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The guilt of leaving your baby hits hardest: Lavanya Tripathi | Telugu Movie News


For Lavanya Tripathi, the hardest part of returning to work wasn’t the long hours or the lights. It’s the small steps, “like dressing up for an interview,” that bring unexpected helplessness. “When you’re in makeup and certain clothes, you can’t touch your baby. He was looking at me and I felt so much guilt,” she confesses, adding, “I have so much respect for mothers who work and take care of their child. This guilt is more than anything else.” Five months into motherhood, the actor is slowly navigating the emotional shift of returning to professional commitments. “I was in this zone of just taking care of my child and suddenly I had to break that and come back to reality,” she says.Life after welcoming her baby boy has shifted entirely in ways no call sheet could prepare her for. “Before, I had all the time for myself. Right now, all my time, my thoughts… literally everything revolves around my son,” she shares. While Lavanya says motherhood hasn’t come with dramatic surprises — thanks largely to years spent babysitting her sister’s children — one thing has stayed with her: how instinct overrides exhaustion. Recalling watching her sister wake up every 20 minutes to feed her baby and wondering how she managed, Lavanya says, “I hated waking up in between my sleep. But now I understand — you don’t feel tired even when you are. That maternal instinct just takes over.” She adds, “I took my own sweet time to take on this challenge, though it doesn’t feel like a challenge because I’m enjoying it. I always wanted to be a mom, and now I just want to enjoy every bit of it.”

Lavanya Tripathi breaks silence on dating rumours with Varun Tej Konidela

‘I shot while I was pregnant and no one knew’Admittedly, Lavanya completed her comeback film Sathi Leelavathi while in her first trimester — a secret she kept from the crew. “At the muhurtam itself, I was pregnant and no one knew,” she reveals. Initially underestimating the physical demands, she soon found herself battling nausea and migraines while travelling daily to the sets. “I was vomiting, I had migraines and it felt like someone shook me in a box. Every day after the shoot, I’d go to the hospital to check if everything was fine,” she recalls. Despite the fear, she completed the film, including a dance sequence. “That’s why I’m not doing everything with full force.” She describes Sathi Leelavathi as a modern drama that flips the traditional image of the suffering wife. “This woman knows what she wants. When her husband says he’s leaving, she’s like, ‘Who are you to leave me?’” she says, calling it an entertainer rather than a moral lesson.

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‘Varun and I are best friends; we listen, we don’t bottle things up’Back at home, the workload is shared. Lavanya lights up when speaking about husband Varun Tej’s involvement.“He wants to be a part of everything,” she laughs, adding, “He’s more into it than me sometimes. I tell him, please let me do a few things!”From diaper duty to nighttime routines, she says he is fully present. “He’s equally there. Anything I need, he’s there.” This easy partnership stems from their foundation of strong communication. “Varun and I are best friends. We listen, we don’t bottle things up,” she explains, adding, “Whenever we don’t like something, we say it. The other person doesn’t get defensive. We just listen, acknowledge, and grow.”As she settles into this new rhythm, Lavanya is careful about the advice she gives other women, answering with honesty and awareness. “My advice would be different because I am privileged,” she says. – Sanjana Pulugurtha



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Sunil Gavaskar reveals how Abhishek Sharma can rediscover his lost mojo in T20 World Cup 2026



India’s T20 World Cup 2026 campaign has thrown up an unexpected storyline — the prolonged lean patch of their explosive opener, Abhishek Sharma. Touted as India’s destroyer-in-chief heading into the marquee tournament, Abhishek has endured a nightmare start, registering three consecutive ducks in his first three matches.

For a batter ranked world No. 1 in T20Is not too long ago, the sudden dip has been startling. India may have navigated their group-stage assignments, but Abhishek’s absence on the scoreboard has become a growing concern within the camp and among fans.

The numbers paint a worrying picture. In just eight T20I innings in 2026, Abhishek has already recorded five ducks — equalling the Indian record for most T20I ducks in a calendar year, previously held by Sanju Samson. Even more concerning, he has become the first batter in T20 World Cup history to begin a campaign with three successive zeros.

Sunil Gavaskar explains how Abhishek Sharma can get back his form in T20 World Cup 2026

Amid the scrutiny, former India captain Sunil Gavaskar has stepped in with calm, measured advice rather than harsh criticism. Speaking during a broadcast analysis, the legendary batter suggested that the burden of expectations may be weighing heavily on the young opener.

