Business
PSX plunges over 2,750 points as profit-taking erupts | The Express Tribune
KSE-100 hits intra-day low of 168,828 after aggressive selling wipes out early gains
KARACHI:
The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) witnessed a major sell-off during Thursday’s session, with the benchmark KSE-100 index plunging by over 2,400 points to close at above 169,170 points.
The KSE100 closed at 169,173 points, registering a decline of 2,405 points (-1.40% DoD), as selling pressure dominated throughout the session. Early stability proved short-lived, with the market drifting lower as sentiment weakened amid persistent external uncertainties.
Activity remained moderate, with KSE-100 volumes recorded at 310 million shares, where YOUW led with 58m shares traded, followed by CNERGY (48m) and KEL (36m). The downturn was largely driven by renewed concerns over rising global oil prices and escalating geopolitical tensions between Iran and the United States.
Read More: Governance gap costs billions
With Brent crude hovering in the $102–104 per barrel range and no clarity on potential negotiations or diplomatic engagement, investor confidence remained fragile, prompting a risk-off stance across the board, according to Ahmed Sheraz, KASB KTrade.
Heavyweight sectors bore the brunt of the decline, particularly commercial banks and oil & gas stocks. Key index laggards included FFC, UBL, MEBL, PPL, BAFL, MARI, ENGROH, and EFERT, all contributing significantly to the negative close as broad-based selling persisted in blue-chip names.
Looking ahead, near-term direction remains tied to external developments, especially movements in oil prices and any progress on geopolitical fronts. With Friday’s session approaching, typical end-of-week caution may keep sentiment subdued, while investors are likely to stay on the sidelines awaiting clearer signals over the weekend.
Business
Govt hikes petrol, diesel prices by nearly Rs27 per litre – SUCH TV
The federal government announced a Rs26.77 per litre hike in the price of petrol and high-speed diesel each on Friday, according to a notification issued by the Petroleum Division.
The new prices will be effective from April 25, 2026 for a week, the notification stated.
Following the increase, the price of HSD has jumped from Rs353.42 to Rs380.19, while the petrol price now stands at Rs393.35.
The government has been reviewing petroleum prices every Friday night following the now-paused US-Israel war on Iran, which began on February 28.
In the previous weekly review, the prime minister announced a reduction of Rs32.12 per litre in the price of high-speed diesel, while the petrol price remained unchanged.
The government jacked up petrol and diesel prices despite oil prices falling globally on Friday after it appeared a second round of Middle East talks was back on, bolstering prospects for an end to a war that has crippled energy shipments from the Gulf.
Oil prices had been climbing earlier as investors worried about a lack of progress in ending the Middle East crisis, with Tehran keeping the Strait of Hormuz closed and the US maintaining a blockade of Iranian ports.
But they dropped on reports that Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was to arrive in Islamabad on Friday night.
Brent crude, the international benchmark contract, fell back below $100 a barrel.
facebook twitter
Business
US justice department drops probe into Fed chairman Jerome Powell
Powell’s term is nearing its end and the US Senate is considering Trump’s nominee for his replacement, Kevin Warsh. A key Republican, Thom Tillis, has withheld his support for Warsh unless the Trump administration would drop its investigation into Powell.
Business
Intel bags big gains! Chipmaker’s shares jump 26% on blockbuster results; how Trump admin benefits – The Times of India
Intel share price soared sharply on Friday after the chipmaker delivered a first-quarter performance that exceeded market expectations. And the win was not just for the chipmaker, but also the whole of US!The stock climbed 26.7% during trading on Friday, marking what could be its strongest single-day gain since 1987. Momentum continued after the closing bell, with shares rising a further 20% in after-hours trading as investors reacted to signs of a sustained turnaround driven by artificial intelligence.Intel reported revenue of $13.58 billion (€11.6bn) for the quarter, ahead of the $12.3 billion (€10.5 bn) forecast and up 7.2% from a year earlier. Adjusted earnings per share came in at $0.29, far exceeding expectations of $0.01.A key contributor to this performance was the company’s Data Centre and AI (DCAI) division, which delivered revenue of $5.05 billion (€4.2bn), up 22.4% year-on-year and well above analyst estimates of $4.41 billion (€3.77bn). The results indicate strong demand for Intel’s Xeon 6 processors and Gaudi 3 AI accelerators, particularly among enterprise clients and cloud service providers.Chief executive Lip-Bu Tan pointed to a broader shift in artificial intelligence usage as a major factor behind the growth. He said, “the next wave of AI will bring intelligence closer to the end user, moving from foundational models to inference to agentic.” He added, “This shift is significantly increasing the need for Intel’s CPUs and wafer and advanced packaging offerings.”The company also issued an upbeat outlook for the second quarter, forecasting revenue in the range of $13.8 billion (€11.8billion) to $14.8 billion (€12.6billion), surpassing investor expectations of $13 billion (€11.1billion).
But how is Washington winning?
The rally has had a direct impact on the US administration’s investment in Intel. In 2025, during a period of severe financial strain for the company, the administration of Donald Trump acquired a 9.9% stake in a move aimed at stabilising the business. The government invested $8.9 billion (€7.8bn) at a share price of $20.47 (€18.01), with $5.7 billion (€5bn) of that amount coming from previously approved but unpaid grants, according to the Euro News.At the time, Intel was facing multi-billion dollar losses and operational challenges, prompting concerns over its viability. As part of the intervention, the company cancelled planned factory projects in Germany and Poland, redirected focus towards US-based manufacturing, and reduced its global workforce by 25%, cutting around 25,000 jobs.Following the latest jump, Intel’s shares are now trading at $81.3 (€71.5), representing an increase of nearly 300% since the government first took its stake. The sharp rise highlights how the company’s improved financial performance has translated into substantial gains for the US administration.
-
Fashion1 week agoFrance’s LVMH Q1 revenue falls 6%, shows resilience amid Iran war
-
Tech1 week agoCYBERUK ’26: UK lagging on legal protections for cyber pros | Computer Weekly
-
Sports5 days agoWWE WrestleMania 42 Night 2: Live match results and analysis
-
Sports1 week agoFaheem Ashraf backs Islamabad United’s push, calls league a ‘career-changing platform’
-
Sports5 days agoNCAA men’s gymnastics championship: All-time winners list
-
Business1 week agoPepsiCo earnings beat estimates as North American food business improves
-
Tech1 week agoAnthropic Plots Major London Expansion
-
Entertainment4 days agoLee Anderson, Zarah Sultana kicked out of UK Parliament for calling PM ‘liar’
