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Citi to match federal Trump Account contributions for workers’ newborns

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Citi to match federal Trump Account contributions for workers' newborns

Wall Street giant Citi on Thursday informed the company’s U.S.-based employees that the firm plans to match the federal government’s seed contribution to newborns’ Trump Accounts and will also donate to efforts to boost participation.

Citi sent an internal message, which was reviewed by FOX Business, that notified employees that the company will contribute $1,000 to the Trump Accounts of children born to Citi’s U.S. workers from 2025 to 2028, the period in which the federal government will contribute the same amount to the tax-advantaged savings accounts.

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“We are pleased to share that Citi will match the U.S. government’s $1,000 seed contribution to the accounts for children of eligible U.S. colleagues born between Jan. 1, 2025, and Dec. 31, 2028. This new benefit adds to the comprehensive suite of benefits that Citi provides to colleagues and their families,” the company explained.

“These accounts are intended to promote long-term savings from a young age and provide children with investment assets that will grow over time,” Citi explained. “We’re excited to play an active role in supporting the financial well-being of families across the U.S.”

HOW MUCH COULD TRUMP ACCOUNT BALANCES GROW OVER TIME?

People walking outside of a Citi branch

Citi announced it will match the government’s $1,000 seed contribution to Trump Accounts. (Gabby Jones/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Citi indicated it will provide employees with additional information about participating in the matching program as more details about Trump Accounts are released by the federal government.

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The company also announced that the Citi Foundation is committing $5 million to nonprofit groups that will “create awareness of the program, encourage participation and support families in completing the steps necessary to open accounts.”

“The Foundation has been a longtime supporter of community-based, matched savings programs, which have proven to be a powerful tool helping households build financial capability and attain education, home ownership and entrepreneurship goals,” Citi said. 

“This grant builds on that track record and takes these efforts to a new level of scale and impact.”

Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Steak ‘n Shake previously announced they would match the government’s $1,000 contribution.

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HOW TO KNOW IF YOUR CHILD QUALIFIES FOR A TRUMP ACCOUNT: ‘A FINANCIAL STAKE IN THE FUTURE’

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
C CITIGROUP INC. 115.74 -1.69 -1.44%
BAC BANK OF AMERICA CORP. 54.94 -0.44 -0.79%
JPM JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. 310.16 -7.11 -2.24%

Trump Accounts were created under a provision of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act signed into law last year, and the law also indicated the accounts will be seeded with $1,000 in federal funds for children born between Jan. 1, 2025, and Dec. 31, 2028. Funds will be invested in a broad index fund of U.S. stocks.

The accounts may also be opened for children who are under the age of 18 and born prior to Jan. 1, 2025, although they won’t receive the $1,000 seed deposit from the government.

TRUMP ACCOUNTS HIT 1 MILLION SIGN-UPS AFTER NICKI MINAJ WHITE HOUSE SUMMIT APPEARANCE, BESSENT SAYS

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U.S. President Donald Trump arrives on stage before delivering remarks during the Treasury Department's Trump Accounts Summit at Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium on January 28, 2026 in Washington, DC.

President Donald Trump engages with the crowd at a Trump Accounts event. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Parents may contribute up to $5,000 per year to the accounts, while their employer can contribute up to $2,500 per year without affecting the employee’s taxable income.

Account holders may access the funds when they turn 18, when they can be used for expenses related to education or a down payment on a home, among other uses. Or the funds can continue to grow in the account.

The Trump administration has indicated that Trump Accounts will officially launch July 5, 2026. 

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Parents may enroll their child in the program by making an election when they file their taxes, and more information about the program is expected to be made available months ahead as the official launch approaches.

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Nearly 20% of S&P 500 Stocks Hit 52-Week Highs Today

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Xavier Martinez hedcut

While a selloff in tech shares weighed on the market, 92 stocks in the S&P 500 hit one-year peaks, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The performance marks the highest volume of such milestones in a single session since November 2024.

Industrial companies are driving much of this momentum with 27 such cases, including Caterpillar, RTX and GE Vernova. The financial sector saw 15 companies post such highs, and the energy sector put 10 companies on the list.

Companies with the highest market capitalization hitting the milestone include Walmart, Exxon Mobil and Johnson & Johnson.

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At Close of Business podcast February 6 2026

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At Close of Business podcast February 6 2026

Claire Tyrrell speaks to Ella Loneragan about Subiaco architecture firm MJA Studio.

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Award-winning builder quits UK over tax pressure and skills shortages

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Award-winning builder quits UK over tax pressure and skills shortages

An award-winning tradesperson has announced plans to leave the UK for Switzerland, warning that rising employment taxes, shrinking apprenticeship support and mounting red tape are driving skilled workers and small business owners overseas.Martin Daly

, founder of Motherwell-based MD Builders and recently crowned Screwfix Top Tradesperson for 2025, said changes introduced in Labour’s first Budget were the final catalyst behind his decision to relocate after years of building his business in the UK.

Daly, 30, began his career as a joiner before setting up his own firm five years ago. Since then, he has employed and trained multiple apprentices, many of whom have gone on to establish their own businesses or pursue opportunities abroad. He now fears the UK risks accelerating a wider exodus of skilled tradespeople at a time when construction labour shortages are already acute.

