Business
Pakistan Stock Exchange Hits All-Time High as Shares Rally – SUCH TV

The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) extended its record-breaking rally on Wednesday, surpassing the 166,000-mark as economic and geopolitical developments continued to boost investor confidence.
By 10 am, the PSX benchmark KSE-100 Index had risen by 917.99 points, or 0.55%, reaching an all-time high of 166,411.57 points.
A total of 338 companies were active in trading, with 252 posting gains, 127 recording losses, and 19 remaining unchanged.
Analysts said the sustained upward trend reflects the trade and business community’s growing confidence in the government’s economic policies.
As the government enters a critical phase of negotiations with the IMF, market participants are optimistic that any progress on the review will further strengthen investor confidence.
However, concerns remain over the ongoing review and its potential impact on Pakistan’s fiscal stability, with some analysts warning that meeting the IMF’s targets will be a challenging task.
On Tuesday, the PSX had surged 1,645.90 points, marking a 1% gain and closing at 165,493.59 points.
Trading activity also increased, with 1,349,798,022 shares exchanged on Wednesday compared to 1,285,638,674 shares the previous day, while the total share value stood at Rs 76.77 billion, up from Rs 65.76 billion.
As many as 488 companies transacted their shares in the stock market, out of which 176 recorded gains, 288 sustained losses, whereas 24 remained unchanged.
The three top-trading companies were WorldCall Telecom with 113,573,124 shares at Rs 1.74 per share, Pak Elektron with 110,391,976 shares at Rs 56.68 per share, and Bank of Punjab with 94,026,621 shares at Rs 27.15 per share.
PIA Holding Company LimitedB witnessed a maximum increase of Rs 700.36 per share, closing at Rs 25,984.99, followed by Unilever Pakistan Foods Limited which rose by Rs 319.69 to close at Rs 30,820.00.
On the other hand, Rafhan Maize Products Company Limited recorded a maximum decrease of Rs 515.46 per share to close at Rs 10,283.67, followed by Pakistan Engineering Company Limited which declined by Rs 55.84 to close at Rs 524.52.
Business
GST Collections Rise 9.1% to Rs 1.89 lakh Crore In September, Marking 2nd Consecutive Growth

New Delhi: India’s Goods and Services Tax (GST) collections continued their upward trajectory in September 2025, rising by 9.1 per cent to Rs 1,89,017 crore compared to Rs 1,73,240 crore in the same month last year.
According to the data released on Wednesday, the figures mark the second consecutive month of robust growth in GST revenues, reflecting sustained economic activity and improved compliance.
Last month the GST collections increased by 6.5 per cent year-on-year to 1.86 lakh crore in August.
In September, the growth is driven by the domestic component, where CGST, SGST, IGST, and Cess collections all showed positive monthly increases.
The collection data indicates steady growth in GST collections and net revenues for the month, supported by healthy domestic consumption, rising imports, and a significant increase in refunds processed during the month.
India’s Goods and Services Tax (GST) system has achieved a major milestone in 2024-25, with a record gross collection of Rs 22.08 lakh crore, showing a 9.4 per cent growth over the previous year.
Daily-use products, packaged foods, and personal care items have been shifted to the 5 per cent slab from 12 to 18 per cent earlier. Companies are expected to cut prices by 4 to 6 per cent, improving affordability and boosting rural demand. Staples such as paneer, chapati and khakhra have even been moved to the zero-tax bracket, making essentials like these cheaper.
Rolled out on September 22, the rationalised GST rates have set the stage for major sectoral transformation by rationalising tax slabs, simplifying compliance, and addressing long-standing issues such as the inverted duty structure.
According to the experts, GST 2.0 has ushered in structural relief across critical sectors, the reforms are likely to accelerate growth by supporting consumption, easing compliance, and strengthening MSMEs, even as luxury and sin goods have been placed in the higher 40 per cent bracket to safeguard revenue loss.
Business
No Proposal To Levy Charges On UPI Transactions: RBI Governor

New Delhi: Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Sanjay Malhotra on Wednesday reiterated that the central bank has no proposal to impose a fee on transactions done through Unified Payments Interface (UPI).
The governor’s clarification came during his address after the post-Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting.
Malhotra stated that he had never said UPI could stay free forever, but he noted that someone needs to bear the costs associated with its functioning.
“What I said was there are costs associated with UPI transactions, and the same need to be paid for by someone,” the governor said.
The governor had clarified the same during the previous post-policy conferences.
Earlier in the morning, National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) data showed that the UPI saw 31 per cent transaction count growth (year-on-year) at 19.63 billion in September.
The transaction amount also rose 21 per cent to Rs 24.90 lakh crore.
Month-wise too, UPI witnessed a growth in transaction amount, from Rs 24.85 lakh crore in August.
Average daily transaction amount in September stood at Rs 82,991 crore, a rise from Rs 80,177 crore in August, the NPCI data showed.
According to data, the UPI recorded 654 million average daily transaction counts in the month, up from 645 million in August.
In August, the UPI transactions had crossed 20 billion for the first time in its history. UPI had earlier achieved a record of crossing 700 million transactions in a single day on August 2.
Meanwhile, the RBI’s monetary policy committee (MPC) has decided to keep the repo rate unchanged at 5.5 per cent, and stick to the “neutral” policy stance.
A neutral stance finds a delicate balance between containing inflation without impairing growth, so it doesn’t call for either stimulation or liquidity restrictions.
The RBI Governor stated that the sharp drop in food prices and the reductions in the GST rate had made the inflation outlook even more benign. As a result, the RBI has changed its average inflation rate forecast from 3.1 per cent in August to 2.6 per cent for 2025–2026.
Business
Why the US government has shut down and what happens now

