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UK Retirees Are Rethinking Europe And Gibraltar Is Gaining Ground

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UK Retirees Are Rethinking Europe And Gibraltar Is Gaining Ground

For years, many British retirees approached relocation in broadly the same way.

They looked for warmth, lower day-to-day living costs, attractive scenery and a decent community of fellow Britons already in place. The logic made sense. Retirement was seen as a reward. The move itself was meant to simplify life, not require a strategic overhaul.

Today, that mindset is changing.

A growing number of UK retirees are no longer asking only where they would enjoy living. They are asking where they can retire with greater control over their pension income, tax position, estate planning and long-term peace of mind. That is a more serious question and it leads to more serious destinations.

Gibraltar is now one of them.

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The Problem: Retirement Magnifies Every Weakness in a Financial Structure

Many people do not notice inefficiency while they are still in their main earning years.

Higher tax can be absorbed. Administrative burdens can be tolerated. A poorly arranged investment structure can limp on for years without forcing immediate change. Retirement is different. Once active income reduces, inefficiency becomes much more visible. In reality, this is often the stage where many UK retirees begin to revisit decisions they assumed were already settled.

Three things usually happen.

First, income becomes less flexible. Second, taxation feels heavier because each deduction bites more. Third, wealth preservation matters more because the focus begins to shift from accumulation towards longevity and transfer.

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This is why retirement planning is not just about where you live. It is about how the jurisdiction you choose affects the income you draw, the assets you hold and the legacy you intend to pass on.

Why the Usual Retirement Destinations Are Being Reassessed

Spain, Portugal, Italy and Greece remain attractive, and they will continue to appeal to many UK retirees. However, more people are now looking beyond surface appeal.

The issue is not whether those countries are enjoyable places to live. Many clearly are. The issue is whether their systems give British retirees the combination of simplicity, predictability and long-term financial efficiency they are increasingly looking for.

That is where some UK retirees begin to hesitate. Tax incentives can change. Administrative systems can feel layered. Language and legal differences can create friction. Relocation planning can become more complicated than expected.

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A destination may still be wonderful. It may simply not be the cleanest base from which to run retirement.

The Solution: Gibraltar Offers a More Structured Retirement Base

Gibraltar’s appeal lies in the fact that it solves several problems at once.

It gives UK retirees British legal familiarity, English-speaking ease, a secure environment and Mediterranean climate. That alone makes the move emotionally easier to contemplate. Yet the real strength is deeper than lifestyle.

Gibraltar offers a framework that can support clearer retirement planning. It is easier for many British nationals to understand. It can be easier to coordinate with existing UK legal and financial thinking. It offers a more contained environment in which fewer things feel culturally or administratively alien.

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For UK retirees who want a second half of life that feels lighter, more ordered and more intentional, that is a serious advantage.

How Gibraltar Improves the Retirement Planning Equation

A strong retirement jurisdiction should support four priorities:

  • efficient income planning.
  • protection of capital.
  • ease of administration.
  • effective estate transfer.

Taxes in Gibraltar

 performs well across all four.

UK vs Gibraltar Tax: What It Means for UK Expats

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Category UK Tax Position Gibraltar Tax Position Impact for Expats
Income Tax 20%–45% progressive 0%–27% effective More efficient income planning
Wealth Tax None None No erosion of capital
Inheritance Tax Up to 40% None Full wealth transfer
Capital Gains Tax 10%–28% None Tax-free growth and disposal
VAT 20% None Lower cost environment
Corporate Tax 19%–25% 15% More efficient company structures
Dividend Tax 0%–39.35% 0%–5% Reduced income leakage

Income Planning

UK retirees need clarity around how pension income, dividend income and other investment income will be taxed. Gibraltar’s framework can offer a cleaner income-planning environment than the UK, particularly for those with more than one type of income stream.

Protection of Capital

The absence of capital gains tax matters greatly over a long retirement. Portfolio changes, asset disposals and investment realignments can all be handled in a more efficient environment.

Estate Planning

The absence of inheritance tax and estate duty makes Gibraltar especially compelling for UK retirees who are thinking about family legacy and preserving wealth across generations.

Administrative Ease

Retirement should not become an endless paperwork project. Gibraltar’s British orientation and familiar legal structure reduce the burden many UK retirees fear when considering a cross-border move.

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The Pension Angle Is One of Gibraltar’s Strongest Advantages

This is where Gibraltar separates itself from most retirement destinations.

