Business
How the Baby Boomer Exit Is Reshaping Business Ownership
For decades, baby boomer founders have been the quiet backbone of the private economy. They built manufacturing firms, regional retailers, logistics operators, service businesses and family brands that now sit at the heart of local communities and national supply chains.
Many of them started with little more than grit, long hours and a stubborn refusal to fail. Now that generation is stepping back, and the scale of what is changing is far bigger than most founders are willing to admit.
Across the UK, the United States, Europe and even Asia and Africa, millions of business owners are approaching retirement at the same time. These are not micro side projects. They are established, revenue-generating enterprises with loyal customers, experienced teams and decades of operational knowledge. Collectively, they represent trillions in enterprise value. Research from McKinsey has described the coming ownership shift as one of the largest intergenerational transfers of private business assets in modern economic history.
The transition is happening whether founders feel ready or not. The only variable left is whether it will be controlled or forced. Some founders will pass the business to their children. Others will sell to management teams or outside buyers. Many are still undecided. What is becoming increasingly clear is that the baby boomer exit may reshape private ownership more profoundly than any trend seen in the past half-century.
The Ownership Cliff Facing Baby Boomer Founders
Demographics are not subtle. In the United States alone, members of the baby boomer generation are now entering their late seventies and early eighties, marking a demographic turning point that has direct implications for business ownership and continuity.
In the UK, a significant share of SME owners are now over the age of 55. Similar patterns are visible in the United States and across Europe. In some sectors, particularly traditional retail, light manufacturing and professional services, ownership is heavily concentrated in the baby boomer generation. This creates what can fairly be described as an ownership cliff.
Within the next decade, a large proportion of privately held firms will require some form of leadership transition. For many founders, the business has been their primary asset, identity and life’s work. Unlike listed corporations, these firms do not have automatic succession pipelines. The transfer of ownership is personal, emotional and often underprepared.
The economic implications are substantial. If transitions are structured well, businesses continue operating, employees retain jobs and local economies remain stable. If transitions are delayed or poorly managed, firms can stagnate, lose competitiveness or be forced into distressed sales. In extreme cases, profitable businesses simply close because there is no clear successor.
This shift reaches far beyond small family shops. It touches manufacturing firms, logistics operators, regional retailers and service companies that anchor entire local economies. UK wealth managers increasingly refer to this as part of the “Great Wealth Transfer,” a multi-trillion pound shift in private assets expected over the coming decades.
The scale of baby boomer ownership means succession planning is no longer a private family issue. It is a macroeconomic force influencing employment, capital flows and regional growth.
The ownership cliff is not about age alone. It is about timing. Many founders are reaching a point where energy, appetite for risk and willingness to reinvest in digital transformation begin to change. Without a clear transition plan, the business can drift precisely when markets demand adaptation.
The Heir Gap – When the Next Generation Says No
The simplest succession story is the most traditional one: the founder steps aside and a son or daughter takes over. In practice, it is rarely that straightforward. At the same time, retirement itself is becoming less predictable. Recent reporting from Business Insider highlights how many baby boomers are delaying retirement altogether, either by choice or necessity. This extends the timeline of ownership decisions and often leaves succession conversations unresolved for longer than planned.
A growing number of second-generation heirs are choosing different paths. Some pursue corporate careers in technology, finance or consulting. Others build ventures of their own rather than inherit existing structures. For many, the family firm represents responsibility without autonomy, legacy without creative control. This creates what might be called an heir gap.
Founders who assumed that “one of the kids will take it” often discover that interest is lukewarm at best. The next generation may respect the business but feel unprepared to lead it, particularly if it operates in a sector facing digital disruption. In some cases, the perceived burden of preserving a parent’s life work outweighs the attraction of ownership.
At the same time, expectations between generations can diverge sharply. Baby boomers often built businesses through intuition, relationships and incremental growth. Their children have been shaped by data-driven decision-making, global competition and digital-first thinking. Without clear alignment, even willing successors can struggle to bridge operational styles.
The heir gap does not automatically signal decline. In some cases, it opens the door to structured management buyouts or external leadership. In others, it prompts founders to modernise governance, clarify ownership structures and professionalise operations before transition. What it does signal is that succession can no longer be assumed. It must be designed.
The baby boomer exit is therefore not simply about retirement. It is about whether the next generation, whether family or external, is ready and willing to carry forward what has been built.
