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NVIDIA Dominates AI Chip Race as Market Surges Toward $500 Billion Milestone

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Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says the US tech giant plans to invest $3 billion in India on AI and cloud infrastructure over the next two years

SAN FRANCISCO — NVIDIA Corp. solidified its commanding lead in the exploding artificial intelligence chip sector in early 2026, capturing roughly 80-85% of the AI accelerator market while the broader AI semiconductor industry hurtled toward half a trillion dollars in annual revenue amid insatiable demand for training and inference horsepower.

Tech giants in the AI race have been spending billions of dollars for GPUs made by Nvidia, considered a leader when it comes to chips that power the technology
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The Santa Clara, California-based company’s Blackwell platform, including the high-performance B100 and B200 GPUs, continued to sell out rapidly, powering the vast majority of the world’s largest AI data centers. Analysts project generative AI chips alone could approach $500 billion in revenue this year, representing nearly half of the global semiconductor market’s explosive growth toward $1.3 trillion overall.

NVIDIA’s dominance stems from its full-stack approach: not just raw silicon but the CUDA software ecosystem that has become the de facto standard for AI developers worldwide. CEO Jensen Huang has repeatedly described the shift as entering an “AI factory” era, with hyperscalers and enterprises racing to deploy massive GPU clusters for everything from large language models to scientific simulations.

Yet the race is far from over. A diverse field of challengers — from traditional semiconductor giants to hyperscale cloud providers designing custom silicon — is chipping away at NVIDIA’s near-monopoly, particularly in cost-sensitive inference workloads and specialized training tasks. Here are the 10 leading AI chip manufacturers shaping the industry in 2026, ranked by a blend of market share, technological impact, revenue contribution and innovation momentum.

1. NVIDIA Corp.

No company defines the AI chip boom like NVIDIA. Its data center revenue exploded past $100 billion in 2025, fueled by the Hopper and now Blackwell architectures. The Blackwell Ultra series promises 2.5 times the speed and up to 25 times better energy efficiency compared to prior generations, making it the go-to choice for flagship models from OpenAI, Anthropic and others.

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NVIDIA’s strength lies in ecosystem lock-in. Developers trained on CUDA find switching costly, giving the company pricing power even as supply constraints ease. The upcoming Rubin architecture, slated for late 2026, is already generating buzz as the next leap forward. Despite growing competition, analysts expect NVIDIA to maintain 70-85% share in high-end AI accelerators through the year.

2. Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD)

AMD has emerged as the most credible GPU alternative to NVIDIA, with its Instinct MI300X and newer MI355X accelerators gaining traction. The MI355X is touted as four times faster than the MI300X in key workloads, positioning it as a direct rival to Blackwell for data center deployments.

Microsoft has become one of AMD’s largest customers, deploying MI300X chips alongside NVIDIA GPUs to diversify supply. AMD’s advantage lies in price-performance ratios that appeal to cloud providers seeking to lower total cost of ownership. CEO Lisa Su has raised the long-term addressable market for AI accelerators to $1 trillion by 2030, and the company’s Zen 5 CPU architecture further bolsters hybrid AI systems.

3. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC)

While not a designer of AI chips, TSMC is the indispensable manufacturer behind nearly all advanced AI silicon. The foundry produces cutting-edge 3-nanometer and 5-nanometer wafers for NVIDIA, AMD, Broadcom and hyperscalers’ custom designs, holding over 60% of the global foundry market and nearly 90% for leading-edge nodes.

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TSMC’s Q1 2026 revenue surged 35% year-over-year to record levels, driven overwhelmingly by AI demand. The company is quadrupling advanced packaging capacity, particularly CoWoS for high-bandwidth memory integration critical to AI GPUs. Expansions in Arizona, Japan and Taiwan underscore its role as the backbone of the AI supply chain, even as geopolitical risks loom.

4. Broadcom Inc.

Broadcom has carved out a powerful niche in custom AI accelerators and high-speed networking silicon that glues AI clusters together. The company partners with Google on TPUs and is reportedly co-designing chips for Meta and potentially OpenAI, delivering energy-efficient ASICs tailored to specific workloads.

Its Ethernet switching and custom silicon expertise help hyperscalers reduce reliance on off-the-shelf GPUs. Broadcom’s backlog remains robust, and analysts see it benefiting from the shift toward inference-optimized and domain-specific chips as AI deployment scales beyond initial training phases.

