Warner Bros. reshuffled several major release dates on its 2027 and 2028 theatrical calendar this week, most notably pushing Matt Reeves’ “The Batman Part II” back to early 2028 to make room for J.J. Abrams‘ long-in-the-works sci-fi fantasy film “The Great Beyond.”
The studio confirmed that “The Great Beyond,” starring Glen Powell and Jenna Ortega, will no longer open on Nov. 13, 2027, as previously planned. Instead, the film is moving up to Oct. 1, 2027. That shift set off a chain reaction across the studio’s slate, sending “The Batman Part II,” which had occupied the Oct. 1 date, to Feb. 18, 2028.
The new date places the Robert Pattinson-led superhero sequel on the four-day Presidents Day holiday weekend, a slot that has previously hosted major comic book releases including “Black Panther,” “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania” and “Captain America: Brave New World.” Reeves announced the change on social media Wednesday morning. The film’s production start had already been delayed by five months earlier in its development, and the new release date gives the director additional time in post-production.
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“The Batman Part II” will still receive Imax screenings on its new date. The film’s cast includes Pattinson returning as Batman, along with Andy Serkis as Alfred and Colin Farrell reprising his role as Penguin. New additions to the cast include Scarlett Johansson, Sebastian Stan, Jayme Lawson, Charles Dance, Gil Perez-Abraham and Sebastian Koch. The sequel will face competition on its new February 2028 weekend from an untitled Disney release and Sony’s original action sci-fi feature “Grandgear,” directed by Takashi Yamazaki, known for “Godzilla Minus One.”
Warner Bros. also moved two other titles on its calendar as part of the broader reshuffling. Sam Esmail’s thriller “Panic Carefully” and New Line’s horror sequel “Revenge of La Llorona” effectively swapped release dates. “Panic Carefully,” which had been scheduled for Feb. 26, 2027, will now open April 9, 2027, in Imax. “Revenge of La Llorona,” previously dated for April 9, 2027, moves up to Feb. 26, 2027.
“Panic Carefully” reunites Esmail, the creator of “Mr. Robot,” with “Homecoming” and “Leave the World Behind” star Julia Roberts. The cast also includes Eddie Redmayne, Brian Tyree Henry, Ben Chaplin, Aidan Gillen, Joe Alwyn, Naledi Murray and Elizabeth Olsen. On its new April date, the film will go up against Paramount Primal’s R-rated comedy “Boys for Life,” which was dated for the same weekend just a day before Warner Bros.’ announcement.
“Revenge of La Llorona,” meanwhile, will now compete against Paramount’s “K-Pop: The Debut” and Sony’s family drama “Live Like That” on its new February weekend. The film is directed by Santiago Menghini from a screenplay by Sean Tretta, and continues the story introduced in the 2019 horror film “The Curse of La Llorona.” Its cast includes Raymond Cruz, Monica Raymund, Martín Fajardo, Acston Luca Porto, Avie Porto, Edy Ganem and Jay Hernandez, with the sequel following a fractured family that must confront its past and enlist an estranged curandero grandfather to battle the vengeful spirit at the center of the franchise.
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The reshuffling comes as “The Great Beyond” finalizes its production timeline. Early signs of the date change emerged when Amazon MGM Studios recently moved its action film “How to Rob a Bank” from Labor Day weekend to Nov. 13, effectively clearing the November date that “The Great Beyond” was vacating. The only wide release remaining on that November weekend is Paramount’s “Ebenezer: A Christmas Carol,” directed by Ti West and starring Johnny Depp.
According to reporting on the project, a recent test screening of “The Great Beyond” at a theater in Irvine, California, led Warner Bros. to commit to releasing the film in 70mm Imax prints, a format decision that factored into the scheduling shift. Abrams has been in the editing process on the film and was previously expected to complete post-production work in September. The new release date gives the director, best known for “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” and “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker,” additional time to finish the project, which he also wrote. The film was first teased publicly at CinemaCon in April.
