Miscellaneous News

Minm

Junior Member
Registered Member
Visegrád 24 is an extremely bad far-right media outlet that frequently exaggerates for its own purposes. This so-called mass protest at most, only had two hundred people.

A byproduct of overly thorough revolution is that people forget how terrible the targets of the revolution were; people tend to fantasize about things they've never experienced.
There's some protests about the economy (as is common in many countries including China, we just don't see the reporting on it). Anti government groups in the west then try to make it look like a colour revolution. This is like relying on Taiwanese narratives whenever there's a problem anywhere in China.

Actually Iran has essentially abandoned the mandatory hijab. There's some protests now by merchants because the currency weakened. This is not about changing to a different system of government and more about central bank policy and inflation
 

Randomuser

Captain
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Indian equities underperform peers by widest margin in three decades​

China’s resurgence and excitement over AI leave India behind

Indian stocks have underperformed other emerging markets by the widest margin in more than three decades as global investors pivot towards China and equities linked to the artificial intelligence boom.

The MSCI India index has returned 2.5 per cent in dollar terms this year compared with 27.7 per cent for the MSCI Emerging Markets index, India’s weakest relative performance since 1993. Foreign investors have pulled more than $16bn out of India this year, the second-largest drawdown on record, as they book profits from years of strong gains to fund investments in other Asian markets.

Chinese and South Korean equities, especially semiconductor and software stocks, have rallied sharply this year because of optimism over AI and a broader re-rating of their markets from a low base. “Investors saw India as a funding trade this year to fund their [long positions] in the rest of the Asian region,” said Sunil Koul, global emerging market equity strategist at Goldman Sachs.

Before this year, India had maintained a streak of outperformance against other emerging markets since 2021, benefiting from investors reallocating funds from China, said Wong Kok Hoi, founder and chief strategist of APS Asset Management, a Singapore-based fund.

But uncertainties around a trade deal with the US and the lack of a clear AI theme in Indian equities have led investors to take money out of the market. “The interplay of persistent underweight positioning, rotation towards tech-heavy north Asia, tariff-driven sentiment weakness and moderating earnings visibility” is driving India’s relative underperformance, said Harendra Kumar, managing director of institutional equities at Elara Capital in Mumbai.

Matthew Quaife, global head of multi-asset at Fidelity International, noted that Chinese and Indian equities rarely rallied together. “When one’s really hot in the market, the other one tends to have a little bit of a harder time,” he said.

India’s relative underperformance comes despite a hot market for initial public offerings. Listings have mostly been in non-tech sectors and corporate earnings have fallen short of expectations, denting foreign investor interest in the country’s stocks. The underperformance in dollar terms has also been driven by the Indian rupee being the worst-performing major Asian currency this year. The rupee weakened past Rs90 a dollar on Wednesday, bringing it down 5 per cent against the US currency since the start of the year. “Earnings growth has just been cut all year long,” said Ray Farris, chief economist at Eastspring Investments. “There’s been a bit of derating.”

Analysts also pointed to the Reserve Bank of India keeping interest rates high even as a pandemic-induced rise in inflation had eased. “Both fiscal and monetary tightening led to a growth slowdown last year, which led to an earnings downgrade cycle,” said Goldman’s Koul. India’s consumer price index rose 0.25 per cent year on year in October, its lowest level in more than a decade. The RBI, meanwhile, has held the repo rate at 5.5 per cent since June. “Inflation surprised to the downside,” said Eastspring’s Farris. “Real interest rates remain very high.”

Amid foreign outflows, domestic investors have buoyed the Indian market with a continual influx of money from retail systematic investment plans. The Nifty 50 index of the market’s largest companies is trading at record highs, even as the broader MSCI India index is down 3 per cent from its peak in late September last year. “The market probably would have fallen more if it wasn’t for the SIPs,” said Joshua Crabb, head of Asia-Pacific equities at Robeco.

Many investors and banks are optimistic that India will perform better next year. Goldman Sachs and HSBC recently upgraded the country’s equities to overweight, citing recent government reforms such as overhauling the goods and services tax and opening up the banking sector to more foreign investment. Goldman analysts wrote in a note that earnings at MSCI India companies had bottomed and were likely to recover next year. “We think foreign money will come back,” Koul said. Robeco’s Crabb added: “The vast majority of the relative underperformance has probably played out now.”