For many British retirees, the pension is the central financial asset. That makes UK pension transfer rules and pension taxation critically important. Gibraltar has a rare position here. Gibraltar and Malta are the only two European jurisdictions where, in the right circumstances, a UK pension transfer may avoid the 25% Overseas Transfer Charge. Gibraltar QROPS can also create a structure where pension income is taxed at around 2.5%.

That does not mean every pension should be moved. Nor does it mean every UK retiree is suited to a UK pension transfer. Suitability, timing, scheme rules, UK tax consequences and future residence all need to be examined carefully.

However, for the right UK retiree profile, Gibraltar’s pension environment is not a minor detail. It can be one of the strongest reasons to place Gibraltar high on the shortlist.

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Why 2026 Has Made Gibraltar More Relevant to UK Retirees

Timing matters in retirement planning and Gibraltar’s timing is unusually interesting.

Its relationship with Europe is becoming more functional in a post-Brexit context. That matters because later life often involves flexibility. UK retirees value the ability to move easily, see family, travel well and stay connected to multiple places without unnecessary friction.

Gibraltar’s position as a British jurisdiction with strengthening practical access to Europe makes it more relevant now than it was in the immediate Brexit aftermath. For UK retirees who want British familiarity without feeling cut off from the continent, that is a major advantage.

How a UK Retiree Should Approach the Move

A retirement move should never begin with property viewings.

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It should begin with structure.

That means asking:

  • when should UK residence be broken or reshaped?
  • how will pension income be treated?
  • what assets should be reviewed before the move?
  • how will estate planning work after the move?
  • what evidence of accommodation and self-sufficiency will be needed?
  • how will day counts and physical presence be managed?

This is why it makes sense for a UK retiree to move from general interest into the practical detail of moving to Gibraltar. Retirement relocations succeed when the relocation planning comes first and the lifestyle follows it, not the other way round.

The Advisory Reality: Gibraltar Is Strong, but It Is Not Automatic

It is important to be honest about this.

Gibraltar is not a universal answer. It will not be right for every UK retiree. Some people will still prefer the scale of Spain, the spread of Portugal or the culture of Italy. Others may not have the net worth profile or planning needs that make Gibraltar especially compelling.

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But for UK retirees who value clarity, legal familiarity, pension efficiency, estate planning strength and a more contained lifestyle environment, Gibraltar deserves much more serious attention than it often receives.

What Most UK Retirees Get Wrong – And Why Timing Now Matters

They start with the dream and leave the structure until later.

That is understandable, but expensive.

The better approach is to start with the framework: pension treatment, tax residence, estate planning, accommodation evidence, timing and execution. Once those pieces are in place, the emotional side of the move becomes much easier to enjoy.

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For many UK retirees, that is where Gibraltar stands out. It allows the lifestyle decision and the relocation planning decision to support one another instead of pulling in opposite directions.

There is, however, one additional consideration that is becoming increasingly important.

Gibraltar’s residency framework is currently in transition. Several pathways have been paused since October 2025 and are expected to reopen in alignment with the UK–EU treaty. The expectation is not that access becomes easier but that it becomes more structured and more selective.

For UK retirees who are already considering Gibraltar, this introduces a different kind of planning question.

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Not just whether the jurisdiction is suitable, but whether the timing of the move may influence the outcome.

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Huge investment plans revealed by Welsh steelmaker

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Business Live

The £100m plans include a new hydrogen powered furnace at 7 Steel in Cardiff

7 Steel’s Cardiff plant.(Image: Robert Mills Photography Ltd)

Owners of Cardiff-based steel maker 7 Steel have confirmed £100m investment plans.

The investment, up to 2030, includes £30m for a new hydrogen-ready furnace, which would be the first large scale industrial application of hydrogen in steel manufacturing in the UK.

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Czech investment company Sev.en Global Investments acquired the business from Spanish firm Celsa last year. The business makes steel from scrap steel through its electric arc furnace mill operation.

The £100m investment also covers plant upgrades, technology improvements and wider operational development.

The new furnace will be operational next year but will not initially be using hydrogen.

The Cardiff plant, which also serves as the firm’s UK headquarters, recycles domestic scrap into low-carbon steel for construction, infrastructure, transport and energy projects. Its products, such as rebar and mesh, have gone into some of the UK’s most recognisable buildings and infrastructure, including The Shard, Wembley Stadium, the Heathrow Terminal 5 extension, Hinkley Point C nuclear power station and rail’s HS2.

