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Apple Stock Rises Modestly as China iPhone Sales Surge 23%

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Apple Holds Annual Worldwide Developers Conference

Apple Inc. shares gained ground in early Wednesday trading, climbing to around $253 as investors welcomed fresh data showing a 23% surge in iPhone sales in China during the first nine weeks of 2026, even as the broader smartphone market contracted. The modest advance reflected optimism about the company’s ability to capture share in its second-largest market despite ongoing global economic pressures.

Apple Holds Annual Worldwide Developers Conference

As of mid-morning, Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) traded at approximately $252.87 to $253.38, up roughly 0.5% to 0.7% from Tuesday’s close of $251.64. Volume reached several million shares by late morning, with the stock moving in a tight range between $251.60 and $254.98. The day’s open stood near $254 before settling into modest gains. Market capitalization hovered near $3.75 trillion to $3.77 trillion, keeping Apple among the world’s most valuable companies.

The positive momentum followed Counterpoint Research data released last week showing Apple’s iPhone shipments in China rose sharply while overall smartphone sales fell 4% year-over-year. Analysts attributed the gains to aggressive e-commerce discounts, eligibility for government subsidies on the base iPhone 17 model, and tighter supply-chain control that allowed Apple to absorb rising memory chip costs better than many Android rivals. Some competitors raised prices, handing Apple an opening to expand market share without cutting list prices.

China remains critical for Apple, accounting for a significant portion of iPhone revenue. The strong early-year performance bucked industry trends and eased concerns about softening demand in the region, where economic headwinds and competition from local brands like Huawei have pressured Western manufacturers in recent quarters. Executives have highlighted improved channel inventory and targeted promotions as key drivers.

Wall Street sentiment stayed largely constructive. Consensus 12-month price targets clustered around $270 to $287, implying potential upside of 7% to 14% from current levels. Most major firms maintained “Buy” or “Hold” ratings, citing Apple’s resilient Services segment, ecosystem lock-in and long-term artificial intelligence opportunities. Some forecasts project the stock could reach $287 by year-end 2026, with longer-term models pointing to $350-$520 by 2030 under optimistic growth scenarios.

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Apple’s forward dividend of $1.04 per share yields approximately 0.41%, with the ex-dividend date having passed in early February. The company has a long track record of returning capital through dividends and share buybacks, supporting its appeal to income and growth investors alike. Beta around 1.12 indicates slightly higher volatility than the broader market.

Recent trading has been volatile. Shares touched a 52-week high near $288.62 in December 2025 before pulling back amid broader technology sector rotation and concerns over iPhone upgrade cycles. The 52-week low stood at $169.21 in April 2025. Year-to-date performance through late March remained modestly positive despite a choppy start to 2026.

Services revenue continues providing a buffer against hardware softness. The segment, which includes App Store, Apple Music, iCloud and advertising, has grown steadily and now generates high-margin, recurring income. Analysts expect Services to contribute meaningfully to overall results when Apple reports fiscal second-quarter earnings around April 30.

Other developments include plans to introduce paid ads in Apple Maps in the U.S. and Canada this summer, marking a new revenue stream in a space long dominated by Google. The company also announced its annual Worldwide Developers Conference will run online from June 8-12, with expectations for major AI-related software updates and new developer tools.

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Speculation around a foldable iPhone has resurfaced, with some reports suggesting enthusiasm is building for a potential 2027 launch. While Apple has not confirmed timelines, any progress on foldable technology could open fresh growth avenues in a maturing smartphone market.

Challenges persist. Global macroeconomic uncertainty, including elevated interest rates and cautious consumer spending, has weighed on premium device demand. Supply-chain costs for components like memory chips have risen, though Apple’s vertical integration and negotiating power provide advantages. In the U.S., iPhone upgrade cycles remain elongated as consumers hold onto devices longer.

