.png)
Here’s your quick read to start the day: a chatty, no-fuss look at overnight moves, the big story, what’s on the docket, and the tickers you need to watch.

Richard is an independent financial journalist who tracks financial markets and macroeconomic developments
March 25, 2026 at 1:55 AM IST
GLOBAL MOOD: Risk-On
Drivers: Iran War De-escalation, Oil below $100
Asia-Pacific markets opened in a clear risk-on mood on Wednesday, supported by signs of possible de-escalation in the Middle East after Donald Trump said the United States and Iran were in negotiations.
The comments helped lift equities across the region, including Japan, South Korea and Australia, while oil prices fell sharply, easing inflation concerns. Investor sentiment also improved ahead of speeches by the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank, with markets positioning for softer geopolitical risks and a more stable global outlook.
TODAY’S WATCHLIST
- US Fed Barr Speech
-
According to a report by The New York Times, the US has already shared a 15-point proposal with Iran aimed at ending the conflict. The plan was reportedly conveyed through Pakistan, although it remains unclear how widely it has been circulated among Iranian leaders or whether Israel would support such an arrangement.
Trump also repeated his claim that the US has already achieved its primary objective in the war — ensuring Iran does not develop a nuclear weapon — and suggested Tehran has agreed to that position. However, the administration is still preparing a large war-related funding request to Congress, reportedly worth around $200 billion, while the Pentagon is also considering deploying additional troops to the region.
Meanwhile, Shehbaz Sharif said Pakistan is ready to host talks between Washington and Tehran to help secure a comprehensive peace settlement.
Data Spotlight
The slowdown was largely driven by weaker services activity, which recorded its softest growth in nearly a year. At the same time, input costs rose sharply, with the survey’s prices-paid gauge jumping more than three points to its highest level since May. Services firms saw the steepest rise in input costs, while manufacturers also faced higher raw-material prices.
Companies increasingly passed on these costs to customers, resulting in the strongest increase in selling prices in more than three and a half years. Employment fell for the first time in a year, mainly in services, though manufacturing showed modest improvement.
Takeaway:
Day’s Ledger*
Economic Data
Corporate Actions
Policy
Tickers to Watch
Must Read
See you tomorrow with another edition of The Morning Edge.
Have a great trading day
India's Best-Run Banks May Have a Governance Debt Coming Due
HDFC Bank chairman's resignation reveals structural flaw.
A chairman's exit rarely breaks a bank.
Krishnadevan V writes, what it can reveal is the comfortable silence around a question nobody in the boardroom wanted to ask.
India's private banks were built on stock-linked management compensation. It worked - until institutions matured, the growth phase ended, and the same equity that once aligned incentives began concentrating influence in ways governance frameworks weren't designed to counterbalance.
That's the HDFC Bank story. Not just a personality clash. A structural drift, years in the making.
This episode will pass. The question it raises, almost certainly, will not.
(*Compiled from various media sources)