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At Close of Business podcast February 25 2026

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Form 8K Bloomin Brands Inc For: 25 February

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Form 8K Bloomin Brands Inc For: 25 February

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Bodo/Glimt Make Champions League History as Norwegian Underdogs Upset Inter Milan

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Bodo/Glimt Make Champions League History as Norwegian Underdogs Upset Inter

Norwegian champions Bodo/Glimt produced one of the most remarkable results in recent Champions League history, eliminating Inter Milan with a commanding 5–2 aggregate score.

Despite facing a three-time European champion at the iconic San Siro, the Arctic-based side displayed composure and tactical discipline to secure a 2–1 victory on the night in Milan.

Jens Petter Hauge Leads Historic Victory

According to the BBC, forward Jens Petter Hauge was once again the decisive figure. Hauge scored his sixth goal of the campaign and provided a pinpoint assist for Håkon Evjen’s sublime finish, sealing a performance full of confidence and maturity.

Hauge’s return to Milan carried added significance after a prior stint with AC Milan, but this time he departed as the hero of Norwegian football.

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Manager Kjetil Knutsen hailed the result as “historic,” celebrating both the club and Norway’s presence on the European stage. Bodo/Glimt became the first Norwegian team to advance past a Champions League knockout tie, marking a landmark moment for the nation’s football legacy.

Arctic Roots Fuel European Success

Based inside the Arctic Circle, Bodo/Glimt have leveraged harsh weather and artificial turf to build a competitive edge. Their fearless identity has helped them overcome elite clubs across Europe, proving that tactical discipline and bold ambition can challenge football’s established giants.

Last 16 Aspirations

The Norwegian side now awaits the draw to face either Manchester City or Sporting CP in the Champions League last 16.

Regardless of the opponent, Bodo/Glimt’s historic run shows how belief, preparation, and tenacity can bridge gaps between Arctic underdogs and Europe’s elite. It’s a David vs. Goliath game, but the Norwegians were able to defy the odds towards one of the most elusive wins of the Champions League season.

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Originally published on sportsworldnews.com

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Lowe’s (LOW) Q4 2025 earnings

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Lowe's (LOW) Q4 2025 earnings

A Lowe’s store in Concord, California, US, on Monday, Nov. 17, 2025.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Lowe’s topped Wall Street’s quarterly revenue and earnings expectations on Wednesday, as the retailer’s quarterly sales grew more than 10% year over year.

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The home improvement company said it expects total sales for the full current fiscal year to range between $92 billion and $94 billion, which would be a roughly 7% to 9% increase over the prior year. It said it expects adjusted earnings per share to be between $12.25 and $12.75 for the full year. Lowe’s said it expects comparable sales, a metric that takes out one-time factors, to be approximately flat to up 2%.

In a news release, CEO Marvin Ellison said the company’s strategy is resonating with its do-it-yourself customers and home professionals, even as the home improvement market remains tepid.

“While the housing macro remains pressured, we are focused on directing what is within our control, which includes our ongoing productivity initiatives,” he said. “We remain confident that we are well-positioned to take share regardless of the macro environment.”

Here’s what Lowe’s reported for the fiscal fourth quarter compared with Wall Street’s estimates, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:

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  • Earnings per share: $1.98 adjusted vs. $1.94 expected
  • Revenue: $20.58 billion vs. $20.34 billion expected

Lowe’s net income for the three-month period that ended Jan. 30 dropped to $999 million, or $1.78 per share, from $1.13 billion, or $1.99 per share, in the year-ago quarter.

Revenue rose from $18.55 billion in the year-ago period.

Its competitor, Home Depot, on Tuesday beat Wall Street’s earnings and revenue expectations, but stuck by conservative full-year guidance. Its quarterly results reflected that home improvement demand remains tepid, as U.S. consumers continue to put off big projects because of high borrowing costs and housing prices as well as economic concerns.

As of Tuesday’s close, Lowe’s shares are up nearly 16% year-to-date, surpassing the S&P 500’s roughly 1% gains during the same period. Its stock is up about 15% over the past year, almost matching the S&P 500’s approximately 16% gains over that time.

