Texans across the state marked Texas Independence Day on March 2, 2026, commemorating 190 years since delegates boldly declared the region free from Mexican rule in 1836. The annual observance, a legal state holiday, blends solemn historical reflection with lively festivities, parades and reenactments that highlight Texas’ unique path to sovereignty.
The Texas Declaration of Independence
As state offices closed and flags flew high, communities from Austin to San Antonio hosted events honoring the Texas Declaration of Independence. The centerpiece remained Washington-on-the-Brazos State Historic Site, where the declaration was signed, drawing crowds to a revamped venue after major renovations.
Here are 10 key things to know about Texas Independence Day and its enduring significance:
1. The date marks the adoption of the Texas Declaration of Independence on March 2, 1836. Fifty-nine delegates, representing Texian and Tejano settlers, convened at Washington-on-the-Brazos amid the Texas Revolution. They unanimously approved the document, severing ties with Mexico and establishing the Republic of Texas. The declaration cited grievances against Mexican centralist policies, including lack of representation and violations of rights.
2. Washington-on-the-Brazos is forever known as the “birthplace of Texas.” The small settlement hosted the Convention of 1836, where delegates worked swiftly — completing the declaration in a single day. The site now features Independence Hall replica, the Star of the Republic Museum and Barrington Living History Farm, preserving the story of Texas’ brief era as an independent nation.
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3. 2026 marks the 190th anniversary of the declaration. Celebrations emphasized this milestone, with the Texas Historical Commission hosting a major event Feb. 28 at Washington-on-the-Brazos following $54 million in renovations completed in late 2025. The free public gathering included an opening ceremony, parade starting at 10:30 a.m., live performances, musket and cannon demonstrations, vendor booths and food trucks. A special exhibit displayed the “Ark of the Covenant” box crafted from original Independence Hall wood to house the declaration.
4. Texas Independence Day is a state holiday, but not federal. State government offices, libraries and many agencies close, though banks, post offices and federal facilities remain open. Public schools typically hold regular classes, often incorporating educational programs about the Texas Revolution. The day also coincides with Texas Flag Day and Sam Houston Day observances.
5. The Republic of Texas existed for nearly a decade before joining the United States. After independence, battles like the Alamo (February 1836) and San Jacinto (April 1836) secured the victory. Sam Houston’s forces captured Mexican General Antonio López de Santa Anna at San Jacinto, forcing recognition of Texas sovereignty. Texas became the 28th U.S. state on Dec. 29, 1845.
6. Only one original copy of the Texas Declaration survives. Of the five handwritten versions produced in 1836, four were lost or destroyed over time. The lone surviving original is preserved at the Texas State Library and Archives Commission in Austin. Modern replicas and digital versions allow widespread access to the text, which echoes the American Declaration in structure and ideals.
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7. Celebrations extend statewide with parades, reenactments and cultural events. In Austin, the annual Texas Independence Day Parade features floats, historical attire and community groups. San Antonio hosts observances at the Alamo, including commemorations from March 1-2 with free admission and programs. Gruene Hall near New Braunfels offers live music and activities, while university campuses like the University of Texas at Austin uphold traditions dating back over a century, including gatherings inspired by early 20th-century student observances.
8. The holiday underscores Texas’ distinct identity. Texans often proudly note their state’s unique history as a former independent republic — a status shared by few others in U.S. history. Popular lore includes myths like Texas’ right to secede or divide into five states, though legal experts clarify these claims lack foundation under current U.S. law. The day reinforces pride in symbols like the Lone Star flag, which flew over the Republic and remains the state banner.
9. Modern observances tie into broader American commemorations. In 2026, Texas America250 initiatives highlight the state’s role in U.S. history ahead of the nation’s semiquincentennial on July 4. Events at Washington-on-the-Brazos featured new exhibits on 1836 convention scenes, emphasizing American influences on Texian settlers who drew inspiration from the 1776 Declaration.
10. The spirit of independence lives on through education and community. Reenactments, storytelling sessions, homeschool days and lantern tours (like the sold-out Feb. 27 event at Washington-on-the-Brazos) engage new generations. Other sites, such as Boonville Heritage Park, offer hands-on 19th-century activities. Amid ongoing renovations and investments, historic sites aim to preserve this chapter as Texas continues evolving while honoring its revolutionary roots.
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Texas Independence Day remains a point of pride for millions, blending history with celebration. As one observer at Washington-on-the-Brazos noted, the holiday reminds residents that Texas began with a bold assertion of freedom — a legacy that endures 190 years later.
