Business
IT majors see strong deal pipeline but revenue momentum cools in Q4
For instance, Infosys and HCL Technologies (HCLTech) reported their strongest three-year top line growth of 4.6% and 6% respectively in dollar terms for FY26. However, both posted a worse-than-expected sequential decline of 1.2% and 2.9% in fourth quarter revenue in that order. Analysts had anticipated a drop of under 1% in each case. At Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), annual revenue contracted 0.5% in FY26, marking its first ever decline since public listing in 2004.
AgenciesSoftening outlook Sharper than expected fall in sequential revenue and weak guidance dampen an otherwise good FY26 show
AI disruption risk
Apart from the tapering in quarterly topline performance, another concern is that the top IT pack’s best multi-year annual revenue growth has now slipped to the mid-single-digit range. That makes the talks of deflation or cannibalisation of revenue by the ever-advancing capabilities of artificial intelligence (AI) models and agents real. In that case, investors would want to find out whether the stock valuations of the IT exporters have been adjusted enough.The trailing price-earnings (P/E) multiples of the top IT companies including TCS, Infosys, HCLTech and Wipro have been gradually falling over the past decade. After staying in the mid-to-high 20s, the P/Es have now dropped to around 20 or lower. Can they fall further?
Weak guidance signals
The revenue forecasts by some of the companies may offer some cues. The FY27 guidance issued by Infosys and HCLTech and for the June quarter issued by Wipro looks less than encouraging. HCLTech guided 1.5-4.5% growth for services revenue, almost half of what the street was expecting. For Infosys too, the guidance of 1.5-3.5% revenue growth for FY27 was below the expectation of 3-5% growth. Wipro guided for either a flat revenue or a 2% drop on a sequential basis for the first quarter of FY27 amid slower project ramp ups.
To be sure, Infosys has historically chosen to err on the side of caution while issuing guidance. For instance, it had guided a 0-3% growth at the beginning of FY26, which was gradually revised to 3-3.5% growth by January 2026 and it eventually delivered 3.1% growth in constant currency. It will be too early to predict whether the company will be able to raise its FY27 forecast during subsequent quarters; that will depend upon the momentum in project rollouts and the pace of decision making by clients.In the short term, the IT stocks are expected to remain under pressure and may show an intermittent uptick, depending upon the extent of the weakness in rupee against the dollar.
Business
Mark My Words April 24 2026
Mark Pownall, Jack McGinn, Tom Zaunmayr and Claire Tyrrell discuss Woodside’s AGM, BHP-China impasse ending, exploration costs reprieve, Fortescue’s green power play and more.
Business
Trend Following’s Bond Problem | Seeking Alpha
Jeff Malec Managing Director & Partner has spent 25+ years in the futures industry, from his days as a clerk in the bond futures pits, to manager of multiple commodity-based hedge fund products, to host of RCM’s popular alternative investment podcast, the Derivative. Prior to RCM, Mr. Malec was the founder and CEO of Attain Capital Management, which merged with RCM after 13 years assisting clients with alternative investments. He is the great grandson of Harley Davidson founder Walter S. Davidson, and a former board member of the National Futures Association. He holds the Chartered Alternative Investment Association (CAIA) designation, and has authored hundreds of white papers covering alternative investments.
Business
Insurers' FHLB Advances Hit New High As Spread Investing Flourishes
Insurers' FHLB Advances Hit New High As Spread Investing Flourishes
Business
NSW, ACT and WA Get Extra Monday Holiday as April 25 Falls on Saturday
SYDNEY — Anzac Day will be observed as a public holiday across every Australian state and territory on Saturday, April 25, 2026, but only residents in New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory and Western Australia will enjoy an additional day off on Monday, April 27, creating uneven long weekends as the nation commemorates its fallen service members.

The variation stems from differing state and territory policies on when public holidays are observed if they fall on a weekend. While April 25 remains the official date for dawn services, marches and remembrance ceremonies nationwide, three jurisdictions have declared the following Monday a substitute holiday to provide workers with a meaningful break.
Fair Work Ombudsman guidance confirms Anzac Day is a national public holiday in all eight states and territories. However, the treatment of the weekend date creates a patchwork. NSW, the ACT and WA will observe both Saturday and Monday as public holidays, while Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory observe only Saturday.
In New South Wales, Premier Chris Minns’ government confirmed the extra Monday holiday, marking a policy shift. Previously, NSW did not always grant a substitute day when Anzac Day fell on a weekend. This year’s decision gives many workers a rare four-day break from Friday evening through Tuesday morning.