“The Great Beyond” marks Abrams’ first original film in more than a decade and lands in a launch window that has historically been favorable for Warner Bros., having previously hosted hits including “Gravity,” “Joker,” “A Star Is Born,” “Dune,” “Argo” and “The Departed.” In addition to Powell and Ortega, the film also stars Emma Mackey, Sophie Okonedo, Merritt Wever and Samuel L. Jackson. As of this week, “The Great Beyond” remains the only major studio wide theatrical release scheduled for Oct. 1, 2027.
The scheduling changes arrive as Warner Bros.’ pending acquisition by Paramount remains tied up in ongoing antitrust litigation, including lawsuits brought by the attorneys general of California, New York and ten other states. The 103-year-old studio’s merger with Paramount had previously been expected to close by the fall of 2026, though that timeline remains uncertain given the continuing legal challenges. Notably, the date shuffle puts Warner Bros. in direct competition with Paramount, its potential parent company, on two of the newly adjusted dates, as Paramount already had films scheduled for both Feb. 26 and April 9, 2027.
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The moves represent some of the more significant scheduling changes on Warner Bros.’ calendar this year, affecting four separate films across genres ranging from big-budget superhero filmmaking to original science fiction, prestige thriller and horror sequel territory. With “The Batman Part II” now more than a year and a half away from release, fans of the franchise will have an extended wait to see Pattinson’s return, while Abrams’ passion project moves into a release window the studio has historically used to launch some of its biggest awards-season and box office successes.
The Nasdaq Composite fell sharply Thursday, dropping 265.61 points, or 1.01%, to close at 26,003.62, as semiconductor stocks extended a multi-day slide even after Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing reported blowout quarterly earnings, underscoring growing investor skittishness over lofty valuations in the artificial intelligence trade.
The decline marked a sharp reversal from Wednesday’s session, when the tech-heavy index climbed 0.62% to settle at 26,269.23 on the back of cooling inflation data and strength in Big Tech names including Apple, Amazon, Alphabet and Microsoft. Thursday’s pullback erased much of that momentum, as chip stocks — which have powered much of this year’s broader market rally — came under renewed pressure for a second straight day.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, the world’s largest contract chipmaker, reported a 77% annual earnings gain and posted record second-quarter revenue, while lifting its full-year capital expenditure outlook to a range of $60 billion to $64 billion, up from prior guidance of $52 billion to $56 billion. Despite the strong results, TSM shares fell in early trading, with the stock declining as investors focused instead on the company’s warning about rising prices and questioned whether even robust earnings could justify current valuations across the sector. The stumble in TSM shares rippled through the broader chip complex, dragging down the VanEck Semiconductor ETF and contributing to declines in Arm Holdings, which fell around 5%.
Memory chip names bore some of the heaviest losses. Western Digital shares fell more than 8%, and SanDisk dropped nearly 8%, while South Korea’s SK Hynix fell 7% in U.S. trading, adding to a bruising stretch for the memory sector that has seen sharp single-day swings in both directions over the past several weeks. The selling pressure followed a similar pattern to Wednesday’s session, when SK Hynix sank nearly 11%, SanDisk tumbled more than 12%, Western Digital fell almost 8% and Micron Technology dropped more than 7%, as investors took profits following a run-up in memory stocks tied to enterprise customers shifting spending toward servers, storage and memory hardware.
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The weakness spread overseas as well. Shares of Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix fell sharply in Seoul trading, dragging South Korea’s benchmark Kospi index lower and contributing to broader declines across Asian chip stocks, including Japan’s Advantest, SoftBank Group, Tokyo Electron and Renesas Electronics. Europe’s chip sector also felt the pressure, with STMicroelectronics, ASML and Infineon Technologies among the decliners tracking the global selloff in semiconductor shares.
