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Netweb Technologies share price soar 7%, up 17% in three sessions. What’s behind the surge?

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Netweb Technologies share price soar 7%, up 17% in three sessions. What’s behind the surge?
Shares of Netweb Technologies India surged as much as 7% to hit an intraday high of Rs 3,605 on the BSE on Thursday, extending gains for a third straight session. The stock has climbed more than 17% over the past three trading days.

The gains come after the company unveiled what it calls one of its most advanced AI infrastructure offerings — the ‘Make in India’ Tyrone Camarero GB200 AI Supercomputer — along with a petascale personal AI system, the Tyrone Camarero Spark, in collaboration with Nvidia.

The Spark is being positioned as one of the world’s smallest AI supercomputers, bringing Nvidia’s full AI stack into a compact desktop-sized system. It combines Nvidia’s Blackwell GPUs, Grace CPUs, networking, CUDA-X libraries and the broader AI software stack, and is aimed at developers working on agentic and physical AI applications.

The system delivers 1 petaflop of AI performance with 128GB of unified memory in a small form factor. It is designed to help developers in India run inference on AI models with up to 200 billion parameters and fine-tune models of up to 70 billion parameters locally. It also allows users to build AI agents and operate advanced AI software entirely on-premises, without relying on external cloud infrastructure.

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In addition to the Spark, Netweb has launched Tyrone AI supercomputing systems, built on Grace Blackwell platforms and manufactured in India. These systems leverage the NVIDIA GB200 NVL4 architecture, featuring four Blackwell GPUs interconnected via NVLink and two NVIDIA Grace CPUs linked through NVLink-C2C.


Also read: Steel IPO wave: 10 firms eye Rs 7,000 crore fundraise over next 10 months
The new systems are compatible with liquid-cooled Nvidia MGX modular servers and are designed for high-performance workloads, including scientific computing, AI model training and inference. According to the company, they can deliver up to twice the performance of the previous generation in certain workloads.The Tyrone Camarero GB200 AI system also incorporates technologies intended to support large-scale AI training and real-time inference for large language models of up to 10 trillion parameters. These include the Nvidia GB200 NVL4 chip, a second-generation Transformer Engine, fifth-generation NVLink, a RAS Engine, confidential computing features for secure AI processing and a Decompression Engine.

Also read:Fear of the unknown: Is India’s $250 billion IT industry facing its Kodak moment?

Netweb showcased the Tyrone AI product range in New Delhi. The lineup features the MGX-based GB200 liquid-cooled system and the Tyrone Camarero Spark, covering applications from edge and personal AI computing to advanced data centre workloads, underscoring its India-based manufacturing push.

Netweb Technology shares price have risen 142% in the last 1 year.

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(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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How Asia’s Growing Mineral Nationalism is Reshaping Global Supply Chains

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How Asia’s Growing Mineral Nationalism is Reshaping Global Supply Chains

A fundamental transformation is underway across Asia in how nations control and leverage their mineral wealth, with profound implications for global technology supply chains, renewable energy transitions, and geopolitical power dynamics.

Key takeaways

  • China’s mineral dominance is a geopolitical weapon: Beijing controls the vast majority of global rare earth processing capacity and has repeatedly demonstrated willingness to restrict exports as leverage, with October 2025 controls on 12 rare earth elements prompting emergency U.S.-China negotiations.
  • Indonesia leads Southeast Asia’s rejection of raw material exports: Jakarta’s ban on unprocessed nickel ore exports since 2014 has forced billions in foreign investment into domestic smelting facilities, transforming the country from a colonial-style resource exporter into an emerging battery manufacturing hub.
  • Resource nationalism is now institutionalized across Asia: From China’s strategic stockpiles to India’s push for mineral self-reliance, Asian governments are permanently consolidating state authority over mining and refining, reshaping global supply chains while complicating Western diversification efforts.

What was once viewed primarily as a technical matter of extraction and trade has evolved into a central pillar of national security strategy, as governments from Beijing to Jakarta assert unprecedented control over critical minerals essential to electric vehicles, semiconductors, defense systems, and clean energy technologies.