According to Gavaskar, Abhishek’s role as the team’s premier six-hitter and headline act may have subtly altered his approach. Instead, three early failures appear to have tightened his mindset. Gavaskar believes that once self-doubt creeps in, even naturally gifted stroke-makers can lose rhythm.

“Maybe the expectations might be weighing just a little too heavily on him. He is a lovely guy. If he had got a flying start in the first game, things might have been different. But now, you can sense that the expectations of being the big guy, the six-hitter, the No. 1 batter in the team, might be weighing heavily on him,” said Gavaskar on Star Sports.

One of Gavaskar’s key suggestions was simple yet profound — give yourself time. In a format driven by urgency, that advice may sound counterintuitive. But the former captain stressed that Abhishek does not need to announce his arrival with a boundary or a towering six. Gavaskar advised him to avoid playing across the line early in the innings and instead focus on playing straight, assessing conditions, and building a base. Even a handful of dot balls at the start, he argued, should not trigger panic.

The veteran pointed out that a batter of Abhishek’s range can compensate quickly once settled. The key lies in surviving the initial phase and allowing instincts to take over naturally rather than forcing glory shots from ball one.

“I think with the range of shots he has, he has to give himself a little more time in the middle. Not be looking to open his innings with a boundary or a six. If he gets it, then fine – but looking to play across the line for the big shot, no. Even if there are four dot balls, it does not matter because in the next four to eight balls he can make up for that,” Gavaskar added.

Also READ: Fans react as India complete flawless T20 World Cup 2026 group stage run after Shivam Dube stars vs Netherlands

Gavaskar on the key problem with Abhishek

Another concern flagged by Gavaskar was predictability. Opposition bowlers appear to have mapped Abhishek’s aggressive intent, setting traps accordingly. Without early strike rotation or quick singles, pressure has mounted, often leading to rash stroke-play. Gavaskar emphasized the importance of getting off the mark — a small but psychologically significant milestone. Rotating strike, feeling the pitch, and finding rhythm through singles can unlock a batter’s timing and confidence.

“He has to play smart cricket. He has to get the circulation in his legs. He has to get off the mark. If you are playing for India, you have to get off the mark and everything will fall in place. The way he is getting out is very predictable. When you take a couple of singles, you get a sense of the pitch. He will get a big score once he gets set,” Gavaskar added further.

Also READ: IND vs NED: Fans express shock as Abhishek Sharma records third consecutive duck in T20 World Cup 2026



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Clearing the boundary, crossing into history: J&K end 67-year wait, enter maiden Ranji Trophy final | Cricket News


Clearing the boundary, crossing into history: J&K end 67-year wait, enter maiden Ranji Trophy final
Jammu and Kashmir’s Auqib Nabi celebrates with teammates after taking a wicket vs Bengal. (PTI Photo)

KALYANI: One clean swing, one red ball sailing into the stands, and a 67-year wait came to an end. The moment Vanshaj Sharma launched Bengal pacer Mukesh Kumar for six, J&K players, support staff and officials poured onto the field at the Bengal Cricket Academy ground here on Wednesday. Their celebratory roar could probably be heard all the way to the Himalayan state.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!With that hit, J&K sealed its first-ever spot in the final of the Ranji Trophy, India’s premier domestic red-ball cricket event. Once famous for the Kashmir willow, J&K is etching a chapter of its own in the annals of Indian cricket.