5. Alphabet Inc. (Google)

Google pioneered custom AI silicon with its Tensor Processing Units (TPUs), now in their seventh generation with the Ironwood TPU v7. Released in late 2025, Ironwood scales to massive pods and is described by some analysts as technically on par with or superior to NVIDIA’s Blackwell in certain training and inference efficiency metrics.

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TPUs power much of Google Cloud’s AI offerings and internal workloads for Gemini models. Google’s vertical integration — designing chips, owning the data centers and developing the models — gives it cost and performance advantages that are pressuring pure-play GPU vendors.

6. Amazon.com Inc. (AWS)

Amazon Web Services has aggressively expanded its Trainium and Inferentia lines. The Trainium3 UltraServer, unveiled in late 2025, packs 144 chips and delivers over four times the performance of prior generations while improving energy efficiency by 40%. AWS claims significant cost savings — up to 50% lower training expenses versus GPUs for many workloads.

Hundreds of thousands of Trainium chips are already deployed, including large clusters for Anthropic. As the world’s largest cloud provider, AWS uses its own silicon to control costs and offer competitive pricing to enterprise customers seeking alternatives to NVIDIA-dominated infrastructure.

7. Microsoft Corp.

Microsoft’s Maia 100 and follow-on Maia 200 accelerators are gaining deployment in Azure data centers, with claims of substantial performance edges in FP4 precision over competitors. The company continues blending in-house silicon with NVIDIA and AMD GPUs to optimize for OpenAI workloads and general cloud AI services.

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Maia’s development reflects Microsoft’s massive AI infrastructure spend. While early generations faced delays, the strategy aims to reduce long-term dependency on external suppliers and tailor hardware to the specific needs of Copilot and enterprise AI applications.

8. Intel Corp.

Intel is fighting to regain relevance in AI with its Gaudi accelerators and Xeon processors featuring built-in AI enhancements. Under new leadership, the company is emphasizing total cost of ownership advantages and pushing into AI PCs with Core Ultra chips that bring neural processing units to laptops and desktops.

Intel’s foundry ambitions could eventually position it as a U.S.-based alternative to TSMC for AI chip production. While trailing in high-end data center GPUs, Intel sees opportunities in inference, edge AI and hybrid CPU-GPU systems.

9. Cerebras Systems

Among startups, Cerebras stands out with its wafer-scale engine (WSE-3), a dinner-plate-sized chip packing 900,000 AI cores and delivering extreme memory bandwidth. The system claims up to 75 times faster inference on large models compared to GPU clusters, with massive gains in scientific computing.

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Cerebras targets hyperscale users needing ultra-fast throughput for reasoning and simulation tasks. Its full-wafer approach minimizes data movement bottlenecks that plague traditional multi-chip designs.

10. Qualcomm Technologies Inc.

Qualcomm leads in edge and mobile AI with its Snapdragon platforms and dedicated neural processing units. As on-device AI grows — powering features in smartphones, laptops and IoT devices — Qualcomm’s power-efficient designs are critical for battery-constrained applications and privacy-focused inference.

The company is expanding into automotive and data center edge use cases, positioning itself for the next wave of distributed AI where not every computation requires massive cloud clusters.

Outlook: Fragmentation and Opportunity

The AI chip landscape in 2026 reflects both NVIDIA’s enduring supremacy and a healthy push toward diversification. Hyperscalers’ custom ASICs are maturing, promising lower costs and better efficiency for specific workloads, while memory leaders like Micron and SK Hynix ride the high-bandwidth memory wave essential for all advanced AI systems.

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Challenges remain: supply chain bottlenecks, enormous capital requirements for new fabs, and geopolitical tensions around Taiwan. Yet the momentum is unmistakable. Global semiconductor revenue is forecast to top $1.3 trillion this year, with AI as the primary catalyst.

For enterprises and investors, the message is clear: the AI chip race is accelerating, rewarding those who can deliver not just raw performance but sustainable, scalable and cost-effective intelligence at every layer of the stack. As models grow more capable and AI permeates every industry, the companies on this list — and nimble newcomers — will determine how fast and how far the technology revolution can run.

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DoubleDown Interactive: May Look Cheap On Paper, But It Could Be A Trap

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DoubleDown Interactive: May Look Cheap On Paper, But It Could Be A Trap

DoubleDown Interactive: May Look Cheap On Paper, But It Could Be A Trap

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OECD Urges Rachel Reeves to Overhaul ‘Inefficient’ UK Tax System to Unlock Growth

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what could Rachel Reeves announce?

