Wineexpress.com has established itself as a prominent online destination for wine enthusiasts, offering a wide selection of bottles, gift baskets and accessories since its launch. As the exclusive wine shop partner of Wine Enthusiast Magazine and Catalog, the retailer combines curated selections with value-driven promotions in a competitive direct-to-consumer market facing challenges from declining shipments and economic pressures.
Winexpress.com
Here are 10 essential facts about Wineexpress.com based on the latest information available as of February 2026:
Official Partnership with Wine EnthusiastWineexpress.com serves as the exclusive online wine shop for Wine Enthusiast Magazine and its catalog. This affiliation provides access to expert recommendations, ratings and featured selections from one of the industry’s leading publications. The partnership enhances credibility and allows the site to highlight wines with high scores, such as recent offerings praised in Wine Spectator or Wine Enthusiast lists.
Extensive Global Wine Selection The retailer stocks an extensive range of wines from around the world, organized by varietal, region, type (red, white, rosé, sparkling) and price. Shoppers can browse iconic regions like Napa Cabernet Sauvignon, Tuscany reds, Provence rosé and California Chardonnay. The inventory includes everyday values as well as higher-end bottles, with filters for specific preferences like organic, sustainable or vintage-specific options.
Gift Baskets and Curated ExperiencesWineexpress.com specializes in wine gifts, including gourmet baskets featuring California wines, cheeses, chocolates and accessories. Options range from simple bottle-and-chocolate pairings to elaborate hampers for occasions like Valentine’s Day, birthdays or corporate events. The Wine Concierge service offers personalized curation for private celebrations or team-building, including virtual tastings and hosted experiences.
Everyday Free Shipping and Case Discounts A key draw is everyday free shipping on qualifying orders, often combined with case discounts up to 15%. Promotions frequently include percentage-off deals, flash sales and featured bundles. Recent customer feedback highlights reliable free shipping during cooler months, with insulated packaging to protect bottles.
Customer Service and Support The site provides a dedicated Help Center for order inquiries, delivery assistance and product questions. A toll-free number allows direct conversations with wine sales specialists. Customer care emphasizes responsive communication, though some reviews note occasional delays during peak seasons or weather-related holds.
Temperature-Controlled Shipping PracticesWineexpress.com holds shipments during extreme heat to prevent damage, using temperature-controlled warehouses and vehicles when possible. Reviews from 2025-2026 mention nested cardboard protection and no ice packs for longer shipments, with success in non-extreme conditions. Hot-weather concerns persist in some areas, leading to occasional holds or reroutes.
Mixed but Generally Positive Reviews On Trustpilot, Wineexpress.com holds solid ratings, with praise for fast shipping, great deals and wine condition upon arrival. Recent 2026 reviews describe excellent service on cross-country orders and appreciation for in-stock high-rated wines at discounts. However, older complaints include isolated shipping issues in high heat, with some users advising caution during summer.
Active Blog and Educational Content The Expressions blog features wine news, recommendations, vintage insights and educational pieces like “Wine 101: Introduction to Winemaking.” Posts cover topics such as poor vintages offering value and winemaking processes for various styles. A YouTube channel (@WineExpress) hosts virtual tastings and team-hosted videos, helping customers discover new bottles.
Affiliate Program and Multi-Channel Presence An affiliate marketing program rewards partners for referrals, paying competitive commissions. The site supports 24/7 online shopping alongside phone orders. Social media presence on X (@WineExpress) promotes deals, everyday free shipping and Wine Enthusiast ties.
Navigating Industry Challenges Like much of the direct-to-consumer wine sector, Wineexpress.com operates amid a prolonged market downturn. The 2026 Direct-to-Consumer Wine Shipping Report noted record declines in volume and value for 2025 shipments, driven by economic factors and shifting consumer habits. Despite headwinds, the retailer continues emphasizing value, promotions and reliable delivery to maintain appeal.
Wineexpress.com remains a go-to for accessible, curated wine shopping with strong ties to industry expertise. Whether seeking everyday sippers, gifts or educational resources, it offers a convenient platform in a dynamic market.
Weardale Lithium is hoping to extract the key material from brines under the North Pennines
Weardale Lithium has secured planning permission to build its lithium extraction facility at the former Eastgate cement works.(Image: Weardale Lithium)
A bid to extract the key material of lithium from the ground beneath the North East has received a boost from the Government.
Weardale Lithium has secured grant funding through the Government’s DRIVE35 Scale-Up: Feasibility Studies competition, supporting the next phase of development at its geothermal lithium project in County Durham. The project aims to produce battery-grade lithium carbonate – a key material for the UK’s net zero ambitions – from geothermal groundwaters under the North Pennines, and could create between 20 and 50 jobs.