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(VIDEO) Two American Heroes Awarded Medal of Honor During Trump’s 2026 State of the Union Address

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Sarah Ferguson

In a dramatic break from tradition during his 2026 State of the Union address on February 24, President Donald Trump presented the nation’s highest military decoration, the Medal of Honor, to two American service members—one for recent heroism in a covert operation in Venezuela and the other to a 100-year-old Korean War veteran whose valor remained classified for decades.

US President Donald Trump delivers a speech during the Gaza Peace Summit in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt
US President Donald Trump
AFP

The awards to Army Chief Warrant Officer 5 Eric Slover and retired Navy Capt. E. Royce Williams marked the first time a president has bestowed the Medal of Honor during a State of the Union speech, drawing bipartisan applause in the House chamber and highlighting themes of military valor amid a lengthy address focused on domestic achievements and foreign policy.

Slover, an active-duty helicopter pilot, received the medal for extraordinary actions during a January 2026 special operations mission that resulted in the capture of former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. Wounded in the operation, Slover continued to fly his aircraft under heavy fire, ensuring the safe extraction of his team and the successful abduction of the Venezuelan leader. Lt. Gen. Jonathan Braga, commander of U.S. Special Operations Command, placed the medal around Slover’s neck—a departure from the usual presidential presentation—after Trump described the pilot’s courage as “above and beyond the call of duty.”

Williams, now 100 years old and a San Diego resident, was honored for his heroism on November 18, 1952, during the Korean War. Flying an F9F Panther from the USS Oriskany, Williams single-handedly engaged seven Soviet MiG-15s in a dogfight over the Sea of Japan. Despite being outnumbered and sustaining damage to his aircraft, he shot down four enemy planes before safely returning to his carrier. The mission remained classified for nearly 50 years due to Cold War sensitivities involving Soviet involvement. First Lady Melania Trump presented the medal to Williams, who stood to receive a prolonged standing ovation from both sides of the aisle.

Trump praised both men as exemplars of American bravery. “These are true American heroes,” he said, noting Williams’ long wait for recognition. “Tonight, at 100 years old, this brave Navy captain is finally getting the recognition he deserves. He was a legend long before this evening.” The president added a lighthearted remark about the award: “I’ve always wanted the Congressional Medal of Honor, but I was informed I’m not allowed to give it to myself. That’s a big thing.”

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The ceremony came amid a broader sequence of honors during the nearly two-hour speech—the longest State of the Union in recent history. Trump also presented Purple Hearts to National Guardsman Andrew Wolfe, who survived a gunshot wound in a 2025 Washington, D.C., attack, and posthumously to Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, who died in the same incident. He awarded the Legion of Merit to a Coast Guard rescue swimmer for flood operations and announced that U.S. men’s hockey goaltender Connor Hellebuyck would receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his performance in the recent Olympic gold medal win.

The Medal of Honor recognitions provided rare moments of unity in an otherwise partisan address. Democrats and Republicans alike rose in applause, particularly for the centenarian Williams, whose story bridged generations of service. Williams, who also served in World War II and Vietnam, acknowledged the crowd with a salute, drawing extended cheers.

The awards underscore the administration’s emphasis on military strength and recognition of service members. Slover’s citation highlights ongoing U.S. involvement in Venezuela following Maduro’s ouster, while Williams’ long-delayed honor reflects efforts to declassify and acknowledge Cold War-era actions.

The Medal of Honor, awarded in the name of Congress, is given for conspicuous gallantry at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty. Fewer than 4,000 have been bestowed since its creation during the Civil War.

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As reactions poured in February 25, veterans’ groups and military leaders praised the spotlight on heroism. The Navy highlighted Williams as embodying “the fighting spirit and enduring legacy of the United States Navy.” Slover’s unit and Special Operations community expressed pride in the recognition of recent valor.

The dual presentations added emotional weight to Trump’s address, which also covered economic gains, immigration enforcement, and international developments. While critics noted the speech’s length and award-show style, the Medal of Honor moments stood out as bipartisan tributes to sacrifice and courage.

The recognition of Slover and Williams serves as a reminder of the enduring cost of service and the nation’s commitment to honoring those who go beyond the call of duty—whether in the skies over Korea seven decades ago or in a high-stakes mission last month.

