Business
FTSE 100 finishes lower as political woe in Paris jolts CAC 40
The FTSE 100 closed slightly lower on Monday, below new best levels, and despite gains by gold miners as the yellow metal hit a new high.
The FTSE 100 index closed down 12.11 points, 0.1%, at 9,479.14. The blue-chip index had earlier hit a new all-time best level of 9,516.83.
The FTSE 250 ended down 97.88 points, 0.4%, at 22,099.74, and the AIM All-Share declined 0.89 of a point, 0.1%, at 795.63.
In European equities on Monday, the CAC 40 in Paris closed down 1.4%, while the DAX 40 in Frankfurt ended unchanged.
The CAC 40 tumbled after prime minister Sebastien Lecornu resigned.
President Emmanuel Macron appointed Mr Lecornu, a former defence minister, to the post last month, the third prime minister appointed since snap parliamentary elections in the summer of 024.
But the largely unchanged cabinet Mr Macron unveiled late on Sunday to work with Mr Lecornu sparked fierce criticism across the political spectrum.
Mr Lecornu’s allies in the centre-right Les Republicains indicated they could withdraw from his government because of the number of ministers planned to be included from Mr Macron’s Renaissance party.
“Lecornu was already expected to face a difficult confidence vote later this week but President Macron’s cabinet appointments, which were largely similar to the past government sealed Lecornu’s fate,” said Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Capital Markets.
Barclays said Mr Lecornu’s resignation now leaves President Macron with two main options: appointing a new prime minister or dissolving the National Assembly.
Financial services took the brunt of the falls, with Societe Generale down 4.2%, BNP Paribas down 3.2%, AXA down 2.3% and Credit Agricole down 3.4%.
But losses were widespread. Car maker Renault fell 1.6%, Gucci owner Kering dipped 1.8% and retailer Carrefour declined 1.7%.
The yield on French 10-year bonds rose six basis points to 3.57%, while the euro traded lower.
The euro stood at 1.1706 dollars at the time of the London equity market close on Monday, compared with 1.1741 dollars on Friday.
Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB said once again, France is “rudderless” politically speaking, which is also weighing on the stock market.
“While the political situation may not directly impact these companies, the fact that France’s largest and most prestigious companies are getting sold off today is a sign that investors are offloading French assets on a broad basis, and the risk is that this causes contagion elsewhere,” Ms Brooks said.
The pound was quoted slightly higher at 1.3471 dollars compared with 1.3469 dollars on Friday. Against the yen, the dollar was trading at 150.07 yen, higher compared with 147.43 yen.
Stocks in New York were mixed at the time of the London close. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.1%, the S&P 500 index was 0.3% higher and the Nasdaq Composite 0.5% to the good.
The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was quoted at 4.16%, stretched from 4.11% on Friday. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury stood at 4.76%, widened from 4.70%.
Advanced Micro Devices soared 27% after it announced a deal with OpenAi which could see the ChatGPT maker take a 10% stake over time.
Under the agreement, San Francisco-based OpenAi has agreed to purchase graphics processing units from AMD with a total power consumption of six gigawatts.
The first 1GW deployment of AMD Instinct MI450 GPUs is set to begin in the second half of 2026.
As part of the agreement, AMD has issued OpenAI a warrant for up to 160 million shares of AMD common stock, roughly 10% of the firm, structured to vest as specific milestones are achieved.
On London’s FTSE 100, Mondi plunged 16% as it revealed profitability dwindled in the third quarter of this year thanks mainly to softer volumes and weaker prices.
The Weybridge-based packaging firm saw its underlying earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation drop 19% to 223 million euros for the third quarter of 2025 from 274 million euros in the second quarter, but was flat compared with the third quarter last year.
Jefferies said this was 11% below its “already cut” forecast of 250 million euros and implies 10% reductions to 2025 Ebitda forecasts.
“The profit warning was worse than we had expected,” analysts at Jefferies wrote.
A fresh surge in the gold price boosted Fresnillo, up 1.2%, and Endeavour Mining, up 2.8%.
Gold traded at 3,957.68 dollars an ounce on Monday, breaching 3,900 dollars an ounce mark for the first time, and up against 3,885.67 dollars on Friday.
The yellow metal was lifted by safe-haven demand as investors braced for a protracted US government shutdown.
Brent oil traded at 65.43 dollars a barrel on Monday, up from 64.61 dollars late on Friday, supporting BP, which rose 2.1%.
On the FTSE 250, Aston Martin hit reverse, down 10%, as it reported a lower full-year outlook for 2025, hurt by US tariff uncertainty and weakened demand.
