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Homes plan thrown out for being too close to industrial park

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Planners warn development could mean ‘subsequent pressure to restrict the current and future activities of businesses’

Bellway provided a site layout for the proposed 83-home estate in Atherton

Bellway provided a site layout for the proposed 83-home estate in Atherton

Plans to develop a patch of green land into an 83-home estate have been rejected.

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Bellway Homes had proposed to build the houses on land close to Tyldesley Old Road and Douglas Road, Atherton, immediately next to the Chanters industrial estate.

The developer described its vision for the estate as ‘creating a sustainable urban extension for the area by working with the sites own features and wider landscape character’.

But planners at Wigan council have this week rejected the project, saying any future occupiers of the homes could be affected by the industrial nature of the area because of its proximity and the noise from Chanters employment park.

A planning report said: “Officers have concluded that the proposed development conflicts with policies within the local plan in that it cannot be satisfactorily delivered.

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“The applicant has failed to address these site constraints effectively through the provision of physical and green infrastructure needed.

“Furthermore, officers have concluded that if the development was delivered if would lead to subsequent pressure to restrict the current and future activities of businesses within the industrial estate.

“The proposed development would not achieve an acceptable standard of residential amenity in relation to noise.”

In a design and access statement supporting the plans, Bellway said the site area covers 8.28 acres and is bounded by ‘roads, residential and light industrial commercial buildings together with open land and woodland’.

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The report said: “The site is located within a predominantly residential area and is bounded by existing houses to the west across Douglas Road.

“The site is also bound by light industrial and commercial infrastructure to the east and south, as well as open land and woodland to the north.”

It characterised the land as being in ‘a suburban residential area’. The council received 15 objections to the application.

Among the reasons given for opposition were ‘future residents would be impacted by proximity to industrial estate’, that Douglas Road is not wide enough for proposed access and that it is too close to electricity pylons and overhead lines.

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Ward councillor Debra Wailes also objected. She said the site was a natural buffer between the houses on Douglas Road and the Chanters industrial estate and the mature tree line which supports this buffer zone would be destroyed.

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DNO reports Q4 results below expectations amid Kurdistan recovery

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DNO reports Q4 results below expectations amid Kurdistan recovery

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Business information firm Creditsafe confirms new Cardiff office location

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It is taking space at the refurbished Coal House office scheme

Coal House.

Business information provider Creditsafe is further expanding with a new office in the centre of Cardiff. Nearly two decades after establishing its operational support centre in Cardiff Bay, Creditsafe has confirmed it is being relocated to the Coal House office scheme.

It has agreed a lease to take more than 15,200 sq ft across the top two floors.

The new centre, which is expected to become operational in late March or early April, will be able to accommodate 260 staff in newly designed workspace.

READ MORE: Waterfront hotel in Swansea acquired in a multi-million-pound dealREAD MORE: More business rate relief for hospitality firms in Wales

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Its current Cardiff Bay support centre opened in autumn 2006 at the Caspian Poinnt office scheme. The operation has played a key role supporting Creditsafe’s international expansion. It now operates 14 offices worldwide and employs more than 1,700 people.

Even with hybrid working, Creditsafe said it required a new larger location for its staff across technology, data, finance, HR, product, and sales operations.

Last year it relocated its HQ from Caerphilly to the 50,000 sq ft Ty Meridian building at Cardiff Gate Business Park with. Over the next five years it plans to double the size of its workforce at the HQ to 600.

Carys Hughes, chief financial officer of Creditsafe, said: “This move to such an energy efficient- building aligns with our broader ESG goals, while enhancing the working environment and experience for our employees through improved comfort, connectivity, and community engagement.”

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Creditsafe’s chief human resource officer, Gareth Way, said: “Moving the short distance from Cardiff Bay to a location nearer to the city centre provides staff the opportunity to make more effective use of public transport, and makes the city centre amenities far more available to them.”

Coal House is owned by Create Real Estate who were represented on the letting to Creditsafe by the Cardiff office of Savills through Gary Carver. Mark Sutton of the Cardiff office of Knight Frank acted for Creditsafe.

Running entirely on 100% renewable energy, Coal House has undergone a comprehensive retrofit to meet net zero standards.

