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Sensex surges as Nifty tops 24,500

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 India🔗 9 sources55Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Sensex surges as Nifty tops 24,500

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Indian equities rallied on April 21, 2026, with the BSE Sensex jumping roughly 600-700 points to trade around the 79,200 mark and the Nifty50 climbing above 24,500 (about 24,550), driven by strong banking and realty stocks as well as gains in Asian Paints, Adani Ports and Trent. Broader indices outperformed, with the Nifty MidCap and SmallCap up nearly 0.8% and 1.1% respectively. Sectoral leaders included realty, PSU banks and private banks, while pharma lagged. Corporate updates and earnings supported sentiment: Nestle India reported a 27% year-on-year rise in Q4 net profit, Nelco posted a quarter-on-quarter rebound and multiple companies — including HCLTech, Tata Elxsi and others — were due to report Q4 results. Market activity was also bolstered by IPO subscriptions with Citius Transnet InvIT and Mehul Telecom in their final subscription days, and Jio Financial allotments. Traders said hopes of US-Iran talks and a potential ceasefire reduced risk premia; the GIFT Nifty signalled a positive open. Oil prices eased on improving diplomatic prospects, while India’s VIX fell, reflecting reduced near-term volatility expectations.

🕰️ The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline

Tuesday, April 21, 2026 10:00 UTC
Sensex surges as Nifty tops 24,500
Tuesday, April 21, 2026 06:28 UTC
Sensex jumps 700 points as Nifty tops 24,500
Tuesday, April 21, 2026 05:29 UTC
Sensex, Nifty rise on US-Iran talks optimism
Monday, April 20, 2026 10:37 UTC
Indian markets wobble as US-Iran talks loom

UK to delink electricity prices from gas

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 United Kingdom🔥 Trending🔗 13 sources57Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
UK to delink electricity prices from gas

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The UK government announced plans to weaken the link between wholesale electricity prices and volatile gas markets to shield households from price shocks driven by the Middle East conflict. Ministers will offer voluntary long-term fixed-price deals — a Wholesale Contract for Difference (WCfD) — to older “legacy” renewable projects that currently earn subsidies on top of market prices; around 30% of Britain’s generation could be affected. The Treasury will raise the Electricity Generators Levy (EGL) on excess profits from 45% to 55% (effective from 1 July) to incentivise sign-up and to fund household support. Officials said the WCfD scheme will be launched later this year with an allocation process expected in 2027, and reforms could be in place within about a year following consultation. The package also includes planning-law changes to expand EV charging for homes without driveways and to make it easier for businesses to install solar. The government declined to give a firm estimate of consumer savings, though analysts and the UK Energy Research Centre have previously suggested fixed-price approaches could save billions if market prices remain high. Opposition parties and industry groups voiced mixed reactions, warning of added costs or market distortions.

Sensex jumps 700 points as Nifty tops 24,500

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 India🔗 10 sources40Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Sensex jumps 700 points as Nifty tops 24,500

đź“° Full Story

Indian equities rallied on April 21 as hopes for a US‑Iran resolution ahead of a ceasefire deadline lifted risk appetite. The BSE Sensex surged roughly 700 points to about 79,214 intraday and the NSE Nifty50 climbed past 24,500 to around 24,557, reversing a muted session on April 20 when the Sensex closed near 78,520 and the Nifty at 24,365. Mid- and small-cap indices outperformed, while sector winners included realty, PSU banks, paints, and ports — Asian Paints, Adani Ports and Trent among notable gainers. Market volatility showed mixed moves: India VIX fell to about 18.0 on April 21 after jumping on April 20 amid renewed Gulf tensions. Geopolitical headlines remained the dominant driver — Iran parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf rejected talks under threats, and US President Donald Trump issued a hardline warning — keeping traders cautious. Oil prices traded around $95 a barrel. Corporate catalysts included Q4 earnings from several firms, active IPOs (Citius Transnet InvIT, Mehul Telecom) and company‑specific moves such as Vedanta hitting record highs ahead of a demerger record date.

American Airlines Rejects Proposed Merger With United

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 United States🔗 11 sources39Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
American Airlines Rejects Proposed Merger With United

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On April 20, 2026, American Airlines publicly denied any interest in a merger with United Airlines, calling a combination “negative for competition and for consumers” and inconsistent with its understanding of the administration’s antitrust stance. The denial followed reporting that United CEO Scott Kirby had raised the idea with President Donald Trump in February. The statement helped trigger a selloff in American shares, which fell roughly 3–4% in pre-market and opening trading. Lawmakers signalled scrutiny: a bipartisan group of senators expressed concerns that a merger could reduce choice and raise fares. Regulators would face major antitrust questions if talks ever resumed. The controversy comes as U.S. carriers grapple with rising jet fuel costs amid Middle East tensions — oil topped about $88 a barrel on April 20 — and operational strains at key hubs such as Chicago O’Hare, where the FAA recently ordered capacity cuts for the summer. Analysts say the industry’s cost pressures could spur consolidation pressure, but any deal between two dominant U.S. network carriers would likely require divestitures and face intense regulatory review.

Sensex, Nifty rise on US-Iran talks optimism

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 India🔗 10 sources36Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Sensex, Nifty rise on US-Iran talks optimism

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Indian equity benchmarks climbed on April 20-21 as hopes of a US-Iran diplomatic resolution offset renewed regional tensions. On April 20 the Nifty50 closed at 24,364.85 and the Sensex ended about flat at 78,520.30 after intra-day swings; sector leadership included PSU banks, Trent and Asian Paints. Markets opened firmer on April 21, with the Nifty trading above 24,400 and the Sensex rising roughly 300-567 points in early trade (Financial Express reported the Sensex near 79,088 by 10:10 a.m.). Broader indices and small‑ and midcaps showed gains; the Nifty India VIX fell about 4% to near 18.0 on April 21 following a jump to ~19.0 on April 20. Oil and precious metals moved in response to geopolitical headlines: Brent traded in the mid-$90s. Corporate calendar items including multiple Q4 results (HCLTech, Nestlé India, PNB Housing among others) and IPOs (Citius Transnet InvIT, Mehul Telecom) added domestic flow dynamics. Commentators said markets remained news‑driven and volatile as investors parsed diplomatic signals and earnings.
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