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Buckingham Palace Withdraws Offer for Prince Harry to Stay There During This Week’s Visit to London Amid Row

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Prince Harry

LONDON — Buckingham Palace confirmed Monday that Prince Harry will not be staying at the royal residence during his visit to London this week, contradicting an earlier statement from the Duke of Sussex’s team that said he had accepted an offer to do so, in the latest episode of confusion and mutual finger-pointing between the two camps.

According to a royal source, Harry had not formally responded to King Charles’ offer of accommodation at a royal residence by the required deadline, which fell at the end of last week. The source said an initial offer for a royal residence to accommodate the wider Sussex family was turned down on Saturday, before a separate request came in for Harry to stay by himself. By that point, the source said, it was too late to arrange the appropriate hospitality and staffing needed to host him, a requirement the palace says applies to any guest staying at one of its residences.

Harry’s spokesperson offered a different account of events. In a statement, the spokesperson said that following a decision by the Royal and VIP Executive Committee, known as RAVEC, not to provide taxpayer-funded security for his family, the duke spent last week arranging alternative security measures. Once those arrangements were finalized, the spokesperson said, Harry was able to formally accept the accommodation offer over the weekend. The spokesperson called it “disappointing” that the offer had since been withdrawn, noting that Buckingham Palace had cited a Tuesday court judgment as a reason for the reversal despite having been aware of the judgment’s timing since the previous Thursday. “It is therefore unclear why, having formally accepted the accommodation offer, it has now been withdrawn at the last moment,” the spokesperson said.

Palace sources have also pointed to sensitivities surrounding the timing of a High Court judgment expected this week in a long-running legal case Harry brought against the publisher of the Daily Mail, alongside other claimants including Elton John, Sadie Frost, Elizabeth Hurley and Baroness Doreen Lawrence. Sources close to the palace have suggested concerns about Harry staying at a royal residence on the same day that judgment is handed down, saying the King cannot appear to be compromised in relation to the ongoing litigation.

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The back-and-forth has drawn attention to what several outlets have described as a pattern of poor communication and mutual distrust between the Sussex team and Buckingham Palace, a dynamic that has persisted since Harry and his wife, Meghan, stepped back from royal duties in 2020. Multiple British media outlets reported earlier Monday, citing Harry’s spokesperson, that the duke had accepted the palace’s invitation, only for palace sources to push back within hours and say the acceptance had come too late to be honored.

The dispute has also become fodder for public commentary. Royal commentator Dan Wootton wrote on the social media platform X that King Charles was “absolutely right to say no to Prince Harry (and Meghan Markle especially) staying in Buckingham Palace,” adding that “the door must now be slammed shut.” Wootton, whose remarks reflect his own characterization of the situation rather than an official palace position, further wrote that Harry and Meghan had made unfounded allegations of racism in an effort to undermine the royal family and that, in his view, their public actions have repeatedly generated controversy. Wootton’s comments represent one vocal perspective among many being expressed publicly as the story has developed, and they have not been endorsed by Buckingham Palace or any official royal spokesperson.

Harry is traveling to the United Kingdom this week to mark the one-year countdown to the 2027 Invictus Games, the Paralympic-style sporting competition for injured and ill servicemen and veterans that he founded more than a decade ago, along with a series of other charity engagements planned across London and the Midlands. It had already been confirmed, separately from the accommodation dispute, that Harry would travel without Meghan and their two children, Archie and Lilibet, following the RAVEC decision not to provide the family with police protection funded by taxpayers during their visits to the UK. It remains possible that Meghan could join Harry later in the week in Birmingham for events tied to the Invictus Games countdown, according to reporting on his travel plans.

The accommodation dispute has added further uncertainty to the question of whether Harry will meet with his father during the visit, a meeting that had reportedly been under discussion before the disagreement over lodging emerged. It also remains unclear whether King Charles will have the opportunity to see his two grandchildren, now ages seven and five, whom he has reportedly not seen in person in roughly four years, should Meghan and the children ultimately join Harry later in the trip.

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Harry and Meghan were last together in the United Kingdom in 2022 for the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II. Since stepping back from their roles as senior working royals that same year, the couple has largely resided in the United States, making periodic visits to the UK for specific engagements, court proceedings and family events, several of which have similarly been marked by public disagreements over security arrangements and other logistical matters.

