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Bringing institutional-grade research to bonds is a game changer for retail investors: Saurav Ghosh of Jiraaf

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Bringing institutional-grade research to bonds is a game changer for retail investors: Saurav Ghosh of Jiraaf
The Indian bond market is undergoing a quiet transformation as retail participation gathers pace, but a key gap has long persisted—access to high-quality, easy-to-understand research.

Addressing this, Saurav Ghosh, Co-Founder of Jiraaf, believes that bringing institutional-grade research to the debt market could be a game changer for individual investors.

In an interaction with Kshitij Anand, he explains how traditional reliance on credit ratings often falls short, why issuance-level analysis is critical, and how structured research reports can help investors better understand risk, pricing, and liquidity.

Fixed income investors can switch to corporate bond funds for the short term
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Corporate bond funds are gaining traction for fixed-income investors seeking steady returns amid rising inflation risks and a potential pause in interest rate cuts. With yields at elevated levels, shorter-duration accrual strategies are favored over those betting on rate movements, offering attractive spreads over government securities and bank fixed deposits.


As bond investing becomes more mainstream, such tools could play a pivotal role in making retail investors more informed, confident, and efficient in building their portfolios. Edited Excerpts –
Kshitij Anand: To begin with, if you can help us understand what research reports are and why they are important for investors, which Jiraaf launched recently.

Saurav Ghosh: So, the job of any research report is to essentially simplify complex underlying investment opportunities. I would say most Indian investors are very familiar with the equity segment. There are multiple brokerage houses that release reports on particular companies and stocks. So, you will have, let us say, Motilal Oswal Financial Services giving a buy rating on Reliance Industries Ltd shares—so that is a research report.
Essentially, a research report covers business analysis, the underlying sector and industry that the companies are operating in, and what cash flows are expected. These are complex analyses, and finally, they provide a simplified summary at the end, with the objective of telling the reader what a possible decision could be after having read and consumed all the information in a very structured and simplified manner. So, that is the job of a research report.
Till now, it has mostly been relevant on the equity side of the Indian ecosystem. What we are trying to do is bring that same institutional-grade research to the debt market.
Kshitij Anand: Equity research reports have played a big role in making stock market investing much easier, so how have they helped retail investors?
Saurav Ghosh: Prior to these research reports being available, an Indian investor was not very confident about their own understanding of the subject matter or the underlying investment opportunity. Today, of course, everyone in India does their own kind of research as well because there are so many tools and avenues that are accessible. But while the data is available, how you consume it, summarise it, and come to a final conclusion differs from person to person.

Everyone is looking to build confidence in their own research, and having institutions do that research for you—or having these research reports available—gives every investor confidence in what they are actually investing in. So, as I said, if I am buying a Reliance Industries Ltd stock, I may feel I understand its business, but sometimes it is far more complex than my understanding.

When an institution breaks it down and presents it in a well-documented report, I feel that I understand the business better. I know the numbers better. And when, for example, Motilal Oswal Financial Services gives a buy rating or a target price, it also gives me confidence that this is a good-quality stock to invest in. That is the kind of confidence we are trying to build.

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On the flip side, sometimes we also identify pitfalls. If someone gives a sell rating, it may be because they have considered certain factors that we have not. This can help us avoid a bad decision as well. So, that is the aim of research reports.

On the equity side, investors today are far more evolved, financially aware, and actively making investment decisions because research reports have essentially hand-held Indian investors over the last one or two decades. That is also why the understanding of the equity market has evolved to where it is today.

Kshitij Anand: And in fact, if you look at the equity markets, investors have access to research reports, but the Indian bond market did not really have something equivalent to what equity investors used to have. So, why did that gap persist?
Saurav Ghosh: Bond markets are evolving, and traditionally, the bond market has largely been the playground for very large institutions in India. Since it has primarily been an institutional space, these participants have been doing their own in-house research and have not relied on external sources. They have large research and analytics teams, so they do not need to depend on external advice or information to make decisions. Because of this historical participation structure, there was no real need for research reports.

However, over the last three to four years, we have seen retail investors in India increasingly take an interest in bond markets. People are now actively seeking to invest in bonds and include them in their financial portfolios. With the growing participation of individual investors, there is now a need for institutional-grade research—similar to what exists in the equity market—to be made available in bond markets as well. This will help investors access high-quality insights, understand investments better, and ultimately evolve into more informed bond market participants.

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Kshitij Anand: In the absence of quality issuance-level bond research, investors often relied mainly on credit ratings, as we discussed earlier in the podcast. What was the problem with that?
Saurav Ghosh: Credit ratings have largely been used as a proxy to assess risk in bond markets, not just by individual investors but also by institutions. However, they have several limitations when it comes to making investment decisions. Typically, a credit rating assesses the overall quality of a company, mostly from a long-term perspective. Ratings are broadly categorised into short-term (less than one year) and long-term ratings, such as AAA, AA, and so on. These primarily evaluate the business and the financial health of the company over a long horizon.

