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CGW: Global Mix Of Water Utilities And Industrials Lacks Coherent Investment Case (CGW)

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CGW: Global Mix Of Water Utilities And Industrials Lacks Coherent Investment Case (CGW)

This article was written by

I am an international analyst with a Buffett and Munger inspired approach to investing. My emphasis is on identifying high quality, shareholder-oriented companies which have been unfairly discounted by the market due to short term factors or irrational investor psychology. At the moment, I am particularly interested in legacy businesses considered to be in secular decline in sectors such as remittances, ATMs and tobacco, where cash generative, high yield stocks (often with under-appreciated revenue and earnings growth) are very often unfairly ignored. While emphasizing U.S. stocks, I also cover attractive opportunities within my own country (the UK) and globally.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Perth Bears eye 20k members, 85pc already from WA

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Perth Bears eye 20k members, 85pc already from WA

ANALYSIS: Securing a Perth Bears match access membership for HBF Park home games next season could now be more challenging than some anticipated.

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Bunge’s SWOT analysis: stock navigates merger integration and earnings recovery

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Bunge’s SWOT analysis: stock navigates merger integration and earnings recovery

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Business

Russell 2000 Index: The Original Benchmark For U.S. Small Caps

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Russell 2000 Index: The Original Benchmark For U.S. Small Caps

FTSE Russell is a leading global provider of index and benchmark solutions, spanning diverse asset classes and investment objectives. As a trusted investment partner we help investors make better-informed investment decisions, manage risk, and seize opportunities.Market participants look to us for our expertise in developing and managing global index solutions across asset classes. Asset owners, asset managers, ETF providers and investment banks choose FTSE Russell solutions to benchmark their investment performance and create investment funds, ETFs, structured products, and index-based derivatives. Our clients use our solutions for asset allocation, investment strategy analysis and risk management, and value us for our robust governance process and operational integrity.For over 40 years we have been at the forefront of driving change for the investor, always innovating to shape the next generation of benchmarks and investment solutions that open up new opportunities for the global investment community.

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Civic Centre in Newport part of new review of council’s properties

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Business Live

The £250,000 office review will be funded using the council’s reserves

Newport civic centre.(Image: Copyright Unknown)

The future of Newport’s civic centre could be decided in a new review of the city council’s office buildings. Cabinet members have agreed to spend £250,000 on a new strategy for its various offices – including its headquarters.

The civic centre is a listed building containing the council chamber and is the base for many of the local authority’s administrative functions, but in recent years has faced an uncertain future.

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It is currently closed on Fridays for cost-cutting purposes.

READ MORE: Cardiff Capital Region £50m evergreen fund close to first cycle full investmentREAD MORE: A new Welsh Development Agency set to be created by Plaid government

A relocation plan was previously considered and then shelved by decision-makers, and the council said in mid-2025 it had “no plans to” move its headquarters to another location.

Some critics have argued the civic centre is underused, however.

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Freedom of Information Act disclosures last year showed its running costs reached £1.05 million in 2024, and there were typically between 200 and 350 staff working daily at a building which contains around 380 “office rooms”.

At the time, Cllr David Fouweather, a Conservative, said a move could save the council money, and by encouraging more people to return to the office would provide a “better service” than working from home.

Independent councillor Mark Howells said last year staff should return to the office to improve customer service levels.

However, the council has defended its home-working policies as having “clear benefits to it around recruitment and retention, congestion and climate change”.

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The £250,000 office strategy will be funded using the council’s reserves, following cabinet approval

They also approved a £750,000 purchase of a property to serve as an additional children’s home, as well as the use of reserves to fund £631,000 of work “on developing a clearer understanding of the key drivers of demand and cost within adult social care”, and £40,000 for a review of the council’s fees and charges.

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Missile and drone strikes kill eight in Russia and Ukraine

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Missile and drone strikes kill eight in Russia and Ukraine


Missile and drone strikes kill eight in Russia and Ukraine

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VGW result shows online gaming strength

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VGW result shows online gaming strength

Laurence Escalante’s VGW Holdings has seen a 19 per cent increase in revenue to $7.3 billion from rising online gaming, pushing net profit up by a third to more than $650 million.

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Japan’s Takaichi unveils $19 billion extra budget, reassures on bond issuance

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Japan’s Takaichi unveils $19 billion extra budget, reassures on bond issuance


Japan’s Takaichi unveils $19 billion extra budget, reassures on bond issuance

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Thomson Geer rebrands to Thomsons, launches Faculti Lawyers spin-out

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Thomson Geer rebrands to Thomsons, launches Faculti Lawyers spin-out

National law firm Thomson Geer has split its practice to rebrand and launch a specialist division for AI-related work, which includes a handful of its Perth lawyers.

