Business
Capex boom, global sourcing tailwinds fuel textile stock rally
Gokaldas Exports gained 3.7%, Arvind advanced 6.3%, Pearl Global jumped 11.2%, Indo Count Industries surged 9.5%, and Welspun Living rose 5%.
Agencies“Indian textile sector is entering a strong capex cycle with leading players announcing significant investments across garments, fabrics, technical textiles, and value-added categories to capture rising global sourcing opportunities,” said Motilal Oswal in a client note. “Unlike earlier expansion phases focused on commoditised products, the current investment cycle is directed toward higher-margin segments such as garments, MMF, specialty fabrics and advanced textiles, along with automation, sustainability and premiumisation initiatives.”
Business
Carnival Says Iran War Disrupted Bookings, Issues Soft Outlook
Carnival CCL 0.66%increase; up pointing triangle said extreme geopolitical volatility has disrupted bookings, and the company issued a soft outlook for the current quarter as higher fuel costs continue to weigh on profit.
The cruise line said Tuesday that booking trends during the recent quarter were most disrupted across Europe, particularly in the Mediterranean region.
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Business
Insight Partners sells $10.2m in Hinge Health (HNGE) stock

Insight Partners sells $10.2m in Hinge Health (HNGE) stock
Business
Form 4 Domo Inc For: 24 June

Form 4 Domo Inc For: 24 June
Business
Elon Musk loses trillionaire status as tech rout hammers Tesla, SpaceX
Elon Musk delivers an inspiring speech at the SpaceX IPO event, sharing his initial doubts about the company’s success but emphasizing the importance of making life multi-planetary and creating an exciting future for everyone.
Elon Musk is no longer worth more than $1 trillion, less than two weeks after becoming the first person to reach the milestone.
Musk’s net worth was valued at $946 billion as of Wednesday, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. That is down from about $1.11 trillion less than 14 days earlier.
The drop came after shares of SpaceX and Tesla fell during a broader tech sell-off. Investors have become more cautious about the long-term profitability of artificial intelligence.
Musk remains the world’s richest person by a wide margin. As of Wednesday, Larry Page ranked second at $296 billion, followed by Sergey Brin at $275 billion, Jeff Bezos at $257 billion and Michael Dell at $223 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
SPACEX MAKES HISTORIC DEBUT; MUSK SOLIDIFIES STATUS AS WORLD’S FIRST TRILLIONAIRE

Musk remains the world’s richest person by a wide margin. (Robin Legrand/AFP via Getty Images)
SpaceX priced its IPO at $135 per share and began trading at $150 on June 12. The debut helped push Musk’s net worth above $1 trillion.
At the IPO price, the listing valued SpaceX at more than $1.77 trillion. Musk owned about 42% of the company, and his SpaceX stake, combined with his Tesla holdings and other assets, put his net worth at more than $1 trillion.
MUSK’S SPACEX SURGES PAST AMAZON IN MARKET CAP AFTER HISTORIC IPO DEBUT

Bret Johnsen, chief financial officer of SpaceX, center left, and Gwynne Shotwell, president of SpaceX, center, during the company’s IPO at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York, on June 12, 2026 (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
SpaceX shares later rose as high as $225.64 on June 16. That lifted Musk’s net worth to about $1.32 trillion.
But the gains did not last. SpaceX shares fell more than 30% from their June peak during the tech sell-off. On June 22, the stock dropped 16%, wiping about $240 billion from Musk’s fortune.
Tesla shares fell nearly 6% the next day, adding to the loss.
Stocks In This Article:
SPACEX SET A NEW RECORD FOR IPOS: THESE ARE THE WORLD’S 5 LARGEST

A Tesla Cybertruck drives past a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket displayed outside a Space Exploration Technologies Corp. facility in Hawthorne, California, on June 8, 2026. (AFP via Getty Images)
Founded by Musk in 2002, SpaceX has grown into the world’s largest space company and a dominant force in commercial launch services.
