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Nell’s and Common owner urges customers to keep visiting amid 3-week Metrolink closure

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Major Metrolink disruption is affecting the Eccles, Trafford Centre and Altrincham lines until August 2

Johnny and Charlotte Heyes are the owners of Nells and Common

Johnny and Charlotte Heyes, the owners of Nells and Common(Image: Kenny Brown | Manchester Evening News)

The proprietor of a collection of well-loved bars and restaurants throughout Greater Manchester has urged customers to ‘keep visiting us’ as major tram works get underway that are set to cause disruption for three weeks.

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From this week until August 2, a programme of essential improvement works will be carried out at the Deansgate-Castlefield and Trafford Bar tram stops, with further work scheduled across the city centre and along the Eccles line simultaneously. That means no trams will run on the Eccles, Trafford Centre and Altrincham lines.

The Metrolink works will also see the East Didsbury and Airport lines terminate at Firswood, and will clash with a host of major events taking place across Greater Manchester including Manchester Day, Comic Con Manchester and The Hundred at Emirates Old Trafford.

Charlotte Heyes, the co-owner of pizza destination Nell’s, says she first became aware of the planned works in mid-June – and warned the line closures will have a significant impact on the Nell’s sites in the city centre, MediaCity, and the Northern Quarter. “I think it will most affect us at MediaCity because it’s right by the tram stop there and people will get off and head to us,” Charlotte told the Manchester Evening News.

“We don’t have that now for the next three weeks. I think it could have a real impact on the area – we’ve had to adjust our forecasts lower as a result.”

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Despite initial concerns, Charlotte reveals that the first few days have been somewhat more encouraging than she and her team had anticipated. She explained: “Thankfully, it’s not been as bad as we thought it would be so far but we have still noticed a bit of a drop in trade. The fact that we’ve had nice weather has certainly helped us out with that.”

Charlotte, who co-owns Common alongside her husband Jonny, describes the tram improvement works that took place over the Easter Bank Holiday weekend, from April 3 to 6, as ‘disastrous’ for their business. Much like the current month’s disruption, that period saw services suspended across the Eccles, Trafford Centre and Altrincham lines.

“We really suffered at MediaCity because of that,” she explains. “We were really down that weekend and everyone struggled. It was really bad for us. I was fearing these works would have had a similar impact on our summer.”

Charlotte revealed she contacted the Bee Network upon first learning of the works to explore whether any support could be offered to her business and neighbouring establishments in the vicinity.

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Replacement bus services are operating in the impacted areas while the lines remain closed, with passengers also advised to utilise Bee Network buses and trains where feasible.

A spokesperson for Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM) described the works as the ‘biggest track upgrades’ they have ever undertaken and stressed they are ‘vitally important’ in improving journey reliability. The organisation apologised for the disruption caused to both passengers and local businesses.

“I do feel like we weren’t given enough notice about this,” Charlotte suggests. “I expect these works had been planned for a long time. If we had known about this six months, or even three months, earlier, it would have helped us figure things out a bit more thoroughly on how we can deal with it. In hospitality, you do try to look at the whole year ahead in terms of predicted revenue and costs, and that helps to set your budgets.

Metrolink's Eccles line

Metrolink’s Eccles line (Image: TfGM)

“But we know at this point that there’s nothing that we can do about it – they’re already taking place. It’s just a case of us now trying to make it work as much as possible for us.”

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Charlotte said she hoped that customers would continue to back hospitality businesses throughout the city-region, with bus and train services still anticipated to run as normal. “We just want to remind customers to still come visit us, there are still lots of ways of getting into town and into MediaCity whether it’s by bus or by cycling,” she said.

“We’re still open. Remember your local businesses, make the most of them.

“It’s been quite a challenging climate for us as a sector with the increased cost pressures so this has not come at the best of timing for us, but we’re just hoping people will still come and visit us.”

A TfGM spokesperson said: “This is vitally important work that will make Metrolink journeys quicker and more reliable once complete.

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“This is one of the biggest track upgrades we’ve ever done, and it was always going to be disruptive for passengers given the scale of the job. We’re sorry for the inconvenience and are doing everything we can to keep people moving.

“We have been and continue to heavily promote the closure, to let people know in advance and give them a chance to prepare.

“Passengers are encouraged to allow extra time for their journey and to check the Bee Network website or app before they travel for the latest information, including about replacement buses.”

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Four Turtle Bay restaurants to close as creditors approve CVA proposals

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Yorkshire and North East sites are among those that have closed

Turtle Bay in Middlesbrough which has now closed

Turtle Bay in Middlesbrough which has now closed(Image: Teesside Live)

Caribbean restaurant chain Turtle Bay has closed four sites and shed 76 jobs amid a restructuring.