As of Monday, neither Buckingham Palace nor representatives for Harry had indicated whether the dispute over accommodation would affect the broader schedule of his visit this week, including his planned charity engagements and any potential meeting with the King. Both sides have continued to offer contrasting accounts of how the accommodation offer was extended, accepted and ultimately withdrawn, with no clear indication that either party intends to publicly revise its version of events in the immediate aftermath of Monday’s statements.

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Minority Report: China develops AI to identify potential political opponents

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How AI is Driving Profitable Growth in Southeast Asia

Leaked documents reveal that Chinese surveillance firm Geedge Networks, in collaboration with government-backed researchers, has been developing AI technology designed to predict political dissent by analyzing vast amounts of citizen data. The system aims to assign “risk scores” to individuals based on their digital footprint, including communication records, internet usage, location data, and social associations.

Key Points

  • The surveillance system integrates diverse data points—such as VPN usage, foreign news consumption, travel history, and activist associations—to calculate the probability of a citizen engaging in anti-government activities.
  • Geedge Networks, led by “father of China’s internet censorship” Fang Binxing, uses deep packet inspection and mobile monitoring to consolidate real-time user data for predictive profiling.
  • Researchers and security organs intended to use the AI to manage “data overload,” allowing authorities to identify and suppress dissent without the need for manual, mass-scale monitoring.
  • Legal experts and international observers warn that this technology could lead to the blacklisting of innocent citizens based on algorithmic errors, mirroring concerns about predictive policing.
  • Development of the most ambitious versions of this technology has been significantly slowed by U.S. sanctions, which restrict China’s access to the advanced GPUs required to process population-wide behavior data.

Geedge Networks integrates a wide range of personal data to calculate the “political risk score” of Chinese citizens by aggregating and merging information from various digital and physical spaces.

The specific categories of personal data being integrated include:

  • Communication Data:
    • Real-name mobile phone numbers.
    • Messenger account links.
    • Call records.
    • Wiretap audio from phone calls.
  • Digital Footprints and Online Activity:
    • Internet browsing history (specifically monitoring viewing habits, such as visiting foreign news sites).
    • Social media activity.
    • VPN usage history (to track attempts to circumvent censorship).
    • Unique device identifiers and IP addresses.
  • Physical Movement and Interaction Tracking:
    • GPS signals.
    • Base station records.
    • Surveillance video data.
    • Time-series trajectories used to map when an individual passes by a protest site and identifying which activists they have had contact with.
  • Miscellaneous Personal Consumption/Behavioral Data:
    • Records of books purchased.
    • Records of movie theater attendance.

The system functions by linking these disparate data points to create a comprehensive user profile, which is then analyzed to determine the probability that an individual will engage in political dissent or anti-government protests.

While this initiative raises significant concerns regarding human rights and the potential for preemptive blacklisting, experts suggest that U.S.-led semiconductor export controls have currently hindered China’s ability to acquire the high-performance computing power necessary to fully deploy such a massive, real-time predictive model.

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Global cuisine, national favorites driving summer flavors

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Global cuisine, national favorites driving summer flavors

T. Hasegawa USA highlights 10 flavors of summer in its 2026 Summer Flavors report.

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Vicor Corp chairman & CEO Patrizio Vinciarelli sells $7.1m in stock

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Vicor Corp chairman & CEO Patrizio Vinciarelli sells $7.1m in stock

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Henderson Hospitalized With Serious Injury After Falling During Celebration

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Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson was among the players to post about #PlayersTogether

MEXICO CITY — England midfielder Jordan Henderson was taken to a hospital with what manager Thomas Tuchel described as a serious wrist injury after slipping over an advertising hoarding during the team’s postgame celebrations following England’s 3-2 Round of 16 win over co-host Mexico on Sunday night.

The incident occurred after England’s players headed toward their traveling supporters behind one of the goals at Estadio Azteca for the team’s now-traditional postgame rendition of Oasis’ “Wonderwall.” According to multiple reports, Henderson attempted to jump over an advertising board during the celebration and slipped while climbing back toward the pitch, landing awkwardly on his elbow and wrist. Medical staff attended to him on the field, with reports indicating he was given oxygen before being transported to a local medical facility. The 36-year-old was later stretchered off and taken to hospital for further treatment.