The grant funding will enable Weardale Lithium to undertake a £700,000 feasibility study to map its geothermal lithium-bearing brinefield within the North Pennine Orefield. The feasibility study represents an important step towards establishing a domestic source of battery-grade lithium carbonate, reducing reliance on imported raw materials and strengthening the resilience of the UK’s EV manufacturing base.
Stewart Dickson, CEO of Weardale Lithium, said: “Securing support through the DRIVE35 Scale-Up programme is an important milestone for Weardale Lithium and for the development of a secure, domestic lithium supply in the UK. This funding enables us to undertake critical subsurface mapping and technical analysis of our geothermal brine resource in County Durham, providing the data needed to inform commercial scale-up and future investment decisions.
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Stewart Dickson, CEO of Weardale Lithium(Image: Weardale Lithium)
“Our project aligns directly with the UK Critical Minerals Strategy and wider UK Battery Strategy. By developing low-carbon Direct Lithium Extraction integrated with on-site conversion to battery-grade lithium carbonate, we are positioning the North East at the forefront of the UK’s emerging
battery materials supply chain while creating high-value jobs and long-term economic benefits for the region.”
The grant to Weardale Lithium – which has planning permission for an extraction facility at Eastgate – is part of a wider investment package into the UK automotive industry.
Ian Constance, CEO of Advanced Propulsion Centre UK, said: “The projects announced today demonstrate the UK’s determination to lead the shift to zero-emission mobility. By facilitating the UK Government’s DRIVE35 grants, we are turning world-class innovation into industrial capability. With our partners in DBT and Innovate UK, we are backing manufacturers, empowering SMEs, and strengthening the UK’s sovereign supply chain.
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“This multi-million pound support package is more than an investment in technology; it is an investment in the people, skills, and companies that will define the future of clean transport. Together, we are building the foundations of a competitive, resilient, and sustainable automotive industry.”
Fox News chief national security correspondent Jennifer Griffin reports on the state of Strait of Hormuz traffic, Irans demand for a toll on passing ships and ceasefire negotiations on Varney & Co.
This story on the March 2026 CPI inflation report is developing and will be updated with further details.
Inflation surged in March as consumer prices jumped amid the economic disruptions caused by the Iran war’s impact on the energy market.
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The Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday said that the consumer price index (CPI) – a broad measure of how much everyday goods like gasoline, groceries and rent cost – rose 0.9% from a month ago and is 3.3% higher than last year. The annual figure jumped from last month’s 2.4% reading, while the monthly increase also rose markedly from last month’s 0.3% reading.
Expectations vs. reality
Both the 0.9% monthly increase and 3.3% annual rise were in line with the expectations of economists polled by LSEG.
So-called core prices, which exclude volatile measurements of gasoline and food to better assess price growth trends, were up 0.2% on a monthly basis and 2.6% from a year ago. Both of those figures were slightly cooler than economists’ predictions of 0.3% and 2.7%, respectively.
The core CPI figures were slightly hotter than February’s readings, which showed prices rose 0.2% on a monthly basis and 2.5% from the prior year.
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Economists have noted that inflation data from December 2025 through April 2026 will be affected due to data collection interruptions resulting from last fall’s 43-day government shutdown.
During the shutdown, the BLS wasn’t able to gather data and used a carry-forward methodology to make up for the lack of an October CPI report and missing data in November’s report. Economists say this is likely to impart a downward bias on inflation data until this spring, when fresh data will negate the discrepancy.
The cost of living breakdown
High inflation has created severe financial pressures in recent years for most U.S. households, which are forced to pay more for everyday necessities like food and rent. Price hikes are particularly difficult for lower-income Americans, because they tend to spend more of their already-stretched paychecks on necessities and have less flexibility to save.
Food prices were flat on a monthly basis in March, and were up 2.7% from a year ago. The food at home index declined 0.2% for the month and is up 1.9% over the last year, while the food away from home index is 3.8% higher than a year ago after a 0.2% increase on a monthly basis.
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Meats, poultry and fish prices were down 0.5% for the month but remain 5.6% higher than a year ago. Beef and veal prices fell 0.6% in March and are 12.1% higher than last year. Egg prices continued to decline following an avian flu outbreak that impacted supply, with prices down 3.4% for the month and 44.7% from a year ago. The fruits and vegetables index rose 1% in March and is up 4% on an annual basis.
Thousands of small investors who piled into one of London’s best-known green investment vehicles are staring down the barrel of losses running well beyond 50 per cent, after the board of SDCL Efficiency Income Trust (SEIT) bowed to pressure from a New York activist and abandoned its rescue plan in favour of a managed wind-down.
