Business
Nor’easter Batters Massachusetts, Leaving Over 210,000 Without Power
A ferocious nor’easter pounded Massachusetts on Monday, February 23, 2026, dumping heavy, wet snow and unleashing damaging winds that toppled trees, snapped power lines and plunged more than 210,000 customers into darkness across the state.

The storm, which intensified overnight and peaked during the morning hours, triggered widespread power outages, blizzard conditions in many areas and treacherous travel that officials described as nearly impossible. The Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) reported escalating outages throughout the day, with figures climbing rapidly as wind gusts exceeded 70 mph in southeastern regions and snow accumulated at rates of 2 to 3 inches per hour in parts of the state.
By mid-afternoon, PowerOutage.us and utility reports showed Massachusetts leading the Northeast with around 181,000 to over 210,000 affected customers, part of a regional total exceeding 511,000 outages stretching from New Jersey to New England. Eversource Energy, the state’s largest utility, reported more than 135,000 of its customers without power at one point, while National Grid cited tens of thousands more in its service areas. Cape Cod and southeastern Massachusetts bore the brunt, with Barnstable County seeing over a quarter of customers impacted and towns like Plymouth reporting nearly 10,000 outages.
The nor’easter arrived Sunday night after days of forecasts warning of its potential historic impacts. A blizzard warning remained in effect for eastern, central and southern Massachusetts until 7 a.m. Tuesday, covering areas from Greater Boston to the Cape and Islands. The National Weather Service in Boston highlighted the dangerous combination of heavy, wet snow — up to 18 to 24 inches in many spots — and sustained winds that created whiteout conditions, reduced visibility to a quarter-mile or less and posed life-threatening risks for anyone venturing out.
Governor Maura Healey declared a state of emergency effective Sunday evening through early Tuesday, urging residents to stay home and avoid unnecessary travel. “This is a high-impact storm with blizzard conditions, and power outages will be likely,” Healey said in pre-storm briefings. Officials mobilized resources early, staging hundreds of utility crews and emergency personnel, but restoration efforts faced severe constraints: bucket trucks and line workers can only operate safely when winds drop below 35 mph, delaying repairs in the hardest-hit zones.
Utility spokespeople warned that some outages could persist for days. Eversource estimated potential restoration times of three to five days in severely affected areas, while National Grid emphasized the challenges posed by fallen trees entangling lines amid ongoing snowfall and gusts. Customers were advised to report outages directly to their providers — Eversource at 1-800-592-2000 or online, National Grid at 1-800-322-3223 — and to sign up for alerts. Both companies urged residents to charge devices, prepare emergency kits and never approach downed wires.
The storm’s ferocity stemmed from its rapid intensification, with barometric pressure dropping sharply to create bomb cyclone characteristics. Wind gusts reached 70 mph or higher along the coast, contributing to coastal flooding risks in low-lying areas. Snow fell heaviest in southeastern Massachusetts, where blizzard conditions were most pronounced, while inland areas saw accumulations closer to 12 to 18 inches.
Travel ground to a halt across the region. State police and transportation officials restricted non-essential driving, with similar measures in neighboring states like Rhode Island and New Jersey. Airports faced widespread cancellations, and public transit services suspended or limited operations. Schools and non-essential businesses remained closed, with many communities activating warming centers for those without power.
The outages compounded safety concerns, as residents relied on generators — with warnings to operate them outdoors to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning — or sought shelter elsewhere. MEMA directed those without electricity to call 211 for warming center locations.
Meteorologists noted the storm’s wet, heavy snow as a key factor in the outages. Accumulating on trees and power lines already stressed by wind, it created widespread structural failures. Forecasters predicted the worst conditions through midday Monday, with winds easing and snow tapering by evening, leading to partial clearing Tuesday with temperatures near freezing.
