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Gloucestershire Airport put up for sale again as bosses refuse to reveal why it’s losing millions

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The Staverton airfield is currently a loss-making site

View of Gloucestershire Airport runway

View of Gloucestershire Airport runway

Gloucestershire Airport is going back up for sale again, its joint owners have announced. Cheltenham Borough Council and Gloucester City Council confirmed on Tuesday (June 30) the Staverton site would brought back to market, with property firm Savills appointed to lead a renewed sales process.

The news comes just three months after the sale of the loss-making transport hub fell through after months of negotiations. In March, a deal to offload the airport to preferred buyer Horizon Aero Group collapsed after the authorities said they could not accept the terms of the sale.

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On Tuesday, council chiefs said they were relaunching the sale process after receiving a “number of approaches” from interested parties.

Councillor Rowena Hay, leader of Cheltenham Borough Council, said: ‘’We are hopeful this renewed sale process will attract the right partner for the airport’s future, which remains our key priority. We will work with partners and stakeholders to update as the new sale process proceeds.’’

Councillor Jeremy Hilton, leader of Gloucester City Council, said: “Gloucestershire Airport is a vital economic and aviation asset for our county and region and we must do our best for it.

“In recent weeks there has been considerable interest from potential investors in the airport and now is the right time to put the airport back on the market.

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“This next phase gives us the opportunity to build on what we have learned and engage with investors who share our vision for growth and continued aviation at Staverton.”

It comes as bosses at Gloucestershire Airport refused to reveal to the public on Monday why the airfield has cost taxpayers millions of pounds in recent years.

City councillors were given an update on the situation of the 350-acre general aviation site, which sees around 66,000 aircraft movements a year. During the public meeting, civic chiefs quizzed airport management over the operational loss at the site.

A slide presented to the committee suggested an unaudited loss for the financial year, including depreciation and loan interest, of £2.1m. It also showed the situation had improved over the last three years.

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Operational losses, excluding non-monetary adjustments, loans and depreciation, in 2024 was £1,333,041, falling to £738,030 in 2025 and £489,979 in 2026.

Interim managing director Brian Rawlings said it was “one of the few airfields you can walk in having never flown an aircraft and leave to go off and fly for an airline”.

“I can’t think of another airfield that offers that facility,” he said. “And that is backed up with the various tenants that we have there that offer some extensive flight training that is basically unique.”

But when asked why they can’t make it pay for the taxpayer, airport chiefs refused to answer detailed questions in public – instead they said they would tell civic chiefs away from the public eye.

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During the public part of the meeting, the airport’s head of finance, Marian Bidmead, said the bottom line figure was a £2.1m loss. She explained the accounts were unaudited and it could be more or less than £2.1m because they “have fair evaluations on the market rentals to do as well and capitalised interest to take into account on top of that”.

Mr Rawlings admitted all members of the team were “fully aware” of what the situation and said they “absolutely” took it seriously.

“We’ve got people there who are very loyal to the airfield, very skilled and for us to be able to turn things around and make it the best airfield it can be, yes, absolutely we can do it. I’m sure we can,” he added.

The committee ultimately voted to exclude the press and public to further discuss airport issues behind closed doors while the chairman voted against.

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Socceroos and Egypt Set for Historic World Cup Knockout Clash in Arlington

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Justin Bieber and Hailey Cheer U.S. to 4-1 World Cup

ARLINGTON, Texas — Australia and Egypt will write a new chapter in World Cup history Friday when they meet in the Round of 32 at AT&T Stadium, with the Socceroos seeking their first-ever knockout-stage victory and the Pharaohs aiming to extend their breakthrough run in the tournament.

The match, scheduled for 1 p.m. local time (6 p.m. BST), pits two teams that advanced from the group stage with contrasting styles and storylines. Australia finished second in Group D with a workmanlike campaign, while Egypt claimed a spot in the knockout rounds for the first time in their history after securing second place in Group G.

Both sides carry historic weight into the fixture. The Socceroos have never won a World Cup knockout match, falling short in previous appearances. Egypt, making their debut beyond the group stage, showed resilience with a mix of draws and a notable victory.

Tony Popovic’s Australia side opened with a 2-0 win over Turkiye but followed with a 0-2 loss to the United States and a scoreless draw against Paraguay. The team conceded twice across three matches while managing just two goals, underscoring a defensive approach that has carried them this far.