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The investment arrives at an important moment for British steel. The UK Government, which is nationalising the last remaining heavy steelmaking plant in Scunthorpe, has set out plans to build 1.5 million new homes and upgrade infrastructure, both of which will require significant volumes of steel. Sev.en GI says the new policy direction reinforces its case for long-term investment in the sector.

7 Steel.(Image: ©Robert Mills Photography Ltd)

Alan Svoboda, chief executive of Sev.en Global Investments, said: “As the long-term owners of 7 Steel UK, we recognise the strategic importance of a robust independent British steel sector.”

“Steel is a strategic industrial opportunity which requires continuity and a willingness to invest through the cycle. That is exactly how we invest.”

Beyond capital investment, Sev.en GI has said it is committed to the workforce. 7 Steel UK pays 1.5 times the UK median salary and continues to train the next generation of engineers, helping to keep skilled industrial jobs in Cardiff and across the UK.

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7 Steel employs over 1,600 people across the UK, with 1,050 based in Wales, of which 800 are in Cardiff. It has 14 sites including four fabricator sites in Neath, Newport, Crumlin, and Whiteheads in Newport, which employ 250. The Cardiff site produces more than one million tonnes of steel a year, making it the UK’s third biggest steel producer.

The operation in the Tremorfa area of Cardiff has been owned and operated by some of the biggest names in British industry such as Guest Keen & Nettlefolds (GKN) before becoming British Steel in 1970.

The blast furnace side of the operations closed in 1978 with the remaining works going through a variety of owners. Previous owners Celsa acquired it in 2003.

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Why a small Northern piece of HS2 could unlock more transport improvements

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Key Manchester Airport link could boost links across the North West and Yorkshire

A small piece of HS2 in Greater Manchester is being resurrected – and it could unlock a wave of future transport improvements across the north.

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When former Tory Prime Minister Rishi Sunak confirmed that the northern leg of HS2 was all but dead in late 2023, it sparked huge backlash and frustration.

The move, announced during the Conservative Party conference being held in Manchester at the time, killed hopes of a faster train link from Greater Manchester to London.

Mr Sunak told Tory conference in October 2023: “I say to those who backed the project in the first place, the facts have changed and the right thing to do when the facts change is to have the courage to change direction.

“I am ending this long-running saga. I am cancelling the rest of the HS2 project and in its place, we will reinvest every single penny – £36 billion – in hundreds of new transport projects in the North and the Midlands.”

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But now one small section of HS2 in the north – which includes a link between Manchester Airport and Manchester Piccadilly station – is being brought back.

It forms part of the High Speed Rail (Crewe – Manchester) Bill, relating to phase 2b of HS2, which is being ‘repurposed’ with a focus on improving rail connections across the north.

The move is expected to feature in the King’s speech on Wednesday, which sets out the new laws being planned by the government.

Creating the new link in Greater Manchester is a crucial part of wider transport plans across the north, insiders say, and would pave the way for a new Manchester to Liverpool line in phase two of the £45 billion Northern Powerhouse Rail programme.

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One source described a new Manchester Airport to Piccadilly connection as the ‘key part’ of the future Manchester to Liverpool connection – a piece of the puzzle which is ‘non-negotiable’ and needs to happen to unlock the rest of the project.

So the High Speed Rail (Crewe – Manchester) Bill featuring in the King’s speech on Wednesday could signal a major step forward for a raft of planned railway improvements in northern England.

Henri Murison, chief executive of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: “We’re expecting there may be good news on Wednesday, this is critical because it will enable not just to be connected to Manchester city centre as part of the wider Manchester-Liverpool scheme, but also will in the end connect Yorkshire better to the airport.”

It’s understood that the government decided to repurpose the current High Speed Rail (Crewe – Manchester) Bill rather than creating a new one to save the time and money that has already been put into the plan.

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Transport secretary Heidi Alexander outlined the plan in Parliament in February.

She told MPs that the High Speed Rail (Crewe – Manchester) Bill ‘has been refined’ with a new purpose, and that the Bill itself is the ‘mechanism by which planning consent for the eastern part of the new route between Liverpool and Manchester can be granted.’

