Business
Second group of Australian women linked to Islamic State to return home
Business
Earnings call transcript: Infratil’s H2 2026 growth driven by AI demand

Earnings call transcript: Infratil’s H2 2026 growth driven by AI demand
Business
Bank stocks gain on softer bond yields
The Bank Nifty advanced 2.3%, while the Nifty PSU Bank index gained 2.9%, outperforming the benchmark Nifty, which rose 1.3% to 24,031.70. Union Bank of India surged 5.3%, while Canara Bank, PNB, Bank of Baroda and AU Small Finance Bank gained between 2.7% and 4.6%. “It was a relief rally because of the 10-year government bond yield easing marginally. PSU banks have been under pressure from elevated yields,” said Vishal Narnolia, assistant VP – research, ICICI Securities.
Declining bond yields boost PSU banks’ mark-to-market gains on their large government securities portfolios and boost treasury income, making them more sensitive to rate moves than private lenders.
The 10-year government bond yield declined 7 bps to 7.03%, while the rupee strengthened to 95.23 per dollar from 96.69 on Friday, following signs of easing geopolitical tensions after reports of a potential US-Iran agreement. “The decline in yield was driven by softer crude oil prices and an appreciation in the Indian rupee following an easing of geopolitical uncertainty over the weekend,” said Narnolia.
Analysts said the recent underperformance in banking stocks was largely because of macro-economic concerns.
“An improving macro environment could aid loan growth and help reduce delinquencies as well,” said Shrikant Chouhan, head of equity research, Kotak Securities. The Bank Nifty remains down 7.4% so far in 2026, as against the 8.1% losses in the Nifty.
Stock picks
Chouhan said he prefers private banks over PSU lenders due to comfortable valuations and a greater scope for return on assets improvement. “Our preferred private sector picks are HDFC Bank, Axis Bank, and ICICI Bank, while we like SBI and Union Bank in PSUs,” he said.
Business
Dollar wobbles as markets cling to hopes for Middle East peace deal

Dollar wobbles as markets cling to hopes for Middle East peace deal
Business
South Korea’s KOSPI hits record high on chipmaker rally

South Korea’s KOSPI hits record high on chipmaker rally
Business
BHP looks to Yindjibarndi-backed project for green power
The Big Australian has begun talks with Yindjibarndi Energy on a deal to supply green power to the miner’s extensive Pilbara iron ore operations.
Business
FinVolution Group 2026 Q1 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (NYSE:FINV) 2026-05-25
Seeking Alpha’s transcripts team is responsible for the development of all of our transcript-related projects. We currently publish thousands of quarterly earnings calls per quarter on our site and are continuing to grow and expand our coverage. The purpose of this profile is to allow us to share with our readers new transcript-related developments. Thanks, SA Transcripts Team
Business
The crop that thrives in the toughest conditions
“Custard apple sits in a strange gap. Demand is rising, but the farming hasn’t gone high-tech as the crop is naturally hardy. It grows in poor soil, needs very little water, and survives on rainfall. Farmers don’t need expensive irrigation, sensors, or controlled environments so tech adoption stays low,” he says.
Business
Hindalco to deliver a robust show, Novelis will turn around in FY27: Satish Pai
How much of Hindalco’s India business performance is driven by structural factors and how much is cyclical?
The upstream business for any commodity is driven by LME (London Metal Exchange)… Our profitability rose proportionately with the gains in LME, but our aluminium downstream business is not linked to LME and still had a great quarter. For copper, it was because of sulphuric acid and the downstream business. So, a part of it is related to pricing, but for manufacturing companies, a large part of it is also how well you run your operations and take care of your customers. Therefore, both factors have to be given credit.
How sustainable are these numbers?
The first quarter of FY27 will be better than the fourth quarter of FY26. We feel that prices will be in the range of $3,400-$3,500 per tonne at least up to the end of 2026. About 2.5-3.0 million tonnes of aluminium have gone off the market because of the West Asia crisis, and it will take six months to get these back online.
Between the higher prices of aluminium and higher input costs, what will profitability look like?
Commodity prices are much higher compared with our cost of production, so it is safe to say fiscal 2027 is going to be much stronger. The first three quarters of this year are going to be very strong.
Will the company’s performance in India overshadow that at Novelis?
Fiscal 2027 will be the turnaround year for Novelis-one, because of Oswego, which will restart next week, and the other reason is the commissioning of the hot mill in Bay Minette. Once these two are done, deleveraging will start from FY28. Ebitda will also start to stabilise at around $500 per tonne on a consistent basis. Next year, even if LME corrects, Novelis will be back. This year is a positive inflection point for Novelis.
Will the IPO for Novelis be planned by FY28?
No. The only focus for Novelis is the restart of Oswego and the full commissioning of Bay Minette.
Do you think the fires at Oswego have impacted investor sentiment for Novelis?
We have done some analysis to make sure this does not happen again. But what the fires have shown the market and the customers is that companies like Novelis have an advantage because they have scale. We have managed to keep supplying Ford Motor because of our worldwide presence and scale.
Business
Government vows to act as under-16s social media ban consultation ends
“Later today, I, and other families who have lost children to social media, will tell the prime minister directly: social media is a product, and like any other faulty product causing the deaths of children, it should be restricted until the companies responsible have fixed it and proven it is safe,” Ellen said.
Business
Next boss warns of 'dramatic' fall in entry-level jobs
Lord Wolfson tells the BBC Next now typically receives double the number of applicants for one role than it did two years ago.
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