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10 New Heroes, Talon Takeover Storyline & Free Season 1 Launch Revealed

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Overwatch Drops '2' in Epic Rebrand: 10 New Heroes, Talon
Overwatch Drops '2' in Epic Rebrand: 10 New Heroes, Talon
Overwatch Drops ‘2’ in Epic Rebrand: 10 New Heroes, Talon Takeover Storyline & Free Season 1 Launch Revealed

Blizzard Entertainment unveiled a monumental reinvention of its flagship hero shooter during the Overwatch Spotlight 2026 livestream on Feb. 4, officially rebranding Overwatch 2 simply as “Overwatch” while announcing 10 new heroes, a year-long “Reign of Talon” narrative arc, sweeping gameplay overhauls and a free Season 1 launch on Feb. 10 — marking the game’s 10th anniversary with its boldest update yet.

The surprise rebrand ditches the “2” suffix amid criticisms that the 2022 free-to-play transition felt more like an expansion than a sequel. Game director Aaron Keller called it a “fresh start” that honors the original 2016 vision while propelling Overwatch into its next decade. “Overwatch is back — bigger, bolder, and more united than ever,” Keller said during the two-hour presentation viewed by millions on YouTube and Twitch.

Season 1 kicks off with five immediately playable heroes — Domina (tank), Emre (damage), Mizuki (support), Anran (damage) and the fan-favorite Jetpack Cat (support, aka Fika) — dropping Feb. 10 alongside a revamped user interface, role subcategories, a new Conquest meta event and the start of a competitive year reset. The remaining five heroes will roll out throughout 2026, tying into the “Reign of Talon” storyline where the terrorist organization launches a global offensive, forcing heroes to adapt in a darker, more divided world.

The Rebrand & Core Overhauls

Dropping “2” symbolizes unity, Blizzard executives explained. “Overwatch has always been about the heroes coming together,” producer Monte Krol said. “The numbering divided us — now it’s just Overwatch, one game, one community.”

Major changes include:

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  • Role Subroles: Tanks split into Vanguard (frontline initiators) and Bastion (area-denial anchors); Damage into Duelist (high-mobility flankers) and Flex (versatile hybrids); Supports into Amplifier (buff/debuff specialists) and Guardian (pure healers).
  • UI Refresh: Streamlined menus, customizable hero cards, and a dynamic battle pass interface with 100+ tiers of cosmetics.
  • Conquest Meta Event: Permanent 4v4 mode launching mid-Season 1, emphasizing objective control over kills.
  • Free-to-Play Evolution: All heroes free at launch; battle pass prices unchanged at $10 (premium track).

The update arrives as Overwatch nears 100 million players, with Season 12 peaking at 35 million monthly actives in late 2025. Yet retention dipped amid hero balance frustrations and PvE content delays — issues Blizzard vows to fix with the Talon arc’s cooperative missions and hero-specific lore cinematics.

Meet the New Heroes: Season 1 Lineup

Hands-on demos showcased the five Season 1 additions, blending fresh archetypes with nostalgic flair:

  • Domina (Tank): A hulking Brazilian enforcer with gravity-manipulating gauntlets. Abilities include a black-hole ultimate that pulls enemies into a crush zone. “She’s the anchor Talon needs,” Keller said.
  • Emre (Damage): Turkish drone hacker deploying sticky bombs and EMP bursts. High mobility via wall-cling jumpsuits him for aggressive flanks.
  • Mizuki (Support): Japanese onmyōji summoning spectral foxes for heals and decoys. Her ultimate creates a spirit barrier that reflects projectiles.
  • Anran (Damage): Chinese martial artist with extendable chain-whips for crowd control and a whirlwind spin attack.
  • Jetpack Cat (Fika, Support): The meme-turned-hero feline rocketeer from Overwatch’s mobile spin-off. Rocket boosts for team dashes, repair nanites from her backpack, and a barrage ultimate. “Fans demanded her — now she’s canon,” Blizzard joked.

All five are unlocked free for everyone at Season 1 start, with premium skins in the battle pass.

Fan Reactions & Competitive Shake-Up

The livestream peaked at 2.8 million concurrent viewers, surpassing Overwatch League finals. Social media exploded: #OverwatchReign trended worldwide, with Jetpack Cat memes dominating X and TikTok.

Veteran player KarQ tweeted: “10 HEROES in ONE YEAR? This is the content drop we’ve begged for.” Pro teams like the San Francisco Shock praised subroles for better comp flexibility.

