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Florida drought deepens strain on citrus industry as growers battle costs, disease

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Florida drought deepens strain on citrus industry as growers battle costs, disease

Florida citrus grows inside a protective screen in Bartow, Florida. (FOX News)

BARTOW, Florida – Florida is facing its worst drought in 25 years, intensifying pressure on a citrus industry already battered by disease, hurricanes and rising costs.

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According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, 100% of the state is experiencing some level of drought, with more than 75% in extreme drought conditions. The dry spell is adding new financial strain for growers who rely heavily on irrigation to sustain crops.

Florida accounts for 17% of the nation’s citrus production, according to the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. For many communities, the industry remains a key economic driver.

“There are multiple companies across our county and across our state, and it’s definitely a lifeline to a lot of Floridians here,” said Jennifer Schaal, VP of finance at Dundee Citrus Growers Association. “It’s what they depend on.”

USDA CREDITS TRUMP TRADE DEALS AS AGRICULTURAL DEFICIT SHRINKS, FARM SECTOR GAINS GROUND

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Grapefruit on a citrus grove

Florida produces nearly 20% of the nation’s citrus crop, including grapefruit. (FOX News / Fox News)

However, nature has been anything but dependable for Florida farmers.

Back in 2000, the state’s citrus industry covered over 800,000 acres. Today, that figure has fallen to just over 200,000 acres, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, reflecting years of disease pressure and storm damage.

“The number one challenge the industry has had over the years is citrus greening disease,” said Steven Callaham, executive vice president and CEO of Dundee Citrus Growers Association. “And then on top of that challenge, we’ve experienced numerous hurricanes.”

RECENT HURRICANES CAUSE FLORIDA CITRUS PRODUCTION TO FALL AS FARMS WORK THROUGH DAMAGE

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Recent freezes and now drought conditions have compounded those pressures.

“When you irrigate, it requires a pump that is either powered by diesel or it’s powered by electricity, and it gets very, very expensive,” explained Callaham.

Dundee Citrus Growers Association is one of the largest fresh fruit cooperatives in the state of Florida, harvesting citrus from over 10,000 acres. 

“It’s been challenging over the last year,” added Bill Bohde, director of agronomy at Dundee Citrus. “During the bloom period, water is critical. It determines how well the fruit sizes and ultimately, you know, how large your crop will be.”

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Dundee Citrus Growers uses CUPS

The Dundee Citrus Growers Association utilizes pods to grow citrus under a protective screen in Florida. (Amy Galo / Fox News)

As citrus acreage dwindles throughout the state, the company has found a solution to nature’s many obstacles with something called “CUPS,” or Citrus Under Protective Screens. 

Orange groves are planted under 10-acre white tent structures, also known as pods. Originally installed to prevent disease in citrus plants, the structures are also helping growers better manage soil moisture during the historic drought.

CITRUS INDUSTRY HAS BEEN PUT ‘BACK ON ITS HEELS’: MATT JOYNER

“Everything is pumped through a series of pipes into this black tubing, and every tree has a very small emitter that puts, you know, puts out an amount of water,” explained Bhode.

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The system allows for precise irrigation, creating a controlled environment that can support fruit production even during prolonged dry spells.

Citrus in a pod

Citrus fruit plants thrive under a protective screen in Bartow, Florida. (Amy Galo)

“This ten-acre pod will produce between 8,000 and 10,000 boxes per pod,” said Callaham. “The trees in this environment, they’re happy. They grow faster than trees do in traditional outdoor groves, and they come into production quicker. So it’s one way that we can really get the industry back on track.”

USDA production data show mixed results across citrus categories. Florida lemon production increased 4% from last season, while tangerine and tangelo output was unchanged. Grapefruit production declined 8%, and non-Valencia orange production fell 2%, according to the agency.

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“If I wasn’t optimistic, I would not be in the citrus business,” said Callaham. “So I think we have a lot of positives going for us right now, you know? The challenges we have are temporary. We’re going to make it through.”