Rachel Reeves has been told by one of the world’s most influential economic bodies that Britain’s tax system is holding the country back and needs urgent surgery if the Chancellor is serious about reigniting growth.

In a pointed intervention, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has urged the Treasury to launch an “in-depth tax review to make the tax system more efficient and growth-friendly”, arguing that decades of tinkering have left Britain with a patchwork of distortions, loopholes and outdated valuations that penalise enterprise and deter investment.

The Paris-based think tank’s latest assessment will make uncomfortable reading in Downing Street. It concludes that the UK economy is being dragged down not only by the familiar headwinds of elevated borrowing costs and sluggish productivity, but by a tax code that businesses have learned to game and that ordinary taxpayers increasingly struggle to understand.

At the heart of the OECD’s recommendations is a call to broaden the VAT base, stripping out a thicket of reliefs and exemptions that economists describe as “largely inefficient and regressive”. It is the sort of reform that could finally consign to history the long-running absurdity of HMRC having to rule on whether a Jaffa Cake is a biscuit or a cake, the kind of grey area that has generated decades of tribunal cases and column inches. The OECD suggests that any additional receipts raised by closing such loopholes could be recycled to shield low-income households through targeted transfers.

Property tax comes in for similarly sharp criticism. The OECD notes that council tax bands still rest on property valuations taken in 1991, a state of affairs no government has dared to touch for fear of triggering a political backlash among homeowners whose rateable values no longer reflect the modern housing market. Successive chancellors have kicked the revaluation can down the road, leaving a levy that economists regard as one of the most distortive in the developed world.

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For small and medium-sized businesses, the case for reform has long been obvious. Entrepreneurs, accountants and owner-managers have complained for years about the sheer complexity of the HMRC code, the punitive £100,000 to £125,000 tax trap that penalises aspiration, the interaction of income tax with student loan repayments, and the cliff edges that plague stamp duty. Each has become a case study in how good intentions, bolted on year after year, can produce a system nobody would design from scratch.

Britain once had a body specifically charged with addressing these frustrations. The Office of Tax Simplification, an arms-length outfit set up to cut administrative burdens, survived for 13 years before being abolished by Kwasi Kwarteng during his short-lived tenure as Chancellor. Its recommendations were frequently ignored even while it existed, and its closure was widely seen at the time as a signal that Whitehall had lost interest in serious structural reform.

The OECD’s warning lands at an awkward moment for Reeves. Several think tanks, including the Institute for Government, urged the Chancellor to pursue wholesale tax reform ahead of last year’s Budget, when she was scrambling to fill a fiscal black hole running into billions. She now faces similar pressures later this year, with the war in Iran weighing on global growth, interest rates stubbornly elevated and borrowing costs showing little sign of easing.

The report also strays into more politically charged territory, criticising the government over conflicts of interest in its dealings with business — a swipe that will inevitably be read in Westminster as a reference to the recent controversies surrounding Lord Mandelson and Labour Together, as well as the steady stream of former MPs moving into private sector roles that have raised eyebrows on both sides of the House. The OECD recommends that legally binding commitments on violations be extended to cover politicians’ post-public careers as well as their periods in office.

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Among its other prescriptions, the think tank calls for a rethink of employee training subsidies funded through the apprenticeship levy, suggesting resources be redirected towards young people who are struggling to get a foothold in the labour market.

Responding to the report, a Treasury spokesperson said the government was “already reforming the tax system to make it more efficient, modern and fair”, adding that it was “tackling reliefs that are now costing far more than intended and are disproportionately benefitting the wealthy”.

Whether that amounts to the kind of root-and-branch overhaul the OECD is demanding, or simply more of the piecemeal tinkering that has brought the system to its current state, will become clearer when Reeves stands up at the despatch box later this year. For Britain’s SMEs, who bear a disproportionate share of the compliance burden, the hope will be that she finally grasps the nettle.


Jamie Young

Jamie Young

Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting.
Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops.

When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders.