Critics noted the PvE delay — Talon missions start Season 2 — but Keller promised “narrative-driven raids” by mid-year.

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Overwatch’s Road to 2026 Dominance

Launched in 2016, Overwatch redefined team shooters with diverse heroes and esports spectacle. Overwatch 2’s rocky 2022 debut (forced PvP transition, monetization backlash) tested loyalty, but steady hero drops and console cross-play rebuilt momentum.

2026’s refresh coincides with Nintendo Switch 2 launch support and potential mobile revival. Blizzard teased BlizzCon 2026 hero reveals and a “Talon vs. Overwatch” cinematic series voiced by original cast.

With 10 heroes, subroles and a unified brand, Overwatch aims to reclaim hero shooter supremacy amid Valorant and Apex Legends competition. Season 1’s free entry lowers barriers, potentially surging player counts past 50 million monthly.

As servers prep for Feb. 10, the message is clear: Overwatch isn’t just returning — it’s evolving. Talon reigns, heroes unite, and the fight continues.

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'Food bank usage a sad picture of our community'

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'Food bank usage a sad picture of our community'

Food banks say they are seeing more people using their services for the first time.

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French Industrial Production Slips In December, But Prospects Look Better

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French Industrial Production Slips In December, But Prospects Look Better

French Industrial Production Slips In December, But Prospects Look Better

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Nvidia’s Quiet Shift From Chips To AI Economics (NASDAQ:NVDA)

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Nvidia's Quiet Shift From Chips To AI Economics (NASDAQ:NVDA)

This article was written by

Pythia Research focuses on multi-bagger stocks, primarily in the technology sector. Our approach combines financial analysis, behavioral finance, psychology, social sciences, and alternative metrics to assess companies with high conviction and asymmetric risk-reward potential. By leveraging both traditional and unconventional insights, we aim to uncover breakout opportunities before they gain mainstream attention. Our multidisciplinary strategy helps us navigate market sentiment, identify emerging trends, and invest in transformative businesses poised for exponential growth. We don’t just follow the market—we anticipate where disruption will create the next big winners.Markets don’t move purely on fundamentals; they move on perception, emotion, and bias. We lean into that reality. Investor behavior, anchoring to past valuations, herd mentality during rallies, panic selling from recency bias, creates persistent inefficiencies. These moments of mispricing often mark the start of a breakout, not the end of one.Rather than avoid psychological noise, we analyze it. When the crowd sees volatility, we assess whether it’s driven by emotion or fundamentals. Status quo bias can keep investors blind to companies redefining their category. Fear of uncertainty can delay recognition of businesses with clear but unconventional growth paths. We look for these disconnects.Our process blends deep research with signals others miss: sudden shifts in narrative, early social traction, founder-driven vision, or underappreciated momentum in developer or user adoption. These are often the precursors to exponential moves, if you catch them early.We focus on conviction plays, not safe bets. Each opportunity is evaluated for Risk/Reward profile: limited downside, explosive upside. We believe that the best returns come from understanding where belief is lagging reality.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of NVDA either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. 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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Gary Neville returns to the Den

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Gary Neville returns to the Den

Gary Neville re-joins the dragons as they put another set of business hopefuls to the test.

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Record Highs Above $5,600 Followed by Sharp Correction Amid Volatility

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Gold Prices Swing Wildly in Early 2026: Record Highs Above

Gold prices have experienced extreme volatility in the opening weeks of 2026, surging to an all-time high near $5,600 per ounce in late January before suffering one of the most dramatic sell-offs in decades, dropping as much as 21% in a single session on February 2. The precious metal has since staged a partial recovery, trading around $4,887 per ounce as of February 5, 2026, reflecting a turbulent start to the year driven by shifting interest-rate expectations, geopolitical uncertainty and massive speculative positioning.

The rally that carried gold to $5,608.35 on January 29 marked the culmination of a historic bull run that saw the metal gain more than 65% in 2025 and continue climbing into the new year. Analysts attributed the surge to sustained central-bank buying, persistent inflation concerns, rising U.S. debt levels, de-dollarisation efforts by emerging markets and investor hedging against potential policy surprises under the second Trump administration.

