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150 new homes approved near Somerset gigafactory despite opposition

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The development in Woolavington has been given the green light from Somerset Council

New homes being built

New homes being built(Image: Rui Vieira/PA Wire)

Up to 150 new homes will be built within close proximity to Somerset’s new £4bn ‘gigafactory’ following the approval of outline plans by local councillors. Work is progressing rapidly on battery maker Agratas’ new facility at the Gravity enterprise zone between Puriton and Woolavington, which will create up to 4,000 new jobs once fully operational.

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Bloor Homes South West conducted a consultation in May regarding its proposals to deliver 150 new homes on Cossington Lane at the eastern edge of Woolavington, less than two miles from the gigafactory site. Somerset Council’s planning committee north has now granted approval for these proposals, despite local concerns about traffic levels and pressure on local services.

The new homes will be accessed from Cossington Lane, with new pavements established along the southern edge towards the Polden Hills Veterinary Centre and the Lock’s Way active travel route to Bawdrip, which forms part of National Cycle Network (NCN route 3).

A separate access for pedestrians and cyclists will be established onto the B3141 Woolavington Hill, north of the existing homes on Southfield Close, enabling residents to access local amenities such as The Co-operative Food store and the local pharmacy.

Substantial public open space will be created at the site’s eastern boundary, incorporating new play facilities, to establish a buffer with the countryside and keep Woolavington distinct from the adjacent village of Cossington.

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Of the 150 properties earmarked for the site, 45 will be affordable, satisfying the council’s requirement of 30 per cent affordable housing for any new development of 10 homes or more within the former Sedgemoor area.

Beyond the new properties, Bloor Homes will supply more than £350,000 towards enhancements to public transport and the local cycling infrastructure (in addition to new connections being delivered by Agratas).

Just over £100,000 will also be allocated to the Polden Medical Centre, towards expanding either its Woolavington surgery (on Woolavington Road, near the primary school) or its Edington surgery (which already secured a share of £1.14m from central government to create additional space).

Local resident Joe Stradling voiced opposition to the proposals when the council’s planning committee north met in Bridgwater on 11 March.

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He said: “This is the wrong place for this development – no-one in Cossington or Woolavington supports this. There is no positive to be had here.

“Because of the Agratas battery plant, there is a rush to get houses built in this area. You should not approve this just because it’s the first application that’s come along. The number of new homes required at Woolavington is about 70 – this greatly exceeds that.

‘It’s unacceptable’

“Woolavington has got no pub, the school is over-subscribed, and the doctors’ surgery is struggling to cope. Traffic is already a problem in the area, and it’s going to get worse – we’re probably talking 300 cars from this. It’s unacceptable.”

Previously, Gladman Developments attempted to obtain planning permission for 125 homes on the same site, but this was rejected by the Planning Inspectorate in June 2021.

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Alan Sharp, chairman of Woolavington Parish Council, said: “The junction of the A39 and the B3141 is currently over capacity.

“No evidence has been presented to show how a ‘modal shift’ from cars to cycling or public transport can be achieved, to provide any alleviation of the vehicular impact on this junction.

“The implication is that the only alleviation would be no additional car movements from this development – which is extremely naive, as we are a rural community and need cars to get to places.”

Wainhomes Severn Valley had pledged to replace this junction with a new roundabout as part of a development of 175 homes west of Woolavington Hill; however, this permission expired in March 2025.

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Councillor Matt Martin, who represents the neighbouring King Alfred division, said: “I must pin my colours to the mast: I don’t generally make adverse comments on large-scale developments because I’m very cognisant of the five-year housing land supply situation, and I’m a realist – I understand how things work in the commercial world.

“However, in this instance I must say that I do think this is in the wrong place. I go through the A39 junction very frequently and it is always a sticking point.

“Cars want to get out and down to Bridgwater and onto the M5 quickly. We’re going to have construction traffic using that junction – it’s going to cause more problems.”

Councillor Alistair Hendry (Conservative, Highbridge and Burnham South) offered a different perspective, arguing: “The average number of cars for a three-bedroom house is not as much as people think – it’s about 1.4.

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“Not everybody drives to work – some do, some don’t, some work from home. Some people do the school run, some don’t – so not all these cars are going to approach a given junction at any one time.

“You cannot stop construction site traffic coming and going – the work has to be done.

“Our highways team are very technical, very educated and know exactly what they are doing – they say it’s safe and acceptable, and that’s good enough for me.”