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Byrna Technologies: Conversion Collapse Is The Real Problem, Not Demand

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Ivanhoe Electric Stock Climbs 8% as Copper Explorer Gains Momentum on U.S. Critical Minerals Push

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Ivanhoe Electric

NEW YORK — Ivanhoe Electric Inc. shares rose sharply in morning trading Friday, gaining about 7.77% to $13.87 as investors bet on the company’s role in bolstering domestic supplies of copper and other critical minerals amid growing demand from electrification, data centers and national security initiatives.

Ivanhoe Electric
Ivanhoe Electric

The Phoenix-based exploration and development firm, listed on the NYSE American as IE, added $1.00 by 10:00 a.m. EDT. The move came as broader sentiment toward copper-related stocks improved and the company continued to highlight progress at its flagship Santa Cruz Copper Project in Arizona, along with a strengthened balance sheet from recent cash inflows.

Ivanhoe Electric specializes in using its proprietary Typhoon™ geophysical surveying technology — paired with advanced data analytics from its majority-owned subsidiary Computational Geosciences Inc. — to detect deeply buried mineral deposits that traditional methods often miss. The system generates powerful electrical signals capable of penetrating up to 1.5 kilometers or more, accelerating discovery while reducing exploration risks and costs.

The company’s portfolio centers on copper but also includes nickel, cobalt and other metals essential for batteries, renewables and high-tech applications. Its core asset is the Santa Cruz Copper Project near Casa Grande, Arizona, where it aims to build a modern underground mine and heap-leach facility to produce high-purity 99.99% copper cathode domestically.

A preliminary feasibility study released in mid-2025 outlined strong economics for the project: an underground operation processing 20,000 tonnes per day, with average annual production of approximately 72,000 tonnes of copper cathode in the first 15 years at low all-in sustaining costs around $1.36 per pound after by-product credits. The study supports a potential 23-year mine life, with initial construction targeted for the first half of 2026 and first cathode production by late 2028, subject to permits and financing.

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In November 2025, Ivanhoe Electric completed final land acquisition payments totaling $39.3 million, clearing a key hurdle ahead of major construction activities. The project sits on private land, which is expected to streamline permitting compared to federal ground. The company has already secured various permits for exploration and land use, positioning it for a smoother development path in a state with a long mining history.

Financially, Ivanhoe Electric entered 2026 with solid liquidity. As of Dec. 31, 2025, it held $173.3 million in cash and equivalents. In February 2026, it received $82.6 million from the exercise of warrants tied to a prior equity financing. In March, the company stood to receive approximately $58.4 million from its 59.6%-owned subsidiary Cordoba Minerals Corp., stemming from Cordoba’s $128 million sale of its remaining interest in the Alacrán Project in Colombia. The cash distribution of $1.01 per Cordoba share was payable around late March.

An undrawn $200 million senior secured bridge facility, closed in December 2025, provides additional near-term flexibility as the company pursues longer-term project financing for Santa Cruz. Ivanhoe Electric received a Letter of Interest from the U.S. Export-Import Bank in 2025 for up to $825 million in debt financing under the Make More in America initiative, with the full application process ongoing. Executives have signaled expectations to finalize project financing by mid-2026.

The stock’s Friday gain built on recent volatility. Shares had traded around $12.87 at Thursday’s close after pulling back from earlier 2026 levels, with a 52-week range spanning roughly $4.50 to $21.55. Analysts maintain a generally bullish outlook, with consensus price targets near $18 to $21.50 and some high-end forecasts reaching $28.50. JPMorgan recently reaffirmed its overweight rating, though it trimmed its target slightly to $21.

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A key differentiator for Ivanhoe Electric is its Typhoon™ technology, which has already shown promise in joint ventures and alliances. In January 2026, the company signed a collaboration agreement with Sociedad Química y Minera de Chile (SQM) to explore 2,002 square kilometers of mining concessions in northern Chile for copper deposits hidden beneath electrically resistive caliche layers. SQM is funding an initial $9 million program, with Ivanhoe Electric supplying a new-generation Typhoon system and advanced inversion software. The deal includes options for joint ventures on discoveries.

In Saudi Arabia, Ivanhoe Electric operates a 50/50 joint venture with Maaden covering about 50,000 square kilometers of the underexplored Arabian Shield. Three Typhoon systems are active there, and early drilling at the Umm Ad Dabah prospect intersected encouraging copper mineralization. Additional surveying and drilling continue across multiple targets.

The company also maintains an exploration alliance with BHP in the southwestern United States, where BHP funds initial work and Ivanhoe Electric acts as operator during the exploration phase. Typhoon surveys have been completed in areas of interest in Arizona and Utah, with drilling underway targeting porphyry copper systems.