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Microsoft Bypasses OpenAI Feud, Partners with Starlink for Connectivity Project

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Microsoft Slashes Jobs Across Teams, Aims to Streamline Management

Microsoft on Tuesday announced a new partnership with Starlink, the satellite internet arm of SpaceX, to expand global connectivity—signaling it is willing to work with Elon Musk’s businesses even as he battles Microsoft’s close partner, OpenAI.

The collaboration will focus on connecting hundreds of community hubs in Kenya through a joint effort between Microsoft, Starlink and a local internet service provider.

In a blog post, Microsoft said the project aims to bring reliable internet access to underserved areas using low-Earth orbit satellite technology.

“Through our collaboration with Starlink, Microsoft is combining low-Earth orbit satellite connectivity with community-based deployment models and local ecosystem partnerships,” said Melanie Nakagawa, Microsoft’s chief sustainability officer, CNBC reported

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“This is intended to expand the set of tools available to deliver digital access while remaining firmly embedded in a holistic, partnership-driven approach.”

Microsoft Connects 299 Million People Worldwide

The move comes at a time when Musk is locked in a heated legal fight with OpenAI and its CEO, Sam Altman.

According to the NY Post, Musk, who co-founded OpenAI in 2015, is seeking as much as $134 billion in damages, arguing that the company shifted away from its original nonprofit mission.

Court filings show he wants compensation for what he calls “wrongful gains” tied to his early backing of the startup.

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Despite the legal tension, Microsoft appears focused on expanding access to technology. The company has said it previously set a goal to bring internet access to more than 250 million people by the end of 2025.

According to Nakagawa, Microsoft has already extended connectivity to more than 299 million people worldwide.

The partnership also adds to growing demand for SpaceX’s satellite network, which already holds contracts with US government agencies such as NASA and the Department of Defense.

Musk recently announced that SpaceX would merge with his artificial intelligence startup, xAI, which develops the Grok chatbot.

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Meanwhile, Microsoft continues to support a wide range of AI tools through its cloud platform. Last year, the company said its Foundry software added support for Grok models.

Originally published on vcpost.com

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Panera Bread releases first-ever value menu with ‘Mix & Match’ deals

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Panera Bread releases first-ever value menu with 'Mix & Match' deals

A steak sandwich and French onion soup from Panera Bread Co. arranged in the Queens borough of New York, US, on Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023. 

Bing Guan | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Panera Bread is entering the so-called value wars with its new “Mix & Match” deals in a bid to win back price-conscious diners.

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The chain, known for its soups, salads and sandwiches, is in the early stages of a turnaround, with a focus on reinvesting in its business and reversing years of traffic declines. Once the top fast-casual brand in the U.S., Panera has fallen to No. 3, ceding the top spots to Chipotle Mexican Grill and Panda Express.

In 2024, Panera’s sales fell 5% to $6.1 billion, according to Technomic estimates.

A key part of Panera’s comeback strategy is focusing on value.

Across the restaurant industry, executives have reported weaker spending among consumers, who are trying to save money by trading down to fast food or dining out less frequently. Chains like McDonald’s and Taco Bell have leaned into value offerings to try to win back customers.

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About 3 out of every 4 diners said that daily specials, discounts or value promotions matter when choosing where to dine or order takeout, according to the National Restaurant Association’s annual State of the Restaurant Industry report.

“[Consumers] are seeking value, and they’re also seeking quality,” Panera CEO Paul Carbone told CNBC. “That’s so, so important.”

Starting Wednesday, Panera customers can choose halved portions of sandwiches and salads, as well as cups of soup, from the “Mix & Match” menu. Each of the 10 items is priced at $4.99, and diners have to buy at least two items. Seasonal menu items will also rotate through the “Mix & Match” options.

Each order also comes with the choice of a baguette, chips or an apple.

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Panera explored other value offerings, but the “Mix & Match” menu tested successfully, Carbone said.

“The guest has really, really reacted well to it,” he said, adding the menu is expected to drive incremental visits to the restaurant.

And while Panera is introducing the deal, its popular “You Pick Two” offering is sticking around.

Carbone said that customer research showed that diners view the option to buy two entrees from the menu as an opportunity for variety, rather than a chance to save money. Like “Mix & Match,” the offer allows customers to choose a half salad, half sandwich or cup of soup or mac and cheese. However, “You Pick Two” spans the menu, rather than being restricted to just 10 items.

