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SBI Funds’ IPO Fully Subscribed as Investors Bet on India’s Expanding Mutual Fund Market

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SBI Funds Management’s $1.03 billion initial public offering (IPO) was fully subscribed on the second day of bidding on Wednesday, indicating strong investor confidence in India’s largest asset manager and growing optimism about the country’s rapidly expanding mutual fund industry.

The IPO, which values the company at about 1.17 trillion rupees ($13.6 billion), or roughly 38 times its projected fiscal 2026 earnings per share, attracted bids for approximately 212 million shares against 124.56 million shares on offer by 1:33 p.m. IST, according to exchange data.

Retail investors subscribed to 68 million shares, representing 1.26 times the portion reserved for them, signaling healthy participation from individual investors alongside strong institutional demand.

The offering closes on Thursday, with shares expected to debut on Indian exchanges on July 21.

The IPO follows a successful anchor investor round in which SBI Funds Management raised $278.5 million from marquee global investors, including BlackRock and sovereign wealth funds from Singapore, Abu Dhabi, and Norway. The participation of some of the world’s largest institutional investors has strengthened confidence in the listing and underscores continued international interest in India’s long-term asset management story.

SBI Funds Management, a joint venture between India’s largest lender, State Bank of India (SBI), and European asset management giant Amundi, managed assets worth 12.5 trillion rupees ($131 billion) as of March 2026, making it India’s biggest mutual fund manager by assets under management (AUM).

Investor interest in the IPO reflects growing confidence that India’s mutual fund industry remains in the early stages of a structural expansion, supported by rising household financial savings, increasing participation from first-time investors and the continued shift away from traditional savings products toward market-linked investments.

One of SBI Funds Management’s biggest competitive advantages is its extensive nationwide distribution network through State Bank of India, which has more than 22,000 branches and one of the country’s largest customer bases. That gives the asset manager unparalleled access to retail investors across both metropolitan and smaller cities.

Analysts say this footprint has become increasingly valuable as India’s mutual fund industry expands beyond major financial centers.

“Smaller cities are contributing more heavily to growth in assets under management for fund managers, and that puts SBI Funds Management in a strong position,” said Ambareesh Baliga, a Mumbai-based market analyst.

The company is also well positioned to capitalize on the sustained growth in systematic investment plans (SIPs), which have become the primary driver of retail participation in Indian equity markets. Monthly SIP inflows have remained resilient even during periods of market volatility, helping India’s mutual fund industry record 64 consecutive months of net inflows through June 2026.

Industry executives expect continued financialization of household savings, supported by rising incomes, greater digital adoption and expanding financial awareness, to drive further growth in mutual fund assets over the coming years.

The listing marks India’s biggest IPO so far this year and could signal improving sentiment in the country’s primary market after fundraising activity slowed during the first half of 2026.

Earlier in the year, higher crude oil prices following the Iran conflict weighed on investor sentiment and raised concerns about inflation, India’s import bill, and economic growth, leading several companies to delay listing plans.

Market participants now expect IPO activity to accelerate in the second half of 2026 as geopolitical tensions ease and equity markets remain near record highs.

The SBI Funds Management offering is widely viewed as a bellwether for investor appetite ahead of several anticipated blockbuster listings, including those of Reliance Jio and the National Stock Exchange (NSE), both expected before year-end.

The strong response also boosts India’s standing as one of the world’s most active equity capital markets, supported by robust domestic liquidity, increasing retail participation and continued foreign institutional interest despite global economic uncertainty.

Welcome Ikechukwu N. S. Dozie, New VC of FUTO

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Great FUTOites,

Please join me in congratulating and welcoming our new Vice Chancellor, Professor Ikechukwu N. S. Dozie, as he assumes the responsibility of leading our great institution to even greater heights.

Our immediate past Vice Chancellor, the distinguished Professor Nnenna Oti, elevated service, leadership, and institutional excellence to an enviable level, earning FUTO widespread respect across Nigeria. I am confident that Professor Dozie will build on that remarkable foundation and further strengthen FUTO’s reputation on the global stage.

