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India plans ₹3,000 crore lithium, nickel incentives

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 India🔗 3 sources35Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
India plans ₹3,000 crore lithium, nickel incentives

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India’s Ministry of Mines is set to shortly unveil a policy offering roughly ₹3,000 crore (about 30 billion rupees) in incentives to establish domestic lithium and nickel processing capacity, sources told Reuters on June 4. The scheme targets minerals critical to electric vehicle (EV) batteries as New Delhi seeks to cut imports and build an EV value chain. Proposed eligibility would require minimum plant capacities of 30,000 metric tonnes for lithium and 50,000 tonnes for nickel. Reporting indicates the policy could include a roughly 15% capital subsidy, staged payments tied to performance and utilisation benchmarks, and incentives available for about five years. Initial support may be earmarked for two lithium and two nickel projects. The move supports India’s ambition of 30% electric car penetration and 80% two-wheeler electrification by 2030 (from about 6% and 9% today), and follows earlier government signals that it had shortlisted these two minerals for processing policy support.

TSMC projects multi-year AI-driven revenue surge

🏷️ Finance & Economics🔥 Trending🔗 12 sources53Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
TSMC projects multi-year AI-driven revenue surge

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TSMC’s chief executive C.C. Wei told shareholders at the company’s annual meeting in Hsinchu that robust adoption of AI across consumer, enterprise and sovereign applications will sustain strong demand for advanced semiconductors and computing power over the next several years. Wei said customers remain optimistic about AI, though TSMC is watching rising component costs and warned it will take a “very long time” for U.S. production to fully meet American customers’ needs. The company has raised its revenue outlook and is stepping up capital spending to expand capacity, including major investment plans in U.S. fabs. TSMC highlighted steep year-on-year gains in employee profit-sharing—around 30% increases for 2024 and 2025 and projected again for 2026—and pointed to a marked share-price rally over the past year. Market-focused outlets noted analyst and valuation commentary that the company faces supply constraints that could keep advanced-node pricing power high, while some investors flagged elevated valuation metrics and recent share volatility tied to customer outlooks.

Broadcom Q2 Revenue, AI Chip Forecast Disappoints

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 United States🔥 Trending🔗 31 sources49Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Broadcom Q2 Revenue, AI Chip Forecast Disappoints

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Broadcom reported record fiscal second-quarter revenue of $22.19 billion on June 3, 2026, up about 48% year-on-year, driven by AI semiconductor sales of $10.8 billion (up 143% YoY). Management said AI bookings topped $30 billion and reiterated a full-year AI semiconductor target of $56 billion, with fiscal 2027 AI sales still expected to exceed $100 billion. Broadcom forecast third-quarter revenue of about $29.4 billion and AI semiconductor revenue of roughly $16 billion, figures that fell short of some analysts’ estimates. The company posted strong margins and cash flow — operating margin around 67% and free cash flow near $10.3 billion — but the guidance and chip-revenue targets triggered a sharp market reaction: shares slid 11–13% in after-hours trading. Executives reassured investors on supply commitments for 2026–27 and highlighted multi‑gigawatt deals with major customers including Google, OpenAI, Anthropic and Meta. Elevated valuation metrics (P/E ~93.6x), notable insider selling and intensifying competition from rivals such as Marvell were also flagged by analysts and market commentators.

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Broadcom faces a split narrative: documented legal disputes and customer departures are weighing on its software business, while rapid AI hardware revenue growth offers substantial upside. Company execution on chip shipments and resolving customer trust issues will determine whether AI gains offset software headwinds.

Oil slips after Israel-Lebanon ceasefire deal

🏷️ Finance & Economics🔗 3 sources31Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Oil slips after Israel-Lebanon ceasefire deal

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Global oil prices eased on June 4 after Israel and Lebanon announced an agreement to implement a ceasefire, reducing near-term regional escalation risk and boosting hopes for a broader U.S.-Iran de-escalation that could reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Brent futures were down about 0.89% at $96.92 a barrel and U.S. West Texas Intermediate fell roughly 0.81% to $95.24 by 0458 GMT. Markets had earlier jumped following renewed Middle East hostilities, including Iranian strikes on Kuwait and U.S. military action near the Strait. Analysts warned the détente remains fragile: the truce is reported to be conditional on Hezbollah ceasing hostilities and broader U.S.-Iran negotiations are ongoing. Supply-side concerns persist after U.S. crude inventories unexpectedly dropped by 8 million barrels to 433.7 million for the week to May 29, and the IEA cautioned that global stocks could reach critically low levels ahead of peak summer demand. Energy consultancy ING noted inventories are likely to tighten into the third quarter, leaving upside risk to prices even if flows through Hormuz resume slowly.

SEBI alleges ₹15.15 trillion fraud at Rajesh Exports

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 India🔥 Trending🔗 9 sources31Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
SEBI alleges ₹15.15 trillion fraud at Rajesh Exports

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India’s market regulator SEBI said in a 109-page interim order on June 3-4 that Bengaluru-based jewellery maker Rajesh Exports Ltd (REL) misrepresented about ₹15.15 trillion ($158.3 billion) of revenue across fiscal 2020-21 to 2024-25. SEBI said roughly 97–99% of consolidated revenue was reported from overseas subsidiaries—notably Switzerland’s Valcambi SA—while standalone audited statements showed negligible operating income. The regulator flagged non‑genuine entries, including mirrored sales and purchases with an entity that denied transactions, and alleged routing of company funds (about ₹3.39 billion) into promoter Rajesh Mehta’s personal accounts and other undisclosed related‑party transfers totaling roughly ₹9.26 billion. SEBI estimated shareholder wealth erosion at ₹127.26 billion and has barred the company and Mehta from the securities market pending further probe. The order cites repeated non‑cooperation, limited access to accounting systems and gaps in documentation; SEBI has directed full cooperation within 30 days, ordered a fresh forensic audit and taken interim market restrictions. Shares hit the 5% lower circuit on June 4 amid investor concern; institutional holdings including insurer exposure were noted by market commentators.
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