This approach has its limitations. For example, a company may be rated BBB because its five- or ten-year outlook is weaker than that of an AA- or A-rated company. However, that does not necessarily mean it is unsuitable for a one-year investment. A BBB-rated company could perform well in the near term due to favourable sectoral tailwinds, improving company fundamentals, strong collateral, or attractive pricing that enhances the risk-reward equation. Credit rating reports do not address these aspects.

They also do not evaluate whether pricing is competitive, what liquidity is available in the secondary market, or whether an investor can easily exit by finding a buyer. Additionally, they do not provide peer comparisons—how similarly rated issuers or companies in the same industry are priced and traded. These are critical factors for investors when making decisions, such as whether they are getting the best opportunity or the most attractive pricing.

Another key limitation is the lack of issuance-level analysis. In bond markets, investors participate in specific issuances, and each issuance can differ in terms of security, collateral, and covenants. While these are technical aspects, they essentially determine how well a particular issuance is structured from a risk perspective. Credit ratings assess the company as a whole but do not evaluate individual issuances. As a result, one issuance from a company may be highly secure and well-collateralised, while another may be unsecured and carry higher risk.

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Since credit ratings often miss these nuances, it becomes important to cover them through institutional-grade research. This is why we have been among the first to introduce research reports for bond markets in India.

Kshitij Anand: I am sure you highlighted many aspects about issuances. So, did this over-reliance on ratings influence investor behaviour in the bond market? Do you see that trend as well?
Saurav Ghosh: One major influence of credit ratings has been on the underlying perception of risk among investors. People tend to believe that AAA- or AA-rated instruments are safe, while anything below that carries a high degree of risk. What individual investors are often unable to do today is quantify risk at each rating level.

While AAA-rated instruments are indeed among the safest in the bond market, it does not mean that a BBB-rated issuer is bad—it simply means it carries relatively higher risk than a AAA-rated issuer. The key question is: can I quantify that degree of risk? If I can, then I can also determine how much additional return I should expect for taking that extra risk, and whether the risk-reward equation is favourable.

This is an important aspect of investing in the bond and debt markets, which many investors struggle with due to the over-reliance on credit ratings as the sole measure of risk. Another important point is that, historically, for bonds with a tenor of less than two to three years, a BBB-rated issuer carries a default risk of less than 2%, while a AAA-rated issuer has a default risk of less than 0.3%. This means the probability of default increases by roughly 1.7% from AAA to BBB, with intermediate ratings falling proportionately in between.

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At the same time, AAA-rated companies currently offer yields of around 7.5% in the Indian market, while BBB-rated companies may offer yields closer to 13%. This implies that investors are earning an additional yield of about 5.5% for taking an incremental default risk of around 1.5–1.7%. This is the perspective investors should consider when making decisions.

However, this kind of analysis is often missing due to the over-reliance on credit ratings as the only benchmark. That is why we aim to provide investors with better access to information and a more nuanced, issuance-level perspective, enabling them to make more informed decisions.

Kshitij Anand: Also, could you highlight that while a listed company has one listed equity, it can have multiple listed bonds? Why is that distinction important for investors to understand?
Saurav Ghosh: Yes, this is very important. A company raises debt multiple times during its lifecycle, and each time it does so through a separate issuance in the capital market. In contrast, in the equity market, when a company raises equity capital, all investors are treated equally. Each shareholder owns the same class of shares, and there is typically one share price.

In debt markets, however, each issuance can have different characteristics. For instance, every bond issuance has its own structure of security. It is important to understand whether a particular issuance is secured or unsecured, and if secured, what the underlying collateral is. Additionally, each issuance may come with different covenants. For example, if the company faces a rating downgrade, does the investor receive additional yield? Or do they have the option to exit through early redemption? These are important considerations.

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Even for the same issuer, these features can vary from one issuance to another. This means that one issuance may carry a higher degree of risk than another, even though the issuer remains the same. Investors often assume that if a company is rated A, then all its issuances carry the same level of risk, but that is not necessarily true. At the issuance level, risk can vary based on factors such as security, covenants, and structure.

This is why it is crucial to analyse investment opportunities in the bond market at the issuance level. Our research reports aim to address this gap by focusing not just on issuer-level analysis but also on issuance-level details, rather than relying solely on credit ratings.

Kshitij Anand: Now that you have talked so much about research reports, could you also highlight what exactly an issuance-level bond research report is?
Saurav Ghosh: An issuance-level bond research report effectively covers five key aspects. First, we cover the business and the management. These are also partly covered in rating reports. This includes the history of the management, their credentials in running the business, and their background prior to this venture, among other details. It provides a comprehensive view of both the business and the management. On the business side, the report covers the market in which the company operates, the margins in the business, its customer base, and so on.