She added: “The Bill will have the necessary powers to deliver the section of Northern Powerhouse Rail into Manchester via Manchester airport, including new stations at Manchester Piccadilly and Manchester airport itself.

“We are now seeking to progress the Bill to make the best use of the significant progress it has already made.”

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A new Manchester-Liverpool railway line has long been touted as essential to boosting connectivity across the north, as well as keeping the economy in good health.

READ MORE: Why business must back Piccadilly underground plans: Manchester leaders push ‘transformational’ scheme as they prepare for MIPIMREAD MORE: Biggest rail boost in a generation: £45bn Northern Powerhouse Rail scheme confirmed with plans for new Manchester-Birmingham line

The plan for a Manchester-Liverpool route could cut journey times between the north west’s two biggest cities to as little as 35 minutes, alongside increasing the number and frequency of trains – something Andy Burnham previously said could turn Piccadilly Station into the ‘King’s Cross of the North’.

Part of the wider project includes plans for an underground Piccadilly station. As Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham said at the start of this year: “Finally, we have a government with an ambitious vision for the North, firm commitment to Northern Powerhouse Rail and an openness to an underground station in Manchester city centre.

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“Today marks a significant step forward for Greater Manchester. We’ll now work at pace to prove the case for an underground station and work up detailed designs for the route between Liverpool and Manchester.”

The transport secretary said of the High Speed Rail (Crewe – Manchester) Bill in February that it is ‘important to crack on and get it done’ given the wider ambitions for the north of England.

This small section of HS2 in Greater Manchester set to be resurrected in the King’s speech on Wednesday could be the key to unlock it all.

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Australia Inflation Eases Slightly to 4.3% in May 2026 as Fuel Pressures Begin to Moderate

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SYDNEY — Australia’s annual inflation rate cooled to 4.3% in the 12 months to May 2026, down from 4.6% in March, offering the first clear sign that the recent surge driven by global energy shocks may be peaking. The Australian Bureau of Statistics released the May Consumer Price Index data on Wednesday, showing headline CPI rising 0.8% in the month, with easing fuel prices providing some relief even as underlying pressures in housing and services remain sticky.

The trimmed mean measure of underlying inflation held at 3.4%, still well above the Reserve Bank of Australia’s 2-3% target band. While the modest decline in headline inflation was welcomed by markets and households, economists caution that progress toward the target will likely be gradual, with the central bank expected to hold rates steady at 4.35% for the foreseeable future.

The data comes as the RBA navigates a complex environment of lingering global uncertainty from the U.S.-Iran conflict, domestic capacity constraints, and a resilient labour market. Governor Michelle Bullock has repeatedly stressed that inflation is “likely to stay above target for some time,” a message reinforced in the central bank’s latest Statement on Monetary Policy.

Key Drivers in May CPI

Fuel prices, the main culprit in the earlier spike, began to moderate in May as global oil markets stabilised somewhat following diplomatic efforts around the Strait of Hormuz. Petrol contributed a smaller 6.8% year-on-year increase compared with 8.9% in March. However, housing costs remained elevated at 6.7%, driven by rents and construction materials, while food inflation ticked up slightly to 3.4%. Services inflation eased marginally to 3.5%.

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The quarterly CPI rose 1.3% in the three months to May, slightly softer than expected but still highlighting persistent price pressures in non-tradable sectors of the economy.

RBA Policy Stance

Markets now assign only a low probability of further rate hikes in 2026, pricing in the first cut possibly in early 2027. The RBA has signalled it will remain data-dependent, watching closely for signs that second-round effects from higher energy and wage costs are embedding. Economists at major banks forecast headline inflation to trend toward 3.8% by year-end before slowly returning to the target band by late 2027.

Cost-of-Living Impact on Households

For Australian families, the May figures bring modest relief after months of painful increases at the pump and in grocery aisles. However, real wages continue to lag inflation in many sectors, and higher interest rates are squeezing mortgage holders. Consumer confidence remains subdued, with retail spending growth slowing and many households tightening budgets.

The federal government’s cost-of-living relief measures, including energy rebates and targeted welfare adjustments in the 2026-27 Budget, are providing some buffer, but Treasurer Jim Chalmers has acknowledged that inflation remains a “live challenge” for ordinary Australians.

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Sector and Market Reactions

The ASX 200 reacted positively to the softer-than-feared inflation print, with rate-sensitive sectors such as real estate and consumer discretionary posting gains. The Australian dollar eased slightly against the greenback as traders adjusted expectations for the RBA’s near-term path. Bond yields dipped modestly, reflecting lower rate-hike probabilities.

