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Stock Market LIVE: GIFT Nifty signals higher start; Asia up; India May WPI, Israel-Iran war in focus
Sensex Today | Stock Market LIVE on Monday, June 16, 2025: At 6:32 AM, GIFT Nifty futures were trading 44 points higher at 24,771, indicating a positive start for the bourses.
7:16 AM
Stock Market LIVE Updates: Ramco Cements, Max Healthcare among top buy recommendations by Angel One
Stock Market LIVE Updates: Angel One Stock Recommendations:
NSE Scrip – Max Health
View - Bullish
Last Close – ₹1,233
Max Healthcare share price had been consolidating in a tight range since December. Last week, it broke out of a 6-month consolidation pattern, posting its strongest weekly close and entering an uncharted territory. The breakout in Max Health shares is backed by strong volumes and a bullish candle. With momentum picking up as indicated by RSI oscillator, we expect the uptrend to continue and suggest a buy for the near term.
We recommend to Buy Max Health stock around ₹1,233 - 1,225 | Stop loss: ₹1,189 | Share price target: ₹1,310. MORE DETAILS HERE
7:13 AM
Stock Market LIVE Updates: Analysts see crude at $150 on panic buying if Israel-Iran tensions escalate
Stock Market LIVE Updates: Brent crude oil prices can touch $150 a barrel (bbl) — up a whopping 103 per cent from the current levels — in the worst-case scenario if the Israel–Iran geopolitical tensions escalate, suggest analysts.
However, if the conflict is contained, then the energy markets will readjust quickly.
Last week, Israeli air strikes on Iran had impacted energy rates with crude and natural gas prices surging as it reignited concerns about a wider conflict in West Asia.
Brent crude oil prices hit $78.5/bbl in the wake of the air strikes before dropping to around $75/bbl. READ MORE
7:12 AM
Stock Market LIVE Updates: Israel-Iran conflict: Gold prices may hit $4,000 per ounce in India
Stock Market LIVE Updates: Gold prices in India's futures market crossed the ₹1 lakh per 10 grams for the first time, with MCX futures settling at ₹1,00,276 last week as Israel-Iran tensions escalated to bombardments. In international markets, spot gold ended at $3,432 per ounce —another significant level in a year already shaped by economic and geopolitical headwinds.
In Mumbai's Zaveri Bazar, pure gold closed at ₹99,058 per 10 grams on Friday. At these elevated levels, demand appears to be ebbing. 'At this price, demand has dried up,' said Chirag Sheth, principal consultant at Metal Focus, the London-headquartered precious metals consultancy. Prices are currently quoted at a discount of $40 per ounce (₹1,120 per 10 grams) to the landed cost of imports. READ MORE
7:09 AM
Stock Market LIVE Updates: US markets end lower on Friday
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The Hindu
20 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Iran-Israel fighting distorted by tech-fuelled misinformation
AI deepfakes, video game footage passed off as real combat, and chatbot-generated falsehoods; such tech-enabled misinformation is distorting the Israel-Iran conflict, fuelling a war of narratives across social media. The information warfare unfolding alongside ground combat, sparked by Israel's strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities and military leadership, underscores a digital crisis in the age of rapidly advancing AI tools that have blurred the lines between truth and fabrication. The surge in wartime misinformation has exposed an urgent need for stronger detection tools, experts say, as major tech platforms have largely weakened safeguards by scaling back content moderation and reducing reliance on human fact-checkers. After Iran struck Israel with barrages of missiles last week, AI-generated videos falsely claimed to show damage inflicted on Tel Aviv and Ben Gurion Airport. The videos were widely shared across Facebook, Instagram and X. Using a reverse image search, AFP's fact-checkers found that the clips were originally posted by a TikTok account that produces AI-generated content. There has been a "surge in generative AI misinformation, specifically related to the Iran-Israel conflict," Ken Jon Miyachi, founder of the Austin-based firm BitMindAI, told AFP. "These tools are being leveraged to manipulate public perception, often amplifying divisive or misleading narratives with unprecedented scale and sophistication." GetReal Security, a U.S. company focused on detecting manipulated media including AI deepfakes, also identified a wave of fabricated videos related to the Israel-Iran conflict. The company linked the visually compelling videos, depicting apocalyptic scenes of war-damaged Israeli aircraft and buildings as well as Iranian missiles mounted on a trailer, to Google's Veo 3 AI generator, known for hyper-realistic visuals. The Veo watermark is visible at the bottom of an online video posted by the news outlet Tehran Times, which claims to show "the moment an Iranian missile" struck Tel Aviv. "It is no surprise that as generative-AI tools continue to improve in photo-realism, they are being misused to spread misinformation and sow confusion," said Hany Farid, the co-founder of GetReal Security and a professor at the University of California, Berkeley. Farid offered one tip to spot such deepfakes: the Veo 3 videos were normally eight seconds in length or a combination of