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1The new U.S. earnings season kicks off this week: U.S.-Iran negotiations break down, can bank giants' earnings boost market sentiment?2Oil Surpasses $100 After U.S. Navy Closes Strait of Hormuz - How Serious Is the Threat to Supply?


Mercedes-Benz at a 10% DCF Discount as New Product Releases May Lead to a Revaluation
101 finance·2026/03/28 09:45

Borr Drilling's High-End Rig Growth Anticipates an Upcoming Shift in Day Rates
101 finance·2026/03/28 09:45

HYPERLIQUID SEEKS GROWTH AMID INCREASED DERIVATIVES DEMAND AND OIL MARKET VOLATILITY
101 finance·2026/03/28 09:45

GM’s $2B Credit Facility Signals Strategic Shift, Not Trouble—Is the Market Overestimating Vulnerability?
101 finance·2026/03/28 09:45

Flow Analysis: The $64 Billion Market Opportunity Presented by the PREDICT Act
101 finance·2026/03/28 09:42

CITYUSDT Trapped in Tight Range as Bearish Signals Intensify
101 finance·2026/03/28 09:27


Flash
18:14
Labor shortage drags Japan's shipbuilding orders down by 15% year-on-yearGolden Ten Data reported on April 14 that due to severe labor shortages, Japanese shipbuilding companies have experienced a decline in new export ship orders for the fourth consecutive year in fiscal 2025, a trend that is hindering the Japanese government's plan to double shipbuilding capacity by 2035. Data released by the Japan Ship Exporters’ Association on Monday shows that in the fiscal year ending March, new export ship orders totaled 9.04 million gross tons, down 15% year-on-year. As of the end of March, shipbuilding companies' order backlogs stood at 29.35 million gross tons, equivalent to approximately three and a half years of workload. These backlogged orders have filled dockyard schedules until around 2029, limiting the industry’s ability to take on current strong demand. Shipbuilding is listed as one of the 17 strategic industries by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s government, with Tokyo aiming to nearly double domestic shipbuilding output to 18 million gross tons by 2035 compared to 2024. The biggest challenge facing Japan is labor shortages, as some shipyards are unable to fully utilize their dockyards due to understaffing.
18:12
IEA: Oil prices will soon begin to reflect the severity of the crisisThe official stated at an event hosted by the Atlantic Council that this conflict, as well as the near closure of the Strait of Hormuz, has resulted in about 13 million barrels of supply being halted daily. He warned that more than 80 energy facilities have already been damaged during the hostilities, and the recovery process could take up to two years. The Paris-based agency has previously described the current supply disruption as the most severe in history. Read more
18:01
With U.S. support, KoBold launches a $50 million lithium exploration project in CongoKoBold is an artificial intelligence (AI)-driven mining company that has previously been active in copper exploration in Zambia. The company stated that this lithium exploration plan covers 13 exploration licenses and includes an aerial survey of 30,000 square kilometers (18,640 square miles), large-scale drilling, and extensive geochemical sampling, with lithium being its primary target.
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