
Bernstein downgrades Campbell’s stock rating on soup, snack woes
Bernstein downgrades Campbell’s stock rating on soup, snack woes

Bernstein downgrades Campbell’s stock rating on soup, snack woes

Stifel initiates HMH Holding stock with buy on offshore drilling outlook
VICTORIA, Seychelles, April 27, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Zoomex announced today a major development in the global crypto derivatives market, as an estimated $20.6 trillion in liquidity is moving across trading venues in 2026. The announcement highlights a significant change in market behavior, with more traders choosing platforms based on execution quality, efficiency, and performance rather than platform size alone. This shift could reshape competition across the industry and redefine how liquidity is distributed in the market. According to CoinGlass, total crypto trading volume reached approximately $20.6 trillion in Q1 2026 , with derivatives accounting for around $18.6 trillion — nearly 90% of total activity. This structural imbalance highlights a broader transformation: crypto markets are increasingly driven by trading activity rather than long-term holding, where execution speed, liquidity quality and responsiveness directly impact outcomes. The Redistribution of Global Flow Zoomex observes that in a derivatives-dominated landscape, liquidity is no longer a static resource held by a few legacy exchanges. Recent industry moves reinforce this: the NYSE's parent company taking a stake in crypto trading , and Deutsche Börse's heavy commitment to tokenized derivatives, signal that the competition has shifted from "asset listing" to "flow capture." "As traders become more selective, platform choice is increasingly defined by execution efficiency, usability, and trust," states the Zoomex team. "Zoomex addresses this through a unified account structure that removes friction between spot and derivatives trading, combined with deep liquidity across more than 590 perpetual contracts to support stable execution." Trading Depth Defines Execution Quality At the execution level, liquidity is not only about availability — it is about usability. Research from CryptoRank indicates that Zoomex demonstrates strong order book depth across major assets: BTC spot depth exceeding 62.7 million USDT ETH depth around 29.8 million USDT SOL depth surpassing 20.5 million USDT In addition, execution tests show that a 1 BTC market order on Zoomex results in approximately 0.03% slippage. Full story available on Benzinga.com

Your look at what's coming in the week starting April 27.

Morgan Stanley just launched its spot Bitcoin Trust ETF, and the best crypto to invest in conversation shifted the moment Wall Street's biggest name entered the space. Institutional capital hit its strongest week since January, pushing the total market cap

BitcoinWorld Binance Stablecoin Inflow Hits $6B: A Powerful Signal of Investor Confidence Amid Market Turmoil Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, has recorded a staggering $6 billion stablecoin inflow over the past two months. This massive capital movement, identified by on-chain analyst Darkfost, occurred during a period of intense market volatility. The inflows suggest a strategic repositioning by investors, even as global uncertainties mount. Binance Stablecoin Inflow: A $6 Billion [...] This post Binance Stablecoin Inflow Hits $6B: A Powerful Signal of Investor Confidence Amid Market Turmoil first appeared on BitcoinWorld .

InvestorWarnings.com has issued a new update on the Merihex case. Trace Your Lost Funds Here: https://www.investorwarnings.com/warnings/get-expert-assistance-on-your-case/ Regulatory Warnings Against Merihex Regulatory warnings and independent analyses regarding Safevexy have raised serious concerns about its legitimacy and safety as an online investment or trading

BitcoinWorld NZD/USD Gains Ground Above 0.5850: Iran Strait Proposal Sparks Surprising Rally The NZD/USD pair gains ground above 0.5850 during Tuesday’s trading session. This move follows a geopolitical proposal regarding the Iran Strait. Market participants now weigh the implications for global oil supply and risk sentiment. Currency traders closely monitor the development. The New Zealand dollar strengthens against the US dollar. This shift occurs despite broader market [...] This post NZD/USD Gains Ground Above 0.5850: Iran Strait Proposal Sparks Surprising Rally first appeared on BitcoinWorld .

BitcoinWorld EUR/USD Downside Bias Intensifies: UOB Warns Break of 1.1665 Could Trigger Sharp Decline The EUR/USD downside bias remains firmly in focus as analysts at United Overseas Bank (UOB) warn that a decisive break of the 1.1665 support level could accelerate selling pressure. This critical juncture arrives amid a backdrop of shifting monetary policy expectations and renewed risk aversion in global markets. UOB Analysis: The 1.1665 Break Remains the [...] This post EUR/USD Downside Bias Intensifies: UOB Warns Break of 1.1665 Could Trigger Sharp Decline first appeared on BitcoinWorld .

Today, residents of India are sending money abroad for a variety of purposes - education, travel, medical treatment, employment/business/professional purposes, and so on. Remittances from India to...

