Business
More banks may queue up to be pension managers: PFRDA chief
PFRDA chairman Sivasubramanian Ramann said while two banks have shown interest, others are in the process. When regulations were first framed around 2012-13, asset management experience was largely limited to mutual funds and insurers, he said.
Banks, however, manage substantial treasury portfolios and possess adequate investment expertise, he added. “The application window remains open until March 31,” he said.
Two banks have already shown interest. Bank of Baroda and ICICI Bank’s applications have come, Axis Bank‘s is a work-in-progress, and a consortium led by Union Bank and Daiichi is also exploring participation, he said.
PFRDA is examining ways to deepen the pension fund’s participation in long-term infrastructure and project finance, while remaining within prudent risk parameters.
Ramann said it is possible for long-term money to get into certain project financing stages, where an entity like a bank is assessing the risk and then inviting other people to join. “These are the kinds of discussions that we need to have to be able to understand how to improve the asset classes, the distribution of money between them, and introducing new asset classes,” he said.
On investments, pension funds will be permitted to invest in gold and silver through ETFs. These will fall under the alternatives category, which is capped at 5% of the equity allocation. Within this bucket, exposure to gold and silver is likely to be initially restricted to around 1%, subject to periodic review.The pension regulator is working on creating simpler payout products that give subscribers greater flexibility at retirement, including options beyond traditional annuities.
A committee has already begun work on designing one or two standardised products that would allow subscribers to choose between annuity payouts or structured withdrawals. The regulator is also exploring products with varied payout tenures, which would not necessarily be 25 years but potentially 10, 15 or 18 years.
Business
ATS Corporation: Positioned For Margin Expansion And Steady Organic Growth
ATS Corporation: Positioned For Margin Expansion And Steady Organic Growth
Business
5 world market themes for the week ahead
Markets will hope for signs of the former from consumer bellwether Walmart‘s results, while European miners’ earnings face plenty of the latter in commodity markets. Leading economic indicators and UK data are trickling in through the week and Indonesia faces a critical central bank decision.
WELCOME TO THE CLUB
Fresh off hitting $1 trillion in market cap, Walmart will post quarterly results that offer a glimpse into consumer spending in the wake of mixed signals from U.S. economic data.
Walmart’s report on Thursday comes after recent data showed December U.S. retail sales were unexpectedly flat, potentially setting consumer spending on a slower growth path heading into 2026, though a surprisingly strong employment report for January eased some concerns about economic weakening.
Walmart precedes a bevy of reports from other retailers in the coming weeks, including Home Depot, Lowe’s and Target. Economic reports in the coming week include the advance reading of fourth-quarter GDP, a monthly consumer sentiment survey, and the personal consumption expenditures price index, a key inflation measure.
HEAVY METAL Europe’s four largest mining companies – Rio Tinto, Glencore, Anglo American and Antofagasta – are reporting earnings in the coming week, at a time when some of the metals they mine have scaled new price peaks.
Copper, gold, silver and other precious metals all recently hit records – but the relentless rally seen during January has been more sporadic this month.
The demand picture for metals is well known. Data centres need copper, as does the grid infrastructure needed to power the AI build-out. U.S. political uncertainty and worries about the independence of the Federal Reserve have propelled gold – and to some extent silver – higher.
That surge has seen the four companies’ market value jump by more than $65 billion since the start of the year, despite the abandoned merger between Glencore and Rio Tinto. The group’s earnings could determine if that continues.
FLASH – AAH!
A lot of the uncertainties that plagued companies around the world, from Europe to the engines of “Factory Asia”, this time last year – namely, U.S. tariffs – have not exactly gone away, but they’re a lot more in hand.
And this is showing up in global surveys of business activity, which in January showed a pickup in most major economies.
Services are gathering momentum as price pressures continue to subside, while manufacturing is acting as more of a drag. The surveys don’t just tell investors what has happened. Sub-indexes on new orders, employment and pricing all give a sense of how companies are preparing for the months ahead.
With a lot of questions hanging over longer-term job security and company bottom lines from the rollout of artificial intelligence right now, investors may scour February’s flash purchasing managers’ surveys more closely than usual.
JOBS, PRICES AND DROWNING STREET
UK labour market data and inflation readings will provide fresh fodder for markets, even though investors are still digesting the fallout from the recent instability at the heart of Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government.
Labour market numbers due on Tuesday will show if a gradual cooling of wage growth – closely watched by the Bank of England – has continued.
Attention shifts to January inflation data on Wednesday. The reading rose to 3.4% in December, down from a peak of over 11% in 2022 but still the highest in the Group of Seven economies. While lower energy prices coming into effect in April should help drag inflation closer to the BoE’s 2% target, much of that slowdown is due to one-off factors.
