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Thursday, April 16, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "data" (39 articles)

Gulf Times
Business

QSE Index rises 0.18% at start of trading

The Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) index rose at the beginning of Thursday's trading by 0.18%, gaining 19.29 points to reach 10,712 points, compared to the previous session's close, backed by four sectors. Market data showed gains in Banks and Financial Services (+0.20%), Industrials (+0.17%), Transportation (+0.09%), and Insurance (+0.08%). Meanwhile, the performance was negative for Consumer Goods and Services (-0.13%), Real Estate (-0.17%), and Telecoms (-0.27%). By 10:00 am, QSE reported a turnover of QR 45.349 million from 16.695 million shares traded across 3,124 transactions.

Gulf Times
Business

China's yuan loans grow $2.08 trillion in first nine months

China's yuan-denominated loans rose 14.75 trillion yuan (about $2.08 trillion) in the first nine months of the year, central bank data showed on Wednesday. Of the total, household loans grew by 1.1 trillion yuan, and loans to enterprises and public institutions increased by 13.44 trillion yuan, according to the People's Bank of China. Outstanding yuan loans stood at 270.39 trillion yuan at the end of September, up 6.6 percent year-on-year, according to the central bank. The M2, a broad measure of money supply that covers cash in circulation and all deposits, increased 8.4 percent year-on-year to 335.38 trillion yuan at the end of September. The M1, which covers cash in circulation, demand deposits and client reserves of non-bank payment institutions, stood at 113.15 trillion yuan at the end of last month, up 7.2 percent year-on-year. The M0, which indicates the amount of cash in circulation, increased 11.5 percent year-on-year to 13.58 trillion yuan at the end of September. According to preliminary statistics, the aggregate financing to the real economy was 30.09 trillion yuan in the first nine months, which was 4.42 trillion yuan more than the same period last year. The outstanding aggregate financing to the real economy stood at 437.08 trillion yuan at the end of September, registering 8.7 percent year-on-year growth.

Gulf Times
Business

Qatar participates in MENAP Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting in Washington DC

His Excellency the Minister of Finance Ali bin Ahmed al-Kuwari participated in the meeting of Finance Ministers, Central Bank Governors, and Heads of Regional Financial Institutions from the Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. The meeting was chaired by Kristalina Georgieva, Managing Director, International Monetary Fund (IMF), and was held on the sidelines of the IMF and World Bank Group Annual Meetings, now being held in Washington, DC. The meeting discussed key strategic issues related to economic growth in the region, in addition to future outlooks and fiscal policy requirements to combat inflation. It also addressed sustainable financing strategies, ways to stimulate economic growth, and the promotion of innovation in financial development.Regional and global challenges were also reviewed, particularly the risks of rising inflation rates and food insecurity. The participants stressed the importance of continuing efforts to adapt to the current financial and economic developments.The meeting was held within the framework of enhancing regional cooperation and the exchange of insights among financial and economic policymakers, with the aim of supporting economic stability and achieving sustainable development across the region.

Gulf Times
Business

Google to invest $15 billion in major AI data hub in India

Google's parent company, Alphabet Inc., announced plans to invest $15 billion to build a major artificial intelligence (AI) and cloud data hub in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, marking the company's largest single investment outside the United States. The new facility will be established in the port city of Visakhapatnam and will form part of Google's global network of AI data centers across 12 countries. "It's the largest AI hub that we are going to be investing in anywhere in the world outside the United States," said Thomas Kurian, CEO of Google Cloud, during an event in New Delhi on Tuesday, adding that the investment would be made over the next five years. Andhra Pradesh's Minister of Information Technology, Nara Lokesh, described the project as "a massive leap for our state's digital future, innovation, and global standing." According to the state government, the new hub will include a 1-gigawatt data center campus integrating advanced AI infrastructure, renewable energy systems, and an expanded fiber-optic network to support growing digital connectivity. The project comes amid intensifying global competition among major technology firms to expand data center capacity to meet surging demand for AI-driven services. Google has pledged to spend approximately $85 billion this year on data infrastructure worldwide, while competitors such as Microsoft and Amazon have also invested billions of dollars in India — a market with nearly one billion internet users.

Gulf Times
Business

QSE index rises 0.38% at start of trading

The Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) index rose at the beginning of Sunday's trading by 0.38%, gaining 41.56 points to reach 10,904 points, compared to the previous session's close, supported by four sectors. Market data showed gains in Banks and Financial Services (+0.53%), Consumer Goods and Services (+0.51%), Industrials (+0.44%), and Real Estate (+0.20%). Meanwhile, the performance was negative for Telecoms (-0.05%), Transportation (-0.07%), and Insurance (-0.08%). By 10:00 am, QSE reported a turnover of QR 52.797 million from 26.503 million shares traded across 2,352 transactions.