Councillor Alan Bradford (Conservative, North Petherton) expressed his preference for a site visit prior to the meeting, suggesting the committee was “boxing blind” without one.

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He continued: “I’m 79, I’ve been on the A39 hundreds of times – I know the area very well.

“Traffic is always going to a problem in every development – but what are we going to do – go back to horse and cart?

“There’s no easy solution to the traffic problem – unless everybody starts working from home and if that happens they’ll want more parking spaces.”

Following nearly two hours of debate, the committee voted to approve the proposals by five votes to three, with one abstention.

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A reserved matters application, offering further detail on the design and layout of the proposed dwellings, is anticipated to be submitted before the year’s end.

The council will shortly deliver a decision on separate proposals for 170 homes south of Vicarage Road (neighbouring the Bloor Homes site, brought forward by South West Strategic Developments) and 85 homes south of Woolavington Road (lodged by Gladman Developments).

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Busselton holiday park sold, another on the market

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Busselton holiday park sold, another on the market

Avocado famer Russell Delroy has added a Geographe Bay holiday park to his asset base, with the $9.8 million purchase preceding another property’s listing.

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Priority Tech earnings beat by $0.09, revenue topped estimates

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Mizuho cuts Immunocore stock price target to $34 on trimmed revenue

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Mizuho cuts Immunocore stock price target to $34 on trimmed revenue

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German energy giant E.ON agrees deal to buy Stephen Fitzpatrick’s Ovo Energy

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The agreement is subject to regulatory approvals but would create one of the UK’s biggest household suppliers

Ovo was founded by Stephen Fitzpatrick

Ovo is headquartered in Bristol(Image: Ovo)

Bristol-headquartered energy firm Ovo has agreed to sell its UK energy retail business to European giant E.ON, subject to regulatory approval. The German supplier said on Monday (May 11) the transaction represented “a significant investment” in the UK market and was about “accelerating consumer energy flexibility”.

Ovo and E.ON will continue to operate as separate companies until the approval process completes, which is expected to be in the second half of the year.

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Chris Norbury, chief executive of E.ON UK, said: “For decades the UK energy system focused too much on those upstream. Now is our opportunity to change that. Solar, batteries, EVs and a retailer built to orchestrate. That is what this deal is about: customers in control and new energy that works for everyone.”

It is understood that for customers of E.ON Next and Ovo there will be no change during the regulatory review period and existing tariffs will be “honoured in full” while services will continue unchanged.

“Bringing Ovo together with E.ON is the right next step for customers, for colleagues, and for the long-term commitment that decarbonisation requires,” Stephen Fitzpatrick, founder of Ovo, said.

On completion of the deal, E.ON said it would continue the existing licence agreement with energy intelligence platform Kaluza in respect of OVO’s customer base. The parties will also evaluate the potential adoption of Kaluza across the wider E.ON group outside of the UK, the company said.

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Mr Norbury added: “It is not about scale for its own sake. It is about building a retailer with the capability, the technology and the customer base to make new energy work for everyone. We chose Ovo because it’s a modern digitally native business with great people and a shared belief that innovation is what can make energy affordable and sustainable for everyone.”

Elsewhere Ovo has also agreed a deal to sell its boiler insurance and servicing arm – Home Services – to Hometree, subject to regulatory approval. It is understood Ovo will work closely with E.ON and Hometree through the regulatory process.

Ovo was established by Mr Fitzpatrick – also founder of Bristol ‘flying taxi’ company Vertical Aerospace – in 2009 as a disrupter to the legacy ‘big six’ companies.

Today, Ovo is one of the biggest energy firms in the UK, with some four million customers. In 2019, the business snapped up SSE’s household energy and related services business for £500m in a bid to accelerate its expansion plans. But by 2022, as the industry was hit by a gas price crisis, the business was forced to cut nearly a quarter of jobs from its workforce.

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In December last year, Ovo confirmed it was consulting on another 200 roles as part of proposals submitted to industry watchdog Ofgem to prove it complies with new financial standards.

“We’re making changes that bring us closer to customers and sharpen our focus as an energy retailer,” Ovo said at the time.

“Our actions will help us build a stronger, more resilient business that better serves our customers and meets regulatory requirements. Where roles are affected, we will consult fully and support colleagues throughout.”

The news came just a month after the company’s chief executive, David Buttress – a former boss of Just Eat – announced he was stepping down from the business after just 18 months.