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Farm owner fined over shearer death in the Wheatbelt

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Farm owner fined over shearer death in the Wheatbelt

A Western Australian farm owner has been fined $22,000 over the death of a shearer who was caught in a decades-old wool press.

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We shouldn’t get hung up on firms being Welsh-owned but those with potential for growth

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Frank Holmes says the real dividing line is not between nationalism and globalism. It is between capability and complacency

Frank Holmes.

Wales is not a large economy pretending to be small. It is structurally small. The overwhelming majority of Welsh firms are micro enterprises, many of them lifestyle businesses, subcontractors or locally oriented service providers.

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Medium-sized companies, the real engines of productivity, export intensity and durable wage growth, are comparatively scarce. That imbalance explains much of Wales’ GVA (gross valued added) gap and its persistent productivity under performance.

It also explains why every political cycle returns to the same question: how do we build scale?

Plaid Cymru’s Senedd Election manifesto places ownership at the centre of the answer. The diagnosis is the “ownership gap”, the claim that Wales loses too much value because successful firms are sold externally and profits flow out. The proposed remedy is a stronger state-backed institutional architecture, including a National Development Agency, a more assertive Development Bank of Wales and a procurement system designed to retain wealth locally. The intention is clear. The consequences are more complex.

READ MORE: Next Welsh Government needs to help realise huge potential of renewablesREAD MORE: Construction work starts on two new campuses for Cardiff and Vale College

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Growing micro-firms into small companies, and small firms into medium-sized enterprises, requires more than stable local demand. It requires management depth, access to capital, export ambition, product differentiation and competitive pressure.

Public procurement reform may provide revenue stability, and patient capital may bridge funding gaps, but neither automatically produces internationally competitive firms. If policy softens competitive tension too far, firms can survive without truly scaling. The danger is institutionalising smallness rather than overcoming it. Protection can preserve, but it does not necessarily propel.

The comparison with Germany’s Mittelstand is frequently invoked, and rightly so. Germany’s economy is also SME-dominated, yet its mid-sized industrial champions command global niches with remarkable precision. However, the Mittelstand is not simply about local ownership. It is about specialisation, export penetration and long-term governance discipline.

These companies are often family-controlled, but they are globally integrated. They do not fear scale or external markets. They dominate them. The lesson for Wales is not merely to retain ownership but to cultivate firms capable of owning markets. Without export depth and technical specialisation, ownership becomes symbolic rather than strategic.

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On inward investment and mergers and acquisitions, the evidence from Wales itself complicates the narrative. Trade sales have historically been the dominant exit route for Welsh businesses, and a large majority of those companies have remained operating in Wales after acquisition.

Ownership change has not equated to economic disappearance. Strategic acquirers frequently bring systems, working capital, distribution channels and professional governance that domestic firms alone may struggle to build. If Wales signals scepticism toward external capital, even indirectly, the likely effect is not an abrupt withdrawal of investment but a repricing. Fewer bidders. Lower valuations. Greater caution. Capital does not debate ideology. It reallocates.

Succession planning illustrates this tension clearly. Most SME owners are not driven by political philosophy but by retirement security, legacy, and compensation for risk taking, job creation and delivering economic impact. They want clarity on valuation, tax treatment, timing and continuity. If policy narrows perceived exit routes, some will accelerate sales, restructure holdings or incorporate elsewhere to preserve flexibility.

Conversely, if a reformed development bank can credibly finance management buy-outs or structured internal successions on competitive terms, domestic retention becomes commercially viable rather than politically aspirational. Employee ownership models have a place, but where vendor financing constrains cash flow and investment capacity, resilience can weaken rather than strengthen. Ideology does not replace financial reality.

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For corporate investors considering Wales as a relocation base for services or manufacturing, the evaluation criteria remain unchanged. Skills depth, grid capacity, digital infrastructure, transport connectivity, planning speed and policy stability determine decisions.

The Cardiff Capital Region narrative of cluster strength in semiconductors, energy systems, digital industries and creative production is compelling when matched by execution. Investors seek predictability and technical competence. They do not seek protection from competition. If Wales demonstrates institutional maturity and regulatory clarity, capital will engage. If it projects uncertainty around ownership or capital mobility, investors will hedge their exposure.

