Business
Gold prices in Pakistan Today – January 5, 2026 | The Express Tribune
Gold prices recorded a sharp increase on Monday, rising in both international and domestic markets following a strong jump in global rates.
In the international bullion market, the price of gold rose by $92 per ounce to reach $4,424 per ounce.
The surge was reflected in local bullion markets, where the price of 24-carat gold increased by Rs9,200 per tola, taking the rate to Rs464,762. The price of 10 grams of gold rose by Rs7,888 to Rs398,458.
Silver prices also moved higher in the domestic market. The price of silver increased by Rs267 per tola to Rs8,023, while the rate for 10 grams rose by Rs229 to Rs6,878.
Spot gold rose 2.2% to $4,424.17 per ounce, a one-week high. US gold futures for February delivery gained 2.4% to $4,434.20.
Spot silver added 3.9% to $75.50 per ounce, after hitting an all-time high of $83.62 on December 29. The metal ended its best-ever year on record, 147% higher.
Read: Informal gold trade drains revenue, distorts prices
The increase comes after a decline recorded two days earlier, when gold prices fell in both global and local markets.
At that time, international prices dropped by $47 per ounce, while domestic rates declined by Rs4,700 per tola and Rs4,030 per 10 grams.
Silver prices had also fallen by Rs106 per tola and Rs91 per 10 grams on Saturday.
Business
Tesco and M&S report strong Christmas food sales
Retail giants Tesco and Marks & Spencer both saw a bump in food sales over the vital Christmas period despite both mentioning a challenging economic backdrop.
Tesco said sales in the UK were up 3.2% from last year and it had now notched up its highest market share in more than a decade.
M&S said that it had seen a record number of customers over Christmas and its food sales were “strong”.
However, sales at its clothing, home and beauty business fell, with M&S blaming the decline on lower footfall on the High Street and lingering issues from last year’s cyber-attack.
M&S suffered a sales fall of almost 3% in its fashion, home and beauty products which it said was still suffering from stock and inventory issues following the cyber-attack.
Chief executive Stuart Machin said: “Food sales were strong and the business continues to outperform, hitting a new market share milestone in the period.
“Fashion, Home & Beauty is getting back on track as we work through the tail end of recovery,” he added.
Tesco boss Ken Murphy said he was “delighted” with the supermarket’s performance over Christmas amid “intense” competition.
He highlighted the performance of the Tesco Finest range, which saw sales growth of 13%.
The supermarket is now expecting to report annual operating profits at the upper end of the £2.9bn-£3.1bn range it predicted in October.
“Tesco has seen a consistently strong performance over the last couple of years really, where it’s really focused on price,” said Sofie Willmott, associate director at GlobalData Retail.
She said that by price-matching Aldi, and offering lower prices to its Clubcard holders, Tesco had “managed to retain its number one position at the top of the market”, despite heavy discounting on some of its products to compete with rivals.
“It also saw very good performance in its Finest range where shoppers are maybe not eating out as much or treating themselves,” she added.
Business
How fast kilos return after ending weight-loss drugs? – SUCH TV
When people stop taking the new generation of weight-loss drugs they pile back on the kilos four times faster than they would after ending diet and exercise regimes, new research found Thursday.
But this was mostly because they lost so much weight in the first place, according to the British researchers who conducted the largest and most up-to-date review of the subject.
A new generation of appetite-suppressing, injectable drugs called GLP-1 agonists have become immensely popular in the last few years, transforming the treatment for obesity and diabetes in many countries.
They have been found to help people lose between 15-20 percent of their body weight.
“This all appears to be a good news story,” said Susan Jebb, a public health nutrition scientist at Oxford university and co-author of a new BMJ study.
However, recent data has suggested that “around half of people discontinue these medications within a year,” she told a press conference.
This might be because of common side effects such as nausea or the price — these drugs can cost over $1,000 a month in the US.
So the researchers reviewed 37 studies looking at ceasing different weight-loss drugs, finding that participants regained around 0.4 kilograms a month.
Six of the clinical trials involved semaglutide — the ingredient used in Novo Nordisk’s brands Ozempic and Wegovy — and tirzepatide used for Eli Lilly’s Mounjaro and Zepbound.
While taking these two drugs, the trial participants lost an average of nearly 15 kilograms.
However, after stopping the medication, they regained 10 kilograms within a year, which was the longest follow-up period available for these relatively new drugs.
The researchers projected that the participants would return to their original weight in 18 months.
Measurements of heart health, including blood pressure and cholesterol levels, also returned to their original levels after 1.4 years.
People who were instead put on programmes that included diet and exercise — but not drugs — lost significantly less weight. However it took an average of four years for them to regain their lost kilos.
This meant that people taking the drugs regained their weight four times faster.
Starting point, not a cure
“Greater weight loss tends to result in faster weight regain,” lead study author Sam West of Oxford University explained.
But separate analysis showed that weight gain was “consistently faster after medication, regardless of the amount of weight lost in the first place,” he added.
This could be because people who have learned to eat more healthily and exercise more often continue to do so even as they regain weight.
Jebb emphasised that GLP-1 drugs “are a really valuable tool in obesity treatment — but obesity is a chronic relapsing condition.”
“One would expect that these treatments need to be continued for life, just in the same way as blood pressure medication,” Jebb said.
If this was the case, it would impact how national health systems judge whether these drugs are cost-effective, the researchers emphasised.
“This new data makes it clear they are a starting point, not a cure,” said Garron Dodd, a metabolic neuroscience researcher at the University of Melbourne not involved in the study.
“Sustainable treatment will likely require combination approaches, longer-term strategies, and therapies that reshape how the brain interprets energy balance, not just how much people eat,” he said.
Business
Will This Years Budget Be Presented On Sunday? CCPA Proposes February 1 Date For Union Budget 2026
New Delhi: The Cabinet Committee on Parliamentary Affairs (CCPA) on Wednesday proposed presenting the Union Budget for 2026–27 on February 1, even though the date falls on a Sunday.
If approved, this would mark a rare instance in recent years of the Budget being tabled on a weekend, as the government sticks to its February 1 timeline to ensure timely implementation of budget proposals from the start of the financial year, as per media reports.
The Budget Session will begin on January 28 with the President’s address to a joint sitting of both Houses of Parliament. The Economic Survey, which reviews the state of the economy, will be tabled in Parliament on January 29, according to reports.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will be presenting her ninth consecutive Union Budget, making it the 88th Budget since India’s Independence. Since 2017, the Union Budget has been presented at 11 am on February 1, after the government advanced the date from the earlier tradition of February 28.
This change was introduced during the tenure of former finance minister late Arun Jaitley to allow faster implementation of budget proposals from the start of the financial year.
Presenting the Budget on a weekend is not entirely new. Sitharaman had presented the Union Budget 2025 on a Saturday.
Before that, late Arun Jaitley presented the Union Budgets of 2015 and 2016 on February 28, which also fell on Saturdays.
With this Budget, Sitharaman will also make history by becoming the first finance minister to present nine consecutive Union Budgets. This achievement places her close to the record held by former Prime Minister Morarji Desai, who presented a total of 10 Budgets across two separate tenures.
Among other recent finance ministers, P Chidambaram presented nine Budgets, while Pranab Mukherjee presented eight during their time in office.
FM Sitharaman was appointed India’s first full-time woman finance minister in 2019 after Prime Minister Narendra Modi returned to power for a second term.
Finance Minister Sitharaman continued to hold the finance portfolio after the Modi-led government secured a third consecutive term in 2024.
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