Business groups welcomed the cooling trend but warned that prolonged high inflation and interest rates could weigh on investment and hiring. Small business owners, in particular, report difficulty passing on costs without losing customers.

Outlook for Coming Months

Economists will watch the June and July CPI releases closely for confirmation that the disinflation trend is taking hold. Key risks include renewed oil price volatility from the Middle East, persistent rental inflation, and wage growth that could fuel services prices. On the positive side, global supply chain normalisation and moderating demand could help ease goods inflation further.

The RBA’s next meeting in early July will be closely scrutinised. Most forecasters expect the bank to hold rates steady while continuing to monitor incoming data. Any signs of renewed acceleration could prompt a hawkish shift, while sustained cooling would open the door for eventual easing.

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Broader Economic Implications

Australia’s inflation challenge in 2026 reflects a global story of post-pandemic supply adjustments compounded by geopolitical energy shocks. The country’s relatively strong labour market and commodity export strength have provided some insulation, but the cost to households has been significant. Policymakers face the difficult task of engineering a soft landing without tipping the economy into recession.

For consumers, the message remains one of cautious optimism. While May’s data shows the worst of the recent surge may be behind us, returning to the RBA’s target will take time and continued vigilance on both monetary and fiscal fronts. Families are advised to continue monitoring budgets, locking in fixed rates where possible, and watching upcoming CPI releases for further direction.

As Australia moves through the second half of 2026, the inflation trajectory will play a central role in shaping interest rates, household spending, business investment and overall economic growth. The May figures mark an encouraging step, but the journey back to price stability is far from over.

Economists and markets will now turn their attention to June data and the RBA’s July meeting for the next important signals on the path ahead.

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EWY: South Korea ETF Plunges – Why More Downside Is Likely (Rating Downgrade) (EWY)

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EWY: South Korea ETF Plunges - Why More Downside Is Likely (Rating Downgrade) (EWY)

This article was written by

Freelance Financial Writer | Investments | Markets | Personal Finance | RetirementI create written content used in various formats including articles, blogs, emails, and social media for financial advisors and investment firms in a cost-efficient way. My passion is putting a narrative to financial data. Working with teams that include senior editors, investment strategists, marketing managers, data analysts, and executives, I contribute ideas to help make content relevant, accessible, and measurable. Having expertise in thematic investing, market events, client education, and compelling investment outlooks, I relate to everyday investors in a pithy way. I enjoy analyzing stock market sectors, ETFs, economic data, and broad market conditions, then producing snackable content for various audiences. Macro drivers of asset classes such as stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies, and crypto excite me. My thing is communicating finance with an educational and creative style. I also believe in producing evidence-based narratives using empirical data to drive home points. Charts are one of the many tools I leverage to tell a story in a simple but engaging way. I focus on SEO and specific style guides when appropriate.

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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First Majestic Silver Corp. 2026 Q1 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (TSX:AG:CA) 2026-05-12

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

This article was written by

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

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Dr Reddy’s Laboratories Q4 Results: Cons PAT falls 86% YoY to Rs 221 crore, revenue dips 12%; Rs 8 per share dividend announced

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Dr Reddy's Laboratories Q4 Results: Cons PAT falls 86% YoY to Rs 221 crore, revenue dips 12%; Rs 8 per share dividend announced
Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories reported a consolidated net profit at Rs 221 crore in the March-ended quarter versus Rs 1,587 crore in the year ago period, an 86% YoY fall.

The company’s revenue from operations in Q4FY26 was down 12% to Rs 7,516 crore versus Rs 8,506 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year.

The company’s board recommended a final dividend of Rs 8 per equity share for the financial year 2025-26, subject to approval of shareholders at the ensuing Annual General Meeting. The company has set the record date for determining eligible shareholders on July 10, 2026.

The profit after tax (PAT) was down 81% on a sequential basis from Rs 1,190 crore in Q3FY26 while topline declined 14% quarter-on-quarter from Rs 8,727 crore in the October-December quarter of FY26.

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However, revenue increased 3% for the full year ended March 31, 2026 to Rs 33,593 crore from Rs 32,553 crore in the year ago period.