How Suryakumar Yadav and Tilak Varma are hurting India | T20 World Cup

The result, a 6-wicket win, was emphatic, even though there were moments when the match appeared to be slipping away. Set 126 for victory, the team completed the chase in 34.4 overs, getting it done before lunch on Day 4.“I have played the Ranji final a number of times. But this time, it’s different. I had not slept for the last three nights. Today I will sleep well,” an elated coach Ajay Sharma, once a stalwart of the domestic scene for Delhi, said.As history beckoned, J&K began Day 4 within touching distance, only 83 runs away, yet Bengal came hard at them. Akash Deep, already among the wickets, struck twice to remove Shubham Khajuria and Yawer Hassan, then returned to send back skipper Paras Dogra.Mohammed Shami, relentless as ever, bowled Shubham Pundir to briefly widen the doorway for a comeback. But Abdul Samad and Sharma shut it with authority with an unbeaten 55-run fifth-wicket partnership that carried J&K to the line without another stumble. Samad’s unbeaten 30 off 27 balls, studded with three sixes, provided the finishing fire. Sharma’s 43 not out off 83 balls supplied the composure.The semifinal had turned on J&K’s refusal to panic after conceding a first-innings lead. Bengal piled up 328, powered by Sudip Kumar Gharami’s superb 146, and then had J&K out for 302 in reply, with Shami ripping through the innings with 8/90. Yet J&K stayed within reach through Samad’s counter-attacking 82, Dogra’s 58 and valuable lower-order runs that kept the deficit to 26.Few might have expected J&K to flip that deficit into a ticket to the final. But Sharma insisted the belief never wavered. “I told the boys that the match is not over. We have two more days. Cricket always gives you a second chance. Red-ball cricket is a dangerous game,” the 61-year-old Sharma said.Day 3 delivered the match’s decisive lurch. Bengal, under pressure, collapsed for 99 in just 25.1 overs. Sunil Kumar grabbed 4/27 and Auqib Nabi — the breakout fast bowler this season — took 4/36 to complete a match haul of 9/123, also chipping in with 42 with the bat earlier. Dogra underlined how quickly the equation changed. “That was not a significant lead (26 runs) and we still had seven sessions of play. But of course we never expected them (Bengal) to fold so cheaply,” he said. The final will carry personal meaning for Dogra, a veteran who crossed 10,000 Ranji runs during this match and now finds himself within a game of the trophy that has eluded him. “It will be big for me. My first Ranji final too. I never thought that I would get such a good group of players,” Dogra said, adding: “There was belief in everyone from the beginning of the season that we can win the Ranji Trophy.”Both Dogra and Sharma could not stop talking about pacer Nabi. “He is a match-winner for us,” Dogra said. “He has good work ethics and has been disciplined.” Coach Sharma believes bigger things are not far away for the 29-year-old from Baramulla. “Age is on his side and he has developed the skill set. He will play the IPL (for Delhi Capitals) and if he performs there, the sky’s the limit for him,” Sharma said.The final is next, and J&K have earned the right to dream all the way.Brief scores: J&K 302 (Samad 82, Shami 8-90) & 126/4 (Vanshaj 43, Samad 30*, Akash Deep 3-46) beat Bengal 328 (Gharami 146, Nabi 5-87) & 99 (Shahbaz 24, Sunil 4-27, Nabi 4-36) by 6 wicketsMEN BEHIND THE MILESTONE: THE TEAM’S KEY PERFORMERSAuqib Nabi: The medium-pacer took 12 wickets (7/40 & 5/70) against MP in the quarterfinal, and 9 (5/87 & 4/36) in the semifinal. Nabi has a 8.4cr IPL deal with Delhi Capitals. Will an India Test call-up follow? Matches This Season: 9, Wkts: 55, Avg: 12.7, Economy Rate: 2.7, Strike Rate: 28.5Sunil Kumar: The left-arm medium-pacer has been the perfect foil to Nabi. His 3/41 & 4/27 in the semis proved crucial. Matches: 8, Wkts: 29, Avg: 15.1, ER: 2.6, SR: 34.9Abdul Samad: The middle-order batter’s composure under pressure has seen him pull off several rescue acts. In the semis, he first slammed 82, then scored an unbeaten 30 off 27 balls to finish a tricky chase. Matches: 9, Runs: 655, Avg: 59.5Paras Dogra: The skipper has led with both bat and tactical acumen. Fittingly, the 41-yr-old has become only the 2nd batter to cross 10,000 runs in the Ranji Trophy. Matches: 9, Runs: 551, Avg: 42.4



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‘No reason to believe’: Russia says India has not changed stance on buying oil, rejects US claims


'Russia Stands By India's Decisions': Putin Rejects Trump Oil Narrative; Defends Right To Decide

AI image used for representative purposes

Russia’s foreign ministry firmly claimed on Wednesday that it has “no reason to believe” that India changed its stance on purchasing Russian oil, despite US claims suggesting otherwise. The ministry emphasised that the oil trade benefits both nations and helps maintain global energy market stability, while dismissing recent statements by US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio about India agreeing to stop Russian oil imports.“We have no reason to believe that India has changed its position on buying Russian hydrocarbons. India’s purchase of Russian hydrocarbons benefits both countries and helps maintain stability in the international energy market,” said Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova during her weekly briefing.