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Egypt, under Hossam Hassan, drew with Belgium, beat New Zealand 3-1 and drew with Iran. The Pharaohs displayed attacking variety, with five different players finding the net in the group phase, reducing reliance on any single star.

The fixture offers intrigue in midfield control and attacking transitions. Australia’s compact shape may limit space, but Egypt’s creative options, led by Mohamed Salah, could prove decisive on the counter. Salah, with extensive international experience, remains a constant threat.

Australia relies on goalkeeper Mathew Ryan and midfield leadership from Jackson Irvine. Younger talents like Nestory Irankunda, who has already scored at the tournament, add dynamism. The Socceroos will need greater final-third output than shown in groups to advance.

Egypt’s lineup features Salah alongside Omar Marmoush and others providing depth. Goalkeeper Mohamed El Shenawy brings experience, while the defense kept clean sheets in qualifying.

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Head-to-head history is limited, with Egypt winning a 2010 friendly 3-0 and a 1987 draw. Recent form favors neither decisively, though Egypt’s attacking depth gives them an edge in many previews.

Tactical battles will center on containing Salah while Australia seeks to exploit transitions. Both teams are expected to start cautiously in their first knockout meeting.

The venue, AT&T Stadium, provides a neutral, high-capacity stage for the occasion. Fans from both nations are anticipated to create an electric atmosphere in Texas.

Advancing to the Round of 16 would mark a milestone for either side. For Australia, it would break knockout barriers. For Egypt, it would validate their group-stage progress.

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The match underscores the World Cup’s global appeal, featuring teams from different confederations with distinct footballing traditions. Australia brings physicality and organization, while Egypt offers flair and clinical finishing potential.

Coaches Popovic and Hassan have prepared meticulously. Australia’s resilience was evident in the Paraguay draw, while Egypt’s Belgium result highlighted their competitiveness.

Injuries appear minimal for both, allowing near-full-strength lineups. Predicted formations include Australia in a 4-3-3 and Egypt in a 4-2-3-1, setting up a balanced contest.

Beyond the pitch, the game highlights football’s unifying power. National pride is high, with supporters traveling far for the occasion.

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Broadcast coverage will reach global audiences, with free-to-air options in several markets. The fixture offers drama typical of knockout football, where one moment can define a campaign.

As teams finalize preparations, focus remains on execution under pressure. Australia must improve attacking threat, while Egypt seeks to convert possession into goals.

The Round of 32 stage tests depth and adaptability. Both squads blend experience with emerging talent, promising an engaging encounter.

World Cup progression carries significant sporting and cultural importance. A victory propels one nation forward while ending the other’s run.

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Analysts anticipate a tight affair, potentially decided by individual brilliance or defensive lapses. Set pieces and transitions could prove pivotal.

The winner advances to face stiffer competition, raising the stakes. Both teams recognize the opportunity to create lasting memories.

Friday’s clash at AT&T Stadium embodies the tournament’s spirit. Australia and Egypt, separated by geography and history, meet with shared ambition on football’s biggest stage.

As kickoff approaches, anticipation builds for a match rich in narrative and potential for history. One

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What’s Happening Now, What the Government Is Doing and What Comes Next

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Person Getting a Shot

SYDNEY — Australia’s fuel supply crisis, triggered by the escalation of the U.S.-Iran conflict in late February and the subsequent disruption to oil shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, has entered a new phase of cautious stabilization after months of emergency government intervention, rationing measures and airline schedule cuts that exposed the country’s deep structural vulnerability as one of the world’s most fuel-import-dependent developed nations.

The crisis began almost overnight. Fuel prices began to rise at the start of March, after U.S. President Donald Trump, along with Israel, launched coordinated military strikes on Iran on February 28. Iran then retaliated, launching strikes at Israel and at U.S. military bases in Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a fifth of the world’s traded oil typically flows, immediately tightened global supply and sent fuel costs surging across every Australian capital city.

The Maritime Union of Australia warned in early March that Australia’s fuel security crisis had been laid bare by the escalating international conflict and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most critical oil shipping routes.

MUA National Secretary Jake Field framed the situation bluntly.

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“The closure of the Strait of Hormuz during the recent attacks on Iran is a stark warning of the volatility of Australia’s access to global fuel supply chains,” Field said. “We mustn’t gamble our economic stability on uninterrupted access to foreign fuel markets. We cannot assume that geopolitical tensions will always resolve before our reserves run dry.”

