Reuters Financial News
17.01 / 12:27
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Business heads see Red Sea tensions causing lengthy trade dislocation
(Reuters) — Business chiefs warned on Wednesday that disruption to shipping in the Red Sea caused by attacks by Houthi militants in Yemen could affect supply chains for months and lead to a shortage of tankers needed to transport fuel.
17.01 / 11:03
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Tesla cuts Model Y prices in Germany after China price cuts
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17.01 / 11:03
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UK inflation picks up unexpectedly in December after tobacco duty rise
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17.01 / 11:03
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Renault returns to growth after 4 years of sluggish volumes
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17.01 / 10:26
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Maersk CEO sees Red Sea shipping disruption lasting 'at least a few months'
By Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen
17.01 / 09:55
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Budget 2024: India likely to allocate $48 billion for food, fertiliser subsidies
food and fertilizer subsidies for the next fiscal year, indicating fiscal caution ahead of 2024 Lok Sabha elections, said two government sources as quoted by Reuters. During the current fiscal year, which concludes on March 31, India's total budget spending is 45 trillion rupees, of which approximately one-ninth comes from subsidies on food and fertiliser. They said the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution has projected that the cost of food subsidies in 2019 will be 2.2 trillion rupees ($26.52 billion).
17.01 / 09:55
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WEF Davos: India to keep diversifying oil supply, accelerate energy transition, says Hardeep Singh Puri
Davos: Supply cuts by OPEC , costly shipments from some traditional Middle East suppliers and geopolitical tension is driving India, the world's third biggest oil importer, to diversify its crude sources and accelerate its energy transition, its Oil Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said. "Whenever there is vulnerability and uncertainty in the market, the transition gets accelerated.
17.01 / 09:55
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Gold rate today: Yellow metal falls on firm US dollar; support seen at ₹61,000 level
₹61,901 per 10 grams. Silver prices also fell 0.67% to ₹71,607 per kg. International gold prices hit a near one-week low as the US dollar strengthened, while traders awaited comments from more Fed speakers this week.
17.01 / 09:31
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India to keep diversifying oil supply, accelerate energy transition: Hardeep Singh Puri
Hardeep Singh Puri said. «Whenever there is vulnerability and uncertainty in the market, the transition gets accelerated. No-one is looking at that», Puri told Reuters in an interview at this week's World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos, referring to attacks by the Houthis on ships in the Red Sea. Puri said that while OPEC+ nations have a right to decide on their energy production, supply cuts against such uncertainty, and the resulting adverse impact on global prices, will dent long term demand. It is «imperative» for India to accelerate its transition to green energy in this scenario, he added. Iraq followed Saudi Arabia in charging a premium for oil supplies to Asian markets which made their crude «more expensive than crude sourced elsewhere», the minister said, noting India is now buying from 37 countries up from 29 earlier.
17.01 / 09:09
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Aramco CEO predicts tighter oil markets, sees Red Sea risks
oil markets will cope with Red Sea disruptions in the short run, although prolonged attacks by the Houthis on ships would lead to a shortage of tankers due to longer voyages and a supply delay, the CEO of Saudi oil giant Aramco said. Amin Nasser told Reuters he expected the oil market to tighten after consumers depleted stocks by 400 million barrels in the last two years, which left OPEC's spare capacity as the main source of additional supply to meet rising demand. Attacks by the Houthis on ships in the Red Sea have forced many companies to divert cargoes around Africa. The Iran-aligned Houthis say they are acting in solidarity with Palestinians during Israel's ongoing war with Gaza. «If it's in the short term, tankers might be available… But if it's longer term, it might be a problem,» Nasser said in an interview on the sidelines of this week's World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos. «There will be a need for more tankers and are they going to have to take a longer journey». Container vessels have been pausing or diverting from the Red Sea that leads to the Suez Canal, the fastest route from Asia to Europe, where about 12% of world shipping passes.
17.01 / 07:49
17.01 / 03:51
Reuters
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US presidential election: Nikki Haley's 3rd place finish in Iowa poses challenges in New Hampshire
Bloomberg report, Trump on Tuesday urged New Hampshire Republicans to reject Nikki Haley's candidature, claiming that Democrats were supporting it, following his historic victory in the Iowa caucuses. While speaking at a rally in Atkinson on Tuesday, Trump said, “Nikki Haley in particular is counting on the Democrats and liberals to infiltrate the Republican primary," as quoted by Bloomberg. “I’ll tell you we have these two people.
17.01 / 02:21
17.01 / 02:17
Reuters
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Canada minister says study permits to students from India drop due to dispute
Canada issued to Indian students fell sharply late last year after India ejected Canadian diplomats who would process the permits and fewer Indian students applied due to a diplomatic dispute over the murder of a Sikh separatist leader in Canada, a top Canadian official told Reuters. Immigration Minister Marc Miller added in an interview that he believes the number of study permits to Indians is unlikely to rebound soon. Diplomatic tensions erupted after Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in June said there was evidence connecting Indian government agents to the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar in British Columbia. Click & check your eligibility for immigration Find out The tensions are likely to weigh on the numbers going forward, Miller said. «Our relationship with India has really halved our ability to process a lot of applications from India,» Miller said. In October, Canada was forced to pull 41 diplomats, or two-thirds of its staff, out of India on orders from New Delhi. In addition, the dispute has prompted Indian students to seek to study in other countries, a spokeswoman for the minister said.
17.01 / 02:11
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Indian stock market: 7 key things that changed for market overnight - Gift Nifty to spike in US dollar, Treasury yields
Sensex declined 199.17 points, or 0.27%, to close at 73,128.77, while the Nifty 50 settled 65.15 points, or 0.29%, lower at 22,032.30. “Following global cues, domestic equities took a breath after rallying in the last few sessions. Overall we expect the market to consolidate in higher zones," said Siddhartha Khemka, Head - Retail Research, Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd.
17.01 / 02:09
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US Presidential Election
US presidential election: Canadian PM Trudeau warns of tough times if Donald Trump wins, says, ‘it will be a step back'
Reuters. While addressing a discussion hosted by the Montreal Chamber of Commerce, Justin Trudeau said in French, "It wasn't easy the first time and if there is a second time, it won't be easy either," reported Reuters. Justin Trudeau also mentioned that if Donald Trump rose to power following the upcoming elections it would not be easy for Americans, He said, “But we can't imagine a day when it will ever be easy with the Americans.
16.01 / 18:51
16.01 / 17:07
16.01 / 16:53
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Vodafone signs $1.5 billion Microsoft deal for AI, cloud and IoT
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16.01 / 16:44
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Oil prices rise 1% on flaring Middle East tensions
Brent crude futures gained 81 cents, or about 1.04%, to $78.96 a barrel at 1333 GMT. The contract had lost 14 cents on Monday. U.S.
16.01 / 15:27
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Gold Prices
Gold prices retreat as US dollar hits over one-month high, yields hold above 4%; silver futures decline
Also Read: Gold and silver prices Today on 16-01-2024 : Check latest rates in your city Fed Governor Christopher Waller is scheduled to deliver a speech on the economic outlook before the Brookings Institution, with at least other six officials due to speak this week. "Fed officials probably will keep a neutral guidance, keeping all options on the table based on incoming data. So to see gold prices tick higher, we need to remain on a soft landing path," said UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo.
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