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Thailand’s Inflation Prospects in Light of Middle East Tensions

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Thailand's Inflation Prospects in Light of Middle East Tensions

The Middle East conflict has disrupted oil markets, risking inflation in energy-dependent Thailand. Rising fuel, freight costs will hit businesses and households. Policymakers must balance subsidies, enhance energy security, and promote efficiency to mitigate impact.

Rising Energy Risks Impacting Thailand’s Economy

The Middle East conflict in early 2026 has unsettled global oil markets and disrupted shipping routes, posing risks for energy-dependent Thailand. After experiencing prolonged low inflation, the country now faces a potential inflation rebound driven by rising oil and freight costs. The Bank of Thailand keeps inflation below target and policy rates low to support growth, but external shocks threaten this fragile balance.

Thailand’s Vulnerability and Immediate Consequences

Thailand imports about 90% of its crude oil, making energy price hikes quickly affect transport, manufacturing, food costs, and household budgets. The Producer Price Index will likely rise first, followed by consumer inflation in months. Businesses, especially SMEs, will face shrinking margins, while lower-income households may bear the brunt of increased fuel and food expenses. The Oil Fuel Fund provides some cushion but may falter if prices stay high.

Strategic Responses for Stability

Businesses should hedge risks, optimize efficiency, and negotiate supply terms to manage costs, while households prepare for higher living expenses. Policymakers need to balance subsidies and incentives to ease immediate pressures without undermining energy-saving goals. Diversifying energy sources and improving infrastructure will strengthen long-term resilience, helping Thailand absorb future shocks more effectively.

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John Lewis pays first staff bonus since 2022

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John Lewis pays first staff bonus since 2022

The department store and Waitrose supermarket owner will give workers a bonus equivalent to an extra week’s pay.

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Iran War Drives Sizable Hedge-Fund Losses

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David Uberti hedcut

Some savvy investors suffered big dollar-figure losses last week after the conflict in the Middle East disrupted global financial markets, with oil prices surging and bonds selling off. Citadel, Millennium Management and Point72 were hit by the market fallout, said people familiar with the matter, as were Balyasny Asset Management and ExodusPoint Capital Management.

Millennium and Point72 each lost $1.5 billion, the people said, while Citadel lost about $1 billion in its fixed-income and macro business. Balyasny lost about $1 billion, including $700 million in its fixed-income business, the people said. ExodusPoint lost a couple hundred million dollars on bond-market bets. Read more:

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Rhun ap Iorwerth on how a Plaid Cymru Welsh Government would boost the economy

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Addressing a meeting of Cardiff Business Club he gave more details on Plaid Cymru’s business and economic priorities

Rhun ap Iorwerth(Image: Getty Images)

A Plaid Cymru Welsh Government, in its first 100 days in office, would launch a Wales-wide skills audit aimed at ensuring businesses have access to a workforce that can support growth as well as establishing a new commission that would set economic targets.

Addressing a meeting of Cardiff Business Club, Plaid leader Rhun ap Iorwerth said that, if elected, Plaid would also aim to increase the level spent on procuring goods and services with Wales-based suppliers from the current 55% to at least 70% of total Welsh public procurement expenditure. A timeframe for achieving this goal has not yet been set.

He also said a wide range of business support initiative and structures, including city deals and investment zones, had created a “tangled web” which is “often riddled with either duplication or contradiction.”

Mr ap Iorweth said business rates would be repurposed to address what he described as the current regime’s bias towards out-of-town retailers over hospitality, leisure and retail businesses in town centres.

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READ MORE: Wales falls in influential index on gender equality in the workplaceREAD MORE: Wales needs it own industrial strategy say Liberal Democrats

Plaid has already committed to creating a national development agency for Wales, at arm’s length from the Welsh Government, that would take over business support currently operated by the Welsh Government under its Business Wales banner.

There is currently no projected timeframe for when a new agency could become operational as well as an assessment of set up costs, what its annual budget could be, and how it would work with regional bodies such as the Cardiff Capital Region. As part of the 100 day plan Plaid is though committed to establishing a panel of business and economic experts to refine the remit, governance and operating model for the agency.

