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Nomura Growth And Income Fund Q4 2025 Commentary

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Dividend Income: Lanny's December 2025 Summary
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Opinion: Supply shock scenario fuel for thought

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Opinion: Supply shock scenario fuel for thought

OPINION: Agriculture will need to adapt in the event of a fuel shock, as petrol prices surge amid the Middle East conflict.

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Oil Market Volatility Eases After Initial Supply Shock From Iran Conflict

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Oil Tankers

Global oil markets showed signs of stabilizing after a sharp price spike triggered by the ongoing conflict involving Iran.

Prices briefly surged above $100 per barrel on Monday before falling back as concerns about major supply disruptions began to ease.

Before the fighting began, crude oil had been trading between $60 and $70 per barrel. Once the conflict escalated, prices quickly jumped, with crude futures rising to about $115 per barrel on Monday.

That level marked the highest price since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, when energy markets experienced similar turmoil.

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However, the spike did not last long. By Tuesday afternoon, crude prices had dropped again.

Global benchmark Brent crude fell roughly 8%, while US benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude oil declined nearly 9%, Fox Business reported.

The pullback suggested that traders were beginning to see the situation as less threatening to global oil supplies than initially feared.

Early reports had warned that oil prices could soar as high as $150 per barrel because of the potential supply shock.

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But as the day progressed, markets reacted to signs that emergency plans and alternative supply routes could limit disruptions.

Market analyst Phil Flynn of Price Futures Group said the first reaction was driven by panic in the market.

“But I think as the day went on into the overnight, the market realized that maybe things aren’t that bad,” Flynn said, explaining that fears of widespread supply damage began to fade as more information emerged.

Global Leaders Discuss Emergency Oil Measures

Global leaders also discussed ways to prevent a long-term oil shortage.

Officials from the Group of Seven and the International Energy Agency held talks about possibly releasing oil from emergency reserves if prices surged further.

For now, they said such a move was not needed, but they remain ready to act if the market becomes unstable.

Flynn noted that coordinated reserve releases could quickly cool prices if the situation worsens.

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“We have the possibility of a coordinated release from the G7 and the IEA of oil reserves that could cool prices,” he said.

Another factor helping calm markets is the availability of alternate supply routes. According to LGM Corp, Saudi Arabia has expanded its east-to-west pipeline, which allows oil shipments to bypass the sensitive Strait of Hormuz.

The pipeline’s capacity has increased to about seven million barrels per day and could soon operate at full capacity.

Meanwhile, the US Energy Information Administration said higher oil prices could encourage producers to increase output in the coming years.

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However, it noted that production changes take time because companies must first approve investments, deploy drilling rigs, and complete new wells.

Originally published on vcpost.com

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Fuel tax hike plan to be kept under review over Iran, says PM

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Fuel tax hike plan to be kept under review over Iran, says PM

Fuel duty on petrol and diesel is due to rise from September, when a 5p cut is phased out.

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Spot gold prices dip as markets parse mixed signals on Iran and assess U.S. CPI

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Spot gold prices dip as markets parse mixed signals on Iran and assess U.S. CPI

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US inflation stable ahead of Iran shock

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US inflation stable ahead of Iran shock

Wednesday’s report offers “some reassurance” that inflation prices had not been moving in the wrong direction, said Seema Shah, chief global strategist at Principal Asset Management, warning that it would nonetheless be seen as “something of a historical artefact”.

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Heating oil protection calls after ‘shock’ price rises

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Heating oil protection calls after 'shock' price rises

Consumers in the Scottish Borders have given their reactions to prices. Wendy Copeland, from Blainslie, said prices were “unpredictable” and her costs had risen from 62p per litre to 126p. She said: “I would love to see a cap and regulation the same as electricity and gas has.”

Margaret Rae, from Oxton, said she had returned from holiday to find the price of her heating oil had doubled, but added that she understood the situation was “very difficult”. She said: “We’re running a bit low but been advised to wait a bit to see if the price comes down.”

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IT stocks in focus after Oracle’s strong results; Nuvama says valuations now attractive after correction

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IT stocks in focus after Oracle’s strong results; Nuvama says valuations now attractive after correction
Shares of IT companies will remain in focus on Wednesday after Oracle posted better than expected quarterly results, sending its shares 9% higher and pushing Wall Street up. Nuvama Wealth Management said in a note that valuations of Indian IT stocks appear attractive after the recent correction.

Oracle on Tuesday reported earnings that mostly surpassed market expectations. The company reported total revenue of $17.19 billion for the third quarter of fiscal year 2026, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $16.91 billion, according to data compiled by London Stock Exchange Group. The company also raised its revenue forecast for fiscal 2027 to $90 billion.

Oracle has increasingly positioned itself as a major cloud infrastructure competitor, challenging companies such as Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure. Amid this strategic shift, investors closely analyse the company’s earnings for signals about the broader AI and cloud computing economy. When Oracle meets or exceeds expectations, it often boosts confidence in the technology sector.

