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Adani Group Exploring Partnerships With Saudi Aramco – Top Indian Market News

Adani Group explores partnerships with Saudi Aramco

According to a Bloomberg report, Adani Group is exploring potential partnerships in Saudi Arabia, including the possibility of acquiring a stake in the world’s largest oil exporter. The group has held preliminary talks on a range of potential cooperation and joint investment opportunities with Saudi Aramco and the country’s Public Investment Fund. Adani Group could team up with Aramco or subsidiaries like Sabic in areas such as renewable energy, crop nutrients, or chemicals.

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Tata Motors in talks to take over Ford India’s Sanand plant

Tata Motors Ltd is in advanced negotiations to take over Ford India’s Sanand plant in Gujarat. Both entities have approached the local administration in Gujarat to understand the incentive structure after the sale of the factory. Ford had announced its exit from India in September last year.

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CBI examining role of SEBI officials in 2016-19, suspects crime was deliberately hidden

As per reports, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) is investigating the role of officials at the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) who served during 2016-19 when alleged governance lapses and a series of irregularities unfolded at the National Stock Exchange (NSE). The CBI is investigating a 2018 case in which ex-officials at NSE are accused of providing unfair access to high-frequency traders. The agency is examining whether SEBI officials were also involved in the crime.

Tata Elxsi unveils digital health platform TEngage

Tata Elxsi Ltd has launched TEngage, the first-ever truly digital health platform designed for omnichannel care. The platform allows hospitals and healthcare providers to offer a unified patient experience across all channels. TEngage is cloud-based, fully customizable, and allows hospitals to implement modules with just the required features. It also keeps deployment and operational costs in check.

India’s oil demand likely to rise 8% in 2022

India’s oil demand is projected to jump 8.2% to 5.15 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2022 as the economy continues to rebound from the Covid-19 pandemic. In its latest monthly oil market report, the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) projected India to add 0.39 million bpd of crude oil demand in 2022. India’s oil demand rose from 4.51 million bpd in 2020 to 4.76 million bpd in 2021, recording a 5.61% growth.

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Mindtree opens new facility at Pune’s ICC Tech Park

Mindtree Ltd, a global digital transformation company, has announced the inauguration of its second facility in Pune. Located at International Convention Center (ICC) Tech Park, the facility can accommodate more than 350 professionals. Mindtree provides digital transformation services to some of the world’s largest communications, media, banking, and healthcare companies from Pune.

Granules India gets licence to market Nirmatrelvir, Ritonavir

Granules India Ltd has received a license from Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) to manufacture and market generic versions of Pfizer’s oral treatment Nirmatrelvir. The drug will be co-packaged with Ritonavir for the treatment of mild-to-moderate Covid-19 cases. The product will be made at the pharma company’s manufacturing facilities in Hyderabad. GIL will launch the product in India and 94 other countries worldwide.

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Thermax wins Rs 1,176 crore order for a Sulphur Recovery Block

Thermax Ltd has secured an order worth Rs 1,176 crore from an Indian public sector refinery to set up their Sulphur Recovery Block. The block includes 2×240 tonnes per day (TPD) Sulphur Recovery Unit (SRU) and Tail Gas Treatment Unit (TGTU). This landmark project comes under the Government of India’s North East Hydrocarbon Vision 2030. 

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Oil Prices Hit $70 A Barrel – Top 10 Global News

1. Nasdaq Leads Surge in Futures as Bonds Rebound

Contracts on the tech-centric Nasdaq 100 rose 2.2% while those on the S&P 500 advanced 0.9%. Markets have been gripped by volatility in tech stocks this week and the Nasdaq 100 has fallen 11% from an all-time high. Investors will be closely watching Treasury sales in the coming days, with the U.S. planning three debt auctions totalling $120 billion. The sales will test appetite for the safest debt after last month’s poorly bid auctions sent shockwaves throughout global markets and short bets climbed to a record. Benchmark 10-year yields traded sharply lower after breaching the 1.6% level to trade at a one-year high last week.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index advanced 0.9% as of 8:30 a.m. New York time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index gained 0.5%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index increased by 0.4%.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index decreased by 0.2%.

