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The Smart Money Is Buying REITs, These Could Be Next

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The Smart Money Is Buying REITs, These Could Be Next

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Jussi Askola is the President of Leonberg Capital, a value-oriented investment boutique that consults hedge funds, family offices, and private equity firms on REIT investing. He has authored award-winning academic papers on REIT investing, has passed all three CFA exams, and has built relationships with many top REIT executives.

He is the leader of the investing group High Yield Landlord, where he shares his real-money REIT portfolio and transactions in real-time. Features of the group include: three portfolios (core, retirement, international), buy/sell alerts, and a chat room with direct access to Jussi and his team of analysts to ask questions. Learn more.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of CUBE; HOM.U:CA 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.

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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Andrew Bailey warns AI training is critical to future of UK jobs

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Andrew Bailey

Training workers to use artificial intelligence will be “critical” to managing disruption in the UK labour market, according to Andrew Bailey, who said there were already signs that AI was reshaping careers and hiring patterns.

Speaking at a conference in Saudi Arabia on Sunday, Bailey said the long-term impact of AI on employment remained “highly uncertain”, but warned that early indicators pointed to meaningful change.

“In the UK, in the last three years, new online vacancies in the most AI-exposed roles have decreased by more than twice as much as in the least exposed group,” he said.

“On the positive side, however, there has been a significant increase in new tasks, such as integrating AI tools into firms’ workflow processes.”

Bailey cautioned against drawing simplistic conclusions about the effect of AI on jobs, stressing that education and reskilling would be central to ensuring workers were not left behind. “Education and training in AI skills will be critical,” he said. “We shouldn’t resort to oversimplified conclusions on the employment effects.”

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His comments came at the end of a volatile week for global markets, during which renewed anxiety over artificial intelligence wiped more than $1 trillion off the combined value of the world’s largest technology and software companies.

Investor nerves were rattled in part by new product launches from Anthropic, one of the world’s leading AI developers. The company unveiled tools aimed at automating legal work such as contract review, alongside its latest Claude Opus 4.6 model, which is capable of analysing complex information and producing presentations and spreadsheets.

The developments fuelled fears about job displacement and business model disruption, triggering sharp share price falls among UK-listed companies seen as highly exposed to AI. These included RELX, London Stock Exchange Group, and Sage.

At the same time, concerns grew that enthusiasm for AI may have run ahead of reality in the US technology sector. Amazon, Alphabet, Meta and Microsoft have collectively committed to spending around $660 billion this year on data centres and advanced computer chips to support AI development.

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Fears that such vast capital investment may not deliver sufficient returns have weighed on share prices, adding to wider market turbulence. The pullback follows years of strong gains in US technology stocks, driven by investor optimism about AI-led productivity gains, optimism that has also raised concerns about a potential bubble.

Bailey said there were signs of “fear of missing out” in markets, reinforced by claims that AI represents a structural break from previous technology cycles. “We have seen arguments along the lines of ‘this time is different’, for instance because of the expected productivity benefits of AI,” he said.

He warned that this narrative risked complacency among investors and policymakers alike. “Expectations of AI-driven productivity gains could be disappointed,” he said.

Despite the caution, Bailey struck a broadly optimistic note on the long-term economic potential of AI and robotics. He said he believed the technologies could boost productivity and growth by automating repetitive tasks and creating entirely new types of work.

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However, he added that the transition would not be painless. “Some industries might shrink, others grow, and affected workers will need to retrain to adapt their skills,” he said, underlining once again that investment in training would be decisive in shaping the future of the UK jobs market.

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Workday: A Bad Narrative Creates A Bargain – 5 Reasons To Buy

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Workday: A Bad Narrative Creates A Bargain - 5 Reasons To Buy

Workday: A Bad Narrative Creates A Bargain – 5 Reasons To Buy

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(VIDEO) Sanae Takaichi Secures Historic Supermajority in Japan’s Landslide 2026 Election Victory

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Sanae Takaichi

Conservative lawmaker Sanae Takaichi led Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) to a resounding landslide victory in the February 8, 2026, general election, securing a historic supermajority of 295 seats in the 465-member House of Representatives and ending more than a year of political uncertainty that followed the LDP’s 2024 snap-election setback.