Other U.S. assets include the Hog Heaven project in Montana, where expansion drilling has intersected significant copper-gold-silver mineralization and a new porphyry system called Battle Butte was identified, and the Tintic project in Utah, focused on precious and base metals in a historic district.

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Executive Chairman Robert Friedland, a prominent figure in the mining industry, has emphasized the strategic importance of domestic critical minerals production. In February 2026, he joined President Donald J. Trump at the White House for the announcement of a $12 billion U.S. minerals stockpile initiative, underscoring Ivanhoe Electric’s alignment with national efforts to reduce reliance on foreign supplies.

The broader copper market provides tailwinds. Analysts forecast structural deficits driven by surging demand from electric vehicles, artificial intelligence data centers, renewable energy infrastructure and grid modernization. Some projections see copper prices potentially climbing significantly if supply lags, benefiting developers like Ivanhoe Electric with high-quality, low-cost projects in stable jurisdictions.

Challenges persist. As a development-stage company, Ivanhoe Electric reports operating losses — posting a net loss of about $105.9 million for 2025 — while investing heavily in exploration and project advancement. Quarterly revenues remain modest, primarily from limited early-stage activities. Permitting timelines, construction execution and final financing terms will be critical to meeting the aggressive Santa Cruz schedule.

The company faces typical mining risks, including commodity price volatility, geopolitical factors affecting global supply chains and potential delays in regulatory approvals. However, its focus on private land in Arizona and access to advanced technology are seen as mitigating factors.

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With Q1 2026 financial results scheduled for release in early May, investors will watch for updates on cash usage, exploration results and any progress on Santa Cruz permitting or financing. Management has highlighted a disciplined approach to capital allocation, balancing aggressive exploration with de-risking the flagship project.

Founded with a vision to revive and modernize mineral exploration through technology, Ivanhoe Electric has assembled a portfolio that spans high-potential development assets and early-stage discovery opportunities across multiple continents. Its dual listing on the NYSE American and TSX broadens its investor reach.

Friday’s trading volume appeared elevated as the stock tested recent resistance levels. Technical observers noted the potential for continued momentum if copper prices hold firm and positive news flows from exploration or financing emerge.

As global industries race to secure critical metals for the energy transition and technological advancement, Ivanhoe Electric positions itself at the intersection of innovation, domestic production and strategic partnerships. Success at Santa Cruz could mark a significant step toward establishing new U.S. copper cathode capacity, while Typhoon-driven discoveries elsewhere offer upside potential.

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Analysts and industry watchers will continue monitoring execution on the 2026 construction timeline and international exploration programs. For a company blending cutting-edge geophysics with real-world development ambitions, the coming months could prove pivotal in determining whether it delivers on its promise as a key player in the critical minerals supply chain.

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Earnings call transcript: Indel B sees growth in H2 2025 amid challenges

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North East lithium firm gets Government backing for feasibility study

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Weardale Lithium is hoping to extract the key material from brines under the North Pennines

Weardale Lithium has secured planning permission to build its lithium extraction facility at the former Eastgate cement works.

Weardale Lithium has secured planning permission to build its lithium extraction facility at the former Eastgate cement works.(Image: Weardale Lithium)

A bid to extract the key material of lithium from the ground beneath the North East has received a boost from the Government.

Weardale Lithium has secured grant funding through the Government’s DRIVE35 Scale-Up: Feasibility Studies competition, supporting the next phase of development at its geothermal lithium project in County Durham. The project aims to produce battery-grade lithium carbonate – a key material for the UK’s net zero ambitions – from geothermal groundwaters under the North Pennines, and could create between 20 and 50 jobs.

The grant funding will enable Weardale Lithium to undertake a £700,000 feasibility study to map its geothermal lithium-bearing brinefield within the North Pennine Orefield. The feasibility study represents an important step towards establishing a domestic source of battery-grade lithium carbonate, reducing reliance on imported raw materials and strengthening the resilience of the UK’s EV manufacturing base.

Stewart Dickson, CEO of Weardale Lithium, said: “Securing support through the DRIVE35 Scale-Up programme is an important milestone for Weardale Lithium and for the development of a secure, domestic lithium supply in the UK. This funding enables us to undertake critical subsurface mapping and technical analysis of our geothermal brine resource in County Durham, providing the data needed to inform commercial scale-up and future investment decisions.