The proposal for a stronger National Development Agency sits at the centre of this debate. Properly governed, such an institution can provide patient equity, bridge succession finance gaps and crowd in private capital into strategic sectors. It can smooth cycles and anchor long-term industrial bets.

Poorly governed, it can crowd out commercial lenders, politicise allocation decisions and concentrate valuation risk on the public balance sheet. The difference lies in governance discipline, transparency and a clear commercial mandate. If the institution becomes a co-investor with global capital, Wales strengthens its credibility. If it becomes a gatekeeper of capital flows, Wales narrows its own opportunity set.

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The broader impact of economic nationalism on GVA and productivity depends on how it is implemented. Retaining more profits locally can improve multiplier effects and community resilience. Aligning skills provision with industrial needs can raise labour productivity and we must double down on adopting AI too. Supporting domestic succession can preserve employment continuity. Yet if the framework discourages competitive exits, reduces the diversity of capital sources or prioritises ownership retention over operational excellence, productivity growth will slow. Sustainable economic growth requires both rootedness and openness.

External investors can and do bring other benefits, not least experienced management and board members, networks within their portfolio companies, international reach and discipline on planned delivery and governance. This extends to Stock Exchange listed companies, of which there are too few in Wales, with only one FTSE 100 company, Admiral Group, whose shareholders are international.

The real dividing line is not between nationalism and globalism. It is between capability and complacency. Ownership matters when it supports strategic continuity and reinvestment. It becomes irrelevant when firms lack competitive edge. Wales does not need to shield itself from global capital. It needs to negotiate from a position of strength. That strength will come from skills, infrastructure, cluster coherence and disciplined institutions.

The opportunity is genuine. So is the risk. The future of Wales’ economy will not be determined by who owns its companies. Competitiveness and reach beyond Wales is the outcome that ultimately matters.

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Frank Holmes is a partner with Gambit Corporate Finance and chair of the Cardiff Capital Region’s Economic Growth Partnership.

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Top 5 mid cap mutual funds to invest in February 2026

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The Economic Times

ETMutualFunds has shortlisted the top midcap mutual funds based on mean rolling returns, consistency over the last three years, downside risk, outperformance and asset size. The threshold is Rs 50 crore.

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Lamborghini CEO Says EV Market for Luxury Cars Is ‘Close to Zero’

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Lamborghini CEO Says EV Market for Luxury Cars Is ‘Close

Lamborghini has canceled plans to launch its first fully electric vehicle, saying demand from wealthy buyers is almost nonexistent.

Chief Executive Stephan Winkelmann said the market for high-end electric supercars is “close to zero,” leading the brand to shelve its all-electric Lanzador project.

In an interview with The Sunday Times, Winkelmann explained that the company studied customer feedback, dealer input, and global data for more than a year before making the decision.

The Lanzador, first revealed in 2023 as a powerful “Ultra GT,” had been expected later this decade with a price near $300,000. That plan is now off the table, Fortune reported.

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“The decision was made after over a year of continuous internal discussion, engaging with customers, dealers, market analysis, and global data,” Winkelmann said.

He added that the “acceptance curve” for electric vehicles among Lamborghini’s target clients was “close to zero” and flattening.

Investing heavily in a full battery-electric model, he warned, risked becoming an “expensive hobby” and would be financially irresponsible.

Lamborghini Shifts Focus to Plug-In Hybrids

Instead, Lamborghini will focus on plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, known as PHEVs.

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“Plug-in hybrids offer the best of both worlds, combining the agility and low-rev boost of electric battery technology with the emotion and power output of an internal combustion engine,” Winkelmann said.

For now, the company plans to keep building traditional combustion-engine cars “for as long as possible.”

According to FoxBusiness, he said Lamborghini buyers want an emotional driving experience, something he believes electric cars currently struggle to provide. “EVs, in their current form, struggle to deliver this specific emotional connection,” he noted.

Lamborghini is owned by Volkswagen AG through its subsidiary Audi. It is not alone in rethinking electric strategies. Stellantis recently took a $26.5 billion charge after scaling back EV production.

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General Motors recorded a $7 billion hit tied to changes in its EV plans. Ford Motor Company also announced major write-downs as it pivots toward hybrids and more affordable models.

Originally published on vcpost.com

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