The second aspect is the financial analysis of the business. While this is also covered in credit rating reports, we go much deeper. The analysis includes profitability at the business level—not just current performance, but also the future outlook—as well as the inherent financial strength of the business, including leverage and other key metrics.

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Beyond these two, the remaining aspects are not typically covered in credit rating reports. The third aspect is issuance assessment. Here, we analyse the security package, collateral, and repayment structure—whether payments are monthly or quarterly—as these factors can influence risk. We also compare the issuance with other issuances by the same company to determine whether it is the best available opportunity or if better options exist.

The fourth aspect is pricing. We evaluate how the issuance is priced relative to past issuances, peers within the same sector or rating category, and its pricing in the secondary market where institutional participants are active. This provides a complete perspective on valuation and also indicates the expected liquidity of the issuance.

The fifth aspect is the economic and sector outlook. If you are investing with a one- to two-year horizon, it is important to understand how the underlying sector is expected to perform over that period. A favourable macro or external environment reduces the likelihood of stress on the company.

Overall, the report is built around these five pillars, with the objective of arriving at a comprehensive scorecard that helps investors determine whether a particular issuance is worth participating in.

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Kshitij Anand: From a broader perspective, why is issuance-level research especially important in the Indian bond market today?
Saurav Ghosh: I have already spoken about the importance of issuance-level details, but to summarise, there are two additional risks beyond credit risk that investors need to consider: liquidity risk and interest rate risk. These research reports help quantify those risks as well. While credit ratings provide insight into credit risk, issuance-level reports help investors understand liquidity—whether they can exit the investment easily—and whether the issuance is fairly priced.

If an investor enters at the right pricing, their interest rate risk is lower, and even if liquidity tightens, the impact on the bond’s capital value will be limited. This helps investors safeguard their investments and make better decisions.

Lastly, it is important to recognise that while the issuer remains the same, the quality of issuances can differ. A company may offer strong collateral and security to institutional investors but weaker terms in public issuances. Investors should not be at a disadvantage in such cases.

Overall, these reports empower investors with the right set of information to make more informed and confident investment decisions.

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Kshitij Anand: And also, can issuance-level research change how investors build bond portfolios now?
Saurav Ghosh: Absolutely, because a lot of times, as I said, with the availability of issuance-level reports, investors will think differently. Let us say a particular BBB-rated company has a balance tenor of one year. Now, you are not just thinking of it as a BBB-rated company; you are thinking, while it is a BBB-rated company, can I take this risk for one year? I am not investing my money for five or ten years—I am just investing for the next one year. So, can I take that risk over this time frame?

With that understanding, people will construct their portfolios very differently because they will view risk differently. And once you look at risk differently, the way you construct your portfolio and think about generating yields and returns from it will completely change. So, with the availability of issuance-level reports, people will become smarter at constructing their financial portfolios than before.

Kshitij Anand: How does Jiraaf RA’s launch address this market gap now?
Saurav Ghosh: I think it is a big game changer. At Jiraaf, we have always been at the forefront of helping our investors gain maximum access to information so that they can make the right decisions. About three months ago, we launched our bond analyser, which is the first bond analytics platform in the ecosystem. It provided access to information, but investors still had to summarise and interpret that information themselves.

We have now taken this a step further with the launch of bond research. This means that investors not only have access to information, but also to structured and summarised insights derived from that data, presented in a simple and easy-to-understand manner. So, people do not need to do all the analysis themselves—they can read the research report and gain a strong understanding of the issuer and the issuance. This helps them make well-informed decisions about whether they want to include a particular bond in their portfolio.

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As a result, decision-making becomes quicker, simpler, and more efficient. At Jiraaf, our intent is to provide investors with maximum clarity and complete transparency so that they can confidently make their investment decisions. This initiative goes a long way in enabling that.

Kshitij Anand: Could bond research reports do for bond investors what equity research reports did for stock investors? Can they match expectations? I am sure investors would want to know more about that.
Saurav Ghosh: Yes, 100%. Once you start trusting the research, you start trusting the institution. Over time, research reports can become an everyday tool, just like they have in the equity market. Investors can quickly go through a report—in 30 seconds to a minute—focus on the key data points, and arrive at an investment decision.

It becomes almost like being on autopilot—you see a report, review a few key metrics, and your decision is largely formed. I believe we will reach that stage in the bond market as well. In fact, institutional-grade research could have an even greater impact in the bond market than it has had in equities, because bonds are relatively more complex instruments that require deeper understanding. That is exactly what this initiative aims to provide.