When the Next Generation Steps In – Five Succession Patterns
Succession does not follow a single script. In some businesses, transition is gradual and carefully staged. In others, it coincides with strategic reinvention. What links successful handovers is not the surname of the successor, but the structure of the transition and the clarity of the mandate. Across markets, several patterns are emerging.
Dyson – Gradual Integration of Second-Generation Leadership (UK)
At Dyson, succession has taken the form of structured integration rather than abrupt replacement. Sir James Dyson remains closely associated with the company’s engineering identity, but over time his son, Jake Dyson, has taken on increasing responsibility within innovation and product development. The transition has not been framed as a departure from the founder’s vision, but as an extension of it.
This gradual approach allows knowledge transfer without destabilising brand continuity. The company’s shift toward software integration, robotics and connected home technologies reflects a generational layering rather than a break. Authority is expanded incrementally, signalling to employees and markets that succession can be evolutionary rather than disruptive.
Westmorland Family – Retail Reinvented (UK)
The Westmorland Family, operators of Tebay Services and other premium motorway locations, provide a mid-market example of generational transition. Founded by the Dunning family, the business has seen leadership pass to Sarah Dunning, who has overseen its evolution beyond traditional roadside retail.
Under second-generation leadership, the focus has moved toward experience-led positioning, regional sourcing and brand differentiation. Rather than compete on scale alone, the company emphasised quality and authenticity, strengthening margins in a highly standardised sector. The succession coincided with a reframing of the business model, demonstrating how a leadership shift can align with strategic repositioning rather than simple continuity.
Mitchells Family Stores – Relational Retail in a Digital Age (USA)
Mitchells Family Stores in Connecticut represent a third-generation retail business navigating digital transformation while preserving a strong relational culture. The company’s identity has long been built on personal service and customer relationships, values embedded by earlier generations.
As leadership has transitioned, digital tools have been integrated into that relational model rather than replacing it. E-commerce platforms, CRM systems and data-driven inventory management have strengthened operational efficiency without abandoning customer-centric traditions. The transition illustrates how generational change can modernise infrastructure while retaining cultural DNA.
Olmed – Regulated Retail and Digital Acceleration (Poland)
In Central Europe, succession dynamics are unfolding within regulated sectors as well as consumer-facing brands. Olmed, a family-founded healthcare retailer in Poland, represents a mid-market example of second-generation leadership aligned with digital expansion. Under new leadership, the company has grown from approximately 70 million PLN in annual turnover to nearly 300 million PLN over several years.
Operating within EU and national pharmacy regulations, the business has combined compliance discipline with digital infrastructure development. Logistics integration, online platform optimisation and transparent product information have supported expansion without compromising regulatory standards. The case illustrates how generational transition in tightly supervised industries can coincide with accelerated scaling rather than operational drift.
Across these examples, succession is not a ceremonial event. It is a structural process. Whether gradual, strategic or transformative, the common thread is intentional design. Where leadership change is planned and authority clearly defined, generational transition can become a catalyst for renewal rather than a moment of instability.
Hoshino Resorts – Modernising Tradition (Japan)
Japan faces one of the most acute business succession challenges globally, with a large proportion of SMEs led by ageing founders. Hoshino Resorts offers an example of structured generational leadership within this broader context. Yoshiharu Hoshino took over the family hospitality business and transformed a collection of traditional inns into a modern, scalable hospitality brand.
The transition combined respect for heritage with disciplined expansion. Standardised operational models, brand segmentation and international growth were layered onto a legacy rooted in local hospitality culture. In a country where many family businesses close due to lack of successors, Hoshino illustrates how structured succession can unlock scale rather than simply preserve tradition.
The Overlooked Opportunity – Buying from a Boomer
While much of the conversation around succession focuses on family transition, an equally significant opportunity lies elsewhere. For ambitious managers, operators and would-be founders, the baby boomer exit represents a rare entry point into established businesses with existing revenue, teams and customers.
Not every founder has a willing heir. Many would prefer to see their company continue under responsible stewardship rather than close or be absorbed by a faceless consolidator. This creates space for structured transactions that are often more flexible than traditional acquisitions.
Vendor financing is one such model. Instead of requiring full upfront capital, the buyer agrees to pay the founder over time, often through staged payments funded by future cash flow. Earn-out structures can align incentives, tying part of the purchase price to performance targets. In some cases, the seller remains as an advisor or non-executive chair for a defined transition period, preserving institutional knowledge while allowing operational authority to shift.