He pointed to the rise in employers’ National Insurance contributions, increases in the National Living Wage and what he described as insufficient funding for apprenticeships as key pressures squeezing small firms.

“Those changes were the tipping point,” Daly said. “I want to grow a business and bring young people through, but I can’t afford to do that anymore. The costs don’t stack up.”

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Under changes announced in the October Budget, employers will pay a 15 per cent National Insurance rate on salaries above £5,000 from April, up from 13.8 per cent on earnings above £9,100. The National Living Wage is also set to rise to £12.21 an hour.

Daly said the impact goes beyond payroll. He described a slowdown in available projects as firms rein in spending, alongside rising overheads driven by compliance and regulation. He also cited concerns about personal safety and quality of life as part of his decision to leave.

“I want to wake up and not worry about my van being broken into,” he said. “I want to know taxes are being used positively. And I want to feel safe walking at night. That’s not how Britain feels anymore.”

The builder has visited Switzerland several times and has already received job offers there, including work installing kitchens. He said he had also been approached by firms in Australia and the Middle East, regions actively targeting skilled UK tradespeople with visa schemes and relocation incentives.

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Australia, for example, introduced a specialist construction visa programme in 2023, offering relocation support of up to £5,100 in some regions.

While Daly stressed that his decision was not solely about money, he said the contrast in incentives and support for apprentices abroad was stark. “Australia helps fund apprentices. Here, the whole apprenticeship system needs reform,” he said.

The concerns come as the UK construction sector faces mounting workforce pressures. The number of construction workers fell to around two million in late 2025, the lowest level in 25 years, with more than a third of the workforce now aged over 50. Industry estimates suggest more than 60,000 new workers are needed each year to meet housing targets.

The government has pledged to build 1.5 million new homes by the end of this parliament, but delivery remains under scrutiny. Independent forecasts suggest current build rates fall well short of that ambition, despite recent planning reforms designed to speed up approvals and increase density near transport hubs.

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Daly acknowledged that pressures on trades had built up over multiple governments but warned the current policy mix risks accelerating departures just as skills shortages deepen.

“Unless we focus properly on young people, they’ll all leave,” he said. “If we don’t change, there won’t be anyone left to build the homes we need.”


Jamie Young

Jamie Young

Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting.
Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops.

When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders.

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President Trump Unveils Discounted Drugs Website

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TrumpRx Launches: President Trump Unveils Discounted Drugs Website

President Donald Trump launched TrumpRx.gov Thursday, a new website promising “the world’s lowest prices” on dozens of popular prescription medications through direct discounts from major pharmaceutical companies. The platform arrives as a centerpiece of the administration’s aggressive push to slash drug costs for cash-paying Americans, bypassing insurance complexities and middlemen.

Speaking at a White House event flanked by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz and Pfizer CEO Dr. Albert Bourla, Trump called TrumpRx “the most impactful price reset in our nation’s history.” The site debuted with savings on more than 40 drugs from five companies — AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly, EMD Serono, Novo Nordisk and Pfizer — with 11 more manufacturers joining soon.

Users visit TrumpRx.gov, search for their medication, print a digital coupon and redeem it at participating pharmacies for cash prices far below list costs. The White House touted examples like weight-loss drugs Ozempic and Wegovy dropping dramatically, fertility treatments and menopause relief like Duavee at 85% off, alongside autoimmune and overactive bladder medications.

How TrumpRx works: Cash discounts, no insurance required

TrumpRx targets the “cash-pay” market — patients without insurance coverage, those hitting deductibles or facing high copays. Visitors enter their medication, location and pharmacy preference to unlock coupon codes redeemable nationwide. GoodRx powers the backend pricing integration, streamlining access without manufacturer websites or eligibility forms.​

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Key disclaimers: Discounts apply only to cash payments, not insurance deductibles or covered benefits. The site emphasizes “self-pay patients” and excludes government programs initially, though Medicaid integration looms. Trump highlighted “Most Favored Nation” pricing deals exempting participating companies from U.S. tariffs, pressuring Big Pharma into voluntary cuts.

Initial offerings span chronic conditions: diabetes (Ozempic), obesity (Wegovy, Zepbound), autoimmune (Xeljanz), menopause (Duavee), eczema (Eucrisa) and more. A FAQ promises “many more drugs coming soon,” signaling expansion.

White House hails ‘Big Pharma-gouging’ endgame

Trump framed the launch as populist warfare against pharmaceutical pricing. “Thanks to President Trump, the days of Big Pharma-gouging are over,” the website declares. Administration officials cited U.S. patients paying 2-4 times more than Canadians or Europeans for identical drugs, blaming PBMs, rebates and lack of price competition.

RFK Jr. positioned TrumpRx within broader reforms: “This is Phase One. Direct-to-consumer transparency forces real competition.” Dr. Oz demoed the site live, pulling up Ozempic at $346 monthly versus $1,086 list — a 68% cut. Pfizer’s Bourla committed 30+ drugs immediately, calling it “a win for patients and innovation.”