Honestly I don't really follow Indian stocks much and the stock market is really just gambling at its core. But since Jai Hinds kept spamming comments on how great the Indian stock market was and how China was failing, I feel its only appropriate to remind them of this.
 

9dashline

Captain
Registered Member
Goes to show the impotence of the neoliberal elite. When they can’t change reality, instead of taking the CHAD approach of self improvement they resort to superstition, and not even the ones they believe in. It’s emblematic of winology.
Intel exCeo was saying prayers to avoid getting shit canned

That didn't work

Now he is using Chinese Qwen models to fine tune an AI that has Christian values and going ipo with it

I think many Anglo simply have a cult gene
 

JJD1803

Junior Member
Registered Member
Anyone who followed the Yemen war since 2015 knew there was underlining tension between KSA and UAE. UAE’s agenda in Yemen was not to fight the Houthis but break up Yemen and set up Southern Yemen. It appears Saudi Arabia has lost all trust of the UAE. This could explain Prince Bin Salman restoring relations with Qatar and Iran along with deepening relations with Turkey. It has been widely reported the UAE wants to supplant KSA as the dominant Arab power in the Persian Gulf. Hell there is reports of UAE officials wanting to break up Saudi Arabia along tribal/sectarian lines. UAE has gone all in with Israel to try destory Saudi Arabia.

2026 is going to be an explosive year in West Asia. The tension is building up region wide for a big explosion. Netanyahu’s visit to Trump all but confirms there will be a round two between Israel and Iran. Israel making threats towards Hezbollah meaning there will also be a second war between both factions. Turkey planning to move radar systems in Syria as a gesture towards Iran but also as a move of frustration towards Israel’s moves within Syria. The Gaza ceasefire nearing collapse. Tensions between Saudi Arabi and the UAE nearing to outright war. The UAE and Israel being very aggressive to reach their goals. I know this a bold statement but I do see in out total regional war occurring in West Asia for 2026.
 

CMP

Captain
Registered Member
Anyone who followed the Yemen war since 2015 knew there was underlining tension between KSA and UAE. UAE’s agenda in Yemen was not to fight the Houthis but break up Yemen and set up Southern Yemen. It appears Saudi Arabia has lost all trust of the UAE. This could explain Prince Bin Salman restoring relations with Qatar and Iran along with deepening relations with Turkey. It has been widely reported the UAE wants to supplant KSA as the dominant Arab power in the Persian Gulf. Hell there is reports of UAE officials wanting to break up Saudi Arabia along tribal/sectarian lines. UAE has gone all in with Israel to try destory Saudi Arabia.

2026 is going to be an explosive year in West Asia. The tension is building up region wide for a big explosion. Netanyahu’s visit to Trump all but confirms there will be a round two between Israel and Iran. Israel making threats towards Hezbollah meaning there will also be a second war between both factions. Turkey planning to move radar systems in Syria as a gesture towards Iran but also as a move of frustration towards Israel’s moves within Syria. The Gaza ceasefire nearing collapse. Tensions between Saudi Arabi and the UAE nearing to outright war. The UAE and Israel being very aggressive to reach their goals. I know this a bold statement but I do see in out total regional war occurring in West Asia for 2026.
If a broader regional war directly involves Israel, the US will be pulled in and the century will belong (even more) to China.
 
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Virtup

Junior Member
Registered Member
If a broader regional war directly involves Israel, the US will be pulled in and the century will belong (even more) to China.
Not necessarily. The world economy will be wrecked, Pakistan and central Asia will get pulled in, other 2nd and 3rd order consequences will also take place, etc. If the previously discussed scenario does indeed unfold, it will be cataclysmic for the entire world, which is why I think it won't happen. But humans have repeatedly proven throughout our long history that they can be dumb and stupid beyond measure, so who knows ? Just look at the stupidity of the people who started ww1. Or how the first Punic war started. That one is even dumber.
 
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