By late March, Australia’s fuel reserve levels had deteriorated to alarming lows, with the country holding roughly 39 days of petrol supply and just 30 days of diesel, figures the government acknowledged publicly as it convened emergency National Cabinet meetings. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese made a rare live address to the nation, outlining a National Fuel Security Plan and announcing a series of emergency measures. The most immediately visible of those was a halving of the fuel excise.

“Today, we cut the fuel excise in half, cutting the tax on every litre of petrol by 26 cents,” Albanese said in his address. “Those savings have started showing up at your petrol station. For our truckies, we have cut a heavy vehicle road user charge to zero. Both these measures will be in place for the next three months.”

The government also moved on multiple supply-side fronts simultaneously. Key actions included securing more fuel internationally through a $7.5 billion Fuel and Fertiliser Security Facility, building long-term fuel resilience through a $3.2 billion Australian Fuel Security Reserve, and temporarily amending Australia’s fuel quality standards to allow higher sulfur levels, enabling around 100 million litres a month of additional fuel supply to enter the country that would not otherwise have met domestic standards.

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In April 2026, the government announced it had received a massive shipment of 100 million litres of jet fuel and 50 million litres of diesel from Asia. That delivery helped arrest the decline in reserve levels, though analysts cautioned that replenishing stockpiles to pre-crisis levels would require sustained, uninterrupted shipping for months.

The crisis hit Australia’s aviation sector particularly hard. Qantas and Jetstar issued a statement on May 1 announcing that they would extend their domestic flight cuts amid the fuel crisis. “Given fuel prices remain significantly elevated, the Group has extended previously announced schedule changes across its international and domestic network between July and September.” People who have booked passage on any of the impacted flights were contacted directly and offered either a refund or an alternative flight. The airline had previously cut its domestic flights by five percent from May to June, with that reduction now extended through September.

Remote and regional Australia has borne the heaviest burden throughout the crisis. The Northern Territory and regional Queensland have been identified as the most at-risk areas, with some remote communities already experiencing intermittent fuel shortages. The government worked with the Coalition of Peaks and other First Nations groups specifically to address fuel, energy and food security in remote communities, acknowledging that supply chain fragility hits hardest in areas with the longest logistics chains and the least alternative options when primary supply routes are disrupted.

Structurally, the crisis has relit a long-running policy debate about Australia’s domestic refining capacity and strategic reserve holdings. The MUA noted that for decades, successive governments allowed domestic fuel capacity to be dismantled. Australia’s strategic fuel reserves were effectively offshored, with public money spent storing fuel overseas. Refinery after refinery closed, leaving Australia importing the overwhelming majority of its refined petrol and diesel, reliant on foreign refineries, foreign-owned tankers and shipping lanes that run through contested waters.

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On the regulatory side, the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water extended key emergency measures into the second half of 2026. The government extended the 20% reduction of the Minimum Stockholding Obligation for diesel and petrol to September 30, 2026, providing ongoing flexibility for industry to respond quickly in the event of another significant spike in demand. The government also worked with the fuel sector to secure authorization from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission to coordinate supply across companies, unlocking bottlenecks that had slowed distribution at key points during the worst of the shortage.

With the tentative U.S.-Iran ceasefire announced over the weekend and shipping beginning to resume through the Strait of Hormuz, Australian fuel reserve levels have begun a slow recovery. Petrol prices across capital cities, while still elevated compared to pre-crisis levels, have begun easing from their March and April peaks as more tankers complete deliveries and the government’s emergency import agreements supply additional volume into the domestic market.

However, the Maritime Union and independent energy analysts alike have warned that the current improvement in supply conditions should not be mistaken for a resolution of the underlying structural weaknesses the crisis exposed. The MUA called on the federal government to rebuild sovereign fuel storage capacity onshore, maintain reserves that comfortably exceed international minimums, protect and expand domestic refining capability to reduce reliance on imported finished fuels, and establish an Australian-flagged strategic shipping capability to guarantee fuel delivery in future crises.

The government’s own updated guidance, reflecting the latest supply situation as of early July, acknowledged that while immediate supply pressures had eased, the crisis had exposed systemic gaps in Australia’s energy security framework that will require sustained, multi-year policy investment to address. Fuelplan.gov.au, the official government tracking site launched during the crisis, continues to publish daily updates on reserve levels, petrol prices across all capital cities and crude oil benchmarks to keep the public informed as the recovery continues.