Anthony ZurcherNorth America correspondent and
James FitzGerald
Funding for the US government has been cut off after President Donald Trump’s Republican Party failed to agree with opposition Democrats on a way forward on a spending bill.
The news means that some – but not all – US government services will come to a temporary halt.
Although budget confrontations are common in US politics, this spending fight is especially tense because Trump has spent the last nine months drastically cutting the size of the national government.
Why has the US government shut down?
This situation results from the inability of the two parties to come together and pass a bill funding government services into October and beyond.
The Republicans control both chambers of Congress, but in the Senate – or upper chamber – they are short of the 60 votes they need to pass a spending bill.
Democrats, therefore, have some leverage in this case. They refuse to back a Republican bill, saying it will make it harder for Americans to afford healthcare, and have made this standoff primarily about advancing their healthcare policy goals.
They are calling for an extension of tax credits that make health insurance cheaper for millions of Americans – which are set to expire – and for a reversal of cuts to Medicaid that have been made by Trump. Democrats also oppose spending cuts to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and National Institutes of Health (NIH).
A stopgap bill was earlier passed in the House, or lower chamber, but is yet to clear the Senate.
When did the shutdown happen?
At 00:01 EDT on Wednesday (04:01 GMT), it became official: the US would have its first shutdown for nearly seven years.
The last time this happened was at the end of 2018, during Trump’s first term. Both sides made last-ditch efforts to avoid a repeat this time.
On Monday, Trump met all four congressional leaders – the top Democrats in the House and Senate as well as their Republican counterparts. But there was little progress, and both sides appear to have dug deeper into their positions.
On the Republican side, Trump administration officials have been unwilling, so far, to offer any substantive concessions.
They appear to believe Democrats, as the side making demands in exchange for keeping the government open, will bear the brunt of the public’s blame – as they have in some past shutdowns.
Democrats, meanwhile, believe their push for preserving health-insurance subsidies is a popular one.
What is more, their congressional leaders provoked the ire of left-wing activists for backing down during the last budget bout in March. Many Democrats are itching for a bigger fight this time around – and funding the government is one of the only places where their party has some leverage.
What’s different about the White House response this time?
What stands out about this current standoff is the position of Trump’s team.
In the past, long shutdowns were usually seen as politically dangerous, hampering both voters’ everyday lives and the images of lawmakers and the president.
But this time around, the Trump administration appears more than happy to shutter large parts of the US government for an extended period. In fact, officials have threatened to use a shutdown to identify “non-essential” workers who could then be permanently let go.
“We’ll be laying off a lot of people,” Trump said on Tuesday.
Also, after previous shutdowns, government operations mostly returned to normal, with staff and spending levels largely going back to what they had been before, once the standoff was resolved.
Over the past nine months, however, the Trump administration has slashed spending and pushed workers out of their jobs, testing the boundaries of presidential power. A shutdown could allow the administration to accelerate its massive reductions.
What impacts will the shutdown have – including on national parks and social security?
Not all of government will shut down.
Border protection, in-hospital medical care, law enforcement and air-traffic control are expected to continue to operate during the stoppage.
While social security and Medicare cheques would still be sent out, benefit verification and card issuance could stop.
Generally, in a shutdown, essential workers continue as normal – some of them without pay for the time being – but government employees deemed non-essential are temporarily put on unpaid leave. In the past, these workers have then been paid retrospectively.
That means that services like the food assistance programme, federally-funded pre-school, the issuing of student loans, food inspections, and operations at national parks are expected to be curtailed or closed.
There could also be travel delays if the stand-off drags on and unpaid workers stop showing up.
Overall, analysts expect that this shutdown could be bigger than the one in late 2018, when Congress had passed some funding bills. They expect roughly 40% of federal workers – more than 800,000 people – to be put on temporary leave.
How could this shutdown affect the economy?
The scale of the damage will depend in part on how long the shutdown lasts – and how wide ranging it is.
In the past, disruption has tended to be temporary, with any lost activity mostly made up in the months after the shutdown ends.
Analysts estimate a shutdown this time could shave roughly 0.1 to 0.2 percentage points off economic growth for each week that it lasts – though much of that could be recouped.
That relatively muted impact may be why the stock market seems to be shrugging off this latest threat.
But, again, there are some ways that this shutdown could look different.
For one thing, Trump has threatened to fire – not just furlough – some workers, which would make the impact more long lasting.
The fight is also injecting more turmoil into an economy already being roiled by changes like tariffs and artificial intelligence, with the likely delay of key data – such as the official US monthly jobs report – expected to add to the uncertainty.
How common are shutdowns in the US?
Quite common over the past 50 years.
There were three during Trump’s first term, including the longest in history at 36 days, which ended in January 2019. That one was brought about by disagreements over funding a wall on the Mexico border.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that it reduced economic output by about $11bn, including $3bn that it never regained.
Fellow Republican Ronald Reagan oversaw eight shutdowns during his presidency in the 1980s – though all were relatively brief.
Shutdowns over budgets are almost unique to US politics.
Under the US system, the different branches of government have to reach an agreement on spending plans before they can become law.
In most countries, budget votes become votes of confidence in the government itself. But because the US has equal and often divided branches of government, that is not the case.
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