Business
Ever Seen A Saree Being Woven Live? This Bengaluru Area Lets You Do That
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Step into one of the narrow units and you will see looms humming non-stop, spools of coloured yarn stacked against walls, workers adjusting threads with the focus of muscle memory.
For those who love sarees, Cubbonpete offers something rare, transparency. You see how your saree is made, who makes it, and how much work goes into every fold. Image: AI
In the middle of Bengaluru’s rush, between honking autos, wholesale lanes and half-hidden bylanes, there is a place where time slows down to the rhythm of clacking looms. Cubbonpete does not announce itself. You stumble into it. And suddenly, you are watching a saree come alive thread by thread.
Tucked near KR Market and Chickpet, Cubbonpete is one of the city’s oldest weaving clusters. The area is home to power looms that produce everything from everyday synthetic sarees to silk blends, cotton-silk mixes and festive fabrics.
This is not a retail street. It is a working neighbourhood that is noisy, warm, unapologetically industrial, where sarees are still made in real time.
Step into one of the narrow units and you will see looms humming non-stop, spools of coloured yarn stacked against walls, and workers adjusting threads with the focus of muscle memory. Patterns are not just designed here; they are executed live, metre by metre.
Watching A Saree Being Born
What makes Cubbonpete special is not just the price or the variety. It is the experience. Buyers can stand next to a loom and watch their saree being woven. The colours they chose roll out slowly, the border takes shape, the pallu reveals itself inch by inch.
For many, this is the first time they understand what goes into making a saree — the coordination, the patience, the precision. It changes the relationship between buyer and fabric. This is no longer just a garment pulled off a rack. It is something you saw being made.
Bulk Orders And Wholesale Culture
Cubbonpete largely works on bulk orders. Most weavers and unit owners cater to retailers, boutique owners and traders who place large quantity requests. A single design may be woven in dozens or hundreds of pieces.
This means it is not the easiest place for someone looking to buy just one saree. Walk-in retail is rare. But if you know a wholesaler, or if you are willing to place a small bulk order for weddings or functions, doors open. And once they do, the experience is worth the effort.
The range here is wide. Synthetic sarees dominate daily production, but silk blends, cotton silks and festive fabrics are also woven depending on demand. Designs are often customised colour changes, border tweaks, pallu variations, all discussed on the spot.
Prices are lower than retail stores because there is no showroom mark up. What you pay for is fabric and labour, not air conditioning and display lighting.
A Living Craft In The City’s Heart
Cubbonpete is a reminder that Bengaluru is not just a tech city. It is also a manufacturing city, a trading city, a place where traditional livelihoods still survive between flyovers and metro lines.
For those who love sarees, Cubbonpete offers something rare, transparency. You see how your saree is made, who makes it, and how much work goes into every fold.
You may not walk out with a single neatly packed saree bag. But you walk out with something else – the quiet joy of having witnessed creation, right in the heart of the city.u
January 26, 2026, 16:53 IST
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Business
Mike Lynch estate ordered to pay almost £1bn
The estate of British technology tycoon Mike Lynch has been denied the right to appeal a High Court ruling that found it liable to pay Hewlett-Packard (HP) following the contentious acquisition of software firm Autonomy.
A High Court judge rejected the estate’s bid to challenge Mr Justice Hildyard’s 2022 decision, which concluded that HP had “substantially won” its more than a billion-dollar fraud claim against Mr Lynch over the 2011 purchase of Autonomy.
The estate had also sought permission to appeal against the judge’s subsequent ruling in July last year, which determined that Hewlett-Packard Enterprise (HPE) suffered losses totalling around £700 million as a result of the deal.
At a hearing in November, barristers for HP, now known as Hewlett-Packard Enterprise, said that Mr Lynch’s estate was liable to pay 1,786,668,553 dollars (£1.35 billion), which includes around 761 million dollars (£578 million) in interest.
In a ruling on Tuesday, Mr Justice Hildyard refused Mr Lynch’s estate permission to appeal against either of his earlier judgments, with a spokesperson for HPE claiming that it had been awarded damages and interest totalling around 1.24 billion dollars (£0.93 billion) from Mr Lynch’s estate.
The estate could still ask the Court of Appeal directly for the go-ahead to challenge the rulings.
HP sued Mr Lynch for around five billion dollars (£3.79 billion) following its purchase of Cambridge-based Autonomy for 11.1 billion dollars (£8.2 billion) in 2011.
The company claimed at a nine-month trial in 2019 – then believed to be the UK’s biggest civil fraud trial – that Mr Lynch inflated Autonomy’s revenues and “committed a deliberate fraud over a sustained period of time”.
It said this forced it to announce an 8.8 billion dollar (£6.5 billion) write-down of the firm’s worth just over a year after the acquisition.