Looking ahead, investors will watch closely for first-quarter results that could provide further color on China momentum and U.S. trends. Guidance for the June quarter and any commentary on AI integration across devices will likely influence sentiment. Analysts project mid-single-digit revenue growth for the year, with Services and emerging categories such as wearables and Vision Pro helping offset any hardware cyclicality.

For retail investors, Apple remains a core holding in many portfolios, offering exposure to consumer technology, premium branding and innovation. The stock’s defensive qualities — strong balance sheet, consistent cash flow and loyal customer base — have historically helped it weather downturns better than many peers.

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Broader market context also matters. Technology stocks have shown resilience amid mixed economic signals, but rotation into value names and concerns over valuations have occasionally pressured high-multiple names like Apple. The company’s price-to-earnings ratio remains elevated compared with historical averages, reflecting expectations for future growth.

As trading continued Wednesday, shares held modest gains, suggesting investors are giving Apple credit for its China performance while awaiting more concrete signals of a broader recovery. The stock rarely moves dramatically on single sessions, but sustained positive data from key markets could catalyze a rebound toward analyst targets.

Apple’s ecosystem strength — seamless integration across iPhone, Mac, iPad, Watch and Services — continues differentiating it from competitors. Loyalty metrics remain high, with many users staying within the platform for years. New product cycles, including potential AI enhancements and refreshed hardware, are expected to drive interest later in 2026.

In summary, Apple’s shares traded modestly higher early Wednesday on the back of encouraging China sales figures that highlighted the company’s competitive resilience. While near-term challenges in consumer spending and component costs linger, the combination of Services growth, ecosystem advantages and strategic moves in key markets keeps Apple well-positioned for long-term success. Investors will continue monitoring quarterly results and product pipeline updates for further direction.

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New proposal would cap Social Security benefits at $100K for wealthy couples

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New proposal would cap Social Security benefits at $100K for wealthy couples

Social Security is facing the threat of insolvency in less than a decade and a new proposal would cap the amount of Social Security benefits that a couple could receive each year at $100,000.

The aging of America’s population is draining the balance of Social Security’s main trust fund, which is projected to be depleted in 2032. Funds for Social Security benefits are drawn from the trust fund along with payroll taxes, and they would be automatically cut by law at the time of insolvency to match incoming revenue, reducing benefits by an estimated 24% across the board.

The nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) launched a Trust Fund Solutions Initiative to explore options for improving Social Security’s solvency, with one such proposal capping six-figure benefits to the wealthiest couples.

The Six Figure Limit (SFL) proposal would put in place a $100,000 cap on the total benefit a couple retiring at the normal retirement age can receive, with adjustments based on marital status and claiming age. For single retirees, the limit on Social Security benefits would be $50,000.

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SOCIAL SECURITY’S MAIN TRUST FUND FACES DEPLETION IN 2032, TRIGGERING AUTOMATIC BENEFIT CUTS

CRFB noted that while only a small fraction of retirees is currently receiving $100,000 in Social Security benefits as a couple or $50,000 as an individual, such figures will become more common over time as Social Security’s benefit formula changes.

The SFL would cap Social Security benefits such that no couple collecting benefits at their normal retirement age could claim retirement benefits greater than $100,000 per year.

It would also adjust the limit based on marital status and the age at which they begin receiving benefits. A couple who delayed collecting benefits as long as possible until age 70 would have a $124,000 limit, whereas a couple who start collecting benefits as early as possible at age 62 would have a $70,000 annual limit.

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SHOULD THE SOCIAL SECURITY COLA BE MEASURED WITH A SENIOR-FOCUSED INFLATION METRIC?

CRFB worked with Jason DeBacker of the Open Research Group to model a trio of options, including a $100,000 limit indexed to inflation, a limit frozen at $100,000 for 20 years and then indexed to average wage growth, and a limit frozen at $100,000 then indexed to average wage growth after 30 years.

It found that the inflation-indexed SFL would save $100 billion over 10 years, while closing 20% of Social Security’s 75-year shortfall and 55% of the shortfall in the 75th year. 