China Demonstrates Mineral Power in High-Stakes Standoff

The most dramatic recent illustration came last October, when China’s Ministry of Commerce expanded export controls to cover 12 of 17 rare earth elements, materials indispensable to everything from fighter jets to wind turbines. The restrictions went beyond raw ores to include processing equipment, refined materials, and even products manufactured overseas using Chinese-origin rare earths.

The move sent immediate shockwaves through global markets, prompting an emergency diplomatic intervention. By late October, Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping negotiated a one-year suspension of the new controls during a meeting in Busan, South Korea, in exchange for U.S. tariff reductions.

Yet experts caution that the “settlement” is more a tactical pause than a genuine resolution. Earlier restrictions imposed in April 2025 remain fully operational, and China’s licensing regime continues to bind companies exporting controlled materials. “Critical minerals are not merely economic assets; they are also instruments of state power,” the analysis notes.

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China’s dominance stems from decades of strategic policy interventions beginning in the 1980s. Today, Beijing controls the vast majority of global processing capacity for rare earths and several other critical minerals, having consolidated state-owned enterprises, built strategic stockpiles, and invested heavily in mining operations across Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia.

The country has repeatedly demonstrated willingness to weaponize this advantage, restricting rare earth shipments to Japan during 2010 tensions, and again imposing embargoes on Tokyo in early 2026, targeting dual-use technologies required for defense production.

Indonesia Rejects “Colonial” Export Model

Indonesia has emerged as one of Asia’s most assertive practitioners of resource nationalism, particularly regarding nickel, the world’s largest reserves of which lie within its borders. The country has pursued an aggressive strategy to transform itself from raw material exporter into a manufacturing hub for electric vehicle batteries.

Beginning in 2014, Jakarta implemented a ban on unprocessed nickel ore exports, forcing foreign companies to invest in domestic smelting and refining facilities. Major Chinese firms, supported by Belt and Road Initiative funding and Indonesian incentives, poured billions into smelters and industrial parks.

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Former President Joko Widodo framed the policy in explicitly anti-colonial terms, arguing that exporting raw minerals perpetuates an extractive relationship that must be replaced with industrialization. The government expanded requirements for foreign investors to partner with local firms, transfer technology, and contribute to domestic industrial ecosystems. 

The strategy has successfully reshaped global nickel markets and demonstrated how developing nations can leverage resource control to force industrial upgrading.

Regional Powers Chart Independent Courses

Malaysia has pursued a more moderate path, balancing strategic concerns with environmental governance. Home to one of the few rare earth processing facilities outside China, the Lynas Advanced Materials Plant, Malaysia has faced periodic public pressure to tighten regulations, particularly regarding radioactive waste management.

The country also imposed a temporary moratorium on bauxite mining in the mid-2010s after exports to China caused severe environmental degradation, later lifting the ban with stricter licensing requirements.

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Thailand’s mineral nationalism operates primarily through regulatory sovereignty rather than export restrictions. Strong community opposition to mining, including the 2016 closure of the Chatree gold mine following environmental contamination allegations, has pushed the government toward strengthened oversight and social accountability mechanisms.

Last October, protesters gathered outside the U.S. embassy in Bangkok opposing a rare earth minerals agreement with Washington, concerned about sovereignty risks and potential environmental damage from deals made without public consultation.

Myanmar, though politically unstable, remains one of Asia’s most significant sources of heavy rare earths. Much production occurs in northern border regions controlled by ethnic armed groups, with substantial Chinese company involvement operating through informal channels. Materials typically cross into China for processing, a strategic lifeline for Beijing, especially after it imposed stricter domestic environmental controls. 

India has intensified focus on critical mineral security driven by concerns over supply-chain vulnerabilities and technological sovereignty. New Delhi has launched initiatives to map resources, expand domestic mining, and reduce dependence on Chinese imports. Recent reforms opening previously restricted minerals to private mining reflect India’s pursuit of strategic autonomy in a fragmenting global order.

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Outlook: Nationalism Becomes Institutionalized

Analysts project Asian resource nationalism will intensify rather than diminish, with governments continuing to strengthen control over mineral resources while deepening industrial policies that push extraction industries up the value chain.

“China’s dominance in rare earth processing, Indonesia’s nickel industrialization and India’s push for critical mineral self-reliance suggest a long-term consolidation of state authority over mining, refining and export mechanisms,” according to the assessment.