clips of a similar duration. "This eight-second limit obviously doesn't prove a video is fake, but should be a good reason to give you pause and fact-check before you re-share," he said. The falsehoods are not confined to social media. Disinformation watchdog NewsGuard has identified 51 websites that have advanced more than a dozen false claims ranging from AI-generated photos purporting to show mass destruction in Tel Aviv to fabricated reports of Iran capturing Israeli pilots. Sources spreading these false narratives include Iranian military-linked Telegram channels and state media sources affiliated with the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), sanctioned by the US Treasury Department, NewsGuard said. "We're seeing a flood of false claims and ordinary Iranians appear to be the core targeted audience," McKenzie Sadeghi, a researcher with NewsGuard, told AFP. Sadeghi described Iranian citizens as "trapped in a sealed information environment," where state media outlets dominate in a chaotic attempt to "control the narrative." Iran itself claimed to be a victim of tech manipulation, with local media reporting that Israel briefly hacked a state television broadcast, airing footage of women's protests and urging people to take to the streets. Adding to the information chaos were online clips lifted from war-themed video games. AFP's fact-checkers identified one such clip posted on X, which falsely claimed to show an Israeli jet being shot down by Iran. The footage bore striking similarities to the military simulation game Arma 3. Israel's military has rejected Iranian media reports claiming its fighter jets were downed over Iran as "fake news." Chatbots such as xAI's Grok, which online users are increasingly turning to for instant fact-checking, falsely identified some of the manipulated visuals as real, researchers said. "This highlights a broader crisis in today's online information landscape: the erosion of trust in digital content," BitMindAI's Miyachi said. "There is an urgent need for better detection tools, media literacy, and platform accountability to safeguard the integrity of public discourse."


Time of India
38 minutes ago
- Time of India
Breathe. Hold. Invest: What Yoga teaches us about wealth creation
Investing isn't a destination, it's a lifelong journey that evolves with you, growing alongside you with each passing year. In a world driven by instant gratification and volatile markets, both yoga and investing require something increasingly rare: discipline, patience, and mindfulness. By aligning the philosophy of yoga with financial habits, investors can create a more balanced relationship with their money. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Join new Free to Play WWII MMO War Thunder War Thunder Play Now Undo Most equity investors look for quick results. They micro analyse each day's market fluctuation, try to rethink each decision they made, second guess not only their own research but also the advises they have acted on from seasoned professionals. But when you look back at this moment 20 or 30 years from now, these fluctuations will feel like nothing more than a small blip in time. Two decades ago, the Sensex was around 5,000 points. Despite several ups and downs like the Global Financial Crises where Sensex declined by more than 30% in less a 6 months period; a sharp fall of about 27% at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic; and numerous periods of sideways movement, Sensex has yet again crossed the 81,000 mark. This is a 16.2x times gain in the 20 years period. This long-term growth underscores a vital lesson - patience and persistence are often the most rewarding strategies in not only Yoga but also in investing. During every bout of volatility which could be triggered by events completely out of anyone's control, investors often feel depressed looking at the temporary losses in their portfolio values. Many even act impulsively and sell some of their investments. But most successful investors aren't chasing quick wins or reacting to every market shift. They think long-term, stay calm during volatility, and many times take advantage of the market nervousness to find some compelling ideas. The power of compounding is infact like yoga - it has the power to transform your life in ways that one would have never imagined. Ask someone who has spent years meditating in a disciplined fashion, the transformation that he/she has undergone. Somebody who has never meditated cannot even imagine the inner peace that someone with that experience has achieved. Just as no one masters a headstand on the first try or fully experiences the benefits of kapalbhati or pranayama within a few weeks, it's the steady ongoing practice that brings real transformation. Live Events Every session of Yoga begins with one fundamental instruction: focus on your breath. It's a call to anchor yourself in the present moment and not on what just happened or what's coming next. The same lesson applies to investing. People need to see beyond just returns if they want to create true wealth and that is possible only when you focus on the investment process and not on the investment outcomes. When investing, one has to understand that despite all the research, analysis, and planning, there will always be elements of risk. You might pick the right fund, but the market