Business
Confirmed! Methane Gas Reserve Found In Andaman Basin As India Ramps Up Energy Security Efforts – Watch
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NEW DELHI: In a significant development, natural gas has been found in the Andaman basin, confirming the long-held belief that the Andaman Sea is rich in natural gas, Union Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said on Friday.
The minister informed about the occurrence of natural gas in the Sri Vijayapuram 2 well at a distance of 9.20 NM (17 km) from the shoreline on the east coast of the Andaman Islands at a water depth of 295 metres and target depth of 2,650 metres.
“An ocean of energy opportunities opens up in the Andaman Sea,” said the minister in a post on social media platform X.
“Initial production testing of the well in the range of 2212 – 2250 meters has established the presence of natural gas with intermittent flaring. The gas samples were brought by ship to Kakinada, were tested and found to be 87 per cent methane,” he further stated.
An ocean of energy opportunities opens up in the Andaman Sea!
Very happy to report the occurrence of natural gas in Sri Vijayapuram 2 well at a distance of 9.20 NM (17 km) from the shoreline on the east coast of the Andaman Islands at a water depth of 295 meters and target depth… pic.twitter.com/4VDeGtt8bt
— Hardeep Singh Puri (@HardeepSPuri) September 26, 2025
According to the minister, the size of the gas pool and commercial viability of the discovery will get verified in the coming months but establishing the presence of hydrocarbons in the Andaman basin is a major step in confirming their long-held belief that Andaman basin is rich in natural gas, “in line with discoveries in the entire area from Myanmar in North to Indonesia in the south in this belt”.
“Under the deepwater mission announced by PM Narendra Modi on Independence Day, large number of deepwater exploration wells are planned in our offshore basins in order to find new discoveries and fully exploit our hydrocarbon reserves,” said Puri.
This occurrence of natural gas will help the country take forward its exploration ambitions in coordination with global deepwater exploration experts, and will be a significant milestone in India’s journey through Amrit Kaal, the minister emphasised.
PM Modi, in his Independence Day address, announced the National Deep Water Exploration Mission, which aims to explore oil and gas reserves in the sea. Terming it “Samudra Manthan,” he said that the initiative will be executed in mission mode, highlighting India’s push for self-reliance in the energy sector.
Business
Deposit claims up to Rs 15L get easier for kin of deceased – The Times of India

MUMBAI: RBI has issued new rules on Friday that in the event of a bank customer’s death, deposits of up to Rs 15 lakh can be claimed by their nominees through a simplified process. For co-operative banks, the limit has been set at Rs 5 lakh.RBI’s new norms have standardised procedures across banks for deposits, safe deposit lockers, and articles in safe custody. The framework replaces earlier circulars and introduces uniform documentation, thresholds, and timelines. The new rules have to be implemented by the end of the current fiscal.For deposits without a nominee, survivorship clause, or will – and where there is no court order or contesting claim – banks must settle claims on submission of a claim form, death certificate, valid ID of the claimant, an indemnity bond, and, if applicable, a letter of disclaimer from other heirs. A legal heir certificate or a declaration by an independent person acceptable to the bank is also required. Banks cannot demand a third-party surety bond for claims within the threshold.RBI has fixed a 15-day deadline for banks to settle deposit claims after receiving all documents. For lockers and safe custody articles, banks must contact claimants and set an inventory date within 15 days. Delays will attract penalties – interest at bank rate plus 4% per annum for deposits, and Rs 5,000 per day for lockers and safe custody items.Banks have been directed to implement the new rules at the earliest, and no later than March 31, 2026.
Business
Bank of England rate-setter says inflation not a ‘particularly British problem’

A Bank of England policymaker has dismissed suggestions that inflation is a problem unique to Britain, as she called for more interest rate cuts.
Swati Dhingra, a member of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), argued there was no need to be “overly cautious” about lowering borrowing costs.
Writing in The Times, Ms Dhingra said: “It’s become commonplace to assert that inflation in the UK is out of step with other economies, requiring a more careful approach to cutting interest rates as a result.
“With prices for services and food rising more quickly than in the major eurozone countries, inflation looks like a particularly British problem.”
But she said that was not the case and that the factors putting pressure on UK inflation “will fade”.
A report from the Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) earlier this week found that Britain will experience the highest level of inflation among the G7 group of advanced economies this year.
In 2026, the overall inflation rate will be the second highest in the G7, behind only the US, according to its forecasts.
Ms Dhingra said food prices are often a named “culprit for accelerating inflation”, having risen at a faster pace in the UK than in the eurozone.
“But it’s not clear that this gap reflects anything other than global trends and slightly different supply chains and shopping baskets in the two economies,” she wrote.
“The difference in inflation between the UK and our continental neighbours can be largely explained by administered prices and global commodity shocks.
“These should pass.
“We can afford to cut rates further and not put additional strain on economic growth without threatening the inflation target.”
Her comments contrast to remarks made by fellow MPC member Megan Greene earlier this week, who said risks to the UK’s inflation outlook may have increased.
Ms Greene said a “cautious approach to rate cuts going forward” was appropriate in the face of “uncertainty and risks” to the economy.
Business
Brighter US outlook fires up European stocks