Locations in Yorkshire and the North East are among those impacted following creditor approval for a Company Voluntary Agreement in the face of “significant economic headwinds”. Turnaround consultants at Interpath have been advising the Bristol-based company as it grappled with challenges seen across the hospitality market including rising costs, reduced consumer spending, and changing footfall patterns.

The majority of the chain’s 48 restaurants are unaffected though sites in York, Middlesbrough, Solihull and Walthamstow have already closed. The CVA has altered terms at 15 Turtle Bay sites which continue to trade as normal.

Ajith Jayawickrema, founder and CEO of Turtle Bay, said: “Securing approval for our CVA proposals provides us with a stable platform for the long-term future of Turtle Bay as we protect the majority of jobs and sites, address challenges in the business, and continue investing in our restaurants. I’d like to thank our landlords and creditors for their support throughout this process, our dedicated teams who have and continue to bring warmth, energy and Caribbean soul to our service and, of course, our loyal customers.

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“While we have had to make difficult decisions along the way, we believe that we now have a sustainable business at its core and can look forward with confidence.”

Last year, Mr Jayawickrema bought back a stake in Turtle Bay from private equity firm Piper. Most recent accounts to the end of March 2025 show headwinds had caused sales to fall 10% to more than £84m but with Mr Jayawichrema saying they were higher than pre-pandemic.

Interpath said the CVA was intended to secure the long-term future of the business and maximise returns for stakeholders, including landlords. The proposals were approved by about 92% of voting creditors.

Gareth Slater, managing director at Interpath Advisory and joint nominee of the CVA, said: “The hospitality industry continues to face significant challenges and so this agreement reflects the support for Turtle Bay’s offering and the impact of the leadership team’s engagement with stakeholders to find a sustainable solution to its challenges. The CVA proposals have struck a fair comprise for creditors, helping the business right-size its debt obligations, while also providing a firm foundation for Turtle Bay to stabilise and move forward with the vast majority of its sites.”

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(VIDEO) Extreme Wildfire Smoke Sparks US-Canada Political Clash as Air Quality in Toledo Tops 800 on Thursday

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Extreme Wildfire Smoke Sparks US-Canada Political Clash as Air Quality

Smoke from hundreds of wildfires burning across Canada and Minnesota is expected to darken skies again Friday, prolonging a stretch of dangerous air quality across the Upper Midwest, Great Lakes and Northeast that has now spilled into a diplomatic dispute between the United States and Canada.

Air quality readings reached extreme levels in parts of the Midwest on Thursday. Toledo, Ohio, recorded an Air Quality Index reading that soared above 800 around 5:30 p.m., far exceeding the standard 0-to-500 scale typically used to measure pollution and well past the threshold of 300 that officially classifies air as hazardous. Milwaukee and Detroit also registered AQI levels above 500 on Thursday, according to AirNow, the government-run monitoring service. By Friday morning, conditions had eased somewhat in several cities but remained severe: Chicago, Detroit and Milwaukee all posted hazardous readings above 300 as of 6:30 a.m., while New York City registered an unhealthy reading of 185, and Philadelphia and Cleveland recorded very unhealthy readings around 260.

Forecasters said an advancing weather system was expected to help clear some of the smoke and stifling heat from parts of the Northeast later Friday. But cities closer to the fires, including Toledo, Detroit and Milwaukee, are likely to continue contending with the acrid smell of smoke and sky-tinting plumes through the weekend, with conditions across the Great Lakes potentially remaining heavy at times, particularly Saturday.

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The persistent smoke has ignited a political confrontation between American lawmakers and the Canadian government. Four Republican members of Congress from Michigan sent a letter Wednesday to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, criticizing the country’s management of its forests and warning that the United States would act on its own if Canada did not take additional steps to address the fires. Ohio Republican Sen. Bernie Moreno said he plans to introduce legislation next week aimed at penalizing Canada, describing the situation as “this atrocity.” Michigan state lawmaker Aric Nesbitt escalated the rhetoric further on social media Thursday, invoking annexation language previously used by President Trump and telling Canada to “learn to manage your forests” unless it wanted to “become the 51st state.”

