciation, analyst coverage continues to point toward potential additional upside from current levels. The analyst consensus target price for shares in Minerals 260 is AU$1.26. That is 51.14% above a recent closing price of AU$0.84.

A Company Still Pre-Revenue

Despite the strong share price performance, Minerals 260 remains, like many exploration-stage mining companies, without meaningful current earnings. Analysts covering Minerals 260 currently have a consensus earnings-per-share forecast of negative AU$0.01 for the next financial year. The company’s net income for the last half-year stood at negative 23.99 million Australian dollars, compared to negative 9.27 million Australian dollars in the previous reporting period. Minerals 260 does not currently pay any dividends to its shareholders.

Technical Signals Point Toward Continued Strength

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Short-term technical indicators have continued to favor the stock despite its already substantial gains. Minerals 260 Limited’s technical analysis shows a neutral signal for the current trading day, though its one-week rating points to buy, and its one-month rating also shows a buy signal.

Part of a Broader Small-Cap Resources Story

Minerals 260’s rally has occurred against a backdrop of broader investor enthusiasm for ASX-listed small-cap resources and exploration names, with commentary from trading communities pointing to elevated interest across the sector. Recent commentary has highlighted defense stocks soaring on a drone pivot and an ongoing lithium debate as among the dominant themes occupying investor attention on trading forums tracking ASX small-cap stocks, suggesting Minerals 260’s gains have occurred alongside broader sector-wide enthusiasm for resources exploration names with exposure to critical minerals.

With the stock’s next earnings report scheduled for September 18, 2026, investors will be watching closely to see whether continued exploration progress across the company’s Moora, Aston, Koojan, Dingo Rocks, and Yalwest projects can sustain the remarkable momentum that has driven shares up by more than 400% over the past year. Given the consensus analyst price target sitting meaningfully above the stock’s current trading level, market participants will also be monitoring whether Minerals 260 can convert its exploration-stage portfolio into more concrete development milestones capable of justifying further gains from what is already one of the ASX’s most dramatic small-cap success stories of the past two years.

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Morning Bid: Any progress is good with Hormuz at stake

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Morning Bid: Any progress is good with Hormuz at stake


Morning Bid: Any progress is good with Hormuz at stake

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Adam Blumenthal skips Perth trip as liquidators mull way forward

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Adam Blumenthal skips Perth trip as liquidators mull way forward

Sydney-based promoter Adam Blumenthal has won an 11th-hour reprieve from flying to Perth to be probed about collapsed medicinal cannabis company Medoliol.

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UK’s Starmer could set out exit timetable on Monday as Burnham waits in the wings

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UK’s Starmer could set out exit timetable on Monday as Burnham waits in the wings


UK’s Starmer could set out exit timetable on Monday as Burnham waits in the wings

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SK Hynix overtakes Samsung to become Korea’s most valuable company

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SK Hynix overtakes Samsung to become Korea’s most valuable company


SK Hynix overtakes Samsung to become Korea’s most valuable company

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Yarning, not boardrooms, best way to build indigenous business relations

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Yarning, not boardrooms, best way to build indigenous business relations

Nyungar-Nyiyaparli-Yamatji woman Emma Garlett is at the start of her business ownership journey, having launched Garlett Group in 2023.

Before that, Ms Garlett’s career spanned industrial, legal, academic, and creative sectors. 

Among her interests is capacity building, primarily in relationships between and within businesses. 

Respect and reciprocity are core to engagement with Indigenous businesses, according to Ms Garlett

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The best way to achieve that, she said, was to do away with traditional meetings and hierarchies. 

“The main difference in best-practice First Nations engagement is engaging often, engaging early, listening and making sure that you use yarning as a methodology,” Ms Garlett said. 

“When you are working with First Nations people, you need to have adequate time to listen and to understand. 

“Yarning [is] conducted in a circle where everyone is sitting down … at the same level. 

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“[It] is a culturally safe space, because you can allow for respect, for discussion and exchange between people.” 

That conversational style of storytelling builds trust over time and helps stakeholders understand needs and aspirations. 

Ms Garlett points out a desire to build trust and non-transactional relationships is not a trait unique to Indigenous people. 

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Garlett Group started in Carnarvon offering cultural awareness training and business services such as strategic planning. 

Today, it is based in Perth and focuses on providing cultural capability advice to government clients and helping Aboriginal people build capacity. 

“We do that through five different service areas: education and training; sustainability services; Indigenous engagement and inclusion; strategic communications; and digital solutions,” Ms Garlett said.

“The reason we have various service offerings is because a lot of them are complementary to each other … you need to approach projects holistically. 

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“The vision of Garlett Group is to have long-term impact.” 

Training and strategic planning remain central to that objective. 

Ms Garlett said it was important for all businesses to walk in two worlds, which meant understanding Indigenous culture and business processes. 

Acknowledging the past was an important part of that business impact picture, Ms Garlett said. 

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“If I can help one person understand the history of what happened to Aboriginal people in Australia and help to change their perspective and worldview when they see a First Nations person in Perth, and if that has a behavioural change for them, to help them be more inclusive, then I’ve done my job,” she said. 

“If you can impact one person, that change will have flow-on effects to their sphere of influence and the work they’re doing.”

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