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

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Chart Of The Day: We May Have An Interest Rate Problem

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FRA: NAV Should Continue To Erode If Distribution Isn't Cut (Downgrade)

Chart Of The Day: We May Have An Interest Rate Problem

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Intercontinental Energy eyes data centres for giant WA green energy projects

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Intercontinental Energy eyes data centres for giant WA green energy projects

The backers of Australia’s largest proposed green energy hubs are planning on plugging up to 9.4 gigawatts of data centre capacity into the project and are promising to do so at a low cost.

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PFC Q4 Results: Profit rises 24% to Rs 6,325 crore as interest income grows

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PFC Q4 Results: Profit rises 24% to Rs 6,325 crore as interest income grows
Power Finance Corp reported a strong rise in fourth-quarter profit, driven by higher interest income and lower impairment on financial instruments during the quarter ended March 2026. The state-run power sector lender posted net profit of Rs 6,325 crore in Q4 FY26, compared with Rs 5,109 crore in the corresponding quarter last year, registering growth of 24%.

Profit before tax rose 27% YoY to Rs 7,764 crore from Rs 6,101 crore in the year-ago quarter.

Total income for the quarter increased 3% to Rs 15,348.23 crore compared with Rs 14,944 crore reported in Q4 FY25. Revenue from operations stood at Rs 15,319 crore, up 3% YoY.

Interest income, which remains the company’s primary revenue driver, rose 1% to Rs 13,925 crore from Rs 13,721 crore a year ago. Dividend income increased 2% to Rs 1,177 crore during the quarter, while fee and commission income surged more than 231% to Rs 217 crore from Rs 65 crore in the corresponding period last year.

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On the expenditure side, total expenses declined 10% YoY to Rs 7,584 crore from Rs 8,842 crore in Q4 FY25.


Finance costs increased 8% to Rs 8,403 crore compared with Rs 7,794 crore a year earlier. However, the company reported a sharp reversal in impairment on financial instruments, recording a write-back of Rs 1,382 crore during the quarter against an impairment expense of Rs 444.71 crore in the year-ago period. That significantly supported overall profitability.
Net translation and transaction exchange losses rose to Rs 309 crore from Rs 261 crore in the corresponding quarter last year.For the full financial year FY26, PFC reported net profit of Rs 20,051 crore, up 16% from Rs 17,352 crore in FY25. Annual profit before tax increased 17% to Rs 24,774 crore from Rs 21,172 crore in the previous financial year.

Total income for FY26 rose 10% YoY to Rs 58,541 crore, while revenue from operations increased 10% to Rs 58,504 crore.

Interest income for the full year climbed 10% to Rs 55,073 crore compared with Rs 49,875 crore in FY25. Fee and commission income also rose sharply by 166% to Rs 478 crore. Total annual expenses increased 6% to Rs 33,767 crore from Rs 31,955 crore in FY25.

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

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How Businesses Are Trying To Cut Down On Rising Sick Days

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How Businesses Are Trying To Cut Down On Rising Sick

The idea of “chucking a sickie” is something that many Aussie workers seem incredibly comfortable doing. Many phone in to work with claims of being too sick to come in, while others are genuinely unwell. When you zoom back and look at the national average, most employees took around 14 sick days in the last year, a staggering 23% increase over the last five years alone. What’s more, this habit ends up costing businesses $7.3 billion a year due to lost work – according to a 9News report, at least.

It creates a situation where businesses need to cut down on the ever-rising sick days, but what’s being done to solve this problem? Unfortunately, companies need to work on two fronts to take care of the issue:

  • ● Prevent employees from getting sick at work
  • ● Remove the need for employees to “chuck a sickie” and fake being ill

When you look at the latest trends throughout the modern workplace, you’ll find a few ideas floating around.

Invest In Cleanliness

A lot of businesses now realise that a clean workplace yields serious productivity benefits. When a lot of people share the same space day after day, all manner of germs will generate and sit on surfaces. While most airborne viruses – like the cold and flu – don’t tend to live that long when on surfaces, the problem stems from how frequently people are in the office. You leave at 5pm and return the next day just before 9am, which doesn’t give the germs enough time to perish.

As a result, people get sick because someone passes it around at work, but this can be solved with a commercial cleaning company. Businesses are hiring cleaning companies to cleanse their offices at the end of each day, removing germs and reducing the chances of people passing things to one another.

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Furthermore, a lot of businesses invest in better ventilation systems to help recycle the air inside their office and prevent all of these viruses from floating around. You end up with offices that are always clean when you start the day, and always have fresh air circulating around. Both help to reduce the spread of germs in the workplace, which cuts down on genuine sick days.

