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Macro headwinds are behind us; largecaps poised to outperform: Prashant Jain

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Macro headwinds are behind us; largecaps poised to outperform: Prashant Jain
India’s equity markets are entering a more constructive phase as macroeconomic headwinds begin to fade, according to Prashant Jain, CIO, 3P Investment Managers who believes large-cap stocks are well positioned to outperform amid improving economic conditions and more reasonable valuations.

Speaking to ET Now, Jain said the combination of stronger domestic fundamentals, improving external balances, and stable valuations has strengthened his outlook for Indian equities. While he remains optimistic about the broader market, he believes opportunities are emerging selectively across sectors, particularly in large-cap banking and information technology.

Macro environment turns supportive
Jain believes India has moved past the macro challenges that weighed on investor sentiment over the past few years. He pointed to a healthier balance of payments outlook, supportive measures taken by the Reserve Bank of India, and a shift in equity ownership from foreign investors to domestic institutional investors as key positives.”I am quite constructive on the markets. The macro challenges that India was facing are clearly behind us. The balance of payments in the current year should be materially positive because of both external factors and the steps the RBI has taken. Valuations are reasonable, and stocks have moved into very strong hands from foreigners to domestic institutional investors. Multiples are reasonable, so I am actually quite constructive on these markets,” he said.

IT sector presents value despite near-term challenges
The recent correction in IT stocks, particularly following weak guidance from some mid-tier companies, has created value, Jain said. While pricing pressures remain a concern, he does not expect Indian IT companies to witness a structural decline in business.
He believes the current pricing environment is cyclical and could improve as enterprises increase technology spending to adopt artificial intelligence.”There is value, in my opinion, and I do not think these businesses are going to melt away. Even in the current deflationary environment, toplines are not negative. They are holding on, maybe flattish or with very low growth. As enterprises adopt AI, they will need to spend more, and I do not think IT budgets are likely to degrow,” he said.

However, he cautioned that Indian IT stocks continue to face valuation pressure from cheaper global peers.

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“The challenge is that similar businesses outside India are trading at 20-30% lower multiples. That will continue to pose a headwind for Indian IT stocks until there is some change in sentiment,” he said.

Potential triggers could revive IT sentiment
Despite the valuation gap with global peers, Jain believes several factors could unlock value in Indian IT stocks over time.

“When you are getting good value, it is very hard to forecast how that value will unlock itself. Maybe earnings turn out slightly better than expected, foreign selling stops, domestic investors continue to support these companies, or some companies announce buybacks. Any of these could become a trigger,” he said.

Avoids specific view on ER&D companies
Asked about engineering research and development companies, which have seen mixed commentary amid slowing European auto demand, Jain chose not to offer a stock-specific opinion.

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“Let me not comment specifically on ER&D names. I do not think I would be able to do justice there,” he said.

Large private banks offer compelling value
Jain is particularly constructive on large private sector banks, arguing that the sector has been weighed down by prolonged foreign institutional selling despite improving fundamentals.

He noted that credit growth has strengthened, valuations have become attractive, and the unwinding of long-held foreign positions appears to be nearing completion.

“Over the last one or two years, value has clearly emerged in large private banks. Credit growth has inched up sharply, and as FCNR(B) dollars come in, it will be positive for banks. The sector has massively underperformed because foreigners have been reducing positions, but at current valuations I would be quite constructive,” he said.

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Largecaps likely to outperform as foreign selling eases
While small and mid-cap stocks have staged a recovery from recent lows, Jain believes large-cap companies currently offer better value. He expects improving macro conditions and easing foreign selling to benefit the large-cap segment over time.

“As a category, largecaps are offering better value. They have borne the maximum brunt of foreign selling, and as macro conditions improve and foreign selling abates, largecaps should outperform smallcaps,” he said.

At the same time, he acknowledged that opportunities continue to exist in the broader market.

“After the correction in small and midcaps over the last two years, value is emerging on a stock-specific basis. It is going to be a stock picker’s market,” he said.

