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Howmet Aerospace EVP, CAO Neil Marchuk sells $11.3m in stock

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Earnings call transcript: NeoVolta’s Q3 2026 results miss forecasts

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Earnings call transcript: NeoVolta’s Q3 2026 results miss forecasts

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What will be the impact of AI on employment

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The best workers will not be those who pretend AI does not exist, nor those who use it uncritically.

ChatGPT.(Image: Getty Images)

Despite all the noise around artificial intelligence, one of the most important questions that is still difficult to answer is whether AI is actually taking people’s jobs in the labour market.

A new report from Anthropic, the company behind Claude, concludes that there is no clear evidence that AI has led to a rise in unemployment among the workers most exposed to it, but there are early signs that hiring in some AI-exposed occupations may already be slowing for younger workers.

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That distinction matters because, for much of the past two years, the debate about AI and employment has been between those who believe it will unleash a productivity revolution and those who fear a wave of white-collar automation, with millions of workers displaced by systems that can write, code, analyse, and communicate at ever-increasing speed.

Author avatarDylan Jones-Evans

Author avatarDylan Jones-Evans

The truth, as usual, is much more complicated, and what makes the Anthropic report interesting is that it goes beyond what AI could theoretically do. In other words, just because AI can help complete a task doesn’t necessarily mean that task is being automated in the workplace.

As we all know, businesses do not change overnight, as software has to be integrated, managers have to trust it, employees have to use it, customers have to accept it, legal and regulatory issues have to be addressed, and human judgement still has to be applied. In many cases, the technology may be available long before the organisation knows how to use it

So Anthropic has looked not only at where AI is theoretically capable of undertaking tasks, but also at where it is already being used in real, work-related and more automated ways. That gives a clearer picture of where the labour market may be heading and, crucially, shows that AI is still far from reaching its full theoretical capability.

That should calm some of the more dramatic predictions of immediate mass unemployment, but it should not make us complacent, especially given that the occupations with the highest observed exposure include computer programmers, customer service representatives, data entry workers, medical records specialists, market research analysts, sales representatives, financial analysts and software quality assurance analysts.

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That is a revealing list because it is not only about repetitive manual work or low-skilled occupations, but also about office and administrative work, and some of the professional tasks that have traditionally formed the first rung of the career ladder for graduates and younger workers. And that may be where the real challenge begins.

The report does not find a clear increase in unemployment since the launch of ChatGPT, but it does find suggestive evidence that young workers aged 22 to 25 are becoming less likely to start jobs in highly exposed occupations.

That is not the same as mass layoffs, but it could be just as significant over time as AI may not appear in the economy as a wave of redundancies, but rather in the guise of fewer junior hires, a trimmed graduate intake, or an entry-level customer service or analyst position that disappears before anyone notices it has gone.

That matters because the first job is not simply a job but is where people learn how work actually works, develop judgement, confidence, habits, networks and commercial understanding, and begin to turn qualifications into experience. If AI weakens that first rung, the consequences could be profound.

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This is especially relevant for Wales, where we already face long-standing challenges around productivity, graduate retention, and access to high-quality professional opportunities outside the strongest labour markets. If AI accelerates the advantage of firms and places that adopt it quickly, then the gap between leading and lagging economies could widen.

Larger firms with the skills, capital and management capacity to integrate AI properly may become more productive, while smaller firms that lack the time, confidence or support to adopt it may fall further behind. Graduates in places with strong professional labour markets may still find routes into work, while those in weaker economies such as Wales may find opportunities narrowing.

With a new Welsh Government in place for the next four years, dealing with this issue could be nation-changing and there is an urgent need to understand where AI exposure is greatest in our own economy, which occupations are most vulnerable, which businesses are using AI to improve productivity and which young people are being prepared for a labour market that is already shifting beneath them.

The best workers will not be those who pretend AI does not exist, nor those who use it uncritically, but those who can ask better questions, interpret better answers, spot mistakes, understand customers, and turn information into action. The same applies to businesses, where the biggest opportunity for SMEs is not replacing people but reducing administration, improving sales processes, strengthening customer communication, and freeing owners and staff to focus on higher-value work.

