Japan’s benchmark bond yield jumps to 29-year high as US-Iran talks collapse

Japan’s benchmark bond yield jumps to 29-year high as US-Iran talks collapse


Yields on Japan’s benchmark
government bonds (JGBs) hit a ‌29-year high on Monday after the
U.S.-Iran peace talks ​collapsed and the U.S. Navy prepared a
blockade of ⁠the Strait of Hormuz, sending oil prices sharply
higher and fuelling inflation fears.

The benchmark 10-year JGB yield rose 5.5 basis points (bps) to 2.490%, the highest ‌since early June 1997, while the five-year yield rose 4 bps to a record high of 1.900%. Yields ‌move inversely to bond prices.

“Uncertainty over the outlook for the ‌Middle ⁠East situation
remains high, and lingering inflation concerns stemming ⁠from a
prolonged rise in crude oil prices are likely to put upward
pressure on JGB yields,” Keisuke Tsuruta, a senior bond
strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan ​Stanley Securities, said in
a note.

Government ‌bond yields have been rising globally as elevated
oil prices in the wake of the Iran war raised inflation risks,
while the ceasefire reached last week remained fragile.

U.S. President Donald ‌Trump said on Sunday that the U.S.
Navy would start ​blockading the Strait of Hormuz, raising the
stakes after marathon talks with Iran failed to reach a ⁠deal,
jeopardising a fragile two-week ceasefire.

Later on Monday, Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino
will read Governor Kazuo Ueda’s address on ‌his behalf at an
event hosted by the Trust Companies Association of Japan.

Analysts said the event could be the BOJ’s last chance
before its policy meeting later this month to signal whether it
will raise interest rates this month.

“(Ueda) was talking to parliament last week, outlining that
policy was still clearly accommodative,” Kenneth ‌Crompton, head
of rate strategy at National Australia Bank, said in a podcast.

“So ​after a fairly hawkish outturn from their meeting back
in March, that potentially still leaves some chance ⁠of an April
move on the table.”

The two-year yield, the one most ⁠sensitive to
BOJ policy rates, increased 1 bp to 1.41%. Other tenors were yet
to be traded, as of ‌0044 GMT.

Interest rate swaps on Friday indicated a 57% chance of a
BOJ rate hike this month, roughly in line ​with the day before,
according to Tokyo Tanshi data.

Published on April 13, 2026



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कच्चा तेल फिर 100 डॉलर के पार, फटाफट चेक करें पेट्रोल-डीजल के रेट

कच्चा तेल फिर 100 डॉलर के पार, फटाफट चेक करें पेट्रोल-डीजल के रेट


Petrol-Diesel Price on April 13: आज 13 अप्रैल को कच्चे तेल (Crude Oil) की कीमतों में भारी उछाल आया है और अब यह फिर से 100 डॉलर के पार निकल चुका है. एक तरफ ब्रेंट क्रूड की कीमत 7 परसेंट बढ़कर 102.29 डॉलर प्रति बैरल पर पहुंच गई है. वहीं, दूसरी तरफ अमेरिकी क्रूड ने भी 8 परसेंट की तेजी दिखाते हुए 104.24 डॉलर प्रति बैरल के लेवल पर पहुंच गया है. तेल की कीमतों में यह उछाल अमेरिका और ईरान के बीच सीजफायर पर बात नहीं बनने और स्ट्रेट ऑफ होर्मुज को बंद करने की ट्रंप की धमकियों के बीच आया है.  

अमेरिकी राष्ट्रपति ट्रंप ने रविवार को घोषणा की कि अमेरिकी नौसेना तुरंत होर्मुज स्ट्रेट में जहाजों के आने-जाने पर रोक लगा देगी. दरअसल, अमेरिका और ईरान के बीच पाकिस्तान के इस्लामाबाद में 21 घंटे तक चली शांति वार्ता बिना किसी नतीजे के समाप्त हो गई. इसके बाद अमेरिकी राष्ट्रपति डोनाल्ड ट्रंप ने स्ट्रेट ऑफ होर्मुज के नाकेबंदी का ऐलान कर दिया, जो अंतर्राष्ट्रीय समयानुसार आज 14:00 GMT से प्रभावी हो जाएगा.

