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QatarEnergy declares force majeure after Iran strikes on Ras Laffan facility

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QatarEnergy declares force majeure after Iran strikes on Ras Laffan facility

Iranian strikes have cut about 17% of Doha’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) export capacity, QatarEnergy’s CEO told Reuters in an interview on Thursday.

Saad al-Kaabi said the disruption could result in an estimated $20 billion in lost annual revenue and threaten supplies to Europe and Asia.

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The CEO of the state-owned energy company, who is also Qatar’s minister of state for energy affairs, told Reuters that damage to two LNG trains and one of its two gas-to-liquids facilities will sideline roughly 12.8 million tons per year of output for three to five years.

“I never in my wildest dreams would have thought that Qatar would be — Qatar and the region — in such an attack, especially from a brotherly Muslim country in the month of Ramadan, attacking us in this way,” said al-Kaabi.

IRAN HOLDS WORLD ENERGY HOSTAGE WITH ‘NIGHTMARE’ STRAIT OF HORMUZ SEA MINES, FORMER CENTCOM OFFICIAL WARNS

Qatar’s energy minister addresses an international conference on liquefied natural gas in Doha.

Saad Sherida Al-Kaabi, Qatar’s minister of state for energy affairs and CEO of QatarEnergy, speaks during the LNG2026 conference at the Qatar National Convention Centre in Doha on Feb. 2, 2026. (Noushad Variyattiyakkal/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

The attacks came after Iran targeted Gulf energy infrastructure in retaliation for an Israeli strike on its South Pars gas field on Wednesday.

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QatarEnergy said in several posts on X that missile and rocket attacks on its facilities at Ras Laffan Industrial City caused fires and extensive damage but no casualties.

Qatar is one of the world’s largest LNG exporters, accounting for nearly 20% of global supply, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

IRAN WARNS EUROPEAN COUNTRIES WILL BE ‘LEGITIMATE TARGETS’ IF THEY JOIN CONFLICT

Industrial gas processing facilities and storage infrastructure at a major Qatari energy complex.

Qatar Energy facilities in Mesaieed Industrial City, south of Doha, on March 4, 2026, after the company announced a shutdown of LNG production following reported Iranian attacks on energy installations. (Stringer/Getty / Getty Images)

President Donald Trump said on his Truth Social platform that Israel would halt further strikes on Iran’s South Pars gas field unless Tehran escalates, warning that the United States could respond with overwhelming force if Qatar’s LNG facilities are targeted again.

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“The United States of America, with or without the help or consent of Israel, will massively blow up the entirety of the South Pars Gas Field at an amount of strength and power that Iran has never seen or witnessed before,” Trump wrote. “I do not want to authorize this level of violence and destruction because of the long term implications that it will have on the future of Iran, but if Qatar’s LNG is again attacked, I will not hesitate to do so.”

Al-Kaabi told Reuters QatarEnergy declared force majeure on its entire LNG output following the attacks on Ras Laffan, allowing it to suspend deliveries due to the damage.

“For production to restart, first we need hostilities to cease,” he said.

Qatari energy executive attends a regional petroleum organization meeting in Kuwait City.

Saad Sherida Al-Kaabi, president and CEO of Qatar Petroleum and chairman of Qatar Gas, attends the 109th meeting of the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries in Kuwait City on Dec. 12, 2022. (Yasser Al-Zayyat/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

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He also explained that the state-owned company will have to declare force majeure on long-term contracts for up to five years covering supplies to Italy, Belgium, South Korea and China due to damage to the two LNG trains.

“If Israel attacked Iran, it’s between Iran and Israel. It has nothing to do with us and the region,” al-Kaabi told Reuters. “And so now, in addition to that, I’m saying that everybody in the world, whether it’s Israel, whether it’s the U.S., whether it’s any other country, everybody should stay away from oil and gas facilities.”

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Aviva: Strong Results And Capital Returns Support Continued Upside (OTCMKTS:AIVAF)

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Aviva: Strong Results And Capital Returns Support Continued Upside (OTCMKTS:AIVAF)

This article was written by

Buy-side hedge professionals conducting fundamental, income oriented, long term analysis across sectors globally in developed markets. Please shoot us a message or leave a comment to discuss ideas.DISCLOSURE: All of our articles are a matter of opinion, informed as they might be, and must be treated as such. We take no responsibility for your investments but wish you best of luck.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Nexstar Media's Aim For Scale Drives Instant Value, But Shares No Longer Cheap

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Nexstar Media's Aim For Scale Drives Instant Value, But Shares No Longer Cheap

Nexstar Media's Aim For Scale Drives Instant Value, But Shares No Longer Cheap

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Surge in UK borrowing limits scope for energy bill support as fiscal pressures mount

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Surge in UK borrowing limits scope for energy bill support as fiscal pressures mount

A sharp rise in UK government borrowing has intensified concerns that ministers will have limited capacity to shield households from a looming surge in energy bills, as geopolitical tensions push inflation risks higher.

