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Jesy Nelson reveals she made ‘secret suicide attempt’ in new documentary

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Jesy Nelson reveals she made 'secret suicide attempt' in new documentary
Jesy Nelson grew emotional discussing the dark place she was in before leaving Little Mix (Picture: Life After Little Mix / Prime Video)

Jesy Nelson has opened up about a previously unknown attempt to take her own life before she quit Little Mix.

The 34-year-old exited the hit girl group – also comprised of Perrie Edwards, Leigh-Anne Pinnock and Jade Thirlwall – in 2020, citing her mental health as the reason for her shock departure nine years after the band first formed on X Factor.

Now, in a new docuseries on Amazon Prime Video – Jesy Nelson: Life After Little Mix – Boyz singer had shed further light on the depths her mental health had plunged to, which ultimately led to her leaving.

Feeling that no one in the band ‘cared’ about her, the music artist revealed for the first time that she attempted suicide through an overdose and was rushed to the hospital in an ambulance.

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Explaining how the rest of the band made her feel, she said: ‘I basically just sat everyone down and I just explained how I was feeling.

‘I just felt like no-one cared… And I remember one of their responses being like “are you done now, is that it?”‘

Jesy Nelson on her Amazon Prime docuseries
The former Little Mix singer was moved to tears as she recounted the week leading up to her exit (Picture: Life After Little Mix / Prime Video)
Little Mix - Perrie Edwards, Jesy Nelson, Jade Thrilwall and Leigh-Anne Pinnock - at the Brit Awards in pink outfits
The 34-year-old exited the group in 2020, citing her mental health (Picture: Samir Hussein/WireImage)

Recounting the interaction through tears, she continued: ‘I was like “okay” and she was like “can I go now?” I remember feeling like “whoa” and that just made me feel alone and like there’s no point to this, no-one cares.’

Suspecting her daughter was in a very dark place, her mum Janice desperately tried to contact Jesy.

Recalling the entire incident for the first time, she said: ‘A few days before she had just been down, really down, and not talking much, and I think she was seeing horrible things written about her again.

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‘She just wanted to be on her own quite a lot, I just got a gut feeling that something wasn’t right and so I kept ringing and ringing and then I wasn’t getting no answer.

Janice, Jesy Nelson's mum, in LIfe After Little Mix on Prime
Her mum Janice was the one who called an ambulance (Picture: Jesy Nelson: Life After Little Mix / Prime Video)

‘Eventually she answered the phone, but she was talking really slurry and then I could just hear the phone drop, and then I didn’t hear anything else. I knew she’d done something. An ambulance was called, we went to hospital with her.’

This is not the first time Jesy has almost died by suicide. She also overdosed in 2013 when she reached a low point after a performance on the X Factor.

Opening up about what drove her to that point, she told the Fearne Cotton Happy Place podcast in 2021 that she ‘physically couldn’t tolerate the pain anymore’.

Jesy Nelson in a green jumper
The Boyz music artist has previously spoken about an overdose in 2013 (Picture: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)

Recounting the circumstances around her overdose, she added: ‘I just remember obviously the first time, so obviously I’d taken an overdose. I went into hospital and then I had a music video like a week after…’

Mum Janice was ‘distraught’ and tried to intervene at the time.

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As Jesy shared: ‘She was like: “This is it, you’re not doing this anymore”. Because my mum’s the kind of mum that’s like, “I couldn’t give a s**t what you do as long as you’re happy…

“That’s all I care about”, So she was like, “No. This isn’t happening anymore….” And obviously I didn’t know what to do at the time because it was very early stages of Little Mix as well.’

Jesy Nelson and Zion Foster on This Morning with their twin babies
Earlier this year Jesy shared her twins had been diagnosed with SMA (Picture: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)

The past year has been another tough one for Jesy, after she revealed her twins had been diagnosed with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). Their prognosis means they could ‘never walk’ or potentially not even survive to their third birthday.

Jesy welcomed the twins – Ocean Jade and Story Monroe – prematurely in May last year alongside her partner, Zion Foster.

Since the news broke of the twins’ condition earlier this year, however, Jesy and Zion have reportedly ended their relationship and continue to co-parent.

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Metro had reached out to Perrie Edwards, Leigh-Anne Pinnock and Jade Thrilwall for comment.

Jesy Nelson: Life After Little Mix is available to stream on Amazon Prime Video now.

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Campaigner Flick Williams gives evidence in Parliament

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Campaigner Flick Williams gives evidence in Parliament

Flick Williams said “change is needed” to ensure disabled people who feel they have been discriminated against “have easier access to legal help” to “enforce our rights”.

Ms Williams, a visually impaired wheelchair user, has previously won legal battles over alleged discrimination against City of York Council, First York and Marks and Spencer.

The campaigner said she was “honoured” to be invited to give evidence to the Parliamentary Justice Committee, which is undertaking an inquiry into barriers to accessing justice for several groups.

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Ms Williams said currently “too much of the burden of enforcing disability rights falls to us as disabled people”, and she was “confident that the changes that are needed are understood” by the committee.