Not all of Thursday’s session was negative. The Dow Jones Industrial Average bucked the broader trend, rising modestly as a more than 6% jump in UnitedHealth Group helped offset weakness elsewhere. UnitedHealth’s results easily topped Wall Street’s expectations, and the company raised its full-year outlook, citing more favorable trends in medical costs during the first half of the year. GE Aerospace also reported an earnings beat before the opening bell, while Abbott Laboratories rose nearly 4% after slightly beating estimates and raising its 2026 earnings guidance. Trucking company J.B. Hunt Transport Services jumped 7.5% after handily beating analyst estimates on the strength of increased intermodal shipping volumes.
Not every earnings report drew a positive reaction. United Airlines shares fell nearly 3% after the company issued cautious third-quarter guidance tied to rising fuel costs, even though its second-quarter earnings beat estimates and revenue matched consensus forecasts. The airline’s chief executive told CNBC that overall demand remained strong despite the guidance concerns. Netflix was scheduled to report its second-quarter results after Thursday’s closing bell, capping a week of earnings that had broadly exceeded expectations, though the streaming company’s shares had fallen following each of its last four quarterly reports.
Broader economic data released Thursday added to the day’s uncertain tone. June retail sales rose 0.2% from the prior month, falling short of the 0.3% consensus estimate, even as some underlying components of the report were viewed more favorably by economists. The modest miss came alongside continued concern over geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, as the United States continued launching strikes against Iran and crude oil prices remained elevated near recent highs. Treasury yields rose Thursday morning as investors weighed the combination of persistent Gulf tensions and mixed economic signals.
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The volatility in chip stocks has become a recurring theme throughout July, with the sector swinging sharply in both directions as investors debate whether current spending and valuation levels tied to the AI buildout are sustainable. JPMorgan analysts have characterized the recent weakness as a reflection of crowded investor positioning within the sector rather than a sign that the broader AI investment cycle is faltering, drawing comparisons to similar bouts of chip-sector selling in past months that were later followed by recoveries.
SpaceX shares also remained under pressure this week, falling below their $135 initial public offering price for the first time since the company’s record-setting Nasdaq debut in June, amid investor concerns over increased competition from Chinese launch providers and a coming increase in the number of shares available to trade on the exchange.
Thursday’s divergence between the Dow’s modest gain and the sharp declines in the Nasdaq and S&P 500 highlighted the extent to which chip and technology stocks continue to dictate the direction of the broader market, even as strength in healthcare, industrials and select consumer names offered some counterbalance. With Netflix’s earnings due after the close and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East showing no signs of easing, investors said they expect volatility in technology shares to persist in the sessions ahead as markets continue to grapple with high expectations heading into the heart of the second-quarter earnings season.
Small firms that reward staff with share options are set to lose one of their more tedious HMRC chores, after the government published draft legislation scrapping the requirement to notify the taxman separately every time an Enterprise Management Incentive option is granted.
Under proposals included in the draft Finance Bill 2026-27, published on 13 July, companies operating EMI schemes would report new option grants through their existing annual EMI return rather than filing a standalone notification for each grant.
For the thousands of growing businesses that use EMI to compete for talent against deeper-pocketed rivals, the change removes a compliance trap that has caught out many an otherwise well-run company. Miss a notification and the tax advantages that make the scheme worthwhile can be put at risk.
Cam Wright, a Senior Associate at audit, tax and business advisory firm Blick Rothenberg, said: “As part of the draft Finance Bill 2026-27, HMRC have published proposals to simplify the grant reporting process. Reducing the reporting burden should make EMI more appealing to businesses.”
He added: “The proposals remove the requirement for companies to separately notify HMRC about EMI option grants. Instead, options granted on or after 6 April 2027 would be reported through the existing annual EMI return.”
Wright said: “EMI options are a tax-advantaged share option scheme approved by the Government. They are designed to help small to medium-sized businesses recruit and retain key talent. EMIs remain one of the UK’s most valuable tax-advantaged share incentive arrangements available for qualifying companies.”