The company pioneered reusable rocket technology, helping lower launch costs and reshape the economics of the space industry. It has also become a key contractor for NASA and the U.S. government through civil and national security missions.
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FOX Business’ Bradford Betz and Eric Revell contributed to this report.
Business
‘By the grace of God’: Miners dig on in face of lab-grown diamonds
In 2003, a United Nations-backed international diamond certification scheme, the Kimberley Process,, external was launched in order to prevent conflict stones from entering the mainstream diamond market. But the industry has struggled to contain the reputational damage.
“To me the diamonds have failed us,” says Abubakar Amara, a primary school teacher in Kono. “What have those diamonds done for our community, for Kono, for Sierra Leone? We are considered as poor in the world.”
The British multinational, De Beers, which specialises in the mining and marketing of diamonds, is eager to change the narrative. In Sierra Leone, it’s launched a project called Gemfair,, external where local artisanal miners are offered equipment, training, and more transparent pricing for their finds. You might call it a kind of fairtrade scheme for diamonds.
“The idea is to connect with markets so that they can be able to find a place to sell their diamonds, and also to empower them, give them training, we give them skills,” says Raymond Alpha, Gemfair’s local representative.
But for De Beers, perhaps its most important function is reputational, allowing retailers to tell the origin story of every diamond they sell.
“We are seeing a growing interest from consumers,” says David Johnson, a De Beers representative. “With people increasingly wanting to know where their coffee, cotton or chocolate has come from, it’s not surprising that people also want to know where their diamond – one of the most emotionally significant purchases – has come from.”
While this increased traceability could win mined diamonds more customers, others say that the lab-grown alternatives are only going to continue to grow in popularity.
Rohit Mehta, chief executive of Forlink Ventures, a commodities house based in India’s lab-grown diamond capital, Surat, says these diamonds are not just cheaper, but also more ethical and better for the environment.
“People are more conscious about climate change, about extracting too much from the earth,” he says.
But the argument that lab-grown diamonds are “green” doesn’t sit well with everyone. Unlike natural diamonds, the lab-grown variety are hugely energy-intensive, requiring vast amounts of electricity to produce a single rough carat.
“These reactors run at the temperature of the sun,” says Stanley Mathuram, a US-based environmental consultant who’s studied the growth of the lab-grown diamond industry. “They’re like data centres. That’s the kind of energy that they require.”
Business
Texas family sues Tesla over fatal crash into home
A Texas woman is suing Tesla and a driver for at least $1m (£759,000) in damages after one of the electric vehicles crashed into her family home, killing her mother
Jennifer Barbour filed her lawsuit in a local court on Tuesday, just days after her 76-year-old mother Martha Avila died from injuries she sustained after a Tesla Model 3 sped into their shared home.
The Tesla driver told police that he was using the car’s autonomous or “full self-driving” technology at the time of the crash.
In the lawsuit Barbour accuses Elon Musk’s electric vehicle company of defective design and negligence by promoting technology that is unsafe, while Musk on social media denied the technology was to blame.
Tesla was approached for comment.
Musk took to X, the social media platform he owns, to refute the idea that Tesla’s self-driving technology was to blame for the crash because it happened at a high speed.
“This makes no sense,” Musk wrote on Monday.
Tesla’s vice president of AI software Ashok Elluswamy followed up on Musk’s comment with more apparent detail on the accident.
Elluswamy wrote that the driver was going at 73mph (117 km/h) and had overridden the car’s self-driving mode “by pressing the accelerator all the way to 100%.”
He also claimed that the driver “had the accelerator pushed even after the crash”.
Barbour’s complaint, filed with her husband Justin Barbour, puts forward a different explanation.
It argues that the driver was operating his Tesla on “in a reasonably foreseeable manner” with full self-driving engaged when the car’s technology “failed to detect the end of the street”, went into “sudden unintended acceleration” and crashed into the Barbour residence.