पेट्रोल-डीजल की कीमत

शहर पेट्राेल की कीमत (प्रति लीटर) डीजल की कीमत (प्रति लीटर)
दिल्ली 94.77 रुपये 87.67 रुपये
मुंबई 103.54 रुपये 90.03 रुपये
कोलकाता 105.45 रुपये 92.02 रुपये
चेन्नई 100.80 रुपये 92.39 रुपये
बेंगलुरु 102.92 रुपये 90.99 रुपये
हैदराबाद 107.41 रुपये 95.65 रुपये
जयपुर 104.88 रुपये 90.36 रुपये
लखनऊ  94.65 रुपये 87.76 रुपये
पोर्ट ब्लेयर  82.46 रुपये 78.05 रुपये

क्यों क्रूड ऑयल में उछाल के बाद स्थिर हैं कीमतें? 

अंतराष्ट्रीय बाजारों में कच्चे तेल की कीमतों में उछाल के बावजूद सरकार और तेल विपणन कंपनियों (OMCs) ने फिलहाल देश में पेट्रोल-डीजल की कीमत में कोई इजाफा नहीं किया है ताकि महंगाई काबू में रहे.

सरकार ने हाल ही में पेट्रोल और डीजल पर एक्साइज ड्यूटी में 10 रुपये प्रति लीटर की भारी कटौती भी की है ताकि कच्चे तेल की बढ़ती कीमतों के असर को कम किया जा सके. पेट्रोल पर एक्साइज ड्यूटी को 13 रुपये प्रति लीटर से घटाकर 3 रुपये प्रति लीटर और डीजल पर लगने वाली 10 रुपये की ड्यूटी को पूरी तरह से खत्म कर दिया गया है. 

यहां ध्यान रखने वाली बात है कि इस कटौती का लाभ सीधे तौर पर ग्राहकों को नहीं दिया जा रहा है, बल्कि इसका इस्तेमाल IOCL, BPCL जैसी तेल कंपनियों के घाटे को कम करने के लिए किया गया है ताकि वे कीमतों को न बढ़ा सके. 

ये भी पढ़ें:

PNG Connection: सिलेंडर के झंझट से मिलेगी मुक्ति, PNG पाइपलाइन से हर घर पहुंचेगी गैस, सरकार ने बना लिया प्लान 



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TVS Motor bikes into global third spot

TVS Motor bikes into global third spot


The global two-wheeler hierarchy has undergone a rare shift in CY2025, with TVS Motor Company overtaking Yamaha to become the third-largest manufacturer by volume, marking a milestone for India’s auto industry. But the achievement also underscores a deeper structural gap: Collectively, Indian manufacturers continue to trail their Japanese rivals by over 10 million units annually.

Honda alone sells more than 20 million units globally, while Yamaha and Suzuki together outpace the combined volumes of India’s ‘Big Three’ — Hero MotoCorp, TVS Motor, and Bajaj Auto. For TVS, the more immediate challenge lies closer home, where it trails Hero and Honda in the domestic market.

Closing the gap

The gap, however, is narrowing.

TVS Motor’s rise has been driven by a strategy anchored in outpacing industry growth. “We are confident that we will do better than the industry growth, both in domestic and international markets,” Managing Director KN Radhakrishnan said during a recent earnings call.

This outperformance is already visible in retail trends. According to Federation of Automobile Dealers Associations (FADA) data for FY26, TVS grew its retail volumes by 22.49 per cent, way beyond the industry’s 13.4 per cent growth.

KN Radhakrishnan, Managing Director, TVS Motor Company

Its market share rose to 18.89 per cent from 17.49 per cent a year earlier, while Hero MotoCorp’s share edged down to 28.4 per cent. The shift is even more visible against Honda — the gap between Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India and TVS narrowed to 6.14 percentage points in FY26 from 7.88 percentage points a year earlier.

Premiumisation

At the core of this momentum is a calibrated shift toward premiumisation. The company has leaned into feature-rich motorcycles and scooters such as the Raider, Apache range, Jupiter, and Ntorq.

“Premium and super-premium are growing faster,” Radhakrishnan said. This shift is being validated — and increasingly seen as structural, rather than cyclical.

