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Strait of Hormuz Shipping Faces Ongoing Restrictions Amid Regional Tensions Despite Ceasefire Efforts

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Kuwait International Airport

DUBAI — The Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for global oil shipments, continues experiencing restricted traffic and heightened tensions despite recent diplomatic initiatives aimed at restoring normal operations. The waterway, through which approximately 20 percent of global oil production typically flows, remains a focal point of geopolitical concerns involving Iran and international stakeholders.

Recent vessel tracking data indicates significantly reduced commercial traffic compared to pre-conflict levels. While some tankers have successfully transited the strait in recent days, overall throughput remains well below normal volumes. Maritime intelligence sources report ongoing challenges including minesweeping operations and security concerns that limit safe passage for commercial shipping.

Iran has periodically asserted control over navigation through the strait, citing various security and political considerations. State media reports have mentioned closures in response to perceived ceasefire violations in related regional conflicts. However, independent vessel tracking shows intermittent traffic despite official statements, highlighting the complex reality of maritime operations in contested waters.

The United States and Iran reached a framework agreement earlier in June aimed at addressing various issues including safe navigation through the strait. The memorandum of understanding included provisions for reopening commercial traffic following periods of restriction. However, implementation has faced challenges amid mutual accusations of non-compliance and ongoing regional tensions.

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Shipping companies have adjusted routes and insurance coverage in response to the uncertain environment. Some vessels continue transiting while others await clearer security assurances or alternative pathways. The economic impact extends beyond immediate shipping costs to global energy prices and supply chain stability.

The strait’s strategic importance stems from its geography and the volume of energy resources that pass through it daily. Tankers carrying crude oil from Persian Gulf producers must navigate its narrow passages, making it vulnerable to disruption from various actors. Historical incidents have demonstrated how tensions can quickly affect global markets.

International naval forces maintain presence in the region to ensure freedom of navigation. Coalition efforts focus on demining operations and escorting commercial vessels when necessary. Diplomatic channels continue addressing underlying issues that contribute to instability in the waterway.

Regional stakeholders have expressed varying perspectives on the strait’s status. Iranian officials have emphasized sovereignty and security concerns while international partners stress the importance of unrestricted commercial access. These differing viewpoints complicate efforts to establish stable operating conditions.

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Oil market participants monitor the strait closely as disruptions can quickly influence prices and supply expectations. Energy traders factor potential volatility into risk assessments while consumers ultimately bear costs through higher fuel prices during periods of uncertainty. Alternative shipping routes exist but add significant time and expense to oil transportation.

The recent ceasefire framework between the United States and Iran included provisions specifically addressing the strait. Implementation challenges have emerged as both sides accuse the other of violations in related regional conflicts. Switzerland-mediated talks continue addressing safe navigation alongside other outstanding issues.

Maritime security firms have reported increased activity in risk assessment and insurance products related to the strait. Ship operators implement enhanced protocols including adjusted routing and crew briefings when transiting the area. These measures add operational complexity and costs to normal shipping activities.

Environmental considerations have gained prominence as maritime incidents in the region could have severe ecological consequences. Oil spills from damaged tankers would threaten marine ecosystems and coastal communities. International cooperation on environmental protection remains important alongside security concerns.

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The strait’s situation reflects broader geopolitical dynamics involving energy security and regional influence. Major powers maintain interests in ensuring stable energy flows while addressing political differences. Diplomatic efforts focus on de-escalation while maintaining deterrence against provocative actions.

Shipping data providers continue updating real-time information about vessel movements and strait conditions. These services help operators make informed decisions about routing and timing. Independent verification of official statements remains crucial for accurate risk assessment.

As diplomatic talks progress, shipping companies hope for clearer operational guidelines and reduced restrictions. Full restoration of normal traffic volumes would benefit global energy markets and reduce costs for consumers. However, underlying political tensions suggest ongoing vigilance will remain necessary.

The international community continues emphasizing the importance of freedom of navigation through international waterways. The Strait of Hormuz’s status affects not only energy prices but also global trade patterns and economic stability. Coordinated efforts aim to balance security concerns with commercial needs.