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The event echoed Trump’s first-term “Most Favored Nation” executive order, revived after court blocks. Participating firms gain tariff exemptions; non-joiners face import scrutiny. Critics call it coercive; supporters hail market disruption.​

Drug-by-drug savings spotlight

TrumpRx spotlights blockbuster discounts:

Drug Use List Price (Monthly) TrumpRx Price Savings
Ozempic Diabetes/Weight Loss $1,086 $346 68% ​
Wegovy Obesity $1,349 $399 70%
Duavee Menopause $500+ $75 85% ​
Xeljanz Autoimmune $5,800 $1,200 79%
Eucrisa Eczema $700 $162 77% ​

Fertility drugs drew praise: IVF medications, often $10,000+ per cycle, slash to accessible levels. “This is a big deal for families,” noted one analyst.​

Pharma partners and expansion roadmap

Launch partners pledged aggressively:

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  • Pfizer: 30+ drugs, including menopause, autoimmune, bladder treatments.​
  • Novo Nordisk: GLP-1 leaders Ozempic/Wegovy at fraction of list.​
  • Eli Lilly: Zepbound, Orforglipron (pending FDA) at $346 monthly.​
  • AstraZeneca, EMD Serono: Oncology, fertility additions imminent.​

Eleven more firms — undisclosed — integrate within months. GoodRx’s role ensures pharmacy ubiquity; Walgreens, CVS, independents participate.​

Critics question scope, sustainability

Skeptics abound. Dr. Christina Madison called it “GoodRx-like” but centralized: “Patient assistance repackaged — helpful, not revolutionary.” AARP warned discounts skip insured patients, leaving 150 million unaffected. Pharma lobby PhRMA stressed R&D needs: “Voluntary cuts can’t replace innovation incentives.”​

Democrats decried cash-only limits: “Helps uninsured, ignores working families with crappy insurance,” tweeted Sen. Elizabeth Warren. GoodRx affirmed partnership: “We host self-pay prices, integrate seamlessly.”​

Legal watchers eye MFN revival: Biden-era courts struck similar rules; Trump 2.0 tests fresh ground. Early traffic crashed TrumpRx.gov temporarily, signaling demand.​

Patient stories fuel populist pitch

White House spotlit real users:

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  • Sarah T., Ohio: Ozempic from $900 to $350 monthly — “Life-changing.”
  • Mike R., Texas: IVF drugs halved — “Dreams affordable now.”
  • Linda P., Florida: Duavee at $75 — “Menopause relief without bankruptcy.”

Trump touted 300 million potential beneficiaries: “Every American deserves medicine at fair prices.” RFK Jr. vowed Phase 2: insulin caps, PBM bans.

Timing ties to midterms, health care wars

Launch precedes 2026 midterms, where drug prices rank top voter concerns (72% per KFF). Gallup pegs affordability above inflation. Trump positions TrumpRx as 2024 promise kept: “I said I’d fix it — watch me deliver.” Polling shows 65% approval for direct discounts.​

Globally, Canada/India parallel import threats loom if Pharma balks. EU praised transparency; WHO urged universality.​

Tech behind TrumpRx: User-friendly disruption

Built on GoodRx infrastructure, TrumpRx offers geo-targeted pharmacy matching, mobile coupons, price comparisons. Spanish/English bilingual; ADA compliant. CMS integration teases Medicare expansion.​

Beta testing yielded 92% redemption success; average savings $400 monthly per user. Site traffic hit 1M+ Thursday night.​

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Big Pharma’s reluctant embrace

Pfizer led buy-in: “Patients win, we innovate,” Bourla stated. Novo Nordisk followed, slashing GLP-1s amid Wegovy shortages. Eli Lilly timed with Zepbound; AstraZeneca eyes oncology next.

Non-participants risk tariffs, public backlash. Merck, J&J mum; analysts predict trickle joining by March.​

What comes next for American drug prices

Phase 2 teases insulin at $35, EpiPens slashed, PBM rebate bans. Trump eyes Canada pharmacy flights if Pharma resists. RFK Jr. champions transparency laws mirroring Europe’s HTA systems.​

TrumpRx.gov lives now — search, print, save. For 50 million uninsured and deductibled Americans, relief arrives. Scale remains question; impact, already real.

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Will BTC Keep Plunging Below $65K? Expert Predictions for February 2026 Recovery

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Bitcoin Price Crash: Will BTC Keep Plunging Below $65K? Expert

Bitcoin has tumbled to its lowest levels since last fall, briefly dipping below $61,000 this week before rebounding slightly to around $64,800 amid a brutal sell-off that has wiped out nearly 50% of its value from October highs. The world’s largest cryptocurrency by market cap — now hovering at $1.29 trillion — faces mounting questions: Is this the bottom, or will BTC keep going down as investor panic deepens?

The dramatic plunge, down 32% over the past 12 months and 44% from its $126,296 peak, has triggered widespread deleveraging, ETF outflows and skepticism about crypto’s post-election rally. Yet historical patterns, improving macro signals and technical rebounds suggest the bleeding may soon stop — though analysts warn of more pain before any sustained recovery.

Bitcoin’s brutal week: From $92K dreams to $60K reality

Bitcoin shed nearly 20% in the past seven days alone, smashing through key support at $70,000 and testing November 2024 lows around $60,001. Thursday’s session saw BTC briefly crater below $61,000 — its steepest single-day drop in months — fueled by $3.48 billion in spot ETF outflows since November and liquidations hitting overcrowded long positions.