Improve General Health & Safety Practices

Some employees will take sick days because they have a physical issue, not an illness. Unfortunately, this can happen as a direct result of where they work:

  • ● Employees trip or slip over and injure themselves
  • ● Poor desk setups and chairs create chronic back/neck pain
  • ● An individual burns themselves in the office kitchen space

All manner of things can go wrong when a company doesn’t have the correct health & safety practices in place. Businesses are beginning to realise how important this is, and so they aim to improve general health & safety in the workplace. It’s all about reducing the chances for accidents of any kind to happen, but it’s also about creating “healthier” work environments for employees.

To touch on that final point, you see businesses invest in more ergonomic workstations for their employees to achieve better comfort and lower the chances of things like back or neck pain. Aside from creating a workplace that’s less likely to cause injuries or accidents that result in sick days, improving health & safety practices can stop a business from dealing with endless employee lawsuits.

Encourage Flexible Working Patterns

Organisations utilise the first two ideas in a bid to cut down on genuine sick days by keeping employees healthy and free from injuries. With that in mind, the idea to encourage flexible working patterns sort of does the same thing while also tackling the “chuck a sickie” generation.

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Employees are more likely to take time off work and fake being sick when they feel burnt out, or the prospect of going into work seems like too much of a chore. It’s partly why the unemployment rate continues to rise, but companies are beginning to address this by encouraging more flexible working patterns.

Instead of working a full five-day week in the office with a strict 9-5, many businesses now let their employees work from home. This can be a permanent solution in some cases, but in others, there’s a nice split between working in the office and then working from home. The common approach is to let people work from home on Friday so the week “feels” shorter – and some businesses even allow their employees to work from home on Monday.

You end up in a situation where employees get more flexibility, which improves their mental health and reduces burnout. As such, you cut down on the number of sick days someone might take for their mental health. At the same time, you’re less likely to see people “chuck a sickie” when they have workplace flexibility. The prospect of going to work feels easier to deal with when you can work from home on a Monday or Friday.

Offer Generous Paid Leave

The elephant in the room is that many employees take sick days or fake being ill because they don’t get enough paid time off from their employers. Someone is infinitely more likely to pretend to be sick so they can have a few extra days off a year if they only get the bare minimum in PTO.

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So, while it may seem counterproductive, businesses can genuinely save money and cut down on sick days by offering generous paid leave benefits to employees. If you give your workers enough time off each year, they aren’t going to “chuck a sickie” every couple of months. This is especially true if you’re flexible with your paid leave system and people don’t have to book time off months in advance.

There’s no denying that we’re dealing with a sick day problem in the workforce, but there are simple solutions to address this. Businesses need to be more generous with paid leave, for one, but they should also implement flexible working schedules, improve office health & safety, and create a cleaner work environment that less likely to make people sick. This enables you to tackle both of the problems at hand: people keep getting sick, and people keep faking sickness.

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B&G Foods, Inc. (BGS) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the B&G Foods, Inc. First Quarter 2026 Financial Results Conference Call. Today’s call, which is being recorded, is scheduled to last about 1 hour, including remarks by B&G Foods management and the question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the call over to AJ Schwabe, Senior Associate, Corporate Strategy and Business Development for B&G Foods. AJ, please go ahead.

AJ Schwabe
Senior Associate of Corporate Strategy & Business Development

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Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us. With me today are Casey Keller, our Chief Executive Officer; and Bruce Wacha, our Chief Financial Officer. You can access detailed financial information on the quarter in the earnings release we issued today, which is available at the Investor Relations section of bgfoods.com.

Before we begin our formal remarks, I need to remind everyone that part of the discussion today includes forward-looking statements. These statements are not guarantees of future performance, and therefore, undue reliance should not be placed upon them. We refer you to B&G Foods’ most recent annual report on Form 10-K and subsequent SEC filings for a more detailed discussion of the risks that could impact our company’s future operating results and financial condition.

B&G Foods undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise

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Why Patients Fly from All Over the World to See Dr. Andrew Jacono

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Why Patients Fly from All Over the World to See Dr. Andrew Jacono

The waiting list at Dr. Andrew Jacono’s Park Avenue practice includes patients from Europe, the Middle East, Latin America, and Asia. They are not traveling to New York for a lack of options in their home countries.

They are traveling because the extended deep-plane facelift technique Dr. Jacono developed and published has become one of the most referenced approaches in facial plastic surgery.

A Technique That Moved Through the Field

Dr. Andrew Jacono, a dual board-certified facial plastic and reconstructive surgeon, developed the Minimal Access Deep-Plane Extended (MADE) facelift in the early 2000s. The procedure lifts skin, muscle, and fat as a single cohesive unit rather than separating the skin from the tissue beneath it, then releasing the retaining ligaments that hold facial structures in their descended positions. The result is a vertical repositioning of the midface, jawline, and neck, addressing the structural causes of aging rather than its surface appearance.