‘Russia Stands By India’s Decisions’: Putin Rejects Trump Oil Narrative; Defends Right To Decide

Zakharova further criticised US leadership, saying, “There is nothing new in the claims of US President Donald Trump, as well as US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who have grabbed the right to dictate to independent nations.”The issue gained attention after the US recently reduced tariffs on Indian goods from 50 per cent to 18 per cent. This included removing a 25 per cent tariff that Trump had imposed on India last August due to its Russian oil purchases. Following a phone call between Prime Minister Modi and President Trump, US officials claimed India had committed to stopping Russian oil imports.India has maintained silence on these US claims, neither confirming nor denying them. MEA had previously stated that “national interests” would guide its energy procurement decisions.Meanwhile, Russia has accused the US of using various pressure tactics, including tariffs, sanctions, and direct prohibitions, to prevent India and other countries from buying Russian oil.In her briefing, Zakharova also took aim at Ukraine’s European allies, suggesting they are not interested in pursuing peaceful solutions to ongoing conflicts.

Russian imports at a low?

India’s crude sourcing pattern is reportedly shifting, with Russian oil imports falling to their lowest levels in over two years. Data cited by Reuters claims Russian shipments accounted for just 21.2 per cent of India’s total imports in January, the smallest share since late 2022, at around 1.1 million barrels per day, down sharply from December and about one-third lower year-on-year.Russia had become India’s top supplier after 2022, with its share once nearing 40 per cent, driven by discounted crude. However, tightening Western sanctions and growing US trade engagement appear to have weighed on purchases. China has now overtaken India as Russia’s largest seaborne crude buyer.To compensate, Indian refiners increased purchases from other regions. Middle Eastern crude rose to roughly 55 per cent of imports in January, while Latin American supplies hit a 12-month high. Saudi Arabia has regained its position as India’s leading supplier, with February volumes tracking at record levels.Read more: Share of Russian crude in India’s oil imports falls to lowest since November 2022; Middle East supplies riseAnalysts expect Russian flows to decline further in the coming months, though not cease entirely, as India continues to emphasise its policy of “strategic autonomy” in energy procurement.



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OpenAI ties up with top Indian universities to push campus-wide AI adoption | India News


OpenAI ties up with Indian universities. (AP photo)

OpenAI on Tuesday announced deep institutional partnerships with six leading Indian universities and three major edtech platforms, marking a decisive shift from individual AI use to campus-wide deployment aimed at building AI-ready talent for India’s future workforce.The first cohort of partner institutions includes IIT Delhi, IIM Ahmedabad, AIIMS New Delhi, Manipal Academy of Higher Education (MAHE), University of Petroleum and Energy Studies (UPES) and Pearl Academy. Together, the initiative is expected to support over one lakh students, faculty and staff over the next year through structured access to enterprise-grade ChatGPT Edu, faculty enablement programmes and responsible-use frameworks .Unlike earlier models focused on tool access, OpenAI said the effort is anchored in institutional transformation — embedding AI across teaching, research, evaluation and campus operations, while aligning with academic integrity and ethical safeguards.“By 2030, nearly 40% of core skills workers rely on today will change, driven largely by AI. Educational institutions are critical to bridging the gap between what AI tools can do and how people actually use them,” said Raghav Gupta, head of education at OpenAI India.At IIT Delhi, the collaboration centres on engineering-led innovation, with AI integrated across undergraduate, postgraduate, doctoral and executive programmes. OpenAI-supported hackathons and industry days will link student innovation to India’s manufacturing, deep-tech and R&D ecosystem. IIM Ahmedabad will deploy ChatGPT Edu across degree and executive programmes, embedding AI fluency into management education spanning strategy, finance, operations, public policy and entrepreneurship.AIIMS New Delhi will explore applied AI use in medical education and clinical training, including a proposed AI in Medical Education Hub focused on simulations, clinical documentation and evidence synthesis, with an emphasis on safety benchmarks and ethical deployment. MAHE’s partnership spans engineering, health sciences, business and hospitality, with structured AI capability tracks across disciplines.UPES and Pearl Academy will focus on multidisciplinary and creative applications respectively — from engineering, law and health sciences at UPES to design, fashion technology and digital media at Pearl Academy — treating AI as core academic infrastructure rather than pilot experimentation.In addition, IIM Ahmedabad and MAHE will roll out OpenAI certifications to formalise structured AI capability pathways in management and multidisciplinary education. To extend AI skills beyond campuses, OpenAI is also partnering edtech platforms PhysicsWallah, upGrad and HCL GUVI to offer structured courses on AI fundamentals and practical ChatGPT use for students and early-career professionals.The move signals a broader shift in India’s higher education landscape — from AI awareness to institutional adoption — as universities begin positioning graduates not just as AI users, but as leaders in an AI-driven economy.



