{"nodes": [{"key": "@BloombergPodcasts", "attributes": {"label": "@BloombergPodcasts", "x": 777.8387357510065, "y": 519.8135975534041, "size": 15.0, "color": "#ED3E3E", "sentiment": "negatif", "labels": ["youtube-000001"], "scores": {"pagerank": 159.3625, "eigenvector": 333.3333, "in_degree": 0, "out_degree": 2, "degree": 2}, "_id": "HE0SjQWWsAI", "id": "@BloombergPodcasts", "source": "youtube-000001", "content": "Oil Swings as Iran Rejects Ceasefire, Trump Reups Hormuz Demand\n\nSalih Yilmaz, Bloomberg Intelligence Senior Oil Analyst, discusses the oil market reaction to Iran's ceasefire rejection. \n\nOil swung after Iran rejected a proposed ceasefire and US President Donald Trump again threatened to bomb the country’s infrastructure if Tehran doesn’t cede to demands and reopen the Strait of Hormuz.\nWest Texas Intermediate traded near $112 a barrel, after earlier rising close to $115. Iran rejected a ceasefire proposal floated by regional mediators saying it wanted a permanent end to the war, a lifting of sanctions, and reconstruction efforts, in addition to protocol for safe passage through Hormuz, according to Iranian state TV. \nTrump again said the US would target Iran’s power plants and bridges if it doesn’t comply with his demands by a Tuesday, 8 p.m. ET deadline. “We could leave right now, but I want to finish it up,” Trump said on Monday at the White House. He’s due to hold a news conference at 1 p.m. ET. \nThe oil market is racing against time, with the chokepoint for about a fifth of global shipments largely blocked since the US-Israel war on Iran began in late February. Prices of some barrels, from crude to jet fuel, have soared across the world since the war began, in what the International Energy Agency is calling the biggest supply disruption ever. The longer the war continues, the higher prices are likely to go, likely triggering a ripple inflationary effect. \n“We no longer just see the situation as a snowball rolling faster and faster down the mountain, but as an avalanche,” said Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, chief analyst at A/S Global Risk Management. “Oil and product markets are now shifting from focusing on the risk of supply disruptions — what we also refer to as the geopolitical risk premium — towards increasingly focusing on the actual conditions in the physical market — the physical premium.” President Donald Trump insisted that freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz be part of any deal and escalated threats to obliterate key Iranian infrastructure if his terms aren’t met before a Tuesday deadline. \nTrump said Monday that talks with Iran are “going well,” even though he listed reopening the strait as “a very big priority.” The president in recent weeks has said that wasn’t among his core prerequisites for ending the conflict. \n“We have to have a deal that’s acceptable to me, and part of that deal is going to be we want free traffic of oil and everything,” he said at a White House news conference.\nTrump laid bare the consequences Iran would face if it doesn’t reach a deal by his Tuesday 8 p.m. cut-off, saying the US military could destroy “every bridge in Iran by 12 o’clock tomorrow night.” Power plants would be rendered “burning, exploding and never to be used again,” he said. \nAttacking civilian infrastructure is barred by the Geneva Conventions, but Trump said he was “not at all” concerned about committing war crimes. \n“I mean complete demolition by 12 o’clock, and it will happen over a period of four hours, if we wanted to,” he said. “We don’t want that to happen.”  Trump’s self-imposed deadline marks the latest pivotal moment in the war, now in its second month, which has killed thousands of people and triggered the largest-ever disruption to the global oil market. The president has struggled to find an off-ramp to the conflict — increasingly unpopular with Americans who are seeing average gasoline prices above $4 a gallon.\nIran has warned that it would respond to the kind of strikes Trump is threatening against civilian targets by ramping up its own attacks on energy infrastructure in the Gulf — a move that could heighten the global fuel squeeze and amplify damage to the world economy.\nThe president’s comments on the strait also appeared to be at odds with past remarks from his administration about whether he’d be willing to end the war with the strait still closed. Last week, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt didn’t list reopening Hormuz as a core US military objective when asked if Trump would declare victory even if passage through the strait remained slow.