Retail footfall was up in March shows new figures from MRI Software.
Shoppers in Swansea..(Image: SWEP/John Corbett)
The retail sector in Wales has been boosted with a healthy rise in shopping numbers, shows new research.
According to data from MRI Software, based on a survey of 700 store managers, in the five week period from March 1st to April 4th, footfall increased by 6.3% on February across all retail destinations and was up 2.8% year-on-year. This sustained growth reflects the impact of key calendar events, including Mother’s Day, St Patrick’s Day and the early start to Easter trading, which encouraged consumers back into physical retail destinations.
High streets experienced the strongest growth up 8.7%, followed by retail parks, up 6.3% and shopping centres 1.6%. The broad uplift across the board highlights the strength of in‑person visits to retail stores and destinations as spring trading begins.
As expected, Mother’s Day played an important role in shaping March’s footfall patterns. The week leading up to Easter delivered a 1.8% uplift week on week. However, when compared with the same period last year leading into Mother’s Day, footfall was 1.6% lower, suggesting shoppers were more considered in their spending.
Earlier in the month, St Patrick’s Day celebrations combined with warmer weather also helped in driving activity, particularly on Wales’ high streets where footfall rose 7.5% week on week during mid-March. Strong weekday increases during that week suggest social occasions combined with warmer weather continue to shape how consumers combine retail, leisure and hospitality visits.
The upward trend continued into the early Easter trading period, with the week leading into the holiday delivering a 7.5% increase in footfall across all Welsh retail destinations week on week. High streets led the growth recording an increase in footfall of 8.7% highlighting Easter as one of the year’s major retail trading periods outside of Christmas.
When measured against the equivalent week leading up to Easter 2025, footfall declined slightly by 0.2% overall. This suggests that while seasonal events still drive strong bursts of activity, consumers are approaching holiday spending more cautiously this year.
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Jenni Matthews, analyst at MRI Software, said: “Despite ongoing economic uncertainty, footfall growth across Wales suggests that consumers are continuing to prioritise physical retail visits, particularly where value, convenience and a clear purpose are evident.
With Easter falling earlier in the calendar this year, March effectively marked the starting point for spring trading. While footfall trends remain stable, the data shows that events, holidays and social activities continue to drive visits to retail destinations, but shoppers are becoming more intentional as economic pressures persist. For retail stores and destinations, the challenge will be in demonstrating value to its shoppers as they become increasingly deliberate with their purchases.”
FREMONT, Calif. — Aehr Test Systems Inc. stock rocketed higher Thursday, climbing more than 8% to trade around $68 as investors bet on the semiconductor test equipment maker’s surging order book tied to artificial intelligence infrastructure, even after the company posted mixed fiscal third-quarter results.
Aehr Test Systems
Shares of the NASDAQ-listed company (AEHR) rose as much as 10% intraday Thursday, building on a 26% surge the previous session following its earnings release. The stock has now skyrocketed more than 210% year-to-date in 2026, turning it into one of the hottest small-cap plays in the chip sector amid booming demand for AI processors and data center components.
Aehr, which specializes in wafer-level and package-level test and burn-in systems, reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $10.3 million for the period ended Feb. 27, missing Wall Street expectations of about $10.8 million and plunging 44% from $18.3 million a year earlier. The company swung to a non-GAAP net loss of $1.5 million, or 5 cents per share, compared with a year-ago profit of 7 cents per share. However, the loss was narrower than the consensus forecast of a 7-cent loss.
The revenue shortfall stemmed largely from a shift in product mix and timing of shipments, but investors quickly zeroed in on far stronger forward-looking signals. Aehr booked a whopping $37.2 million in new orders during the quarter — delivering a book-to-bill ratio exceeding 3.5 times — pushing its effective backlog to a record $50.9 million when including post-quarter wins.
“We are seeing significant demand from AI and data center customers,” Aehr President and CEO Gayn Erickson said in a statement accompanying the results. The company highlighted production orders for its FOX-XP wafer-level burn-in systems from a lead AI processor customer and follow-on wins in silicon photonics for hyperscale data center optical interconnects.
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Analysts and market watchers described Aehr as a “quiet bottleneck” in the AI supply chain. Its equipment stresses semiconductors through burn-in testing to weed out early failures, ensuring reliability for high-power AI chips used in training and inference workloads at massive data centers. Only a fraction of advanced AI accelerators currently undergo full wafer-level burn-in, leaving substantial room for adoption growth as hyperscalers ramp production.
Recent orders underscore that momentum. In February, Aehr landed a $14 million order for FOX-XP systems from its lead AI processor customer. It also secured follow-on business for silicon photonics devices critical to high-speed optical connections in AI servers. Earlier in the year, the company won initial orders for its Sonoma ultra-high-power systems to burn-in next-generation AI ASICs for a major hyperscale customer.