Carney responded to the criticism Thursday, telling reporters in French that fighting climate change is the responsibility of every country, including the United States. He did not directly address the congressional letter, and it remained unclear as of late Thursday whether he had formally received it. Separately, Carney acknowledged the toll the fires have taken domestically, telling reporters during a visit to an armored vehicle factory in London, Ontario, that thousands of Canadians’ lives had been upended by wildfires burning across the country. He noted that Canada’s federal government has limited authority over the wildfire response, since forest management falls primarily under provincial jurisdiction, with Ottawa’s role largely confined to fires on national parks and military land. Carney said the federal government was providing search-and-rescue aircraft through the Royal Canadian Air Force and had deployed helicopters through an intergovernmental firefighting agency, adding that his government stood ready to provide further assistance as needed.

The dispute has drawn attention to the shared, cross-border nature of North American wildfire smoke. U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra, a Michigan native, struck a more conciliatory tone in a social media post Wednesday, saying the wildfire challenge “knows no borders” and that the U.S. would continue coordinating closely with Canada as it has for more than four decades of shared wildfire emergencies. Notably, the flow of smoke across the border has not run in only one direction. In September 2020, wildfires in California, Oregon and Washington state burned more than 5 million acres and sent thick smoke drifting north into Canada, eroding air quality in cities including Vancouver for weeks. The U.S. National Interagency Fire Center reported Thursday that more than 150 new fires had been reported nationwide the previous day, including six new large fires, with firefighters working to contain more than four dozen large fires burning across the country. A Canadian helicopter pilot, Nicholas Dale, 56, died Sunday in a crash while assisting with wildfire suppression efforts in Colorado, prompting Gov. Jared Polis to call him “a heroic firefighting pilot.”

Much of the current wave of smoke originates from fires burning in northwestern Ontario near Thunder Bay, a city roughly an hour’s drive north of Minnesota, with additional fires burning around Fort Frances, Dryden, Nipigon and Sioux Lookout. Ontario has struggled for years to stay within its wildfire-fighting budget. The province budgeted 135 million Canadian dollars for emergency firefighting in 2025 but ultimately spent more than double that amount, 271 million Canadian dollars, by year’s end. This year’s budget was increased to 150 million Canadian dollars, an amount critics say still falls short of recent actual spending. Ontario Premier Doug Ford defended his government’s firefighting funding Thursday, telling reporters in Windsor that his administration would “not spare an expense, not one single penny” and that firefighting funding had more than doubled since he took office in 2018. Marit Stiles, leader of Ontario’s opposition New Democratic Party, pushed back on that characterization in a video posted to social media, accusing Ford of allowing the province’s wildland firefighting force to shrink over successive years despite warnings from firefighters.

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Ontario’s emergency preparedness minister, Jill Dunlop, said Thursday morning that the province had formally asked the federal government to help evacuate 15 remote communities under threat from the fires, including the potential deployment of Canadian soldiers. Provinces have also been leaning on each other for support, with Alberta currently providing 94 firefighters and support workers to assist in Ontario, reversing a similar arrangement from last year when large numbers of Ontario firefighters traveled west to help fight fires in Alberta.

Health officials have urged residents across the affected region to take precautions as the smoke lingers. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said children, pregnant women and people with respiratory conditions such as asthma face the greatest risk, advising these groups to stay indoors, keep windows closed and run air filtration systems where available. Officials have also recommended wearing a mask, ideally an N95 rather than a cloth or surgical mask, when the Air Quality Index climbs above 200, and have urged pet owners to limit their animals’ time outdoors and wipe them down after exposure to reduce lingering pollutants on their fur.

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Thailand Updates Visa Rules for 65 Countries Including India 30-Day Exemption

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Thailand to Reduce Visa-Free Stay Limit to 30 Days

The Thai Cabinet approved updated visa measures for 65 countries, aligning entry facilitation with conditions. Changes include categories for visa exemptions and Visa on Arrival, impacting screening and international relations.

Visa Update Announcement

On 16 July 2026, the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) informed visitors that the Thai Cabinet has approved new visa exemption and Visa on Arrival guidelines. These updates are pending publication in the Royal Gazette and will be effective 15 days post-publication. This move aims to streamline entry processes, enhance screening, reduce overlapping entry categories, and ensure visa privileges meet their intended purposes, replacing the 60-day visa exemption introduced in July 2024.

Entry Category Strategy

The updated approach follows the principle of “one country or territory, one entry category,” with eligibility based on economic factors, security, international relations, and reciprocity. The categories include 30-day visa exemption, 15-day visa exemption, or Visa on Arrival. Sixty-five countries and territories are affected, with 59, including India, becoming eligible for a 30-day visa exemption. This aligns visa treatment across all EU members and supports discussions on Schengen visa exemption for Thai nationals.