The Australian Capital Territory has aligned with NSW, declaring both days public holidays. ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr noted the move honors the significance of Anzac Day while recognizing modern workforce needs. Public sector and most private employers will observe the additional Monday.
Western Australia continues its long-standing practice of providing a substitute day when Anzac Day lands on a weekend. The state will observe Saturday, April 25, and Monday, April 27, as public holidays, a policy welcomed by workers and unions.
For the majority of Australians, however, only Saturday counts as the public holiday. In Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory, businesses and services will largely operate as normal on Monday, April 27. Employees rostered to work Saturday may receive penalty rates or time off in lieu depending on awards and agreements.
The discrepancy has sparked lively debate on social media and talkback radio. Many in non-substitute states expressed disappointment at missing a long weekend, while others argued that the solemn nature of Anzac Day should focus on commemoration rather than extra leisure time. Unions have used the occasion to renew calls for more consistent national public holiday rules.
Anzac Day holds profound cultural importance. The date marks the 1915 landing of Australian and New Zealand troops at Gallipoli. Dawn services, marches and community events will proceed nationwide on Saturday regardless of holiday status. Major ceremonies are planned at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra, Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, Melbourne’s Shrine of Remembrance and equivalent sites across the country.
Retail trading restrictions vary. In jurisdictions with only Saturday as the holiday, many shops will open normally on Monday. States granting the Monday holiday will see broader closures or reduced trading similar to other public holidays. Hospitality and tourism sectors anticipate strong demand in NSW, ACT and WA for the extended break.
Employers and employees are advised to check specific awards, enterprise agreements and state legislation. Penalty rates for working on public holidays remain applicable on April 25 everywhere, and on April 27 in the three jurisdictions observing the substitute day. Casual workers generally do not receive the day off but may be entitled to higher rates.
This year’s arrangement repeats a pattern seen in previous weekend Anzac Days. With the date falling on a Saturday again in 2027, similar debates are expected unless more states align policies. Federal efforts toward greater harmonization of public holidays have gained little traction so far.
Community events will bridge the differences. Schools are closed nationwide on Saturday, and many workplaces will pause for minutes of silence or allow staff to attend services. Veterans’ groups emphasize that remembrance transcends holiday entitlements.
Travel operators report mixed bookings. Destinations popular for long weekends, such as the NSW South Coast, Blue Mountains and Western Australia’s Margaret River region, expect surges, while other states anticipate standard Saturday traffic. Airlines and accommodation providers have adjusted pricing accordingly.
Historians and defense analysts note Anzac Day’s evolution from a solemn military commemoration to a broader reflection on service, sacrifice and national identity. The public holiday variations highlight Australia’s federal system, where states retain significant autonomy over employment and holiday matters.
As April 25 approaches, Australians are encouraged to check official government websites or the Fair Work Ombudsman for jurisdiction-specific details. Whether enjoying a single day of reflection or a full long weekend, the focus remains on honoring those who served and remembering the human cost of conflict.
For many, the extra day in NSW, ACT and WA offers welcome respite. For others, Saturday’s observances provide sufficient opportunity to pause and pay respects. In either case, Anzac Day 2026 will see communities united in remembrance, even as holiday rules differ across the map.
Business
Union Bank of India shares fall 10% in two days after Q4 earnings. What’s spooking investors?
The public lender on Thursday reported a 6.6% year-on-year (YoY) rise in net profit to Rs 5,316 crore for the January-March quarter of FY26. Its net interest income (NII), however, slipped over 1% YoY to Rs 9,406 crore during the quarter under review.
Provisions saw a sharp spike during the quarter, increasing to Rs 1,055 crore from Rs 322 crore in the December quarter, marking a nearly three-fold rise, according to the company’s regulatory filing. Asset quality, however, improved, with the gross NPA ratio declining to 2.82% and the net NPA ratio easing to 0.48% during the quarter under review.
Along with the Q4 results, Union Bank of India recommended a dividend of Rs 5 per equity share for the financial year 2026, subject to necessary approvals. The record date to determine the eligibility of shareholders set to receive the dividend is yet to be announced.
Why Motilal Oswal remains ‘Neutral’ on Union Bank shares?