“These wins position Aehr at the heart of AI infrastructure buildout,” said one analyst who upgraded the stock following the earnings. Craig-Hallum upgraded Aehr to Buy from Hold, citing improving business momentum, while Lake Street raised its price target to $56 from $50.
Aehr also announced a $60 million at-the-market equity offering Thursday, giving it flexibility to fund growth or acquisitions as demand accelerates. The company completed the acquisition of Incal Technology last year to expand its footprint in AI semiconductor testing.
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For the full fiscal year ending May 2026, Aehr reaffirmed guidance for revenue on the high end of $45 million to $50 million. It expects second-half revenue between $25 million and $30 million and reiterated a path to non-GAAP profitability in the fourth quarter.
The upbeat bookings outlook helped offset concerns about the current-quarter softness, which management attributed partly to lumpy shipment timing and a temporary emphasis on package-level burn-in products.
Aehr’s technology addresses a critical pain point in semiconductor manufacturing. As chips for electric vehicles, AI, silicon carbide power devices and photonics become more complex and power-hungry, the need for rigorous testing and stabilization before deployment grows. Aehr’s FOX family of systems can test and burn-in full wafers or singulated die in parallel, improving yields and reducing costs for customers.
The company’s products serve diverse end markets, including AI processors, data center infrastructure, automotive, industrial and silicon photonics for optical I/O. Demand from hyperscale cloud providers building out AI training clusters has become a dominant driver.
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Wall Street’s view on Aehr remains mixed but tilting more positive. Consensus ratings hover around Hold with an average price target near $68, though some firms see higher upside if AI orders continue to materialize. The stock’s rapid run has left it trading at elevated valuations, with a market capitalization now exceeding $2 billion.
Investors appeared unfazed by the revenue miss, focusing instead on the massive backlog and potential for a strong second half. Broader market sentiment also helped, with a ceasefire agreement between the U.S., Israel and Iran easing some geopolitical tensions and lifting risk assets.
Aehr executives expressed confidence in a rebound. Management highlighted expectations for a “near-term follow-on production order” from its lead hyperscale customer and said bookings for the second half should land on the high side of prior $60 million to $80 million guidance.
Shares closed Wednesday at $63.16, up sharply on the earnings reaction and macro tailwinds. By mid-afternoon Thursday, they traded near $68.19, extending gains.
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The surge reflects growing recognition that Aehr’s niche expertise in reliability testing could prove essential as the AI boom demands ever-more robust semiconductors. Hyperscalers and chip designers cannot afford failures in massive AI clusters, making burn-in a non-negotiable step.
Still, risks remain. Aehr derives a significant portion of revenue from a handful of large customers, exposing it to order timing volatility. The company has yet to achieve consistent profitability, and competition in the test equipment space could intensify.
For now, momentum favors the bulls. With AI capital spending showing no signs of slowing and Aehr’s backlog at record levels, the company appears poised for a potential inflection as shipments ramp in coming quarters.
Aehr Test Systems, founded in 1977 and headquartered in Fremont, employs about 136 people. It has installed thousands of systems worldwide and continues to innovate in wafer-level solutions that enable parallel testing of hundreds or thousands of devices simultaneously.
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As the semiconductor industry grapples with exploding complexity driven by AI, companies like Aehr that provide critical enabling technology are drawing fresh attention from growth-oriented investors.
Whether the stock can sustain its blistering pace will depend on execution in the back half of the year and the ability to convert that hefty backlog into revenue and, ultimately, profits.
BEIJING: Oil prices rose in early trading on Friday following attacks on Saudi energy infrastructure, and as markets evaluated the risk premium from the ongoing closure of the Strait of Hormuz, despite a fragile truce agreed between the U.S. and Iran.
“The initial wave of relief following President Trump’s two-week ceasefire announcement has quickly given way to underlying doubts,” IG market analyst Tony Sycamore said in a note.
Iran and the U.S. agreed on Tuesday to a two-week ceasefire brokered by Pakistan, but fighting was still taking place following the announcement.
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“All eyes remain firmly on tanker tracker flows through the Strait of Hormuz for any signs of increased activity ahead of peace talks scheduled in Pakistan on Friday,” Sycamore said.
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Analysts say Pakistan will try to push in the talks for a more durable peace agreement but may lack the leverage needed to compel the reopening of the key Strait of Hormuz. Iran wants to charge fees for ships passing through the strait under a peace deal, a Tehran official told Reuters on April 7. Western leaders and the U.N.’s shipping agency have pushed back on the idea. The crucial artery for oil and gas flows has been effectively shut down by the conflict, which began on February 28 when the U.S. and Israel launched air strikes on Iran.