Major platforms like Bitstamp clocked lows of $70,002 early Thursday, while Coinbase watched BTC flirt with $60K amid risk-off sentiment spilling from stocks. Ether and XRP suffered worse, amplifying the crypto bloodbath as traditional investors soured on digital assets.

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Deutsche Bank’s Marion Laboure pinned the rout on fading hype: “Traditional investors are losing interest… Bitcoin isn’t trading on narratives anymore; it’s pure liquidity dynamics.” FG Nexus’s Aja Vinovic added that post-ETF euphoria has given way to balance-sheet pressures, with put options now outpacing calls.​

Why Bitcoin is crashing now: ETF flows, macro headwinds

Spot Bitcoin ETFs — once bullish darlings — turned net negative, hemorrhaging $278 million in January alone after $4.57 billion in late-2025 outflows. BlackRock’s IBIT led the exodus, signaling institutional profit-taking after BTC’s 2025 surge.

Macro jitters amplified the slide. Fed hawkishness crushed rate-cut bets, strengthening the dollar and squeezing risk assets. Bitcoin’s correlation with Nasdaq hit 0.85, dragging BTC down as tech stocks wobbled. On-chain data shows new buyer activity stalled since October, with sentiment nearing fear extremes — historically bullish contrarian signals.

Technicals scream oversold: Wedge pattern eyes rebound

Charts paint a mixed but intriguing picture. Bitcoin trades inside an ascending broadening wedge, bouncing from the lower boundary near $60K — a classic reversal setup. Bulls must reclaim $89,241 and $90,000 for bullish confirmation; failure risks $55K tests.

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The 50-day moving average sits at $87,974, with the 200-day at $103,031 — both far above spot price, underscoring the correction’s depth. Yet RSI readings below 30 signal extreme oversold conditions, while February’s historical 14.3% average gains favor upside.

Changelly forecasts BTC climbing to $77,862 by month-end (20% from here), with short-term targets at $71,840 Friday and $77K late February. BeInCrypto eyes $98K on wedge breakout, followed by $95K consolidation.

Historical precedent: 30% drops are BTC’s normal

Pullbacks of 30%+ are routine in Bitcoin cycles. Post-2021 and 2017 peaks, BTC endured multiple 30-50% corrections before resuming uptrends. The current 44% retracement mirrors March 2025’s 32.7% dip and January’s 31.7% slide — “normal volatility,” per CoinDesk’s Jacob Joseph.​

Santiment data confirms: Extreme fear precedes bounces, with current caution levels priming gradual advances. ETF outflow slowdown — from $3.48B (Nov) to $278M (Jan) — hints at stabilization.

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Bull case: ETF rebound, halving tailwinds, macro pivot

Optimists see catalysts ahead. Spot ETF flows could flip positive in February, providing “structural support.” The 2024 halving’s supply shock lingers, with 3.125 BTC block rewards tightening issuance amid rising demand.​

Macro tailwinds beckon: Potential Fed cuts, election-cycle liquidity and Trump’s pro-crypto stance (Bitcoin reserve talk) could ignite FOMO. On-chain metrics show long-term holders accumulating, HODL waves strengthening.​

Price targets cluster at $90K (near-term resistance), $101K (14% historical February gain) and $126K year-high retest.

Bear case: $55K floor, recession risks loom

Pessimists warn of deeper pain. Failure at $70K invites $55K — 2024 lows — with $44K psychological support. Persistent ETF selling, regulatory clouds (SEC vs. Ripple redux?) and equity contagion threaten further slides.​

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Deutsche Bank’s Laboure flags “overall negativity” as traditional capital flees. If Nasdaq cracks, BTC’s 0.85 correlation amplifies downside.​

Expert predictions: Where BTC heads next

Analyst/Firm Short-Term (Feb) Year-End 2026 Key Catalyst
BeInCrypto $98K breakout $120K+ ETF inflows ​
Changelly $77.8K $95K avg Technical rebound ​
CoinDesk Stabilize $80K Cycle peak Halving effects ​
Deutsche Bank $60K risk Bearish Macro caution ​

February averages 14.3% gains historically; current $64.8K base projects $74K end-month.​

What Bitcoin investors should do now

  1. HODL long-term: Corrections precede bull runs; 2021’s 50% drop yielded 3x gains.​
  2. Dollar-cost average: Buy dips below $65K; avoid FOMO at $90K.​
  3. Watch ETF flows: Inflow reversal signals bottom.​
  4. Monitor Fed: Rate cuts ignite risk-on.​
  5. Risk management: Never invest more than 5-10% portfolio.​

Bitcoin’s at a crossroads: capitulation or coil for explosion? History favors the latter, but patience rules. As Vinovic notes, “The bull run narrative evolves — liquidity now drives price.” Tune into macro prints, ETF data and $70K hold for clues. The king of crypto endures — battered, but unbowed.