\n\r\n--------\r\nWatch Bloomberg Radio LIVE on YouTube\r\nWeekdays 7am-6pm ET\r\nWATCH HERE: http://bit.ly/3vTiACF\r\n \r\nFollow us on X:   / bloombergradio  \r\n\r\nSubscribe to our Podcasts:\r\n\r\n    Bloomberg Daybreak: http://bit.ly/3DWYoAN\r\n    Bloomberg Surveillance: http://bit.ly/3OPtReI\r\n    Bloomberg Intelligence: http://bit.ly/3YrBfOi\r\n    Balance of Power: http://bit.ly/3OO8eLC\r\n    Bloomberg Businessweek: http://bit.ly/3IPl60i\r\n\r\nListen on Apple CarPlay and Android Auto with the Bloomberg Business app:\r\nApple CarPlay: https://apple.co/486mghI\r\nAndroid Auto: https://bit.ly/49benZy\r\n \r\nVisit our YouTube channels:\r\nBloomberg Podcasts:    / bloombergpodcasts  \r\nBloomberg Television:    /   \r\nBloomberg Originals:    / bloomberg  \r\nQuicktake:    /", "post_id": "HE0SjQWWsAI"}}, {"key": "markets", "attributes": {"label": "markets", "x": 361.3682745860529, "y": 199.80749058070003, "size": 15.0, "color": "#ED3E3E", "sentiment": "negatif", "labels": ["youtube-000001"], "scores": {"pagerank": 227.0917, "eigenvector": 333.3333, "in_degree": 1, "out_degree": 0, "degree": 1}, "_id": "HE0SjQWWsAI", "id": "markets", "source": "youtube-000001", "content": "Oil Swings as Iran Rejects Ceasefire, Trump Reups Hormuz Demand\n\nSalih Yilmaz, Bloomberg Intelligence Senior Oil Analyst, discusses the oil market reaction to Iran's ceasefire rejection. \n\nOil swung after Iran rejected a proposed ceasefire and US President Donald Trump again threatened to bomb the country’s infrastructure if Tehran doesn’t cede to demands and reopen the Strait of Hormuz.\nWest Texas Intermediate traded near $112 a barrel, after earlier rising close to $115. Iran rejected a ceasefire proposal floated by regional mediators saying it wanted a permanent end to the war, a lifting of sanctions, and reconstruction efforts, in addition to protocol for safe passage through Hormuz, according to Iranian state TV. \nTrump again said the US would target Iran’s power plants and bridges if it doesn’t comply with his demands by a Tuesday, 8 p.m. ET deadline. “We could leave right now, but I want to finish it up,” Trump said on Monday at the White House. He’s due to hold a news conference at 1 p.m. ET. \nThe oil market is racing against time, with the chokepoint for about a fifth of global shipments largely blocked since the US-Israel war on Iran began in late February. Prices of some barrels, from crude to jet fuel, have soared across the world since the war began, in what the International Energy Agency is calling the biggest supply disruption ever. The longer the war continues, the higher prices are likely to go, likely triggering a ripple inflationary effect. \n“We no longer just see the situation as a snowball rolling faster and faster down the mountain, but as an avalanche,” said Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, chief analyst at A/S Global Risk Management. “Oil and product markets are now shifting from focusing on the risk of supply disruptions — what we also refer to as the geopolitical risk premium — towards increasingly focusing on the actual conditions in the physical market — the physical premium.” President Donald Trump insisted that freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz be part of any deal and escalated threats to obliterate key Iranian infrastructure if his terms aren’t met before a Tuesday deadline. \nTrump said Monday that talks with Iran are “going well,” even though he listed reopening the strait as “a very big priority.” The president in recent weeks has said that wasn’t among his core prerequisites for ending the conflict. \n“We have to have a deal that’s acceptable to me, and part of that deal is going to be we want free traffic of oil and everything,” he said at a White House news conference.\nTrump laid bare the consequences Iran would face if it doesn’t reach a deal by his Tuesday 8 p.m. cut-off, saying the US military could destroy “every bridge in Iran by 12 o’clock tomorrow night.” Power plants would be rendered “burning, exploding and never to be used again,” he said. \nAttacking civilian infrastructure is barred by the Geneva Conventions, but Trump said he was “not at all” concerned about committing war crimes. \n“I mean complete demolition by 12 o’clock, and it will happen over a period of four hours, if we wanted to,” he said. “We don’t want that to happen.”  Trump’s self-imposed deadline marks the latest pivotal moment in the war, now in its second month, which has killed thousands of people and triggered the largest-ever disruption to the global oil market. The president has struggled to find an off-ramp to the conflict — increasingly unpopular with Americans who are seeing average gasoline prices above $4 a gallon.