Brent prices could reach $190 a barrel if flows through the Strait of Hormuz remain at the current level, said John Paisie, president of energy consultants Stratas Advisors.
“If Iran allows increasing flows the price of oil will be more moderated, but still well above pre-war levels.”
Attacks on Saudi Arabia’s oil production capacity have cut the kingdom’s output by around 600,000 barrels per day (bpd) and reduced throughput on its East-West Pipeline by 700,000 bpd, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Thursday.
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The announcement “shifts the narrative from episodic disruption to a measurable supply shock,” JPMorgan analysts said in a research note.
Some 50 infrastructure assets in the Gulf have been damaged by drone and missile strikes over the nearly six weeks since the conflict started, and around 2.4 million bpd of oil refining capacity have been taken offline, according to JPMorgan.
Councils in WA’s grain belt want the state government to impose bigger setbacks and stronger end-of-life rules on wind farm proponents and let locals decide how they want to use community funds.
Singapore’s logistics hub centralizes regional trade, reduces inventory costs, enhances supply chain agility, and leverages advanced port, airport, and trade agreements for efficient, cost-effective ASEAN operations.
Singapore’s Role in Regional Trade and Logistics
Singapore’s logistics sector mainly functions as a regional trade coordination hub rather than serving a demand-driven domestic market. In 2025, the country’s total trade exceeded S$1.2 trillion (about US$890 billion), with re-exports comprising nearly 45% of this volume. This structure allows multinational corporations to centralize inventory management and distribution decisions in Singapore, minimizing working capital exposure by avoiding fragmented stockpiling across diverse ASEAN markets with varying regulations and demand patterns.
Strategic Advantages for Supply Chain Management
This high throughput enables companies to delay allocation decisions until goods arrive regionally, enhancing forecast accuracy and reducing excess inventory. For firms adopting China+1 strategies, Singapore acts as a control point where supplies from multiple production sites are consolidated and redistributed based on real-time demand signals. Efficient integration across maritime, air, and warehouse logistics is crucial for seamless execution, with Changi Airport handling approximately 1.9 million tonnes of freight in 2025 and connecting over 300 global cities.
Enhancing Supply Chain Efficiency within ASEAN
Singapore’s trade facilitation framework improves working capital efficiency by streamlining import, clearance, and redistribution processes. Customs clearance typically occurs within 24 hours, significantly lowering inventory dwell time and improving cash flow. Its extensive free trade agreement network enables tariff optimization through re-export structuring, allowing companies to reduce total landed costs without relocating production, further strengthening Singapore’s position within ASEAN supply chains.
FOX Business’ Kelly Saberi joins ‘The Claman Countdown’ with an inside look at Walmart’s sweeping effort to eliminate synthetic dyes and artificial ingredients from its foods without raising costs for shoppers.
Bissell is recalling nearly 2 million of its home steam cleaners in response to over 100 reports of serious burn injuries from one of its attachments, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC).
The brand’s Steam Shot OmniReach and Steam Shot Omni Steam Cleaners are specifically affected by the recall, and the CPSC report says the attachments can “unexpectedly” detach from the steamer, resulting in the user being exposed to hot steam or water, possibly posing a “serious burn hazard.”
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According to the CPSC, Bissell received 206 reports of steam escaping from cleaners and 161 people reporting burn injuries. There was one report of a person receiving a second-degree or partial thickness burn.
About 1.7 million steamers were recalled in the U.S. alone, while 96,000 units were recalled in Canada, according to the CPSC.
In this image provided by the Consumer Product Safety Commission, the recalled Bissell Steam Shot OmniReach is pictured alongside its accessories and attachments. (Consumer Product Safety Commission / Unknown)
The affected steamers were sold between October 2024 and March 2026 through department stores, including Target and Walmart, in addition to online through Amazon or the Bissell website.
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A spokesperson for Bissell told FOX Business in a statement the company will continue to work alongside the CPSC, and suggested following its website for news about other affected steamer models.
In 2024, about 3.2 million of the Bissell steam cleaners were subject to a recall. (Consumer Product Safety Commission / Unknown)
“At Bissell, we are passionate about designing safe and reliable cleaning products,” the statement said.
“Consumer safety is our top priority, and we are working in full cooperation with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) and Health Canada to voluntarily recall the attachments of our Steam Shot OmniReach and Steam Shot Omni.”
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The brand has previously recalled a different model of its steamer, the Steamshot Deluxe, which is no longer available for purchase.
FOX Business reported in 2024 the recall of 3.2 million steamers also due to 157 reports of “minor burn injuries.” There were also 26 other incidents of hot steam being expelled from steamers that did not result in injuries.
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