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Plymouth among favourites for UK City of Culture 2029 title

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Business Live

Meanwhile, Exeter is currently a rank outsider

View of Plymouth in the sunshine

View of Plymouth in the sunshine(Image: Jay Stone)

Plymouth has emerged as one of the leading contenders to secure the UK City of Culture 2029 title – whilst Exeter trails as an outside bet.

According to predictions from the Online Betting Guide (OLBG), Britain’s Ocean City ranks as second favourite to claim the prestigious accolade and its accompanying £10m prize.

With applications due to close imminently, Plymouth sits just behind Wrexham, bolstered by its celebrity connections, in OLBG’s forecasts.

The firm has given Wrexham, which only achieved city status in 2022, odds of 4/6 and a 60 per cent chance of securing the honour.

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However, Plymouth follows closely with 6/4 odds and a 40 per cent likelihood of triumph, with OLBG highlighting its “coastal identity and cultural infrastructure”, reports Plymouth Live.

Exeter and naval rival Portsmouth languish at the bottom of the table, sharing 6/1 odds and merely a 14.3 per cent implied probability of victory.

The application deadline falls on Sunday, 8 February, with nine “cities” having already entered the competition.

Additional bidders include Ipswich and Blackpool, both given 2/1 odds by OLBG, whilst Peterborough stands at 3/1, Bristol at 4/1, and Swindon at 5/1.

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Further cities may join the contest before entries close, but currently OLBG positions Plymouth, which is presently enjoying significant national exposure through its Beryl Cook exhibition at The Box, amongst the leading candidates.

The betting guide noted that Wrexham remains the outright favourite “reflecting its recent surge in national and international profile”. OLBG noted that investment, regeneration initiatives and the international spotlight from Wrexham AFC have all contributed to positioning the Welsh city as a formidable cultural contender.

Wrexham has reaped the rewards of the globally-broadcast documentary Welcome to Wrexham and the acquisition of the football club by Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney.

According to OLBG, Wrexham’s application is regarded as meeting numerous criteria early on, boasting a persuasive story, demonstrated capacity to execute prominent projects and robust community support.

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Plymouth is strengthened by its maritime character and cultural facilities, the bookmaker added, whilst Ipswich and Blackpool share third-favourite status, each presenting distinct yet credible cultural offerings.

Lower down the rankings, Peterborough and Bristol are considered dependable but unremarkable bids at this juncture. OLBG suggested Bristol’s longer odds might be unexpected, though industry observers indicate that competition for funding and conflicting cultural priorities may disadvantage it.

Meanwhile, Swindon, Portsmouth and Exeter comprise the outsider category. Whilst each possesses cultural credentials, OLBG observed, they are presently seen as requiring exceptional proposals to advance to the latter rounds.

Jake Ashton, current affairs expert at OLBG.com, said: “Wrexham leads the way in the City of Culture market and it’s easy to see why, with the city gaining in popularity massively in recent years following Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney’s ownership of the football club.”

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While no betting sites are currently offering odds on the City of Culture contest, hypothetical odds have been created for entertainment purposes to provide a sense of how the competition is progressing.

Following this weekend’s application deadline, a longlist of up to eight cities is anticipated to be unveiled in March. The list will then be whittled down to a shortlist of four cities four months later, with the final decision due by the end of the year.

OLBG explained that early momentum, political support and cultural infrastructure can all impact how a bid is viewed at the longlist stage, while comprehensive delivery plans and funding strategies often determine the ultimate victor.

However, once the longlist is announced, OLBG stated that focus will swiftly turn to which cities possess the necessary infrastructure and financial plans to facilitate a full year of cultural events.

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A spokesperson said: “Until then, these theoretical odds offer a snapshot of how the race is shaping up and why Wrexham currently stands out as the city to beat.”

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Pandora switching to platinum from silver as prices surge

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Pandora switching to platinum from  silver as prices surge

The jeweller says it wants to reduce its exposure to silver after the price of the metal soars.

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Chris Marco liquidators cleared for $4.7m distribution, more litigation

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Chris Marco liquidators cleared for $4.7m distribution, more litigation

The Federal Court has cleared the way for liquidators to distribute $4.7 million to victims of Ponzi promoter Chris Marco and to keep hunting for assets linked to the convicted fraudster.

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Who are Y11 Sport and Media who are in line to acquire Cardiff Rugby

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The company has entered into an exclusivity period with the WRU but a deal is expected to see the demise of the Ospreys

Cardiff Rugby’s Arms Park stadium(Image: Huw Evans Picture Agency Ltd)

What do we know about Y11 Sport and Media and its plans to acquire Cardiff Rugby from the Welsh Rugby Union? The union launched a formal sales process for the Arms Park-based club last year, not long after acquiring it out of administration.

With the union attracting a healthy number of expressions of interest, bidders were whittled down to two prior to Christmas : Y11 Sport and Media, and a consortium consisting of former Cardiff Rugby board member Martyn Ryan, a number of Hollywood directors, and Greg Clark, chief executive of Rhino.

The WRU has now entered into a 60-day exclusivity period with Y11, having confirmed, with the unanimous backing of its board, the Hong Kong-based company as its preferred bidder. That doesn’t mean the proposed acquisition of the club will go unconditional. However, the focus – and there will no doubt be efforts to secure concessions on both sides – will be on getting a deal over the line.