With political turmoil creating a febrile backdrop for sterling and gilts, markets will be sensitive to data shifts, while Fitch is due to review its UK rating on Friday.
STERN WARNINGS
Bank Indonesia’s policy meeting on Thursday will be closely watched by investors after MSCI threatened a downgrade to frontier market status last month, triggering a $80 billion wipeout – the country’s worst rout since the Asian financial crisis in 1998.
Soon after, Moody’s cut the country’s credit rating outlook, while rival benchmark compiler FTSE said it would postpone a scheduled index review.
The central bank could resume its easing cycle after cutting interest rates by a total of 150 basis points between September 2024 and September 2025.
Elsewhere, on Wednesday, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand will announce the first monetary policy decision since Governor Anna Breman joined from Sweden’s Riksbank in December. Breman is expected to hold rates, but growth has rebounded sufficiently quickly that her next move is expected to be a hike – perhaps as soon as September.
Business
Cerity to Merge With $1.2 Trillion Institutional Advisor Verus Investments
Cerity to Merge With $1.2 Trillion Institutional Advisor Verus Investments
Business
Zurn Elkay water solutions officer sells $195k in stock

Zurn Elkay water solutions officer sells $195k in stock
Business
Leveraging Business Intelligence to Assess Workforce Availability and Wage Trends in Indonesia
Indonesia’s workforce exceeds 153 million, mainly in Java; wages vary by province, significantly impacting labor costs, with mandatory contributions and allowances adding fixed costs to employment expenses.
Indonesia’s Workforce and Industrial Regions
As of February 2025, Indonesia’s labor force consisted of approximately 153 million people, with 145.77 million employed. The majority of this workforce, about 56–58 percent, is concentrated on the island of Java, which serves as the country’s economic hub. Java hosts the primary manufacturing and service corridors, especially in the Jakarta metropolitan area, West Java, Central Java, and East Java, making it central to Indonesia’s industrial activity and labor markets.
Variations in Minimum Wages Across Provinces
Minimum wages in Indonesia are set at the provincial level and act as mandatory cost floors for employers. In 2026, Jakarta’s minimum wage is IDR 5,729,876 (US$339) monthly, about 130–150% higher than wages in key Java provinces like West Java (IDR 2,317,601), Central Java (IDR 2,327,386), and East Java (IDR 2,446,880). This wage disparity can significantly impact payroll expenses, especially for labor-intensive businesses with large entry-level workforces, potentially adding over IDR 20–22 billion (US$1.3–1.4 million) annually.
Long-term Employment Costs and Statutory Contributions
Beyond base wages, employers must account for additional statutory costs that elevate employment expenses. Mandatory social security contributions include the Old Age Security (JHT) at 3.7% and the Pension program (JP) at 2%, along with an annual religious holiday allowance (THR) equal to one month’s wage. These fixed-multiplier costs must be incorporated into operating budgets from the start, influencing the total cost of employment and workforce planning.
Read the original article : Using Business Intelligence to Evaluate Workforce Availability and Wage Levels in Indonesia
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Business
Alphabet bonds’ lack of guardrails highlights investor confidence
Google parent Alphabet raised $31.51 billion across U.S. dollar, sterling and Swiss franc bond markets in a global bond raise on Monday and Tuesday, as artificial intelligence-driven spending sparks a surge in borrowing at U.S. tech giants.
Alphabet’s bond sale stood out in several ways, including its use of a so-called 100-year “century” bond in the sterling market.
These and other hyperscalers’ recent bond sales have garnered strong reception with Alphabet’s $20 billion U.S. bond sale drawing over $100 billion in demand. But the growing hyperscaler debt pile has raised concerns about their lack of investor protections compared to other bonds.
“What stands out is what’s missing,” said Julia Khandoshko, the CEO of Cyprus-based broker Mind Money. “Once a big name gets covenant-light terms through, others will try the same.”
“Naturally, that creates a second-market problem, where the next buyer has fewer ‘rules’ to rely on, while prices will swing more on rates, mood, and liquidity,” she added.
Investment-grade borrowers with strong credit profiles typically include fewer covenants in debt agreements than their junk-rated counterparts. Yet most include basic investor guardrails, especially a standard change-in-control covenant protecting investors in the event of M&A or another change in ownership. Alphabet’s bonds do not carry these protections, noted Anthony Canales, head of global research at New York-based Covenant Review.
The five major AI hyperscalers – Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, and Oracle – issued $121 billion in U.S. corporate bonds last year, according to a January report by BofA Securities. Alphabet and Amazon did not respond to requests for comment, while Oracle, Meta and Microsoft declined to comment.