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Yet that will not happen automatically as badly used AI will simply produce bad work faster, creating poor marketing, shallow analysis and false confidence, while the firms that benefit will be those that combine technology with good management.

That has always been the real productivity challenge and for Wales, the choice is clear. We can either treat AI as another distant technological fashion, something discussed by academics but not embedded in economic policy, business support or education, or we can recognise that the country cannot afford to lose more of its talent, ambition or productivity potential, and treat it as one of the defining economic issues of the next decade and do something to maximise the opportunity it presents.

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Slideshow: Providing flexibility with frozen foods

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Slideshow: Formulating fresh condiment innovations

The frozen foods sector is growing with convenient meals and novelties.

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BBC explains closing arguments of the Musk-Altman trial

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BBC explains closing arguments of the Musk-Altman trial

Over the past three weeks, Elon Musk and his lawyers have argued in a California federal court that Sam Altman – with whom he founded OpenAI – has swindled him out of millions of dollars and reneged on the ChatGPT-maker’s original non-profit mission.

Musk and Altman themselves testified in a case in which the future of AI could be at stake.

As the trial now heads to jury for deliberations, BBC’s Lily Jamali explains what we learned from the high-stakes case.

Read more here.

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Rumble: Skepticism Is Now The Opportunity (Rating Upgrade)

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Rumble: Skepticism Is Now The Opportunity (Rating Upgrade)

Rumble: Skepticism Is Now The Opportunity (Rating Upgrade)

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Richest people in Wales named on Sunday Times Rich List

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They are worth more than a staggering £13bn between them

Collage of six photos

The Sunday Times Wales Rich List,

The richest people in Wales have been revealed. They include a couple behind an opticians chain, the founders of a supermarket, and a husband and wife who have topped the list on a number of occasions, according to this year’s edition of The Sunday Times Rich List, which has now been published online.

The list, which is updated annually, ranks the 350 richest people in the UK and has been printed in a special edition of The Sunday Times Magazine since 1989. This year’s list of individuals and families have a combined wealth of £783.5bn – more than the the annual GDP of Belgium, Sweden, and Israel.

The top three richest individuals and families in Wales has remained the same for the last four editions of the list.

The survey is based on identifiable wealth including land, property, other assets such as art and racehorses, or significant shares in publicly-quoted companies. It excludes bank accounts, which the paper has no access to.

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The 2026 special edition of The Sunday Times Magazine reveals the largest fall in the billionaire count in the guide’s 38-year history. The minimum entry level to get on the list this year has dipped to £340m – another indicator of a subdued year.

Famous figures to make the cut include Sir Elton John, Andrew Lloyd-Webber, Sir Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, JK Rowling, Charlotte Tilbury, and Sir Lewis Hamilton. Always keep on top of the latest Welsh news with our newsletter.

Topping the list once again for the 10 richest individuals or families in Wales – who are worth in excess of a staggering £13bn between them – are venture capitalist Sir Michael Moritz and his novelist wife Harriet Heyman. Moritz’s wealth has grown by more than £1bn since last year taking his worth to more than £5.4bn.

Some of the other wealthiest entries on the list have lost wealth since the last list. Only one Welsh person made the list for the richest people under under 40, founder and CEO of Net World Sports, Alex Lovén, who has an estimated wealth of £263m.

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These are Wales’ 10 wealthiest individuals or families according to The Sunday Times Rich List 2026.

1. Sir Michael Moritz and Harriet Heyman

Sir Michael Moritz

Sir Michael Moritz(Image: Getty Images)

Source of wealth: Venture capitalist and philanthropist

2026 wealth: £5.481bn

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Yearly difference: Up £1.046bn

Cardiff-born Sir Michael Moritz, 71, is a former journalist who joined US investment house Sequoia Capital in 1986 and set up his own charitable foundation, Crankstart. He became a billionaire by making early investments into the likes of Google, PayPal, WhatsApp, YouTube, and a host of other tech giants before any other big names.

After stepping down from being in charge of Sequoia Capital in 2012 for health reasons Sir Michael and his American author wife Harriet Heyman, whom he shares his billions with, set up Crankstart to support students from low-income families.

Last year he announced he had applied for a German passport as an “insurance policy” against antisemitism. He believes the country his parents fled does a better job of teaching children about the horrors of the Holocaust.