The FTSE 250 trust, which has raised more than £1.1 billion from retail backers since its 2018 launch, confirmed today that it has shelved plans to convert itself into a conventional operating company and will instead begin selling off its portfolio of energy-efficiency assets.
SEIT becomes the latest London-listed trust to change course under the gaze of Saba Capital, the aggressive New York hedge fund run by Boaz Weinstein, which is understood to hold a stake of more than 10 per cent. Saba has built positions in dozens of British investment trusts over the past eighteen months, agitating for boards to be replaced and cash to be returned to shareholders.
For the army of private investors who subscribed to SEIT’s nine capital raisings between 2018 and 2022, the decision marks the bitter end of a story that once looked like a copper-bottomed route into the green transition. They were lured by an anticipated yield of 5 per cent or more at a time when base rates were on the floor, and placings were frequently several times oversubscribed. Their money went into projects ranging from rooftop solar arrays at Tesco supermarkets to electric-vehicle charging infrastructure and district heating schemes.
The trust’s fortunes reversed sharply once interest rates began their steep climb, and the market has grown increasingly sceptical about the values SEIT has placed on its unquoted holdings. The shares, which were issued at £1 or more, closed at 45p yesterday, a punishing 49 per cent discount to stated net asset value. If the portfolio is eventually liquidated anywhere close to recent market prices, the collective hit to shareholders could exceed £500 million.
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Tony Roper, SEIT’s chairman, said the board had held intensive talks with wealth managers, retail platforms and other large holders, and that the feedback had been clear. Many had expressed what he described as “a clear preference for liquidity” over the proposed run-on plan. Saba is believed to have been among those consulted.
The directors, he said, had “unanimously concluded” that a managed wind-down of the portfolio was now in the best interests of shareholders taken as a whole. Roper acknowledged the pain felt by loyal backers, saying the board was “acutely aware of the reduction in share price in recent years” and recognised the frustration and uncertainty that had caused.
The alternative on the table had been to delist the investment trust wrapper, retain the stock market listing as an ordinary trading company and carry on running the assets. Roper conceded that, in theory, such a route “could have created value significantly in excess of the current share price”, but said it carried meaningful execution risk that shareholders were unwilling to stomach.
SDCL, the manager founded and led by energy-efficiency evangelist Jonathan Maxwell, has agreed to what the trust described as minimised termination fees, a nod to the sensitivity around what retail backers might otherwise regard as rewards for failure.
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Analysts at Barclays said the activist presence on the shareholder register had made an orderly wind-down the more probable outcome all along. In their view, the shift “provides clearer line of sight to value realisation”, though they warned that the process would stretch out over an extended period and that disposal pricing remained a live risk.
There is already a cautionary data point. SEIT recently offloaded a batch of assets for £105 million, a 9 per cent discount to the value at which they had been carried in the books, a reminder that the private market for infrastructure assets remains sticky and that further haircuts are likely as the wind-down gathers pace.
The SEIT decision lands squarely within a broader assault by Saba on the £270 billion investment trust sector. Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust and Impax Environmental Markets are both midway through exit tender offers that their boards have argued are necessary to prevent ordinary shareholders being trapped in vehicles increasingly controlled by the American fund. Several other trusts have pre-emptively announced buybacks, continuation votes or strategic reviews in an attempt to keep Saba at bay.
For SME owners and retail savers who were encouraged to view specialist investment trusts as a low-drama way of backing the energy transition, the unravelling of SEIT is a sobering lesson. A yield that looks generous in a zero-rate world can evaporate quickly when gilts start paying 4 per cent, and unlisted infrastructure values that held up well on paper do not always survive contact with a real buyer. With Saba now a fixture on share registers from Leith Walk to Bishopsgate, more boards are likely to find themselves weighing whether to fight, fold or hand the cheque book back to investors.
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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.
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump, seething over what he calls NATO allies’ failure to support U.S. efforts in the Iran conflict and stalled plans for Greenland, has discussed with advisers the possibility of withdrawing some American troops from Europe, a senior White House official said Thursday.
AFP
The deliberations, reported first by Reuters, mark the latest escalation in trans-Atlantic tensions that have pushed the 77-year-old military alliance into one of its rockiest periods. No final decision has been made, and the Pentagon has not been tasked with concrete planning, but the mere discussion signals Trump’s deepening frustration with European partners he accuses of freeloading on American security guarantees while offering little in return during critical moments.
Trump’s anger boiled over after a tense White House meeting Wednesday with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. In an all-caps Truth Social post afterward, the president declared: “NATO WASN’T THERE WHEN WE NEEDED THEM, AND THEY WON’T BE THERE IF WE NEED THEM AGAIN. REMEMBER GREENLAND, THAT BIG, POORLY RUN, PIECE OF ICE!!!” He followed up Thursday by calling the alliance “very disappointing” and saying its members only respond to pressure.