However, the momentum reversed sharply. Spot gold plunged nearly 9% in a single day on January 30 — its largest daily percentage drop since the 1980s — after reports surfaced regarding President Trump’s nomination of Kevin Warsh to chair the Federal Reserve. Markets interpreted Warsh as likely to pursue a less dovish monetary policy than anticipated, prompting a rush to unwind long positions and triggering stop-loss orders across leveraged funds and retail traders.

Silver suffered even more acutely, collapsing nearly 28–30% in the same session — its worst one-day performance since 1980 — as the gold-silver ratio widened dramatically before compressing again in the rebound.

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By February 5, spot gold had recovered to approximately $4,887 per ounce, down 1.57% on the day but still up 8.70% over the past month and a staggering 71.01% year-over-year. Gold futures for February 2026 delivery traded around $4,988, reflecting ongoing choppiness.

Drivers Behind the Volatility

Several overlapping factors fueled the whipsaw action:

  1. Monetary Policy Uncertainty Expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2026 have fluctuated wildly. Early-year optimism about aggressive easing gave way to caution after signals from the Trump administration and nominee commentary suggested a more hawkish tilt. Lower short-term rates historically support gold by reducing the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets; any delay or reversal in cuts sparked selling.
  2. Central Bank & ETF Demand Central banks continued aggressive accumulation — a trend that began in earnest in 2022 — providing a solid floor. However, retail and speculative ETF inflows reversed sharply during the late-January sell-off, amplifying downside momentum before bargain hunters stepped in.
  3. Geopolitical & Macro Risks Ongoing global tensions, U.S. fiscal deficits, trade policy uncertainty and de-dollarisation efforts by BRICS nations kept a bid under gold. Yet the speed of the rally led to overbought conditions, setting the stage for profit-taking.
  4. Technical & Positioning Extremes Futures positioning reached record net-long levels in late January. The subsequent liquidation triggered cascading stops, creating a self-reinforcing drop that erased weeks of gains in hours.

Analyst Forecasts & Outlook for 2026

Despite the correction, most major banks and research houses remain bullish on gold for the full year:

  • Wells Fargo Investment Institute raised its end-2026 target to $6,100–$6,300 per ounce, citing expectations of lower short-term rates and sustained central-bank demand.
  • J.P. Morgan maintained a $6,300 year-end forecast, arguing that hedges against macro and policy risks have become “sticky.”
  • Goldman Sachs targets $5,400 by year-end, driven by central-bank accumulation and renewed ETF inflows as rates fall.
  • Bank of America sees potential for $6,000 in the coming months, noting that physical-market fundamentals remain supportive despite volatility.

Reuters’ latest poll of 30 analysts and traders (conducted late January–early February 2026) returned a median forecast of $4,746.50 per ounce for the full year — the highest annual projection in Reuters polls dating back to 2012 and up sharply from $4,275 in the October survey.

Silver forecasts were similarly upgraded, with analysts now expecting an average of $79.50 per ounce in 2026 (up from $50 in the prior poll).

Market Implications & Investor Considerations

The volatility has created both opportunities and risks:

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  • Dip-buyers stepped in aggressively after the February 2 low near $4,400, pushing prices back toward $5,000 in subsequent sessions.
  • Physical premiums on coins and bars showed resilience, indicating robust retail demand even during the correction.
  • Gold/silver ratio compressed from extreme levels, suggesting silver may outperform on any sustained rebound.

For investors, the swings underscore gold’s dual role as a safe-haven asset and a speculative vehicle. While fundamentals — central-bank buying, geopolitical risk, fiscal concerns — remain supportive, near-term price action will likely hinge on U.S. monetary-policy signals, dollar strength and positioning unwinds.

As of February 5, 2026, gold’s path forward remains upward-sloping according to most forecasts, but the journey is proving far bumpier than many anticipated after the smooth ascent of 2025.

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BPER Banca SpA 2025 Q4 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (OTCMKTS:BPXXY) 2026-02-05

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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Seeking Alpha’s transcripts team is responsible for the development of all of our transcript-related projects. We currently publish thousands of quarterly earnings calls per quarter on our site and are continuing to grow and expand our coverage. The purpose of this profile is to allow us to share with our readers new transcript-related developments. Thanks, SA Transcripts Team

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Workers urge Target and US firms to speak up over ICE raids

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Workers urge Target and US firms to speak up over ICE raids

Workers are writing letters, staging strikes and in some cases resigning over how bosses are handling the immigration crackdown.

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