The positive sentiment driven by Oracle’s strong earnings pushed Wall Street higher in early trading hours before losing steam as investors weighed fading hopes for an earlier than expected end to the ongoing war between the United States, Israel and Iran. The tech heavy Nasdaq Composite gained 0.01%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.07% and the S&P 500 dropped 0.21%.

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Also Read | Gold ETF inflows tumble 78% MoM to Rs 5,254 crore in February


Nuvama on IT services

Nuvama remained bullish on IT stocks, suggesting that the 20% correction seen since the beginning of the year due to expectations of AI led disruption in the sector following back to back AI tool launches by Anthropic has made valuations attractive.
“Reports of my death are greatly exaggerated,” Nuvama said, citing Mark Twain’s quote as perfectly explaining the current situation of the IT sector.“Given the advent and adoption of Gen AI, obituaries of the Indian IT services industry are being written all around. The concerns have been amplified by the sharp stock reactions, first with global SaaS and now with IT services companies,” it said.

The Indian IT services industry is at a crossroads again. The advent of a new technology, Gen AI, threatens to disrupt the way it has been functioning so far, thereby raising concerns about its near term growth and long term survival, Nuvama said.

It sees no existential threat from Gen AI and believes that the requirement for a system integrator, which can customise an enterprise’s plug and play software inputs and outputs as per its requirements, will always exist.

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“We also note B2B adoption of any technology is very different from that of the B2C segment. Eventually, enterprises going for automation of tasks will still need someone to take ownership of the system and that will be IT services firms,” it added.

Nuvama, however, cautioned that Gen AI adoption will follow the technology adoption curve, and IT services firms will face cannibalisation of revenue in the initial phase, which they are facing currently, before reaching the inflection point.

“Following this, the opportunity will lead to an expansion of TAM (USD300 to USD400 billion by 2030, as per Infosys management). However, the companies are likely to undergo a pivot from a headcount driven to an outcome based revenue model. This will lead to lower headcount addition and lower correlation with revenue growth in coming years,” it added.

IT services model is here to stay

Nuvama believes the IT services model is here to stay and that the Gen AI disruption would only lead to bigger opportunities.

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“Post the recent sharp correction, we find valuations of all stocks highly attractive,” it added.

“We see this as a deja vu moment for the industry and believe it will come out of this disruption just like earlier ones, with a net increase in its TAM. We remain positive on the sector from a medium to long term view. Near term volatility may persist,” Nuvama said.

It now has a ‘Buy’ call on all the top ten IT services stocks.

It upgraded HCLTech, Wipro, Tech Mahindra and Hexaware Technologies to ‘Buy’, and prefers LTIMindtree, Persistent Systems, Mphasis, Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services.

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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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Charges against former Capital Mining directors discontinued

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Charges against former Capital Mining directors discontinued

The Director of Public Prosecutions has dropped its case against former directors of collapsed company Capital Mining, bringing an end to the legal dispute.

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Regency Centers announces passing of co-founder Joan Newton and potential stock sales

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Regency Centers announces passing of co-founder Joan Newton and potential stock sales

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JPMorgan reins in lending to private credit firms, marks down software loans

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JPMorgan reins in lending to private credit firms, marks down software loans

Jamie Dimon, chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co., during the America Business Forum in Miami, Florida, US, on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025.

Eva Marie Uzcategui | Bloomberg | Getty Images

JPMorgan Chase is reducing its exposure to the private credit industry by marking down the value of loans held by the bank as collateral, according to a person with knowledge of the moves.

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The bank’s giant Wall Street trading division has reduced the value of loans — most of which were made to software firms — sitting within the financing portfolios of private credit clients, said the person, who declined to be identified speaking about the client interactions.

JPMorgan’s move indicates the biggest U.S. bank by assets wants to get ahead of potential turbulence involving private credit loans to software companies. CEO Jamie Dimon, who has guided his bank through multiple crises in his two decades atop JPMorgan, is known to constantly remind his executives about the risk that borrowers won’t be able to repay their loans.

Software firms have come under scrutiny in recent months as model updates from OpenAI and Anthropic drive concerns that some providers will be disrupted by AI. The worries have ignited a downcycle for private credit players as retail investors yanked funds in recent weeks, driving abnormally high redemptions at firms including Blue Owl and Blackstone.

The adjustments were made in JPMorgan’s financing business, where private credit firms borrow money to amplify fund returns in what’s known as “back-leverage.” The business is considered relatively risky because it layers leverage upon leverage — amplifying losses when the underlying loans sour.

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By marking down the collateral for that leverage, JPMorgan is reducing the ability of private credit firms to borrow against their loans, and in some cases could even force firms to post more collateral.

The size of the loans impacted and the extent of the markdowns at JPMorgan couldn’t be determined.

JPMorgan is potentially the first major bank to take such steps, according to the FT, which was first to report the bank’s markdowns.

The moves are a preemptive step driven by changes in market valuations rather than actual loan losses, said the person with knowledge of the bank, who characterized the move as financial discipline, “rather than waiting until a crisis comes.”

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JPMorgan previously pulled back leverage to the industry during the early days of the Covid pandemic, according to the person.

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