2. Worst-Performing Asia Stock Index Turns Winner on Value Love

Singapore could be the biggest comeback story for Asian equities this year. After becoming the region’s worst performer in 2020 following a 12% slump, the Straits Times Index has surged 9.3% to trounce all other major Asian benchmarks so far this year. That’s come in the wake of a tech rout that saw the Nasdaq 100 enter a correction amid rising U.S. Treasury yields. Singapore’s market revival echoes the global trend of value investing as investors bet on an economic rebound. The island nation’s market is dominated by old economy shares, with more than 80% of the index made up of cyclical stocks without technology and communication services — among the highest contributions in Asia.

3. Bitcoin Hits Highest Level in Two Weeks as Big-Money Bets Flow

Bitcoin rallied to a two-week high, with prices hovering near $54,000 as the digital currency rides a wave of investor demand for crypto assets. The token rose 3.8% to $53,850 in early U.S. trading on Tuesday. While high-flying bets like Tesla and the ARK Innovation ETF have cratered recently, Bitcoin has steadily climbed on news of more institutional involvement in crypto. The narrative that longer-term investors such as family offices, insurers and corporate treasurers are adding exposure to tokens is controversial but gaining traction. Goldman Sachs Group recently said it’s seeing substantial demand from institutions as it works to restart its cryptocurrency trading desk.

4. China’s $1 Trillion Stock Rout Tests Limit of State Intervention

A world-beating rally in Chinese stocks has turned into the biggest rout globally, shocking investors with the severity of its reversal and evading state efforts to slow the pace of losses. In just 14 trading days, the nation’s benchmark CSI 300 Index has plummeted 14% from a 13-year high. That compares with a 3.3% drop by the MSCI All-Country World Index. The plunge has wiped out more than $1 trillion of value and hammered the holdings of retail investors who piled in at the peak, betting that the new lunar year of the Ox, or bull, would be auspicious. State intervention on Tuesday briefly arrested the tumble, before losses resumed.

5. Pfizer-BioNTech Covid Shot Neutralizes Brazilian Strain in Lab

The Covid-19 vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech showed a high ability to neutralize coronavirus strains first detected in Brazil, the U.K. and South Africa. In lab experiments, the shot demonstrated “roughly equivalent” levels of neutralizing activity against the Brazil and U.K. strains compared with a version of the virus from early last year. It also showed “robust but lower” activity against the South Africa variant. While the research needs to be validated with real-world data, it offers another reason for optimism that the Covid vaccines are generally performing well against variants of the virus. 

6. Oil Flirting With $70 Challenges World’s Economic Recovery

The spike in oil prices has focused attention on how the steady rise in energy costs is threatening to create a drag on the global economic recovery and stoking fears of inflation. After surging more than 30% this year on coordinated supply constraints by major exporters and demand returning from the depths of the Covid-19 crisis, a missile attack Sunday on a key Saudi Arabian export facility sent Brent crude, the international benchmark, above $70 a barrel for the first time since January 2020. While prices have since pulled back, the impact on inflation and the overall global recovery depends on how sustained the underlying rally proves to be. For economists, the cause of higher prices is what matters, rather than the price itself. Rising energy costs on the back of strong demand normally indicate robust and resilient growth, while a surge from crimped supply could weigh on a recovery.

7. Haunted by 2008, China and U.S. Diverge on Stimulus Plans

The U.S. and China are pursuing divergent economic policies in the aftermath of the coronavirus recession in a role reversal from the last time the world economy was recovering from a shock. One of the takeaways from the annual National People’s Congress underway in Beijing is a conservative growth goal, with a tighter fiscal deficit target and restrained monetary settings. That’s a big contrast with Washington, where President Joe Biden is preparing a second major fiscal package after he gets final approval for his $1.9 trillion stimuli. The widening policy divergence is putting strains on exchange rates and could potentially reshape global capital flows. It stems, in part, from different policy lessons from the 2007-09 crisis.

