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KPIT Tech shares sink 17%, see worst plunge since 2020 Covid crash. Time to buy or more pain ahead?

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KPIT Tech shares sink 17%, see worst plunge since 2020 Covid crash. Time to buy or more pain ahead?
Shares of KPIT Technologies tumbled 17% to hit a fresh 52-week low on Wednesday, as a weaker-than-expected Q1 business update put the stock on track to record its worst single-day plunge since the infamous COVID-19 crash of March 2020.

The shares of the company dropped around 17% to a low of Rs 559.20 apiece on Wednesday morning. The sharp drop wiped off more than Rs 3,080 crore from the company’s market capitalisation, pulling it down to Rs 15,330 crore.

Why KPIT Tech shares are falling today?

KPIT Tech on Tuesday said that it expects the financial performance for the April-June quarter of the ongoing financial year 2027 to be lower than expected previously, due to a sudden drop in revenues in the last few weeks. It expects a decline of 1% in reported revenues for Q1 FY27 as compared to Q1 FY26 (YoY) primarily due to sudden actions by some European OEMs triggered by their recent profit warnings or adverse business outlook, it added. As a result, its operating profitability (EBITDA Margin) and the net profit margin for Q1 FY27 will likely decline sequentially, proportionately higher than the revenue decline, since there is no window for cost optimization during this short period. “While the H1FY27 performance would be unsatisfactory, the fundamentals of our business remain strong,” it added.

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“This impact was not seen coming earlier and has been realized only in the recent weeks. Such sudden actions is a short-term phenomenon. In the long run cost-cutting measures by clients would imply more outsourcing and offshoring with more automation led by our products and solutions, which is already indicated by the said clients and evidenced earlier during COVID & similar circumstances,” KPIT Tech added.

Also read: KPIT Tech shares crash as company expects Q1 revenue decline, sharp hit to margins

Time to buy KPIT Tech? Here’s what technical charts indicate

KPIT Tech shares have witnessed a decisive breakdown, and is now trading close to the levels last seen in September 2022, reflecting significant weakness in the price structure, said Sudeep Shah, Head of Technical and Derivatives Research at SBI Securities. He noted that the momentum remains firmly bearish from a technical perspective.

“The RSI has slipped below 20 and continues to trend lower, highlighting extremely weak momentum. The Directional Movement Index (DMI) also paints a negative picture, with the DI- line widening sharply above the DI+, indicating that sellers remain firmly in control. Adding to the bearish outlook, the stock is trading well below its key short-term and long-term moving averages and has also moved significantly below the lower Bollinger Band, underscoring the intensity of the ongoing downtrend,” the analyst explained.
Also read: Why KPIT Tech shares crashed today? The BMW & Volkswagen connection explained
Harshal Dasani, Business Head at INVasset PMS, highlighted that the technical downside references cluster around JPMorgan’s Rs 550 target zone, which coincides with prior consolidation lows and would represent roughly another 18% correction from current levels. “Recovery attempts should now be treated as bounces within a downtrend rather than trend reversals. The technical setup calls for patience until either RSI reaches deeply oversold conditions with a reversal candle, or a decisive close above the Rs 749-760 zone with volume confirms structural repair,” he added.
According to Shah, the next immediate support is placed in the Rs 555-550 zone, which also served as the base for the strong rally witnessed in September 2022. A decisive breach below this support could trigger another leg of weakness. On the upside, Shah sees the Rs 625–630 zone is likely to act as the immediate resistance.

(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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Refunds: Hidden Tricks – BBC

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Refunds: Hidden Tricks - BBC

Struggling to get a refund?

Rebecca Wilcox reveals the tricks some companies use to avoid paying up, from giving you the runaround to making the process so complicated you give up. Plus, how to use your consumer rights to fight back.