I have already exchanged messages with our new Vice Chancellor, and I conveyed a simple commitment: “We are here whenever there is anything you may need from us.”

To fellow FUTOites around the world, if you are in a position to facilitate international partnerships, research collaborations, faculty exchanges, industry engagements, innovation programs, or global opportunities, remember that there is FUTO. Let it be your first option. If there is any way I can help create connections or facilitate introductions, please let me know. Together, we can continue to open new doors for our alma mater.

For me, everything began at FUTO, Africa’s finest university of technology by far! lol. I arrived from my Ovim village with dreams, but it was FUTO that began the true liberation of my mind. It provided exactly the right intellectual environment, delivered at exactly the right time. Looking back, I can only say: thank you, FUTO, for a peerless academic experience.

I still remember one of my earliest lectures by Rev. Fr. Prof. Ashiegbu on Logic and Philosophy. His opening exploration of the timeless question – “What is the world made up of?” – was transformative. At that moment, I realized I was no longer a student of Secondary Technical School Ovim. I had entered a different world. I had become an undergraduate, embarking on a lifelong journey of inquiry, discovery, and innovation.

That is the enduring mission of a great university: not merely to transmit knowledge, but to liberate minds. Professor Dozie, together with the faculty and staff, now carries that noble responsibility, to inspire the next generation of engineers, scientists, innovators, entrepreneurs, and leaders who will shape Nigeria, Africa, and the world.

We wish him wisdom, strength, and tremendous success as he leads our beloved university into its next chapter.

Great FUTOites.

The Greatest. And Still the Greatest.

Stripe and Advent Make $53bn Bid For Paypal In Blockbuster Fintech Deal as Payments Industry Enters New Consolidation Phase.

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Stripe and private equity giant Advent International have made a joint offer to acquire PayPal Holdings for $60.50 per share, valuing the pioneering digital payments company at more than $53 billion in what would rank among the largest financial technology acquisitions on record.

According to sources cited by Reuters, the proposal was submitted earlier this month and is backed by roughly $50 billion in committed bank financing, underscoring lenders’ confidence in one of the largest leveraged buyouts attempted in recent years. The offer represents a premium of about 28% to PayPal’s Tuesday closing price, sending the company’s shares up more than 16% in premarket trading as investors assessed the likelihood of a transaction.

Neither PayPal, Stripe, nor Advent International commented on the discussions.

The approach follows an initial proposal made in early April, the sources said. While PayPal has yet to formally respond, Stripe and Advent are seeking to advance negotiations over the coming weeks. The sources cautioned that there is no guarantee the talks will result in a deal.

Unlike many private equity acquisitions that involve selling businesses separately, the proposal would keep PayPal intact. Stripe and Advent would jointly own the company, each taking an equal stake, signaling confidence that PayPal’s long-term value lies in integrating its businesses rather than dismantling them.

If completed, the acquisition would unite two of the most influential names in digital payments. Stripe has become the dominant payment infrastructure provider for internet businesses, while PayPal remains one of the world’s largest consumer payments platforms through its core checkout business, Venmo, Braintree, and expanding cryptocurrency services.

The combination would create a payments ecosystem spanning merchants, consumers, online marketplaces, subscription businesses and cross-border commerce, potentially giving the combined company greater scale to compete with technology giants such as Apple Pay and Google Pay as well as traditional card networks including Visa and Mastercard.

The proposed acquisition also shows how dramatically PayPal’s valuation has changed over the past five years.

Once regarded as one of the biggest beneficiaries of the pandemic-driven e-commerce boom, PayPal reached a market capitalization of roughly $360 billion in 2021. Since then, slowing online spending, rising interest rates, intensifying competition, and investor concerns over long-term growth have erased much of those gains. The company’s value fell to about $36 billion earlier this year and has declined more than 40% over the past 12 months.

That steep correction has transformed PayPal from a former market leader into a potential takeover candidate, particularly for strategic buyers seeking an established global payments franchise with hundreds of millions of users.

