Business
PSX sheds 1,382 points amid heightened global tensions | The Express Tribune
Trading at the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) slumped sharply on Wednesday as caution gripped investors amid escalating geopolitical tensions, particularly between the United States and Iran, and fears of a potential US strike on Tehran that have rattled markets and lifted oil prices.
The benchmark KSE-100 index fell 1,381.69 points, or 0.75% to close at 182,569.82, after swinging between an intraday high of 184,726.60 and a low of 182,369.87. Profit booking after recent gains, coupled with persistent selling, kept market sentiment subdued throughout the session.
Analysts believe the cautious mood reflected investors locking in gains and shying away from fresh exposure as regional uncertainty deepened, keeping the local bourse under pressure for most of the day.
Market Snapshot – January 14th, 2026
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• KMI-30: Pullers & Draggers pic.twitter.com/CCrZgffXPU— PSX (@pakstockexgltd) January 14, 2026
KTrade equities trader Ahmed Sheraz observed that PSX closed the session under pressure, with the benchmark KSE-100 index settling at 182,569 points, down 1,381 points or 0.75% on a day-on-day basis.
Market sentiment remained cautious throughout the session, primarily due to escalating geopolitical tensions between Iran and the US. Uncertainty surrounding a potential strike kept investors on the sidelines, while regional Asian markets also remained under pressure, with PSX following the broader trend.
Read: Exports dip 20% despite high inflows
Total volumes clocked in at 444 million shares. Sector-wise, selling was broad-based across banks, cements, fertilisers, technology, power, and pharma stocks. On a scrip-wise basis, notable pressure was observed in United Bank, MCB Bank, Fauji Fertiliser, Lucky Cement, Hub Power, Habib Bank, Pakistan Telecommunication, National Bank, and Systems Limited, he added.
Oil and gas stocks were the sole exception, supported by expectations of higher global oil prices, which helped Oil and Gas Development Company and Pakistan Petroleum to close in positive territory.
Looking ahead, the market is expected to remain range-bound and volatile in the near term until greater clarity emerges on the geopolitical front. From a longer-term perspective, Sheraz anticipated the overall market outlook to remain intact and advised investors to remain cautious while gradually accumulating quality blue-chip stocks on dips.
Overall trading volume remained nearly flat at 1.034 billion, compared with Tuesday’s 1.037 billion. The value of traded shares stood at Rs65.9 billion.
Shares of 483 companies were traded. Of these, 90 rose higher, 352 fell, and 41 remained unchanged. K-Electric was the volume leader with trading in 56.3 million shares, losing Rs0.02 to close at Rs6.33.
Business
Ticketmaster parent Live Nation reaches settlement with Department of Justice over antitrust concerns
Signs are seen at the Live Nation NYC headquarters on May 23, 2024 in New York City.
Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images
Live Nation Entertainment has reached a settlement with the Department of Justice over antitrust concerns surrounding its Ticketmaster platform, a senior DOJ official said Monday.
The settlement would see Ticketmaster unwind some of its exclusivity agreements with musical artists and open up the ticketing industry to greater competition. It still needs approval by more than 20 states that had filed suit and by the court.
As part of the settlement, Ticketmaster will offer a standalone third-party ticketing system for other companies like SeatGeek to use its technology. Live Nation has also agreed to divest at least 13 of its amphitheaters and will no longer be able to require artists to use other Live Nation products tied to its venues. It has also agreed to pay roughly $280 million in civil penalties.
Shares of Live Nation rose 5% in morning trading. Live Nation and Ticketmaster did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Ticketmaster has long faced criticism that its dominance in the live events and ticketing space pushes up prices for consumers. The company has come under heightened scrutiny in recent years from fans who argue that it’s become harder and pricier to snag coveted event tickets.
In 2022, the backlash boiled over when the rollout of tickets for Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour was mishandled, leading to a probe of the company. And in 2024, the DOJ — along with more than two dozen states — sued to break up Live Nation and Ticketmaster, which merged in 2010.
In September, Live Nation was separately sued by the Federal Trade Commission over what the agency called “illegal” ticket resale tactics. The FTC said Ticketmaster controls roughly 80% of major concert venues’ ticketing.
In a Monday statement, New York Attorney General Letitia James said her office would continue to fight against Live Nation’s alleged monopoly even after its agreement with the DOJ.