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India’s premium has almost entirely disappeared now: Ben Powell, BlackRock

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India's premium has almost entirely disappeared now: Ben Powell, BlackRock
Ben Powell, chief investment strategist for APAC at BlackRock Investment Institute, said he is turning more constructive on Indian equities after the recent underperformance. In an interview with Himadri Buch, Powell spoke about India as an investment destination, IT stocks and US bond yields, among other topics. Edited excerpts:

Is the worst of the foreign investor selling in India over?

Over the last couple of quarters, Indian equities have had a more difficult time, largely driven by things beyond India’s control. One is the AI super boom, and two is the conflicts in the region and the consequent energy shock. Energy prices have come all the way back down, and oil supply looks quite abundant globally. So, for India, that is good news. India is very close to the top of the list, and you could see a continuation of foreign flow back into India, creating a so-called virtuous circle.

After two years of underperformance, are Indian stock market valuations still expensive right now?
India’s premium has almost entirely disappeared now. So the valuation is more reasonable versus other emerging markets. When we look forward over the next six or 12 months, we can have more confidence in the earnings forecast. That is quite encouraging for Indian equities.

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Where does India sit in your emerging markets basket?

We are neutral on emerging market equities. Neutral is not bearish; it means fully invested. We want to take a little bit of profit in some of the AI super boom. It’s not that we are negative on Taiwan and Korea.
So, we are taking emerging market equity to neutral within that mix tactically, and for India, I am turning a little bit more constructive. Within the mix, the relative preference is adjusting more in the direction of Indian equities on the tactical side in the next six months.
What is your assessment of the sharp sell-off in Indian IT stocks?
We will have to wait and see. We call it scarcity and abundance. People are hoping that AI can create an abundant future, but we are not there yet, so we need to treat the world as it is.

There is not much evidence of the impact on jobs, and the US labour market continues to be very strong. For now, it feels the market has a little bit oversold indiscriminately. AI is a big deal, we agree with that. But the skill as an investor is to be more nuanced, to pick your spots.

US bond yields have risen 4.3% to 4.4% with markets expecting the new Fed chair to be hawkish. What will be the interest rate trajectory there?

The Fed is not going to do much is our judgment, because all of us are wrestling with a very complicated world. Their uncertainty and reluctance to move policy is completely reasonable, given a very uncertain path of inflation, growth and unemployment. So the Fed will be on pause for this year, trying to work out what is going on, including the impact of AI.

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The uncertainty around inflation is very high, so we think US 10-year yields can go higher, even when the Fed is waiting and seeing.

What does higher US bond yields mean for the AI investment story?
The 10-year yields can go up, and AI trade can continue. We are underweight in US government bonds, long duration, and overweight US equities. The reason is earnings.

Do you see signs of an AI bubble?
We think the AI boom will continue. This should mean we have earnings strong enough to drive these companies and the overall market forward, even as the 10-year yield goes a little bit higher over the next six months.

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Car tracking features for ‘convenience not security’ warns Kia

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A woman with shoulder-length blonde hair talks into a microphone

“Kia Connect is a customer convenience feature, not a certified security vehicle tracker,” the firm told the BBC.

“Therefore, it does not provide live‑tracking functionality for stolen vehicles.

“Release of location details of a vehicle via Kia Connect is possible, however this must be done in full compliance with all applicable laws, in particular GDPR, and the authorities to minimise risk to the customer.”

GPDR is Europe’s data protection law, and an almost-identical version applies in the UK.

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According to the Information Commissioner’s Office, Britain’s data regulator, users have the right to access their information and organisations need to respond to the request from someone who can be identified from personal data within one calendar month.

In the event of standard vehicle theft, the police have no formal powers to demand this data without specific consent from the Home Office, which is rarely sought on these occasions, the BBC understands.

It is up to individual car manufacturers to share data with law enforcement depending on their own policies.

Kia does offer a security vehicle tracking service in the US to subscribers who take out its premium package, but this is not available in the UK or Europe.

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Romesh Ranganathan ‘Gutted’ as Coughlans Bakery Collapses After 89 Years

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Romesh Ranganathan 'Gutted' as Coughlans Bakery Collapses After 89 Years

An 89-year-old family bakery has become the latest high-street casualty of Britain’s mounting cost crisis, closing its doors for good and taking with it one of the more unlikely celebrity business partnerships of recent years.