Sanae Takaichi
Sanae Takaichi

Takaichi, 65, became the first woman to lead the LDP to a national election victory as party president, capturing 312 seats when combined with its junior coalition partner Komeito (24 seats), well above the 233-seat supermajority threshold needed to control both chambers of the Diet and push through legislation with minimal opposition interference. The result marked one of the largest swings in postwar Japanese electoral history and handed Takaichi a clear mandate to implement her hawkish security agenda, economic reforms and traditional-values platform.

Voter turnout reached 57.8%, up slightly from the 2024 low of 55.9%, reflecting heightened public interest in the LDP’s comeback campaign and widespread dissatisfaction with the short-lived opposition-led coalition government that collapsed in late 2025. Preliminary results released early Monday showed the LDP winning 271 single-seat constituencies outright — a gain of 98 seats from its 2024 performance — while proportional representation added another 24 seats.

Takaichi, who assumed LDP presidency in September 2025 after a narrow internal party victory over former Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s preferred successor, campaigned on a platform of “strong Japan, secure future.” Her manifesto emphasized:

  • Constitutional revision to explicitly recognize the Self-Defense Forces and expand collective self-defense rights
  • Doubling defense spending to 2% of GDP by 2028
  • Aggressive economic stimulus combining tax cuts, deregulation and infrastructure investment
  • Promotion of traditional family values and stricter immigration controls
  • Energy security through expanded nuclear power and liquefied natural gas imports

The LDP’s sweeping win reversed the dramatic losses of October 2024, when public anger over slush-fund scandals, inflation and perceived weak leadership cost the party its majority. The subsequent minority government under then-Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba relied on fragile support from smaller parties and independent lawmakers, leading to legislative gridlock and frequent no-confidence threats.

Opposition parties suffered heavy defeats. The Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (CDP), led by Yoshihiko Noda, dropped to 98 seats from 148. The Japan Innovation Party held steady at 44 seats, while Reiwa Shinsengumi and the Japanese Communist Party each lost ground. Smaller centrist and progressive groups largely collapsed, consolidating the political map into a clearer LDP-dominated landscape.

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Analysts attributed the LDP’s resurgence to several factors:

  • Voter fatigue with opposition disunity and inability to present a coherent alternative government
  • Takaichi’s personal popularity among conservative and rural voters, bolstered by her strong performances in televised debates
  • Effective use of digital campaigning and targeted social-media outreach to younger and swing voters
  • Economic anxieties over inflation, yen weakness and wage stagnation that favored the LDP’s promise of immediate stimulus
  • A perception that only the LDP could deliver stable governance amid regional security tensions, including North Korean missile tests and China’s military activities near Taiwan and the Senkaku Islands

Takaichi addressed supporters late Sunday at party headquarters in Tokyo’s Nagatacho district, declaring: “The Japanese people have spoken clearly. They want a strong, proud, secure Japan that protects its families and its future generations. We will not betray that trust.”

She pledged to form a new cabinet swiftly and submit a supplementary budget in March 2026 to fund immediate economic relief measures, including cash handouts to low-income households, expanded child allowances and accelerated infrastructure projects.

International reaction was mixed. U.S. officials welcomed the return of a stable LDP government committed to strengthening the U.S.-Japan alliance and increasing defense contributions. Chinese state media described the outcome as a “dangerous shift toward militarism,” while South Korean officials expressed cautious optimism that Takaichi’s administration would continue pragmatic dialogue despite her past criticism of Seoul’s historical policies.

Domestically, the result sparked debate over the speed and scope of constitutional revision. Takaichi has vowed to convene a formal review process within the first 100 days, though analysts expect the earliest possible referendum to be held no sooner than 2028 due to procedural requirements and public opinion thresholds.