Growth was broad-based across key markets, except for North America which declined primarily on account of lower Lenalidomide sales and a one-time Shelf Stock Adjustment (SSA) of Rs 450 crore related to the product. Favourable foreign exchange rate movements further supported overall growth.
Excluding the one-time SSA, consolidated revenues were at Rs 7,970 crore billion in Q4FY26, a decline of 6.3% YoY and 8.7% QoQ and Rs 34,050 crore in FY26, a growth of 4.6% YoY.Gross Margin for Q4FY26 at 44.8%, a decline of 1,074 basis points (bps) YoY and 881 bps QoQ. For FY26 it stood at 52.8%, a decline of 573 bps YoY.

The YoY decline for the quarter was primarily on account of reduced sales of Lenalidomide, price erosion in North America and Europe Generics and a one-time SSA impact indicated earlier. FY26 was further impacted by one-time new Labour Code related provision in Q3FY26.

Excluding the one-offs related to SSA and new Labour Codes, gross margin for Q4FY26 at 48% and FY26 at 53.5%.

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Cardinal Infrastructure Group Inc. 2026 Q1 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (NASDAQ:CDNL) 2026-05-12

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

This article was written by

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

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Trump FDA Commissioner Marty Makary out

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Trump FDA Commissioner Marty Makary out

Dr. Marty Makary is out as FDA commissioner, President Donald Trump said Tuesday, ending a controversial tenure at the health agency.

Makary is “a wonderful man and he’s going to be off, and the assistant, the deputy, is taking over temporarily,” Trump told reporters on Tuesday.

He added, “He’s going to go on, and he’s going to lead a good life.”

Several news outlets reported that Makary resigned on Tuesday, which followed days of reporting that the White House was planning to fire him.

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Kyle Diamantas, who previously worked as the top food official at the FDA, will step in as acting commissioner, according to reports. Trump on Tuesday did not name Diamantas.

Makary, a surgical oncologist known for criticizing the government’s handling of the Covid pandemic, had reportedly fallen out of favor with both FDA staff and the White House in recent months. He served as head of the agency responsible for regulating food, drugs and medical devices for more than a year. 

His tenure was marked by internal dysfunction and leadership turmoil at the FDA, along with mounting backlash from drugmakers, physicians and patient groups on regulatory decisions, including high-profile rejections of some rare disease treatments. At the same time, the White House reportedly grew increasingly impatient with what it viewed as his slow movement on Trump’s key policy initiatives, such as legalizing flavored vapes. 

Makary has touted his accomplishments as commissioner, including his priority voucher program that accelerates review times for certain drugs. 

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But staff morale at the agency plummeted after layoffs and departures of career agency scientists, including longtime cancer regulator Dr. Richard Pazdur, who cited Makary’s leadership as his reason for leaving. Meanwhile, distrust of leadership has reportedly grown among the staff that remained. 

Among Makary’s most polarizing appointees was Vinay Prasad, who served as a key agency official overseeing vaccines and biotech treatments before stepping down at the end of April. Prasad, an outspoken academic and podcaster, left the agency after mounting criticism of the FDA within the biotech and pharmaceutical industries and among former health officials.

For example, the FDA initially refused to review Moderna’s flu shot – a decision that the biotech company said was inconsistent with previous agency guidance and specifically stemmed from Prasad. The FDA later reversed course on the vaccine.

Prasad also faced backlash earlier this year for his rejection of a Huntington’s disease gene therapy from uniQure, which claimed the FDA was requiring it to perform fake brain surgery to evaluate whether the treatment works. In a CNBC interview in March, Makary appeared to criticize that treatment without naming it. 

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In April, the FDA rejected Replimune’s drug candidate for melanoma a second time after an initial rejection in July. The agency cited insufficient evidence of effectiveness and took issue with the single-arm trial design. 

In an interview with CNBC in May, Makary said three independent teams have arrived at the same conclusion around the drug and that the FDA has not made “corrupt sweetheart deals.”

“I don’t work for Replimune, I work for the American people, and I stand by the scientists at the FDA,”  Makary said in the interview with CNBC’s David Faber. 

In March, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., announced an investigation into the FDA’s rejection of rare disease treatments.

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Trump to head to Beijing for Xi summit amid AI chip and trade talks

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Trump to head to Beijing for Xi summit amid AI chip and trade talks

President Donald Trump is set to travel to China this week for a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping that comes as the relationship between the world’s two largest economies is disrupted by ongoing trade disputes and emerging technology.