Coughlans Bakery, which ran a chain of shops across Kent, Surrey, West Sussex and south London, ceased trading on Tuesday after slipping into voluntary liquidation. The comedian Romesh Ranganathan, who became a co-owner in 2024 and once billed the tie-up as “the partnership of the century”, said he was “gutted” by the collapse.

The Crawley-born presenter, known for his deadpan stage style, reposted a video from managing director Sean Coughlan to his 1.4 million followers with the caption: “Gutted isn’t the word.” Ranganathan, who is vegan, had first thrown his weight behind the business because of its range of plant-based products.

For Coughlan, whose family firm first opened its ovens in 1937, the arithmetic simply stopped adding up. He laid much of the blame on the government’s decision to lift employers’ National Insurance contributions in April last year, a move that raised the headline rate to 15 per cent and lowered the threshold at which employers start paying, alongside a business-rates bill he said had “absolutely smashed local business”. The change, set out in the National Insurance Contributions (Secondary Class 1 Contributions) Act 2025, has landed hardest on labour-intensive trades such as retail and hospitality, where wage bills dominate the cost base.

Those pressures were then compounded by a spike in fuel prices following the recent conflict in the Middle East, which Coughlan estimated had cost the company an extra £20,000 a week. The summer heatwaves that pushed the South East towards 35C proved, in his words, the “nail in the coffin”. With shoppers staying at home, weekly takings roughly halved while the outgoings, he noted, “remained exactly the same”.

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Coughlan was unsparing about the human cost, and generous towards his celebrity backer. “I feel like we’ve absolutely let him down,” he said. “Everything he’s done, it’s been from the heart.” Ranganathan, he added, had been “amazing”.

The affection was mutual among customers. When the comedian appeared behind the counter of the Dorking High Street branch last year, a large queue quickly formed down the pavement. Josie Smith, who works near the Crawley shop, told BBC Radio Sussex she was “really sad” to see it go. “It brings a lot of people together. It is a massive shame.” Her colleague Kaitlin Stinton praised staff who were “dedicated to their jobs, always making you happy”.

Coughlan said the firm had chosen the orderly route of voluntary liquidation specifically so that it could still pay suppliers and employees, a decision that speaks to a proprietor trying to do right by his people even as the shutters came down. “It’s heartbreaking,” he said.

Coughlans is far from alone. Industry data shows three pubs, bars and restaurants now shutting every day as tax and cost rises bite, while the £28bn National Insurance shock has run well ahead of Treasury forecasts. Trade press, too, has tracked the toll, with The Caterer among those charting a wave of closures across food and drink. With high-street closures set to surge as the business-rates burden grows, the loss of a beloved 89-year-old baker is unlikely to be the last story of its kind this year.

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Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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ADP National Employment Report: 98K Private Jobs Added In June

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ADP National Employment Report: 98K Private Jobs Added In June

Group of business people waiting for job interview in the office.

skynesher/E+ via Getty Images

By Jennifer Nash

The economic mover and shaker this week is Friday’s employment report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This monthly report contains a wealth of data for economists, the most publicized being the month-over-month change

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HarbourVest Global Private Equity Ltd. (HVPQF) Discusses Investor-Friendly Initiatives and Tender Offer Following Annual Results Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

HarbourVest Global Private Equity Ltd. (HVPQF) Discusses Investor-Friendly Initiatives and Tender Offer Following Annual Results June 30, 2026 10:00 AM EDT

Company Participants

Edmond Warner
Richard Hickman – Director of Investment & Operation
Stephanie Hocking – Head of Investor Relations & Communications

Presentation

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Operator

Good afternoon, and welcome to the HarbourVest Global Private Equity Investor Presentation. [Operator Instructions] Company may not be in a position to answer every question received during the meeting itself. However the company can review all questions submitted today and publish responses where appropriate to do so. Before we begin, we’d like to submit the following poll. I’d now like to hand over to Ed Warner, Chair. Good afternoon, sir.

Edmond Warner

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Good afternoon. Thank you, and thank you, everybody, for attending this afternoon. Temperatures dropped a little bit, so you’d probably rather be outside than in front of your screen. So we very much appreciate your time today. We’ve had a number of these investor meet company presentations over the last few years. And those of you that have been on a number of them or through all of them will know that we have introduced a series of very investor-friendly measures to the governance of HVPE in recent years, culminating in our most recent announcements, which include a tender offer for 10% of the shares of the company that will be conducted this autumn at a discount of around 10%, which we think is market-leading, certainly in our space within listed private equity and is part of a package of actions that we’ve taken to ensure that we are [indiscernible] focused on the interest of you as investors and shareholders, which I am myself too, to deliver returns which beat the competition, beat the market and enable you to not only diversify your portfolios, but most importantly, to capture all that’s great about private markets opportunities that exist across the world, which you may well not

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Walmart makes first nuclear power play to support Illinois expansion

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Walmart makes first nuclear power play to support Illinois expansion

Walmart is making its first nuclear power play as the retail giant looks to support its growing footprint in Illinois.