This nor’easter follows an active winter pattern for Massachusetts, which had already seen significant snowfall earlier in the season. The state recorded 43.3 inches seasonally before this event, and totals from the storm could push many areas well above average.
As crews worked amid hazardous conditions, officials reiterated calls for patience and safety. “Our focus is public safety and stabilizing the system as conditions allow,” said Eversource spokesperson Olessa Stepanova. Restoration priorities target critical infrastructure like hospitals and emergency services first.
The storm’s regional scope left neighboring states similarly battered: New Jersey reported over 129,000 outages, Delaware nearly 72,000 and others in the tens of thousands. The Northeast’s power grid faced one of its most severe tests of the season, underscoring vulnerabilities to extreme winter weather amplified by heavy precipitation and wind.
Residents were urged to monitor updates from MEMA, local authorities and utilities as the storm slowly moved offshore. With sunshine forecast for Tuesday, melting could begin, but lingering outages and potential refreezing posed ongoing risks.
Business
Global ETF craze has retail buyers paying steep premiums
Currently, many of these schemes do not accept fresh subscriptions because they have hit the central bank’s overseas investing limit for mutual funds. The industry currently operates under a $7-billion limit for international mutual fund schemes and an additional $1-billion window for ETFs. The industry first hit this ceiling in February 2022, and since then, only schemes that haven’t exhausted their individual limits – or those where redemptions have freed up space – have been able to accept subscriptions. This resulted in a sharp spike in demand for ETFs, which are traded like stocks on exchanges – with investors buying them at premiums to their net asset values – the daily prices.
AgenciesBlinded by higher returns Industry has hit its $7-b cap leading to overcrowding
“Retail investors blindly buy ETFs, and there is no attempt to look at the premium or discount to the NAV,” says Chetan Nandani, founder, Prime Care Investments.
Currently, the Nippon India Hang Seng ETF trades at a 21% premium to its NAV, while the Mirae Asset Hang Seng Tech ETF trades at a premium of 23%. The Mirae Asset S&P 500 Top ETF trades at a premium of 18%, the Mirae Asset NYSE Fang+ ETF at 19%, while the Motilal Oswal Nasdaq 100 ETF trades at a premium of 2-3%.
“Overseas ETFs can no longer create new units to meet additional demand. However, since they trade on the exchanges, investors can still buy in the secondary markets,” says Kunal Valia, founder, Statlane – a Sebi-registered research analyst. “This has led to crowding into a handful of overseas ETFs, due to which these ETFs are trading at a premium way higher than the NAV.”
As per data from Value Research, international funds, on average, have returned 28% over the last year, compared with Nifty’s 12.8%.
RBI-imposed overseas limits have kept many US-focused mutual fund schemes shut for fresh subscriptions. While investors can bypass these curbs by using the Liberalised Remittance Scheme to buy ETFs abroad, the route comes with high transaction costs and the added hassle of separate brokerage accounts and compliance paperwork. Another alternative is to buy international funds set up in GIFT City, but the minimum investment of $5,000 makes it accessible only to larger-ticket investors. Investors who bought these international ETFs from the secondary market run the risk of sharp drawdowns if the RBI eventually decides to lift this limit. In such an instance, the lofty premiums on many of these products could evaporate quickly.
“Such investors carry a huge risk. The premium on these funds can disappear overnight if RBI were to increase or open up the limits,” warns Nandani. “If that happens, such investors could see a straight capital loss of 20-25% on these ETFs.”
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Barnett-era minister warns of political infiltration from compulsory council voting
Former local government minister Tony Simpson has warned compulsory voting will open the door to party politics in council elections.
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Gold snaps 4-day winning streak amid profit-taking; tariff tensions linger