Speaking to media after the match, Tuchel confirmed the severity of the injury. “He injured his wrist, he is at the moment in the hospital,” Tuchel said. “It is a quite serious injury. It just doesn’t fit to the evening that Jordan is now not with us. I don’t know the procedure which is going on. I just did the press and the doctor told me he’s in the hospital.” Speaking separately to ITV, Tuchel added, “Not good, not good. Jordan fell over and injured his wrist.”

Tuchel also reflected on the mixed emotions of the night, saying, “It’s a very special night for us. Mixed feelings because I am exhausted and emotional but also sad because Jordan got injured, he injured his wrist and is at the hospital at the moment.” He noted that he had not received a detailed update on the medical procedure Henderson was undergoing at the time of his postgame media availability.

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Henderson remained in Mexico City on Sunday night accompanied by a member of England’s medical staff, while the rest of the squad flew back to the team’s training base in Kansas City, Missouri, ahead of the team’s upcoming quarterfinal match. According to reporting from Goal, medical assessments were expected to continue over the following 24 hours to determine the full extent of the damage to Henderson’s arm and wrist.

The injury came at the end of what was otherwise a historic night for England, which secured a 3-2 win over Mexico to reach the World Cup quarterfinals, marking the best win by an England men’s team on foreign soil in the program’s history, according to ESPN. The match itself was eventful, with Jarell Quansah shown a red card following a VAR review, forcing England to play most of the second half a man down. Jude Bellingham scored twice in a dominant first-half showing, while Harry Kane converted a second-half penalty to help see the Three Lions through to the next round.

Henderson’s involvement in this year’s tournament had already been limited heading into Sunday’s match. The Brentford midfielder made history earlier in the tournament by becoming the first England men’s player to appear at four separate World Cups when he came on as a substitute against Panama during the team’s final group-stage match, a brief six-minute cameo that marked his only playing time of the tournament to that point. Despite his reduced on-field role under Tuchel, Henderson has continued to serve as a senior figure within the squad, with his leadership and experience regarded as valuable components of the team’s dynamic even in a limited playing capacity.

Following the match, England captain Harry Kane offered a brief update on his teammate’s condition, telling reporters that he believed Henderson was going to be okay, though he described the injury as an arm injury without providing further specifics at the time. Kane’s comments came shortly after his own second-half penalty helped secure England’s win, extending his tournament tally as he continues to push for the World Cup’s Golden Boot award.

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Teammate Jude Bellingham, who scored twice in the win, addressed the broader mood of the squad following the match, saying, “We’ve done something incredible tonight, no doubt about it, and we’ll enjoy it. And we’ll sing songs until we lose our voices on the plane and whatnot, but we’ll have a couple of days recovering, then it’s straight back to business in terms of facing Norway.”

England is scheduled to face Norway in the World Cup quarterfinals on Saturday in Miami Gardens, Florida, a matchup set up after Norway eliminated five-time champion Brazil in a stunning 2-1 upset earlier the same day, led by a brace from striker Erling Haaland. Henderson’s injury adds an element of uncertainty to England’s preparations for that match, with the team’s medical staff continuing to evaluate his condition in the days leading up to the quarterfinal.

As of the latest available reporting, England had not issued a formal statement on Henderson’s specific diagnosis, prognosis, or expected recovery timeline beyond Tuchel’s initial comments describing the injury as serious. The team’s coaching staff and medical personnel were expected to provide further updates on his status as the squad continues preparations in Kansas City ahead of traveling to Florida for Saturday’s quarterfinal.

The injury has cast a shadow over what was otherwise one of the most celebrated victories of England’s tournament so far, with players and staff processing what Tuchel described as a mix of exhaustion, emotion and concern in the immediate aftermath of the win. Henderson’s status for the remainder of the tournament remains unclear, and it is not yet known whether the injury will require surgery or an extended recovery period that could rule him out for the rest of England’s World Cup campaign.

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North and South deals for PE-backed fire and security business Ranger as it buys CIA and AKD

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Gloucestershire and Cumbria firms among Ranger’s 25 brands

Ranger Fire and Security has acquired CIA Fire and Security in Cirencester

Ranger Fire and Security has acquired Gloucestershire group CIA Fire and Security(Image: Ranger Fire and Security)

A private equity-backed fire and security business has made two more acquisitions and now has more than 25 firms under its umbrella.