To watch this with subtitles go to BBC iPlayer and search for Morning Live from 01/07/2026

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Accenture: Nowhere To Hide

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Accenture: Nowhere To Hide

Accenture: Nowhere To Hide

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Plans for 7,000 new homes near Taunton Racecourse

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Taylor Wimpey says sections nearest Blackdown Hills will be ‘safeguarded from inappropriate development’

Artist's impression of new 'Taunton garden village' of 7,000 homes near Taunton Racecourse. CREDIT: Taylor Wimpey. Free to use for all BBC wire partners.

Artist’s impression of new ‘Taunton garden village’(Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service / Taylor Wimpey)

A major housebuilder has confirmed it will be submitting proposals for 7,000 homes as part of a new ‘Taunton garden village’ under the emerging Somerset Local Plan.

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The Somerset County Gazette reported in 2019 the Crown Estate had offloaded 1,200 acres of “productive farmland”, known as the Orchard Portman estate, to major developer Taylor Wimpey for the relatively modest sum of £12.5m.

Somerset Council recently launched the initial round of public consultation on its new Somerset Local Plan, which will ultimately determine where new housing and employment sites are allocated through to 2045.

Taunton resident David Orr condemned the plans in late June, arguing that they would lead to 9,000 new homes being constructed in an unsustainable location near Taunton Racecourse and cause permanent harm to the Blackdown Hills national landscape (formerly area of outstanding natural beauty, or AONB).

Taylor Wimpey has now confirmed it will be progressing with the proposals – albeit with the total number of homes being scaled back to around 7,000 – and has provided assurances that the sections closest to the Blackdowns will be safeguarded from inappropriate development.

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The bulk of the Orchard Portman site lies to the east of the racecourse, spanning the parishes of Orchard Portman, Stoke St Mary and West Hatch.

A small portion of the proposed development directly overlaps the boundary of the Blackdown Hills, wrapping around the existing Netherclay and Thurlbear woodland.

Taylor Wimpey submitted the site for consideration in the new Local Plan in February 2025, as part of the ‘call for sites’ (whereby developers, landowners and land promoters were invited to submit possible locations for development, to be assessed and narrowed down by the council’s planning department).

A draft vision for the development was circulated to local parish councils in the autumn of 2025, with several key organisations offering encouraging initial responses – among them Bishop Fox’s School, King’s College, the Somerset NHS Foundation Trust (which runs Musgrove Park Hospital) and the Somerset Chamber of Commerce.

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Only a partial masterplan for the site has been made public thus far, suggesting the development could feature a farm shop, an amphitheatre and a woodland trail.

A spokesperson for Taylor Wimpey said: “Our proposals for the new Taunton garden village include around 7,000 modern, energy-efficient and sustainable homes alongside schools, healthcare facilities, community spaces and infrastructure needed to create a self-sustaining community.

“We are working with a wide range of local stakeholders to shape the best version of this new community, including local schools, care home operators, the NHS, local charities, business partnerships, wildlife groups and Somerset Council.

“We are promoting the new garden village through the council’s Local Plan process and will continue to work with local stakeholders and communities as those plans evolve.”

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Partial masterplan of new 'Taunton garden village' of 7,000 homes near Taunton Racecourse. CREDIT: Taylor Wimpey. Free to use for all BBC wire partners.

Partial masterplan of new ‘Taunton garden village’ of 7,000 homes near Taunton Racecourse(Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service / Taylor Wimpey)

The current masterplan for the site (which has not been made public) includes a new primary and secondary school (including new special needs provision), a ‘healthcare hub’, a neighbourhood hub with a “dedicated mass transit route to the town centre”, commercial and office space, and affordable homes – including specialist children’s homes.

Taylor Wimpey has committed that “more than half of the site” will be retained as green space for “sport, recreation, food growing, equestrian use, children’s play and biodiversity enhancement” – and they will not construct homes within the boundary of the Blackdown Hills.

The consultation is running until July 24 and a summary of responses will be published in early November. The second round of consultation (including further details of proposed development sites) is anticipated to start in September 2027.

The third and final round of public consultation is presently scheduled to take place in March 2028, after which the Local Plan will be submitted to the Planning Inspectorate (which may hold additional public hearings if deemed necessary).