The retailer signed a long-term power purchase agreement with Constellation to buy emissions-free electricity from the company’s Dresden Clean Energy Center in Illinois, the companies announced on June 23.

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The agreement provides Walmart with about 176 megawatts of power, including 30 megawatts of expanded generating capacity, through two 15-year terms starting in 2029 and 2030.

WALMART LAUNCHES HARDWARE OVERHAUL, NEW KIDS BRAND IN PRIVATE-LABEL PUSH

Walmart store Chicago

Walmart is making its first nuclear power play as the retail giant looks to support its growing footprint in Illinois. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

The agreement will help power Walmart’s planned high-tech perishable distribution center in Belvidere, Illinois – first announced in 2023 – while supporting upgrades at Dresden that will boost output from the existing nuclear facility without building a new plant.

The deal marks Walmart’s first nuclear power purchase agreement and is among the first of its kind between a large U.S. retailer and a nuclear energy facility, according to the companies.

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Walmart, which operates about 175 stores and clubs in Illinois and employs more than 55,000 associates in the state, said the agreement builds on its broader energy strategy.

WALMART WARNS SHOPPERS COULD FACE HIGHER PRICES AS FUEL COSTS SURGE, TAX REFUNDS DRY UP

walmart store aisles shoppers

The deal marks Walmart’s first nuclear power purchase agreement. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

“Working with Constellation allows us to support new operations in Illinois while advancing our strategy in a way that prioritizes affordable, reliable, and clean energy for our business and the communities we serve,” Shayne Wahlmeier, senior vice president of energy at Walmart US, said in a statement.

 “We’re constantly evaluating new capabilities and energy solutions that help ensure the electricity we rely on is dependable, responsibly produced, and built to support long-term growth,” Wahlmeier added.

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Corporate demand for nuclear power has accelerated in recent years, driven largely by Big Tech’s need to power data centers and artificial intelligence (AI) operations.

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
WMT WALMART INC. 108.82 -4.44 -3.92%

WALMART TO REMODEL OVER 650 STORES, OPEN ABOUT 20 NEW LOCATIONS

Constellation Energy's LaSalle Clean Energy Center nuclear power plant

A sign hangs on a fence which surrounds Constellation Energy’s LaSalle Clean Energy Center nuclear power plant on May 23, 2025, near Marseilles, Illinois. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

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Meta announced earlier this year that it signed 20-year agreements to buy power from three Vistra-owned nuclear plants in Ohio and Pennsylvania, while also working with Oklo and TerraPower to help develop new nuclear projects.

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The deals could supply up to 6.6 gigawatts of nuclear power by 2035, the company’s chief global affairs officer, Joel Kaplan, told FOX Business at the time.

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Seven Teams Through, Japan and Germany Already Eliminated

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Christian Pulisic of Chelsea FC

The 2026 FIFA World Cup’s expanded knockout bracket is beginning to take clear shape, with seven nations already assured of a Round of 16 berth following the completion of the first week of win-or-go-home play, while several of the competition’s most storied programs have been sent home far earlier than expected.

The round of 32, a feature unique to this year’s enlarged 48-team format, has produced a string of notable eliminations and compelling results since kicking off June 28. Japan, Germany and the Netherlands have all been eliminated, three programs that entered the tournament as genuine contenders, making Wednesday’s schedule of three additional matches all the more consequential for the teams still trying to ensure their own survival.

The bracket opened June 28 with Canada defeating South Africa 1-0, setting up a Round of 16 matchup against Morocco in Houston on Saturday, July 4. South Africa’s elimination carried particular weight given the team had shocked co-hosts Mexico with a 1-0 victory in the group stage, a result that contributed to weeks of national recrimination in Mexico before El Tri recovered to advance and then beat Ecuador 2-0 in their own round of 32 fixture Tuesday.