In a ruling in 2022, Mr Justice Hildyard said the American firm had “substantially succeeded” in its claim, but that it was likely to receive “substantially less” than the amount it claimed in damages.

He said that Autonomy, founded by Mr Lynch, had not accurately portrayed its financial position during the purchase, but even if it had, HPE would still have bought the company, but at a reduced price.
Then in 2024, Mr Lynch died aged 59 along with his 18-year-old daughter, Hannah, and five others when his yacht, the Bayesian, sank off the coast of Sicily.
In written submissions for the hearing in November, Patrick Goodall KC, for HPE, said Mr Lynch had “not only perpetrated an enormous fraud, but lied about it at every stage”, and an appeal “aimed at escaping the consequences of that fraud” should not be allowed to be pursued.
Richard Hill KC, in written submissions for Mr Lynch’s estate, said the 761 million dollars (£578 million) in interest sought by the claimants was an “excessive sum … based on a flawed analysis”.
Mr Hill also said Mr Lynch’s estate should be allowed to appeal against the two earlier rulings, claiming that the judge “erred in law” and that there was a “compelling reason for allowing the appeal to be heard”.
Business
PSX advances as easing Middle East war fears boost sentiment – SUCH TV
The equity market rose on Tuesday as hopes of easing Middle East tensions lifted sentiment, while reports that Pakistan may be playing a mediating role between the United States and Iran added support.
The Pakistan Stock Exchange’s (PSX) benchmark KSE-100 Index closed at 152,207.89 points, up 1,225.99 points, or 0.8%, versus the previous close of 152,740.37. During the session, the index traded between a high of 157,442.68, up 4,702.31 points, or 3.08%, and a low of 153,382, up 641.63 points, or 0.42%.
“The market opened on a positive note, driven by investor optimism surrounding the potential easing of geopolitical tensions and further supported by Pakistan’s perceived geopolitical relevance following media reports suggesting the country may be mediating between the United States and Iran,” said Huzaifa Riaz, Director, Mayari Securities (Pvt) Limited.
US President Donald Trump said on Monday he had ordered a five-day postponement of any military strikes against Iranian power plants, citing what he described as “very good and productive” conversations over the past two days about a “complete and total resolution of hostilities in the Middle East”.
Iran’s Fars news agency later reported there had been no direct communication with the United States or through intermediaries, citing an unnamed source, while also quoting Deputy Speaker Ali Nikzad as saying there would be no talks and that the Strait of Hormuz would remain effectively closed.
Asian equities rose on the headlines as hopes of de-escalation briefly strengthened, with Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Taipei and Manila higher, though gains pared as trading progressed. Oil prices, after plunging on Monday, edged up again as the outlook remained uncertain.
Analysts said market direction would remain tied to Middle East developments, with investors also watching post-Ramadan participation and upcoming inflation data.
AKD Research said any de-escalation could trigger a sharper rebound as valuations had turned more attractive, with forward price-to-earnings at 6.6 times. Arif Habib Limited Research put the market at a price-to-earnings ratio of 7.5 times and a dividend yield of around 6.8%.
Business
After Trump’s sanction waiver, Reliance Industries procures 5 million barrels of Iran crude oil: Report – The Times of India
With the US waiving sanctions on Iran oil, Reliance Industries has reportedly bought 5 million barrels of Iranian crude. Reliance runs the world’s largest refining complex. The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz has led to global crude oil prices shooting up. In recent years, Iranian crude has largely been purchased by independent refiners in China and is often rebranded as originating from other countries.Last Friday, the Donald Trump administration granted a 30-day waiver on sanctions for Iranian oil already in transit. The exemption covers cargo loaded on or before March 20, including shipments on sanctioned vessels, provided it is discharged by April 19.
Reliance buys Iran crude oil
Two sources told Reuters that the cargo was sourced from the National Iranian Oil Company. One of them noted that the crude was priced at a premium of about $7 per barrel over ICE Brent futures. The delivery schedule is not yet known.The transaction marks India’s first import of Iranian oil since May 2019, when the country, the world’s third-largest importer and consumer of crude, stopped purchases following the reimposition of US sanctions on Tehran.The move follows large-scale buying of Russian crude by Indian refiners, who secured more than 40 million barrels to deal with supply crunch from the Middle East.Other Asian refiners, including Indian state-run firms, are evaluating whether to buy Iranian oil, sources said.
State refiners hesitant?
At the same time, a Bloomberg report indicates that state-run refiners are reluctant to procure Iranian crude, as apprehensions around operational, financial and regulatory hurdles could outweigh any short-term benefits.Despite the sanctions waiver granted by the administration of Donald Trump, these refiners have remained cautious. Persistent uncertainties linked to shipping, insurance and payment mechanisms have so far prevented deals from being finalised.The brief duration of the waiver is a major concern. Refiners worry that any delays in execution could push shipments beyond the allowed timeframe, potentially exposing them to the risk of sanctions.
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