For the buyer, this reduces the capital barrier to entry. For the seller, it can provide continuity, income stability and the reassurance that the business will not be dismantled immediately after sale. Structured correctly, succession without a family heir does not signal decline. It can mark the start of a new chapter under disciplined leadership.
In a business culture obsessed with start-up mythology, this route remains comparatively underexplored. Building from zero is not the only route into entrepreneurship. Acquiring a profitable, cash-generating firm from a retiring owner may, in many cases, offer a more resilient foundation. For a generation of operators seeking ownership without venture capital dependency, the boomer exit may represent one of the decade’s most overlooked strategic openings.
The Strategic Risk of Waiting Too Long
If a structured transition can unlock value, a delayed transition can quietly erode it.
Founder dependency is one of the most common structural vulnerabilities in privately held firms. When strategic decisions, client relationships and operational knowledge remain concentrated in a single individual, succession becomes harder with each passing year. Potential successors, whether family members or external buyers, inherit not only a business but a personality-centred system.
Valuations can also suffer when succession planning is deferred. Global surveys by PwC consistently show that family businesses without formal succession plans face higher valuation discounts and greater transition friction during ownership change. Buyers discount uncertainty. A business without clear governance, documented processes or a visible leadership pipeline will often command lower multiples than one with established management depth. What appears stable from the inside can look fragile from the outside.
Talent retention presents another risk. Senior managers may hesitate to commit long term if ownership transition is unclear. Ambitious employees may leave in anticipation of instability. Over time, operational discipline can weaken, particularly if the founder reduces day-to-day involvement without formally delegating authority.
In the worst cases, succession becomes reactive rather than planned. Health events, sudden retirement or external shocks can force rushed exits at suboptimal valuations. Waiting too long rarely preserves optionality. More often, it narrows it.
Preparing for a Controlled Handover
A controlled handover begins long before the founder steps aside. Effective succession is less about a ceremonial transfer of title and more about structural readiness.
First, timelines must be formalised. Even if retirement remains several years away, clarity around intended transition windows allows successors and management teams to prepare. Ambiguity breeds speculation; defined horizons create stability.
Second, ownership and governance should be separated where possible. Clear delineation between shareholder rights and executive authority reduces friction during leadership change. Advisory boards, non-executive directors or formalised reporting structures can introduce continuity beyond any single individual.
Third, financial and operational transparency matters. Clean accounts, documented processes and modernised systems increase both internal confidence and external valuation. Digital infrastructure, particularly in customer management, supply chain visibility and data reporting, reduces reliance on informal knowledge held only by the founder.
Finally, successors must be granted a genuine mandate. Whether family member, management team or external buyer, new leadership requires room to adapt strategy to contemporary market realities. Preservation of legacy should not preclude necessary innovation.
The baby boomer exit is not merely a demographic milestone. It is a strategic inflexion point. Managed deliberately, it can sustain jobs, preserve regional enterprises and create new ownership pathways. Managed passively, it risks dissolving decades of accumulated value. In the end, age is inevitable. Whether value survives the transition depends on whether succession is treated as a strategy early or ignored until circumstances dictate the terms.
Business
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Cricut, Inc. (CRCT) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript
Operator
Good day, everyone, and welcome to Cricut Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note, this conference is being recorded.
Now, it’s my pleasure to turn the call over to the Senior Vice President and Head of Investor Relations, Jim Suva. Please proceed.
Jim Suva
Senior Vice President of Finance, Treasurer & Investor Relations
Thank you, operator, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us on Cricut’s Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Call.
Please note that today’s call is being webcast and recorded on the Investor Relations section of the company’s website. A replay of the webcast will also be available following today’s call. For your reference, accompanying slides used on today’s call, along with a supplemental data sheet, have been posted to the Investor Relations section of the company’s website, investor.cricut.com.
Joining me on the call today are Ashish Arora, Chief Executive Officer; and Kimball Shill, Chief Financial Officer. Today’s prepared remarks have been recorded, after which Ashish and Kimball will host live Q&A.
Before we begin, we would like to remind everyone that our prepared remarks contain forward-looking statements, and management may make additional forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our strategies, business, expenses, tariffs, capital allocation and results of operations in response to your questions. These statements do not guarantee future performance, and therefore, undue reliance should not be placed upon them.