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Regional actors have proposed various confidence-building measures to improve conditions in the strait. These include communication protocols, incident prevention mechanisms and joint monitoring arrangements. Implementation would require sustained diplomatic commitment from all parties.

The situation in the Strait of Hormuz serves as a reminder of energy security’s geopolitical dimensions. While diplomatic solutions are pursued, practical measures ensure continued commercial operations under challenging conditions. Global markets adapt while hoping for lasting stability.

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Tech stocks tumble on concerns over AI spending

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In the left corner, a bald male trader, and a woman with auburn hair, also a trader, in the middle, holding a pen and writing into a notebook, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

Financial markets received a sharp wake-up call on Tuesday following a sudden wave of selling in major technology shares, triggering widespread doubt over the sustainability of the AI boom.

The tech-focused Nasdaq index fell about 2% alongside international chipmakers, reigniting fears that dizzying market valuations have finally run out of momentum after a relentless three-month climb.

At the same time, the newly public SpaceX has faced an incredibly choppy session. The aerospace giant’s share price plunged below the $150 (£114) mark– its initial floatation price–before staging a modest recovery to $157 despite the broader market anxiety.

For months, international stock exchanges have climbed on pure optimism. While this enthusiasm repeatedly pushed indices to unprecedented highs, the sustained 90-day rally left stock prices looking incredibly inflated.

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On Tuesday, that upward drive vanished as market watchers questioned whether actual corporate adoption of AI can truly justify such expensive price tags.

The downturn hit semiconductor players such as Nvidia and Intel the hardest, causing a primary index of global chip firms to slide.

This turnaround follows a period where the wider tech sector had more than doubled stock prices from cyclical lows in 2022. It suggests that investors may have moved far too quickly to fund the hardware behind the AI shift.

The anxious mood quickly spread to other high-profile assets. Elon Musk’s newly public aerospace firm was caught in the crossfire, external.

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Texas-based SpaceX has endured highly volatile trading session since going public on 12 June, proving just how vulnerable newly listed companies are when general tech sentiment turns sour.

The stock dropped past its widely watched $150 opening price early in the day. However, it managed a slight rebound to settle around $160.

Some optimistic traders interpreted the quick bounce as a sign of steady underlying interest in the commercial space sector.

Conversely, sceptics argue that these massive price swings only expose the highly speculative nature of today’s market.

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Market analysts are now split on the next move.

They disagree on whether this sell-off is merely a healthy, temporary pause or the start of a much larger retreat for tech investments.

The more optimistic view suggests that taking profits is a completely standard reaction following a historic run.

Bank of America’s Vivek Arya supported this perspective. In a note to clients, Arya argued that the combination of sticky inflation and strengthening demand will ultimately drive sector forecasts higher.

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According to Arya, the industry is simply transitioning from a phase where it had to defend its initial return on investment to one focused on solving physical infrastructure and power constraints.

However, a growing number of sceptics counter that, saying cooling corporate IT budgets and broader economic pressures mean the period of easy market gains is over.

Reflecting the shift, Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, noted that the relative lack of tech stocks on London markets helped the FTSE 100 stay in positive territory, even as Wall Street buckled.

As the trading week continues, Wall Street will be closely watching upcoming corporate earnings. That suggests tech giants must prove their massive AI investments are generating real profits rather than just marketing buzz.

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Centurion CEO Justin Cardaci to step down

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Centurion CEO Justin Cardaci to step down

Justin Cardaci is planning to step down as chief executive of the CFC Group subsidiary, with Michael West to fill the breach as interim CEO.

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Meta halts worker tracking for AI training due to privacy fears

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Mark Zuckerberg, wearing a white collared shirt while sitting in a crowd at the recent UFC event at the White House.

Meta has paused a new company-wide program of tracking its employees’ computer usage which has been plagued by internal frustration.

The program was started only two months ago as part of an effort by Meta to gather data on how people used computers, including mouse clicks and keystrokes, that could be used to train artificial intelligence (AI) models.

It was met immediately with upset from employees who were to have their every online action at work tracked and recorded, but also concerned about where the data was going and how it would be protected.

Meta halted the program on Monday after realising some of the collected data had been left potentially accessible to anyone inside the company.