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Mizuho raises Fluence Energy stock price target on data center growth potential

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SEC Order, DOJ Indictment, and Now Civil Litigation: The Documented Anatomy of the Short-and-Distort Scheme That Targeted Barry Honig

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SEC Order, DOJ Indictment, and Now Civil Litigation: The Documented Anatomy of the Short-and-Distort Scheme That Targeted Barry Honig

When the SEC issued its cease-and-desist order against Anson Funds Management LP and Anson Advisors Inc. on June 11, 2024, it didn’t just fine a hedge fund. It formally confirmed — on the public record — that a coordinated, multi-year market manipulation scheme operated from at least 2018 through 2023, targeting public companies and their shareholders. Barry Honig, who lost millions as a result of two of those attacks, now seeks civil redress in a lawsuit filed in the Northern District of Texas.

This article walks through what the regulatory record shows, what the indictment adds, and what the civil complaint filed May 6, 2026 — Honig v. Anson Funds Management LP et al., Case No. 3:26-cv-01167-S — alleges as a result.

The SEC’s Findings: A Confirmed Scheme, Not a Theory

The SEC’s administrative order (Inv. Adv. Act Rel. No. 6622) is the foundation of the case against Anson. The order found that Anson Funds and Anson Advisors, co-advisers of the Anson Investments Master Fund (AIMF), willfully violated multiple provisions of the Investment Advisers Act:

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Section 206(4) and Rule 206(4)-8 — anti-fraud provisions applicable to investment advisers managing pooled vehicles;

Sections 204 and Rule 204-2 — recordkeeping obligations;

Rule 206(4)-7 — compliance procedures.

The operative finding: Anson’s Private Placement Memorandum described a short-selling strategy but materially omitted that the strategy involved (a) coordinating with activist short publishers; (b) trading around those publications; and (c) compensating publishers with a share of AIMF’s trading profits in exchange for advance access to their work.

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‘From at least 2018 through 2023, the Private Placement Memorandum for Anson Investments Master Fund described a short position investment strategy… but omitted that AIMF’s investment strategy involved working with activist short publishers and trading in the target securities, including around the time the reports were issued by activist short publishers, and paying a portion of AIMF’s trading profits to the short publishers.’ — SEC Order, Rel. No. 6622, June 11, 2024

The SEC found that Anson’s share of profits paid to ‘Individual A’ (identified in the civil complaint as Andrew Left of Citron Research) exceeded $1.1 million in connection with just two target securities. Critically, those payments were not made directly. Anson routed them through a third-party intermediary — identified in the civil complaint as Kurt Feshbach of Falcon Research — using invoices for purported ‘research services’ that were never performed. Anson then recorded these payments on its books as payments to Falcon for research, in violation of the Advisers Act’s books-and-records requirements.

The DOJ Indictment: Criminal Charges That Mirror the SEC Findings

On July 25, 2024, a federal grand jury in the Central District of California returned a 19-count indictment against Andrew Left (United States v. Andrew Left, No. 2:24-cr-00456-TJH), charging him with one count of engaging in a securities fraud scheme, 17 counts of securities fraud, and one count of making false statements to federal investigators.

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The indictment references a ‘Hedge Fund A’ that paid Left through ‘Individual F’ via a third-party intermediary — language that maps directly onto Anson and Feshbach as identified in the civil complaint. Left is alleged to have shared planned negative publications with Hedge Fund A in advance, allowing the fund to establish short positions before reports were released, then cover those positions after prices declined — generating millions in trading profits that were then shared with Left.

The DOJ’s theory of criminality: Left’s publications were not independent research but paid promotional attacks. His representations to investors that Citron had ‘never been compensated by a third party to publish research’ were, the government alleges, simply false. In August 2019, Left made precisely that claim publicly. The indictment characterizes this as a material misrepresentation to investors who relied on Citron’s purported independence.

The indictment also expressly names PolarityTE as one of the companies targeted by the scheme — providing a direct evidentiary foundation for the civil claims now pending in Dallas.

III. The PolarityTE Attacks: False Claims, Real Damage

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The civil complaint describes two coordinated Citron Research attacks on PolarityTE in 2018, both of which the plaintiffs allege were orchestrated by Anson and executed through Left:

Attack 1 — June 25, 2018: Citron published a report entitled ‘Citron Exposes History of FRAUD Behind PolarityTE.’ The central claim: PolarityTE’s patent application was ‘dead on arrival’ following a USPTO rejection notice. The report called the situation ‘not only securities fraud, but… criminal and not just civil fraud.’