Gulf Times
Business

South Korea's consumer price increases 2% in September

South Korea's consumer prices grew by more than 2% in September, returning to the 2% range after one month, largely due to rising prices of essential food items, data showed Thursday. Consumer prices, a key gauge of inflation, increased 2.1 % from a year earlier last month, South Korea's (Yonhap) news agency said, citing data from the Ministry of Data and Statistics. Inflation had remained above the Bank of Korea's 2% target for four consecutive months through April before slowing to 1.9% in May. It then climbed again, staying above 2% in both June and July, before slowing down to 1.7% in August. The service sector continued its upward trend, posting a 2.2% on-year gain. Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, went up 2% in September, accelerating from August's 1.3% growth.

Gulf Times
Business

Dollar slips to one-week low as US government shuts down

The dollar sank to a one-week low versus major peers on Wednesday as the US government entered a shutdown that is likely to delay the release of crucial jobs data. The dollar index, which gauges the currency against six counterparts including the euro and yen, declined 0.2% to 97.635, and earlier dipped to 97.584 for the first time since last Wednesday. The euro rose as much as 0.3% to $1.1767, the highest since September 24. The dollar slipped 0.3% to touch 147.46 for the first time since September 19, adding to a three-day, 1.2% slide.

Gulf Times
Business

US stocks close at fresh record highs

All three major Wall Street indices finished at record highs for the third straight session on Monday, buoyed by optimism over corporate earnings and resilient economic data. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index advanced 29.58 points, or 0.44%, to end at 6,693.96.The Nasdaq Composite Index gained 156.04 points, or 0.69%, to settle at 22,786.71.The Dow Jones Industrial Average edged up 70.65 points, or 0.15%, closing at 46,385.92.

Gulf Times
Business

QSE Index starts week lower

The Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) general index opened the week in negative territory on Sunday, edging down 13.52 points, or 0.12%, to 11,294 at the start of trading.Market data showed gains in three sectors, led by Telecoms (+0.46%), Real Estate (+0.34%), and Transportation (+0.23%). However, the index was weighed down by declines in Consumer Goods and Services (-0.32%), Insurance (-0.24%), Banks and Financial Services (-0.12%), and Industrials (-0.02%).As of 10:00 am, trading volume stood at 36.371 million shares, with a turnover of QR 93.945 million across 3,429 transactions.

Gulf Times
Qatar

NPC, QF conclude training on economic statistics

The Statistical and Data Training Centre at the National Planning Council (NPC), in co-operation with Qatar Foundation (QF), has concluded a specialised training programme entitled ‘Economic Statistics for Managers: From Data to Decisions’.The initiative, held at QF headquarters, was part of national efforts to enhance government efficiency and advance knowledge-based sustainable development, a statement said.The aim is to qualify government leaders in economic fields, empowering them to effectively utilise data and statistics to impact public policies.The programme focused on developing skills for using data efficiently as a fundamental element in improving institutional performance and enhancing decision-making effectiveness.It is also a significant step towards qualifying national cadres and developing their capabilities in statistical leadership, as well as building integrated, collaborative systems for data exchange among various entities. The programme emphasised the importance of building trust in government data as a cornerstone for ensuring effective governance.It highlighted the pivotal role of integration and data exchange between institutions, and encouraged the adoption of modern tools and techniques in future planning.This reinforces the concept of leadership empowerment in the field of data, which enables leaders to support national decisions with accurate and reliable information. The intensive six-day programme covered several key themes, including: fundamentals of data and statistics, national statistical system, statistical literacy for executive leaders, data integration and ethics, statistical data management, strategic leadership, and roadmap design.Hessa Ali al-Malki, director of the Statistical and Data Training Centre at NPC, said: “Organising the programme with Qatar Foundation strengthens our partnerships with the country’s leading academic institutions.”QF’s talent management director Sheikha Ghalia al-Thani, said: “This initiative is part of our strategic co-operation with national institutions, reflecting QF’s steadfast commitment to enhancing national capabilities through knowledge exchange and leadership development across various sectors.”