Implementation and Monitoring

While the new measures await implementation, existing entry conditions remain. Foreign nationals entering before the changes retain their current stay permissions. Bilateral agreements continue, providing visa exemptions of varying durations. Security agencies will enhance the Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC) system for better screening and verification. Visitors should monitor official updates from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and embassies for the latest requirements applicable to their nationality. TAT will announce further details once officially published.

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Source : Thai Cabinet approves updated visa measures pending Royal Gazette publication

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Frontier Energy solar farm attracts $280m in Japanese, French funds

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Frontier Energy solar farm attracts $280m in Japanese, French funds

Frontier Energy has gained commitments for up to $280 million toward the first stage of its renewable energy project south of Perth.

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South Plains Financial beats second quarter estimates

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South Plains Financial beats second quarter estimates

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Why has British Steel been nationalised?

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A British Steel plant, with steam billowing out of it, behind a row of terrace houses

There are 1,160 businesses in the UK steel industry, directly supporting 40,000 other firms, according to government figures., external

Tata Steel at Port Talbot in Wales was once the UK’s largest virgin steel producer but it turned off its blast furnace in September 2024, saying it was losing £1.7m a day.

An agreement with the UK government was reached which saw it commit £500m to help the company move to greener forms of steelmaking.

Other steelmakers in the UK include Liberty Steel, Celsa, Marcegaglia and Outokumpu.

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Liberty Steel also has a plant in Scunthorpe that is facing closure. The government took control of its Speciality Steels UK (SSUK) division in August last year, and agreed to cover the ongoing wages and costs of the plant while a buyer is sought.

In 2024 the UK steel industry contributed £1.7bn to the UK economy – equivalent to 0.1% of total UK economic output and 0.8% of manufacturing output.

The latest figures for 2023 show the UK produced 5.6 million tonnes of crude steel, or 0.3% of the world’s total. In comparison, China produced more than 1,000 million tonnes, 54% of global production.

The EU produced 126 million tonnes of steel in 2023, about 7% of the world’s total. Compared with EU countries, the UK ranked as the eighth largest steel producer, after Germany, Italy, Spain, France, Austria, Poland and Belgium.

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Groww shares rebound 4% after Thursday’s slump. Why are Jefferies, Motilal bullish on the stock?

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Groww shares rebound 4% after Thursday's slump. Why are Jefferies, Motilal bullish on the stock?
Shares of Billionbrains Garage Ventures, the parent company of Groww, rebounded 4% to Rs 213.50 on Friday after tumbling 5% in the previous session. The stock remained in focus this week after the company reported a 94.44% year-on-year jump in Q1FY27 net profit to Rs 735 crore, compared with Rs 378 crore in the corresponding quarter last year.

Groww’s revenue from operations also witnessed a sharp uptick, rising 66% to Rs 1,504 crore from Rs 904 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year. On a sequential basis, Groww’s revenue remained. Net profit for the quarter grew by 7% to Rs 735 crore from Rs 686 crore last year.

EBITDA for the quarter under review came in at Rs 971 crore, up 101% from Rs 483 crore in the year ago period. Sequentially, the increase was relatively modest, up 3% from Rs 939 crore, Groww’s investor presentation showed.

Groww shares: Buy, sell or hold after Q1 results

Jefferies maintained its positive stance on Groww with a target price of Rs 250, implying 21.3% upside. The brokerage believes the company is well positioned to benefit from the ongoing shift in household savings from traditional yield-based products to equity-linked investments. It also highlighted Groww’s product-agnostic platform, saying the addition of new products and services should help increase wallet share. Jefferies raised its FY27-FY29 EPS estimates by 1-6%, while the increase in the target price is largely due to the roll-forward of its valuation to September 2028. It noted that the stock is currently trading at 45x FY27E EPS, with an expected three-year EPS CAGR of 30%.

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JM Financial has upgraded Groww to ‘Buy’ from ‘Sell’ and raised its target price to Rs 250 from Rs 170, citing stronger growth visibility and improving operating leverage. The brokerage said its confidence in the company’s growth outlook has strengthened after Groww delivered a resilient performance despite a moderation in retail trading activity from the Q4FY26 peak.
Also read: Groww responds to Nithin Kamath tweet: Direct mutual funds remain free for DIY investors
It also highlighted expanding yields and better operating efficiency, with the cost-to-income ratio declining 3 percentage points quarter-on-quarter to 36%. Reflecting sustained market share gains and disciplined cost control, JM Financial has raised its FY27, FY28 and FY29 EPS estimates by 4%, 6% and 11%, respectively. It now values Groww at a 50% premium to Angel One, up from 20% earlier, supported by stronger earnings growth, higher margins and significantly larger client assets that improve customer stickiness.
Motilal Oswal reiterated its Buy rating on Groww with a revised target price of Rs 250. The brokerage expects the overall number of orders in the broking business to grow by more than 20% over FY27 and FY28, led by continued market share gains and improving revenue per order. It also believes that the MTF business, Loan Against Securities (LAS) and wealth management will provide an additional boost to the company’s revenue growth.