Stripe appears well positioned to pursue such a transaction. The privately held company was valued at $159 billion during a secondary share sale earlier this year, reflecting renewed investor optimism after a difficult period for fintech valuations. Its payments infrastructure is deeply embedded across internet commerce, serving millions of businesses that rely on its software to process payments, automate financial operations and manage online transactions.

For Advent International, one of the world’s largest private equity firms, the transaction would underpin another major investment in financial technology. The firm already has significant exposure to payments through investments, including Nuvei, and has extensive experience scaling software and financial services companies.

The proposed acquisition comes as PayPal is undergoing one of the most significant restructurings in its history. Chief Executive Enrique Lores, who assumed the role in March, has launched an aggressive turnaround strategy aimed at restoring growth and improving profitability after several years of slowing expansion.

In April, PayPal reorganized its operations into three core divisions covering checkout services, Venmo and consumer financial services, and payments and cryptocurrency. The company also reshaped its senior leadership team as part of a broader effort to simplify operations and accelerate decision-making.

Artificial intelligence has become a central pillar of the turnaround. Management plans to deploy AI across customer service, software development, and internal operations while eliminating overlapping functions throughout the organization. The company expects these initiatives to generate approximately $1.5 billion in savings over the next two to three years, with the proceeds reinvested into new products and growth initiatives.

Early operational indicators suggest the strategy is gaining traction. First-quarter revenue rose 7% year over year to $8.35 billion, surpassing analysts’ expectations of $8.05 billion. On a currency-neutral basis, total payment volume increased 8% to approximately $464 billion, demonstrating that PayPal continues to process enormous transaction volumes despite mounting competition.

The potential transaction also points to a broader consolidation wave sweeping through the global payments industry.

As digital payments mature, companies are increasingly pursuing mergers to gain scale, reduce costs and expand into faster-growing businesses such as business-to-business payments, embedded finance, cross-border transactions and AI-powered financial services.

Competitive pressure has intensified as technology companies, fintech startups, and traditional financial institutions all compete for payment volumes. Consumers now have a wider range of payment choices than ever before, including digital wallets, real-time payment systems, buy now, pay later products, and cryptocurrencies.

Recent transactions underscore that shift. Global Payments agreed to acquire Worldpay from FIS and GTCR in a $24.25 billion transaction, while Canadian payments company Nuvei agreed to purchase Payoneer Global for $2.75 billion. Meanwhile, Mastercard is reportedly exploring options for its UK payments subsidiary Vocalink as governments place greater emphasis on domestic ownership of critical financial infrastructure.

A PayPal acquisition by Stripe and Advent would be significantly larger than those deals and could become the defining fintech transaction of the decade. But beyond its size, the proposed takeover highlights a broader evolution in the payments industry. The next phase of competition is increasingly being driven by artificial intelligence, integrated financial services, and global payment ecosystems rather than traditional transaction processing alone.

Acquiring PayPal would instantly add to Stripe, one of the world’s largest consumer payment networks, the Venmo platform, a vast merchant base, and established global brand recognition. Combined with Stripe’s strength among developers and enterprise merchants, the deal could create one of the industry’s most comprehensive payment platforms.

For PayPal shareholders, the proposal offers an opportunity to realize substantial value after years of declining share performance, while providing the company with the financial backing to accelerate investments in artificial intelligence, digital wallets, merchant services and next-generation payment technologies outside the scrutiny of public markets.

If negotiations progress, the transaction is likely to face extensive regulatory scrutiny given the combined companies’ significant presence in digital payments.

Wall Street Banks Ride Record Massive Deals and Trading Boom, But Executives Warn Risks Are Building Beneath Markets

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The logo for Goldman Sachs is seen on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, New York, U.S., November 17, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/Files

Wall Street’s largest banks delivered another quarter of exceptional earnings, powered by a resurgence in investment banking, record trading activity and blockbuster capital markets deals, underscoring how the artificial intelligence investment boom and elevated market volatility have become the industry’s biggest profit engines.