Official figures show public sector net borrowing reached £14.3 billion in February, the second-highest level for the month since records began and significantly above economists’ expectations of £8.8 billion. The figure was also £2.2 billion higher than the same period last year, underlining mounting fiscal pressure even before the escalation of conflict in the Middle East.

The data, released by the Office for National Statistics, reflects a widening gap between government spending and tax income. While receipts increased, they were outweighed by higher expenditure and the timing of debt interest payments, highlighting the growing burden of servicing the UK’s national debt.

The deterioration in the public finances comes at a critical moment. Since the outbreak of the US-Israel conflict with Iran, global energy markets have been thrown into volatility, pushing up oil and gas prices and raising fears of a renewed inflationary shock.

Economists warn that this combination of higher borrowing and rising debt costs significantly constrains the government’s ability to repeat the kind of large-scale energy support packages deployed during the 2022 cost-of-living crisis.

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Ruth Gregory, deputy chief UK economist at Capital Economics, said there was little room for manoeuvre. “We doubt there is scope for a large-scale fiscal support package like that seen in 2022, even in more extreme scenarios,” she said, adding that any assistance offered would likely be more limited due to the UK’s “worse fiscal position”.

That view was echoed by Charlie Bean, former deputy governor of the Bank of England, who said the government no longer has the same financial flexibility it enjoyed during previous energy shocks.

Financial markets have already begun to react. Government borrowing costs have risen sharply in recent weeks as investors factor in the prospect of higher inflation driven by surging energy prices. This has increased the cost of servicing the UK’s debt pile, with around one in every ten pounds of public spending now going towards interest payments.

Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, said the latest borrowing figures would make uncomfortable reading for the Treasury. “With the chancellor under pressure to act swiftly to protect households from the impact of the latest energy price shock, today’s numbers won’t make great reading,” she said.

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The scale of the challenge is compounded by forecasts that household energy bills could rise by more than £300 from July, according to consultancy Cornwall Insight, although the final figure remains subject to market movements.

While borrowing over the broader financial year remains lower than previously forecast, the February spike highlights the volatility in the UK’s fiscal position. Analysts noted that part of the increase reflects technical factors, including the timing of debt interest payments, but the underlying trend remains concerning.

Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter, said hopes that the government was regaining control of the public finances had been short-lived. “There were glimmers of hope that borrowing was being reined in after January’s record surplus, but the latest data has put a swift end to that picture,” she said.

The UK’s debt burden remains elevated at 93.1 per cent of GDP, close to levels last seen in the early 1960s, limiting the government’s ability to deploy further fiscal stimulus without risking market confidence.

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Chief Secretary to the Treasury James Murray insisted the government had the “right economic plan” and was prepared for a more volatile global environment. However, political pressure is mounting, with critics arguing that rising borrowing and debt costs are narrowing the policy options available.

For households and businesses already grappling with high living costs, the message is increasingly clear: any government intervention to offset rising energy bills is likely to be more targeted, more modest, and far less generous than in previous crises.


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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Australian Shares Close Lower as ASX 200 Hits Four-Month Low Amid Geopolitical Tensions and Rate Uncertainty

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S&P/ASX200

SYDNEY — The Australian stock market extended its losing streak Friday, with the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index closing at 8,428.40, down 69.40 points or 0.82%, marking a fresh four-month low and its third consecutive weekly decline.

S&P/ASX200
S&P/ASX200

The close came after a volatile week dominated by escalating Middle East conflict, surging oil prices, tumbling commodity values and renewed fears of higher interest rates from major central banks. Since early March, when the index peaked near 9,200, the ASX 200 has shed more than 8%, wiping out year-to-date gains and erasing hundreds of billions in market value.

Trading opened lower and remained under pressure throughout the session, with the index dipping to an intraday low of 8,427.20 before a modest late-session stabilization. Volume was solid as investors repositioned amid heightened uncertainty.

The sell-off reflected broader global risk aversion triggered by Iran’s strikes on key energy infrastructure in Qatar and retaliatory actions involving Israel. Brent crude oil prices surged past US$110 a barrel earlier in the week before paring some gains, but the spike fueled inflation concerns and dimmed expectations for near-term rate cuts.

In Australia, the heavyweight materials sector — dominated by mining giants — bore the brunt of the pain, sliding around 1.5% on Friday. Iron ore, copper and aluminum prices weakened sharply, dragging BHP Group down 1.8% and Rio Tinto 2.9%. Gold miners suffered even steeper losses after bullion prices extended declines amid a stronger U.S. dollar and higher-for-longer rate outlook, with the gold sub-sector down nearly 10% for the week in some sessions.