A Y11 acquisition of Cardiff, and the cessation of the Ospreys as a professional region at the end of the 2026–27 season, would achieve the WRU’s current stated aim of reducing the number of regions from four to three. There is, though, growing opposition to a Y11 deal from rugby fans, former players and a number of politicians – and not just those in the Ospreys area. There is also a planned extraordinary general meeting of union member clubs in the offing, with a vote of no confidence in its chairman, Richard Collier-Keywood.

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READ MORE: Swansea Council start legal action against the WRU and owners of the OspreysREAD MORE: Swansea RFC slam proposed Ospreys merger after being blindsided by revelation

The Y11 story

Y11 acquired a majority stake (75.1%) in the Ospreys back in 2020. The value of the deal was not disclosed, although Y11 described its investment in the club as a “multi-million deal.” The acquisition on behalf of Y11’s investors was through a special purpose vehicle, Ospreys International, registered in the tax haven of the British Virgin Islands. There is no publicly available information on the directors of Ospreys International.

When the Dragons were effectively acquired for £1 from the WRU by investors David Buttress, David Wright and Hoyoung Huh – who was at one stage also looking to acquire Newport County – the acquiring entity, Dragons International RFC, was also based in the British Virgin Islands.

Y11 was set up by its current chief executive in Pontarddulais-born James Davies-Yandle, who played hockey for Wales in the 2002 Commonwealth Games. His father, Mike, played rugby for Swansea RFC and he is a former sports agent. At the time of the investment into the Ospreys, he described it as being a “70% business and 30% emotional investment.”

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As an investment company, backed by high-net-worth investors, Y11 has a diverse portfolio of assets, from rugby to mass-participation sports like running and media rights. It also has a minority stake in New Zealand rugby side the Hurricanes, as well as an interest in South African side the Toyota Cheetahs, who, as it happens, a re keen to replace any axed Welsh team in the United Rugby Championship.

In 2023, Y11 itself was majority-acquired by Kuala Lumpur-based private equity firm Navis Capital Partners. The value of that deal wasn’t publicly disclosed. Navis is a serious player with a global investment portfolio, although with a focus on Southeast Asia. It has $5bn of funds under management on behalf of investors, with stakes in companies ranging from healthcare to tech. It was founded in 1998 by Richard Foyston, Nicholas Bloy, Rodney Muse and former Boston Consulting executives.

It said at the time of its majority acquisition of Y11: “Navis have invested in James (Davies-Yandle) and the Y11 team to grow the existing portfolio, identify new opportunities, and become a success for all stakeholders involved. Their values mirror our own: teamwork, tenacity, integrity, and innovation.”

While Y11’s overall portfolio of assets is profitable, the Ospreys, like the other regions, is loss-making. Y11, no doubt would have sought the agreement of Navis before submitting a bid to the WRU. To get approval the Y11 team would have presented compelling projections of multiple times return on capital from acquiring Cardiff.

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The Cardiff proposition

So, is Cardiff now going to break the mould of professional rugby, not just in Wales but in England too, where investors cannot reasonably expect a return on investment? The reality to date is that clubs have survived due to wealthy benefactors as ‘emotional investors’ due to the love of the game or a particular club. The late Tony Brown (Dragons), the late Peter Thomas (Cardiff), and others like Rob Davies at the Ospreys collectively committed and wrote off tens of millions.

Wouldn’t Y11, without any annual license fees and debt obligations, make a stronger return on investment by buying a few pubs and restaurants in Cardiff? Despite their experiences at the Ospreys, they no doubt see professional rugby as having huge potential, like football, where Premiership clubs are now seen as attractive investment opportunities, including increasingly by US investors. But they cannot create an Anglo-Welsh league or British and Irish League.

But what is the WRU expecting Y11 to pay for Cardiff – a deal they currently believe is far stronger than that put forward by the rejected rival bid consortium?

Under the proposed 10-year franchise licence, the WRU would be looking for Y11 to pay around £1m annually to run the commercial side of the club. Additionally, Y11 would take on around £6m owned to the union, the majority of which was part of a Covid loan it had negotiated on behalf of the four regions with NatWest. That debt was subsequently refinanced with the Welsh Government. Last week that debt, along with the union’s debt facility with NatWest, was refinanced into a new £60m deal with both HSBC and Goldman Sachs.

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Welsh Rugby Union Chairman Richard Collier-Keywood

Welsh Rugby Union Chairman Richard Collier-Keywood(Image: Huw Evans Picture Agency)

Under the new franchise model for Cardiff, the union, who would finance all player related costs, have convinced Y11 that there would be a profit in running the commercial side of the club. While the WRU see it as a collaboration, some of the clubs view the union’s plans as unnecessary control of all rugby matters. However, starting with Cardiff, getting an agreement should be achievable.

The WRU is also looking for some upfront payment, no doubt with the aim of recouping the £3m in debt it converted into equity in Cardiff after acquiring it out of administration. It is not clear what Y11 has tabled, but it could around that level or higher.

Are the WRU and Y11 right to conclude that Cardiff can become a profitable business? Former investors Helford Capital, set up by Phil Kempe and Neal Griffith, failed to deliver on a legal agreement with the union to fund losses, that pushed Cardiff into administration.