Motilal Oswal maintained its ‘Neutral’ rating on the shares of Union Bank of India, with a target price of Rs 180 apiece, implying a marginal upside potential over the stock’s previous closing price of Rs 179.71 apiece on NSE. The domestic brokerage said that the company’s net profit beat its estimate by 18%, led by NPA recoveries and lower opex. This was partly offset by lower NII and higher-than-expected provisions.
NIM contraction was majorly attributed to the transmission of the repo rate cut, Motilal noted, adding that the management expects growth to sustain at 13-14% while the CD ratio shall remain comfortable at approximately 82-83%.
Union Bank of India reported a modest quarter, with NIM contraction weighing on performance, although stronger other income supported an earnings beat, even as credit costs were elevated due to the creation of standard asset provisions, the domestic brokerage said. “Loan growth improved following a subdued 1H, while deposit growth also rebounded in a seasonally strong quarter, with the bank remaining cautious on bulk deposits. Management has guided for loan growth of 12-14%, with a continued focus on margin-accretive expansion. Margins came in below expectations, largely impacted by repo rate transmission following the Dec’25 rate cut. The bank has built a standard asset provision buffer of ~INR30b (including ~INR7b created in 4Q), while the estimated ECL transition impact stands at ~INR42-43b. Asset quality continued to improve overall, although slippages were marginally higher in 4Q,” it further said, adding, “We fine-tune our estimates and project FY27E RoA/RoE at 1.1%/13.9%. We expect loans to expand at a 10.5% CAGR over FY26-28.”
Union Bank of India share price
Union Bank of India dropped over 2% to trade at Rs 175.52 apiece on Friday. The stock has fallen around 10% in two days after announcing its Q4 earnings during market hours on Thursday. The stock has declined around 7% in one month, but is up 15% in 2026 so far.
In the longer term, the shares of the bank gained around 37% in one year and more than 139% in three years.
Also read: Why is the stock market falling today?
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Business
Steve Englander on US dollar, oil and the surprising market resilience
In an interaction with ET Now, Steve Englander from Standard Chartered Bank shared his perspective on the evolving situation, noting that neither side appears eager to escalate tensions further.
“Well, look, I think both sides are clearly hesitant to reinitiate hostilities. Both are hoping that the other one is in a more difficult economic and political situation and will cave first.”
He pointed out an interesting shift in market behavior. While US equities have pulled back slightly from their highs, their correlation with oil prices has weakened significantly compared to the early weeks of the conflict. Even Israeli equities, he observed, are hovering near all-time highs.
“In some ways, you can say that the pressure on Trump may be less than the Iranians are counting on, given that the asset markets seem to be dealing with this relatively well.”
The US dollar, meanwhile, has shown signs of strengthening against major global currencies. However, Englander cautioned against attributing this solely to oil price movements or geopolitical developments.
“No, it is certainly having an impact on other regions, and again the Iranian side is probably hoping that that leads other countries to put pressure on the States to back off.”He added that the dollar’s movement is more closely tied to equity market performance than to oil dynamics.
“I would say that the dollar is weaker than it was before when oil prices hit these levels, but I do not think it is because of oil. I think that the negative correlation between the dollar and equity prices has been the strongest correlation over the last couple of weeks.”
Interestingly, the resilience of US equities may itself be contributing to a softer dollar.
“Paradoxically, the fact that the US equities are so robust is making the dollar weaker, and you are not seeing a global equities collapse.”
When it comes to market focus, Englander believes the spotlight has shifted away from geopolitical risks toward corporate performance, especially in the technology and AI sectors.
“It is possible, but setting aside the war, say the war had never happened, US earnings would still be strong. The AI productivity drive would still be strong, and probably stronger than in other countries.”
He also highlighted structural advantages within the US economy, particularly its labor market flexibility.
“It is easy to fire people, and that is unfortunate when it happens, but it is also easy to hire people. So, I think that the ability to adjust is strongest certainly within G10 and the US as compared to Europe or Japan.”
Turning to bond markets, the US 10-year yield—currently around 4.33%—has repeatedly faced resistance near the 4.4% mark. While some see this as a ceiling tied to geopolitical stress, Englander views it differently.
“Well, looking at the same thing, you can look at oil prices, you can look at inflation breakevens, you can look at Treasury yields—they have all been very strongly correlated, and that correlation is still in place.”
He expects yields to rise further over time, regardless of the conflict.
“Ultimately, I think that US yields are going to go above 4.4 even without the war. There is enough going on in terms of activity picking up, real returns picking up—the direction of travel for bond yields is higher.”