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A Meta spokesman confirmed to the BBC that the program, named internally the Model Capability Initiative (MCI), was “on pause for now” as the company investigates the issue.

“We have no indication at this time that any data was improperly accessed by Meta employees,” the spokesman added.

The pause follows weeks of blow-back from workers at the company, led by billionaire Mark Zuckerberg, to being tracked at work.

In an initial response to worker frustration – which was displayed in part through a petition signed by nearly 2,000 Meta workers demanding that the MCI program be cancelled – Meta said it would allow workers to not be tracked for up to 30 minutes at a time.

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“That was just an attempt at damage control,” one current employee told the BBC. The person asked not to be identified.

Another Meta employee, who also asked not to be identified, said that while a lot of technical workers inside the company are open to the idea of improving its AI models and being more competitive in a field dominated by Anthropic and OpenAI, the fact that tracking “was forced on us, there was no consent” left people angry.

“I’ve never seen morale here so bad,” the employee said.

In addition to the tracking program, frustration inside Meta has grown as it has done extensive layoffs, and reorganised many employees and their work around AI initiatives, on which the company is spending up to $145bn (£109bn) this year alone.

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Employees have even openly insulted management, external in an internal meeting on the AI-driven changes, according to a report in Wired.

While Meta has long had a reputation in the technology industry as a company that frequently reorganises internal teams around new projects, the changes and spending in an effort to catch up on AI feels like “chasing your tail”, a person who recently left Meta after several years said.

“The direction this company is going in is depressing”, the former employee said. “Exhausting and depressing.”

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Clear Blue Technologies International Inc. (CBLU:CA) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

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

Miriam Tuerk
Co-Founder, CEO & Director

Good morning. This presentation is being recorded for further viewing after the webinar is completed. My name is Miriam Tuerk. I’m Co-Founder and CEO of Clear Blue Technologies. I’m joined today by Farrukh Anwar, who’s our CFO; and Jonathan van der Veen, who’s Head of our Marketing function within the company.

Today, we’re going to be going over our fiscal 2025 and Q1 2026 earnings results and try to give you as much information as we can from a forward outlook perspective. With respect to forward outlook perspective, please be aware always the guidance that’s around forward-looking statements we’re giving the best information we have at the time that we have it, but there is nothing that can promise what’s going to happen in the future. So please take that under advisement.

So just a little bit about Clear Blue. Clear Blue is a world leader in delivering clean, managed wireless power to meet the global need for reliable, low-cost energy for mission-critical infrastructure. Why do I say the word world leader? We don’t deliver large solar infrastructure that feeds into the grid. We deliver off-grid power that is disconnected from the grid for small point-of-use applications, satellite systems, WiFi networks, smart city infrastructure, security cameras, street lights, cell phone towers.

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And when it comes to that, we build the technology, but we also manage and deliver it on an ongoing basis. We’ve been doing that since day 1 when we had our first prototype in 2011, and we’ve been remotely managing and monitoring that — those systems online with an ongoing service since day 1. As

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Wales sees a rise in inward investment projects

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However the promised new jobs from projects is down on 2024-25

(Image: Ian Cooper/North Wales Live)

Wales has seen a rise in inward investment projects although the number of new jobs promised has fallen.

Figures from the UK Government’s Department for Business & Trade show that in 2025-26 Wales attracted 75 inward investment projects – which as well as overseas firms investing in Wales for the first time included expansions by companies already here – compared to 65 in the previous financial year.

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The new projects promise to create 1,617 jobs, compared to 2,470 from foreign direct investment in the previous year.

New jobs and safeguarded from foreign direct investment in Wales amounted to 5,585 , up from 4,122 a year earlier.

For the UK as a whole there were 1,020 new inward investment projects – down from 1,375 a year earlier – that promised to create 69,166 jobs (69,355 previously).

In terms of origination some 239 projects into the UK came from US firms and investors, followed by India, 93, France 64, Germany 62 and Ireland 45.

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London attracted around a third of all total UK projects with 326, followed in number by the north west, 115. Scotland attracted 94 and Northern Ireland 33. The lowest on number was the north east of England with 23.

While the Welsh Government has devolved powers to support efforts to attract foreign direct investment into Wales, the UK Government also has a role.

