Business
Women’s Day 2026: Female Investors Cut FD Allocation From 45% To 20%, Boost Equity Funds
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On International Women’s Day 2026, Equirus Wealth reports Indian women investors’ shift from fixed deposits and gold to equity mutual funds.

Women investors are steadily reshaping India’s financial landscape, with rising participation in stocks, mutual funds, and digital investing platforms.
On International Women’s Day 2026, a key trend of behavior change among female investors has emerged over the past five years, particularly in their investment choices across various financial products. Women are now more confident while investing in high risk but rewarding equity market, as the portfolio allocation in equity mutual funds surged from 10 per cent to 32 per cent, while down from 40 per cent to 20 per cent in Fixed Deposits (FDs).
The five-year study on women investors and relationship managers was conducted by Equirus Wealth Limited, and was published in a report titled “Expanding Horizons: Changing Wealth Management Behaviours of Indian Women – Qualitative Analysis of Investor Evolution Across Age and Affluence.”
The study reveals that women investors are increasingly moving away from episodic product purchases such as fixed deposits, gold and property towards diversified, allocation-driven portfolios anchored around long-term financial goals.
This reflects the major behavioural change from ‘safety-first’ investing to allocation-driven portfolio strategies.
Female Investors Adopting AI Cautiously
According to the report ,Artificial Intelligence may dominate global investment conversations, but Indian women investors are adopting it cautiously. They are using AI primarily as research and learning tool rather than for autonomous investment decisions.
Not Panicking During Corrections
Another interesting thing being revealed by the study is that 70-90% of investors hold or review their investments during market corrections rather than exiting in panic, showing maturity during market cycles.
At the same time, around 55% selectively add capital during market dips, reflecting growing conviction and a longer-term approach to investing.
Rise of “bucket investing”
Investors are increasingly dividing portfolios into buckets like safety, growth, liquidity and legacy instead of buying random financial products.
Risk is no longer seen only as loss of capital.
Investors now also consider inflation, goal failure, and portfolio drawdowns as risks.
75–90% are discussing intergenerational wealth transfer and financial discipline for the next generation.
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March 08, 2026, 14:14 IST
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Crude oil surpasses $100: WTI up 30%, brent crude reaches $118; what it means? – The Times of India
Oil markets skyrocketed beyond the $100 mark on Monday as Middle East conflict continues to intensify, fueling fears about energy supplies disruption and shipping routes across the region. Brent crude, the global benchmark, climbed past $118 a barrel. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate followed a similar trajectory as the light, sweet crude grade jumped 30% higher than its previous close of $90.90 on Friday.At 0230 GMT, WTI crude climbed 30.04% to $118.21 per barrel before paring some of its gains, while Brent crude was trading 27.54% higher at $118.22.The latest spike came after an already volatile week for oil markets. Last week, US crude prices had surged 36% while Brent rose 28%, as the conflict, now entering its tenth day, began drawing in regions central to the production and transportation of oil and gas from the Persian Gulf.Roughly 15 million barrels of crude oil move through the Strait of Hormuz every day, accounting for about one-fifth of global oil supply, according to independent research firm Rystad Energy. However, the threat of Iranian missile and drone attacks has nearly halted tanker traffic through the narrow waterway. The strait, bordered to the north by Iran, is a critical route for shipments from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Qatar, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Iran.Export constraints have begun to affect production levels in the region. Iraq, Kuwait and the UAE have reduced oil output as storage facilities fill up due to limited export capacity. At the same time, strikes targeting energy infrastructure have intensified supply concerns, with Iran, Israel and the United States attacking oil and gas facilities since the conflict began.The last time Brent and US crude futures traded near the current levels was in 2022, following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.Natural gas prices have also moved higher during the conflict, although the gains have been more modest compared to oil. Late Sunday, natural gas was trading at around $3.33 per 1,000 cubic feet, about 4.6% above its Friday closing price of $3.19, after rising roughly 11% during the previous week.Oil’s rise has also begun to show up in fuel prices. In the United States, the average price for a gallon of regular gasoline reached $3.45 on Sunday, about 47 cents higher than a week earlier, according to the AAA motor club. Diesel prices climbed to roughly $4.60 per gallon, up around 83 cents over the same period.Meanwhile, crude oil is also a key ingredient in many everyday consumer goods, including detergents, biscuits, toothpaste, paints and packaging materials. Petroleum-based derivatives are widely used in products such as soaps, shampoos, creams, hair oils, as well as in plastic bottles and tubes. In India, these inputs account for over 25% of production costs for FMCG companies and nearly 40% for paint manufacturers. As a result, if crude oil prices continue to rise, the cost of these daily-use products could increase further.Some analysts and investors have further cautioned that if oil prices remain above $100 a barrel for a prolonged period, the global economy could struggle to absorb the impact.
Business
Iran war: Oil prices jump above $100 for first time in four years
Major disruption to energy supplies threatens to push up prices for consumers and businesses around the world.
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Aramco scrips surge 4%, most in three years – The Times of India
Saudi Aramco jumped the most since April 2023 on Sunday as the Iran war entered its second week, prompting supply disruptions that may send oil prices higher when global markets reopen. Shares of the state-backed oil giant climbed as much as 4.9% in Riyadh before paring gains to close up 4.1%, on the first day of trading for the stock since Brent crude prices topped $90 a barrel on Friday.Brent may climb further after UAE and Kuwait started reducing oil production amid a near-closure of Strait of Hormuz waterway, adding to interruptions affecting worldwide energy supply and exports. “For Aramco, we believe that the gain in oil prices would offset a decline in exports,” said Junaid Ansari, head of research and strategy at Kamco Investment Co. “We also believe that Aramco should be able to re-route a bulk of its shipments to the Red Sea. It’s just about logistics and handling the excess capacity.” Aramco has been redirecting oil cargoes to Red Sea facilities on Saudi Arabia’s west coast to avoid the Strait of Hormuz.
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