These statements are based on current expectations
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Asia stocks fall for third day, oil edges up as markets track Iran war
The conflict in the Middle East has rattled financial markets and global energy prices have soared.
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(VIDEO) Smoothie King Fires Two Employees in Ann Arbor After Refusing Service Over Pro-Trump Hoodie
Two employees at a Smoothie King franchise in Ann Arbor were terminated Monday after a viral video captured them refusing to serve a couple because the husband was wearing a hoodie bearing President Donald Trump’s name, prompting a swift corporate investigation and public backlash over alleged political discrimination.

The incident unfolded Sunday afternoon at the Smoothie King location on Jackson Road, a bustling strip in this liberal-leaning college town home to the University of Michigan. Erika Lindemyer and her husband, Jake, entered the store seeking smoothies when two young female workers behind the counter expressed discomfort with Jake’s attire and declined to take their order.
In the 90-second video filmed by Erika and posted to TikTok, the confrontation escalates as the couple accuses the employees of discrimination. “We were just wanting a smoothie, and you literally looked at us and I asked you if everything was OK and you said, ‘We don’t feel comfortable serving you’ because of my husband’s hoodie,” Erika says in the footage. “That is discrimination.”
One employee responds calmly, “Okay, well, have a great day,” while the other adds, “I said Trump discriminates [against] us.” As the argument intensifies, the second worker insists, “We have a right to refuse service,” and directs the couple to the door. Erika retorts that the refusal is “illegal” and threatens to call police before exiting, lamenting, “What’s embarrassing is that we’re American citizens and I wanted to get a smoothie.”
The video quickly spread across social media platforms, amassing hundreds of thousands of views on X (formerly Twitter) and TikTok by Monday morning. Accounts like Libs of TikTok and Leftism amplified the clip, with Leftism identifying one employee as Janiyah Mishelle Williams of Ann Arbor. “She refused to serve customers at @SmoothieKing because the husband wore a Trump hoodie,” Leftism posted, garnering widespread attention.
Smoothie King, a New Orleans-based chain with over 1,300 locations specializing in blended fruit drinks, responded swiftly. In a statement posted to X on Monday evening, the company affirmed its “zero tolerance for discrimination of any kind, including political affiliation.” It confirmed that following an investigation, the franchise owner had taken “immediate action,” and the two employees “are no longer with the business.”
“We were deeply concerned to learn of an incident involving a guest who was refused service at a franchised location in Michigan yesterday,” the statement read. “Every guest and team member deserves to feel welcomed. We remain firmly committed to upholding our brand standards and ensuring our stores are inclusive environments where everyone feels cared for and respected.” The franchise owner also apologized directly to the Lindemyers and mandated retraining for all staff on guest experience protocols.
Williams, who claims to be a minor, posted her own videos on TikTok in response, captioning one “refusing service to Trumpies gone wrong” and another “I lowkey might be cooked.. why does my job support Trump?” She doubled down in subsequent clips, framing the standoff as “good vs. evil” and urging viewers to report Erika’s video for removal, citing lack of consent and racist comments from predominantly white users.
By Monday morning, Williams launched a GoFundMe campaign seeking $700 for “support for safety after online harassment,” boasting about her refusal to serve Trump supporters and detailing threats that made returning to work unsafe. The fundraiser raised nearly $400 before being disabled later that day, following calls from critics like Leftism for the platform to intervene. In a later X post, Williams claimed Trump had legalized the right to refuse service — a misstatement, as federal law does not explicitly protect political affiliation, though local ordinances in Ann Arbor prohibit discrimination based on political beliefs in public accommodations.
Public reaction was polarized, reflecting broader national divides. Conservative commentators hailed the firings as a victory against “woke” bias, with X users like Ryan Ermanni of FOX 2 Detroit noting, “Smoothie King has FIRED two employees in Michigan.” Calls for boycotts emerged briefly before the terminations, with one X post warning, “Boycott Smoothie King” if action wasn’t taken. Others, like podcaster Jeremy from The Quartering, mocked the employees’ decision, saying it “ruined her life” over an entry-level job.
On the other side, some defended the workers’ right to feel safe, with Reddit threads in r/AnnArbor debating whether the hoodie constituted a threat in a progressive enclave. “If they felt unsafe, they shouldn’t be forced to serve someone,” one commenter wrote on Times of India. Instagram reactions included calls for lawsuits, with users tagging Smoothie King and decrying discrimination.