Motilal raised its earnings estimates by 1% for FY27 and 3% for FY28, factoring in improved operating efficiency. The revised target price of Rs 250 is based on 38x FY28 estimated earnings per share (EPS).

Groww Q1 highlights

The company said it strengthened its market leadership across key segments during the June quarter by adding 115,000 net clients, supported by higher customer retention and improved product quality despite an industry-wide slowdown.

In mutual funds, it retained its position as India’s largest distribution platform for direct mutual funds, with Rs. 1.9 lakh crore in direct mutual fund assets under management (AUM). SIP inflows grew 32% year-on-year, outpacing the industry’s 16% growth.

Read more: Groww says it overtook Angel One in commodities trading within a year of launch

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In the stock broking business, the company said risk control measures led to its retail ADTO market share easing sequentially to 15.1%, although it remained 3.3 percentage points higher year-on-year. In commodity derivatives, it expanded its retail market share to 28.6% in notional ADTO across MCX and NSE.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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Trump childhood home in Queens finds buyer after $500K renovation

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Trump childhood home in Queens finds buyer after $500K renovation

The childhood home of President Donald Trump in New York found a buyer after it was renovated by a real estate developer over the last year.

Located in the Queens borough of New York City, the Tudor-style home was built by the president’s father, real estate developer Fred Trump, in the affluent neighborhood known as Jamaica Estates in 1940.

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The president lived at the home until the age of 4, when the family moved to a larger home in the neighborhood in 1950, Realtor.com reported.

The home was purchased a little more than a year ago by real estate developer Tommy Lin, who bought it for $835,000 in March 2025, according to PropertyShark records.

WHY AMERICANS ARE FLOCKING TO THIS FLORIDA RETIREMENT HOT SPOT

Exterior view of President Donald Trump's childhood home.

Trump lived in the Jamaica Estates home until the age of 4, when the family moved to a larger house in the neighborhood. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Lin previously told Mansion Global that while his work typically focuses on condos in Brooklyn, the “only reason I took on this project was because it’s Trump’s childhood house,” adding that ordinarily it would be “a little too small for me to do.”

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At the time of Lin’s purchase, the house was in need of upkeep, with issues including a leaking roof, an overgrown yard and feral cats.

Exterior view of President Donald Trump's childhood home.

After it was purchased last year, the home was in need of repairs and upkeep. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Lin worked on the renovation with Jevon Gratineau of Brown Harris Stevens, and they started the renovation with fixes to the interior caused by leaks, along with replacing the roof and windows and adding full insulation. He also redid the home’s facade, though it retains its Tudor-style appearance.

SOME BAY AREA HOMES ARE SELLING $1M ABOVE ASKING AMID AI BOOM

The two largely kept the layout of the 3,400 square foot, five-bedroom home intact from its original design – though they did remove a wall to open the kitchen and living room area.

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Exterior view of President Donald Trump's childhood home.

Lin and Gratineau told Mansion Global that the renovation cost about $500,000. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

They also fully finished the interior of the home after originally planning to just make it livable, with Lin telling the outlet he put “double or triple the time and effort” into this project compared to what he would normally work on.

The two told Mansion Global that the total renovation cost was a little over $500,000 – which included higher than expected spending on a new HVAC system as well as the property’s gardening.

RARE VIRGINIA OCTAGON MANSION WITH ‘HAUNTED’ REPUTATION HITS THE MARKET

Exterior of President Donald Trump's childhood home.

The renovated home was most recently listed at a little below $2 million before the sale was pending. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

The former Trump family home went back on the market late last year when it was listed in November for $2.3 million.

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It was delisted by the end of January and relisted briefly in March for $2.2 million. The was relisted in May with a new agent, Joe Zhu of Re/Max Edge, with the most recent asking price just below $2 million.

The home was pending sale as of Tuesday, according to Realtor.com.

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Home Affordability: Better Than Headlines Suggest

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Home Affordability: Better Than Headlines Suggest

Home Affordability: Better Than Headlines Suggest

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Earnings call transcript: Instalco lifts sales and margins in q2 2026

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Earnings call transcript: Instalco lifts sales and margins in q2 2026

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