For the new Plaid Cymru Cardiff Bay administration inward investment will sit within a new at arm’s length development agency for Wales. It will also look to support greater links between inward investors and indigenous supply chains as a means of bolstering Welsh productivity levels.

Secretary of State for Wales, Jo Steven, said: “These latest figures show that Wales is punching above its weight. The UK Government is backing the industries of the future in Wales and creating the right conditions to attract yet more investment.

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“This has been a driving motivation behind our new initiative, Brand Wales, which is designed to attract inward investment and promote Wales as a brilliant place to do business. We want to ensure that the economic opportunities offered by Wales sit at the forefront of the minds of global investors.”

Cabinet Minister for Enterprise, Connectivity and Energy, Adam Price, said:“Inward investment can play a crucial part in our goal to half the productivity gap with the rest of the UK. It’s encouraging to see Wales bucking the trend as the only part of the UK to see an increase in inward investment projects.

“But to meet our productivity goal we need to ensure that investment creates resilient and well-paid jobs and contributes to the long-term competitiveness and performance of the Welsh economy.

“Inward investment should strengthen Welsh firms, deepen supply chains, support priority economic platforms, increase exports, bring technology or management capability into Wales, and help retain more value in the Welsh economy. A new Welsh innovation and development agency will lead our approach to inward investment and make Wales the easiest place in the UK for investors to say yes. “Above all, investment must deliver for the people of Wales and lead to higher productivity and shared prosperity.”

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The foreign direct investment figures also include those as a result of mergers and acquisitions.

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Micron, Sandisk, SpaceX, Tesla, Carnival, and More Stocks That Explain Today’s Market

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Applied Materials, Rivian, Moderna, Arista, Fastly, Coinbase, Robinhood, DraftKings, and More Stock Market Movers

Micron, Sandisk, SpaceX, Tesla, Carnival, and More Stocks That Explain Today’s Market

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SpaceX’s wild ride is just getting started

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SpaceX’s wild ride is just getting started


SpaceX’s wild ride is just getting started

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TUC Cymru reveals its new general secretary

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Laura Doel comes from a long line of family trade unionists

Laura Doel.

TUC Cymru has confirmed Laura Doel as its new general secretary. Ms Doel is currently the national secretary for Wales of the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) and the current TUC Cymru president.

She will replace Shavannah Taj who was elected as a Labour member of the Senedd in May.

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A passionate trade unionist and education campaigner, she started her career in journalism working at several newspapers, including the Newport Argus, before moving into politics.

A stint in local government reignited a love of social activism and campaigning which turned into a career in the trade union movement. She began that career as an organiser for Unison, then an organiser for NAHT Cymru before becoming their National Secretary six years ago.

In her role as national secretary she held a number of key roles including NAHT Cymru’s seat on Wales TUC general council, as well as a number of key Welsh Government union positions under social partnership legislation including the National Attendance Task Force, the Pay Partnership Forum, the workload negotiating groups and Schools Social Partnership Forum.

Born and brought up in Aberbeeg, near Abertillery, she now lives in Cardiff with her two daughters. She attended Abertillery Comprehensive School before going to college in Ebbw Vale and Pontypool. She comes from a long line of trade unionists. She is the first female trade union official in her family following in the footsteps of her dad, grandfathers, and wider family who all worked in manufacturing, local collieries, steelworks, and local government.

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The incoming general secretary said: “I am honoured to be appointed to the role of TUC Cymru general secretary, and I look forward to representing Wales’s nearly 400,000 trade unionists as we work together to build a Wales that works for everyone.

“I believe that trade unions have never been more important. Wales is experiencing a moment of significant change, with a new government in place, continued pressures on pay-packets, and a world of work that is transformed compared to what has come before.

“The workers of Wales need to know that there is someone on their side and I look forward to taking up that challenge in the coming weeks.”

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Can Andy Burnham Win Over Britain’s Entrepreneurs?

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Can Andy Burnham Win Over Britain's Entrepreneurs?

So that’s that, then. Keir Starmer has read the room, found it on fire, and quietly let himself out of the back door.