\nIran has warned that it would respond to the kind of strikes Trump is threatening against civilian targets by ramping up its own attacks on energy infrastructure in the Gulf — a move that could heighten the global fuel squeeze and amplify damage to the world economy.\nThe president’s comments on the strait also appeared to be at odds with past remarks from his administration about whether he’d be willing to end the war with the strait still closed. Last week, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt didn’t list reopening Hormuz as a core US military objective when asked if Trump would declare victory even if passage through the strait remained slow.\n\r\n--------\r\nWatch Bloomberg Radio LIVE on YouTube\r\nWeekdays 7am-6pm ET\r\nWATCH HERE: http://bit.ly/3vTiACF\r\n \r\nFollow us on X:   / bloombergradio  \r\n\r\nSubscribe to our Podcasts:\r\n\r\n    Bloomberg Daybreak: http://bit.ly/3DWYoAN\r\n    Bloomberg Surveillance: http://bit.ly/3OPtReI\r\n    Bloomberg Intelligence: http://bit.ly/3YrBfOi\r\n    Balance of Power: http://bit.ly/3OO8eLC\r\n    Bloomberg Businessweek: http://bit.ly/3IPl60i\r\n\r\nListen on Apple CarPlay and Android Auto with the Bloomberg Business app:\r\nApple CarPlay: https://apple.co/486mghI\r\nAndroid Auto: https://bit.ly/49benZy\r\n \r\nVisit our YouTube channels:\r\nBloomberg Podcasts:    / bloombergpodcasts  \r\nBloomberg Television:    /   \r\nBloomberg Originals:    / bloomberg  \r\nQuicktake:    /", "post_id": "HE0SjQWWsAI"}}, {"key": "bloombergquicktake", "attributes": {"label": "bloombergquicktake", "x": 918.6345769221595, "y": 487.0718735539954, "size": 15.0, "color": "#ED3E3E", "sentiment": "negatif", "labels": ["youtube-000001"], "scores": {"pagerank": 227.0917, "eigenvector": 333.3333, "in_degree": 1, "out_degree": 0, "degree": 1}, "_id": "HE0SjQWWsAI", "id": "bloombergquicktake", "source": "youtube-000001", "content": "Oil Swings as Iran Rejects Ceasefire, Trump Reups Hormuz Demand\n\nSalih Yilmaz, Bloomberg Intelligence Senior Oil Analyst, discusses the oil market reaction to Iran's ceasefire rejection. \n\nOil swung after Iran rejected a proposed ceasefire and US President Donald Trump again threatened to bomb the country’s infrastructure if Tehran doesn’t cede to demands and reopen the Strait of Hormuz.\nWest Texas Intermediate traded near $112 a barrel, after earlier rising close to $115. Iran rejected a ceasefire proposal floated by regional mediators saying it wanted a permanent end to the war, a lifting of sanctions, and reconstruction efforts, in addition to protocol for safe passage through Hormuz, according to Iranian state TV. \nTrump again said the US would target Iran’s power plants and bridges if it doesn’t comply with his demands by a Tuesday, 8 p.m. ET deadline. “We could leave right now, but I want to finish it up,” Trump said on Monday at the White House. He’s due to hold a news conference at 1 p.m. ET. \nThe oil market is racing against time, with the chokepoint for about a fifth of global shipments largely blocked since the US-Israel war on Iran began in late February. Prices of some barrels, from crude to jet fuel, have soared across the world since the war began, in what the International Energy Agency is calling the biggest supply disruption ever. The longer the war continues, the higher prices are likely to go, likely triggering a ripple inflationary effect. \n“We no longer just see the situation as a snowball rolling faster and faster down the mountain, but as an avalanche,” said Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, chief analyst at A/S Global Risk Management. “Oil and product markets are now shifting from focusing on the risk of supply disruptions — what we also refer to as the geopolitical risk premium — towards increasingly focusing on the actual conditions in the physical market — the physical premium.” President Donald Trump insisted that freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz be part of any deal and escalated threats to obliterate key Iranian infrastructure if his terms aren’t met before a Tuesday deadline. \nTrump said Monday that talks with Iran are “going well,” even though he listed reopening the strait as “a very big priority.” The president in recent weeks has said that wasn’t among his core prerequisites for ending the conflict. \n“We have to have a deal that’s acceptable to me, and part of that deal is going to be we want free traffic of oil and everything,” he said at a White House news conference.