The episode echoes past controversies, such as 2018 incidents where Trump supporters were denied service over MAGA hats at restaurants in New York and Virginia, sparking debates on free speech versus private business rights. Legal experts note that while the Civil Rights Act protects against discrimination based on race, religion and other traits, political views fall into a gray area, often governed by state or local laws. In Michigan, Ann Arbor’s human rights ordinance explicitly bans bias in public services based on “political beliefs,” potentially exposing the franchise to complaints.
Smoothie King, founded in 1973 and now franchised globally, has emphasized inclusivity in its response, aiming to avoid the fate of brands like Bud Light, which faced boycotts over political missteps. Franchise owners operate independently but adhere to corporate standards, and this incident highlights challenges in enforcing uniform policies amid polarized times.
As of Tuesday, no police report was filed, per local sources, and the Lindemyers have not indicated plans for legal action. Williams continued posting online, unrepentant, while job hunt speculation swirled in conservative circles. The viral storm underscores how everyday encounters can ignite national debates in an election year, with Ann Arbor’s progressive vibe — where Trump garnered just 20% of the vote in 2024 — amplifying the clash.
Experts like University of Michigan political science professor Jenna Bednar told local media that such incidents reflect deepening societal rifts. “In a diverse community like ours, service refusals based on politics erode trust,” she said. Meanwhile, Smoothie King’s stock (part of parent company) dipped slightly amid the chatter, though analysts attribute it to broader market trends.
The franchise has reopened normally, with retraining underway. For the Lindemyers, what started as a quick stop ended in vindication — and a free smoothie voucher from corporate.
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Goldman CEO says markets may take ’couple of weeks’ to digest Iran war impacts

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Renova’s approach between ergonomics and operational continuity
For many years, internal material handling was considered a secondary function, necessary to feed lines, clear areas and move materials between departments.
This is changing. Rising operational complexity and higher volumes are transforming internal flows into a lever for continuity, labor sustainability and reduced congestion within plants. SKU proliferation, omnichannel strategies, flexible production schedules and multi-shift operations are increasing pressure on material movements. Disruptions in these flows can slow production, increase Work-in-Progress (WIP) and create bottlenecks in critical areas. Internal logistics, once invisible, is now treated as part of the industrial system.
A more complex operating environment
Manufacturing is no longer based solely on homogeneous batches and linear sequences. Lines are supplied more frequently and with product variants. The result is a higher density of movements on wheels (carts, containers and dedicated carriers) that must reach the line regularly to sustain continuity. At the same time, several sectors are reducing the use of heavy vehicles near production. In automotive, pharma, food and packaging, forklifts are being replaced with lighter and more ergonomic solutions. Drivers include safety, congestion, space constraints and costs related to licensing, insurance and maintenance.
The workforce variable
Labor availability is another structural element. Repetitive manual handling requires physical force, increases injury risk and is difficult to sustain over three shifts. Improving ergonomics is no longer a collateral benefit but a way to protect uptime, reduce turnover and retain qualified personnel.
Not only automation: the gradual transition
The debate around automation in internal logistics is often framed as a choice between manual handling and fully autonomous systems such as AGVs, AMRs or industrial robots. Adoption, however, tends to be more incremental. Many plants are not yet prepared for full automation due to investment levels, layout implications, integration requirements and the rigidity associated with fixed automated flows. This is creating space for an intermediate category: operator-assist electric solutions that remove physical effort, support flow continuity and retain operator flexibility. These systems require no infrastructure, no software integration and no plant modifications, and typically deliver a faster ROI than full automation.
Across sectors, three priorities are shaping decisions on internal handling upgrades:
- Labor sustainability → reducing strain, injuries and turnover
- Operational continuity → regular line feeding, including multi-shift
- Flexibility → avoiding rigid systems that limit layouts and product mix
There is also growing interest in reducing heavy vehicles in high-density human areas for safety and space configuration reasons.
Renova’s proposal in the operator-assist segment
In this context, operator-assist technologies represent a strategic intermediate layer between manual processes and autonomous systems. Renova has developed a dedicated material handling range, including cart movers and electric tow tugs, designed to prioritize ergonomics, ensure continuity across multiple shifts, and provide high operational flexibility.