Tuya Inc. (TUYA) Q4 2025 Earnings Call March 2, 2026 7:30 PM EST
Company Participants
Xuechen Wang Xueji Wang – Founder, Co-Chairman & CEO Yi Yang – Co-founder, COO, CFO & Executive Director
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Conference Call Participants
Yang Liu – Morgan Stanley, Research Division Timothy Zhao – Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., Research Division Mingran Li – China International Capital Corporation Limited, Research Division Matt Ma – Jefferies LLC, Research Division
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Presentation
Operator
Good morning, and good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by, and welcome to Tuya Inc.’s Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2025 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be informed that today’s conference is being recorded.
I’ll now turn the call over to your first speaker today, Ms. Regina Wang, Investor Relations Associate Director of Tuya. Please go ahead.
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Xuechen Wang
Thank you, operator. Hello, everyone. Welcome to our fourth quarter and fiscal year 2025 earnings call. Joining us today are our Founder and CEO, Mr. Jerry Wang; and our Co-Founder and CFO, Mr. Alex Yang. The fourth quarter and fiscal year 2025 financial results and webcast of the conference call are available at ir.tuya.com. A replay of this call will also be available on our IR website in a few hours.
Before we continue, I refer you to our safe harbor statement in our earnings press release, which applies to this call as we will make forward-looking statements.
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With that, I will now turn the call over to our Founder and CEO, Mr. Jerry Wang. Jerry will deliver his remarks in Chinese, which will be followed by a corresponding English translation. Jerry, please?
Xueji Wang Founder, Co-Chairman & CEO
[Interpreted]
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Hello, everyone. Thank you for joining Tuya’s earnings call for the fourth quarter 2025. In 2025, against the complex and evolving external environment, we maintain stability across our platform business, delivered steady full year
Sign at the main entrance to a Best Buy store in Venice, Florida.
Erik McGregor | Lightrocket | Getty Images
Best Buy posted mixed results on Tuesday as the retailer’s holiday-quarter sales declined and missed Wall Street’s expectations, but its earnings topped estimates as it showed improved profitability.
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For the current fiscal year, the consumer electronics retailer expects revenue to range between $41.2 billion and $42.1 billion, compared with $41.69 billion in the most recent fiscal year. It expects adjusted earnings per share to range from $6.30 to $6.60, after it reported adjusted earnings per share of $6.43 for the previous fiscal year.
Best Buy anticipates that comparable sales, a metric that tracks sales online and in stores open at least 14 months, will range from a decline of 1% to an increase of 1%.
In a news release, CEO Corie Barry said demand for consumer electronics remained lackluster during the gift-giving season, but the company’s internal data indicates that Best Buy’s market share in the industry “was at least flat.”
Chief Financial Officer Matt Bilunas said in his own statement that the company is “excited about the momentum in our business.” But he added that company leaders “expect to continue to navigate a mixed macro environment.”
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Shares jumped more than 10% in premarket trading.
Here’s how the retailer did for the fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was expecting, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:
Earnings per share: $2.61 adjusted vs. $2.47 expected
Revenue: $13.81 billion vs. $13.88 billion expected
In the three-month period that ended Jan. 31, Best Buy’s net income jumped to $541 million, or $2.56 per share, from $117 million, or 54 cents per share, in the year-ago quarter. Excluding one-time expenses, including charges for its health business, Best Buy reported adjusted earnings per share of $2.61.
Revenue decreased from $13.95 billion in the year-ago quarter. Yet on an annual basis, revenue rose to $41.69 billion from $41.53 billion in the prior fiscal year. Best Buy’s annual revenue declined in the three previous fiscal years.
For about four years, Best Buy has pinned its slower sales on more price-sensitive U.S. consumers, a slower housing market and less tech innovation. All of those factors have caused some shoppers to delay tech purchases, particularly big-ticket items like new refrigerators. Higher tariffs have also added costs for Best Buy, since many consumer electronics are imported.
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Comparable sales dropped 0.8% in the fourth quarter as the company saw softer sales of appliances and home theaters. Those declines were partially offset by sales growth in computing and mobile phones, the company said.
Best Buy has leaned into more profitable businesses, including selling ads and offering more merchandise through its third-party marketplace, which launched in August. Barry said in the company’s news release that Best Buy’s advertising partners nearly doubled compared to the prior year and she said the retailer has significantly increased the number of available products on the marketplace.
The company has a scheduled earnings call at 9 a.m. ET.
Japanese shares fell at the sharpest pace in months on Tuesday, as investors remained on edge for a second straight day following the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran.
The Topix slumped 3.2% to 3,772.17, the fastest decline since April, while the Nikkei declined 3.1% to close at 56,279.05, the biggest drop since November last year, after falling as much as 3.4%.