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Strong economy could lift large-cap earnings
Jain dismissed concerns that earnings growth will remain confined to smaller companies, arguing that India’s underlying economy remains robust. He cited healthy demand conditions, strong credit growth, rising GST collections, and supportive nominal GDP trends as reasons why large-cap earnings could also accelerate.

“The underlying economy is doing extremely well. Credit growth, GST numbers and demand conditions point to a very robust economy. We could see some acceleration in earnings growth even in the large-cap space,” he said.

No clear view on real estate
While acknowledging that the real estate sector remains important, Jain said he does not track it closely enough to offer a meaningful opinion.

“It is a good space, but I do not track it very closely. So, let me not comment on that,” he said.

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Consumer discretionary preferred over staples
Jain drew a clear distinction between consumer staples and consumer discretionary businesses, arguing that the former faces slower growth and increasing competitive pressures despite its strong business quality.

He believes discretionary consumption offers better long-term growth opportunities, although investors must remain disciplined on valuations.

“Consumer staples are highly penetrated and will continue to exhibit slow growth. They are also facing increasing competition from organised retail, D2C brands and private labels. The businesses are excellent, but valuations remain demanding relative to likely growth,” he said.

Instead, he prefers businesses linked to discretionary spending.

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“I would be more inclined towards the consumer discretionary space than the consumer staples space,” he said.

He added that the discretionary universe is broad, covering automobiles, airlines, consumer durables, building materials, food delivery, cosmetics and apparel retail, making stock selection critical.

“It is a very diverse category. The attempt should be to have a realistic view of what growth is sustainable over the long term and what is already priced in. My preference would be to do more work in that space than in the staples space,” he said.

Outlook
Jain’s investment outlook remains firmly constructive. He believes improving macroeconomic conditions, healthier valuations and resilient domestic liquidity are creating an attractive backdrop for equities. While he sees selective opportunities across sectors, his preference currently lies with large-cap companies, private sector banks, and select consumer discretionary businesses, while viewing stock selection as the key driver of returns in the small- and mid-cap universe.

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Positives for North East firms though cost pressures still loom

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The North East Chamber of Commerce has published the findings of its latest quarterly economic survey

Welders working on a huge steel jacket for Scottish Power's East Anglia TWO offshore windfarm at Smulders yard in Wallsend

Welders working on a huge steel jacket for Scottish Power’s East Anglia TWO offshore windfarm at Smulders yard in Wallsend(Image: Simon Greener/Newcastle Chronicle)

There are encouraging signs for North East businesses with rising sales and hiring intentions, research from a top regional group suggests.

Firms were questioned as part of the established North East Chamber of Commerce’s quarterly economic survey (QES), which pointed to improvements in sales, recruitment and investment in workers. But despite the confidence markers, the Q2 research also showed firms were wary of increased energy costs, wider inflation and weaker profit forecasts.

Business activity was shown to have broadly strengthened with increases in UK sales, UK orders and exporting, while the proportion of firms operating at full capacity also increased. Training investment plans rose strong, up 13.2%, but plant investment declined by 7.6% Profitability expectations were also weakened.

The survey conducted between May 11 and June 8 found future workforce expectations rose sharply, with recruitment across all types of roles. However recruitment challenges increased across all categories but particularly semi and unskilled and clerical roles. Workforce levels also improved slightly on the previous quarter, but remained below Q2 2025 levels.

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Deborah Walton, president at the North East Chamber of Commerce, said: “This quarter’s results highlight growing confidence among North East businesses, with significant improvements in sales activity, recruitment intentions and investment in workforce development. Businesses are clearly looking ahead, with future workforce plans reaching their highest level for some time and training investment increasing strongly compared with both last quarter and a year ago.”

Less favourable were concerns about price pressures, which increased across most indicators but most notably fuel, up 23.4%, raw materials, up 18.5%, and utilities, up 9.9%. Researchers said that despite the growth, most cost pressures remained lower than a year ago as labour, finance and other overheads showed annual declines.

Concern about energy prices rose significantly over the quarter, with 58.1% of businesses saying it was an issue. More than half of firms reported taking action to reduce energy costs through efficiency measures and reduced energy usage.