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Banking stocks, another key driver of the index, fell 1.1%. The big four lenders — Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, NAB and ANZ — all finished in the red as bond yields rose on expectations that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) may need to hike rates further to combat imported inflation from energy costs.

Countering the gloom, energy stocks provided the session’s bright spot, rising 0.7% to multi-week highs. Shares of Viva Energy soared on exposure to refined product margins amid disrupted supply chains, while Woodside Energy and Santos benefited from the crude rally. Coal producers like Yancoal and New Hope also rallied as market participants eyed potential substitution demand for gas.

The broader market context included fresh domestic data showing unemployment edging up to 4.3% while jobs growth surprised to the upside. However, money markets fully priced in two additional RBA rate hikes this year, pushing the terminal rate outlook to around 4.6% — the highest in over a decade. Overseas, the U.S. Federal Reserve held rates steady but projected only one cut for the year while lifting its inflation forecast, reinforcing a hawkish global tone.

Analysts noted that the ASX 200’s retreat has brought it dangerously close to bear market territory in certain sub-sectors, particularly resources. The index’s 2.2% weekly drop marked the third straight loss, with cumulative declines since the Iran-related escalation wiping out an estimated A$280 billion in market capitalization across the bourse.

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Market strategists pointed to the interplay of geopolitical risks and monetary policy as the primary drivers. “The combination of oil spiking on supply disruptions and central banks signaling caution on easing has created a perfect storm for risk assets,” one Sydney-based fund manager said. “Miners and growth stocks are feeling the heat, while defensive and energy plays are finding some refuge.”

Individual stock highlights included sharp falls in gold names like Northern Star Resources and Newmont, alongside junior miners such as Ora Banda Mining, which plunged more than 7%. On the upside, energy-related counters led gainers, with some coal stocks posting gains of 5-7%.

Looking ahead, investors will monitor developments in the Middle East, where diplomatic efforts — including U.S. calls for de-escalation and international support for securing key shipping lanes like the Strait of Hormuz — could influence oil trajectories. Domestically, upcoming RBA commentary and inflation data will be scrutinized for clues on policy direction.

Despite the recent turmoil, longer-term observers remain cautiously optimistic about Australia’s resource-heavy economy. The nation’s exposure to commodities positions it to benefit if global demand rebounds, though near-term volatility appears set to persist.

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The ASX 200’s year-to-date performance now sits down around 3.3%, contrasting with the strong finish to 2025 when the index notched positive returns for the third consecutive year. Technical analysts note the breach of key support levels, with the next major floor potentially near 8,200-8,300.

As markets digest Friday’s close, attention shifts to next week’s corporate earnings tail-end and any geopolitical breakthroughs. For now, the Australian share market remains in correction mode, reflecting the broader challenge of navigating war-induced uncertainty alongside stubborn inflation pressures.

The session underscored the interconnectedness of global events and local equities, with energy security and central bank caution dominating the narrative. While energy stocks offered pockets of resilience, the overall tone was defensive as investors braced for prolonged volatility.

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Quanex Building Products: Expect Outperformance To Keep Building

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Quanex Building Products: Expect Outperformance To Keep Building

Quanex Building Products: Expect Outperformance To Keep Building

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We need a plan to revive and renew struggling universities in Wales

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For too long Welsh higher education has behaved as though the market around it has not fundamentally changed,

The Owain Glyndwr statue in Corwen

The Owain Glyndwr statue in Corwen .(Image: Ian Cooper )

I was the first in my family to go to university, but I was not the first to understand what education could mean.

My great-grandfather, a quarryman in Gwynedd, was among those who gave what little they could to help establish the University College of North Wales in Bangor in the nineteenth century. Those contributions mattered because they came from people who had very little but believed higher education was worth building for future generations.

That is why the crisis now facing Welsh universities is important, as this is not simply a story about deficits, redundancies and falling student numbers. It is about whether Wales is prepared to let one of its most important national assets drift into decline.

For too long, Welsh higher education has behaved as though the market around it has not fundamentally changed, but students are now more mobile, more selective and more exposed to a competitive UK-wide system than ever before. Welsh universities are not mainly competing with each other, they are competing with powerful English institutions, major city brands and a student market that is making harder judgments about value, employability and experience.

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Yet Wales has never developed a convincing answer to that challenge, and “Study in Wales” should have become a serious national proposition, built around quality, affordability, community and opportunity. Instead, it has too often felt like a slogan rather than a strategy, and too many institutions have looked and sounded alike, chasing similar students with similar offers.