Both the 20- and 30-year fixed limit before indexing would save $190 billion over 10 years, and while the 20-year proposal would close 25% of the shortfall, the 30-year option would close 55% of the 75-year shortfall and 60% of the shortfall in the 75th year.

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“Athough the SFL would not significantly delay the date of insolvency of the Social Security trust funds on its own, it could meaningfully delay insolvency in combination with other reforms,” CRFB wrote. 

It added that the 20-year SFL would delay insolvency by seven years in conjunction with an employer compensation tax, while the 30-year SFL with an employer compensation tax would permanently restore solvency for 75 years and beyond.

BUDGET DEFICIT HITS $1 TRILLION IN FIRST FIVE MONTHS OF FISCAL YEAR: CBO

The analysis found that the SFL would affect only the top 0.05% of couples in the early years of its implementation who have benefits over $100,000 and total average retirement income over $2.5 million per year, with an average net worth above $65 million.

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Over time, more retirees would be affected by the SFL, with the top 1% of couples receiving 5% less in benefits on average by 2030 with no impact on the bottom 90%. That would shift to a 7% benefit reduction in 2040 for the top 1% and no impact on the bottom 80%; and to a 24% benefit reduction for the top 1% in 2060 with no impact on the bottom 70% of households.

Senior advocacy groups have expressed skepticism of proposals that could reduce the Social Security benefits received by Americans.

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“Proposals that focus on capping Social Security don’t address the problem in front of Congress: ensuring every American gets every dollar they have earned,” said AARP VP of financial security and livable communities Jenn Jones. 

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“What’s worse, ideas like this risk becoming a backdoor to broader cuts. AARP urges policymakers to focus on bipartisan solutions that protect and strengthen Social Security, not cut it,” Jones added.

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Form 144 NETLIST INC For: 25 March

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Form 144 NETLIST INC For: 25 March

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Bwxt stock hits all-time high at 220.79 USD

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Bwxt stock hits all-time high at 220.79 USD

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Iran war squeezes Asia energy supply as India, Japan feel strain

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Iran war squeezes Asia energy supply as India, Japan feel strain

The latest phase of the Iran war is locked on the Strait of Hormuz and critical energy infrastructure. Already, its effects are rippling thousands of miles away in Asia.

Asia is at the front line of the energy crisis, ​with shortages hitting nearly every country. Roughly a fifth of the world’s oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, with some 80% going to Asia, according to the International Energy Agency.

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As Iran refuses to open the strait, Asia is scrambling to mitigate disruptions and is being forced to take measures reminiscent of COVID-era actions.

Asia is especially susceptible due to its heavy import dependence, weaker currencies and large populations. And the impact has hit households fast.

The conflict has disrupted sectors from air ‌travel ⁠and shipping to gas supplies. People are struggling to cook and businesses across the board are bearing the brunt as liquefied petroleum gas imports slow.

A STATE-BY-STATE LOOK AT GAS PRICES AS IRAN CONFLICT PUSHES OIL HIGHER

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A cargo ship in the Strait of Hormuz

Commercial vessels are pictured offshore in Dubai on March 11, 2026. (AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Widespread disruptions have hit South Asia in particular, which is extremely reliant on Middle Eastern oil. India, which imports nearly 90% of its crude and about half its natural gas from abroad and is the world’s third-biggest oil importer and consumer, has been left especially vulnerable.

Yesterday, President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke on the phone, their first call since the Feb. 28 war broke out. In a post on X, Prime Minister Modi stressed, “Ensuring that the Strait of Hormuz remains open, secure and ​accessible is essential for the whole world.”

The Strait of Hormuz serves as a conduit for more than 40% of India’s crude oil ​imports.

This week, two tankers bound for India sailed through the strait. Vessels with ties to China, Pakistan and Thailand have also transited successfully, while several other Asian governments are in talks with Tehran to secure passage.

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But a lot of these imports are expected to be used for non-power, industrial purposes such as fertilizer production, leaving the public left in the lurch.