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2. Simon Nixon

Simon Nixon

Simon Nixon(Image: Western Mail)

Source of wealth: Tech entrepreneur (MoneySuperMarket)

2026 wealth: £2.05bn

Yearly difference: Up £100m

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In second place again this year is 58-year-old Simon Nixon, who was born in Lincolnshire but grew up in Flintshire. Many will have heard of his fortune making website, MoneySuperMarket, which he co-founded in 1993.

He eventually went on to sell his shares by 2016 and now has investments in Monzo. He also makes money from his holiday home website Simon Escapes where he rents out his personal collection of luxury homes around the world from Cornwall to Malibu.

3. Douglas and Dame Mary Perkins and family

Doug Perkins

Doug Perkins opening the new Specsavers Carmarthen(Image: Mike Walters)

Dame Mary Perkins

Dame Mary Perkins

Source of wealth: Opticians (Specsavers)

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2026 wealth: £1.409bn

Yearly difference: Down £130m

Douglas Perkins, 83, from Llanelli, and his wife Dame Mary Perkins, 82, started their billion-pound fortune from a ping-pong table in their spare bedroom where they created Specsavers. The pair came up with the idea of making a visit to the opticians like going to a shop rather than going to the doctor and turned the idea into a hugely profitable international business.

The company is now a global chain of opticians and made Perkins and his family billionaires.

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4. Sir Terry Matthews

Sir Terry Matthews

Sir Terry Matthews.(Image: John Myers)

Source of wealth: Telecoms tycoon

2026 wealth: £1.33bn

Yearly difference: Down £8m

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Sir Terry Matthews was raised in Newbridge before earning a degree in electronics from Swansea University.

He began his journey as an entrepreneur in Canada where he started his telecoms equipment venture Mitel in 1973. He now also owns the Celtic Manor Resort in Newport.

Sir Terry is recorded as Wales’ first billionaire and was the richest man in Wales until 2012.

5. David Sullivan and family

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David Sullivan

David Sullivan.(Image: PA)

Source of wealth: Publisher

2025 wealth: £1.1bn

Yearly difference: Down £18m

Born in Cardiff, David Sullivan, 77, earned his millions by selling pornographic content,. By the late 1970s he ran half of the UK’s adult magazine market and 150 sex shops.

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In 1982 he was convicted of living off immoral earnings and served 71 days in prison but he told the Standard in 2012 that he did not “feel embarrassed” by how he made his money.

Sullivan is currently the co-owner of West Ham United FC as well as operating an investment company, Conegate, which owns property in London.

6= Henry Engelhardt and Diane Briere de L’Isle

Henry Engelhardt and his wife Diane Briere de L'Isle.

Henry Engelhardt and his wife Diane Briere de L’Isle.(Image: Richard Swingler)

Source of wealth: Insurance firm Admiral

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2026 wealth: £935m

Yearly difference: Down £45m

The married couple are up from 7th in the list last year.

Chicago-born Henry Engelhardt moved to Cardiff in the 1990s to set up the insurance firm Admiral. In the 20 years before he stepped back in 2016 he reshaped the UK car insurance industry and built a fortune.

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6= Steve Morgan

Steve Morgan

Steve Morgan.(Image: Redrow/PA)

Source of wealth: Housebuilder Redrow

2026 wealth: £935m

Yearly difference: Down £53m

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Steve Morgan founded housebuilder Redrow in 1974 at the age of 21. It grew to be a FTSE 250 company and one of the UK’s most successful homebuilders. Morgan stepped down as chairman of Redrow in 2019.

In 2001 he founded the Steve Morgan Foundation to which he has donated more than £300m and which has provided support to more than 650 charities.

In 1992 Morgan received an OBE for Services to the construction industry and in 2016 he received a CBE for Philanthropic Services.

8. Dai and Richard Walters

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Dai Walters feels Ffos Las will be better served for fixtures under Arc

Dai Walters.(Image: MediaWales)

Source of wealth: Construction tycoons (Walters)

2026 wealth: £441m

Yearly difference: Up £23m

Dai Walters’ fortune is entirely self-made having started out as an apprentice labourer at an opencast site in south Wales in the 1970s. The Walters Group website describes how after work as a labourer, greengrocer, and tree planter at 20 years old he took a job as an apprentice fitter at the Wimpey-operated Maesgwyn opencast coal mine.