Second-quarter results from JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and Wells Fargo showed broad-based strength across fee-generating businesses, with mergers and acquisitions, equity underwriting and trading revenue helping offset persistent concerns over inflation, geopolitical tensions and stretched asset valuations.

The results suggest that the U.S. banking industry is benefiting from one of its strongest operating environments in years, as corporations rush to raise capital, pursue acquisitions and finance massive AI-related investments.

“We’ve had really terrific global markets performance and investment banking performances,” Bank of America Chief Financial Officer Alastair Borthwick said during the bank’s earnings call. “Business continues to feel good.”

The earnings also bolster expectations that 2026 could become one of the busiest years for global investment banking since the post-pandemic dealmaking boom, as companies race to secure funding for AI infrastructure, semiconductor manufacturing and digital transformation projects.

JPMorgan posted the highest quarterly profit ever recorded by a U.S. bank, bringing its market capitalization above $920 billion and edging it closer to becoming Wall Street’s first trillion-dollar bank.

Chief Financial Officer Jeremy Barnum said activity across equity markets remained exceptionally strong.

“What’s going on in equities is a booming environment with a ton of activity, big IPOs, the AI theme, a very active environment,” Barnum said.

Investment banking has emerged as one of the industry’s fastest-growing revenue streams after several subdued years marked by rising interest rates and weaker corporate confidence.

According to Dealogic, global investment banking revenue climbed 24% in the first half of 2026 to $61.4 billion compared with a year earlier. JPMorgan retained its position as the world’s leading investment bank by revenue, while Goldman Sachs remained the top adviser on mergers and acquisitions.

The surge reflects a revival in corporate confidence as executives pursue acquisitions and public offerings tied to AI infrastructure, cloud computing and semiconductor expansion.

Among the largest transactions during the quarter were Alphabet’s $85 billion share sale, Cerebras Systems’ $6.4 billion initial public offering, and SpaceX’s IPO, which generated an estimated $500 million in underwriting fees for participating banks.  Trading businesses also benefited from unusually volatile financial markets as investors repositioned portfolios amid the U.S.-Iran conflict, fluctuating oil prices, changing Federal Reserve expectations and continued enthusiasm for AI-related stocks.

Higher market volatility typically boosts client activity, increasing demand for hedging, market-making, and derivatives trading, all of which translate into stronger revenue for investment banks.

Analysts said the scale of the earnings outperformance exceeded expectations.

“I’m a little bit surprised by the magnitude of the beats,” said Robert Pavlik, senior portfolio manager at Dakota Wealth Management, which owns shares of Bank of America and JPMorgan.

Goldman Sachs, whose earnings are heavily tied to investment banking and capital markets, also exceeded analysts’ forecasts, while Citigroup reported its highest quarterly revenue in a decade alongside a 45% jump in profit. Wells Fargo also beat Wall Street estimates, demonstrating that earnings strength extended well beyond pure investment banks.

“The biggest beats were coming from investment banking, capital markets, and trading,” said Neville Javeri, portfolio manager at Allspring Global Investments.

He said Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan benefited most from the rebound, adding that “capital markets and investment banking have sort of been the drivers for all the banks.”

The results highlight a broader structural shift underway across global finance. Unlike previous banking cycles that relied heavily on loan growth and widening net interest margins, today’s earnings are increasingly driven by advisory services, securities trading and financing for AI-related investments.

Banks are acting as financial intermediaries for one of the largest capital spending cycles in decades, as technology companies collectively invest hundreds of billions of dollars to build AI data centers, semiconductor fabrication plants and computing infrastructure.

That financing wave has generated robust demand for equity offerings, bond issuance, structured financing, and acquisition advisory services.

Macrae Sykes, portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds, said the strength of the quarter exceeded even optimistic expectations.

“We thought the second-quarter earnings were going to be very good, but they turned out to be extraordinary,” Sykes said.