Monday’s results were among the round’s most dramatic. Brazil edged Japan 2-1 in Houston in a match that saw Japan push Vinícius Júnior’s side far closer than the final scoreline suggested, before Brazil’s quality in transition ultimately proved decisive. Japan’s exit brought an end to one of the tournament’s most technically impressive groups stage campaigns. Separately on Monday, Morocco outlasted the Netherlands on penalty kicks, 3-2, after the sides finished 1-1 through 90 minutes, eliminating a Netherlands team that had been considered a dark-horse contender entering the tournament. Morocco will now face Canada on July 4 in Houston, a repeat of a 2022 World Cup encounter that the Moroccans won on penalties during their remarkable run to the semifinals in Qatar.

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Also Monday, Paraguay pulled off one of the round’s biggest upsets, eliminating Germany on penalties after a 1-1 draw, denying the four-time World Cup winners a place in the Round of 16 in what has already been described as one of the tournament’s most stunning results. Paraguay will now face France in Philadelphia on July 4, a daunting assignment given France’s 3-0 dismantling of Sweden on Tuesday in which Kylian Mbappé scored twice to draw level with Lionel Messi in the Golden Boot standings at six goals apiece.

Tuesday’s remaining results set up what should be a fascinating Round of 16 weekend. Norway defeated Ivory Coast 2-1, advancing Erling Haaland’s side to face Brazil on July 5 in East Rutherford, New Jersey, in what many analysts are already framing as a potential match of the tournament. Mexico’s 2-0 defeat of Ecuador, built on goals by Julián Quiñones and Raúl Jiménez, extended the co-hosts’ unbeaten record at the Estadio Azteca in World Cup competition to 10 matches and ended 40 years of knockout-stage futility for El Tri, who had not won a World Cup knockout game since beating Bulgaria at the same venue in 1986. Mexico will now face the winner of Wednesday’s England vs. Congo DR match at the Azteca on July 6.

Wednesday’s schedule includes three critical fixtures. England face Congo DR at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta with kickoff at noon ET, a match that will determine whether England, who were eliminated in the quarterfinals at the last World Cup, can advance to face Mexico in what would be one of the most anticipated Round of 16 matchups in the tournament. Belgium face Senegal at Lumen Field in Seattle at 4 p.m. ET, with the winner facing the survivor of the USA vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina match, which kicks off at 8 p.m. ET at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara. The United States’ fixture carries enormous domestic significance for the co-hosts, with co-host status translating into a guaranteed World Cup appearance but no guarantee of deep advancement in a field packed with quality opposition across the bracket.

The remaining Round of 32 fixtures spread across Thursday, Friday and into the following weekend. Thursday brings Spain vs. Austria at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, at 3 p.m. ET, followed by Portugal vs. Croatia at BMO Field in Toronto at 7 p.m. ET, a heavyweight European clash that could determine whether Cristiano Ronaldo, who scored twice against Uzbekistan in the group stage, continues his own pursuit of tournament milestones. Switzerland vs. Algeria closes Thursday’s schedule at 11 p.m. ET at BC Place in Vancouver.

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Friday’s schedule includes Australia vs. Egypt at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, at 2 p.m. ET, followed by Argentina vs. Cape Verde at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens at 6 p.m. ET, a match that will almost certainly feature Messi and represents what many expect to be a straightforward advancement for the 2022 champions into the Round of 16 and another opportunity to add to his record tournament goal tally. Colombia vs. Ghana closes the round of 32 at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City at 9:30 p.m. ET.

The full Round of 16 schedule runs July 4 through July 7, with Canada vs. Morocco and Paraguay vs. France both on July 4, followed by Brazil vs. Norway and Mexico vs. England or Congo DR on July 5, and Spain or Austria vs. Croatia or Portugal and Belgium or Senegal vs. USA or Bosnia on July 6, before Australia or Egypt vs. Argentina or Cape Verde and Switzerland or Algeria vs. Colombia or Ghana round out the last 16 on July 7. The quarterfinals follow on July 9, 10 and 11, with the semifinals scheduled for July 14 and 15, a third-place match July 18, and the World Cup final set for July 19 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

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Nasdaq Declines as Tech Sector Pullback Weighs on Broader Market Sentiment

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NEW YORK — The Nasdaq Composite Index fell more than 200 points Tuesday, closing at 26,012.68 as investors booked profits in technology shares and assessed mixed signals from corporate earnings and economic data.

The 0.77 percent decline reflected caution in growth-oriented stocks after a period of strong gains driven by artificial intelligence enthusiasm. Major technology names contributed to the downside, though broader market losses were contained as other sectors showed relative resilience.