Gulf Times
Qatar

Positron targets Middle East’s AI infrastructure with energy-efficient inference

Across the Gulf, governments are investing billions in sovereign AI initiatives, data center expansions, and smart city ecosystems. From NEOM’s greenfield infrastructure to Abu Dhabi’s G42-backed cloud services and Dubai’s push to embed AI in public services, the region is making AI central to its long-term economic leadership. But as these ambitions scale, they demand energy-efficient, high-performance infrastructure capable of running AI at national levels—without breaking the grids or the budgets. This challenge is prompting a closer look at energy-efficient alternatives to running AI models.This shift is already underway in the U.S., where trillions of dollars are being poured into data center infrastructure. With it, a wave of new players is emerging with hardware optimized for efficiency, scalability, and cost-effectiveness in AI workloads. One of the most promising is Positron, a startup with deep connections to capital partners behind well-known brands—two of the most compute-intensive sectors in AI. The company recently raised $51M to scale its inference accelerators, designed for high power efficiency, strong performance-per-dollar, and optimized memory bandwidth, key factors for large-scale inference deployment.As Middle Eastern nations plant their flags and chart the course of their AI futures, it’s worth looking for solutions beyond obvious hardware, like expensive, non-specialized GPUs. Positron’s recent deployments with leading US neoclouds like Cloudflare might be an indicator of the powerful and efficient infrastructure that will soon be deployed in many countries in the Middle East.Where AI Gets ExpensiveWhile hardware choices often focus on raw power or training benchmarks, the real costs and energy demands come after the model is trained. Inference, the phase where AI models are actually deployed and used, is what makes or breaks infrastructure strategies. And it’s where the gap between traditional GPUs and purpose-built systems becomes most apparent.In the training phase, models learn from data to make predictions and perform tasks. Inference is the subsequent phase where a trained model uses its knowledge to process new data and generate outputs like user prompts and synthetic content, or power customer-facing AI assistants. Where training is a one-time cost, inference is a continuous process that scales with every user interaction on every AI platform. And today, inference has become the largest and fastest-growing source of AI’s ongoing energy consumption.Positron is directly addressing this challenge with its inference system, designed from the ground up to maximize memory capacity and support large-scale deployment across neocloud platforms and enterprise environments. By focusing on efficiency, memory optimization, and compatibility, Positron is helping AI builders and infrastructure providers improve performance while working toward more energy-efficient operations.Rethinking AI’s Cost CurveToday, inference accounts for nearly 90 percent of all model-related workloads across both consumer and enterprise applications. Despite this, most inference is still being run on power-hungry general-purpose GPUs, which were originally designed to train large, flexible models, not for the demands of real-time, high-throughput inference workloads.This misalignment has created a hidden cost structure in which enterprises and cloud providers are forced to rely on expensive GPU hardware to perform repetitive, memory-bound inference tasks, often utilizing only a fraction of each chip’s capacity. This inefficiency inflates operating costs and puts additional strain on power grids in regions where energy management and infrastructure optimization are critical concerns.Positron’s answer to this problem is Atlas, a full-stack inference system that leverages reprogrammable FPGAs to maximize memory bandwidth and throughput. Atlas is designed to make more efficient use of memory bandwidth than standard GPUs, with a focus on improving cost-effectiveness and reducing energy consumption. The platform is already in use by neocloud companies, including Cloudflare and Parasail, where it’s powering large-scale inference workloads with no code modifications required.Strategic Funding to Scale AI AccessPositron just closed a $51.6 million Series A funding round led by Valor Equity Partners, Atreides Management, and DFJ Growth with participation from 1517 Fund, Flume Ventures, and Unless. The round brings the company’s total funding to $75 million and reflects growing investor confidence in inference-optimized infrastructure as the next major wave in AI.This funding will support the continued deployment of Positron’s first-gen product and accelerate the rollout of Titan, the company’s upcoming ASIC-based inference platform slated for release in 2026. Titan is being developed to support some of the largest and most complex AI models in use today, with a planned capacity of up to 16 trillion parameters and two terabytes of high-speed memory per chip. Its modular, high-throughput design is intended to address the growing demand for scalable, sovereign AI infrastructure in both enterprise and government deployments.Unlike traditional solutions, Positron’s hardware supports existing model binaries and APIs, minimizing the need for code rewrites or major system changes.Enabling Innovation in Emerging MarketsAs AI deployment expands beyond Big Tech and into broader enterprise and public-sector applications, the economic burden of inference is becoming increasingly visible. AI-driven tools are now reaching users across every geography and industry—but their accessibility still hinges on the cost and efficiency of the underlying computer infrastructure.By making inference more affordable and energy-efficient, AI will become accessible beyond the walls of Big Tech and elite research labs, which will open the door for a broader range of users to fine-tune open-source models and run them locally. This unlocks entirely new categories of use cases, from healthcare diagnostics in rural clinics to real-time translation in schools——applications that only become viable in power-constrained environments with energy-efficient inference solutions.This transformation is especially relevant in the Middle East, where governments are prioritizing both AI leadership and sustainability. By decoupling inference performance from power-hungry GPUs, Positron offers a path forward for building AI infrastructure that is both economically and environmentally aligned with the region’s strategic goals.The Future of AI InfrastructureLooking ahead, the next phase of AI evolution will not be determined by who can train the largest model, but by who can deploy it most efficiently. Inference is already the dominant workload—and its impact on cost, access, and infrastructure design is only accelerating. As AI becomes a foundational layer across sectors, the ability to serve models at scale—securely, affordably, and sustainably—will shape the region’s global economic posture.Positron’s inference-first architecture presents a credible alternative to GPU-dominated infrastructure. By designing systems tailored to how AI is actually used in production, the company is unlocking new opportunities for cloud providers, national governments, and enterprise platforms alike. In the Middle East, a region increasingly focused on energy efficiency, technological development, and AI infrastructure, this shift in architecture could power the next chapter of AI growth in digitally ambitious, resource-aware economies like those across the Middle East.