\nTrump laid bare the consequences Iran would face if it doesn’t reach a deal by his Tuesday 8 p.m. cut-off, saying the US military could destroy “every bridge in Iran by 12 o’clock tomorrow night.” Power plants would be rendered “burning, exploding and never to be used again,” he said. \nAttacking civilian infrastructure is barred by the Geneva Conventions, but Trump said he was “not at all” concerned about committing war crimes. \n“I mean complete demolition by 12 o’clock, and it will happen over a period of four hours, if we wanted to,” he said. “We don’t want that to happen.”  Trump’s self-imposed deadline marks the latest pivotal moment in the war, now in its second month, which has killed thousands of people and triggered the largest-ever disruption to the global oil market. The president has struggled to find an off-ramp to the conflict — increasingly unpopular with Americans who are seeing average gasoline prices above $4 a gallon.\nIran has warned that it would respond to the kind of strikes Trump is threatening against civilian targets by ramping up its own attacks on energy infrastructure in the Gulf — a move that could heighten the global fuel squeeze and amplify damage to the world economy.\nThe president’s comments on the strait also appeared to be at odds with past remarks from his administration about whether he’d be willing to end the war with the strait still closed. Last week, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt didn’t list reopening Hormuz as a core US military objective when asked if Trump would declare victory even if passage through the strait remained slow.\n\r\n--------\r\nWatch Bloomberg Radio LIVE on YouTube\r\nWeekdays 7am-6pm ET\r\nWATCH HERE: http://bit.ly/3vTiACF\r\n \r\nFollow us on X:   / bloombergradio  \r\n\r\nSubscribe to our Podcasts:\r\n\r\n    Bloomberg Daybreak: http://bit.ly/3DWYoAN\r\n    Bloomberg Surveillance: http://bit.ly/3OPtReI\r\n    Bloomberg Intelligence: http://bit.ly/3YrBfOi\r\n    Balance of Power: http://bit.ly/3OO8eLC\r\n    Bloomberg Businessweek: http://bit.ly/3IPl60i\r\n\r\nListen on Apple CarPlay and Android Auto with the Bloomberg Business app:\r\nApple CarPlay: https://apple.co/486mghI\r\nAndroid Auto: https://bit.ly/49benZy\r\n \r\nVisit our YouTube channels:\r\nBloomberg Podcasts:    / bloombergpodcasts  \r\nBloomberg Television:    /   \r\nBloomberg Originals:    / bloomberg  \r\nQuicktake:    /", "post_id": "HE0SjQWWsAI"}}, {"key": "@thecore_in", "attributes": {"label": "@thecore_in", "x": 108.27762615272307, "y": 767.9137604332913, "size": 3.0, "color": "#B3B6C6", "sentiment": "netral", "labels": ["youtube-000001"], "scores": {"pagerank": 159.3625, "eigenvector": 0.0, "in_degree": 0, "out_degree": 2, "degree": 2}, "_id": "62ZvZhcuGSk", "id": "@thecore_in", "source": "youtube-000001", "content": "⁠Are Markets Pricing A Long War? Oil Rally vs Stock Dip | Govindraj Ethiraj | The Core Report\n\nOn Episode 838 of The Core Report, financial journalist Govindraj Ethiraj talks to Ketan Dalal, Tax Expert and Founder of Katalyst Advisors.\n____________________________________________\nIn Partnership With:\nMarkets move fast.\nStay ahead with InvestingPro—your all-access pass to 300,000+ instruments, pro tools & real-time alerts.\nNo noise. Just market intelligence.\nInvestingPro—power your portfolio.\nDownload Now: https://www.investing-referral.com/af...\n____________________________________________\nSHOW NOTES\n(00:00) The Take\n(05:09) Will markets start adjusting to a war normal this week?\n(09:12) India crude supplies are under control, though gas is still not\n(10:37) Why did India and Mauritius sign a treaty allowing tax free investments and what’s changed now?\n(21:50) Guess where rich Chinese are headed next\n\nThe Take:\n\nSix weeks into a war started by the United States and Israel, global energy markets are disrupted and the impact on India economy is becoming clear.\n\nFuel shortages are rising, especially gas, yet petrol diesel LPG prices remain largely controlled. While this may look like strong state management, the economic reality is more complex. Domestic LPG prices have seen only modest hikes, while commercial cylinders have risen more. But overall fuel prices remain suppressed despite crude oil above $100.\n\nWhen prices are capped, shortages follow. Across cities like Mumbai and Delhi, migrant workers are leaving not because fuel is expensive, but because it is unavailable. Many rely on small LPG cylinders, which are now being diverted into black markets for commercial use.