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The supermajority also gives Takaichi leverage over internal LDP factions. Her victory over establishment candidates in the September 2025 leadership race already weakened traditional power brokers, and the scale of the electoral win further consolidates her authority. Observers expect her to appoint a cabinet blending loyalists, policy experts and a higher proportion of women and younger lawmakers than previous administrations.

Economic markets reacted positively Monday morning, with the Nikkei 225 rising 2.1% in early trading and the yen strengthening slightly against the dollar as investors anticipated fiscal stimulus and policy predictability.

Takaichi’s personal journey adds historical weight to the victory. A former economic security minister and longtime Abe Shinzo ally, she was once considered a long-shot candidate due to her hardline views on gender roles, history textbooks and security policy. Her ability to broaden appeal — particularly among women voters concerned about inflation and child-rearing costs — proved decisive.

As she prepares to be formally elected prime minister in a special Diet session later this week, Takaichi faces immediate challenges: balancing aggressive defense buildup with fiscal discipline, navigating U.S.-China tensions, addressing Japan’s rapidly aging population and rebuilding public trust after years of scandal.

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For now, however, the landslide victory gives her a rare window of political capital rarely seen in recent Japanese politics. Whether she uses that mandate to enact sweeping change or opts for incremental steps will define her premiership and Japan’s trajectory in the late 2020s.

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Raymond James reiterates Strong Buy on Encompass Health stock after strong Q4

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Raymond James reiterates Strong Buy on Encompass Health stock after strong Q4

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Reitar Logtech stock soars on exclusive deal with Chinese food giant

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Reitar Logtech stock soars on exclusive deal with Chinese food giant

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Turkish snack company acquires Trubar

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Turkish snack company acquires Trubar

The acquisition boosts Trubar’s capacity to expand across North America. 

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Post sees encouraging signs for cereal

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Post sees encouraging signs for cereal

Consumer opting for more “budget-friendly breakfast choice.”

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Form 8K Expand Energy Corp For: 9 February

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Form 8K Expand Energy Corp For: 9 February

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Punk Rock Legends, 2026 Super Bowl Performance, and Enduring Legacy

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Taylor Swift

Green Day, the influential punk rock band from the San Francisco Bay Area, remains one of the most enduring and commercially successful acts in modern music. In February 2026, the trio—Billie Joe Armstrong, Mike Dirnt and Tré Cool—delivered a high-energy pre-game set at Super Bowl LX, performing classics including “American Idiot” and “Boulevard of Broken Dreams” to a massive Levi’s Stadium crowd and global television audience ahead of the New England Patriots-Seattle Seahawks championship game.

10 Things You Must Know About Green Day
10 Things You Must Know About Green Day

Formed in 1987 as Sweet Children before adopting the Green Day name, the band has sold more than 85 million records worldwide, won five Grammy Awards and influenced generations of rock musicians with their blend of raw energy, catchy melodies and politically charged lyrics. Here are 10 essential facts about Green Day as they continue to shape rock music in 2026.