“Growth is being driven by a richer domestic vehicle mix and higher export volumes,” Axis Securities said in a recent sector note, pointing to improving realisations and stronger product positioning.

Kotak Institutional Equities, in its March quarter earnings preview, endorsed this view and expects this shifting mix to continue driving earnings improvement.

Together, these assessments suggest that TVS Motor’s growth is not merely volume-led but increasingly also quality-led — better pricing, stronger mix, and a widening presence in higher-margin segments.

The strategy is also portfolio-led. “We always look at the total portfolio contribution… we don’t look segment-wise,” Radhakrishnan said.

A changing demand cycle

This positioning is reshaping the domestic market. TVS is capturing urban demand through premium products while riding a rural recovery. FADA data shows rural growth at 13.05 per cent and urban growth at 13.62 per cent in FY26, pointing to a convergence that increasingly favours higher-spec models.

The traditional divide between rural and urban consumption is narrowing, expanding the addressable market for premium offerings.

“With the kind of infrastructure getting built in India… mobility needs… and affordability, I’m a firm believer that 8–9 per cent CAGR is sustainable,” Radhakrishnan said.

Exports power growth

International markets are emerging as a key growth engine. TVS has expanded across Africa and Latin America. “The demand in Africa continues to grow… LatAm also has grown,” Radhakrishnan said.

Analysts see exports as both a volume and margin lever. “A higher export mix is supporting margins across auto companies,” Kotak noted, linking international expansion to improved earnings quality.

Yet Southeast Asia remains the toughest market. Indonesia and Vietnam continue to favour Japanese incumbents, making ASEAN the last frontier for Indian OEMs.

The EV wild-card

Electric mobility could reset the competitive order, but also determine whether TVS can translate momentum into leadership.

TVS emerged as the market leader in India’s electric two-wheeler segment in FY26, retailing about 341,513 units and capturing a 24 per cent market share, according to FADA data.

The 43.5 per cent year-on-year growth helped it overtake early mover Ola Electric.

Unlike several competitors, TVS has taken a calibrated approach — scaling up through its iQube platform while leveraging its distribution network and brand strength. This has helped it expand beyond early adopters to more mainstream buyers — a shift that has proved challenging for both start-ups and legacy players.

EV penetration is also rising. FADA data shows electric two-wheelers accounted for 6.54 per cent of total volumes in FY26, with monthly penetration nearing double digits.

This positions EVs not just as a new segment but also a structural shift that could reshape market share over time, potentially accelerating TVS Motor’s climb in the domestic hierarchy.

Legacy strengths

However, the transition comes with trade-offs. “Margins could be impacted by the margin-dilutive mix of EV scooters,” Axis Securities said, highlighting near-term profitability pressures.

At the same time, Kotak noted that “operating leverage and improved product mix” continue to support margins, suggesting that legacy strengths remain relevant even as EV investments rise.

For TVS, the EV strategy mirrors its broader approach. “Continue to grow the top line… improve the product mix,” Radhakrishnan said.

The challenge will be in converting early leadership into durable scale as the market shifts from subsidy-driven adoption to demand-led growth.

The road ahead

At the premium end, TVS is sharpening its global ambitions through Norton Motorcycles. “We will have a differentiated strategy for Norton,” Radhakrishnan said.

The rise to the global top three marks a coming-of-age moment, but not the endgame.

Closing the gap with Hero at home will test its ability to scale up. Cracking ASEAN will test its global ambition. And making EVs profitable will test its execution discipline.

The climb to third was about momentum. The climb to second will be about execution.

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Published on April 13, 2026



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सिलेंडर के झंझट से मिलेगी मुक्ति, PNG पाइपलाइन से हर घर पहुंचेगी गैस, सरकार ने बना लिया प्लान

सिलेंडर के झंझट से मिलेगी मुक्ति, PNG पाइपलाइन से हर घर पहुंचेगी गैस, सरकार ने बना लिया प्लान


PNG Connection: मिडिल ईस्ट में चल रहे तनाव का असर भारत में भी देखने को मिल रहा है. पेट्रेल- डीजल से लेकर गैस सिलेंडर तक की किल्लत से लोग परेशान हैं. अब इन हालातों को देखते हुए सरकार ने अपना मास्टर प्लान तैयार कर लिया है. इस बारे में खुद पेट्रोलियम और प्राकृतिक गैस मंत्रालय ने हाल ही में बताया है. मंत्रालय ने बताया है कि गैस की किल्लत से बचने के लिए अब PNG की पाइपलाइन बिछाई जाएंगी.