Vogue Turkey, covering the procedure’s anatomy in April 2026, noted that Dr. Jacono is considered worthy of the “Deep Plane King” nickname among his colleagues. His own explanation of the approach is direct: “This procedure focuses on freeing and repositioning deep muscle and fat layers, rather than stretching the skin.” The publication reported that by working in the natural anatomical layers of the face, “pain and healing process is more comfortable than expected in most cases.”

That technical precision has earned peer endorsement at the highest levels of the surgical community. Dr. Gregor Bran, a facial plastic surgeon, described Dr. Jacono’s influence in a widely circulated Instagram reel: “He is the reason everybody’s talking about Deep Plane facelift surgery. He has taught everybody who is good everything he knows… not one person in the presentations didn’t have a picture with Andrew visiting Andrew at some point in their careers.”

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What Draws Patients Across Borders

The clinical data behind the technique is part of what draws international patients to consult with Dr. Andrew Jacono directly. His first published series, documented in Aesthetic Surgery Journal in 2011, covered 153 patients and established the foundational outcomes for the approach. A 2019 follow-up publication introduced further refinements for jawline rejuvenation and lower-face volumization. He now performs approximately 250 deep-plane facelifts annually at his Manhattan practice.

Results from the extended deep-plane facelift last 12 to 15 years, roughly twice as long as standard SMAS procedures, because the deeper tissue repositioning holds its structure over time rather than relying on surface tension that gradually loosens. Key factors affecting that longevity include technique, lifestyle, skin quality, and care.

The patient base reflects the procedure’s reach. Dr. Jacono has been featured in The New York Times, Forbes, Harper’s Bazaar, Marie Claire, and The Wall Street Journal, among others. He has appeared on Good Morning America, CNN, and CNBC. His 2019 consumer book, The Park Avenue Face, brought his surgical philosophy to a general readership, and his 2021 medical textbook, The Art and Science of Extended Deep Plane Face Lifting, documented his technique for surgical peers worldwide.

Recognition That Extends Beyond New York

Dr. Andrew Jacono has delivered lectures at Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Columbia, and the University of Pennsylvania, and has presented clinical research and conducted live surgery at more than 100 plastic surgery meetings and symposiums globally, including those hosted by the International Master Course on Aging Skin (IMCAS), the European Academy of Facial Plastic Surgery (EAFPS), and the International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ISAPS).

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His academic role as Fellowship Director for the American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery has extended his influence further. Dr. Andrew Jacono has served for most of his career in that position, training Fellows from the AAFPRS in advanced techniques, which means surgeons working in practices across the country and internationally carry his methodological approach forward in their own operating rooms.

Harper’s Bazaar named him among the 24 best plastic surgeons in America. He has received the Most Compassionate Doctor Award consecutively from 2012 to 2022, an honor given to fewer than 3% of physicians.

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Hopes for 5,000 North East jobs in AI are the ‘absolute minimum’, regional leader says

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A meeting in Newcastle has heard that the country’s first AI Growth Zone in the North East could bring thousands of jobs and billions of pounds in investment

AI event at Atom Bank in Newcastle

AI event at Atom Bank in Newcastle(Image: Software City)

A target for the North East AI growth zone to create 5,000 jobs and attract £30bn in private investment should be the “absolute minimum”, a leading official in the region has said.

Rob Hamilton, assistant director for economic strategy and innovation at the North East Combined Authority, made the confident claim as the new Government body to support companies in artificial intelligence – Sovereign AI – held its first roadshow in Newcastle yesterday.

The Government created the UK’s first AI growth zone in the North East last September, with other areas following in Scotland, Wales and Oxfordshire. It is hoped each area will accelerate the use of AI to boost local economies, as well as increasing skills in the technology for young people.

Mr Hamilton – speaking at Newcastle’s Pattern Shop, once part of the Stephensons’ railway works and now the home of Atom Bank – said he was “delighted” with the progress made on the North East growth zone in recent months, including work on data centres at Cambois and Cobalt.

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He said the North East was better placed to have the energy needed for those data centres, which would lead to the region having nationally important assets to help greater adoption of AI.

He said: “In terms of the outcomes, it’s pretty simple really: it’s about jobs, it’s about productivity growth, it’s about engaging with young people, it’s about rising skills and it’s about growing tech businesses in the region.”

Mr Hamilton added that a fully worked-up plan for the growth zone would be produced in the coming months and that “getting on with it” had been the message from the Government and North East mayor Kim McGuinness.

The region is benefiting from a £10bn investment from global financiers Blackstone into a massive data centre at Cambois, near Blyth, which it is hoped will attract more technology businesses to the region. But plans for a second centre at Cobalt were dealt a blow when global AI firm OpenAI said its plans for investing in the UK were being shelved until the “right conditions” allow for long-term investment in the UK’s infrastructure.