  1. Origins in the East Bay Punk Scene Green Day formed in Rodeo, California, when Billie Joe Armstrong (guitar/vocals) and Mike Dirnt (bass) were 15 years old. Tré Cool joined in 1990 after original drummer John Kiffmeyer left. The band emerged from the vibrant 924 Gilman Street punk scene in Berkeley, playing fast, aggressive shows at all-ages venues. Early independent albums “39/Smooth” (1990) and “Kerplunk” (1991) built a devoted underground following before their major-label breakthrough.
  2. “Dookie” Launched Mainstream Punk Revival Released in February 1994 on Reprise Records, “Dookie” sold over 20 million copies worldwide and became a defining album of the 1990s. Hits like “Basket Case,” “When I Come Around,” “Longview” and “Welcome to Paradise” brought pop-punk to MTV and radio, helping spark the mid-’90s punk revival alongside bands like The Offspring and Rancid. The album won a Grammy for Best Alternative Music Album and remains one of the best-selling punk records ever.
  3. Political Rock Masterpiece: “American Idiot” In 2004, Green Day released “American Idiot,” a concept album critiquing the George W. Bush administration, post-9/11 America and media manipulation. The title track, “Holiday,” “Boulevard of Broken Dreams” and “Wake Me Up When September Ends” became anthems of dissent. The album sold more than 14 million copies, won a Grammy for Best Rock Album and inspired a Broadway musical. It solidified Green Day’s shift from pop-punk to ambitious rock opera.
  4. Billie Joe Armstrong’s Iconic Stage Persona Frontman Billie Joe Armstrong, born Feb. 17, 1972, is known for his high-energy performances, dyed black hair (often with colorful streaks), eyeliner and signature red or black guitars. His outspoken personality—calling out politicians, record labels and conformity—has defined the band’s ethos. Armstrong has battled substance issues, notably a 2012 onstage meltdown in Las Vegas that led to rehab, but has since focused on sobriety and mental health advocacy.
  5. Tré Cool and Mike Dirnt: The Rhythm Section Drummer Tré Cool (born Frank Edwin Wright III, Dec. 9, 1972) joined at age 17 and is celebrated for his powerful, precise playing and quirky personality. Bassist Mike Dirnt (born Michael Ryan Pritchard, May 4, 1972) co-founded the band and contributes backing vocals and songwriting. The trio’s chemistry—forged over nearly four decades—remains a cornerstone of their live shows and studio work.
  6. Super Bowl LX Pregame Performance (2026) On Feb. 8, 2026, Green Day performed a six-song set before Super Bowl LX, including “American Idiot,” “Holiday,” “Boulevard of Broken Dreams,” “Basket Case,” “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)” and “Minority.” The performance honored their political legacy while energizing the crowd for the championship game. Armstrong dedicated “American Idiot” to “anyone fighting for truth and justice,” drawing cheers and renewed attention to the band’s catalog.
  7. Broadway Musical and Rock Opera Legacy “American Idiot” was adapted into a Broadway musical in 2010, earning three Tony nominations. The show toured globally and introduced Green Day’s music to new audiences. The band has continued experimenting with concept albums, including “¡Uno! ¡Dos! ¡Tré!” (2012) and “Father of All Motherfuckers” (2020), though “Saviors” (2024) marked a return to classic sound with singles “The American Dream Is Killing Me” and “Dilemma.”
  8. Activism and Social Commentary Green Day has consistently used their platform for political and social causes. They opposed the Iraq War, supported LGBTQ+ rights, criticized corporate greed and advocated for environmental issues. Armstrong has spoken out on gun control, women’s rights and mental health. The band’s lyrics often reflect disillusionment with authority, resonating with fans across generations.
  9. Awards and Commercial Success Green Day has won five Grammy Awards, including Record of the Year for “Boulevard of Broken Dreams” (2005). They hold American Music Awards, MTV Video Music Awards and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (2015). With more than 85 million albums sold, they rank among the best-selling punk bands ever, alongside The Clash and Ramones.
  10. Current Status and Enduring Influence In 2026, Green Day remains active with touring, new music and side projects. Billie Joe Armstrong released a solo album under The Longshot and continues producing. The band’s influence spans punk, pop-punk, emo and alternative rock, inspiring acts like Fall Out Boy, My Chemical Romance and Olivia Rodrigo. Their ability to evolve while staying true to punk roots keeps them relevant nearly four decades after forming.

From Gilman Street basements to Super Bowl stages, Green Day’s journey reflects resilience, rebellion and relevance. As they continue performing and recording, the band’s music remains a powerful voice for generations seeking authenticity in an ever-changing world.

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Japan's Election Shock: The Yen Trade Wall Street Can't Ignore

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Japan's Election Shock: The Yen Trade Wall Street Can't Ignore

Japan's Election Shock: The Yen Trade Wall Street Can't Ignore

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