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It wasn’t until 1982, after 17 years working on sites across Wales, that Walters struck out on his own. After success buying plant machinery and hiring it out to mining companies initially in south Wales the Walters Group was established to add earthmoving and civil engineering services to its portfolio and before long was becoming involved in some major construction projects

His son Richard previously ran Caerphilly-based Celtic Energy.

9. Sir Malcolm and Lord Walker

Sir Malcolm Walker

Sir Malcolm Walker.(Image: IAN COOPER/NORTH WALES LIVE)

Source of wealth: Frozen food retailers (Iceland)

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2026 wealth: £424m

Yearly difference: Re-entry

Sir Malcolm Walker founded the supermarket chain in 1970 as a side business alongside his job working at Woolworths. The founder was fired for having his own company which was the starting point of Iceland becoming the giant it is today.

Growing up in Yorkshire the supermarket boss now lives in Flintshire.

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Sir Malcolm’s son Lord Richard of Broxton, 45, joined the company in 2012 as a shelf-stacker and cashier working his way up the ladder to becoming becoming executive chairman in January 2023.

10. David and Heather Stevens

David Stevens

David Stevens.(Image: South Wales Echo)

Source of wealth: Insurers (Admiral)

2026 wealth: £340m

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Yearly difference: Re-entry

This couple are the second to find themselves on the due to their involvement in establishing insurance firm Admiral. David and Heather Stevens were part of the small team which launched the insurance group in 1993 in Cardiff.

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H&R Real Estate Investment Trust (HR.UN:CA) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to H&R Real Estate Investment Trust 2026 First Quarter Earnings Conference Call. Before beginning the call, H&R would like to remind listeners that certain statements, which may include predictions, conclusions, forecasts or projections and the remarks that follow may contain forward-looking information, which reflect the current expectations of management regarding future events and performance and speak only as of today’s date.

Forward-looking information requires management to make assumptions or rely on certain material factors and is subject to inherent risks and uncertainties, and actual results could differ materially from the statements in the forward-looking information. In discussing H&R’s financial and operating performance and in responding to your questions, we may reference certain financial measures, which do not have a meaning recognized or standardized under IFRS or Canadian generally accepted accounting principles and are therefore unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other reporting issuers.

Non-GAAP measures should not be considered as alternatives to net income or comparable metrics determined in accordance with IFRS as indicators of H&R’s performance, liquidity, cash flows and profitability. H&R’s management uses these measures to aid in assessing the REIT’s underlying performance and provides these additional measures so that investors can do the same.

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Additional information about the material factors, assumptions, risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the statements in the forward-looking information and the material

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Form 13D/A Ballard Power Systems Inc. For: 15 May

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Form 13D/A Ballard Power Systems Inc. For: 15 May

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H World Group Limited (HTHT) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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

Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to H World First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded.

I’ll now hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Ms. Ivy Luo, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

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Ivy Huili Luo

Thank you, operator. Good morning and good evening, everyone. Thanks for joining us today. Welcome to H World’s First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. Joining us today is our Founder and Executive Chairman, Mr. Ji Qi; our CEO, Mr. Jin Hui; our CFO, Mr. Arthur Yu, our COO, Mr. Chen Hui; and our CFO, Ms. Junrui Yu. Following our prepared remarks, management will be available to answer your questions.

Before we continue, please note that the discussion today will include forward-looking statements made under the safe harbor provision of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties. As such, our results may be materially different from the views expressed today. A number of potential risks and uncertainties are outlined in our public filings with the SEC.

H World Group does not undertake any obligation to update any forward-looking statements, except as required under applicable laws. On the call today, we will also mention adjusted financial measures during the discussion of our performance. Reconciliation of those measures to comparable GAAP information can be found

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Infographic highlighting key insights and trends in the stock market for April 2026.

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Infographic highlighting key insights and trends in the stock market for April 2026.
Infographic highlighting key insights and trends in the stock market for April 2026.

Infographic summarizing the stock market situation in April 2026

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