<p>The Great Decoupling March 2026 was supposed to be the moment the Indian growth story finally buckled. As the US-Iran conflict escalated and trade tariffs tightened, the Nifty 50 plummeted by 11.31 per cent, its steepest decline since the pandemic shock of March 2020. In any previous era, a correction of this magnitude, coupled with a massive flight of foreign capital, would have triggered a multi-year bear market and systemic panic.</p> <p>What the headlines missed, however, is that the tectonic plates of Indian liquidity have shifted. India has moved from a foreign-flow-led market to a twin-engine structure, where domestic institutions and retail-led Mutual Fund flows now provide a stronger stabilising force. The scale of foreign selling in March 2026 was extraordinary, with FPIs pulling out about Rs 1.22 lakh crore from Indian equities, one of the sharpest monthly outflows on record.</p> <p>To put things into perspective, this selling is greater than the selling that we witnessed cumulatively in last six month from FII.s Yet, unlike earlier episodes such as the 2013 taper tantrum, the market did not face the same kind of systemic collapse. This is the Great Decoupling of Indian equities: foreign money still matters, but it no longer has the final word on India’s market destiny.</p> <p>The Rise of the "Patient Capital" Anchor</p> <p>The most significant revelation of 2026 is the maturing of the domestic investor. In March alone, FIIs exited with a massive Rs 1.22 lakh crore, specifically targeting high-liquidity heavyweights in the BFSI sector—selling Rs 60,655 crore in Bank stocks simply because they were the only "exit doors" large enough to accommodate the flight. For example, ICICI Bank saw FIIs ownership declined by huge 9.39 per cent between December 2025 ending March 2026. </p> <p>In the past, this intensity of selling would have created a liquidity void. Instead, Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs) exploited this artificial valuation dip, absorbing the shock with a net purchase of Rs 1.42 lakh crore in the month of March 2026. This resilience is underpinned by "Patient Capital." Unlike the "Hot Money" of FIIs, which chases global macro arbitrage like the US 10-year Treasury yield (now at 4.4 per cent), DII capital is anchored by long-term mandates. Shareholding data corroborates a fundamental shift: Indian equities are becoming increasingly 'self-owned. FII ownership in the broader market has slipped below 17%, while domestic institutions and promoters now form a clear majority when it comes to ownership of Indian equities.</p> <p>This structural floor is reinforced by a retirement anchor: a significant share of DII flows is now backed by the EPF and NPS. This is capital that literally cannot leave the market for decades. When combined with monthly SIP inflows reaching Rs 32,000 crore, market dips have been transformed from a source of fear into a "clearance sale," where lower NAVs allow for higher unit allocation for millions of retail investors.</p> <p>We are witnessing strong domestic SIP inflows are acting as a powerful cushion beneath the market, helping absorb foreign selling and supporting the market. Our analysis, across the period from May 2020 to April 2026, FIIs were net sellers in 44 out of 72 months, while DIIs remained net buyers in most of these phases, often with much larger inflows. Notably, in those 44 months of FII selling, the BSE 500 still posted positive returns in 20 months, showing that foreign outflows did not always translate into market weakness. In recent periods, the domestic cushion has become even more visible.</p> <p>For instance, from April 2025 to April 2026, FIIs were net sellers to the tune of around Rs 3.8 lakh crore, while DIIs invested nearly Rs 8.85 lakh crore during the same period. This data suggests that while FII flows still influence sentiment and can trigger short-term volatility, their selling is no longer affecting the market in the same way as before. The reason is that strong domestic institutional inflows have increasingly absorbed foreign selling pressure, helping the broader market remain far more resilient than in earlier cycles. The "Goldilocks" Growth vs.</p> <p>The Energy Shock</p> <p>The RBI continues to navigate a "Goldilocks" environment—a rare state of strong GDP growth and contained inflation, which is likely to change if conflict in middle east takes any ugly turn and continues for longer. While the "Energy Shock" from the US-Iran conflict briefly sent oil prices soaring, India is fundamentally better insulated today than in the 1990s. Plentiful forex reserves and the strategic shift toward electric mobility have acted as buffers. As we navigate the "Year of the Horse," (according to Chinese Zodiac) the market is embodying the symbol's resilience.</p> <p>The temporary two-week ceasefire between the US and Iran has provided a necessary window for the "Goldilocks" narrative to regain its footing, proving that India’s internal expansion can survive external volatility.</p> <p>Sectoral Rotation: Betting on the Domestic Story</p> <p>Strategic positioning has moved decisively away from "export-heavy" plays toward domestic cyclicals. There is a clear "Underweight" stance on IT, as global investors remain cautious about US spending that is reflected in current earnings season, where majority of the companies could not meet the street estimates. Conversely, institutional capital is flowing into sectors with high earnings visibility, especially in Energy sector. Notably, Large Caps are currently the preferred vehicle for growth. While Mid-Caps and Small-Caps trade at premiums of 30% and 18% respectively above their historical averages, Large Caps offer "growth at reasonable valuations."</p> <p>The "AI Trade" Reversal Opportunity</p> <p>A counter-intuitive opportunity may emerge from the global exhaustion of the "AI Trade." In the US, capex for computing equipment is approaching levels not seen since the 2000 dot-com bubble. The overcrowding in US tech has created a valuation gap that makes India look like a bargain. The historical context is vital here: in late 2022, the Nifty and Nasdaq were at valuation parity, both trading at 22-23x trailing earnings. Today, that gap has widened to a cavernous 21x for the Nifty versus 35x for the Nasdaq.</p> <p>As global concerns mount regarding the return on investment for AI, India’s stable earnings growth and narrowed valuation premium offer a compelling alternative for global capital looking for a "risk-off" haven that still provides growth.</p> <p>Conclusion: Beyond the Foreign Noise</p> <p>The events of 2026 have finalized a decade-long transition. While FIIs may still dictate the "daily swings" through algorithmic trading, DIIs now command the "underlying stability." The Indian market is no longer a peripheral satellite of the US Federal Reserve; it is a self-correcting, internally funded machine. For the retail investor, the message is clear: ignore the foreign noise and focus on the structural compounding of the domestic economy. The ultimate question is no longer about when FIIs will return, but whether your own asset allocation has made the necessary shift towards compounding engine of Indian equities. The market is now self-owned; the only risk is not owning enough of it yourself.</p> <div><strong><em>(Disclaimer: This article uses information originally published by Dalal Street Investment Journal (DSIJ). The views expressed are those of the original authors and not necessarily of ABP Network Pvt. Ltd. This content is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as investment, financial, legal or tax advice. Readers are advised to conduct their own research and/or consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be treated as investment advice. ABP Network, its employees and associates shall not be responsible or liable for any losses or damages arising directly or indirectly from the use of or reliance on this article or any information contained herein.)</em></strong></div>
Help! Our newest client is an AI model Financial Times