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If all proceeds smoothly, the new Local Plan will be formally adopted on March 16, 2029.

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Energy bills: What is happening to gas and electricity prices?

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A woman with shoulder-length blonde hair talks into a microphone

Since 1 April, charges related to the insulation scheme – called the Energy Company Obligation – have been scrapped, and for three years, renewable energy projects will be 75%-funded by general taxation instead of a levy on energy bills.

Before the changes, energy bills in England, Scotland and Wales included additional charges to help fund insulation for low-income households, and subsidise green energy projects such as wind farms and solar panels.

Nearly everyone in England, Wales and Scotland will benefit from this cut, although the amounts will vary between households.

However, the cost of maintaining and strengthening energy network infrastructure like power lines, cables and gas pipes is rising.

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In December 2025, Ofgem said it had approved a £28bn investment to improve the electricity and gas grids in Great Britain.

It said this will strengthen the energy supply, and better shield customers from volatile energy prices. It will also reduce Britain’s dependence on gas.

Customers will pay part of the cost of the upgrade, through an additional £108 added to energy bills by 2031.

These charges started to appear from April 2026, adding about £6 a month to the bill for a typical household covered by the energy cap.

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In April, the government also announced separate plans to change the way electricity is priced to ensure that household energy bills are less vulnerable to spikes in gas prices.

It also wants customers to benefit more from the cheaper running costs of renewable energy sources like wind and solar power.

The government has not said how much bills might fall but believes savings could be “significant”. It said the changes could be in place by spring 2027.

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What I'm Watching In July: Rate Hikes, Testimony, And AI Volatility

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What I'm Watching In July: Rate Hikes, Testimony, And AI Volatility

What I'm Watching In July: Rate Hikes, Testimony, And AI Volatility

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At Close of Business podcast July 1 2026

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At Close of Business podcast July 1 2026

Ella Loneragan speaks with Nadia Budihardjo about her feature diving into the speculation surrounding a WA university merger.

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Lower crude, easing FII selling brighten market outlook; large-cap financials offer better value: Kunal Vora

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Lower crude, easing FII selling brighten market outlook; large-cap financials offer better value: Kunal Vora
A sharp decline in crude oil prices, improving earnings visibility and signs that foreign institutional investor (FII) selling may be losing steam have significantly improved the outlook for Indian equities, according to Kunal Vora from BNP Paribas India . While near-term earnings may reflect the temporary disruptions caused by higher commodity prices and currency movements, he believes the broader market setup has become considerably stronger over the past few weeks.

Speaking to ET Now, Vora said investors should focus less on whether foreign money returns aggressively and more on whether the intense selling pressure witnessed in recent months begins to ease. In his view, domestic institutional flows remain strong enough to support the market as long as earnings continue to grow.

Market Conditions Improve as Crude Retreats
The fall in crude oil prices to the $70-75 per barrel range has emerged as one of the biggest positives for the Indian economy. According to Vora, softer crude supports corporate earnings, strengthens the fiscal position, eases pressure on foreign exchange reserves and improves the interest rate outlook.While weather remains a key risk, particularly with concerns over El Niño and rainfall deficits, he believes those risks are relatively smaller than the challenges posed by elevated crude prices earlier this year.

“Compared to where we were two months back, the market construct is looking better. Crude at $70-75 is a big relief. It has positive implications for earnings, forex, interest rates and the government’s fiscal position. The reasons for FII selling have reduced, valuations have become slightly more attractive and the earnings outlook is improving,” he said.
Earnings May Be Weak, But Pain Could Be Temporary
The upcoming earnings season is expected to capture the impact of the recent spike in crude prices and currency fluctuations. However, Vora cautioned against interpreting one weak quarter as a longer-term trend.
He believes sectors such as consumer staples and automobiles could witness temporary margin pressure, but expects those headwinds to fade during the second half of FY27.
“This quarter will reflect the problems we saw last quarter. I would not extrapolate them into a long-term trend. The impact on consumption-oriented sectors will be visible, but it is likely to be short-lived. Our FY28 earnings outlook has not changed materially because this looks like a temporary phenomenon rather than a structural headwind,” he said.