“Ongoing gains in crude oil futures on worsening Middle East tensions, together with a stronger U.S. dollar and weaker yen, are fuelling views that inflation could accelerate,” said Maki Sawada, a strategist at Nomura Securities.
“This uncertainty, seen as potentially impacting future monetary policy, is weighing on the equity market overall.”
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The U.S.-Israeli air war against Iran escalated with no end in sight, as Israel struck Lebanon in response to Hezbollah attacks and Tehran continued launching missiles and drones at Gulf states hosting U.S. military bases.
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All 33 industry subindexes on the Tokyo bourse were down, led by a 5.5% fall in the oil and coal sector followed by a 5.4% decline in the transport equipment industry. Toyota Motor, the world’s largest automaker by sales, dropped 6.1%, the sharpest drop since September 2024, while Japan’s largest airline, ANA Holdings, fell 3.3%. ENEOS Holdings, Japan’s biggest refiner, lost 6.3%, the sharpest drop since April.
The largest percentage decliner, though, had nothing to do with the Middle East tensions.
Sumitomo Pharma tanked 19.1%, the biggest fall in nearly 12 years, as investor concerns over a new share issuance outweighed an upward revision to its full-year net profit forecast for the current fiscal year.
There were 219 decliners on the Nikkei index against six advancers.
Shop price inflation slowed more than expected in February, offering households tentative relief from cost-of-living pressures as retailers stepped up discounting and global food prices eased.
New data from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and NielsenIQ showed shop prices rose 1.1 per cent year-on-year in February, down from 1.5 per cent in January. The deceleration reflects intensified competition across both food and non-food sectors, with retailers cutting prices to stimulate demand amid weak consumer confidence.
The figures come ahead of the spring statement, when the Office for Budget Responsibility is due to update its outlook on growth and public finances. They add to recent signs that inflationary pressures are moderating, after official data showed UK consumer price inflation fell sharply to 3 per cent in January, moving closer to the Bank of England’s 2 per cent target.
Food prices remain elevated but are increasing at a slower pace. Annual food inflation eased to 3.5 per cent in February from 3.9 per cent the previous month. Fresh food inflation edged lower, while ambient food inflation, covering products such as coffee, pasta, canned goods and other cupboard staples, fell to 2.3 per cent, its lowest level in four years.
The BRC said lower global commodity costs were filtering through supply chains, helping to stabilise grocery prices. However, it emphasised that competitive dynamics were playing a crucial role, particularly in discretionary categories such as fashion, health and beauty.
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Prices for non-food items, including clothing, electronics and household goods, declined by 0.1 per cent year-on-year, compared with 0.3 per cent growth in January. Heavy promotional activity in fashion and personal care, coupled with softer demand due to unseasonal weather and fragile sentiment, contributed to the decline.
Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the BRC, described the slowdown as a “welcome relief” but warned that pressures had not disappeared. She noted that while the pace of price rises is moderating, many households continue to feel strain from higher cumulative costs over the past three years.
Mike Watkins, head of retailer and business insight at NielsenIQ, said pricing behaviour had shifted notably since the start of the year. “Competitive pricing across both food and non-food is helping to bring down inflation,” he said, though he cautioned that demand remains unpredictable as shoppers continue to prioritise essentials and trade down to value options.
The easing in shop price inflation follows a mixed economic backdrop. The government recently reported a record £30.4 billion budget surplus in January, driven by strong tax receipts and lower debt interest payments. Retail sales also surprised on the upside. However, unemployment has climbed to a five-year high and economic growth remains sluggish, tempering optimism.
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Retailers have also flagged potential future cost pressures. The upcoming implementation of the Employment Rights Act and higher employment costs could increase operating expenses later this year. Industry leaders warn that if secondary legislation raises labour or compliance costs significantly, businesses may be forced to pass some of those increases on to consumers.
For now, the slowdown in shop price inflation suggests that competitive retail markets and easing global input costs are helping to cushion households. Whether that trend continues will depend on energy prices, wage dynamics and the broader economic outlook in the months ahead.
Jamie Young
Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting.
Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops.
When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders.
Realty firm Gaurs Group will invest Rs 100 crore to set up a precast manufacturing plant in Greater Noida as part of its strategy to strengthen construction capabilities through backward integration.
In a statement on Monday, the company said it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Elematic India, an arm of Finland-based Elematic Group, for sourcing of precast concrete technology.
The MoU was signed on February 19, 2026, in the presence of Petteri Orpo, Prime Minister of Finland and also the Ambassador of Finland Kimmo Lahdevirt.