8. Hedge Fund Investors Rush for Private Deals With IPOs Surging

Investors are increasingly betting on private markets — and they want to use hedge funds to do so. Private markets equities have emerged as the strategy most in-demand among non-traditional offerings from hedge funds. The appetite for growth and venture capital investments is increasing as private companies and unicorns become a larger part of the capital markets ecosystem.  More than half of the investors surveyed said they are now using hedge funds to access private markets. That figure rises to more than 70% for family offices, endowments and foundations.

9. Biden Faces Tougher Obstacles for Broad Relief Bill Sequel

President Joe Biden’s soon-to-be-unveiled longer-term economic stimulus package is set for far tougher obstacles in Congress than the pandemic-relief bill that’s on the verge of squeaking through without a single Republican’s backing. The “build back better” program that the White House says will be announced after Biden signs the $1.9 trillion aid bill — heading for final passage as soon as Tuesday — will be far more expansive than its predecessor. Biden has the same three options as for his first package: go without the GOP on a bill that’s as expansive as moderate Democrats and Senate rules will allow, dramatically scale back ambitions to lure at least 10 Senate Republicans, or split the program up and pursue a combination of approaches.

10. Carlyle-Backed China Biotech Firm Plans Hong Kong IPO

Abbisko Therapeutics, an oncology-focused Chinese biotech company, is planning a Hong Kong initial public offering that could raise about $250 million. Abbisko, which is backed by investors including Carlyle Group and Warburg Pincus, is working with advisers on the offering. The company aims to list as soon as this year. The Shanghai-based company joins a growing wave of health-care and biotech firms listing in Hong Kong after a record year for share sales in the sector. So far this year seven health-care companies have debuted in the city, raising a combined $2.1 billion. Abbisko raised $123 million in a Series D funding round in January which was led by Carlyle, Warburg, OrbiMed Advisors and Lake Bleu Capital. That brought its total fundraising to $263 million.

Curated from Bloomberg.com

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Facebook Blocks News in Australia – Top 10 Global News

1. Nasdaq Leads U.S. Futures Lower; U.S. Yields Rise

U.S. equity futures slumped amid disappointing earnings, while bonds resumed a selloff. Contracts on the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 fell 0.8% and S&P 500 futures dipped. Walmart Inc. dropped in U.S. pre-market trading after saying it will increase spending on worker salaries and automation. In Europe, banks led losses in the Stoxx 600 Index. Yields on 10-year Treasuries climbed to 1.29%. Concern is growing across markets that higher borrowing costs could sap a rally that’s driven values to historic highs. Technology companies that derive much of their cash flows from future earnings are especially vulnerable to inflation pressures.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index sank 0.5% as of 8:22 a.m. New York time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index decreased 0.4%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index sank 0.8%.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index sank 0.8%.

2. Big Freeze in Texas Is Becoming a Global Oil Market Crisis

What began as a power issue for a handful of U.S. states is rippling into a shock for the world’s oil market. More than 4 million barrels a day of output — almost 40% of the nation’s crude production — is now offline. One of the world’s biggest oil refining centres has seen output drastically cut back. The waterways that help U.S. oil flow to the rest of the world have been disrupted for much of the week. Brent crude briefly surged above $65 a barrel on Thursday, a level not seen since last January. Spreads indicating supply tightness also soared. Ten months ago, the price slumped below $16 because of a demand shock caused by Covid-19.

3. Facebook Blocks News in Australia in Warning for the World 

Facebook’s decision to block news sharing on its Australian platform is an unprecedented show of force that escalates a legal standoff with the government and flashes a warning to regulators worldwide. The tech giant imposed the restrictions early Thursday, an unexpected riposte to a proposed law that will force the company and Google to pay Australian publishers for news content. Facebook’s algorithmic ambush switched off the main news source for almost one in five Australians. It also disabled — accidentally, the company said — a raft of government Facebook pages carrying public health advice on the coronavirus, warnings from the weather bureau and even the site of a children’s hospital.

4. Walmart Falls After Forecasting Earnings Drop, More Spending

Walmart Inc. fell after forecasting a slowdown in sales and profit for the year, plus billions of additional spending on worker salaries, automation and other technology. The retailer said Thursday earnings per share will decline slightly in the fiscal year that just started, though will be flat or slightly up when excluding divestitures. Although U.S. comparable sales will stay positive this year, they’ll rise in the low-single-digits, below the recent breakneck rate but on pace with estimates. Walmart shares fell 5% in premarket trading at 7:49 a.m. in New York. Over the past 12 months, the shares have outpaced the S&P 500 but have trailed Target Corp.