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The Hidden Cost of Maintaining Outdated Enterprise Systems

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What Threat Detection Looks Like in a Large Organisation

Many businesses find their legacy systems just sort of blend into the day-to-day operations. While not perfect, they manage to keep things ticking over. The thought of replacing them often feels too costly, too risky, and something that can easily be put off for another quarter.

The thing is, “good enough” systems seldom stay that way for very long.

What might begin as a minor annoyance can quietly escalate into higher maintenance bills, slower product development, nagging security worries, integration issues, and general operational slowdowns that ripple across the entire company. Many businesses often don’t fully grasp the true cost of outdated systems because the costs are hidden, spread across departments like operations, support, and security, and reflected in overall productivity, rather than showing up as a single clear line item.

When companies face aging infrastructure, specialized legacy system migration services can help reduce operational risks while bringing those essential systems up to speed—systems that perhaps no longer quite meet today’s business demands.

For many, it’s no longer a question of *if* they need to modernize, but rather *how much longer* they can really afford to wait.

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So, how exactly do companies start to pinpoint the true cost of those older enterprise systems?

Now, the direct costs of older infrastructure are usually pretty clear. Every year, businesses can point to costs such as server maintenance, support contracts, licensing fees, and hardware replacement.

The real issue, though, often lies in everything quietly happening beneath those visible numbers.

Outdated systems frequently force employees into manual workarounds, which simply slows them down daily. Teams might spend hours sorting out inconsistent reports, trying to match up disconnected data, moving information by hand between different systems, or simply waiting for clunky old processes to grind to a halt. These kinds of inefficiencies rarely show up as a line item in an IT budget, but they steadily chip away at productivity throughout the entire organization.

Technical debt, you see, often builds up quietly in these older environments, until even making a small, straightforward update turns into something risky and costly. Eventually, companies reach a point where they’re genuinely hesitant to change anything, worried that a minor tweak could unexpectedly bring down other connected systems.

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This lack of adaptability, in turn, impacts a company’s growth in very tangible ways.

Something like launching a new customer portal, bringing in modern analytics, expanding eCommerce features, or simply improving the customer experience might suddenly require months of engineering time rather than just weeks. For industries that move quickly, such delays can put a company at a competitive disadvantage.

Even attracting new talent becomes tougher.

Many engineers would rather work with modern technologies than spend their days maintaining old systems with outdated frameworks and patchy documentation. Businesses that heavily depend on old infrastructure frequently find it hard to both attract and keep experienced technical professionals.

What ends up happening is that teams spend more and more of their energy just keeping these fragile systems running, instead of actually developing new features or capabilities.

So, how can businesses reduce the security and compliance risks associated with their legacy systems?

You often find that outdated systems become security weaknesses well before a company even thinks about replacing them.

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A lot of these older platforms were simply built for a totally different technological era; they weren’t made to handle today’s security demands, cloud setups, or modern authentication methods.

The older the systems get, the harder and riskier it becomes to manage their security issues properly.

Some of these platforms no longer get updates or security patches from their vendors. Others run on operating systems that aren’t supported anymore, or they’re in highly customized setups that make any kind of upgrade really complicated and risky. Sometimes, companies even avoid applying patches altogether, fearing downtime or potential compatibility issues.

This just leads to long-term vulnerability.

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Moreover, older enterprise systems often come with weaker monitoring, less clear audit trails, and fragmented access controls. These shortcomings make it much tougher for companies to spot threats quickly or react fast when an incident happens.

And then there are compliance requirements, which just pile on more pressure.

Fields such as healthcare, finance, retail, and logistics are facing increasingly stringent expectations for data protection, transparent reporting, and operational accountability. Legacy environments frequently struggle to meet these standards effectively, mainly because they were simply not built with modern compliance frameworks in mind.

The risks involved aren’t just technical, either. A significant security breach can throw operations off balance, erode customer trust, open up legal liabilities, and trigger costly recovery processes.

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So, what’s the path forward for businesses looking to tackle the integration and scalability challenges associated with legacy software?

A lot of businesses really start to see the limits of their legacy software when they try to bring other parts of their operations up to date.

Older enterprise systems frequently struggle to integrate with modern tools, cloud platforms, and the real-time workflows we expect today. Their APIs might be restricted, old, poorly documented, or simply non-existent. Getting data to sync between different systems often turns into a slow, unreliable chore, pushing teams towards manual tasks or quick-fix workarounds.

