logo
China assures Pakistan $3.7 billion loan

China assures Pakistan $3.7 billion loan

Time of India4 days ago

ISLAMABAD: China has assured
Pakistan
of re-lending $3.7 billion in commercial loans, denominated in Chinese currency, before June end, in a move that will help keep the foreign exchange reserves in double digits, according to a report.
Unlike in the past, when Beijing gave loans in non-Chinese currency too, this time it has decided not to give loans in US currency in a bid to decouple the economy from the dollar. The central bank's reserves remained around $11.4 billion after an IMF injection. It may now increase to $12.7 billion.
Stay informed with the latest
business
news, updates on
bank holidays
and
public holidays
.
AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

CDSL share price: Stock rebounds significantly; surges 60% from March lows
CDSL share price: Stock rebounds significantly; surges 60% from March lows

Time of India

time20 minutes ago

  • Time of India

CDSL share price: Stock rebounds significantly; surges 60% from March lows

Trendlyne data indicates CDSL shares have appreciated by 60.86% over the past year. (AI image) CDSL share price: CDSL stock has shown a remarkable recovery, rising 60.4% from its March low of Rs 1,047.5, to reach a high of Rs 1,680 on Monday. The stock demonstrated robust positive movement, with a notable 9.8% increase by 2:40 pm in the current trading session. Trading activity was substantial on Monday, with 152.99 lakh shares exchanged on the NSE by 2:30 pm, representing a traded value of Rs 2,496.21 crore. The company's market capitalisation stood at Rs 34,903 crore, according to an ET report. The financial services company has successfully moved above all its significant daily moving averages, indicating sustained positive momentum. Trading exclusively on the NSE, the stock previously reached Rs 1,989 on December 17, 2024. Subsequently, it experienced a significant decline, falling below crucial daily moving averages. CDSL Q4 Performance CDSL experienced a decline in net profit, dropping 22% YoY to Rs 100.39 crore in Q4FY25. The company's operational revenue decreased by 6.7% YoY, reaching Rs 224.45 crore, down from Rs 240.49 crore in the previous year. The organisation's total income reduced to Rs 267.37 crore compared to Rs 255.77 crore in the same period last year. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Зачем на ночь сжигают лавровый лист? Undo Additionally, total expenses rose to Rs 129.40 crore from Rs 100.90 crore. Share Performance Analysis Trendlyne data indicates CDSL shares have appreciated by 60.86% over the past year. The company's stock value increased by 2.03% in the previous six months and recorded a 50.98% growth in the three-month period. The shares demonstrated a 26.72% increase over the last month. Stay informed with the latest business news, updates on bank holidays and public holidays . AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

Airlines likely to post $36 billion profit in 2025: IATA
Airlines likely to post $36 billion profit in 2025: IATA

Time of India

time20 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Airlines likely to post $36 billion profit in 2025: IATA

NEW DELHI: Airlines are expected to post a combined profit of $36 billion in 2025, up from $32.4 billion last year, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) said on Monday. Speaking at IATA's Annual General Meeting (AGM) in New Delhi, Director General Willie Walsh emphasized that airspace should remain free from trade war disruptions, urging governments to avoid using it as a tool in geopolitical disputes. This marks India's first hosting of the AGM since 42 years ago. Walsh highlighted supply chain challenges, noting 17,000 aircraft backlog, 1,100 relatively new planes in storage, and a three per cent fleet replacement rate. IATA forecasts global airline profits of $36 billion for 2025, surpassing 2024's $32.4 billion but slightly below December 2024's projection of $36.6 billion. Walsh noted that whilst $36 billion profit appears substantial, it translates to merely $7.20 per passenger per segment. He cautioned that this modest margin leaves little room for additional taxes, increased charges, demand fluctuations or costly regulations that could test industry stability. IATA, representing approximately 350 airlines and over 80 per cent of global air traffic, predicts industry revenues will reach $979 billion in 2025, exceeding 2024 figures by 1.3 per cent. The World Air Transport Summit and AGM anticipate 1,700 attendees. IATA reports that India's aviation sector directly employs 369,700 people, generating $5.6 billion in GDP. Including indirect, induced and tourism impacts, these figures expand to 7.7 million jobs and $53.6 billion GDP contribution (1.5 per cent). Brazil will host the next IATA AGM in 2026. Stay informed with the latest business news, updates on bank holidays and public holidays . AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

View: Ads ruined social media. Now they're coming to AI chatbots
View: Ads ruined social media. Now they're coming to AI chatbots