Meanwhile worries around business rates, crime and taxation eased, while concerns about energy prices, inflation and exchange rates all increased.

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Rhiannon Bearne, deputy CEO at North East Chamber of Commerce, said: “As businesses and communities face further change on the national political stage, stable policy, investment in infrastructure and support for competitiveness will be critical to sustaining this cautious momentum. The North East Chamber of Commerce will continue to champion the needs of North East businesses and ensure their experiences help shape policy not just regionally but, through our strong partnership with the British Chambers of Commerce, nationally as well.”

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Leeds’ The Malthouse building acquired by tenants following landlord’s collapse

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Occupiers IMA said buying the freehold gives them the flexibility to evolve the space

The Malthouse is an 18th century building.

The refurbished Malthouse, in South Bank, Leeds.(Image: Avison Young)

Creative agency IMA has acquired The Malthouse building in a £4m deal.

The global firm has taken freehold ownership of the refurbished 18th century former maltings having acquired it from the administrators of former landlords Leaseco 23 Limited, which collapsed last year. The building, which sits opposite Leeds Dock, provides more than 24,000 sqft of office accommodation, with Leeds city centre and train station only minutes away.

IMA have been based at the Malthouse since 2020, after moving from their location in Headingley, where the company was based for more than 30 years. The Leeds office is one of six, with additional bases in London, Amsterdam, Sydney, New York and Manchester.

Avison Young acted for IMA, which Cushman & Wakefield acted for the seller. The deal is described as reflecting the ongoing momentum of Leeds’s creative and digital industries.

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A spokesperson for IMA said: “Leeds Dock has become a real hub for creative and growing industries, and it’s been an inspiring place for us to call home over the past few years. Our workspace plays a big role in shaping how we collaborate and support our clients, so having the opportunity to make it our own is incredibly important.

“Acquiring The Malthouse gives us the flexibility to evolve the space alongside our business and create an environment that truly reflects who we are. The process has been smooth throughout, and we’ve really valued the expertise and support from the Avison Young team.”

Leaseco 23 – formerly known as Leeds Dock Limited – owned 24 ground-floor commercial units at Leeds Dock, and was linked to two buildings there. The property-owning company’s finances deteriorated following the departure of a key anchor tenant in January 2024, leading to a big fall in rental income.

Despite the efforts of directors to refinance, administrators at Interpath were called in and appointed in mid December, 2025. A statement of affairs showed a total estimated deficit of more than £12m.

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WA Museum’s Warriors display called ‘most successful yet’

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WA Museum’s Warriors display called ‘most successful yet’

The Terracotta Warriors exhibit has been labelled the museum’s most successful display yet, as questions swirl around the state government’s spending on arts and culture events.

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General Mills CEO: ‘Fiscal ’27 will be a better year’

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General Mills CEO: ‘Fiscal ’27 will be a better year’

Company better-positioned to focus on growth after tough fiscal 2026.

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Bloom Energy's Long-Term Rally Is Just Getting Started

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Bloom Energy's Long-Term Rally Is Just Getting Started

Bloom Energy's Long-Term Rally Is Just Getting Started

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Don’t Panic: Big AI CapEx, Negative Free Cash Flow, And Lack Of ROI Are NOT Bearish (QQQ)

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Don’t Panic: Big AI CapEx, Negative Free Cash Flow, And Lack Of ROI Are NOT Bearish (QQQ)