The effect is region-wide reinforcement of mineral nationalism that remains compatible with global supply chains even as it complicates diversification efforts by Western and East Asian manufacturers. States are expected to maintain export restrictions on unprocessed ores while crafting supply agreements that simultaneously attract foreign investment and preserve sovereign leverage.

A less likely but plausible scenario involves coordinated regional strategies, where Southeast Asian states leverage mineral resources collectively through harmonized export policies, shared industrial hubs, or informal alignment around processing standards, potentially positioning themselves between U.S. and Chinese technological competition.

What appears virtually impossible is any significant rollback. The momentum behind national industrial policy, strategic resource planning, and rising domestic expectations for value creation suggests Asia’s mineral nationalism represents a fundamental and enduring shift in how these nations engage with the global economy.

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Consumer Staples Are on a Tear. These Still Look Like Bargains.

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Consumer Staples Are on a Tear. These Still Look Like Bargains.

Consumer Staples Are on a Tear. These Still Look Like Bargains.

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TAT Showcases the Vibrant Essence of Thai Culture at Mumbai Travel Festival

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TAT Showcases the Vibrant Essence of Thai Culture at Mumbai Travel Festival

The Tourism Authority of Thailand showcased Thai culture at The Gypsy Travel Festival 2026 in Mumbai, targeting premium Indian travelers with interactive exhibits and performances, attracting over 5,500 attendees.


Key Points

  • The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) promoted Thai culture and travel at The Gypsy Travel Festival 2026 in Mumbai, targeting premium millennial and family travelers from India. The event, held on February 7-8, showcased Thailand alongside Sapporo City and Kenya, attracting a high-spending audience aged 25 to 45.
  • Thailand’s pavilion, themed around the Songkran Festival, featured vivid visuals, cultural demonstrations like the Khon masked dance, traditional crafts, and Thai cooking. A luxury wellness agency also presented holiday packages, enhancing Thailand’s appeal.
  • With over 5,500 attendees, the festival generated 4 million digital and outdoor impressions. A survey indicated strong interest in destinations like Bangkok and Phuket, with many planning trips to Thailand, highlighting potential growth in the Indian market.

The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) recently promoted Thai culture and travel experiences at The Gypsy Travel Festival (TGTF) 2026 in Mumbai, seeking to boost Thailand’s appeal among premium millennial and family travelers from India. The effort was led by the TAT Mumbai Office and the ASEAN, South Asia, and South Pacific Market Division, under the direction of TAT Governor Thapanee Kiatphaibool, with support from Consul-General Donnawit Poolsawat and senior TAT executives. The festival was held from February 7 to 8 at Jio World Drive and attracted a large audience from a high-spending travel segment.

Thailand participated as one of three main destination partners, alongside Sapporo City and ANA of Japan, and Kenya. TGTF 2026 is Mumbai’s largest lifestyle travel festival, attracting mainly visitors aged 25 to 45 through exhibitions, discussions, workshops, and food and beverage showcases focused on international travel and lifestyle trends.

Thailand’s pavilion was presented under a Songkran Festival theme, using vivid visuals and interactive activities to introduce Thai traditions and seasonal travel experiences. Cultural demonstrations and performances included Khon masked dance, long-drum and Songkran dances, traditional handicrafts, Thai cooking demonstrations, interactive games, and photo opportunities inspired by Bo Sang umbrellas. A luxury and wellness travel agency also co-exhibited to promote special holiday packages in Thailand.

More than 5,500 people attended the festival, while promotional activities generated over four million impressions across digital platforms and outdoor media. A visitor survey showed strong interest in destinations such as Bangkok, Phuket, Krabi, Chiang Mai, and Samui, with beaches, food, and cultural festivals ranking as Thailand’s most recognized attractions. Many respondents said they plan to visit Thailand within the year, pointing to continued growth potential in the Indian market.

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Source : TAT Showcases Thai Culture at Mumbai Travel Festival

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Heard on the Street Recap: Paramount Gets a Plus

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The Warner Bros. studio lot in Burbank, Calif.