The agreement was formalised between Veshesh Gaur, Director of Gaurs Group, and Chander Dutta, MD of Elematic India and Teppo Voutilainen, CEO of Elematic Oyj, Finland.
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Under the agreement, Gaurs Group will invest Rs 100 crore to set up a precast manufacturing plant in Greater Noida.
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The facility, spread over 5 acre land, will manufacture advanced precast concrete components that would include slabs, columns, beams and walls. The plant is expected to be operational within six months. Gaurs Group has also placed an advance order to Jindal Elematic, Alwar to supply 45,000 units of modular bathrooms and 10,000 units of kitchen pods for its under-development projects.
The order book is worth Rs 150 crore.
The company intends to integrate technology-led construction practices to improve execution efficiency and reduce project timelines by almost 30 per cent.
Precast construction enables key structural and utility components to be manufactured and assembled off-site in a controlled environment and installed on-site.
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Veshesh Gaur said, “Construction technology is becoming increasingly important as the scale and complexity of residential developments continue to grow. Our partnership with Elematic will enable us to integrate advanced precast manufacturing into our construction processes, improving efficiency, quality control and project timelines.”
Gaurs Group is one of the leading real estate developers in Delhi-NCR. It has developed many townships, Group housing and commercial projects.
A monitor has been appointed to the Town of Port Hedland one month before an election is held to reinstate a council at the trouble-plagued jurisdiction.
US technology group Avalara has acquired Manchester-based integration startup Versori in a deal that underscores the growing international appeal of the UK’s regional tech sector.
The value of the transaction has not been disclosed, but it includes Versori’s proprietary technology platform and its 23-strong team. Co-founders Sean Brown and Daniel Jones will remain with the business, which will operate under the name “Versori, by Avalara”.
Founded in 2022, Versori specialises in next-generation integration technology, enabling companies to connect complex systems such as ERPs, ecommerce platforms, marketplaces and financial applications with greater speed and automation. The company raised $10.5 million in prior funding and graduated from the prestigious Y Combinator accelerator programme in March 2023.
Sean Brown said the acquisition aligns closely with Versori’s founding vision.
“We want Versori to connect the world’s systems. That was the mission statement from day one,” he said. “As we were going through a period of growth we were facing doing another investment round, but Avalara were already a customer and the strategic fit was very strong.”
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Avalara describes itself as an “agentic” tax and compliance leader, providing automated tax calculation, reporting and compliance solutions to more than 200,000 customers across 75 countries. Its long-term ambition is to embed real-time, always-on compliance into global commerce systems.
Scott McFarlane, chief executive and co-founder of Avalara, said the acquisition would significantly accelerate that ambition.
“Compliance at global scale depends on seamless, reliable integration,” he said. “Versori’s technology and team significantly accelerate our ability to connect into the world’s commerce systems quickly, at scale, using intelligent, AI-driven automation that meets the reliability and accuracy standards global compliance demands.”
The move strengthens Avalara’s unified platform strategy, particularly as regulatory complexity increases worldwide and multinational businesses seek automated, audit-ready compliance solutions embedded directly into transactional workflows.
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Versori’s platform uses automation-first architecture to reduce the time and engineering resources required to build and maintain integrations. By leveraging artificial intelligence, the system can simplify deployment and ongoing maintenance, making it attractive to enterprises operating across multiple jurisdictions and platforms.
Since its launch, Versori has worked with high-profile organisations including Frasers Group, Macy’s and the UK Ministry of Defence. Its growth trajectory has made it one of Manchester’s fastest-rising enterprise software startups.
Brown said the acquisition demonstrates that Manchester can produce globally competitive technology businesses.
“It’s proof that Manchester can grow companies like Versori,” he said. “Hopefully it will bring more investment into Manchester and more talent. I’ve never done it for the rewards. I love building things and I’m looking forward to keeping building things with Versori. I’ve got a lot of unfinished business.”
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The deal also reflects continued US interest in UK AI and enterprise software firms, particularly those outside London. Manchester’s tech ecosystem has grown rapidly in recent years, supported by university spinouts, venture capital inflows and accelerator programmes.
For Avalara, the acquisition adds advanced AI-enabled integration capabilities at a time when global tax and compliance requirements are becoming increasingly digitised and complex. The company has spent more than two decades building one of the most extensive libraries of tax content and system integrations in the industry. Integrating Versori’s automation technology is expected to enhance speed, scalability and reliability across that network.
Both companies indicated that integration work is already under way, with Versori’s technology forming a key part of Avalara’s push towards AI-native compliance systems that operate continuously and autonomously within global commerce infrastructure.
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.