मंत्रालय की तरफ से दी गई जानकारी
न्यूज एजेंसी एएनआई के मुताबिक पेट्रोलियम और प्राकृतिक गैस मंत्रालय ने आदेश दिया है कि PNG पाइप बिछाने के लिए फ्रेमवर्क तैयार किया जाए. मंत्रालय ने बताया है कि, ‘इस आदेश से पीएनजी नेटवर्क के विकास में तेजी आने, आखिरी-माइल कनेक्टिविटी में सुधार होने और साफ ईंधन की ओर ट्रांजीशन को समर्थन मिलने की उम्मीद है, जिससे ऊर्जा सुरक्षा मजबूत होगी और भारत की गैस-आधारित अर्थव्यवस्था को बढ़ावा मिलेगा।’

इस समय की भोगौलिक स्थित को देखते हुए एलपीजी आपूर्ति पर पड़ने वाले प्रभाव को कम करने के लिए सरकार ने कई उपाय किए हैं. मंत्रालय ने कहा है कि, ‘एलपीजी वितरकों में आपूर्ति की कमी की कोई रिपोर्ट नहीं मिली है और इंडस्ट्रीज में ऑनलाइन एलपीजी बुकिंग बढ़कर लगभग 98 प्रतिशत हो गई है.

घरेलू LPG सिलेंडर डिलीवरी है सामान्य
फिलहाल अवैध आपूर्ति को रोकने के लिए, डिलीवरी ऑथेंटिकेशन कोड (DCA) आधारित डिलीवरी लगभग 93% तक बढ़ा दी गई है. इस बारे में मंत्रालय ने बताया कि, ‘घरेलू एलपीजी सिलेंडर डिलीवरी सामान्य बनी हुई है. 11.04.2026 को 52.3 लाख से ज्यादा घरेलू LPG सिलेंडर की डिलीवरी की गई’. सरकार ने ये भी बताया कि कमर्शियल एलपीजी आपूर्ति बढ़ाने के लिए भी कदम उठाए हैं, जिसमें कुल आवंटन को संकट-पूर्व स्तरों के लगभग 70% तक बढ़ा दिया गया है, जिसमें 10% सुधार-संबंधित आवंटन शामिल है.

मजदूरों को मिलेगा 5 किलो सिलेंडर मिलेगा
इसके अलावा सरकार ने ये भी बताया है क उन्होंने 5 किलो FTL सिलेंडर की आपूर्ति को दोगुना कर दिया गया है. प्रवासी मजदूरों और छात्रों को आसानी से ये मिल जाएगा. उन्हें इसके लिए कोई एड्रेस प्रूफ की जरूरत भी नहीं होगी. बल्कि केवल आईडी दिखाकर ही उन्हें FTL मिल जाएंगे.



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AI disruption will be deeper and broader than previous technology disruptions: K Krithivasan, CEO, Tata Consultancy Services

AI disruption will be deeper and broader than previous technology disruptions: K Krithivasan, CEO, Tata Consultancy Services


As clients direct funds towards tech modernisation, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) management talks about the inevitability of the AI wave in the twenty-first century. In conversation with businessline, TCS CEO K Krithivasan and CFO Samir Seksaria, talk about the changes in the tech sector and the role of system integrators like the giant in the evolving space.

Last year, you said FY26 will be good. Now, you said FY27 will be better and that the worst is over. Is something fundamentally changing in the business?

Krithivasan: We were expecting greater momentum to compensate for the first quarter but unfortunately we were not able to do that. Despite that we grew in three consecutive quarters. The order book has been good. We signed mega deals. The customer band movement has been very strong across all buckets. We also saw more customers coming to larger, newer projects, transformation engagements and AI has become an inevitable technology. They have to invest quickly or it becomes a competitive disadvantage. Now we have business case existing for tech modernisation as many of our customers are embarking on that.