Trading volume was steady as participants navigated the transition from second-quarter earnings season into the heart of summer. The session highlighted ongoing rotation between growth and value segments, with defensive areas finding some support.

Technology’s heavyweight influence on the Nasdaq amplified the index’s move. Chipmakers and software firms faced pressure amid concerns over valuations and near-term spending trends in data centers. However, several companies reported solid results, suggesting fundamentals remain intact for many leaders.

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The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average posted more modest changes, underscoring divergence across market segments. Blue-chip industrials and financials provided a buffer against technology weakness.

Economic indicators released around the session offered a nuanced picture. Inflation measures aligned with expectations, while consumer spending data pointed to resilient demand. Federal Reserve officials continued emphasizing a data-dependent approach to future policy decisions.

Bond yields moved modestly, influencing equity valuations particularly in rate-sensitive sectors. Treasury markets reflected balanced views on growth and inflation risks.

Corporate news flow remained active. Several large technology firms updated guidance, with some citing strong AI-related demand while others noted cautious enterprise spending. The mixed tone contributed to selective selling in the sector.

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Analysts noted the Nasdaq’s recent run had left some stocks extended. Profit-taking after strong performance is typical, though underlying demand for innovative technologies persists.

The index’s decline erased some recent gains but left it well above year-ago levels. Year-to-date performance remains positive, supported by earnings growth in key constituents.

Broader market context included geopolitical developments and fiscal policy discussions. Investors monitored potential impacts on corporate supply chains and consumer confidence.

Smaller companies in the Russell 2000 showed mixed results, with some benefiting from rotation away from mega-cap names. Market breadth was neutral to slightly negative on major exchanges.

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Looking ahead, participants await further earnings reports and economic releases. The upcoming employment situation report will be closely watched for labor market signals that could influence monetary policy expectations.

Technology’s dominance in the Nasdaq means sector-specific news often drives index moves. Artificial intelligence infrastructure spending continues as a major theme, with companies positioned in chips, software and cloud services remaining focal points.

Valuation concerns have surfaced periodically, with some metrics elevated compared to historical averages. However, earnings growth has justified premiums for many high-quality names.

Tuesday’s trading reflected typical midweek dynamics, with no single catalyst dominating. Instead, cumulative positioning and position squaring influenced flows.

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The session’s loss leaves the Nasdaq navigating technical levels that could attract buyers on further weakness. Support areas are watched closely by chart-focused participants.

Longer-term, demographic trends, productivity gains from technology and global digitization support secular growth in the sector. Short-term volatility is expected as economic cycles unfold.

Federal Reserve policy remains a key variable. Markets have priced in limited near-term rate changes, focusing instead on the trajectory over coming quarters.

Corporate capital expenditure on AI and digital transformation provides a tailwind for many Nasdaq constituents. Supply chain improvements and efficiency gains could support margins.

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Tuesday’s close at 26,012.68 caps a period of consolidation after earlier advances. The index has shown resilience in the face of periodic pullbacks.

Investors continue balancing optimism around innovation with macroeconomic caution. Diversified portfolios help manage sector-specific risks.

The technology sector’s evolution includes artificial intelligence, cloud computing and cybersecurity. Companies adapting successfully are rewarded with premium valuations.

Broader equity markets benefit from technology leadership when growth expectations are high. Periodic rotations provide opportunities for other sectors.

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As summer trading continues, liquidity may thin, increasing volatility potential. Major events could shift sentiment quickly.

The Nasdaq’s performance remains a barometer for investor risk appetite and growth expectations. Tuesday’s decline was orderly, with no signs of panic selling.

Market strategists emphasize focusing on fundamentals amid daily fluctuations. Strong balance sheets and competitive advantages position leaders for long-term success.

Tuesday’s session contributed to ongoing narrative around technology’s role in the economy. Innovation cycles drive productivity, though adoption timelines can vary.

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The index’s movement Tuesday underscores the importance of diversification. While technology leads in bull markets, other areas provide stability during rotations.

Participants will monitor upcoming data for confirmation of economic soft landing or other scenarios. Corporate guidance will further shape sector outlooks.

In summary, the Nasdaq’s 0.77 percent decline reflected measured profit-taking in technology amid a complex market backdrop. The session highlighted the index’s sensitivity to sector dynamics while broader markets remained relatively stable.

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