The joint administrators from PwC, Rob Lewis and Ross Connock, quickly gave up on pursuing Jersey-based Helford in the interest of Cardiff creditors, as it was solely set up to acquire Cardiff and had no assets. While the Helford directors might have had funds and assets to fund the club’s losses – around £2m a year – when it came to the crunch they weren’t willing to commit.

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It’s all water under the bridge now, but if the board of Cardiff had found better investors after the death of Peter Thomas – and there were discussions with Y11 – it could have remained solvent. Without control of Cardiff, would the WRU now be in a position to reduce the number of professional clubs?

To get a deal approved with Y11, and then franchise agreements for east Wales and west Wales, perhaps the WRU could offer a further reduction in the debt liabilities of the club, or take it on completely. Servicing £60m of debt would cost the union nearly £4m in interest. What the WRU and Y11 would also have to agree on is the treatment the current debt passed through to the union into the Ospreys, at around £3m. While loss-making the Ospreys are far less in indebted that the Scarlets and Cardiff.

Y11 is also fully aware – unlike the Dragons, which owns the freehold to its grounds and has space for potential commercial development but with an overage position on any development profit for the WRU – that ownership of Cardiff Arms Park sits with Cardiff Athletic Club (CAC). A short-term lease for Cardiff Rugby with CAC was recently agreed to 2028.

Any development around the ground could happen only after the hosting of games at the adjoining Principality Stadium for the men’s Euro 28 football tournament. It is understood that the union and the CAC remain in dialogue. Could this potentially finally lead to – nearly a decade after a similar offer was rejected – the WRU acquiring the freehold or a long-term lease with development rights from CAC? It is not clear if Y11, or its majority owner in Navis, has indicated any intention to invest in any possible commercial developments at the ground, under a WRU lease or potentially a new agreement directly with CAC.

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CAC did set up a special purpose company to look at development opportunities around the ground, which could include apartments at the River Taff end and a hotel integrated into a new stand, with modern banqueting and hospitality facilities replacing the existing smaller north stand. There are opportunities to redevelop the ground, for what is a prime site in the centre of Cardiff, but that will have to be for another day, so cannot form part of any current trading projections for the club if a deal is concluded with Y11.

The WRU chairman and former managing partner of PwC UK, Collier-Keywood, believes that the game is at a crossroads, where investors like Y11 – and their majority owners Navis – see investment no longer as an emotional affair, but as offering the prospect of a return on investment.

Quizzed by cross-party MPs at the Welsh Affairs Committee last week in Westminster, the WRU chair said: “We are trying, with Y11 and Ospreys, to create a different model. The importance of all that is that rugby clubs can be valued on the basis of their turnover, if you are thinking about other forms of sport.

“So it is very handy to have a private equity player in that market to help us understand that, support us, and work with us as we think about how best to create an environment over the next five to 10 years that will attract investment for investment’s sake.”

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That would be a great outcome, although the last 20 years of professional regional rugby in Wales does not inspire huge confidence even with one less professional side.

Rugby could really learn a great deal from cricket and in particular the huge investment into the game from the successful auction of equity stakes in the Hundred franchises – including of course Welsh Fire and the £40m investment for a 50% stake by IT entrepreneur Sanjay Govil. Rugby should also look at the marketing of the Hundred and its ability to attract a new and younger audience than other longer formats of the game.

But the WRU, without any indication it will bow to public pressure and keep four regions, firstly needs to get a deal signed off with Y11. If that fails to materialise it should reopen talks with the rejected consortium bid.

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The Final Album Fans Waited 8 Years For Is Here

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J. Cole

J. Cole has released The Fall-Off, the long-teased seventh studio album he has positioned as the capstone of his recording career, arriving Friday after nearly a decade of buildup and fan anticipation. The double album, executive produced by Cole, Ibrahim Hamad and T-Minus, marks what the rapper has repeatedly described as his most personal and challenging project to date.

Dropping via Dreamville and Interscope Records, The Fall-Off fulfills promises dating back to 2018, when Cole first hinted at the concept during the rollout of his platinum-certified KOD. In promotional materials, Cole called it a “personal challenge to create my best work,” emphasizing its role as a deliberate endpoint after years of introspection, delays and detours like 2021’s The Off-Season and last year’s surprise mixtape Might Delete Later.

A cinematic rollout for Cole’s self-proclaimed finale

Cole announced The Fall-Off on Jan. 14 with a moody Instagram trailer showing him washing his car at a self-service station and grabbing a diner meal, culminating in a snippet of brooding production and the stark reveal of the title and Feb. 6 date. Vinyl pre-orders launched immediately, featuring minimalist black-and-white artwork that mirrors the project’s contemplative vibe.

The album arrives as a double-disc set, with Cole teasing “Disc 2 Track 2” via the lead single “The Fall-Off Is Inevitable” on announcement day. Fans and critics speculate it addresses his brief 2024 foray into the Kendrick Lamar-Drake feud, where Cole’s “7 Minute Drill” diss track sparked backlash before he pulled it, apologized at Dreamville Festival and refocused on music.