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Pulse Biosciences CCO Danahy sells $118k in PLSE stock

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Clouded outlook suggests waiting on IDFC First Bank despite sharp correction
In the case of IDFC First Bank, the price-book (P/B) multiple inched up gradually to nearly two over the past three years from around one, aided by improving asset quality. In addition, the mid-tier bank also took efforts to revive its net interest margin to around 6% from under 2% seven years ago by shifting its focus on consumer lending and reducing corporate exposure. This makeover has attracted value investors over the past few years, supporting the stock price. The stock hit a 52-week high of 87 in the first week of January and continued to trade closer to this level in subsequent weeks.
This however changed on Monday when the stock crashed by 16% to ’70 from the previous session’s close. Monday’s closing price was nearly 20% lower than the 52-week high level. The bank’s P/B has shrunk to 1.3, the lowest in over three years. However, investors need to wait before making fresh purchases as the stock is likely to remain under pressure given the possible impact of the latest fraud.
AgenciesSharp fall IDFC First declined 16% in Monday’s trading. The bank is now trading 20% below the 52-week high it had hit in January
IDFC Bank informed stock exchanges on Saturday about fraudulent activities in accounts linked to the state government at its Chandigarh branch, amounting to ‘590 crore. The Haryana government has de-empanelled IDFC First Bank and AU Small Finance Bank from parking of bank deposits. Outflow of government funds may put pressure on current account- savings account (CASA) of banks at a time when they are still facing slower growth in deposits. Sector experts say, a part of government deposits may move to public sector undertaking banks over the medium term. BSE PSU Bank index rose 1.4% outperforming Sensex’s 0.6% rise on Monday.
“This episode could prompt other states to reassess their comfort with smaller banks,” a banking analyst told ET. “For mid-sized and smaller lenders, the risk of losing state government business has clearly risen after this incident.”
IDFC First Bank has said that recoveries will help cushion the financial impact of the fraud. Analysts, however, caution that recoveries in such cases are typically slow. “If any third party chooses to pursue litigation, the recovery process could be significantly delayed,” the analyst said.
As per the Reserve Bank of India’s circular ‘Provisioning pertaining to Fraud Accounts’, banks are required to provide for the entire amount involved in the fraud. This provisioning can be done immediately upon classification or spread over a period of upto four quarters. For IDFC Bank, if the entire amount is provided in a single quarter, the bank may be forced to report a net loss given that it reported a profit of ‘503 crore in the December quarter.
Business
Monadelphous lifts guidance again on bumper first half
The engineering firm posted record first-half revenue, sending its shares to an all-time high as management lifted guidance.
Business
Global Market Today | Asian stocks follow US lower on tariff uncertainty
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index edged down 0.2%, with shares in South Korea — a bellwether for AI investments — falling 0.5%. Attention later will turn to mainland China’s markets, which are set to reopen after the Lunar New Year holiday period.
The moves in Asia came after the S&P 500 Index slid 1%, with tech, delivery and payment shares hit as Citrini Research laid out the potential AI risks to various industries. International Business Machines Corp. tumbled 13% in its worst day since October 2000 as Anthropic said its Claude Code could help modernize COBOL, a programming language mainly run on IBM computers.
Amid lingering uncertainty over President Donald Trump’s tariffs, concerns about AI-driven disruption are prompting traders to dump shares of any company seen at the slightest risk of being displaced. Those worries have also grown despite solid results from megacaps amid doubts over whether big investments in the technology will pay off soon.
“The software selloff is a reminder of what can happen when momentum-driven sectors shift into reverse,” said Steve Sosnick at Interactive Brokers. “The broader, more important question is: How many sectors can go into reverse before they drag the broader market along with them?”
While software companies have been among the hardest hit, insurance brokers, private credit firms, cybersecurity and even real estate services stocks in the US have all been caught up in the so-called AI scare trade.
Asian shares have outperformed, with MSCI’s regional gauge rising 12% this year compared with a 0.1% decline in the S&P 500 over the same period. That marks the index’s strongest start to a year relative to the US benchmark on record.In other corners of the market, Treasuries and gold held their gains from the US session, when traders pared back risk and sought haven assets. Bitcoin continued to trade below $65,000. The dollar was little changed in early trading on Tuesday.
In other commodities, oil steadied as Trump said his preference was for a nuclear deal with Iran ahead of talks between the two nations this week.
Meanwhile, questions over US tariffs added to the downbeat mood on Monday.
After the Supreme Court’s decision Friday to nix Trump’s “reciprocal” tariffs, the White House announced plans to replace the prior levies with a new, across-the-board 15% tariff on US imports. The European Union froze ratification of its US trade deal amid the uncertainty.
The US is readying a spate of additional national security investigations that would enable Trump to impose new tariffs, as the administration seeks to rebuild his global tariff regime.
The administration is considering new national security tariffs on a half-dozen industries, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the plans.
“The push and pull with tariffs is likely to be a distracting theme for markets for the remainder of the year, albeit with less volatility than the initial shock last April,” said Michael Landsberg at Landsberg Bennett Private Wealth Management.
Business
Homebuyers gain over $30,000 in purchasing power from lower mortgage rates
The Corcoran Group broker Noble Black joins Varney & Co. to discuss homebuilder confidence, mortgage rates and Congress actions to address the housing crisis.
A new analysis finds prospective homebuyers have seen their purchasing power rise in the last year due to higher incomes and lower mortgage rates.
Zillow published a report on Monday that found a median-income U.S. household can now comfortably afford a $331,483 home with a 20% down payment. It found that the typical mortgage payment is 8.4% lower than it was a year ago when excluding taxes, insurance and assuming a 20% downpayment.
Mortgage rates have fallen from an average of 6.96% in January 2025 to 6.1% last month, while incomes have ticked higher to give a median-income household an extra $30,302 in buying power compared with a year ago due to shifts in mortgage rates and household incomes.
“A more than $30,000 gain in buying power is meaningful for households that have been stretched thin by high rates. It can mean the difference between settling and choosing,” said Kara Ng, senior economist at Zillow.
RENT BECOMING MORE AFFORDABLE FOR MANY AMERICANS AS MARKET STABILIZES

A median-income U.S. household can now comfortably afford a $331,483 home with a 20% down payment, a new Zillow analysis found. (Steve Pfost/Newsday RM via Getty Images)
“That doesn’t suddenly make this market affordable for everyone, but it does crack open doors that had firmly shut when rates peaked,” Ng added.
Zillow’s report noted that with the recent changes in household income and mortgage rates, the purchasing power of homebuyers is now at its highest level since March 2022, when mortgage rates were still below 5%.
The most recent low point for affordability was October 2023, when the median household could afford a $272,224 home as mortgage rates averaged 7.62% that month – the highest average for any month since 2000.
OHIO GOVERNOR SAYS ENDING PROPERTY TAXES COULD PUSH STATE’S SALES TAX TO 20%