\n\nAs supply tightens, households and businesses are shifting to kerosene, firewood, and electricity. Demand and supply are adjusting, but through black market signals rather than open market pricing.\n\nNow\n\nThis is a structural shift in the global economy. Even if the US Israel Iran conflict eases, high oil prices and supply risks will persist. India must align fuel prices with global trends, push energy efficiency, and accelerate solar and EV adoption.\n\nMarkets, War, Oil, and The Rupee:\n\nEscalation in the US Israel Iran conflict is keeping crude oil prices volatile, with Brent above $100 and markets reacting sharply.\n\nSensex and Nifty have seen continued pressure despite short term recovery. Foreign portfolio investors continue to sell, reflecting global risk aversion.\n\nThe rupee has moved sharply after RBI intervention but remains sensitive to crude oil prices and global capital flows.\n\nAt the same time, trade war pressures and real war disruptions are pushing policy changes, including petrochemical import duty cuts to support manufacturing and reduce cost pressures.\n\nIranian Oil is Back:\n\nIndia has resumed importing Iranian oil amid global supply disruptions, signalling a shift in energy strategy. While sourcing crude from multiple countries provides flexibility, India remains exposed to geopolitical risk and volatile oil prices.\n\nRetroactive Tax Relief:\n\nThe government’s move to ease retrospective tax concerns has brought relief to investors after uncertainty triggered by the Tiger Global case.\n\nTax expert Ketan Dalal says clarity on pre 2017 investments reduces uncertainty for private equity and venture capital, helping restore investor confidence in India.\n\nThe Chinese in Zimbabwe:\n\nChinese investments in Zimbabwe reflect a broader global shift in resource control and economic influence.\n\nFrom lithium mining to infrastructure and energy, this trend highlights how emerging markets are becoming central to global supply chains and geopolitical strategy.\n\nAre markets pricing a long war as oil rally and stock dip signal deeper risk from the US Israel Iran conflict? Track crude oil prices, stock market trends, India economy, and rupee movement with insights from Govindraj Ethiraj and tax expert Ketan Dalal on The Core Report. Stay ahead of global markets and geopolitical risk.\n\n#StockMarketNews #CrudeOil #IndiaEconomy #Geopolitics #TheCoreReport #TheCore\n\nJoin The Core Insider to get access to perks:\n   /   \n\nListeners! We await your feedback: https://tinyurl.com/TCR-Listener-Survey\n\nThe Core & The Core Report is ad supported & FREE for all readers & listeners. Write in to shiva for sponsorships & brand studio requirements.\n\nFor more of our coverage check out thecore.in (https://www.thecore.in/)\n\nSupport the Core Report (https://tinyurl.com/Support-the-Core-...)\n\nJoin & Interact anonymously on our WhatsApp channel (https://tinyurl.com/The-Core-WhatsApp...) \n\nSubscribe to our Newsletter (https://www.thecore.in/newsletters/th...)\n\nFollow Us on Social Media for More Updates:\nTwitter (  / the_core_in  )\nInstagram (  / the.core.in  )\nFacebook (  / thecore.biz  )\nLinkedin (  / thecore-in  )\nYoutube (   /   )", "post_id": "62ZvZhcuGSk"}}, {"key": "thecore_in", "attributes": {"label": "thecore_in", "x": 178.07112175841422, "y": 506.1302847053999, "size": 3.0, "color": "#B3B6C6", "sentiment": "netral", "labels": ["youtube-000001"], "scores": {"pagerank": 227.0917, "eigenvector": 0.0, "in_degree": 2, "out_degree": 0, "degree": 2}, "_id": "62ZvZhcuGSk", "id": "thecore_in", "source": "youtube-000001", "content": "⁠Are Markets Pricing A Long War? Oil Rally vs Stock Dip | Govindraj Ethiraj | The Core Report\n\nOn Episode 838 of The Core Report, financial journalist Govindraj Ethiraj talks to Ketan Dalal, Tax Expert and Founder of Katalyst Advisors.\n____________________________________________\nIn Partnership With:\nMarkets move fast.\nStay ahead with InvestingPro—your all-access pass to 300,000+ instruments, pro tools & real-time alerts.\nNo noise. Just market intelligence.\nInvestingPro—power your portfolio.\nDownload Now: https://www.investing-referral.com/af...\n____________________________________________\nSHOW NOTES\n(00:00) The Take\n(05:09) Will markets start adjusting to a war normal this week?\n(09:12) India crude supplies are under control, though gas is still not\n(10:37) Why did India and Mauritius sign a treaty allowing tax free investments and what’s changed now?\n(21:50) Guess where rich Chinese are headed next\n\nThe Take:\n\nSix weeks into a war started by the United States and Israel, global energy markets are disrupted and the impact on India economy is becoming clear.