The Warwickshire-based luxury car maker now expects total wholesale volumes for the full year to decline by mid-high single-digit percentage from 6,030 in 2024.
In addition, Aston Martin expects adjusted earnings before interest and tax “to be below the lower end of the range of market consensus … driven by the weaker volumes and pressure on the gross margin per vehicle”, the minimum estimate currently being a £110 million loss, “and no longer expects positive free cash flow generation in (the second half)”.
“Reduced 2025 expectations may clear the decks for a better 2026, but this remains a show-me story for investors,” analysts at Citi said.
The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Prudential, up 28.5p at 1,039.0p, Endeavour Mining, up 86.0 pence at 3,198.0p, BP, up 9.05p at 432.8p, Admiral, up 62.0p at 3,330.0p and Glencore, up 6.0p at 353.7p.
The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Mondi, down 167.4p at 879.6p, Kingfisher, down 6.0p at 301.7p, BAE Systems, down 39.0p at 2,016.0p, Diageo, down 33.5p at 1,760.0p, and IMI, down 40.0p at 2,310.0p.
Tuesday’s global economic calendar has the Halifax house price index in the UK and trade figures in Canada.
Tuesday’s UK corporate calendar has full year results from veterinary services provider CVS Group, and half year numbers from fishing tackle and equipment retailer Angling Direct.
Contributed by Alliance News.
Business
Indias Net Direct Tax Collections In FY26 Rise, Grow 8.82% To Rs 18.38 Lakh Crore Till Jan 11
New Delhi: India’s net direct tax collections for the financial year 2025–26 recorded strong growth of 8.82%, reaching Rs 18.38 lakh crore as of January 11, 2026, compared with Rs 16.89 lakh crore collected during the same period last year, according to official data released by the Income Tax Department on Monday.
Gross direct tax collections stood at Rs 21.50 lakh crore, marking a 4.14% increase over the Rs 20.64 lakh crore collected in the corresponding period of FY25. Corporate tax collections rose modestly to Rs 10.47 lakh crore, while non-corporate tax collections—which include taxes paid by individuals and other entities—increased to Rs 10.58 lakh crore.
Refunds issued during the period declined sharply by 16.92% to Rs 3.12 lakh crore from Rs 3.75 lakh crore in the previous year, contributing to higher net collections. Net corporate tax collections rose to Rs 8.63 lakh crore, while net non-corporate tax collections increased significantly to Rs 9.30 lakh crore. Securities Transaction Tax (STT) collections remained stable at around Rs 44,867 crore, while collections from other taxes were marginal during the period.
The Union Budget 2026 will be presented on February 1. Earlier, in an email interview with ANI, Sonal Badhan, Economist at Bank of Baroda, said the Union Budget 2026 is likely to target 8.5–9% growth next year and increase capital expenditure to Rs 12–12.2 lakh crore.
“We expect the government to meet its fiscal deficit target of 4.4% for FY26. For next year, we estimate the deficit ratio will be lowered by 30–40 basis points to 4–4.1%. Capital expenditure allocation will be of key interest. In the ongoing fiscal year, the government has already met around 60% of the budgeted target till November 2025,” the BoB economist said.
Business
Trump’s credit card rate cap plan has unclear path, ‘devastating’ risks, bank insiders say
Bank executives were sent scrambling over the weekend after President Donald Trump declared late Friday that American credit card companies would be subject to a 10% cap on the interest rate they can charge customers.
The move sent shares of large banks including Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Bank of America down between 1% and 4% in early trading Monday. Companies more tightly tethered to the card industry, like Visa, Mastercard and American Express, also fell. Capital One, whose loan book is mostly from credit cards, sank nearly 7%.
Trump proposed a one-year cap on interest rates starting Jan. 20. While it’s unclear exactly how that would be enforced, the industry’s message is clear: the plan would bring unintended consequences for consumers and the American economy.
The move would make large swaths of the credit card industry unprofitable, especially tied to customers with less-than-ideal credit profiles, according to banks and analysts. The average credit card rate nationally is 19.7% as of this month, according to a weekly survey from Bankrate.com, while rates for subprime borrowers and store-specific cards are even higher.
Rather than offer loss-making products to consumers, the industry would simply stop offering access to customers with subprime credit, along with a slew of other changes around card programs including scaling back rewards, insiders say. Consumers would either spend less or rely on other forms of unsecured debt, many of which carry even higher interest rates than credit cards, they say.
“We cannot offer products at a loss; there’s no scenario where we would take our entire portfolio to 10%,” said a person with knowledge of the operations of a large bank, who asked to remain anonymous to speak candidly. “It’s not a stretch to suggest this will very quickly tank the economy.”