“We continue to believe the environment for the major banks is very constructive due to business activity, market engagement and demand for capital with average loans up around 10%.”

Investors rewarded some of the strongest performers. Goldman Sachs shares surged 7.3%, while JPMorgan gained 1.7% and Bank of America rose 1.8%. Citigroup shares fell 4.3%, however, as investors focused on the prospect of higher expenses and softer profitability later this year. Wells Fargo also declined 2.6%.

“It’s the best bank set up in years,” said Lauren Cassidy, chief investment officer for the Founders 100 ETF. “And this is an unusual quarter. Everything’s working.”

Still, executives cautioned that today’s favorable conditions may not persist indefinitely. Barnum warned that elevated valuations and increasing leverage across financial markets could leave investors vulnerable if conditions deteriorate.

“How fragile, dangerous, overheated, exuberant is the current moment?” he asked, noting that leverage and valuations have become “quite high.”

“It would be naive not to be worried – but it’s easy to be worried and the market keeps going up.”

JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon also highlighted several macroeconomic risks that could eventually unsettle markets.

“Several risks are shifting below the surface like tectonic plates, including geopolitical tensions and wars, sticky inflation, large global fiscal deficits and elevated asset prices,” Dimon said, adding that they “could also cause meaningful disruptions when they shift or collide.”

Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan echoed those concerns, saying the U.S. economy has remained more resilient than expected but warning that inflation and restrictive monetary policy continue to pose significant risks.

Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf also cautioned that unusually favorable market conditions rarely last.

“Strong environments like this don’t last forever, and we see large amounts of capital being deployed by both banks and non-banks across a broad range of risk assets,” Scharf said.

Citigroup Chief Financial Officer Gonzalo Luchetti added that the conflict in the Middle East could eventually weigh on mergers and capital markets activity if geopolitical uncertainty persists, even though current deal pipelines remain healthy.

The second-quarter earnings show the extent to which Wall Street has become one of the biggest financial beneficiaries of the global AI investment boom. Analysts believe that as long as companies continue raising capital for AI infrastructure and markets remain active, investment banking and trading businesses are likely to remain the primary drivers of profitability.

World Stocks Steady As AI Rally Offsets Oil Shock; ASML Lifts Chip Sector While Markets Weigh Fed Outlook And Middle East Risks

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World equity markets traded cautiously on Wednesday as renewed enthusiasm for artificial intelligence-related stocks, sparked by stronger-than-expected results from Dutch chip equipment giant ASML, offset rising geopolitical tensions after fresh hostilities involving Iran pushed oil prices higher.

The mixed performance highlighted the competing forces driving global markets: optimism over AI-driven corporate earnings and technology investment on the one hand, and mounting geopolitical and inflation risks on the other.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index slipped 0.05% by 0849 GMT after posting strong gains in the previous session, when weaker-than-expected U.S. inflation data boosted expectations that the Federal Reserve could keep interest rates unchanged in the near term.

Technology-heavy markets outperformed. Nasdaq futures climbed 0.5%, South Korea’s KOSPI surged 6.2%, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 advanced 1.5%, reflecting renewed investor appetite for semiconductor and AI-related stocks.

“The divergence between the U.S. and Europe seems to be driven mainly by technology stocks, which are outperforming again,” said Swissquote senior analyst Ipek Ozkardeskaya.

“ASML’s results came in sweet.”

The MSCI World Price Index edged up less than 0.1%.

The latest rally was driven by ASML, the world’s largest supplier of semiconductor manufacturing equipment, after the Dutch company raised its 2026 financial forecasts and unveiled plans to expand production capacity, citing sustained demand for advanced chipmaking tools used in artificial intelligence applications.

The company also delivered quarterly earnings that exceeded market expectations, sending its shares up as much as 8% in Amsterdam and lifting semiconductor stocks globally.

The upbeat outlook helped restore confidence in AI-related equities after recent volatility triggered by concerns that valuations had run ahead of earnings fundamentals and questions over whether massive AI infrastructure spending by technology companies would generate sufficient returns.