The 100 day plan can also be seen as providing a signal to Welsh Government civil servants – who will implement policy changes – that a Plaid administration wants rapid implementation.

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Mr ap Iorwerth said: “If businesses in Wales are to succeed, then we need to be able to match people with skills and jobs right across our economy. That’s why a Plaid Cymru government, in its first 100 days, would launch a Wales-wide skills audit to identify future skills needs in the Welsh economy and inform our policy decisions in government.

“We’ll prepare to convene a future skills summit, to include representatives from the further education and higher education sectors, businesses and other relevant stakeholders, to create one clear vision and strategy for the future of our skills system and its funding.”

He told his business audience that an economic and fiscal commission would be created to support the collection and analysis of Welsh economic data and the setting of clear economic targets.

Mr ap Iorwerth said: “Without that kind of full picture we’re hamstrung in our ability to understand the challenges we’re facing and, critically, in identifying the steps we should be taking to overcome them.”

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He also confirmed that business rates would be recalibrated to ensure improved reliefs for firms in the retail, hospitality and leisure sectors operating in town centres.

He said: “The businesses in retail, leisure and hospitality that are the backbone of our high streets and our local economies have faced a perfect storm of increased overheads and declining footfall.

“The current First Minister has of course suggested that the answer is for people to stop watching so much Netflix, but we think we need slightly more practical support for businesses than that. As a first step in a wider review of the fitness for purpose of non-domestic rates, we’ll extend a preferential multiplier to redress the imbalance that currently advantages out-of-town shopping over hospitality, leisure and retail in our town centres.”

On procurement, he said: “We want to make much better use of public procurement in Wales — currently worth as much as £8bn a year — to support our home-grown small and medium-sized businesses.”

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Plaid would also seek to address what it sees as over complexity and a degree of duplication from a range of regional structures and initiatives aimed at boosting the economy, including city and growth deals, freeports and new investment zones. Although some of these initiatives are non-devolved matters or partnerships with the UK Government.

However, the party is not advocating any current changes to the statutory status joint corporate committees, but wants to ensure these bodies, such as the Cardiff Capital Region, are maximising their potential to support growth. He said Plaid would also look to speed up planning to support business investment.

He said: “A Plaid Cymru government will reform planning processes in Wales — with the aim of offering clarity and firmer consenting timelines, as well as ensuring that the rules of the game don’t suddenly change halfway through.

“We’ll also use the opportunity afforded by the forthcoming review of the National Development Framework – Future Wales – to simplify, rationalise and ultimately ensure better use of public money.

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“That includes looking at all those overlapping local, regional and national frameworks and initiatives – from city and regional growth deals to enterprise zones, and from trailblazer neighbourhoods to local growth and pride-in-place programmes – some imposed from Westminster, others made up on the hoof it seems, and some showing little evidence of logic or strategy.

“The web is too tangled, and too often riddled with either duplication or contradiction, or both.

“And we need clarity and consistency so we can carry on with, and build on, really important work that is going on — work done by the Cardiff Capital Region, for example.”

He said that ultimately creating a more competitive Welsh economy has to be driven by businesses.

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He added: “The future of our economy won’t somehow be written in government buildings alone. It will be shaped in offices, workshops, laboratories, shop floors and start-ups – by people like you (business audience) – willing to take risks, invest, innovate and build. And by the people you employ, through good relationships with unions, and a genuine sense of joint venture across Wales.”

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Anglo Asian Mining reaches 1M gold equivalent ounces in Azerbaijan

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Anglo Asian Mining reaches 1M gold equivalent ounces in Azerbaijan

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Morgan Stanley downgrades Sandvik stock rating on valuation concerns

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Morgan Stanley downgrades Sandvik stock rating on valuation concerns

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iPhone Fold Reportedly Comes With New App Features, Side-by-Side Multitasking

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iPhone Fold

Apple’s first foldable phone, popularly but unofficially known as the iPhone Fold, is reportedly expected to debut new app features should it arrive later this year.