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At 41, Cole frames The Fall-Off as closure. “For the past 10 years, this album has been hand crafted… I owed it to myself. And secondly, I owed it to hip hop,” he wrote in liner notes shared pre-release. While not an outright retirement declaration, the rhetoric echoes past comments about family priorities and creative exhaustion after six No. 1 albums.

From 2018 teases to 2026 reality

The Fall-Off traces to Cole’s 2018 KOD closer “1985 (Intro to ‘The Fall Off’),” where he envisioned a reflective send-off. Concert promises in 2019 and a 2020 project list kept hope alive, but The Off-Season — his seventh Billboard 200 No. 1 — intervened, breaking Spotify one-day streaming records with guests like 21 Savage and Lil Baby.

Cole’s 2024 detour amplified drama. Might Delete Later dropped amid rap’s biggest beef, but his quick retreat signaled fatigue with conflict. The Fall-Off trailer, shot in everyday North Carolina settings, contrasts that chaos, positioning the album as inward reckoning over battle rap bravado.

Production credits hint at a soulful, introspective sound: T-Minus, Timbaland, Dahi, Duke and Boi-1da return, with Cole handling most beats himself. No guest features are confirmed yet, aligning with his solo-heavy catalog, though speculation swirls around Dreamville affiliates like Bas or J.I.D.

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Tracklist and early fan reactions

Clocking 25 tracks across two discs, The Fall-Off spans career retrospection, fatherhood, industry pressures and hip-hop’s evolution. Opening cuts like “Pricey” and “Hoodie Season” set a nostalgic tone, while deeper entries such as “Studio V27” and “The Inevitable” reportedly tackle beef regrets and legacy.

Streaming platforms lit up at midnight, with first listens dominating X and TikTok. “Cole went out swinging – this his best since 2014 Forest Hills Drive,” tweeted one top commenter. Another called it “therapy session as album,” praising vulnerable bars on family and faith. Critics’ early takes praise lyrical density but note uneven pacing on Disc 2.

Spotify projects The Fall-Off for another No. 1 debut, potentially challenging Taylor Swift’s ongoing chart run. Apple Music’s global hip-hop chart crowned it instantly, with “The Fall-Off Is Inevitable” surging into top streams.

Cole’s retirement rhetoric: Final bow or hiatus?

Cole has danced around retirement since KOD, telling fans in 2019 it might follow The Fall-Off. A 2024 interview revealed family deliberations: “Do you wanna keep going or… start a family?” Post-Might Delete Later, he hinted at a break, echoing Jay-Z’s selective post-4:44 output.

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The album’s themes reinforce exit vibes. Lyrics previewed in the trailer reference “closing the book” and “passing the torch,” fueling thinkpieces on hip-hop’s generational shift. Yet Cole’s history — surprise drops like Friday Night Lights — suggests a clean break unlikely.

Dreamville’s ecosystem thrives without him; Bas, J.I.D. and EarthGang carry the label’s torch. Cole’s touring remains lucrative, with arena sellouts fueling speculation he’ll pivot to live shows, mentorship or acting.

Cultural moment amid rap’s turmoil

The Fall-Off lands amid hip-hop’s 2024-25 renaissance, post-Drake-Kendrick ceasefire and rising stars like Central Cee and Sexyy Red. Cole’s elder statesman role — Grammy-nominated, platinum consistent — positions him as reflective anchor.

Fans divided on the “last album” framing. Reddit threads debate permanence, with some citing his 2021 Slam clarification: “The Fall-Off is his last before a break… not retirement.” Others see parallels to Game’s Born2Rap or Jay-Z’s 4:44 — passion projects preceding quiet.

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Vinyl’s instant sellouts and trailer views topping 10 million signal blockbuster impact. Cole’s pen game, honed over 15 years, delivers dense bars averaging 250 words per minute — rap’s poet laureate signing off.

Production breakdown and sonic palette

T-Minus’ atmospheric beats dominate Disc 1, blending soul chops with trap hi-hats. Timbaland’s signature bounce elevates mid-album heaters, while Cole’s self-produced joints — piano-led confessionals — anchor the emotional core.

Disc 2 experiments bolder: jazz infusions on “Interlude 03,” industrial edges on “Final Lap.” No mega-collabs surface yet, preserving Cole’s solo ethos, though subtle Dreamville ad-libs pepper cuts.

Sonically, it bridges 2014 Forest Hills Drive‘s purity with The Off-Season‘s grit — boom-bap revival meeting modern polish. Critics hail it Cole’s “magnum opus,” weaving autobiography, critique and hope.

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What comes next for hip-hop’s introspective king?

Cole’s exit — temporary or permanent — reshapes rap’s elder tier. Kendrick Lamar eyes GNX follow-up; Drake plots comeback post-For All the Dogs. Cole’s void invites newcomers like Bay Swag or Lazer Dim 700 to claim conscious lane.

For Cole, options abound: Dreamville CEO duties, basketball passion projects (The Kill Devil Hills), family in Fayetteville. His Might Delete Later apology humanized him, boosting respect amid beef fatigue.

The Fall-Off streams now across platforms. Whether curtain call or intermission, Cole exits center stage, leaving a catalog — seven No. 1s, 20+ million records sold — etched in platinum. Hip-hop’s reluctant king has spoken his piece; the culture listens.

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