The time from disruption to hope to final redemption took about 2 to 3 years. Do you see a similar cycle with AI?

Krithivasan: Actually, even more. There is so much of adoption yet to happen, it takes much longer. However, the time shrinks with every technology disruption. That does not mean it will happen in the next year. This is going to be a disruption that is broader and deeper.

Anthropic recently suggested that advances in generative AI could significantly reduce demand for traditional IT services.

Krithivasan:Customers need system integrators like TCS, who understand the context, technology implementation, give you business benefits out of technology. We are helping our customers in multiple things, cannibalising our own revenue in terms of software engineering. We give them benefits that helps them in addressing the backlog. Then we help them in adopting AI: model, training, building agentic architecture. These are opportunities for us in the mid-term. Our overall philosophy though is, every time a technology destruction comes, it increases economic activity manifold, creates more jobs, as long as people are willing to adopt.

So, TCS’s nature as a IT services player may change?

Krithivasan:It could change because today we have 6 lakh employees approximately. Maybe 5 lakh of them are people come with programming background. We will probably need lesser proportion of programmers but we will need people to train models, context engineers, prompt engineers, model testers, agent developers. All those newer skills and newer opportunities will emerge.

Your client numbers in terms of investments have gone up. Have existing clients increased their spends or have you gained new clients?

Krithivasan: We are getting new clients. Most clients start off with smaller investments. Of course, sometimes we get lucky and some come in with large spends but it is common for most clients to start with smaller spends.

How are you able to protect margins?

Seksaria: We called out our ‘build-acquire-partner’ strategy and we have been investing on it. Investments are offset by either gains being reinvested. Looking forward, our priority would be to focus on investments to sustain growth. At the same time, we will look at operational rigor in terms of execution excellence, whether it is the normal levers, pyramid, productivity, utilization. Currency can be a tailwind, at least on annual basis. The sharp depreciation in FY26 leads some tailwind to FY27. The 25 per cent margin was delivered while making investments through the year. We are exiting FY26 with a 4-year high on annual margin numbers.

Your attrition grew over the year. How are you assessing the job market in this context?

Krithivasan: The overall demand environment at this time is quite healthy. Last year, despite a headcount reduction, we had almost 90,000 people. About 45,000 of them were from the campus. The trend will continue for FY27. We have already rolled out close to 25,000 campus offers. We are actively recruiting people from the market. As the quarters progress, we will calibrate how many more people, campus layers will be recruited and what would we do in terms of lateral recruitment. However, we don’t see any serious significant reduction or change in the number.

Do you have enough attractive jobs here for young freshers?

Krithivasan: I would say TCS is very attractive. We do lot of interesting work. Last year, we offered almost 44,000 offers, the largest ever by a private sector for a campus fair in a single year. There are concerns but we continue to hire lot of people, provide opportunities. I still believe TCS is the best place for anyone to work and that is the greatest opportunity.

Looking at it from a Human+AI model, how are you assessing the compensation and increments for your associates?

Krithivasan: Compensation and increment would be based on the individual employee’s contribution, company performance. That we have announced the increment within six months or the last month shows the confidence we have on the overall growth prospect. It has to be based on the confidence we have on the future as well and we are quite confident about it. Assessment metrics will keep evolving. Some of the software measures will keep evolving.

Is there a timeline for the HyperVault data center to go live?

Krithivasan: We have been talking about sometime in calendar year 2028.

Isn’t that a significant time gap from the time?

Krithivasan: I t takes 12 to 18 months from the time you put the shovel on the ground to operationalisation. 12 to 18 months is actually still quite accelerated.

With all the demand coming in, are you thinking of increasing the cash that you are pumping in?

Krithivasan: We will start looking at how much of actual capex has to happen. Currently, we have signed the MoU for most of them. We are in the phase of finalising design, SLA, land and other timelines. Once that is done, we will start looking at putting actual money into these investments. Currently our target is 1 GW but as it scales up, we will recalibrate our (capacity?).

How many MoUs have you done?

Krithivasan: We have announced two and we are in discussions with a few more. First, you do the MoU then there is a long process of agreeing on the design and specifications. After that, we will start the actual.



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