A range designed for operational versatility
Renova’s new material handling line covers a wide range of applications, from line-side movements in tight spaces to heavy-duty movements in aerospace, marine and waste-handling environments. With capacity to move wheeled loads up to 6 tons, these systems can be deployed in sectors that have significantly increased the density of internal movements over recent years. Globally, industries such as pharma, food & beverage, aerospace and industrial logistics are growing at annual rates of 5–7%, driven by higher volumes, SKU expansion and multi-shift production. In Europe, this trend is reinforced by the progressive reduction of forklifts near production and the rise of operator-assist solutions as a stable intermediate category.
The range includes Cart Movers and Electric Tow Tugs.The MCE 400/500 cart mover models handle up to 5-ton carts, while the MTE electric tow tug series covers 1.5 to 6-ton applications. Compact models such as MTE 1000/1500 are suited for line-side, end-of-line and machine feeding; MTE 100W is optimized for two-wheel carts often used in the textile industry; and MTE 3500, MTE 6000 and MTE 6000S address heavier towing tasks typical of waste handling, airport and marine sectors.
Integrated with ergonomic handles, the heavy-duty design enables precise maneuverability both indoors and outdoors, including irregular surfaces, tight layouts and non-linear paths. The systems easily overcome obstacles while maintaining full control and operational safety, with compliance to ISO 11228. The Plug&Play lithium battery system supports multi-shift operations without charging downtime, and no operator license is required, reducing training costs and expanding workforce eligibility. Both the device and the battery system come with a two-year warranty, ensuring operational continuity and lower lifecycle costs. For sectors with specific requirements, including chemical and pharmaceutical, ATEX configurations are available.
Balancing efficiency, continuity and flexibility
Ultimately, the shift in internal handling is being driven as much by economics as by ergonomics. Plants are seeking continuity with fewer forklift interventions, shorter integration cycles and a lower total cost of ownership, all while facing tighter layouts and more demanding labor models. Operator-assist systems respond to these constraints by offering a scalable upgrade path that does not require infrastructure, software integration or specialized licensing.
If warehouse and fulfilment operations have already been heavily automated, the open question for the coming decade is how far internal flows can evolve without compromising flexibility. Renova’s new Material Handling range moves precisely in this direction, enabling a more balanced distribution of tasks between operators, equipment and automated systems, and opening the discussion on what the next stage of internal handling might look like inside modern plants.
Sources:
- 2025 Warehouse Automation & Order Fulfillment Study – Peerless Research Group
- 2025 Warehouse Automation Industry Outlook- Modern Materials Handling
- Warehouse Automation Market Report 2025–2029-ResearchAndMarkets.com
- OSHA 2023 Work-Related Injury & Illness Summary (PDF)
- OSHA Warehousing Hazards & Safety Guidance
Business
Drone strikes damage AWS data centers, disrupt cloud services in Middle East
Goldie Ghamari, an Iranian-born human rights activist, praises President Trump’s decisiveness, equating the regime’s fall to Hitler on ‘The Evening Edit.’
Drone strikes damaged Amazon Web Services data centers in the Middle East, disrupting cloud operations and prompting the company to urge customers to move critical workloads out of the region.
AWS confirmed that two of its data center facilities in the United Arab Emirates were directly struck, while a separate strike near a site in Bahrain also caused infrastructure damage. The attacks disrupted power systems and caused structural damage, impairing two of the three data center sites that make up AWS’s UAE cloud region.
As a result, businesses that rely on AWS to run their websites, store data and process transactions experienced more error rates, slower performance and service interruptions.

AWS confirmed that two of its data center facilities in the United Arab Emirates were directly struck and another site in Bahrain also sustained damage. (Hamad I Mohammed/Reuters)
AWS said full recovery will depend in part on repairing physical damage and restoring power and connectivity – a process that could take at least a day and potentially longer.
OIL PRICES SURGE AFTER STRIKES KILL IRAN’S SUPREME LEADER, TANKERS HIT NEAR STRAIT OF HORMUZ
The company has urged its customers in the Middle East to activate disaster recovery plans, restore data from backups in other regions and redirect traffic away from the affected facilities. Customers were advised to consider shifting operations to AWS regions in the United States, Europe or Asia-Pacific.

The damage comes amid unrest after Operation Epic Fury. (Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu via Getty Images)
While cloud providers are designed to withstand the loss of a single data center, simultaneous damage to multiple facilities has strained built-in backup systems.