In a new move that shows the precariousness of the situation, India’s Reliance Industries, which operates the world’s biggest refining facility, reportedly bought 5 million barrels of Iranian oil. The deal marks India’s first such purchase since 2019 and comes days after the U.S. temporarily lifted sanctions.

“All our kitchens run on gas and so, they’ve all been hit,” Indian hospitality veteran AD Singh told FOX Business. “We have been forced to stop serving several items and shorten our menus, doing our best given what we have. But people are worried and livelihoods are at stake. It’s not a positive feeling,” the founder and managing director of the Olive Group of restaurants said.

KEVIN O’LEARY FORECASTS GLOBAL POWER SHIFT IN STRAIT OF HORMUZ AS IRAN CONFLICT RATTLES OIL MARKETS

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Industrial gas processing facilities and storage infrastructure at a major Qatari energy complex.

Qatar Energy facilities in Mesaieed Industrial City, south of Doha, on March 4, 2026, after the company announced a shutdown of LNG production following reported Iranian attacks. (Stringer/Getty / Getty Images)

It’s a similar story in much of the subcontinent. 

Two of Asia’s most advanced economies have also been hit hard. But while South Asia feels it more at the household level, Japan and South Korea are facing a different kind of strain.

The two east Asian nations are being rocked by surging import costs, forcing factories to scale back and governments to tap emergency reserves.

Japan, which imports more than 90% of its oil from the region, has begun tapping strategic reserves. South Korea is weighing reserve releases and emergency support measures.

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Unlike India, both countries have larger financial buffers and energy stockpiles, allowing them to cushion the immediate impact even though structural risks remain high.

Strikes are hitting many nations, like India, Bangladesh and the Philippines as frustrations grow. Online rumors are deepening the chaos and prompting panic buying. In a few countries like India, police are being deployed at gas stations.

Japan

Mount Fuji and the Shinjuku skyline seen from an observation deck in Tokyo, Japan, on Dec. 26, 2023. (Akio Kon/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

As Asia grapples with this energy crisis, many countries are now turning back to coal and firewood to offset their gas needs. 

Induction cooking equipment is flying off the shelves in LPG-dependent India, and early warning signs are popping up elsewhere in the region. Energy shocks are now showing up on dinner tables as well.

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 “It’s taking some time to get set on these new ways,” AD Singh told FOX Business.

AMERICAN DRONE COMPANY CHALLENGES CHINESE DOMINANCE WHILE PREPARING TROOPS FOR SWARM ATTACKS

Japan and South Korea are accelerating plans to boost nuclear energy.

Several Asian countries have also released petrol and diesel from domestic reserves, temporarily loosened fuel standards and stepped up domestic production.

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Emergency regulatory steps are beginning to sweep the region, from severe austerity measures in Sri Lanka to strict fuel rationing in Bangladesh.

Bangladesh energy crisis

People refuel their motorbikes at a fuel station in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on March 17, 2026. (Mamunur Rashid/NurPhoto via Getty Images / Getty Images)

The Philippines just became the first country to declare a national energy emergency, warning of “an imminent danger of a critically low energy supply.” The island imports 98% of its oil from the gulf.

Meanwhile, China just dialed back on planned fuel price hikes in a bid to “reduce the burden” on the population.

Some governments are also weighing stimulus packages and energy-saving campaigns are flooding social media as record-high costs bite household budgets. 

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“Any scarcity of essential fuels has a cascading effect across the continent,” Singh told FOX Business. “When it comes to food, ingredient prices rise, operation costs increase and business volumes are affected. And with the news all over the place, people are spooked.”

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Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman moves Bill to amend IBC, speed up resolution

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Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman moves Bill to amend IBC, speed up resolution
New Delhi: Finance and corporate affairs minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Wednesday moved a bill in the Lok Sabha to amend the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, proposing a creditor-initiated framework with largely out-of-court arrangements to speed up bankruptcy resolution.