The reform will be particularly welcome to founders who see employee ownership as central to their recruitment pitch but have long complained that the compliance burden on entrepreneurs keeps growing even as ministers talk up simplification.
He added: “The proposed changes will also consolidate reporting through the annual EMI return, reduce the administrative requirements for companies operating EMI schemes and simplify the process of granting EMI options while maintaining HMRC reporting requirements through the existing annual filing framework. While this change was originally announced at Budget 2025, the publication of draft legislation represents a significant step towards implementation.”
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The draft clauses are open for technical consultation until 7 September 2026, with the final contents of the Bill subject to the Chancellor’s decision.
Wright said: “The proposal forms part of a broader trend towards modernisation and simplification across the UK’s shares and incentives landscape.”
Until the new rules take effect, companies granting EMI options must continue to notify HMRC under the current framework. Business owners planning grants around the April 2027 changeover should take advice on timing, and on keeping their annual returns in good order, since that single filing will soon carry all the weight.
Jamie Young
Jamie Young is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, covering SME finance, employment law and Westminster policy since 2016. He has reported on every Budget and Autumn Statement since 2018, helped make sense of the ‘covid era’ and the bounce-back loan scheme from launch through the fraud investigations, and broke the magazine’s coverage of the 2024 late-payment reforms. He joined Business Matters straight from completing his BA in Administration from Exeter University and is NCTJ-qualified. Reach him at jyoung@cbmeg.co.uk
SoftBank-backed digital-commerce ecosystem AceVector Ltd has filed updated draft papers with markets regulator Sebi for an initial public offering (IPO), which will include a fresh issue of shares worth Rs 300 crore.
In addition to the fresh issue, the IPO will also involve an offer-for-sale (OFS) of 6.38 crore shares by existing shareholders, according to the updated draft red herring prospectus (UDRHP).
As part of the OFS, promoter Starfish I Pte Ltd and other shareholders Nexus, Wonderful Star Pte Ltd, Kenneth Stuart Glass, Jason Ashok Kothari, Priyanka Shreevar Kheruka, Rupen Investment and Industries, and Centaurus Trading and Investments will offload their holdings.
Despite the share sale by several investors, AceVector’s promoters and founders Kunal Bahl and Rohit Bansal, who together hold a 23.56 per cent stake, will not participate in the OFS. However, another promoter entity Starfish, which owns 30.68 per cent stake in the company, will be divesting part of its stake.
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The company plans to use the IPO proceeds to strengthen technology infrastructure, support marketing and business promotion for Snapdeal, pursue inorganic growth through acquisitions, and meet general corporate requirements.
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The Gurugram-based company operates Snapdeal, a value-focused lifestyle e-commerce marketplace; Unicommerce, an e-commerce enablement SaaS platform; and Stellaro Brands, an omnichannel consumer brands arm. Financially, AceVector reported operating revenue of Rs 244 crore in H1 FY26, up 34 per cent from Rs 181 crore in H1 FY25. During the same period, its adjusted EBITDA loss narrowed significantly to Rs 9.2 crore from Rs 28 crore a year earlier.
AceVector had initiated its IPO journey earlier this year by filing confidential draft papers with Sebi in July and subsequently securing approval in November. By opting for the confidential pre-filing route, the company gained the flexibility to delay public disclosure of IPO details until the later stages.
Welcome to the Nederman Holding Q2 2026 Report Presentation. [Operator Instructions] Now I will hand the conference over to speakers, CEO, Sven Kristensson, and CFO, Matthew Cusick. Please go ahead.
Sven Kristensson President, CEO & Director
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Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today, taking the time not sitting in the fabulous sunshine in this — at least in this part of Sweden. The second quarter was encouraging for Nederman and our owners. We saw a clear increase in customer activity and a strong order intake across all 4 divisions. This confirms the positive trend we saw at the end of the first quarter.