Oracle’s $25 billion note offering on February 2, and Meta’s $30 billion bond offering in October, similarly lacked change-in-control and other basic covenants, Canales noted.
“In most IG covenant packages you would expect to see a change-in-control covenant,” Canales said. “But these are huge companies where the investors don’t believe there’s great risk they’ll need these protections.” Future tech issuers, especially smaller and lower-rated companies, could run into obstacles if they attempt to model their covenants after Alphabet, he added.
New debt issuance in 2026 from the five major hyperscalers could reach more than $300 billion as their spending needs around AI buildout increase, BofA Securities analyst Tom Curcurro wrote in a January 12 report. “This massive AI infrastructure buildout requires so much capex from the hyperscalers that they want to reduce the technical impact on their bonds,” said Jordan Chalfin, senior analyst at the New York-based research firm CreditSights, noting the benefits to issuers from flexible covenant structures.
Business
uniqure investor lawsuit deadline set for April 13 following FDA setback

uniqure investor lawsuit deadline set for April 13 following FDA setback
Business
Lumentum director Herscher sells $2.39 million in stock

Lumentum director Herscher sells $2.39 million in stock
Business
Freight Brokers Are the Latest AI Victims. These Other Stocks Look Safe.
Freight Brokers Are the Latest AI Victims. These Other Stocks Look Safe.
Business
US Stocks Today | S&P 500 ends up slightly as tech dips, inflation cools
The S&P 500, the Nasdaq and the Dow all declined for the week with technology stocks on a roller-coaster ride due to uncertainty about the extent to which profits could be disrupted due to AI competition and the hefty spending needed to support the technology.
Equities had started the session strong after data showed U.S. consumer prices increased less than expected in January. This prompted traders to slightly raise the chance of a 25 basis point interest-rate cut in June to 52.3% from 48.9%, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.
But heavyweight technology and communications services ended the session lower as investors were jittery ahead of Monday’s U.S. holiday for Presidents Day.
“Large cap tech stocks continue to be an anchor on the market and any whiff of optimism continues to get rejected,” said Michael James, managing director, at Rosenblatt Securities, Los Angeles.
“We’ve been on wobbly legs a couple of weeks now and with the three-day weekend approaching, it’s not surprising to roll over into the end of the day.”
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 48.95 points, or 0.10%, to 49,500.93, the S&P 500 gained 3.41 points, or 0.05%, to 6,836.17 and the Nasdaq Composite lost 50.48 points, or 0.22%, to 22,546.67. For the week, the S&P 500 fell 1.39%, the Nasdaq declined 2.1%, and the Dow fell 1.23% for their biggest weekly losses since November. Equity markets have pulled back from record levels recently as AI fears fueled worries in sectors spanning from software and insurance to trucking companies. However, the S&P 500 software and services index closed up 0.9% on Friday while the S&P 500 tech sector fell 0.5%.
Despite improving inflation trends, Phil Orlando, chief market strategist at Federated Hermes, predicted more choppy trading ahead as investors deal with the looming U.S. midterm elections in November and the expected replacement of Fed Chair Jerome Powell by Kevin Warsh in May.
Historically when a Fed leadership transition happens in a midterm year, the market has hit a “double-digit air-pocket every time that’s occurred,” Orlando said.
Megacap tech stocks were weak with Nvidia and Apple Inc providing the biggest drags to the S&P 500 while Applied Materials provided the strongest boost.
Defensive utilities ended up 2.69% and real estate added 1.48%, making them the top gainers among S&P 500’s 11 major industry indexes. Healthcare was also a boost with Dexcom rising 7.6% and Moderna rising 5.3% after both companies’ fourth-quarter earnings reports impressed.
Applied Materials shares jumped 8.1% after the chipmaking-equipment firm forecast second-quarter revenue and profit above Wall Street expectations. Networking equipment provider Arista Networks gained 4.8% during the session after forecasting annual revenue above expectations.
White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said there was no basis to reports that the administration was planning to reduce steel and aluminum tariffs.
Still, some steelmakers came under pressure with Nucor falling just under 3% and Steel Dynamics slipping 3.9%. Also aluminum producer Alcoa fell 0.9% while Century Aluminum shares tumbled 7.4%.
Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 2.57-to-1 ratio on the NYSE where there were 392 new highs and 93 new lows. On the Nasdaq, 3,156 stocks rose and 1,646 fell as advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 1.92-to-1 ratio.
The S&P 500 posted 34 new 52-week highs and 6 new lows.
On U.S. exchanges 18.61 billion shares changed hands compared with the 20.75 billion moving average for the last 20 sessions.
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