\n\nFuel shortages are rising, especially gas, yet petrol diesel LPG prices remain largely controlled. While this may look like strong state management, the economic reality is more complex. Domestic LPG prices have seen only modest hikes, while commercial cylinders have risen more. But overall fuel prices remain suppressed despite crude oil above $100.\n\nWhen prices are capped, shortages follow. Across cities like Mumbai and Delhi, migrant workers are leaving not because fuel is expensive, but because it is unavailable. Many rely on small LPG cylinders, which are now being diverted into black markets for commercial use.\n\nAs supply tightens, households and businesses are shifting to kerosene, firewood, and electricity. Demand and supply are adjusting, but through black market signals rather than open market pricing.\n\nNow\n\nThis is a structural shift in the global economy. Even if the US Israel Iran conflict eases, high oil prices and supply risks will persist. India must align fuel prices with global trends, push energy efficiency, and accelerate solar and EV adoption.\n\nMarkets, War, Oil, and The Rupee:\n\nEscalation in the US Israel Iran conflict is keeping crude oil prices volatile, with Brent above $100 and markets reacting sharply.\n\nSensex and Nifty have seen continued pressure despite short term recovery. Foreign portfolio investors continue to sell, reflecting global risk aversion.\n\nThe rupee has moved sharply after RBI intervention but remains sensitive to crude oil prices and global capital flows.\n\nAt the same time, trade war pressures and real war disruptions are pushing policy changes, including petrochemical import duty cuts to support manufacturing and reduce cost pressures.\n\nIranian Oil is Back:\n\nIndia has resumed importing Iranian oil amid global supply disruptions, signalling a shift in energy strategy. While sourcing crude from multiple countries provides flexibility, India remains exposed to geopolitical risk and volatile oil prices.\n\nRetroactive Tax Relief:\n\nThe government’s move to ease retrospective tax concerns has brought relief to investors after uncertainty triggered by the Tiger Global case.\n\nTax expert Ketan Dalal says clarity on pre 2017 investments reduces uncertainty for private equity and venture capital, helping restore investor confidence in India.\n\nThe Chinese in Zimbabwe:\n\nChinese investments in Zimbabwe reflect a broader global shift in resource control and economic influence.\n\nFrom lithium mining to infrastructure and energy, this trend highlights how emerging markets are becoming central to global supply chains and geopolitical strategy.\n\nAre markets pricing a long war as oil rally and stock dip signal deeper risk from the US Israel Iran conflict? Track crude oil prices, stock market trends, India economy, and rupee movement with insights from Govindraj Ethiraj and tax expert Ketan Dalal on The Core Report. Stay ahead of global markets and geopolitical risk.\n\n#StockMarketNews #CrudeOil #IndiaEconomy #Geopolitics #TheCoreReport #TheCore\n\nJoin The Core Insider to get access to perks:\n   /   \n\nListeners! We await your feedback: https://tinyurl.com/TCR-Listener-Survey\n\nThe Core & The Core Report is ad supported & FREE for all readers & listeners. Write in to shiva for sponsorships & brand studio requirements.\n\nFor more of our coverage check out thecore.in (https://www.thecore.in/)\n\nSupport the Core Report (https://tinyurl.com/Support-the-Core-...)\n\nJoin & Interact anonymously on our WhatsApp channel (https://tinyurl.com/The-Core-WhatsApp...) \n\nSubscribe to our Newsletter (https://www.thecore.in/newsletters/th...)\n\nFollow Us on Social Media for More Updates:\nTwitter (  / the_core_in  )\nInstagram (  / the.core.in  )\nFacebook (  / thecore.biz  )\nLinkedin (  / thecore-in  )\nYoutube (   /   )", "post_id": "62ZvZhcuGSk"}}], "edges": [{"key": "@BloombergPodcasts", "source": "@BloombergPodcasts", "target": "markets", "attributes": {"label": "mention", "type": "mention", "source": "youtube-000001"}}, {"key": "@BloombergPodcasts", "source": "@BloombergPodcasts", "target": "bloombergquicktake", "attributes": {"label": "mention", "type": "mention", "source": "youtube-000001"}}, {"key": "@thecore_in", "source": "@thecore_in", "target": "thecore_in", "attributes": {"label": "mention", "type": "mention", "source": "youtube-000001"}}, {"key": "@thecore_in", "source": "@thecore_in", "target": "thecore_in", "attributes": {"label": "mention", "type": "mention", "source": "youtube-000001"}}]}