You remember the first part of the first quarter wasn’t that great. Market uncertainty persists, but we continue to see customers investing in areas that are important for their operations. It’s also encouraging that the investments we have made in innovation, operations over the — and operations over the recent years are creating results. This is strengthening our competitiveness, and it’s also helping us gain market share in traditional and new industries.
During Q2, orders received increased in all 4 divisions. Extraction & Filtration Technology, which is the biggest division, had record order intake. Monitoring & Control Technology and Duct & Filter Technology had the highest quarterly order intake since Q1 last year. We also see continued growth in our service business. That’s a focus area, and it’s very important for recurring revenue and long-term value creation. We continue to advance our innovation agenda through new product development and releases that address our customers’ need for cleaner production, improved
The 2026 Open Championship at Royal Birkdale is set to double local business spending, according to Mastercard data based on economic impact from previous tournaments
Frank Dalleres www.cityam.com
12:04, 16 Jul 2026
Early morning crowds at Royal Birkdale today for the 154th Open
This week’s Open Championship at Royal Birkdale is forecast to double spending at businesses in the surrounding area, according to figures from Mastercard.
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Last year’s tournament at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland generated a 119 per cent surge in spending within 5km of golf’s oldest major, while the 2024 Open delivered an 82 per cent uplift within 3km of Royal Troon.
The hospitality sector stands among the greatest beneficiaries. Spending in bars and restaurants around Portrush last year soared 234 per cent and 95 per cent respectively, while at Troon expenditure across both categories more than doubled.
“As fans travel to Royal Birkdale to enjoy one of golf’s greatest Championships, the local hospitality sector is in for a bumper weekend,” said Mastercard UK and Ireland president Simon Forbes, as reported by City AM.
“From Australian tourists to B&B owners in Merseyside, live events bring people together. We’re proud to help businesses at these busy times, connecting them to tourists from all over the world with the tap of a card.”
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Play got under way this morning at Royal Birkdale, where local favourite Tommy Fleetwood is considered one of the frontrunners to lift the Claret Jug.
The Open draws in excess of 250,000 spectators, with a significant proportion travelling from abroad — particularly from the United States, home of defending champion Scottie Scheffler, and Australia. Accommodation spending at the 2024 Open rose 44 per cent, according to Mastercard’s findings.
This comes as Britons are continuing to devote more of their budgets to experiences. The proportion of UK consumer spending on experiences, excluding travel, rose to 23.3 per cent, up from 22.3 per cent the previous year, according to the payments giant.
This rise in spending also provides a welcome boost to the broader economy, with the 2025 Open credited with delivering £89.2m in economic impact for Northern Ireland. The 2024 Open generated a comparable figure, £87.3m, for Scotland.
Any customers that will be impacted by network changes will be “contacted directly and provided with re-accommodation or refund options,” the airline said in a statement.
Aer Lingus said changes will begin to take effect from late September 2026, continuing into summer 2027.
The proposed changes to routes are:
Dublin to Denver will be discontinued after 28/09/26
Dublin to Minneapolis will be discontinued after 24/10/26
Dublin to Las Vegas will be discontinued after 03/12/26
Dublin to Seattle will be a summer-only operation after 24/10/26
Dublin to Split will be discontinued after 29/09/26
Dublin to Frankfurt will be a summer-only operation after 02/11/26
Dublin to Hamburg will be a summer-only operation after 02/11/26
Dublin to Malta will be a summer-only operation after 03/11/26
Linked to these network changes, there will be a reduction in the use of two A330 aircraft and four A320 aircraft for peak summer 2027.
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It added the “changes are essential to support required improvement in its operating margin, which is needed to underpin future investment.
“The more cost efficient and productive the airline is, the more it will be able to fulfil its network and growth ambition,” a spokesperson said in a statement.
“The consultation and engagement process will focus on reducing redundancies and potential future redundancies and on what needs to be done to secure future investment in the business.”
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