Private Banks Continue to Top the Preference List
Financials, particularly frontline private sector banks, remain among Vora’s highest-conviction investment ideas.

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After a subdued FY26, he expects earnings growth of 15-18% for leading private lenders during FY27. Attractive valuations across price-to-earnings and price-to-book metrics further strengthen the investment case.

“Private sector banks continue to remain one of our preferred sectors. We expect earnings growth of 15% to 18% in FY27, while valuations remain supportive. Heavy FII selling has weighed on the sector, but if that pressure eases, banks should benefit from improving flows,” he said.

Domestic Money Can Carry the Market
Vora believes investors are placing too much emphasis on the return of foreign portfolio investors. Instead, he argues that simply reducing the pace of FII selling could be enough for domestic investors to sustain the market.

He pointed out that India witnessed unprecedented foreign selling over the past few months, making any moderation in outflows a meaningful positive.

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“India does not really need FPI money to come back in a big way. What we need is a lack of selling. If incremental FII selling eases, domestic money can continue doing the heavy lifting,” he said.

Consumption, Telecom Also Offer Attractive Opportunities
Besides financials, Vora remains constructive on consumption stocks, especially consumer staples, following the recent GST rate cut. He believes improving demand and pricing power could support earnings after the temporary crude-related impact fades.

Telecom is another sector he favours because of its consistent pricing power and the possibility of another tariff hike over the coming quarters.

“Consumer staples have become attractive after the GST rate cut. Telecom also continues to offer strong pricing power, and we expect tariff hikes over the coming quarters,” he said.

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On the other hand, he believes pharmaceuticals, utilities and automobiles may underperform due to expensive valuations, easing defensive demand and possible margin pressures.

IT Faces Structural Questions Despite Attractive Valuations
While valuations in IT services have corrected meaningfully and dividend yields have become increasingly attractive, Vora believes the sector continues to grapple with long-term uncertainty stemming from artificial intelligence.

He does not expect widespread degrowth, but says investors are increasingly questioning the industry’s long-term growth assumptions.

“We do not expect the sector to start degrowing, but terminal growth assumptions have changed because of AI. This has become more of a value call and a hope that growth eventually bottoms out,” he said.

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He also highlighted the broader implications of a slowdown in IT hiring, noting that the sector remains one of India’s largest employers and a significant contributor to wage growth.

Premium Valuations Are a Structural Feature
Addressing concerns over India’s valuation premium relative to global markets, Vora argued that higher multiples are not unique to IT but reflect a broader characteristic of Indian equities.

Strong domestic liquidity and sustained investor participation have allowed Indian stocks to command premium valuations across sectors.

“Indian valuations across sectors are higher than global peers. That is a structural feature of our market and not unique to IT. I do not expect that premium to disappear,” he said.

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Large Caps Offer Better Value Than Mid and Small Caps
Although mid- and small-cap stocks have delivered exceptional returns, Vora believes valuations have become stretched after sustained domestic inflows and relatively lower FII ownership.

He now sees stronger value emerging in large-cap companies.

“Midcaps and smallcaps have become much more expensive relative to largecaps. We currently see better value in the large-cap space, while some froth remains in the broader market,” he said.

Focus on Earnings Rather Than Foreign Flows
Looking ahead, Vora expects market returns to broadly track corporate earnings rather than be driven by large foreign inflows. He believes India can continue delivering respectable returns if earnings growth remains in the low-to-mid teens and foreign selling gradually subsides.

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“We are banking on domestic money to drive the market, not FIIs. If earnings grow in the mid-teens and FII selling eases, returns should broadly follow earnings even without large foreign inflows,” he said.

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Radich resigns as Perth Glory chief

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Radich resigns as Perth Glory chief

Perth Glory’s chief executive Anthony Radich is leaving the club after four years at the helm of the A-League soccer club.