The drag on the economy from less spending could be more acute for airlines, retailers and restaurants, which would have to make up for lost card revenues by “potentially raising pricing” on their services, KBW analysts led by Sanjay Sakhrani and Chris McGratty said in a Jan. 11 research note.
The industry’s trade groups issued a joint statement late Friday making their case.
“Evidence shows that a 10% interest rate cap would reduce credit availability and be devastating for millions of American families and small business owners who rely on and value their credit cards, the very consumers this proposal intends to help,” the trade groups said.
(L-R) Wells Fargo CEO and President Charles Scharf, Brian Bank of America Chairman and CEO Thomas Moynihan, JPMorgan Chase Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon, Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser, State Street CEO Ronald OÕHanley, BNY Mellon CEO Robin Vince, Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon and Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman, testify during a Wall Street oversight hearing by the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, December 6, 2023.
Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images
‘Opening bid?’
This isn’t the industry’s first time contending with possible price controls. A bill was introduced last year from Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont that would limit card APRs at 10% for five years.
While that bill is stalled in Congress, a study looking at the Missouri market from the Electronic Payments Coalition found that a 10% cap on rates would mean that more than 80% of card accounts would lose access. Most accounts with credit scores below 740 would be shut, the study claimed.
Complicating matters, it is unclear to bankers how Trump’s rate cap would take place.
The most straightforward approach, through legislation in Congress, isn’t possible by the proposed Jan. 20 start date, said Tobin Marcus, head of U.S. policy at Wolfe Research.
Other enforcement means, through banking regulators including the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, are also possible. But the Trump administration has repeatedly tried to shutter that agency, and the industry has had a successful run at defeating CFPB rules in federal courts.
“I’m not aware of an authority that they can use to do this unilaterally in any kind of a sweeping way,” Marcus said. “As far as I can tell, telling them they have until Jan. 20 is an attempt to create pressure and have them do it voluntarily.”
While the exact mechanism that Trump can use to enforce an interest rate cap is unclear, card issuers now face the risk that rates could be headed lower in some form of negotiated compromise with the government, KBW’s McGratty said in an interview.
“Is 10% an opening bid?” he said. “There’s a long distance between 10% and what companies charge today.”
Americans had a collective $1.23 trillion in credit card debt as of the third quarter last year, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Balances have been climbing as many Americans spent down the savings they’d built up during the global coronavirus pandemic.
Correction: This story has been updated to correct the spelling of Capital One.
Business
Boeing 737 MAX lawsuits: Second US trial opens over 2019 Ethiopian Airlines crash; Canadian family presses damages claim – The Times of India
A US federal court in Chicago on Monday began hearing a second damages trial against Boeing over the fatal 2019 crash of an Ethiopian Airlines 737 MAX aircraft, as a Canadian plaintiff sought compensation for the loss of multiple family members in the tragedy.The case has been filed by Manant Vaidya, whose sister Kosha Vaidya and parents Pannagesh and Hansini Vaidya were among the 157 people killed when Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crashed in March 2019. Vaidya also lost his brother-in-law and two young nieces in the incident, AP reported.Jury selection in the case is expected to begin on Monday, with opening statements likely on Tuesday afternoon or Wednesday, according to court proceedings.“It is hard to believe that my entire family was wiped out in an instant incident in such a horrific way,” Vaidya said in a statement published on the website of his attorneys at Clifford Law Firm. “I still cry and my wife, Hiral, still cries when we think of the horror of the last moments of our loved ones’ lives.”The Vaidya family, which lived in Canada, was travelling to Kenya, the homeland of Kosha Vaidya, at the time of the crash.Relatives of Vaidya’s brother-in-law and nieces had filed a separate lawsuit against Boeing, which was settled out of court in July 2025.The Ethiopian Airlines crash followed a similar fatal accident involving a Lion Air 737 MAX aircraft in Indonesia in October 2018. Together, the two crashes claimed 346 lives and led to the worldwide grounding of the 737 MAX fleet. Investigations linked both incidents to the aircraft’s Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS), a flight-stabilising software.Boeing has acknowledged responsibility for the crashes and issued apologies to the victims’ families.“Boeing is deeply sorry for the losses suffered by the families,” a company spokesperson said, adding that the company is committed to “fully and fairly compensate” the victims and has “accepted legal responsibility for the accidents.”“While we have resolved the vast majority of these claims through settlements, families are also entitled to pursue their claims through damages trials in court, and we respect their right to do so,” the spokesperson said.The trial comes weeks after a US jury in the same Chicago courthouse ordered Boeing to pay $28.45 million in damages to the family of an Indian victim of the 2019 Ethiopian Airlines crash.
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