In addition to the death of her mother, Barbour claims her husband also suffered severe and grievous injuries as a result of the crash.
Monetary damages being sought include those for anguish, injury and medical expenses, as well as “exemplary” damages because Tesla’s actions have been “grossly negligent.”
The crash remains under investigation by police in Texas and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), the US government’s auto safety regulator.
Tesla’s self-driving technology has come under increased criticism and scrutiny.
Last week, Democratic Senators Edward Markey and Richard Blumenthal sent a letter, external to the NHTSA demanding that the agency investigate Tesla’s full self-driving technology for its safety risks.
Business
Dish Network Down? Outage Reports Spike, With Picture Freezing and Signal Loss Affecting Customers
Reports of a possible service disruption affecting Dish Network surfaced Wednesday, with some viewers reporting issues across the satellite TV provider’s channels, even as official confirmation of a widespread outage remained limited.
What Users Are Reporting
StatusGator has detected an outage at Dish Network. Picture breaking up and freezing on all channels. There have been 36 user-submitted reports of outages in the past 24 hours. Based on our analysis, Dish Network might be experiencing or have recently experienced an outage even though there is no official acknowledgment of the issue.
The specific problems reported by users have centered primarily on signal quality issues rather than a complete blackout. Incident description: Satellite TV signal loss affecting service availability. The disruption was first detected at 5:57 p.m. on Wednesday, June 24.
Where Reports Are Concentrated
The most recent Dish Network outage reports came from the following cities: Crawfordville, Ashburn, Connersville, Phenix City, Chillicothe, Baytown, French Lick, Cedar Rapids, Charlotte, Tompkinsville, Mason, Beaverton, Abilene, Dallas, and Twin Falls — suggesting the reported issues, if connected, span a wide geographic footprint across multiple states rather than being confined to a single regional outage.
No Official Acknowledgment From the Company
Despite the volume of user reports, Dish Network has not issued any public statement confirming a widespread service disruption. According to monitoring data, the incident has never been officially acknowledged by the company, a pattern consistent with how Dish has historically responded to user-reported outage spikes that fall short of a confirmed, company-wide technical failure.
A History of Periodic, Brief Disruptions
Wednesday’s reports add to a documented pattern of intermittent service issues that Dish Network has experienced throughout 2026. Earlier outage data shows a signal loss incident affecting local channels detected on June 7, lasting about 20 minutes, as well as a separate incident on June 3 tied to local channels being unavailable due to maintenance, lasting roughly 29 minutes, and another brief disruption on June 2 involving local channels not working or showing a scrambled picture.
A Notably Quieter Track Record by Other Measures
Not every outage-tracking service has identified the same pattern of frequent disruptions, however, illustrating the inherent variability in how different monitoring tools detect and classify service issues. One service reported that Dish Network appears to be working normally, with report volume within the typical range for the time of day, and noted that the last reported incident before that assessment was roughly 680 days earlier. A separate tracker similarly noted zero confirmed outages over the prior 12 months, based on its own monitoring methodology, despite scattered individual user complaints about slow performance or channels not working.
What to Do During a Suspected Outage
For customers experiencing service problems, Dish has outlined a standard set of troubleshooting and verification steps. Customers can call the Dish customer support phone number, 1-800-333-3474, which is staffed 24/7, or check third-party outage tracker Downdetector, which surveys customers for issues they’ve faced within the last 24 hours and provides an outage map for a visual check of issues in a specific area. Dish has also directed customers to its DISH Answers account on social media during select hours for real-time updates on potential service outages in their area.
If a confirmed area-wide outage is identified, the company says the only thing customers can do is wait, though Dish maintains that it prioritizes these repairs to restore channels as quickly as possible. For issues isolated to an individual household rather than a broader area, the company recommends checking the connection of the satellite receiver, since equipment-level glitches — such as a failed software update or an overheating receiver — can also cause channel disruptions distinct from a true network-wide outage.