The FTSE 100 recorded strong gains on Friday as US data pointed to resilient consumer spending and relatively subdued inflation, keeping hopes for rate cuts across the pond on track.
The FTSE 100 index closed up 70.85 points, 0.8%, at 9,284.83. The FTSE 250 ended 93.71 points higher, 0.4%, at 21,681.48, and the AIM All-Share ended up 3.91 points, 0.5%, at 777.53.
For the week, the FTSE 100 rose 0.7%, the FTSE 250 advanced 0.4% and the AIM All-Share climbed 0.4%.
Figures from the Bureau of Economic Analysis showed US inflation pressure was largely steady in August.
The core personal consumption expenditures price index, which is the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflationary measure, rose 2.9% on-year in August, matching the pace of growth from July and landing in line with FXStreet cited consensus.
The core reading excludes food and energy. The headline PCE price index rose 2.7% on-year last month, picking up speed slightly from 2.6% in July, as expected.
In addition, the report showed personal income rose 0.4% month-over-month, the same as in the month prior. Consumer spending grew 0.6% month-on-month in nominal terms, coming on the heels of 0.5% gains in the two months prior.
Personal income beat consensus of 0.3%, while spending beat a forecast of 0.5%.
Barclays analyst Pooja Sriram called the inflation figures subdued although she expects core inflation to firm in the coming months amid tariff pass-through.
Analysts at TD Economics said the data, following strong economic growth figures on Thursday, suggests that the US consumer is in “somewhat better shape than previously thought”.
“Overall, an improved growth trend and persistent inflation lean in favour of the Fed potentially having to do a little less in the way of rate cuts to support the economy. This may put some doubt on the interest rate path, though it does not derail the case for two more rate cuts by the end of this year,” the broker said.
The CME FedWatch tool puts an 86% chance of a quarter point rate cut at the Federal Open Market Committee meeting in October, unchanged from Thursday.
The pound was quoted higher at 1.3399 dollars at the time of the London equity market close on Friday compared with 1.3348 dollars on Thursday. The euro stood at 1.1692 dollars, higher against 1.1676 dollars. Against the yen, the dollar was trading at 149.51 yen, lower compared with 149.74 yen.
The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was quoted at 4.18% trimmed from 4.20% on Thursday. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury stood at 4.75%, narrowed from 4.76%.
In European equities on Friday, the CAC 40 in Paris closed up 0.8%, as was the DAX 40 in Frankfurt.
Stocks in New York were mixed at the time of the London close. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.4%, the S&P 500 index was 0.2% higher, while the Nasdaq Composite was down 0.1%.
On the FTSE 100, Intercontinental Hotels topped the blue-chip leaderboard, rising 4.0%, as JP Morgan double upgraded the hotel operator to ‘overweight’ from ‘underweight’.
IHG is a “quality compounder” benefiting from superior earnings visibility and execution, in JPM’s view, adding this is “key” in times of revenue per average room uncertainty.
Pharmaceutical stocks shrugged off new tariffs from the US with AstraZeneca up 0.4% and GSK up 1.1%.
Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, explained that drug companies are exempt from the 100% tariffs on US imports if they are building a factory in the country.
“That means AstraZeneca and GSK are safe as they’ve both unveiled big investments in the US in what look like strategic moves to get on the right side of Trump,” he said.
“Being exempt is a big win for these companies given previous uncertainty over how they might be affected by Trump’s repeated threats for tariffs on the pharmaceutical sector,” he added.
Phoenix Group rose 1.9% as RBC Capital Markets raised its share price target and reiterated an ‘outperform’ rating.
“Phoenix shares continue to trade at a notable valuation discount versus peers, likely reflecting perceptions that are increasingly unwarranted, in our view,” RBC said.
The broker expects Phoenix to start deploying excess capital supporting buybacks alongside financial 2026 results.
Pennon Group climbed 0.2% as it said its financial performance remains on track, although guidance fell short of consensus, amid the benefits and challenges from the hot weather.
In a trading statement covering April 1 to September 25, the Exeter-based water utility company explained that high demand for water over the summer due to the hot weather was more than offset in revenue by increased meter usage, deferring sales into financial 2027.
In addition, the hot weather also resulted in higher operational costs to respond to the increased demand and operational pressure on the networks.
Despite this, Pennon said it has made a “strong return” to profitability, with earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation anticipated to increase by 60% year-on-year, net of revenue deferred into financial 2027.
In the financial year to March 2025, Pennon reported underlying Ebitda of £335.6 million.
Analysts at Jefferies said this was slightly below consensus of 66%/67% although part of the variation could be driven by the profiling of revenues from the current year into next to manage the bill profile.
Brent oil advanced to 70.64 dollars a barrel on Friday from 69.15 dollars late on Thursday. Gold firmed to 3,775.97 dollars an ounce on Friday, up against 3,729.67 dollars on Thursday.
The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Intercontinental Hotels Group, up 350.0 pence at 9,124.0p, Hikma Pharmaceuticals, up 52.0p at 1,644.0p, Babcock International, up 39.0p at 1,273.0p, NatWest, up 15.2p at 520.4p and Kingfisher, up 8.2p at 301.0p.
The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Rio Tinto, down 84.5p at 4,831.5p, Coca-Cola Europacific Partners, down 80.0p at 6,620.0p, Spirax, down 80.0p at 6,795.0p, Bunzl, down 24.0p at 2,336.0p and Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust, down 11.0p at 1,120.0p.
Monday’s global economic calendar has UK mortgage approvals figures, US pending home sales numbers and Spanish CPI data. Later in the week, a slew of data on the US jobs market will be released, culminating in Friday’s nonfarm payrolls.
Monday’s UK corporate calendar sees third quarter results from cruise operator Carnival. Later in the week, food retailer Tesco reports half-year results while bakery chain Greggs issues a third quarter trading statement.
Contributed by Alliance News
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