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Stewart Dickson, CEO of Weardale Lithium

Stewart Dickson, CEO of Weardale Lithium(Image: Weardale Lithium)

“Our project aligns directly with the UK Critical Minerals Strategy and wider UK Battery Strategy. By developing low-carbon Direct Lithium Extraction integrated with on-site conversion to battery-grade lithium carbonate, we are positioning the North East at the forefront of the UK’s emerging

battery materials supply chain while creating high-value jobs and long-term economic benefits for the region.”

The grant to Weardale Lithium – which has planning permission for an extraction facility at Eastgate – is part of a wider investment package into the UK automotive industry.

Ian Constance, CEO of Advanced Propulsion Centre UK, said: “The projects announced today demonstrate the UK’s determination to lead the shift to zero-emission mobility. By facilitating the UK Government’s DRIVE35 grants, we are turning world-class innovation into industrial capability. With our partners in DBT and Innovate UK, we are backing manufacturers, empowering SMEs, and strengthening the UK’s sovereign supply chain.

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“This multi-million pound support package is more than an investment in technology; it is an investment in the people, skills, and companies that will define the future of clean transport. Together, we are building the foundations of a competitive, resilient, and sustainable automotive industry.”

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Dolce & Gabbana co-founder steps down as chair

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Dolce & Gabbana co-founder steps down as chair

The bold and sensual fashion house has been struggling with debt amidst a slowdown in global luxury spending.

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March 2026 CPI: Inflation surged as Iran war took a toll on consumer prices

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March 2026 CPI: Inflation surged as Iran war took a toll on consumer prices

This story on the March 2026 CPI inflation report is developing and will be updated with further details.

Inflation surged in March as consumer prices jumped amid the economic disruptions caused by the Iran war’s impact on the energy market.

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The Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday said that the consumer price index (CPI) – a broad measure of how much everyday goods like gasoline, groceries and rent cost – rose 0.9% from a month ago and is 3.3% higher than last year. The annual figure jumped from last month’s 2.4% reading, while the monthly increase also rose markedly from last month’s 0.3% reading.

Expectations vs. reality

Both the 0.9% monthly increase and 3.3% annual rise were in line with the expectations of economists polled by LSEG.

So-called core prices, which exclude volatile measurements of gasoline and food to better assess price growth trends, were up 0.2% on a monthly basis and 2.6% from a year ago. Both of those figures were slightly cooler than economists’ predictions of 0.3% and 2.7%, respectively.

The core CPI figures were slightly hotter than February’s readings, which showed prices rose 0.2% on a monthly basis and 2.5% from the prior year.

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Economists have noted that inflation data from December 2025 through April 2026 will be affected due to data collection interruptions resulting from last fall’s 43-day government shutdown.

During the shutdown, the BLS wasn’t able to gather data and used a carry-forward methodology to make up for the lack of an October CPI report and missing data in November’s report. Economists say this is likely to impart a downward bias on inflation data until this spring, when fresh data will negate the discrepancy.

The cost of living breakdown

High inflation has created severe financial pressures in recent years for most U.S. households, which are forced to pay more for everyday necessities like food and rent. Price hikes are particularly difficult for lower-income Americans, because they tend to spend more of their already-stretched paychecks on necessities and have less flexibility to save.

Food prices were flat on a monthly basis in March, and were up 2.7% from a year ago. The food at home index declined 0.2% for the month and is up 1.9% over the last year, while the food away from home index is 3.8% higher than a year ago after a 0.2% increase on a monthly basis. 

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Meats, poultry and fish prices were down 0.5% for the month but remain 5.6% higher than a year ago. Beef and veal prices fell 0.6% in March and are 12.1% higher than last year. Egg prices continued to decline following an avian flu outbreak that impacted supply, with prices down 3.4% for the month and 44.7% from a year ago. The fruits and vegetables index rose 1% in March and is up 4% on an annual basis. 

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C.H. Guenther expands tortilla capabilities with acquisition

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C.H. Guenther expands tortilla capabilities with acquisition

Texas-based company acquires Les Aliments Mejicano.

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LyondellBasell: North America's Cost Advantage Is Just Getting Started

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LyondellBasell: North America's Cost Advantage Is Just Getting Started

LyondellBasell: North America's Cost Advantage Is Just Getting Started

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