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. The monthly US consumer price index on Thursday highlights next week's economic releases, with investors focused on signals from the inflation data about the prospects for interest rate cuts and the fallout from tariffs on prices.
Business

Inflation data looms for US markets as stocks hover near records

A spate of inflation data confronts US stock investors in the coming week as markets grapple with fresh uncertainty over tariffs and government bond yields, while equities hover at lofty valuations. The benchmark S&P 500 index closed at a record high on Thursday despite an uneven start to September, which has been the worst month for stocks on average over the past 35 years. Stocks were pulling back on Friday after the monthly US employment report showed job growth weakened in August."September has been known to see a wearing down of the sentiment picture," said Matthew Miskin, co-chief investment strategist at Manulife John Hancock Investments. At the same time, he said, "stocks aren't pricing in a lot of risks right now. They look fully valued."The monthly US consumer price index on Thursday highlights next week's economic releases, with investors focused on signals from the inflation data about the prospects for interest rate cuts and the fallout from tariffs on prices. Following Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's remarks late last month that flagged rising risks to employment, markets have been widely expecting the central bank to lower rates for the first time in nine months at its September 16-17 meeting.Investors bet on even more accelerated easing after the weak jobs report.Fed Funds futures were baking in a 90% chance of a quarter-point rate cut at the meeting, and a roughly 10% chance of a heftier half-percentage point cut, LSEG data as of Friday afternoon showed.Only a CPI number that comes in "egregiously higher" than estimates could dent assumptions of imminent monetary policy easing, said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth.About 70 basis points of easing, or nearly three standard cuts, are projected by December, according to the futures data.Recently, "the prospect of the Fed cutting has been the overwhelming factor driving equity sentiment to be more positive," Miskin said. "And so if that reverses, then it could be problematic for equities."Along with CPI, a Wednesday report on producer prices could also reveal impacts from import tariffs. Last month's PPI data showed US producer prices increased by the most in three years in July as the costs of goods and services surged. Tariffs and their economic implications were the main risk facing markets earlier this year, but other factors such as questions over Fed independence and caution about the artificial intelligence trade have been more prominent recently.The issue returned to the fore this week after a US appeals court ruled that most of President Donald Trump's tariffs are illegal. While the Trump administration has asked the US Supreme Court to hear a bid to preserve the sweeping tariffs, the ruling injected fresh uncertainty for markets."It felt as though the fog of trade war was clearing, and now we're just back into the thick of it," Hogan said. "And that doesn't help corporate America make decisions, consumers make decisions, and investors make decisions."The potential of lost tariff revenue exacerbating the US fiscal deficit was one factor investors said may have driven long-dated US government debt yields sharply higher at the start of the week, moves that also followed big jumps in yields in the UK and other regions. While long-dated yields globally have since calmed, their spikes were cited as contributing to stock weakness initially during the week.The 30-year US Treasury yield this week hit 5% for the first time in over a month. That yield level has been "problematic" for risk appetite over the past few years, said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist for LPL Financial. The long-bond yield was last around 4.78%, with yields falling broadly on Friday after the jobs data.The S&P 500 was up about 10% so far in 2025, helped recently by a solid second-quarter earnings season. The S&P 500's price-to-earnings ratio climbed to 22.4 times, based on earnings estimates for the next 12 months, a valuation well above its long-term average of 15.9, according to LSEG Datastream."Investors face ongoing threats from trade and tariff unknowns as well as potential economic releases that could ultimately challenge elevated stock valuations," Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial, wrote in a commentary."That said, investors have been navigating those dynamics for months, and stocks have continued to grind higher."