Ranger Fire and Security has been buying “local hero” businesses across the UK to become a nationwide fire and security group.

It has now acquired Cirencester’s CIA Fire and Security and its three businesses to strengthen its Southern operations. Meanwhile, the group has boosted its Northern business with the takeover of AKD Fire and Security in Cumbria.

Ranger and its acquisition strategy are backed by mid-market firm Inflexion and by Hyperion Equity Partners, which has made a “significant reinvestment” in the group. The latest deals mean the Ranger group includes 25 businesses and has more than 500 employees as it aims to become “the leading one-stop provider for fire and security services across the UK and Ireland”.

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CIA Fire and Security includes three businesses – CIA, PFS, and Pioneer Automated Controls – all of which will join Ranger along with their 80 staff.

CIA was founded in 1982 to offer services including fire alarms, intruder alarms, CCTV, extinguishers and keyholding. It went on to acquire fire and security maintenance led business PFS, and Gloucester-based fire and security maintenance firm Pioneer Automated Controls.

Matthew Harrison, managing director of CIA Fire and Security said: “Becoming part of the Ranger Group marks a significant moment for our team, enabling us to extend our services to new customers across the local region and beyond.

“Working alongside Ranger’s group of industry experts will give us a greater opportunity to cross-sell and we look forward to bringing our own experience and skill set to the Group, including strengthening the business’s service delivery and expanding their fire and security offering.”

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Cumbria fire and security specialist AKD has a customer base spanning commercial, hospitality, public sector and residential property. Ranger says the group strengthens its North West operations, “bridging the gap between its North West hub, Syncro, and its Scottish hub, Secureshield, in Motherwell”.

Mark Bridges, CEO of Ranger Fire and Security, said: “Our two latest acquisitions, CIA Fire and Security and AKD Fire and Security, bring decades of industry experience to the Ranger Group and will help extend our presence across the North West and South of England. With existing Ranger businesses already well-established in both regions, our two new companies will be able to bring their experience and knowledge to the team, helping Ranger meet more of the fire and security needs of local businesses.

“With backing from Inflexion we will continue to step up our acquisition strategy, bringing on board the UK and Ireland’s best fire and security experts to fulfil our mission of becoming the one-stop shop for all customer’s fire and security needs.”

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Greece stocks higher at close of trade; Athens General Composite up 0.91%

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Greece stocks higher at close of trade; Athens General Composite up 0.91%

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Delek US Energy stock hits 52-week high at 54.2 USD

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Delek US Energy stock hits 52-week high at 54.2 USD

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Analysis: Exposure therapy puts WA on notice

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Analysis: Exposure therapy puts WA on notice

ANALYSIS: Few places in the world have benefited more from their natural resource endowment. But prosperity also creates exposure.

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SpaceX Nears Historic Nasdaq-100 Debut Tuesday as Investors Weigh Post-IPO Valuation Questions

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Elon Musk has stepped back from his job of cutting government spending by firing civil servants and gutting or closing departments

Shares of Space Exploration Technologies Corp. continued to trade higher Monday morning as investors positioned ahead of the company’s addition to the Nasdaq-100 index, a milestone scheduled to take effect before markets open Tuesday and one that will mark the fastest index inclusion in the benchmark’s history.

SPCX shares stood at $163.79, up $1.79, or 1.10 percent, as of 10:19 a.m. Eastern time, according to Google Finance data. The move comes just 15 trading days after SpaceX’s initial public offering, which priced shares at $135 on June 12 and raised between roughly $75 billion and $85.7 billion, depending on the reporting source, making it the largest IPO in market history and valuing the company at approximately $1.77 trillion at the time of its debut.

SpaceX’s rapid path to inclusion in the Nasdaq-100 was made possible by a relatively new exchange rule that fast-tracks large initial public offerings into the index after just 15 trading days, a significant reduction from the longer waiting period previously required of newly listed companies. Nasdaq confirmed the inclusion on June 27, setting the stage for the company’s shares to become part of a benchmark that underpins more than $800 billion in tracked assets, including the widely held Invesco QQQ Trust and numerous retirement and 401(k) funds.