The troop withdrawal idea would serve as a targeted punishment short of the full U.S. exit from NATO that Trump has repeatedly floated — a move that would require congressional approval and faces legal hurdles. Instead, officials are eyeing a realignment: pulling forces from countries viewed as “unhelpful,” such as Germany and Spain, and shifting them toward more supportive eastern flank nations like Poland, Romania, Lithuania and Greece, according to reports citing administration sources.
The United States currently stations roughly 84,000 troops across Europe, with major bases in Germany playing a central logistical role for operations from the Middle East to Africa. Any significant drawdown would reshape America’s forward military posture on the continent and send shockwaves through European capitals already grappling with Russia’s ongoing threat and energy security concerns.
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Roots of Trump’s Fury: Iran War and Hormuz
Trump’s latest grievances trace directly to the U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran that began in late February 2026. The conflict disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a vital chokepoint for global oil and gas flows, sending energy prices soaring. European allies largely declined to commit naval forces to help reopen the waterway, a decision Trump branded as abandonment.
“They turned their backs on the American people,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said ahead of the Rutte meeting. Trump has repeatedly labeled NATO a “paper tiger” and suggested in interviews that he is “absolutely” considering pulling the U.S. out of the alliance once the Iran situation stabilizes.
The Greenland issue adds another layer. Trump has long expressed interest in acquiring the Danish territory for strategic reasons, but progress has been nonexistent, further fueling his irritation with European partners.
A Strategy of Punishment Without Full Withdrawal
The troop repositioning plan, first detailed by The Wall Street Journal, stops short of a complete NATO exit but would still dramatically reduce Washington’s security commitments in western and central Europe. Countries with higher defense spending and quicker support during the Hormuz crisis could see increased U.S. presence, while others face base closures or force reductions.
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Defense analysts note that such a move would test NATO’s Article 5 collective defense pledge in practice, even if not formally abandoned. Eastern European nations, already wary of Russian aggression, have generally met or exceeded the 2% of GDP defense spending target that Trump has long demanded. Western European powers like Germany have increased spending in recent years but remain below what the president considers adequate.
NATO officials and European leaders responded with a mix of calm and concern. Rutte described his meeting with Trump as “very frank” and “very open,” acknowledging disagreements without elaborating. Poland and other frontline states urged unity, while Germany reaffirmed its commitment to the alliance. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer suggested Europe may need to strengthen intra-continental defense ties.
Congressional barriers could complicate any large-scale withdrawal. The National Defense Authorization Act includes provisions aimed at preventing sharp reductions in U.S. forces in Europe below certain thresholds, reflecting bipartisan support for maintaining the trans-Atlantic link.
Historical Echoes and Strategic Stakes
Trump’s threats echo his first term, when he repeatedly criticized NATO spending and briefly considered troop cuts from Germany. This time, the context is more volatile: a recent U.S.-Iran conflict, disrupted global energy markets and a NATO already strained by Russia’s war in Ukraine.
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European officials worry that any U.S. drawdown could embolden adversaries and force rapid, costly increases in their own defense budgets. Some have quietly begun contingency planning for greater European strategic autonomy, including joint procurement and enhanced EU defense initiatives.
For the Pentagon, repositioning tens of thousands of troops would involve enormous logistical challenges, base negotiations and potential strains on readiness. Supporters of Trump’s approach argue it finally forces Europe to shoulder more of the burden after decades of underinvestment.
Critics, including former national security officials, warn that signaling wavering U.S. commitment could weaken deterrence against Russia and China while damaging America’s global credibility.
What Comes Next
As of Friday, April 10, no orders for troop movements have been issued. White House officials emphasize that discussions remain internal and that Trump continues to use leverage to extract concessions on spending and burden-sharing.
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Trump is expected to keep pressure on allies in coming weeks, potentially tying future U.S. support to concrete actions on defense budgets and Hormuz-related cooperation.
The episode underscores the fragile state of trans-Atlantic relations in 2026. While NATO has survived previous Trump-era turbulence, the combination of the Iran conflict fallout and longstanding spending disputes has exposed deep fault lines.
For now, the president’s anger serves as both venting and negotiating tactic. Whether it leads to actual force reductions — or simply compels European capitals to boost contributions — will shape the alliance’s future for years to come.
European leaders face a delicate balancing act: responding to Trump’s demands without appearing to capitulate, while preparing for a security landscape with potentially less reliable American backing.
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As one senior European diplomat put it privately, “Pressure works with Trump, but permanent damage to trust could outlast any single administration.”
State-owned energy provider Synergy has launched an investigation into claims of a massive data breach allegedly involving over 900,000 sensitive document, including the personal records of customers.
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