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Bill Gates to skip India AI Impact Summit keynote, Gates Foundation confirms


Bill Gates to skip India AI Impact Summit keynote, Gates Foundation confirms

After days of speculation, Gates Foundation India has confirmed that Bill Gates will not deliver his keynote address at the ongoing India AI Impact Summit 2026. The foundation shared a post on microblogging platform X (formerly Twitter) announcing that the Microsoft founder will skip his keynote speech that he was previously scheduled to deliver today, February 19, 2026. There had been uncertainty around Gates’ participation after earlier reports suggested he might not attend the event. The Gates Foundation had subsequently indicated that he would be present, but his name later disappeared from the official AI Impact Summit website, adding to the confusion.With the latest X post, Gates Foundation India has cleared the air. It stated that the foundation will now be “represented by Ankur Vora, President of Africa and India Offices, who will speak later today at the Summit”.

Mumbai Hosts Modi-Macron Talks, Rafale In Focus; Bill Gates To Attend AI Summit Under Epstein Cloud

Here’s what Gates Foundation India wrote

“After careful consideration, and to ensure the focus remains on the AI Summit’s key priorities, Mr. Gates will not be delivering his keynote address. The Gates Foundation will be represented by Ankur Vora, President of Africa and India Offices, who will speak later today at the Summit.The Gates Foundation remains fully committed to our work in India to advance our shared health and development goals,” the post reads.

India AI Impact Summit 2026: Tech speakers on day 4

As per the official website of India AI Impact Summit, tech CEOs scheduled to speak today are Google CEO Sundar Pichai, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei and Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis, N Chandrasekaran – Chairman, Tata Sons, Rishad Premji, Executive Chairman, Wipro, Brad Smith, Vice Chair and President, Microsoft, and Julie Sweet, CEO, Accenture.Alexandr Wang, Chief AI Officer, Meta, Arthur Mensch, CEO and Co-founder, Mistral AI, Roy Jakobs, CEO Phillips, Nikesh Arora, CEO of Palo Alto Networks among others are also scheduled to deliver their keynote at the summit today.



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AUS-W vs IND-W, 2nd T20I, Match Prediction: Who will win today’s game between Australia Women and India Women?



The action moves to the nation’s capital as India Women look to clinch a historic T20I series win on Australian soil. After a dominant, rain-curtailed victory in the first game at the SCG, the Women in Blue head into Canberra with a 1-0 lead and a massive boost in confidence.

The first T20I belonged to India’s bowling unit, specifically Arundhati Reddy, whose career-best 4/22 dismantled the world-renowned Australian batting order. India’s strategy was clear: strike early and often. Renuka Singh Thakur provided the initial breakthrough, and the spinners squeezed the life out of the middle overs. Chasing a rain-adjusted target, Shafali Verma’s aggressive cameo ensured India stayed well ahead of the DLS par score.

For Australia, this is a rare “back against the wall” moment at home. Under the new T20I leadership of Sophie Molineux, the Aussies will be desperate to fix their middle-order collapse. They were bundled out for just 133 in the opener, a total far below their lofty standards. With heavyweights like Ellyse Perry and Beth Mooney in the ranks, expect a fierce counter-attack.

Australia Women vs India Women, 2nd T20I: Match Details

  • Date and Time: February 19; 01:45 pm IST/ 08:15 am GMT/ 7:15 pm Local
  • Venue: Manuka Oval, Canberra

Manuka Oval Pitch Report

The Manuka Oval is widely regarded as one of the best batting surfaces in Australia, but it offers a “fair fight” for those willing to bend their backs. Batters can trust the bounce here, making it an ideal venue for stroke-makers like Harmanpreet Kaur and Phoebe Litchfield. Unlike smaller subcontinental grounds, the square ropes are quite long. This rewards disciplined bowlers and punishes batters who mistime their “heaves” toward the mid-wicket region. While pacers get some movement with the new ball under lights, the pitch traditionally slows down slightly as the match progresses. Expect Deepti Sharma and Georgia Wareham to play massive roles.