The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Bill, 2025, also proposes frameworks for faster resolution of cross-border and corporate group insolvency cases.

Sitharaman moved the bill, as “reported by” the select House committee that vetted it, for the Lok Sabha’s consideration.

The amendments, the first since 2021 and the seventh since the law’s inception in 2016, introduce new concepts and streamline existing processes to reduce delays in resolving insolvent companies that erode asset value, experts said.

Between April and December 2025, the average resolution time rose to 764 days, excluding periods exempted by the National Company Law Tribunal, compared with 597 days as of March 2025. The IBC currently stipulates a 330-day deadline, including litigation time, for resolution. The proposed creditor-led resolution process will have a 150-day deadline. It allows a majority of unrelated financial creditors and the debtor to reach an informal agreement on a rescue plan, limiting the NCLT’s role to affirming the moratorium and approving the plan, experts said. Unlike the current system, the corporate debtor will continue to manage the company under the supervision of a resolution professional. Lenders will have the option to choose between the new framework and the existing corporate insolvency resolution process.

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“The amendments mark the transition of the IBC to a new phase-from mistrust to trust, from regime punishing lack of governance to a regime motivating governance and from an adversarial approach to a conciliatory one based on coordination for insolvency resolution,” said Anoop Rawat, national practice head (insolvency and restructuring practice) at Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas.
The bill proposes a framework, aligned with a model UN law, to enable creditors to handle cases where a bankrupt company has assets or creditors overseas, and to seek cooperation from other jurisdictions.

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Tillamook unveils ice cream bars

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Tillamook unveils ice cream bars

The frozen novelties are offered in four flavors. 

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Stewart upgrades virtual underwriter platform with AI agent

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Stewart upgrades virtual underwriter platform with AI agent

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NAACP hires DOJ civil rights chief in Biden administration

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NAACP hires DOJ civil rights chief in Biden administration


NAACP hires DOJ civil rights chief in Biden administration

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Retail investors cut holdings in 14 midcaps; stocks fall up to 45% in 6 months

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The Economic Times

Retail investors trimmed stakes in 96 Nifty Midcap 150 stocks amid weak performance, with many declining sharply over six months, signaling fading confidence and cautious sentiment toward select midcap companies.

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Naturgy Energy Group, S.A. (GASNY) Shareholder/Analyst Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Naturgy Energy Group, S.A. (GASNY) Shareholder/Analyst Call March 24, 2026 5:00 AM EDT

Company Participants

Francisco Reynés Massanet – CEO & Executive Chairman
Manuel García Cobaleda – Secretary of the Company and the Board

Conference Call Participants

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Fernando de la Camara Garcia

Presentation

Francisco Reynés Massanet
CEO & Executive Chairman

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Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you. Thank you so much for being here. If you allow me, before I officially start this AGM, I would like to share with you a video that summarizes joint and in-depth work that we have done this year and after being shared and approved by the AGM has to do with our corporate purpose. Our corporate purpose has been defined as a goal that aims to facilitate the relationship that we all have with energy on a daily basis. By trying to improve the relationship with our employees, collaborators, public authorities, regulators, suppliers and especially so with the over 20 million customers that we have distributed through our geographies. So without further ado and before we officially start, allow me to show you this video that summarizes our commitment.

[Presentation]

Francisco Reynés Massanet
CEO & Executive Chairman

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Ladies and gentlemen, shareholders, just like in previous years, I’m honored as the Chairman of the Board of Directors to welcome you to this ordinary AGM that the company holds, as we have in the past, both remotely and in person simultaneously. I would especially like to thank the presence of the members of the Board of Directors who are here present and also the representatives of the most significant shareholders. Especially this year, I have the honor of welcoming the representatives of Sonatrach, Mr. Eddine Daoudi and Mr. [ Atallah ] who are also with us here today. One more proof of that commitment and the fruitful relationship and long-lasting relationship we’ve had for over 40 years. Therefore, we officially open this

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