What Happened in Markets Today

Warner Bros. Discovery said Tuesday it will restart deal talks with Paramount. The move sets the stage for a potential bidding war with Warner’s preferred suitor, Netflix. Warner said Paramount has indicated it would be willing to raise its offer to $31 per Warner share from $30 if Warner would agree to engage in negotiations. Warner shares gained 2.7% Tuesday while Paramount rallied 4.9%. Netflix rose 0.2%.

Commercial real-estate lenders have reached a breaking point, calling in tens of billions of dollars of loans. Many CRE lenders initially extended maturing loans they made when borrowing costs were lower, hoping that interest rates would fall or cash flows would grow in a strategy known as extend and pretend.

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Opinion: Budget woes meet gold gains

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Opinion: Budget woes meet gold gains

OPINION: The soaring gold sector could prove too tempting for a federal government chasing tax dollars.

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Opinion: Women’s Asian Cup extends WA’s economic, soft-power reach

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Opinion: Women’s Asian Cup extends WA’s economic, soft-power reach

OPINION: Three months after Travis Head’s Ashes onslaught got the WA summer off to an explosive start, Optus Stadium will host more sporting fireworks when the 2026 AFC Women’s Asian Cup gets under way.

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Pub landlord’s plea for support turns into UK-wide movement

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The ‘Hands of our Pubs’ campaign now has the backing of more than 500 hospitality businesses

A pint of Heinken being poured

A pint of Heinken being poured

A campaign by a pub landlord in the Forest of Dean for fairer treatment for hospitality businesses has gathered support from across the UK. The ‘Hands off our Pubs’ (Hoop) movement began last month when a group of landlords met up to discuss rising costs – and now more than 500 other businesses from around the country have joined.

On Wednesday, the campaign group held a summit at The Speech House, in Coleford, with speakers including Tony Sophoclides, strategic affairs director at UKHospitality and Julie Kent MBE, the High Sheriff of Gloucestershire. They were joined by hotel owners, café operators, tourism leaders and independent publicans to discuss the issues facing the industry.

At the heart of the discussion was the “growing disconnect” between government policy and how hospitality actually operates on the ground – particularly in rural and market-town Britain, where pubs are often the last remaining community infrastructure.

Mr Terry-Lush, co-founder of Hoop, said: “Most consumers have no idea how many new costs are being piled onto hospitality. Business rates, an alcohol duty hike, higher employment and environmental taxes, rising energy bills and food inflation are all landing at once – forcing prices up while margins collapse.

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“At the same time, supermarkets continue to sell alcohol at wafer-thin margins that pubs cannot legally or commercially match. Community pubs cannot absorb this imbalance. They either pass on costs and lose customers, or close. That is the reality.”

‘This is no longer a local issue’

Last month, the government announced a 15 per cent discount on business rates for pubs and music venues after a backlash against Rachel Reeves’ Budget announcements in November. But the Hoop campaign is pushing for more support.

In a post on LinkedIn following the summit, Hoop wrote: “The mood was was determined as speaker after speaker described the same reality: busy venues, loyal customers, strong reputations – and margins quietly evaporating under VAT at 20 per cent, business rates calculated on theory not reality, rising employment costs and supermarket imbalance.

“Hospitality is economic infrastructure: it drives tourism, supports retail, employs young people, anchors villages and gives high streets a reason to exist. When it weakens, places weaken.

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“The summit was about prevention, about turning frustration into organised influence. About moving from polite letters to coordinated action. The message leaving Speech House was clear: this is no longer a local issue. It is structural and national.”

The group is now taking its fight to Westminster.

A spokesperson for HM Treasury said the government was backing Britain’s pubs by “cutting their new business rates bills by 15 per cent, extending World Cup opening hours and increasing the Hospitality Support Fund to £10m to help venues grow.

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3 Ways Advisors Can Support Founders of Private Companies

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3 Ways Advisors Can Support Founders of Private Companies

3 Ways Advisors Can Support Founders of Private Companies

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Covivio stock leaps 8% on better-than-expected results, higher outlook

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Covivio stock leaps 8% on better-than-expected results, higher outlook

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Warmer winter hits profits at British Gas owner

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Warmer winter hits profits at British Gas owner

Savvy bill payers shopping around for fixed-tariff energy deals also dented British Gas earnings.

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