The legal and factual problem: A USPTO ‘final rejection’ is a term of art, not a terminal event. Under 37 C.F.R. §§ 1.113 and 1.114, an applicant receiving a final office action has six months to file a Request for Continued Examination (RCE), amend the application, or submit new evidence. Statistics bear out that applicants who continue prosecution after a final rejection receive a patent approximately 70% of the time. PolarityTE filed an RCE, continued prosecution, and was ultimately granted Patent No. US 10,92,001 B2 in February 2021 — two and a half years after Citron declared the application dead. The class action lawsuit premised on the patent narrative was subsequently dismissed.

Attack 2 — October 18, 2018: A second Citron report, ‘PolarityTE: This Game Is Over! Price Target -$2,’ recycled the patent misrepresentation and introduced a new attack: a standard FDA Form 483 ‘inspectional observations’ letter, which the report characterized as proof that the FDA had ‘proven’ PolarityTE was a ‘stock scheme.’ The FDA Form 483, by its express terms, ‘does not represent a final Agency determination regarding [the company’s] compliance.’ The FDA took no further regulatory action.

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Market impact: The first attack caused a single-day decline exceeding 33%, and nearly 50% within a week. The second attack caused an additional 17% decline. Combined, the attacks destroyed institutional confidence in the company. Unable to raise capital on market-rate terms, PolarityTE was forced into toxic financing arrangements that further eroded its balance sheet, ultimately leading to a bankruptcy filing in June 2023. Shares went to zero.

The Civil Claims: What Honig Is Seeking

Filed in the Northern District of Texas (which has jurisdiction given Anson Funds’ Texas domicile), the First Amended Complaint asserts five causes of action under Texas law:

  1. Business Disparagement — False and malicious statements that caused economic harm to Honig’s investment interests in PolarityTE.
  2. Tortious Interference — Honig held preferred convertible shares in PolarityTE under publicly disclosed contracts; Defendants’ manipulation of PolarityTE’s stock price directly affected the conversion formula in those contracts, impairing their value.
  3. Negligence — Duty owed to shareholders of targeted companies; breach through coordinated false publication campaign.
  4. Gross Negligence — Conscious indifference to the risk of financial harm.
  5. Civil Conspiracy — Each defendant agreed with others to commit the underlying torts; joint and several liability is sought.

Vicarious liability is also pled: Kassam and Puri’s conduct occurred within the scope of their roles at Anson; Anson is liable under respondeat superior.

On the statute of limitations, the complaint invokes the discovery rule: the scheme’s existence was not publicly knowable until the DOJ indictment and SEC enforcement action were announced in July 2024. The complaint alleges Honig could not, through reasonable diligence, have identified the concealed coordination between Anson, Left, and Choi before that date.

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The Broader Accountability Picture

This is not a case where a plaintiff is challenging opinions or subjective analysis. The SEC order, the DOJ indictment, and the settling defendants’ own payments have already established the factual core of the scheme on the public record. Choi paid over $1.8 million to settle SEC charges and is cooperating with the DOJ prosecution. Anson paid $2.25 million in civil penalties and is cooperating. Left faces 19 criminal counts and potential decades in prison.

What the civil litigation in Dallas adds is accountability to the shareholders who were neither named parties in the SEC action nor compensated by Anson’s penalty payments. The SEC’s enforcement mandate is systemic deterrence; civil litigation is the mechanism by which individual victims — including Honig, whose entities held nearly 10% of PolarityTE at the time of the attacks — seek to recover actual losses.

The broader significance: the Left trial, currently scheduled for 2026, will expose the full architecture of a short-and-distort infrastructure that operated for five years across more than a dozen public companies. For the companies and shareholders who were targeted — and for the market integrity principles at stake — that trial represents the most consequential public reckoning yet with the mechanics of coordinated market manipulation.

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Seven years is a long time to wait for the record to be set straight. The record is now being set.

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Form 10Q Elme Communities For: 11 May

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Perenti prepares for its next billion

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Perenti prepares for its next billion

Mark Norwell reflects on his leadership journey at one of the state’s biggest mining services firms.

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Lamine Yamal, 18, Shatters Cristiano Ronaldo Record as Barcelona Wonderkid Rewrites History

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Lamine Yamal celebrated his 17th birthday on the eve of the Euro 2024 final

BARCELONA — At just 18 years and 237 days old, Lamine Yamal has already reached a career milestone that took Cristiano Ronaldo until age 21 and Lionel Messi until age 20: 100 senior goal contributions for club and country. The Barcelona and Spain sensation continues to rewrite football’s record books at a pace that defies logic, cementing his status as one of the greatest teenage talents the game has ever seen.