This, of course, creates friction between departments.

Sales teams might be operating with partial customer data. Inventory visibility could be inconsistent across different sales channels. Reports might always seem a step behind actual business activity. And marketing automation might end up relying on manual exports, simply because the systems can’t talk to each other correctly.

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As a business grows, these issues usually just compound.

Systems that were initially built for smaller operational volumes frequently struggle to handle growing traffic, bigger datasets, and more intricate business demands. During periods of expansion, company acquisitions, or significant digital transformation efforts, these scalability limitations become impossible to overlook.

A common approach is to try to fix things by simply adding more tools on top of the old infrastructure. While this can offer a temporary band-aid, it often just makes things more complex and adds to the technical debt in the long run.

Modernization, however, offers companies an opportunity to clear away years of accumulated complexity, rather than constantly trying to work around it.

With modern architectures, cloud-native infrastructure, and API-driven systems, organizations can integrate more smoothly, scale up quickly, and adapt far more easily as their business needs evolve.

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How can organizations go about modernizing their legacy systems without bringing their day-to-day operations to a halt?

One of the main reasons businesses often put off modernization is simply the fear of interrupting everything.

The idea of replacing systems that are essential to daily operations, customer transactions, inventory management, or financial processes can understandably feel quite risky.

However, modernization doesn’t always mean ripping everything out and replacing it all at once.

Many businesses are now adopting phased modernization strategies that help reduce operational risk while gradually enhancing the underlying infrastructure.

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This approach might involve:

  • updating one module at a time
  • moving workloads in smaller steps
  • operating both the old and new systems side-by-side for a period
  • bringing in middleware during the transition phases
  • or focusing on the systems that pose the greatest risk first

The key is to gain more flexibility without causing major interruptions to core operations.

Typically, successful modernization projects start with a thorough audit of the current setup. Businesses really need to get a clear picture of all their dependencies, integrations, operational risks, and technical limitations *before* they begin making architectural choices.

Setting up pilot environments is also crucial. Testing modernization approaches under controlled conditions allows teams to confirm everything works as expected before rolling it out across the entire business.

Data migration, in particular, demands extremely careful planning. If not handled well, it can lead to downtime, inconsistent reporting, or data integrity issues that impact numerous departments.

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For many companies, this quickly stops being solely an IT concern and becomes a broader operational challenge.

That’s often why many organizations choose to collaborate with experienced modernization partners who truly grasp enterprise migration strategies, phased rollouts, and complex, integration-heavy environments. Companies such as nCube assist businesses in modernizing essential systems by offering scalable engineering teams and migration approaches focused on operations, all designed to minimize disruptions.

So, how exactly can modernized enterprise systems actually boost business performance?

Modernization isn’t just about the technology itself. A lot of the time, it fundamentally shifts how quickly a business can adapt and expand.

Modern enterprise systems can boost operational efficiency across several areas simultaneously.

Teams find themselves spending less time on manual workarounds, wrestling with disconnected data, or repetitive processes. Reporting gets quicker and more precise. Departments end up collaborating more smoothly because their systems share information far more reliably.

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The customer experience often improves, too.

With modern systems, it becomes simpler to support omnichannel strategies, offer real-time inventory insights, deliver personalized experiences, and provide quicker service. Companies can respond to evolving customer expectations without completely overhauling their infrastructure every time a new need emerges.

Scaling up also becomes significantly simpler.

Cloud-native and modular environments empower organizations to expand their infrastructure more efficiently, sidestepping many common bottlenecks in older systems.

Often, long-term maintenance costs also come down. Businesses can dedicate less effort to managing delicate infrastructure and more to driving growth initiatives.

Perhaps most importantly, modern systems enable companies to react much more quickly as their business landscape shifts.

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This kind of flexibility is becoming invaluable in industries where customer expectations, operational pressures, and technological standards are all changing rapidly.

The hidden costs of outdated enterprise systems rarely hit all at once.

Instead, these costs build up over time through operational inefficiencies, security vulnerabilities, increasing maintenance expenses, integration headaches, and generally slower innovation. What might initially seem like the cheaper option to maintain can, surprisingly, become much more expensive in the long run.

For many businesses, the real risk isn’t modernization itself. It’s actually taking too long to tackle that aging infrastructure, which is already dragging on their operations.

Ultimately, modernization is about building systems that are simpler to scale, easier to integrate, more secure, and readily adaptable as the business itself changes and grows.

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With careful planning, a phased implementation approach, and the right migration strategy, companies can update their most critical systems without bringing operations to a standstill, laying a much more robust foundation for future expansion.