The stock’s performance since its debut has been volatile. Shares initially surged to an intraday high of $225.64 in the days following the IPO before retreating sharply, falling as much as 28 percent from that peak. Last week alone, SPCX shares dropped 16.4 percent after analysts at KeyBanc adopted a more cautious stance, arguing that the stock’s valuation had become increasingly stretched following its post-IPO rally. Shares closed Friday at $153.23, just above the IPO price, before climbing again in Monday’s trading session.

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Analysts have offered a range of estimates for how much buying activity the Nasdaq-100 inclusion could generate as passive funds adjust their portfolios to reflect the index’s updated composition. Some projections suggest the Invesco QQQ Trust alone could purchase as much as $4.3 billion worth of SpaceX shares, while broader estimates across Nasdaq-100 and Russell index-tracking funds have ranged from approximately $7.3 billion to as much as $27 billion. That wave of anticipated demand is notable given how limited SpaceX’s public float remains: the company has roughly 13 billion shares outstanding, but only an estimated 3 to 5 percent are currently available for public trading, with Musk’s approximately 42 percent ownership stake locked up until June 2027.

That tight supply-demand dynamic is expected to persist for some time. According to reporting from TradingKey, SpaceX insiders are not expected to become eligible to sell meaningful portions of their holdings until around August 6, when the company is scheduled to report its first quarterly earnings as a public company. At that point, insiders could sell up to 20 percent of their holdings, with an additional 10 percent becoming saleable if shares trade at least 30 percent above the $135 IPO price for five of any 10 consecutive trading days. The remainder of locked shares are set to become available on a staggered basis through December 2026.

Some market analysts have cautioned against assuming the Nasdaq-100 inclusion will necessarily provide a sustained boost to the stock. Historical examples cited by market observers include Palantir and Strategy, both of which joined the index in December 2024 and saw their share prices peak around or shortly before their respective inclusion dates, with Strategy shares later falling roughly 80 percent from their peak in the months that followed. Given SpaceX’s own sharp post-IPO volatility, some analysts have suggested the stock could face similar pressure once the immediate index-driven buying subsides.

Beyond the technical dynamics surrounding the index addition, attention has also turned to SpaceX’s broader corporate strategy. Following the completion of the IPO, analysts at Baird said they believed investor focus could increasingly shift toward the possibility of a merger between SpaceX and Tesla, the electric vehicle maker also led by Musk. “We see the strategic rationale for a merger as clear and compelling with both companies benefitting from greater scale,” the firm wrote in a note, adding that it did not anticipate significant regulatory scrutiny given the limited overlap between the companies’ respective end markets. Baird noted that the timing of any such transaction remained difficult to predict, suggesting a period of integration was more likely in the near term as SpaceX works to absorb its recent merger with Musk’s artificial intelligence company, xAI, while also adjusting to its new status as a publicly traded company.

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That merger with xAI, completed earlier this year, has reshaped SpaceX’s underlying business structure into three primary segments. The Connectivity division, anchored by the Starlink satellite internet business, generated roughly 61 percent of the company’s total revenue in 2025. The Space segment includes the company’s Falcon 9 and Starship launch operations, while the newly integrated AI division encompasses the Grok large language model, the X social media platform, and broader AI computing infrastructure. Starlink’s subscriber base has continued to expand rapidly, surpassing 10 million subscribers globally, more than double the 5.5 million subscribers the service had at the time of SpaceX’s June IPO.

Financially, SpaceX reported $4.7 billion in revenue during the first quarter of 2026 and disclosed cash and cash equivalents of approximately $100.8 billion as of June 19, following a senior unsecured notes offering used in part to repay bridge financing tied to earlier stages of the company’s growth. Even so, some valuation metrics have raised concerns among analysts, with the stock’s price-to-sales ratio estimated at various points between roughly 79 and 112 times trailing sales, a level that remains elevated even compared with other high-growth technology companies.

With Tuesday’s Nasdaq-100 inclusion set to bring SpaceX into the portfolios of millions of index-fund investors who never directly chose to own the stock, market attention in the coming weeks is expected to focus on how the company’s limited public float absorbs the anticipated wave of passive buying, as well as on SpaceX’s first earnings report as a public company, expected in early August, which analysts have identified as the next significant test of the stock’s long-term valuation and growth trajectory following one of the most closely watched public debuts in recent market history.

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New tech take on real estate

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New tech take on real estate

A technology-backed disruptor is making headway in real estate with a different agency model and fee structure.

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