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Romesh Ranganathan ‘gutted’ as his South East bakery chain shuts down

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Romesh stood behind a counter of baked goods. He is wearing an apron and black cap and is smiling directly at the camera. There are red and black balloons behind him

Comedian Romesh Ranganathan said he is “gutted” after the 89-year-old bakery chain he part-owns shut down.

Coughlans Bakery – which operates a chain of shops across Kent, Surrey, West Sussex and south London – announced it had ceased trading on Tuesday after it went into voluntary liquidation.

Ranganathan, best known for his deadpan stage style, became its co-owner in 2024, describing it as “the partnership of the century”.

Managing director Sean Coughlan blamed the closure on the government’s decision to increase national insurance contributions for employers in April last year, along with high business rates.

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Posting on social media, he described the rates as having “absolutely smashed local business”.

He added that, combined with the spike in fuel prices following the conflict in the Middle East, they had cost the company an extra £20,000 a week.

Coughlan said Crawley-born stand-up Ranganathan, who is vegan and initially became a supporter of the business because of its range of plant-based products, had been “amazing”.

“I feel like we’ve absolutely let him down. Everything he’s done, it’s been from the heart,” he added.

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Ranganathan reposted Coughlan’s video to his 1.4m followers online, with the caption: “Gutted isn’t the word.”

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Heat failure: Why essential tech fails when the temperature rises

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A woman stands silhouetted on the banks of the River Thames, holding a purple umbrella for shade.

As one of France’s hottest days on record unfolded on 23 June, exasperated people painted white chalk on their windows to screen out the sun. Paris’s Eiffel Tower closed early.

And in the town of Ergué-Gabéric, in Brittany, the punishing temperatures – around 40C – were too much for one electric transformer.

The chunky metal box malfunctioned, initially leaving more than 100,000 people without power.

It was a “heat related” incident, according to local authorities, external. Videos posted to social media appeared to show a plume of smoke rising from the stricken transformer. A spokeswoman for power company RTE confirmed to the BBC that the video showed one of the firm’s facilities.

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The day before the accident, RTE had published a statement, external saying there was “no concern” surrounding the availability of electricity across its network this summer.

Just as we all have our own limits in terms of high temperatures, so too does technology. Electrical and telecoms equipment, and railway signalling cabinets sometimes falter during a heatwave. Extreme temperatures can even set off alarm systems.

Heat-troubled tech is a serious issue.

For instance, six NHS trusts in England declared a critical incident last week after hot weather adversely affected their IT systems, scanners, and cancer and lab equipment.

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More frequent and more intense heatwaves triggered by human-caused climate change mean that engineers are increasingly adapting infrastructure to cope.

“Anything to do with the electricity network – the power lines, the interconnectors and transformers – they all struggle to keep themselves cool enough,” explains Iain Staffell at Imperial College London. “It reduces the efficiency of everything.”

Staffell and colleagues estimate that, in temperatures of 40C, the output of gas-fired power stations drops by roughly 10% versus 20C.

The efficiency of solar panels also falls as temperature rises, though Staffell notes that this effect has become less pronounced with newer generations of panels.

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Even so, the impact of high temperatures on solar energy in Great Britain is visible in data he and his colleagues have analysed and shared with the BBC. “Once the UK gets above 27C, our solar output plateaus and starts to slowly fall [as temperatures continue to rise],” says Staffell.

That said, extended periods of sunny weather during heatwaves can still boost solar output relative to cloudier days before the heatwave hit. This happened last week, according to comparison website Utility Bidder.

Aside from electricity-generating facilities, consider also the power lines that swathe the country. These cables are made of metal, which expands in heat, causing the lines to droop. Running electricity through them generates even more heat.

“There is a limit to how much droop you can allow,” says Simon Hogg, a consultant and professor emeritus at Durham University.

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If sagging cables touch trees or buildings below, that could cause an accident or power failure.

This scenario was behind a massive blackout in 2003 in North America.

Given the risk, operators reduce the amount of electricity sent along power lines during heatwaves, limiting the supply.

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