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Tali Raphaely on Real Estate, Renovation and Building in Miami

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Tali Raphaely on Real Estate, Renovation and Building in Miami

Tali Raphaely (born 27 December 1977) is a Miami-based real estate entrepreneur, attorney, and investor known for his hands-on approach to property ownership and development.

At 48, he has built a growing portfolio across South Florida focused on single-family homes, multifamily apartment buildings, luxury rentals, Section 8 housing, and ground-up construction projects.

Originally from Baltimore, Maryland, Raphaely attended law school in Florida on a full merit-based scholarship and graduated in the top 3% of his class. He later returned to Maryland and served as a Law Clerk for the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland for two years. After briefly practising as a litigation attorney, he transitioned into real estate law and title insurance, eventually owning a nationwide real estate title company.

Over time, Raphaely shifted his focus from legal work to real estate investment and operations. Today, he specialises in purchasing underperforming multifamily properties, renovating them, and managing them through his own team. His portfolio is centred entirely in South Florida, where he has lived for more than a decade.

Raphaely is also the owner of South Florida Home Group, a property management company, and a yacht charter business. He is the author of The Complete Guide on How to Negotiate and is recognised for combining legal knowledge, operational discipline, and practical experience in the real estate industry.

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Outside of work, his interests include fitness, boxing, chess, boating, reading, and exploring Miami’s restaurant scene.

Q&A With Real Estate Entrepreneur Tali Raphaely

Q: What first interested you in real estate?

Tali Raphaely: I did not begin in real estate investing. I started in law. I attended law school in Florida on a full scholarship and graduated near the top of my class. After that, I worked as a Law Clerk for the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland. That experience taught me discipline and attention to detail.

Later, I briefly practised litigation, but I realised I wanted to build businesses rather than only work on disputes. Real estate became the natural fit because it combines negotiation, operations, long-term thinking, and problem-solving.

Q: How did your legal background help your career in property investment?

Tali Raphaely: It helped a lot. Before becoming an investor, I worked in real estate law and eventually owned a nationwide title company. That gave me insight into transactions, contracts, and risk.

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You start understanding how deals are structured and where problems usually happen. I think that gave me a strong foundation before I began buying my own properties.

Q: What type of properties do you focus on today?

Tali Raphaely: My main focus is multifamily apartment buildings in South Florida. I also own single-family homes, luxury rentals, and Section 8 properties.

I like properties that need improvement. I enjoy buying buildings that are underperforming, renovating them, and improving the operations. Sometimes the biggest value comes from organisation and management, not just construction work.

Q: Why Miami?

Tali Raphaely: I moved to Miami about 13 years ago and stayed because of the energy here. Miami is constantly evolving. There is always development happening and the market moves quickly.

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It is competitive, but that also creates opportunities. You need to pay attention to trends and stay flexible. My entire portfolio today is based in South Florida because I prefer to stay close to my projects and operations.

Q: You are known for being hands-on. Why is that important to you?

Tali Raphaely: Real estate is not passive for me. I self-manage my properties along with my team. I believe owning buildings is only one part of the business. Managing them properly is equally important.

I like being involved in renovations, tenant issues, maintenance decisions, and operational planning. Staying close to the day-to-day side of the business helps you understand what is really happening.

Q: What do you enjoy most about renovations and construction?

Tali Raphaely: I enjoy the transformation process. There is something satisfying about taking an older property and improving it.

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I also do ground-up construction of single-family homes, which is a different challenge. With new construction, you control everything from the design to the final product. With rehabs, you are solving existing problems. I enjoy both because they require different ways of thinking.

Q: Has negotiation played a major role in your success?

Tali Raphaely: Absolutely. Negotiation is part of every business decision. That is why I wrote The Complete Guide on How to Negotiate.

People often think negotiation is about being aggressive, but I see it differently. A good negotiation is really about understanding the other side, listening carefully, and finding practical solutions. That applies to real estate, business partnerships, and everyday operations.

Q: What challenges do you see in today’s real estate industry?

Tali Raphaely: The market changes constantly. Costs change, regulations change, and buyer behaviour changes. You cannot become too comfortable.

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I think adaptability is important. Investors and operators need to stay organised and understand their numbers, but they also need patience. Real estate is a long-term business.

Q: What keeps you motivated after all these years?

Tali Raphaely: I genuinely enjoy the process. I like finding opportunities, improving properties, and building systems.

Outside of work, I stay active with fitness and boxing, and I enjoy boating, chess, reading, and exploring restaurants around Miami. But overall, I still enjoy the business itself. That makes a big difference.

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