may still dip leading to a broader level fall in your portfolio. You might invest at the perfect time, but returns could take years to compound. That's not failure, but a reality. A very important philosophy that applies here is ' aparigraha' or non-attachment. By embracing non-attachment, investors can avoid the stress of trying to control every outcome. It's about being consistent, making thoughtful decisions, and then allowing the process to unfold. This is much like holding a yoga pose with presence and ease, rather than striving for perfection. Yoga has been recognised globally to discover the essence of life. By focusing on the present, dealing day to day with equanimity, maintaining discipline to lead a balanced life and using meditation and exercises for both the mind and body, millions of people have achieved happiness. By incorporating some of these principles in our investment processes, we can have similar outcomes for our wealth as well. (The author Raghvendra Nath is Managing Director, Ladderup Asset Managers. Views are own) ( Disclaimer : Recommendations, suggestions, views, and opinions given by experts are their own. These do not represent the views of the Economic Times)


Economic Times
39 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Breathe. Hold. Invest: What Yoga teaches us about wealth creation
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel Investing isn't a destination, it's a lifelong journey that evolves with you, growing alongside you with each passing a world driven by instant gratification and volatile markets, both yoga and investing require something increasingly rare: discipline, patience, and mindfulness. By aligning the philosophy of yoga with financial habits, investors can create a more balanced relationship with their equity investors look for quick results. They micro analyse each day's market fluctuation, try to rethink each decision they made, second guess not only their own research but also the advises they have acted on from seasoned professionals. But when you look back at this moment 20 or 30 years from now, these fluctuations will feel like nothing more than a small blip in decades ago, the Sensex was around 5,000 points. Despite several ups and downs like the Global Financial Crises where Sensex declined by more than 30% in less a 6 months period; a sharp fall of about 27% at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic; and numerous periods of sideways movement, Sensex has yet again crossed the 81,000 mark. This is a 16.2x times gain in the 20 years period. This long-term growth underscores a vital lesson - patience and persistence are often the most rewarding strategies in not only Yoga but also in every bout of volatility which could be triggered by events completely out of anyone's control, investors often feel depressed looking at the temporary losses in their portfolio values. Many even act impulsively and sell some of their investments. But most successful investors aren't chasing quick wins or reacting to every market shift. They think long-term, stay calm during volatility, and many times take advantage of the market nervousness to find some compelling ideas. The power of compounding is infact like yoga - it has the power to transform your life in ways that one would have never imagined. Ask someone who has spent years meditating in a disciplined fashion, the transformation that he/she has undergone. Somebody who has never meditated cannot even imagine the inner peace that someone with that experience has achieved. Just as no one masters a headstand on the first try or fully experiences the benefits of kapalbhati or pranayama within a few weeks, it's the steady ongoing practice that brings real session of Yoga begins with one fundamental instruction: focus on your breath. It's a call to anchor yourself in the present moment and not on what just happened or what's coming next. The same lesson applies to investing. People need to see beyond just returns if they want to create true wealth and that is possible only when you focus on the investment process and not on the investment investing, one has to understand that despite all the research, analysis, and planning, there will always be elements of risk. You might pick the right fund, but the market may still dip leading to a broader level fall in your portfolio. You might invest at the perfect time, but returns could take years to compound. That's not failure, but a reality. A very important philosophy that applies here is 'aparigraha' or non-attachment. By embracing non-attachment, investors can avoid the stress of trying to control every outcome. It's about being consistent, making thoughtful decisions, and then allowing the process to unfold. This is much like holding a yoga pose with presence and ease, rather than striving for has been recognised globally to discover the essence of life. By focusing on the present, dealing day to day with equanimity, maintaining discipline to lead a balanced life and using meditation and exercises for both the mind and body, millions of people have achieved happiness. By incorporating some of these principles in our investment processes, we can have similar outcomes for our wealth as well.: Recommendations, suggestions, views, and opinions given by experts are their own. These do not represent the views of the Economic Times)