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Yesterday’s meeting also heard from Will Bushby, ventures lead at Sovereign AI, the new body that has been set up to invest in UK AI companies in an effort to keep the country at the forefront of adoption of the new technology. He said the organisation was “looking to back world leading companies”, particularly firms that were taking artificial intelligence into new areas.

Answering a question from BusinessLive, he had to admit that all three of the organisation’s investments to date had been into London firms, a pattern seen with other Government efforts to boost business growth and innovation. He said that “we want to invest in the best companies wherever they are in the UK” and that, as a native of Leeds, he was “passionate” about supporting companies around the UK.

Separately, 30,000 primary school children in the North East are to gain AI and digital tech skills and 1,000 teachers will be helped to teach AI thanks to new funding from North East mayor Kim McGuinness. The skills drive will see a £750,000 investment from the North East Combined Authority and £1.5m from the Government.

Science and Technology Secretary Liz Kendall said: “The North East is already showing how AI can deliver for working people, with billions of pounds invested and thousands of new jobs on the way, as businesses and government work together to make the region a leader in Britain’s AI future. We’re investing in that progress for the long term. By giving young people the AI skills they need, supporting start-ups and acting to bring more women into tech we can keep talent and opportunity in the North East.

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Ms McGuinness said: “The North East is the one to watch when it comes to cutting-edge tech and AI as we work to make sure everyone benefits from our AI growth zone. We’re already working closely with local employers, training providers and schools to make the North East the best place to live, work and thrive when it comes to tech.

“But we know we need to go further to make sure local people really benefit from more opportunities than ever before. That’s why we’re investing in training so our young people can make the most of the exciting opportunities around AI and working with some of the region’s brightest companies to support more women and girls in the tech sector.”

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Arafura locks in funding, US offtake for Nolans

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Arafura locks in funding, US offtake for Nolans

Arafura expects to lock in an FID for its rare earths play before June 30.

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Manappuram Finance, IIFL Finance, other stocks rally up to 11% as gold prices soar after import duty hike

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Manappuram Finance, IIFL Finance, other stocks rally up to 11% as gold prices soar after import duty hike
The shares of gold-financiers Manappuram Finance, Muthoot Finance and IIFL Finance rallied up to 11% on Wednesday as gold prices jumped following the government’s move to hike import duty on the precious metal to 15%.

The government introduced the import duty hike in order to stop the rupee’s free fall and moderate non-essential imports during a period of heightened global uncertainty linked to the Iran-US conflict, which continues to keep oil prices elevated above the $100 per barrel mark.

In the domestic market, MCX gold futures for June expiry jumped Rs 11,055 or more than 7% to Rs 1,64,497 per 10 grams today. The contracts with August and October expiries also surged more than 6% each.

The move came after Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday urged citizens to reduce purchases of non-essential gold over the next one year. Speaking at Hyderabad’s Secunderabad, Modi said that the move could help reduce the pressure on foreign exchange reserves and imports.

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“India continues to remain the world’s second-largest consumer of gold after China, with demand primarily driven by the jewellery industry…Higher duties are expected to reduce precious metal imports, support the rupee, and help narrow the trade deficit,” said Sumit Singhania, Research Head at Bajaj Broking.

Why are gold financier stocks rallying today?

Manappuram Finance, Muthoot Finance and IIFL Finance provide loans with gold as collateral. Rising gold prices will increase the value of the pledged collateral. Since gold loans are sanctioned based on the per-gram valuation of gold, higher prices can allow borrowers to access a higher loan amount without pledging additional jewellery, which in turn boosts demand.
IIFL Finance shares rallied nearly 11% to trade at Rs 493.20 apiece on Wednesday, the highest level since the end of February. Notably, the company said it has adequate factual and legal grounds to substantiate its position and does not expect any material impact on its financials or operations after Mumbai’s IT authority sent a tax demand notice for nearly Rs 476 crore.
Muthoot Finance shares jumped over 4% while Manappuram Finance shares surged around 5% on Wednesday. “Gold financing firms, including Muthoot Finance and Manappuram Finance, are likely to benefit from higher collateral values of gold loans,” said Sumit Singhania from Bajaj Broking.

(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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Top 5 Gainers Lead Rally as Commodities Surge on May 13

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Tesla's robotaxi launch in Texas comes as Elon Musk focuses on his business ventures following his stint in Washington

LONDON — The FTSE 100 pushed higher Wednesday as mining stocks and specialist services firms dominated the leaderboard, with Intertek Group leading gains amid strong sector rotation toward commodities and industrial testing services.

By mid-morning on May 13, 2026, the blue-chip index had climbed around 0.5% to trade near 10,318, extending recent momentum. Mining heavyweights benefited from firm metal prices, while testing and certification leader Intertek surged on positive sentiment and possible contract momentum.