This article was written by

After 43+ years working for one investment research company or another, I finally retired. So now, I’m completely independent. And for the first time on Seeking Alpha, I won’t be working based on anybody else’s product agenda. I have only one goal now… to give you the best actionable investment insights I can.I have long specialized in rules/factor-based equity investing strategies. But I’m different from others who share such backgrounds. I don’t serve the numbers. Instead, the numbers serve me… to inspire HI (Human Intelligence) generated investment stories. I definitely understand quant investing, including factors and what not (AI before it was called AI). But I don’t agree with what other quants do. Rather than be obsessed with statistical studies that are no good for any time periods other than the ones studied, I combine factor work with the underlying theories of finance including classic fundamental analysis to get the true story of a company and its stock. Investing is about the future. So numbers (which necessarily live in the past) can take us just so far. They’re at their best when they cue us into stories that shed light on what’s likely to happen in the future. And that’s how I use them,I’ve had a pretty colorful career. Besides a full range of experience covering stocks from lots of different groups (large cap, small cap, micro cap, value, growth, income, special situations … you name it, I covered it) I’ve developed and worked with many different quant models. In addition, I formerly managed a high-yield fixed-income (“junk bond”) fund and conducted research involving quantitative asset allocation strategies such as are at the foundation of what today has come to be known as Robo Advising. I formerly edited and or wrote several stock newsletters, the most noteworthy having been the Forbes Low Priced Stock Report. I previously served as an assistant research director at Value Line.I also have long had a passion for investor education, which has resulted in my having conducted numerous seminars on stock selection and analysis, and the authoring of two books: Screening The Market and The Value Connection.I’m looking forward to my new incarnation on Seeking Alpha. I hope you enjoy what I offer. But if you don’t, feel free to tell me why in the comment sections. I’m a big boy. I can handle criticism. (But please don’t call me “stupid.” That’s my wife’s job!)

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

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

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Kroger acquiring Giant Eagle

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Kroger acquiring Giant Eagle

Giant Eagle generates approximately $9 billion in annual sales.

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CoreWeave: Meta Compute Scare Is A Long-Term Buying Opportunity (CRWV)

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Bitfarms Rebrands To Keel Infrastructure, But Financial Engineering Still Weighs

This article was written by

I am focused on growth and dividend income. My personal strategy revolves around setting myself up for an easy retirement by creating a portfolio which focuses on compounding dividend income and growth. Dividends are an intricate part of my strategy as I have structured my portfolio to have monthly dividend income which grows through dividend reinvestment and yearly increases. Feel free to reach out to me on Seeking Alpha

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of CRWV, META, MSFT, GOOGL, AMZN, NVDA, ORCL 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.

Disclaimer: I am not an investment advisor or professional. This article is my own personal opinion and is not meant to be a recommendation of the purchase or sale of stock. The investments and strategies discussed within this article are solely my personal opinions and commentary on the subject. This article has been written for research and educational purposes only. Anything written in this article does not take into account the reader’s particular investment objectives, financial situation, needs, or personal circumstances and is not intended to be specific to you. Investors should conduct their own research before investing to see if the companies discussed in this article fit into their portfolio parameters. Just because something may be an enticing investment for myself or someone else, it may not be the correct investment for you.

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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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Paisalo Digital bets on AI and Nvidia chips to double its loan book in 3 years

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Paisalo Digital bets on AI and Nvidia chips to double its loan book in 3 years
Paisalo Digital is undergoing a technology-first overhaul aimed at sustaining its 6.5% net interest margin while doubling its loan book over the next three years, according to Santanu Agarwal, Deputy Managing Director at the NBFC.

From high-touch lender to fin-AI company

Speaking to ET Now, Agarwal said the company has deployed two Nvidia chips to run proprietary AI models internally, marking a shift from a traditional high-tech, high-touch lending model. The results are already visible in the numbers: cost of funds has dropped from around 12% three years ago to 10.3%, beating the company’s own 10.5% guidance, while yields have simultaneously risen roughly 10 basis points to 17.04%. Agarwal credited this combination — falling costs and rising yields — alongside ongoing AI-driven efficiencies for the company’s ability to defend its margins going forward.

Asset quality: A “collection first” philosophy

On concerns that rapid loan book expansion could hurt asset quality, Agarwal was firm that Paisalo treats itself as “a collection business first and a lending business second.” He pointed to a multi-decade track record since the company’s 1996 listing, during which asset quality stayed below 2% except during the Covid years, when it briefly rose before being brought back down within roughly six quarters. The company’s underwriting model functions more as a rejection filter than a disbursement engine, he said, with incentive structures across the organization weighted equally toward collections and growth.