5. Biden Immigration Agenda Takes Shape as Lawmakers Unveil Bill

President Joe Biden’s proposed immigration overhaul will be introduced in Congress on Thursday, kicking off what will likely be one of his most difficult legislative challenges. The legislation, known as the U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021, hews closely to the outline that Biden sent to Congress on his first day in office. The proposal includes an eight-year path to citizenship for most of the roughly 11 million immigrants living illegally in the U.S., bolsters the nation’s refugee and asylum systems and calls for additional technology to be used to help secure the southern border. The citizenship path is not explicitly tied to the implementation of border security measures, a trade-off included in past immigration bills designed to earn Republican support.

6. Bitcoin Keeps Hitting New Highs as Crypto Mania Accelerates

Bitcoin’s incredible rally shows little sign of abating yet after the token jumped past $52,000 for the first time. The largest cryptocurrency was little changed in Asian trading Thursday at about $52,100 after a fivefold surge in the past year. The crypto faithful counter that the digital asset is grabbing more mainstream attention, especially after Tesla’s recent $1.5 billion purchase. MicroStrategy Inc. boosted its convertible debt sale to buy Bitcoin by nearly half to $900 million and cut the coupon to 0%, making it virtually a straight bet on the price of the cryptocurrency.

7. WeWork Slashes Prices Across the U.S. by 10%

WeWork Cos. cut prices across the U.S. in the past few months, indicating that a post-pandemic recovery will come slowly for office rentals. The New York-based company reduced the price of most rental units—from individual desks to small offices—in early November and again in January. The average price reduction overall was about 10%, the data show. Some locations declined by as much as 25%. The pricing information was contained within the source code of WeWork’s website but wasn’t displayed to visitors through a web browser. Office rental prices across the country have been dropping precipitously. In the largest American cities, fewer than 20% of office workers were back at their desks as of the end of last year. Landlords’ asking prices could drop by 7% by early 2022 before rebounding.

8. Global Cases Slowing; Pregnancy Vaccine Trials: Virus Update

Encouraging signs in the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic are emerging, with new global infections slowing sharply, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. In a lab study, Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE’s Covid-19 vaccine stimulated lower levels of neutralizing antibodies against the South African coronavirus variant. Indonesia will mandate vaccinations, the government said Thursday, while New Zealand has made masks compulsory on most forms of public transport. The United Nations is pushing for a worldwide vaccination effort. Vaccine-makers will begin trialling their shots with pregnant women, in a bid to provide reassurance that they are safe for expectant mothers.

9. Hong Kong Unemployment Hits Highest Level Since April 2004

Hong Kong’s unemployment rate rose in January to the highest level in more than 16 years as social distancing and travel restrictions from the pandemic continue to damage local businesses and destroy jobs. The jobless rate rose to 7% in the November-to-January period from 6.6% previously, the highest since April 2004, according to a government report Thursday. The underemployment rate also increased, rising to 3.8%. Hong Kong has struggled under an extended recession over the past two years amid social unrest and the global pandemic, with the economy shrinking a record 6.1% in 2020. Retail consumption, a key pillar of the economy, slumped first because of political demonstrations and then continued to decline due to restrictive measures to contain the spread of the virus.

10. Robinhood Rival Webull Raises New Funds at $1 Billion Valuation

Webull, the Chinese-owned brokerage that runs one of the fastest-growing retail trading platforms in the U.S., raised $150 million in a new financing round that gives the startup more firepower to compete with Robinhood Markets. The fundraising valued Webull’s parent company at more than $1 billion. The brokerage, founded by Alibaba Group Holding alum Wang Anquan, has benefited from the surge in trading by individual investors as stock prices soar to all-time highs. Webull has positioned itself as the go-to platform for disgruntled users of Robinhood, whose restrictions last month on highly volatile stocks including GameStop sparked outrage from some customers and drew criticism from politicians.