Understanding How Dish Signals Travel
Dish has explained that service disruptions can originate at any of three points along the signal’s path to a customer’s home. Live TV signals from Dish travel a long path to reach a home, passing through three major touchpoints that can cause an outage: the television stations that send their content to Dish satellites via radio waves, the Dish satellites that bounce the radio signal down to a customer’s satellite dish, and the home satellite setup itself, which converts the signals for display on the television. According to the company, losing just a channel or two typically points to an issue at the originating TV station, while a broader loss across most or all channels indicates a genuine Dish Network-side outage.
With user-submitted reports continuing to be monitored by third-party outage trackers and no official statement yet issued by Dish Network confirming the scope or cause of Wednesday’s reported issues, customers experiencing picture freezing, signal loss, or other service disruptions are encouraged to check Downdetector or similar tracking services for updates specific to their region, or to contact Dish customer support directly for individualized troubleshooting. Given the company’s history of brief, localized disruptions resolving within roughly 20 to 30 minutes, affected customers may see normal service restored relatively quickly, though the company has not provided a specific timeline for resolution as of the most recent reports.
Business
Macy’s EVP, COO & CFO Edwards Jr. sells $408,726 in stock

Macy’s EVP, COO & CFO Edwards Jr. sells $408,726 in stock
Business
VAT cut on theme parks and kids’ meals comes into force
Families are expected to get cheaper access to theme parks, zoos and museums as well as kids’ meals as a temporary VAT cut comes in to force on Thursday for the school summer holidays.
Ticket prices at various attractions are among the activities where VAT will be reduced from 20% to 5% in what the goverment said would help with the cost of living.
The cut begins on 25 June, in time for schools breaking up in Scotland at the end of this month, followed by Northern Ireland, England and Wales in July, until 1 September.
But families, charities and firms said the measure will do little to help squeezed budgets, with some doubting the tax saving would be passed on to customers.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves said the summer holidays could be quite expensive, and the purpose of the temporary cut to VAT on family-related activities was to “help people make those precious memories during the summer holidays, but not having to fork out too much for it”.
Alan, 42, from Brighton goes to theme parks with him family regularly but he does not expect much from the VAT cut.
“These kind of attractions are quite expensive in the first place,” he said, adding that the savings, if passed on, would be “negligible” and only benefit those who go to theme parks as a one-off.
He said the best option for his family was having a theme park pass, which they use to go to Legoland, Chessington World of Adventure and Sea Life centres.
Helen Miller, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies think tank, previously said the measures would lead to some savings, but estimated they would equate to an “average saving of around £10 per UK household”.
Alan says that more useful measures would be if energy and fuel costs were addressed.
“How the government can say this is going to result in any household saving is a mystery,” he said.
Asked whether the savings would be meaningful, Reeves told the BBC the government was focused on helping families.
“Especially over the summer, things can be a bit more expensive. So we are targeting this directly at families,” she said, adding there would also be unlimited free bus travel for children in England in August.
The chancellor pointed to other measures the government has introduced including freezing prescription charges, freezing rail fares and providing energy bill relief as also helping households with cost of living pressures.
Business
Fair Issac Stock: Strong Earnings Growth Makes The Valuation Attractive Again (NYSE:FICO)
I’m a passionate investor from the Netherlands with 12 years of stock market experience. My articles usually contain a good overview of important investment criteria. A stock for my portfolio is of interest to me if the company has the following characteristics:1. Companies that are growing in both revenue, earnings and free cash flow.2. Companies that have excellent growth prospects.3. Stocks with favorable valuations.I prefer steadily growing companies with high free cash flow margins, dividend stocks and stocks with generous share repurchase programs.Are you looking for European stock coverage? Visit my website (it’s free!): www.capitalinsights.euDisclaimer: My articles do not provide financial advice, they reflect my own findings and insights.
Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, but may initiate a beneficial Long position through a purchase of the stock, or the purchase of call options or similar derivatives in FICO over the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.
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