The most recent low point for affordability was October 2023, when the median household could afford a $272,224 home. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The latest dip in mortgage rates provided the biggest boost to homebuyers’ purchasing power in the nation’s most expensive housing markets.
Zillow noted that a median-income household in San Jose, Californina, has gained nearly $74,000 in buying power from a year ago – the largest gain among major metropolitan areas.
San Francisco buyers saw a boost of $56,115, and they were followed by peers in Washington, D.C. ($48,881), San Diego ($46,505) and Boston ($46,390).
The number of homes that are affordable for a median-income household has also increased from a year ago by about 82,300 homes, Zillow found, with about 447,000 homes listed in January.
US HOME PRICES ARE RISING – BUT THESE FAST-GROWING MARKETS REMAIN AFFORDABLE

The latest dip in mortgage rates provided the biggest boost to homebuyers’ purchasing power in the nation’s most expensive housing markets. (Loren Elliott/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The 447,000 affordable home listings represent about 40.3% of total listings, an increase from 34.8% last year.
Markets where home values have declined over the last year make even more homes available to median-income buyers, boosting purchasing power alongside the lower mortgage rates.
Houston led the country in the growth of affordable home inventory, with nearly 4,000 more homes listed for sale that are within reach for median-income buyers when compared with last year.
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Other metros with significant jumps in affordable home inventory are Phoenix with 3,434 more than last year, Dallas with 3,267, Miami with 2,981 and Atlanta’s gain of 2,279, Zillow found. Each of those markets has seen home values decline from last year.
Business
Volvo recalls 40,000 EX30 SUVs over battery fire risk
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Volvo Cars is recalling over 40,000 of its flagship electric EX30 SUVs because of a risk of battery packs overheating and catching fire.
The recall involves replacing modules in the high-voltage battery packs in the SUV, which is a crucial model in Volvo’s push to compete with cheaper Chinese brands. The news was first reported by Reuters.
The recall covers a total of 40,323 model year 2024-2026 EX30 Single-Motor Extended Range and Twin-Motor Performance cars that have the high-voltage cells. Volvo is a Sweden-based automaker that is majority-owned by China’s Geely.
VOLVO RECALLS MORE THAN 450,000 VEHICLES OVER BACKUP CAMERA ISSUE

Over 40,000 Volvo Car EX30 all-electric SUVs will be recalled by Volvo due to a battery fire risk. (Francesca Volpi/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Volvo said it plans to replace affected units free of charge and is urging owners to continue limiting their charging to 70% until repairs can occur to eliminate the fire risk.
“Our investigations have identified that in very rare cases, the affected vehicles can overheat when charged to a high level. In a worst-case scenario this could lead to a fire starting in the battery,” Volvo told FOX Business in a statement.
The automaker said, in total, 40,323 cars are affected globally; of those, it has “identified 189 in the U.S. that will be inspected and fixed if necessary.”
VOLVO REVERSES GOAL TO MAKE ONLY EVS IN 2030

Volvo said that car owners will get their EX30 electric SUV batteries repaired free of charge. (Claudia Greco/Reuters)
The automaker first told EX30 owners in over a dozen countries – including the U.S., Australia and Brazil – in December to park their vehicles away from buildings and cap charging at 70%, according to regulatory filings and the company.
Volvo may face a high cost for replacing the battery packs, as a Reuters analysis based on what a Chinese battery maker might charge resulted in an estimate of $195 million, excluding logistics and repair costs. Volvo said the calculations were “speculative in nature” and that it’s in discussions with the supplier.
The automaker is pursuing deeper integration with its parent company, Geely, while the batteries were made by a Geely-backed joint venture known as Shandong Geely Sunwoda Power Battery Co. Volvo indicated the supplier has fixed the problem and will supply the new battery cells.
NISSAN RECALLS OVER 640,000 VEHICLES FOR ENGINE AND GEAR ISSUES

Volvo said it’s working with the supplier to address the issue. (Yves Herman/File Photo)
Andy Palmer, an auto industry veteran who oversaw the launch of Nissan Motor’s Leaf EV in 2010, said that Volvo has less room for missteps than its rivals because its safety reputation is a central part of its identity as a company.
“Volvo can’t afford a safety issue because that strikes at the heart of their brand,” Palmer said.
Volvo said it is contacting the owners of affected cars to advise them about the next steps in the recall.
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Reuters contributed to this report.
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