The renewed optimism also comes as semiconductor companies continue to benefit from unprecedented capital expenditure by hyperscale cloud providers including Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet and Meta, which are collectively spending hundreds of billions of dollars to expand AI computing infrastructure.

South Korea’s technology-heavy market was among the biggest beneficiaries of the improved sentiment, with investors returning to chipmakers after several weeks of profit-taking.

Markets Balance AI Optimism Against Geopolitical And Monetary Policy Risks

While AI-driven gains supported equity markets, investor sentiment remained restrained by escalating tensions in the Middle East.

Oil prices extended gains after President Donald Trump reimposed a naval blockade on Iranian ports and Tehran launched strikes targeting U.S. infrastructure in the region, raising fears of further disruptions to energy supplies. Brent crude futures rose 0.7% to $85.31 per barrel, increasing concerns that higher energy costs could eventually complicate the global inflation outlook.

Those concerns partly offset the positive impact of Tuesday’s softer U.S. inflation report.

Data released a day earlier showed headline U.S. consumer prices fell 0.4% in June, marking the first monthly decline since the COVID-19 pandemic, while core inflation was unchanged, reinforcing expectations that inflationary pressures are easing.

The figures prompted investors to scale back expectations of another near-term Federal Reserve interest rate increase.

U.S. Treasury yields and the dollar fell sharply after the inflation data. Although two-year Treasury yields edged up one basis point to 4.2% on Wednesday, they remained roughly nine basis points below Tuesday’s 17-month high.

The euro held above $1.14 against the dollar, reflecting the broad weakness in the U.S. currency following the inflation report.

“For market bulls this is even better than Goldilocks could have imagined,” J.P. Morgan analysts said in a client note.

“This print should remove any fears over a July rate hike and may assuage fears on September, too. This sets up the market to move higher and to broaden as it does so.”

However, Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh cautioned lawmakers that one encouraging inflation report was insufficient to conclude that inflation had been defeated, tempering market optimism.

Investors will closely monitor Warsh’s second day of congressional testimony later Wednesday, alongside U.S. producer price inflation data and the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book, for additional clues on the central bank’s policy trajectory. Attention is also turning toward the corporate earnings season, which is increasingly becoming a key driver of market direction.

Morgan Stanley, BlackRock, and Johnson & Johnson are scheduled to report results before the opening bell, following stronger-than-expected earnings from Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Bank of America that reinforced confidence in the resilience of the U.S. banking sector despite elevated interest rates.

Strong bank earnings have helped justify lofty equity valuations and strengthened hopes that corporate America can continue delivering earnings growth even as economic activity slows.

Elsewhere, investors are awaiting the Bank of Canada’s latest monetary policy decision, with the Canadian dollar trading broadly steady at 1.4051 per U.S. dollar. In China, official data showed the world’s second-largest economy expanded 4.3% year-on-year in the second quarter, falling short of analysts’ expectations as persistent weakness in domestic demand outweighed resilient exports and industrial production.

While softer growth highlighted ongoing structural challenges, stronger-than-expected June retail sales and hopes for targeted government stimulus helped cushion investor sentiment.

“I don’t think they will be worried enough to announce any big stimulus, but it is going to be targeted, since they are aware that growth is only for the tech areas whereas the broader economy is continuing to underperform,” said UOB economist Woei Chen Ho.

China’s yuan traded at 6.7715 per dollar, just below a one-month high.

Meanwhile, gold prices retreated after surging more than 2% in the previous session. Spot gold fell 0.7% to $4,023.70 an ounce as rising oil prices revived inflation concerns and investors reassessed the outlook for U.S. monetary policy.

While the combination of improving inflation data, resilient corporate earnings and renewed enthusiasm for AI has strengthened the case for risk assets, geopolitical tensions and uncertainty over central bank policy continue to limit broader market gains. Investors are increasingly balancing optimism surrounding the AI investment cycle against risks from higher energy prices, slowing global growth and ongoing conflicts that could quickly alter the inflation outlook.