One of its new app features includes side-by-side multitasking, which will help users fully take advantage of the foldable device’s large screen.

Apple iPhone Fold: New App Features Coming

According to a new report by analyst Mark Gurman (via Bloomberg), there are already massive new features expected to arrive along with the iPhone Fold, which is speculated to launch later this year.

The new app features for the iPhone Fold would reportedly be specific to the device as it is set to be the first foldable of the company and will offer a novel experience to the iOS ecosystem.

Gurman reported that Apple is now developing “new iOS app layouts and revamping core iPhone programs” specific to the iPhone Fold. The device is set to include new features like a sidebar found on the leftmost edge of the foldable and feature similarities to Apple’s iPad apps.

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According to the report, developers will be able to adapt their iPhone software via this new interface and adapt it to iPad-like proportions.

Side-by-Side Multitasking for Apple’s Foldable

One of the key features that Apple will deliver for the iPhone Fold is “side-by-side multitasking,” which will reportedly allow users to launch two apps alongside each other on the smartphone.

It would be similar to the multitasking feature of the iPad, but instead of having multiple resizable floating windows on the display, users only get two apps launched side by side.

This report corroborated earlier ones that claimed the iPhone Fold is launching later this year and is set to join the iPhone 18 series for a fall release.

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Like the iPhone 18 series, the iPhone Fold is also speculated to be running iOS 27, the next-generation software for the iPhone platform.

Originally published on Tech Times

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WhatsApp Launches Preteen Accounts That Adds Safeguards, Require Parent Management to Use

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WhatsApp to Roll Out Close Friends Feature for Status Updates
WhatsApp to Roll Out Close Friends Feature for Status Updates

WhatsApp is bringing preteen accounts to its platform, which essentially expands the age of eligibility to use the instant messaging app.

WhatsApp Launches Preteen Accounts for Younger Users

WhatsApp announced in its latest blog post that it is now lowering the age of eligibility among users to use the platform, launching the new “preteen accounts” that will open up the platform to younger users.

The latest preteen accounts will let users below 13 to use the platform and its features, including instant messaging, calls, and more. However, this access will come with specific controls and limits.

WhatsApp revealed that there will be safeguards for the preteen accounts, with the platform’s end-to-end encryption still promising privacy to users.

According to WhatsApp, the experience will center around parent-managed accounts for preteen users, ensuring that their children remain safe on the platform.

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WhatsApp Preteen Accounts Require Parent Management

WhatsApp will require a preteen account to be set up with their parent or guardian’s account, which it calls “parent-managed accounts.” This is mandatory for users who are under 13.

To create the account, parents or guardians need to have their device and their ward’s side by side to link the accounts. After linking the accounts, parents or guardians may now set up the limitations to the preteen account.

Here, they may select the contacts their children can talk to, as well as which groups they can join.

Parent accounts may be able to review message requests from unknown contacts and choose to allow or delete these contacts.

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WhatsApp said that parental controls and the app’s settings may only be accessed or changed by the parent, as it will remain PIN-protected.

Originally published on Tech Times

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John Hancock Infrastructure Fund Q4 2025 Commentary (JEEIX)

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John Hancock Infrastructure Fund Q4 2025 Commentary (JEEIX)

A company of Manulife Investment Management, John Hancock Investment Management serves investors through a unique multimanager approach, complementing our extensive in-house capabilities with an unrivaled network of specialized asset managers, backed by some of the most rigorous investment oversight in the industry. The result is a diverse lineup of time-tested investments from a premier asset manager with a heritage of financial stewardship. Note: This account is not managed or monitored by John Hancock Investment Management, and any messages sent via Seeking Alpha will not receive a response. For inquiries or communication, please use John Hancock Investment Management’s official channels.

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NewEdge Advisors Acquires $6 Billion Alabama RIA Led by Former UBS Advisor

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NewEdge Advisors Acquires $6 Billion Alabama RIA Led by Former UBS Advisor

NewEdge Advisors Acquires $6 Billion Alabama RIA Led by Former UBS Advisor

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