Patanjali Foods Q4 profit rises 46% to ₹524 cr
Edible oil business contributed the maximum ₹29,133 crore to the total income from operations.
Edible oil business contributed the maximum ₹29,133 crore to the total income from operations.
Markets brace for a crucial week. Investors watch US-Iran peace talks closely. Crude oil price drops also impact sentiment. Foreign investors sold heavily, impacting Indian equities. The Rupee shows strength against the US Dollar. Technical indicators suggest a lack of strong trend. Geopolitical and economic developments will drive market sensitivity.
Market Outlook: US-Iran talks, crude oil among 5 factors to drive D-St in first week of June The Economic Times Dalal Street outlook: What will guide market sentiments this week? The Times of India Stock markets climb in early trade amid drop in oil prices The Hindu Week ahead: RBI policy, crude oil prices, FIIs activity among key market triggers to watch Upstox Markets dip again in May amid persistent uncertainty over West Asia war Business Standard

New Delhi, May 31 (SocialNews.XYZ) The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is likely to hold repo rate hike in its June monetary policy meeting and must use short-term rates and nudging to manage the pressure... The post RBI likely to hold rates in June MPC meet, GDP pegged at 6.6 pc for FY27: SBI report appeared first on Social News XYZ .

Nike’s top executives have been putting their own money on the line. CEO Elliott Hill and board member Timothy D. Cook together purchased shares worth roughly $2.73 million over the past three months — a gesture that often hints at a belief the stock has bottomed. Yet the broader market is not yet buying that [...] The post Insider Buying Signals Confidence, But Nike’s Turnaround Still Faces Steep Climb appeared first on NewsCase .

Seoul, May 31 (IANS) Foreign selling of South Korean stocks listed on the benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) reached a record high in May, while foreign investors poured a record amount into the tech-heavy KOSDAQ market, data showed on Sunday. Offshore investors sold a net 44.71 trillion won (US$29.66 billion) worth of local stocks in May, surpassing the previous record of 35.74 trillion won in net selling set in March, according to data from the Korea Exchange (KRX), reports Yonhap news agency. Foreign investors remained net sellers for 16 consecutive trading sessions from May 7 to May 29, marking the longest selling streak since February 2009, when they sold stocks for 17 straight trading days in the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis. In contrast, retail investors purchased a net 36.09 trillion won worth of stocks, setting a record for monthly net buying. Market watchers attributed the foreign sell-off largely to profit-taking following a tech rally, led by chipmakers Samsung Electronics Co. and SK hynix Inc. Meanwhile, foreign investors bought a net 2.8 trillion won worth of shares on the secondary KOSDAQ market this month, exceeding the previous record of 2.7 trillion won in net buying set in July 2023. Market observers said the strong inflow into KOSDAQ stocks was partly driven by expectations surrounding a newly launched investment fund that offers tax benefits and loss protection, which became available through local banks and securities firms earlier this month. The fund, under the Korea National Growth Fund, aims to invest in companies specialising in artificial intelligence, rechargeable batteries, hydrogen, biotechnology and other related sectors. Even as the benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) continued its record-breaking rally toward the unprecedented 9,000-point mark, rising volatility is fuelling concerns that gains were increasingly concentrated in a handful of heavyweight stocks, bourse data showed Friday. The KOSPI 200 volatility index, or VKOSPI, closed at 74.26, up 3.72 per cent from the previous session, according to data from the Korea Exchange. The KOSPI climbed 3.55 percent to finish at a record high of 8,476.15. —IANS na/
Even seasoned investors lose money due to behavioural biases, poor timing, and overreaction to market noise. Drawing on Bernard Baruch’s principles, the piece highlights how discipline, patience, and rational decision-making matter more than intelligence in navigating volatility, avoiding emotional traps, and achieving long-term success in equity markets.

Lockheed Martin will earn more than Boeing on its South Korean arms deal.

AdvisorShares Gerber Kawasaki ETF (NYSEARCA:GK – Get Free Report) was the target of a large increase in short interest in the month of May. As of May 15th, there was short interest totaling 6,456 shares, an increase of 161.6% from the April 30th total of 2,468 shares. Approximately 0.6% of the shares of the company [...]

JPMorgan Short Duration Core Plus ETF (NYSEARCA:JSCP – Get Free Report) was the target of a significant drop in short interest in the month of May. As of May 15th, there was short interest totaling 49,649 shares, a drop of 71.2% from the April 30th total of 172,151 shares. Approximately 0.2% of the company’s stock [...]

*Says $2.34bn spent on food imports in 2025 despite decline in forex demand Festus Akanbi Nigeria’s external reserves have continued their upward trajectory, rising to $49.34 billion as the naira

A draft XRPL amendment notes that flash loan attacks are 'structurally impossible' on the network because of how its transactions are built, an architectural quirk that has spared the chain from the exploit class that has cost Ethereum DeFi billions.