For now, while uncertainties persist, markets appear to be taking the situation in stride—balancing geopolitical risks with strong economic fundamentals and corporate performance.
Business
Trumps Announces Israel-Lebanon Ceasefire is Extended by Three Weeks

US President Donald Trump has announced that the ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon has been extended by another three weeks.
The ceasefire was initially set to expire on Sunday, April 26.
Israel-Lebanon Ceasefire Extended
According to a report by AP, Trump revealed in a Truth Social post that a meeting between envoys of both countries in Washington “went very well.”
While he acknowledged that “they do have Hezbollah to think about,” Trump also revealed that the US is willing to help Lebanon.
“The United States is going to work with Lebanon in order to help it protect itself from Hezbollah,” he said in the post.
Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran, has openly opposed the talks between Lebanon and Israel.
According to a report by the BBC, Trump is set to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun in the next few weeks.
Lebanon Accuses Israel of War Crimes
The extension of the ceasefire comes after Lebanon accused Israel of war crimes following Israeli air strikes that killed Amal Khalil, a journalist who worked for a Lebanese newspaper.
A freelance photographer, Zeinab Faraj, was wounded in the attack. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has since denied that it is targeting journalists.
Since the beginning of the ceasefire, both sides have accused the other of violations. As recent as Thursday, Hezbollah said that it fired rockets at Israel over the latter’s alleged ceasefire violations.
Business
Israel, Lebanon extend ceasefire as Trump seeks ’best deal’ with Iran

Israel, Lebanon extend ceasefire as Trump seeks ’best deal’ with Iran
Business
SW Solar shares fall 2% after Q4 revenue declines 23%; net profit balloons 143%
Revenue from operations, however, declined 23% year-on-year to Rs 1,946 crore, compared to Rs 2,519 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year. Revenue slipped 7% quarter-on-quarter from Rs 2,092 crore recorded in the October-December quarter.
On a sequential basis, the company returned to profitability after reporting a loss of Rs 2.8 crore in Q3FY26.
Sterling and Wilson, a major MEP and EPC contractor across power, solar energy and data centres in India, reduced its total expenses by 24% year-on-year to Rs 1,844 crore, down from Rs 2,420 crore in Q4FY25. Expenses also fell 11% compared to the previous quarter.
These costs were primarily related to construction materials, stores and spare parts, employee benefits and finance charges, among others.
On the segment front, the EPC business generated revenue of Rs 1,863 crore in Q4FY26, lower than Rs 2,028 crore in Q3FY26 and Rs 2,459 crore in Q4FY25. Meanwhile, revenue from operations and maintenance services rose to Rs 81.26 crore, compared to Rs 63.25 crore in the preceding quarter and Rs 59 crore in the year-ago period.
FY26 was SWREL’s strongest period yet, delivering record quarterly PAT and 4.5 GW execution, as management said. “As we look forward to FY27, our record Rs 11,813 crore order book and expanded 13.5 GW O&M platform provide unmatched revenue visibility and stability. Our diversification into Wind and BESS projects is being well appreciated, and we see these two verticals contributing significantly to our future growth,” it added. SW Solar shares have been on a tear lately, soaring as much as 35% in the last 1 month. Despite the recent surge, the stock is down 3% in the last six months and about 34% in the last 1 year.
Sensex, Nifty today: Catch all the LIVE stock market action here
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Business
Croda International Plc (COIHY) Q1 2026 Sales/Trading Call Transcript
Operator
Hello, and welcome to the Croda International Q1 2026 Sales Update Call. Please note, this call is being recorded. [Operator Instructions]
I will now hand you over to your host, Steve Foots, to begin today’s conference. Please go ahead, sir.
Steve Foots
Group Chief Executive & Executive Director
Good morning, everyone. Many thanks for joining. So I’m here with Stephen and David, and together, happy to take your questions.
So first, just a few overview comments from me. Overall, quarter 1 sales were as we expected it, up 1% at constant currency and similar to a very strong quarter last year. And whilst we acknowledge the heightened uncertainty that the Middle East conflict has caused, it had no material effect on quarter 1, and there is no change to guidance for full year ’26.
So breaking our quarter 1 sales performance down by business, sales were up 4% in Consumer Care, driven by Beauty Actives and F&F. Life Sciences saw sales dip 3%, largely due to Crop Protection being 8% lower versus a strong prior year when we saw significant restocking. And industrial sales were down 2%, again against a strong prior period.
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