The deeper problem is not simply that some Welsh students leave Wales, it is that the system has become increasingly dependent on students from elsewhere while the number of Welsh-domiciled students staying in Wales has fallen. That leaves universities more exposed to changes in markets they cannot control.

That vulnerability is clearest in the finances and across the sector – deficits have widened, staff cuts have deepened, and fragility has become impossible to ignore. This is not the problem of a single badly managed institution, and while Welsh universities operate in a difficult UK environment, many also lack the scale and resilience of larger competitors elsewhere.

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International students are not the problem as they bring enormous academic, cultural and economic value. The problem is overdependence, and when international recruitment becomes the key support holding up an institution, rather than one part of a balanced model, the risks become obvious.

But this is not just about money, it is also about people. The loss of hundreds of posts across the Welsh university sector is not merely a spreadsheet adjustment. It is the loss of expertise, loyalty and institutional memory. More troubling still is how many staff seem to have been treated during restructuring, and too often, one hears the same themes: poor communication, shallow consultation and a lack of dignity. Universities are meant to embody learning, public service and opportunity, and if they begin treating their own people as disposable, they corrode the values they claim to uphold.

That brings us to governance as good governance is not about committees and paperwork. It is about asking difficult questions early enough to matter. Is student demand really there? Is the subject mix sustainable? Is the capital programme affordable? Is the institution genuinely clear about its mission? Too often in Wales, those questions do not appear to have been asked hard enough.

But the Welsh Government must also confront its own role as universities have too often been treated in Cardiff Bay as a financial pressure to be contained rather than as part of Wales’s productive infrastructure. In policy terms, higher education has been repeatedly downplayed, expected to absorb financial pressures while ministers avoid confronting the scale of the challenge.

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That is a serious mistake because universities matter well beyond their campuses. They train nurses, teachers, engineers, entrepreneurs, and public servants on whom Wales relies. They support local jobs, sustain city and town centre economies, attract investment, and help keep talented young people in the country. They are not just education providers but are anchor institutions in the true sense, and if universities weaken, the damage impacts local economies, public services, and national confidence.

The same is true of research, and for too long, Wales has failed to secure anything like its fair share of UK research funding. That matters because research is not an optional extra, it is central to long-term economic growth, innovation and national capacity. If Wales continues to receive far too small a share of UK research and development funding while other parts of the country pull further ahead, we should not be surprised when the gap widens in productivity, commercialisation and high-value employment.

This is not just a university problem but a national economic problem, and every extra pound of research funding helps build laboratories, support skilled jobs, develop new technologies, attract private investment and create spin-out businesses. When Wales loses out, the whole country loses out, and a nation that does not fight for its fair share of research funding is quietly accepting a smaller future.

The good news is that Wales still has outstanding staff, talented students and institutions of real importance, but strengths alone are not enough. Without honesty, reform and a much clearer sense of national purpose, the sector will simply continue to lurch from one crisis to the next.

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And in truth, this is not a new aspiration.

More than six centuries ago, when Owain Glyndwr outlined his vision for an independent Wales in the Pennal Letter of 1406, establishing two universities, one in the north and one in the south, was among his chief priorities. He understood then what we must remember now namely that higher education is not secondary to Wales but is central to its future.

The task, then, is not merely to save universities, but to renew and revitalise the higher education system that remains vital to our country’s future. That is the challenge, and that is the opportunity.

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Ex-CEO Bronwyn Barnes accuses Ivanhoe Atlantic of illegal laptop seize

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Ex-CEO Bronwyn Barnes accuses Ivanhoe Atlantic of illegal laptop seize

Perth-based executive Bronwyn Barnes has accused Ivanhoe Atlantic of seizing a laptop containing her records, as proceedings against her former employer continue in court.

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Allspring Absolute Return Fund Q4 2025 Commentary (WARAX)

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Allspring Absolute Return Fund Q4 2025 Commentary (WARAX)

Red ladder and stack coin on wooden table with white wall background copy space.

Pla2na/iStock via Getty Images

GENERAL FUND INFORMATION

Ticker: WABIX

Portfolio managers:

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Petros Bocray, CFA®, FRM;

Matthias Scheiber, CFA®, Ph.D.;

Rushabh Amin;

and David Kowalske, Jr.

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Subadvisor: Allspring Global Investments, LLC

Category: Tactical allocation

FUND STRATEGY

  • Invests in affiliated mutual
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H.C. Wainwright reiterates Intellicheck stock rating on revenue beat

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H.C. Wainwright reiterates Intellicheck stock rating on revenue beat

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Stephens raises FedEx stock price target to $435 on strong yields

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Stephens raises FedEx stock price target to $435 on strong yields

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