Yamal’s latest landmark came during Barcelona’s dominant 2025-26 campaign, where the winger has dazzled with blistering pace, visionary passing and clinical finishing. His 100th combined goal or assist arrived far quicker than either of the modern greats achieved at the same stage, sparking fresh debates about his trajectory compared to Ronaldo and Messi.

A prodigy rewriting the script

Born in 2007 in Rocafonda, Yamal made his Barcelona first-team debut at 15 years and 290 days old — already the youngest in club history. By 18, he has eclipsed multiple Ronaldo benchmarks, including becoming the youngest player to score 20 goals in a single La Liga season for Barcelona, surpassing Brazilian Ronaldo’s mark from the 1996-97 campaign.

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In the Champions League, Yamal became the youngest player ever to reach 20 goal contributions (goals plus assists), achieving the feat in just 32 matches at 18 years and 275 days. Ronaldo and Messi required significantly more time and games to hit similar numbers at comparable ages.

His performances this season have been nothing short of spectacular. Yamal has terrorized defenses with trademark dribbles, precise crosses and growing goal threat. A recent hat-trick against Villarreal not only delivered a statement win but also broke a 92-year La Liga record for the youngest player to score a first senior treble.

Comparisons to Ronaldo and Messi

At the same age, Ronaldo was a promising but raw talent at Sporting Lisbon and early Manchester United, showing flashes of brilliance but lacking the consistent output Yamal now delivers. Messi, while exceptional, needed more time to reach triple-digit goal contributions. Yamal’s numbers at 18 already rival or surpass what both legends produced in their early 20s.

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Statistics paint a staggering picture. Yamal has accumulated his 100 G/A in far fewer matches than Ronaldo (who reached it around age 21) and Messi. His dribble success rate, chance creation and big-game performances have drawn inevitable comparisons, though Yamal himself remains humble, crediting teammates and coaches for his rapid rise.

Barcelona’s reliance and future

Under Hansi Flick, Yamal has flourished in a fluid attacking system that maximizes his creativity. Barcelona’s La Liga title push this season has been powered significantly by the teenager, who many view as the club’s next generational superstar following in the footsteps of Messi.

His contract runs until 2030 with a massive release clause, but interest from Europe’s elite — particularly Real Madrid — remains a constant backdrop. For now, Yamal insists his focus is solely on Barcelona and winning more silverware.

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International stardom

On the international stage, Yamal was instrumental in Spain’s Euro 2024 triumph and continues shining for La Roja. His ability to perform at the highest level as a teenager has drawn praise from legends including Ronaldo and Messi themselves, who have publicly applauded the youngster’s talent.

What makes Yamal special

Beyond raw statistics, Yamal’s fearlessness, technical brilliance and football intelligence set him apart. His low center of gravity, explosive acceleration and ambidextrous finishing make him a nightmare for defenders. Coaches describe him as a “once-in-a-generation” talent with the maturity of a veteran.

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Off the pitch, Yamal maintains a grounded demeanor despite global fame. His rapid ascent from La Masia to world stardom serves as inspiration for young players worldwide.

Broader impact on football

Yamal’s records fuel debates about player development, the intensity of modern schedules and expectations placed on young stars. His success validates Barcelona’s famed academy system while highlighting how exceptional talent can accelerate timelines once thought impossible.

As the 2025-26 season nears its climax, Yamal shows no signs of slowing. With Barcelona chasing domestic and European glory, the teenager remains central to their ambitions. His journey is only beginning, yet he has already surpassed benchmarks set by two of football’s greatest icons.

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Legacy in the making

Whether Yamal ultimately challenges Messi and Ronaldo’s all-time records remains to be seen. What is undeniable is his current dominance and the joy he brings to fans. At 18, he has achieved what most players dream of in entire careers.

The football world watches with bated breath as Lamine Yamal continues his extraordinary ascent — a teenager already making history and redefining what’s possible in the beautiful game.

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Aussie shares drop as ceasefire frays, CSL plunges

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Aussie shares drop as ceasefire frays, CSL plunges

The local share market has slipped after the US rejected Iran’s latest peace proposal to end the Middle East war, and as a huge plunge by a prominent biotech name weighed on the bourse.

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