Trump’s meeting with Xi in Beijing on May 14–15 comes amid the Iran war affecting global energy markets, while the trade tensions between the U.S. and China continue to simmer amid tariff disputes, the artificial intelligence (AI) race and potential export deals.

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The two countries may negotiate new commitments by China to purchase American farm goods and jetliners, with restrictions on the sale of advanced AI chips a potential sticking point.

Derek Scissors, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute whose focus includes U.S. economic ties with China, told FOX Business that the “president wants to announce a bunch of purchases” of U.S. goods following the talks and sees China as having flexibility to make public commitments to that effect.

WHITE HOUSE ACCUSES CHINA OF ‘INDUSTRIAL-SCALE’ AI TECHNOLOGY THEFT WEEKS AHEAD OF TRUMP-XI SUMMIT

Donald Trump stands next to Xi Jinping

President Donald Trump’s last trip to China to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping was in November 2017, which was the last visit by a U.S. president. (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters)

“Xi Jinping can just say, ‘we are going to do this.’ It doesn’t mean they actually do it – they didn’t do it in the phase one deal – but he can say that, and they can announce that China will buy this many Boeings and this many soybeans, so I think they’re going to negotiate a purchase deal,” Scissors said.

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He said that he views a public deal involving Chinese purchases of U.S. energy as unlikely due to political sensitivities stemming from the Iran war, but China may seek a deal allowing it to purchase advanced AI chips.

“On the Chinese side, they, of course, want more advanced technology. One of the reasons they have not bought any H200 Nvidia chips is that they want to put pressure on the company to sell them better chips,” Scissors said. “They’ll even eventually acquire H200 chips, and probably already have indirectly, but what they want is an agreement to sell more advanced chips.”

IN LETTER TO XI, TRUMP ASKS CHINA NOT TO SEND WEAPONS TO IRAN

chip on board with nvidia logo in the back

Nvidia’s advanced AI chips have been a major point of contention in U.S. trade with China. (Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

“That’s the basic economic trade: the Chinese make, or at least announce, large-scale purchases of U.S. items that we sell to China, which is aircraft and farm goods in the lead if you’re not going to count energy, and then we agree to sell them more advanced chips than the H200,” he said.

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Scissors added that he’s unsure whether Trump is interested in selling the advanced chips to China, given the tension between his stated desire for more U.S. exports and the restrictions that have been put in place on the sale of those chips.

Kyle Chan, a fellow at The Brookings Institution’s John L. Thornton China Center, expressed a similar sentiment and told FOX Business that Beijing’s approach to export controls will be a big question ahead of the summit.

“Trump allowed the sale of Nvidia H200 chips to China subject to certain conditions. Beijing, however, has not been eager to allow the import of these chips. While Chinese AI companies would like to access stronger AI chips, Beijing is keen to support domestic AI chipmakers instead,” Chan noted. “Will Trump see this as a technology issue or a trade issue?”

FORMER TREASURY SECRETARY SAYS GUARDRAILS ARE NEEDED TO AVOID US-CHINA ‘MUTUALLY ASSURED ECONOMIC DISRUPTION’

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President Donald Trump shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping in front of the American and Chinese flags.

President Donald Trump last met with Chinese President Xi Jinping in October 2025 in Busan, South Korea. (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters)

Chan added that the investment deals that have been reached between the U.S. and Japan and South Korea, two regional rivals of China, may be appealing to Chinese leadership – though he cautioned it isn’t clear the U.S. would be receptive.

“Beijing is quite interested in increasing Chinese investment in the U.S. They look around and see U.S. investment deals with other countries like Japan and South Korea and wonder whether this might be an easy win-win. The real question is whether the U.S. would find this attractive or see this as a source of greater risk and dependency,” Chan said.

A spokesman for the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that the two presidents will exchange their views on “major issues concerning China-U.S. relations and on world peace and development.”

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“China stands ready to work with the U.S. to expand cooperation and manage differences in the spirit of equality, respect and mutual benefit, and provide more stability and certainty for a transforming and volatile world,” the spokesman added.

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Federal court orders $150m compensation for Yindjibarndi in Fortescue feud

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Federal court orders $150m compensation for Yindjibarndi in Fortescue feud

Fortescue has been ordered to pay the Yindjibarndi people $150 million for mining their lands without approval by Australia’s Federal Court.

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