AWS initially described the situation as a localized power issue before later confirming that drone strikes had caused physical damage. The company said it is working with local authorities and prioritizing employee safety as repairs continue.
The company did not say who was responsible for the strikes, but it came amid the ongoing conflict with Iran that has spilled over into the wider region, throwing businesses and economies into uncertainty.
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When reached for additional details, Amazon referred FOX Business to its AWS Health Dashboard.
Business
Guthrie Disappearance Enters Fifth Week as Family Visits Memorial
The search for Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of NBC “Today” show co-host Savannah Guthrie, has entered its fifth week with no major breakthroughs reported, though authorities insist the case is far from cold as investigators pursue viable leads, forensic analysis and a flood of public tips spurred by a $1 million family reward.

Nancy Guthrie was last seen at her home in the Tucson area on Jan. 31, 2026, and reported missing the following day after failing to appear at a church event. Authorities, including the Pima County Sheriff’s Department and the FBI, believe she was taken against her will, classifying the incident as a suspected abduction or kidnapping. Surveillance footage released early in the investigation shows a masked individual at her doorstep, and gloves found nearby contained unknown male DNA now being processed for database matching.
As of March 3, 2026, the investigation remains active, with detectives reviewing surveillance video, timeline inconsistencies and physical evidence. The FBI has confirmed ongoing forensic testing and tip evaluation, emphasizing that verified information continues to drive progress. A retired NYPD detective described recent footage as “a good lead — better than we’ve had so far,” highlighting its potential value despite the passage of time.
On March 2, marking Day 30 since the disappearance, Savannah Guthrie and her sister Annie made their first public visit to their mother’s home since the incident began. Aerial footage captured the siblings laying flowers and a card at a growing memorial of notes, candles and tributes outside the property, which has been returned to the family with “No Trespassing” signs posted. Savannah shared images on social media, writing, “We feel the love. Please don’t stop praying and hoping with us.”
The emotional appearance followed Savannah’s Friday Instagram post reiterating the family’s $1 million reward — announced Feb. 23 — which can be paid in cash for information leading to Nancy’s recovery. The offer has generated over 1,500 new tips, officials said, reinvigorating the lead pool after an initial surge.
Savannah has been vocal throughout, releasing gut-wrenching videos pleading for help. In one, she acknowledged the possibility that her mother “may already be gone,” yet urged the public to come forward. “We are begging you to please come forward now,” she said in late February remarks.
The case has drawn intense national and international attention, with communities near Tucson holding vigils to mark the one-month milestone. Messages of hope and support have proliferated at the memorial, reflecting widespread sympathy for the Guthrie family.
Investigative shifts have fueled speculation. The FBI relocated much of its command post from Tucson to Phoenix last week, and the Pima County Sheriff’s Department reassigned some officers, focusing resources on dedicated missing-persons detectives. Experts caution these moves indicate strategic adjustments rather than abandonment, with one former agent calling federal prosecutors’ presence at the home “great news” for potential charges.
A man named Luke Daley and his mother were briefly detained Feb. 13 under a federal search warrant but released without charges. Daley later spoke publicly, stating he has no information about the case.
Sheriff Chris Nanos cleared all Guthrie family members, including Savannah and her siblings, as suspects early on. No arrests have been made, and no suspect has been publicly identified.
The disappearance’s perplexing nature — an elderly woman vanishing from her home with limited immediate clues — has perplexed investigators and captivated media. Coverage spans outlets from CNN and The New York Times to local Arizona stations, with live updates tracking Day 30 developments.
Nancy Guthrie, a private figure before this ordeal, gained broader recognition through her daughter’s platform. Some reports note her Christian faith and family-oriented life in retirement, though details remain sparse amid the ongoing probe.
Public reaction mixes hope with concern over the case potentially cooling. Experts stress it’s too early to declare it cold, citing active leads and the reward’s impact. “They still have viable leads that need to be followed,” one analyst said, pointing to forensic opportunities and public engagement.
As the search continues, authorities urge anyone with information — no matter how small — to contact the Pima County Sheriff’s tip line or the FBI. The family maintains hope, bolstered by community support and the outpouring at the memorial.
The ordeal underscores the anguish of prolonged uncertainty for loved ones. For the Guthries, each day without resolution heightens calls for closure. Investigators vow to persist, driven by evidence, tips and the family’s unwavering pleas.
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