Time of India

time27 minutes ago

  • Time of India

View: Ads ruined social media. Now they're coming to AI chatbots

By Parmy Olson Chatbots might hallucinate and sprinkle too much flattery on their users — 'That's a fascinating question!' one recently told me — but at least the subscription model that underpins them is healthy for our wellbeing. Many Americans pay about $20 a month to use the premium versions of OpenAI 's ChatGPT, Google's Gemini Pro or Anthropic's Claude, and the result is that the products are designed to provide maximum utility. Don't expect this status quo to last. Subscription revenue has a limit, and Anthropic's new $200-a-month 'Max' tier suggests even the most popular models are under pressure to find new revenue streams. Unfortunately, the most obvious one is advertising — the web's most successful business model. AI builders are already exploring ways to plug more ads into their products, and while that's good for their bottom lines, it also means we're about to see a new chapter in the attention economy that fueled the internet. If social media's descent into engagement-bait is any guide, the consequences will be profound. One cost is addiction. Young office workers are becoming dependent on AI tools to help them write emails and digest long documents, according to a recent study, and OpenAI says a cohort of 'problematic' ChatGPT users are hooked on the tool. Putting ads into ChatGPT, which now has more than 500 million active users, won't spur the company to help those people reduce their use of the product. Quite the opposite. Advertising was the reason companies like Mark Zuckerberg's Meta Platforms Inc. designed algorithms to promote engagement, keeping users scrolling so they saw more ads and drove more revenue. It's the reason behind the so-called 'enshittification' of the web, a place now filled with clickbait and social media posts that spark outrage. Baking such incentives into AI will almost certainly lead its designers to find ways to trigger more dopamine spikes, perhaps by complimenting users even more, asking personal questions to get them talking for longer or even cultivating emotional attachments. Millions of people in the Western world already view chatbots in apps like Chai, Talkie, Replika and Botify as friends or romantic partners. Imagine how persuasive such software could be when its users are beguiled. Imagine a person telling their AI they're feeling depressed, and the system recommending some affordable holiday destinations or medication to address the problem. Is that how ads would work in chatbots? The answer is subject to much experimentation, and companies are indeed experimenting. Google's ad network, for instance, recently started putting advertisements in third-party chatbots. Chai, a romance and friendship chatbot, on which users spent 72 minutes a day, on average, in September 2024, serves pop-up ads. And AI answer engine Perplexity displays sponsored questions. After an answer to a question about job hunting, for instance, it might include a list of suggested follow ups including, at the top, 'How can I use Indeed to enhance my job search?' Perplexity's Chief Executive Officer Aravind Srinivas told a podcast in April that the company was looking to go further by building a browser to 'get data even outside the app' to track 'which hotels are you going [to]; which restaurants are you going to,' to enable what he called 'hyper-personalized' ads. For some apps, that might mean weaving ads directly into conversations, using the intimate details shared by users to predict and potentially even manipulate them into wanting something, then selling those intentions to the highest bidder. Researchers at Cambridge University referred to this as the forthcoming 'intention economy' in a recent paper, with chatbots steering conversations toward a brand or even a direct sale. As evidence, they pointed to a 2023 blog post from OpenAI calling for 'data that expresses human intention' to help train its models, a similar effort from Meta, and Apple's 2024 developer framework that helps apps work with Siri to 'predict actions someone might take in the future.' As for OpenAI's Sam Altman, nothing says "we're building an ad business' like hiring the person who built delivery app Instacart into an advertising powerhouse. Altman recently poached CEO Fidji Simo to help OpenAI 'scale as we enter a next phase of growth.' In Silicon Valley parlance, to 'scale' often means to quickly expand your user base by offering a service for free, with ads. Tech companies will inevitably claim that advertising is a necessary part of democratizing AI. But we've seen how 'free' services cost people their privacy and autonomy — even their mental health. And AI knows more about us than Google or Facebook ever did — details about our health concerns, relationship issues and work. In two years, they have also built a reputation as trustworthy companions and arbiters of truth. On X, for instance, users frequently bring AI models Grok and Perplexity into conversations to flag if a post is fake. When people trust AI that much, they're more vulnerable to targeted manipulation. AI advertising should be regulated before it becomes too entrenched, or we'll repeat the mistakes made with social media — scrutinising the fallout of a lucrative business model only after the damage is done. (This column reflects the personal views of the author and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.)(Parmy Olson is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering technology. A former reporter for the Wall Street Journal and Forbes, she is author of 'Supremacy: AI, ChatGPT and the Race That Will Change the World.')

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store