Also READ: Arundhati Reddy’s fiery bowling powers India to emphatic win over Australia in rain-hit first Women’s T20I

Squads

India: Shafali Verma, Smriti Mandhana, Jemimah Rodrigues, Harmanpreet Kaur (c), Deepti Sharma, Richa Ghosh (wk), Amanjot Kaur, Vaishnavi Sharma, Kranti Gaud, Shree Charani, Renuka Singh Thakur, Bharti Fulmali, Sneh Rana, Arundhati Reddy, Shreyanka Patil, Gunalan Kamalini

Australia: Phoebe Litchfield, Ellyse Perry, Beth Mooney (wk), Georgia Voll, Annabel Sutherland, Ashleigh Gardner, Tahlia McGrath, Kim Garth, Sophie Molineux (c), Megan Schutt, Darcie Brown, Grace Harris, Nicola Carey, Georgia Wareham

Australia Women vs India Women: Today’s Match Prediction

Case 1:

  • India Women wins the toss and bowls first
  • Australia Women’s powerplay score: 50-60
  • Australia Women’s total score: 170-190

Case 2:

  • Australia Women wins the toss and bowls first
  • India Women’s powerplay score: 55-65
  • India Women’s total score: 180-200

Match result: Team bowling first to win the contest

Also READ: AUS-W vs IND-W, T20I Series: Broadcast, Live Streaming details – When and where to watch in India, Pakistan, Australia, USA & other countries

This article was first published at WomenCricket.com, a Cricket Times company.



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Stock market today: Nifty50 opens above 25,850; BSE Sensex up over 100 points


Stock market today: Nifty50 opens above 25,850; BSE Sensex up over 100 points
Stock market today (AI image)

Stock market today: Indian equity benchmarks are slowly inching upwards, with Nifty50 and BSE Sensex opening in green after three days of gains. While Nifty50 was above 25,850 in early trade, BSE Sensex rose over 100 points. At 9:18 AM, Nifty50 was trading at 25,861.55, up 42 points or 0.16%. BSE Sensex was at 83,854.33, up 120 points or 0.14%.Stock markets extended gains for the third straight session on Wednesday amidst improving global cues and sector-specific domestic developments that are supporting sentiment. Market experts expect markets to remain firm with an upward bias, guided by global cues and domestic sector-specific developments.Dr. VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist, Geojit Investments Limited says, “An important takeaway from Q3 results is the comeback of the mid and smallcaps. Improvement in earnings recovery and indications of continuation of this uptrend have brought the mid and smallcaps back to the radar of investors. At the institutional level, there is a trend of selective accumulation of mid and smallcaps. Even mutual funds which had flagged the valuation concerns of the mid and smallcaps have started approaching the segment with optimism.”“However, even now, largecaps have valuation comfort while mid and smallcaps are trading at much higher valuations. Nifty is trading at around 20 times FY27 estimated earnings while the NSE midcap and NSE smallcap indexes are trading at 28 and 24 times estimated FY27 earnings. This makes this market a stock picker’s market. Prospects for financials, autos, capital goods, pharmaceuticals and hotels look good.”Wall Street finished in the green, led by a rise in major technology stocks such as Nvidia and Amazon after recent volatility linked to artificial intelligence concerns. Nvidia gained 1.6% after announcing a multi-year agreement to supply millions of its current-generation chips to Meta Platforms.Asian markets also moved higher following the rebound in technology shares and strong US economic data, which boosted investor confidence. Oil prices retained gains after registering their sharpest rise since October.The US dollar steadied on Thursday, holding on to recent gains after minutes from the Federal Reserve indicated policymakers were not in a hurry to lower interest rates and that some remained open to rate hikes if inflation persists.Foreign portfolio investors were net buyers of equities worth Rs 1,154 crore on Wednesday, while domestic institutional investors purchased shares worth Rs 440 crore.(Disclaimer: Recommendations and views on the stock market, other asset classes or personal finance management tips given by experts are their own. These opinions do not represent the views of The Times of India)



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