“The settlement recently announced with the U.S. Department of Justice fails to address the monopoly at the center of this case, and would benefit Live Nation at the expense of consumers. We cannot agree to it,” said James, who is joined by the attorneys general of more than 20 other states.
Business
How the Iran war may affect your bills and finances
The conflict in the Middle East could raise the cost of petrol, household energy bills and even food.
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Business
Oil crosses $100 mark amid Iran war as violence erupts at petrol pumps in South Asia
Oil prices surged past $115 (£86.47) a barrel on Monday as fuel shortages sparked rationing and violence in South Asia, as the Iran war continues to choke the world’s most critical energy route.
Brent crude rose to $115.31 (£86.47) a barrel, up 24 per cent from Friday’s close and the highest since 2022, as the US–Israeli war with Iran entered its second week. The Strait of Hormuz remained effectively closed to most operators.
West Texas Intermediate crude hit $116.33 (£87.41), up 28 per cent. Brent has not traded at current levels since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.
The surge in energy prices is causing rationing and closure of petrol stations in import-dependent South Asia.
In Sialkot, Pakistan, a man opened fire at a petrol station on Saturday after workers refused to fill jerry cans, killing one worker and critically injuring two others. Separately, a man was killed in Karachi in another fuel queue altercation.
Pakistan raised petrol prices by PKR55 (£0.15) per litre on Friday, the largest ever single increase, to PKR321 per litre, after weeks of warnings that its exposure to Hormuz-linked supply was among the highest of any emerging market.
In Bangladesh, authorities on Monday brought forward university Eid holidays as an emergency measure to cut electricity use and ease fuel pressure after Qatar suspended Liquefied natural gas (LNG) deliveries.
Officials said university campuses consume large amounts of electricity for residential halls, classrooms, laboratories and air conditioning, and the early closure would help ease pressure on the country’s strained power system.
Five of the country’s six fertiliser factories have also closed.
Bangladesh already imposed daily fuel limits last week – motorcyclists are capped at two litres, private cars at 10 – after panic buying emptied stations across the country.
“About 95 per cent of our fuel must be imported,” Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation said, urging consumers not to hoard.
Meanwhile, bigger economies are also affected. Japan said on Sunday it had instructed a national oil reserve storage site to prepare for a possible release of crude, the first such directive since 2022.
Japan holds 254 days of emergency reserves, one of the highest, but sources 95 per cent of its crude from the Middle East, with roughly 70 per cent shipped through the Strait.
India, which imports more than 88 per cent of its oil, sought to calm concerns. Oil minister Hardeep Puri said the country held “sufficient stocks” and directed all LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) refineries, public and private, to increase production.
Analysts are now warning that oil prices could exceed $150 a barrel – a level that could be catastrophic for the global economy.
“Oil prices have now gathered all the ingredients for a perfect storm,” Muyu Xu, senior oil analyst at Kpler, told Reuters. “If the disruption in the Strait of Hormuz persists for another one to two weeks, we could see prices move toward $130–150 a barrel.”
BMI, a unit of Fitch Solutions, said Pakistan and India are the most vulnerable major emerging markets, citing their energy import dependence and high exposure to Hormuz. Egypt and Turkey, it said, face the greatest risk outside the Gulf because of fragile external positions and large energy subsidies.
The shortages come as Iraq, Kuwait and the UAE cut oil production as storage tanks fill due to the reduced ability to export through the Strait.
Iran‘s parliament speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, warned that the war’s impact on the oil industry “would spiral” after Israeli strikes on oil depots in Tehran and a petroleum transfer terminal killed four people overnight.
Roughly 15 million barrels of crude oil, about 20 per cent of global supply, typically pass through the Strait each day, according to Rystad Energy.
The energy minister of Qatar, one of the world’s largest LNG producers, warned that it expects all Gulf energy producers to shut down exports within weeks if the Iran conflict continues.
“Everybody that has not called for force majeure we expect will do so in the next few days if this continues,” Saad al-Kaabi told FT on Friday. “All exporters in the Gulf region will have to call force majeure.”
US energy secretary Chris Wright told CNN on Sunday that gas prices would be back under $3 a gallon “before too long”, describing the spike as “a weeks, not a months thing”.
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