Here are the top five FTSE 100 gainers on the session:

1. Intertek Group (ITRK) — Up more than 6.7% to around 5,660 pence. The quality assurance and testing services provider saw its shares jump sharply, adding over 360 pence. Investors appeared to reward the company’s diversified global operations and resilience in industrial and consumer testing segments.

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2. Metlen Energy & Metals — Advanced roughly 4.1% to 39 pence. The diversified energy and metals group continued to attract buyers on commodity strength and operational updates.

3. Anglo American — Rose nearly 3.8% to 4,045 pence. The diversified miner gained as copper and other industrial metals held firm amid global demand signals from Asia and infrastructure spending expectations.

4. Antofagasta — Climbed about 3.5% to 4,094 pence. The Chilean copper producer benefited from the same tailwinds lifting peers, with copper prices supported by supply concerns and long-term electrification trends.

5. Rio Tinto — Gained around 3% to 8,155 pence. The Anglo-Australian mining giant rounded out the top performers, riding higher iron ore and copper sentiment.

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These moves highlight the FTSE 100’s heavy exposure to global commodities. Miners often lead or lag the index based on metal price cycles, and Wednesday’s action reflected renewed optimism in the resources sector.

Intertek’s outsized gain stood out in a session otherwise dominated by resource names. The company provides testing, inspection and certification across industries from oil and gas to pharmaceuticals and consumer goods. Analysts note steady demand for its services amid regulatory tightening and quality focus worldwide. Recent trading updates have shown resilience despite macroeconomic uncertainties.

Mining stocks’ performance tied directly to commodity markets. Copper prices remained elevated due to ongoing supply disruptions in key producing regions and expectations of increased demand from renewable energy and electric vehicles. Anglo American and Antofagasta, with significant copper exposure, have been standout performers in 2026 so far.

Rio Tinto, a major iron ore player, also drew support from steel demand indicators in China and elsewhere. The sector’s rebound comes after periods of volatility linked to global growth concerns and trade dynamics.

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Broader market context showed selective buying. Energy stocks like BP and Shell traded modestly higher earlier but were not in the top tier Wednesday. Defensive names and financials saw mixed fortunes as investors weighed geopolitical developments and UK domestic data.

The FTSE 100’s year-to-date performance in 2026 has been solid, driven by international revenue exposure. Dividend yields remain attractive, and the index has often outperformed more tech-heavy peers during periods of uncertainty. Mining and energy names have contributed significantly to returns alongside insurers like Beazley and asset managers like Schroders.

Commodity analysts point to structural factors supporting prices. The global energy transition requires vast amounts of copper, nickel and other metals, while iron ore benefits from infrastructure cycles. Supply constraints, including labor issues and permitting delays, add upward pressure.

For Intertek, the rally may reflect relief after any prior weakness or anticipation of strong interim results. The firm operates in over 100 countries, providing a hedge against regional slowdowns. Its services are essential rather than discretionary, supporting steady cash flows.

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Market watchers note rotation patterns. After earlier strength in defensives and banks, capital flowed into cyclicals on signs of stabilizing growth. However, caution persists around inflation, interest rates and Middle East tensions that could impact energy and transport costs.

Trading volume was healthy in the gainers, indicating genuine interest rather than thin-market moves. Anglo American and Antofagasta saw solid turnover alongside Intertek. This breadth suggests conviction among institutional buyers.

Looking ahead, analysts will monitor upcoming corporate results and macroeconomic releases. Earnings from major miners later in the season could validate recent share price strength. For Intertek, any contract wins or margin improvements would further underpin sentiment.

The top gainers’ performance underscores the FTSE 100’s diversified nature. While technology and growth stocks dominate headlines elsewhere, London’s market offers exposure to real assets and essential services. This mix appeals to income-focused and value-oriented investors globally.

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Challenges remain for the broader index. A stronger pound could pressure exporters, while persistent geopolitical risks might cap enthusiasm. Domestically, political and fiscal developments continue to influence gilt yields and borrowing costs.

Despite these factors, Wednesday’s movers demonstrated resilience. Miners’ gains reflect confidence in commodity supercycle elements, while Intertek’s surge highlights opportunities in non-cyclical industrial services.

Investors considering exposure to these names should weigh sector-specific risks. Mining stocks face operational, regulatory and environmental challenges, while testing firms navigate competitive landscapes and client spending cycles. Diversification via ETFs tracking the FTSE 100 or resources sub-sectors remains popular.

As the trading day progresses, focus will shift to whether early gains hold into the close. Follow-through buying could push the index toward recent highs, while profit-taking might temper advances. Corporate news flow and commodity price ticks will likely dictate direction.

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The session’s top five gainers encapsulate current market themes: commodity strength and quality industrial plays. In an uncertain global environment, these FTSE 100 constituents offer compelling narratives for investors seeking both growth and income potential.

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