No fresh equity needed for expansion

Despite pursuing aggressive growth, Agarwal said Paisalo does not need new equity capital, citing a comfortable 35% capital adequacy ratio and underleveraged 2.2x debt-to-equity position. Instead of diluting existing shareholders, promoters have been steadily raising their stake through open-market purchases — now at 46-47%, up from a low of about 26% four years ago. The company also has a $50 million foreign currency convertible bond outstanding, of which $44 million remains unconverted at a strike price of roughly Rs 48. With the stock now trading above that level, Agarwal expects meaningful conversion activity, and possibly full conversion, within the current financial year.

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Four pillars driving 24-25% loan growth

Agarwal outlined four growth levers underpinning the company’s three-year AUM, revenue, and profit-doubling target: the shift to AI-led operations, aggressive distribution expansion, new product launches, and continued cost-of-capital optimization. Distribution has grown more than fivefold since 2017, expanding into 12 new states in the last three to four years to reach 5,299 distribution points across 22 states. Six new products were launched in the most recent quarter alone.

AI is already doing the heavy lifting

The scale of AI adoption at Paisalo is substantial. In just two quarters, the company processed around 160,000 loan applications through AI-enabled onboarding, alongside 125,000 servicing cases and 225,000 risk management cases handled by AI systems. It has also run roughly 250,000 quality checks across audit, credit and operations functions using AI, while scaling from zero to two AI bots and five outbound voice bots handling 350,000 multilingual calls daily in Hindi, English, and Marathi.

Opex to stay elevated near-term, then ease

Agarwal acknowledged that operating expense ratios will likely hold steady or edge up in the medium term as the company continues investing heavily in in-house AI and IT infrastructure, including a revamped sourcing app and business correspondent platform expected later this year. However, he expects opex efficiencies to materialize meaningfully over the longer term as AI-driven automation scales across the organization.

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OpenAI offers US government $43bn stake ahead of $1tn IPO

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OpenAI offers US government $43bn stake ahead of $1tn IPO

OpenAI is weighing up handing the US government a 5 per cent stake worth $43bn (£32bn) as Sam Altman moves to shore up relations with Donald Trump ahead of the ChatGPT maker’s blockbuster stock market debut.

The offer, first reported by the Financial Times, has been tabled in recent discussions with the White House as the company prepares for a $1tn flotation in New York, a listing that would rank among the largest in corporate history.

Trump has made no secret of his enthusiasm for the American taxpayer taking stakes in the leading AI developers, describing the prospect as a “beautiful thing” that would make the public rich. “There’s something very interesting about it, where it almost becomes a partnership with the American public,” he said last month. “You make them partners in this revolution. It would be a beautiful thing. It would make them rich.”

The logic behind the proposal is as much political as financial. Handing the public a direct interest in AI’s upside is seen as a way of blunting the growing backlash over the technology’s impact on jobs, a concern Altman himself has wrestled with publicly, and the relentless spread of energy-hungry data centres. Altman has previously floated the idea of a public wealth fund holding stakes in AI companies, and reports suggest he envisages rivals such as Anthropic, Google and Meta ceding similar holdings through a government vehicle.

OpenAI is currently valued at $852bn, putting a 5 per cent stake at roughly $43bn. Should the flotation hit its $1tn target, the government’s paper gain would be immediate, a point unlikely to be lost on a president who has boasted about the returns from Washington’s 10 per cent stake in Intel, taken last year at $9bn and now worth more than $60bn.

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Quite where any OpenAI shares would sit remains up for debate. JD Vance, the vice-president, has said Trump favours a sovereign wealth fund, while others in the administration have suggested parking the holdings in “Trump accounts”, the investment accounts for children being established by the president. Bernie Sanders, the left-wing senator, has gone considerably further, arguing the public should own half of the AI companies outright.

The talks mark a striking shift in Washington’s posture. Having initially taken a hands-off approach to AI, the White House has become increasingly interventionist in recent months, blocking the release of Anthropic’s most powerful systems and forcing OpenAI to restrict access to its latest models, moves made against a backdrop of intensifying competition from China.

Anthropic, for its part, has proposed special taxes on the AI sector to fund a “digital dividend” for the public, a rather different route to the same political destination.

OpenAI, whose staff shared a $6.6bn payout in a secondary share sale last year, was approached for comment.

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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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