Andy Burnham, the man who has spent years doing his best impression of a Prime Minister-in-waiting from a tram stop in Greater Manchester, is now the overwhelming favourite to be holding the keys to No.10. And the question I keep being asked, by founders who have built something real with their own sweat and overdraft, is a simple one: is he on our side or isn’t he?

I should declare an interest. I advised David Cameron’s government on enterprise, and I sat alongside the late, magnificent Lord Young of Graffham, the sharpest business brain to wander the corridors of Whitehall in a generation. Young understood something that most politicians never grasp, which is that you cannot conjure growth from a spreadsheet or a press release. You get it by listening to people who have actually met a payroll on a Friday when the bank has gone quiet. His reports on small business were not poetry, but they were honest, and they moved the needle. We need that voice in the room again.

Now, Burnham is not a fool, and he is not anti-business in the snarling, placard-waving sense. He talks a good game about “business-friendly socialism,” whatever that turns out to mean when the civil servants get hold of it. He wants to cut business rates for the corner café and the struggling pub, which is grand, and I will buy the first round. But the mood music among the people who actually create jobs is not exactly a standing ovation. A recent survey found that eight in ten SME owners are nervous about what a Burnham premiership means for their business, and you do not get a number like that by accident.

Here is the bit Burnham needs to understand, and understand fast. The genius of a healthy economy is not the wealth that gets created. It is what happens to that wealth afterwards. The founder who sells her software company for forty million does not stuff it under the mattress. She becomes an angel investor. She backs three more founders, mentors a dozen, and sets up a fund. That is the flywheel, and it is the single most powerful engine of prosperity we have. The Tony Blair Institute, no nest of swivel-eyed capitalists, has written about exactly this, the way start-up success recycles into the next generation of scale-ups. Nine out of ten angels reinvest their exit money. That is not greed. That is the machine working.

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And here is my worry. You cannot, on the one hand, ask entrepreneurs to take insane risks, remortgage the house, miss the kids’ bedtimes for a decade, and then, on the other, signal that the moment they succeed you intend to relieve them of the reward through a wealth tax, a land tax, or whatever the focus group has christened it this week. Burnham has been artfully vague on this, which is its own kind of answer. Vagueness is what frightens founders. They can plan for bad news. They cannot plan for a shrug.

The thing is, the money is sitting there, ready to be put to work. The challenge for whoever is next PM is not creating start-up wealth. We are rather good at that, thank you. The challenge is getting it recycled into the real economy instead of fleeing to Lisbon and Dubai, where the welcome is warmer and the tax letters are kinder. That is a solvable problem, but only if Burnham does the one thing this government has been allergic to, which is actually listening to entrepreneurs about how to unlock the funding rather than lecturing them about fairness.

So can he win us over? Yes, he can, and I would rather like him to. But it requires a leap that does not come naturally to a man whose instincts were forged in the Labour movement. He needs a Lord Young of his own, a proper entrepreneur with calloused hands and scar tissue, sitting at the heart of Downing Street, not a special adviser who once read a book about disruption on the train to Manchester. He needs to treat founders not as a cash machine to be tapped but as the goose that lays the golden egg, and you do not, if you have any sense, threaten the goose.

Burnham has charisma, a northern soul, and a genuine knack for sounding like he means it. What he lacks, so far, is a credible promise to the wealth creators that their success will be celebrated rather than confiscated. Make that promise, and keep it, and he could be the most pleasant surprise this country has had in years. Break it, and the flywheel stops, the money leaves, and we are all the poorer for it. Over to you, Andy. The kettle is on.

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Richard Alvin

Richard Alvin

Richard Alvin is a serial entrepreneur, a former advisor to the UK Government about small business and an Honorary Teaching Fellow on Business at Lancaster University.

A winner of the London Chamber of Commerce Business Person of the year and Freeman of the City of London for his services to business and charity. Richard is also Group MD of Capital Business Media and SME business research company Trends Research, regarded as one of the UK’s leading experts in the SME sector and an active angel investor and advisor to new start companies.

Richard is also the host of Save Our Business the U.S. based business advice television show.

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BIT: Unsustainable Distribution And Inflation Make This Fund Unattractive

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Cash Is King, A Quick Look At 3 Cash ETFs For 2026

BIT: Unsustainable Distribution And Inflation Make This Fund Unattractive

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