“Change is needed so that we have easier access to legal help and representation to assist us to enforce our rights,” she added.

Ms Williams said the “core issue” is that there are “very few solicitors who will take disability discrimination cases because the compensation awards are so low it simply doesn’t pay to take them”.

She said it means people have been left with few options but to take discrimination cases on themselves. “This can be very daunting and many disabled people simply don’t have the confidence, the energy or capacity to do this.”

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Ms Williams added: “I’ve always had a burning sense of injustice which has spurred me on to pursue blatant discrimination to the bitter end.

“I have now taken more cases than I can count, but always choose which cases to take on the basis of their wider impact for other disabled people.”


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Ms Williams said she was “most proud” of the case she won against City of York Council over its licensing of pavement cafes, which followed the campaigner becoming trapped on a footpath while out shopping in York city centre in May 2022.

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On leaving a shop, Ms Williams found café furniture had been put out while she was inside, blocking the dropped kerbs on either side – effectively creating an island on which she was trapped.

At the time, a council spokesperson apologised, saying “we got it wrong” and “will continue to listen and learn from the lived experiences of disabled people”.

Ms Williams said the case “certainly had the greatest impact forcing the council to change its policy thereby enabling all disabled people to get around the city with fewer obstacles on pavements”.

The Parliamentary committee was told about many barriers faced by disabled people trying to access justice including inaccessible court buildings and a failure to make reasonable adjustments for court hearings.

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“It’s bitterly ironic that disabled people going to court for failures by service providers to make reasonable adjustments as they are required to do by law, then face more reasonable adjustments failures by the court system itself,” Ms Williams said.

The Justice Committee is compiling a report with recommendations for the government.

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Gaelic Warrior blitzes Gold Cup field with dominant win as Jukebox Man falls short

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Gaelic Warrior blitzes Gold Cup field with dominant win as Jukebox Man falls short

It is a disappointing result for Redknapp and his stable. The former Tottenham boss, whose week at Cheltenham has been overshadowed somewhat by links to the Spurs job, had enthusiastically backed his horse in the build-up to the race after he won December’s King George Chase, but his wait will continue for a first Gold Cup win.

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Bridgend sees major rise in people on waiting list for somewhere to live

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Wales Online

Councillors heard the significant demand was driven by the cost of living crisis and the challenging private rent sector

Demand for temporary accommodation and homelessness services across Bridgend have continued to rise “significantly” despite a number of measures taken to reduce costs by the council.

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The discussions were held at a council cabinet meeting where members heard how the number of households in temporary accommodation across the borough had consistently gone up since 2019.

The figures were presented to council bosses as part of an update on the service where they also gave approval for officers to enter into further agreements with private accommodation providers to enable the “continuation of short-term arrangements”.

Data given at the meeting showed the number of households in temporary accommodation in Bridgend in 2019 was 83 though by January 2026 this had climbed to 296. Make sure you never miss Wales’ biggest updates by getting our daily newsletter.

It also showed consistent increases in the number of individuals in temporary accommodation with single-person households shown to make up 75% of all those temporary accommodation.

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Additionally the report noted a major rise in the number of applicants on the Bridgend Common Housing Register since the 2019-20 financial year which it said was driven by the cost-of-living crisis and a challenging private rented sector.

The report said: “The demand for homelessness and temporary accommodation services has been compounded by a wider increase in demand for social housing.

“The total number of applicants on the Bridgend Common Housing Register at the end of each year has increased substantially. In 2019-20 there were 816 households on the Common Housing Register.

“At the end of January 2026 there were around 3,500 households on the Common Housing Register.

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“A combination of the impact of the cost-of-living crisis and a challenging private rented sector are key drivers behind this demand.”

Speaking at the meeting council leader John Spanswick praised the work of officers and said despite the rise in demand for services they had driven down the cost of delivering them by around 21% or £1m.

This came after the council purchased three of their own properties to be used as temporary accommodation along with a capital programme to “increase affordable housing options”.

Cllr Neelo Farr said the three properties purchased for HMOs were reducing their costs “tremendously” with funding now in place to buy three more over the next 12 months.

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The report also noted that upscaling this positive work was still considered medium-to-long-term with agreements needed with accommodation providers such as guesthouses, holiday lets, and other properties to address the immediate pressures seen.

Cabinet members in attendance approved plans to temporarily suspend contract procedure rules for agreements to be made directly with providers for up to 12 months or three years where there is value for money.

Cllr Farr said: “This approach ensures that vulnerable people continue to have safe suitable accommodation while longer-term solutions such as increasing affordable housing and supported accommodation are developed to reduce reliance on temporary accommodations.”

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Hegseth Claims Strait Of Hormuz ‘Is Open’

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Hegseth Claims Strait Of Hormuz 'Is Open'

WASHINGTON — Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth said Friday that the Strait of Hormuz, where shipping traffic has essentially been stopped since the start of the war on Iran, is actually “open” and that military leaders “don’t need to worry about it.”

“The only thing prohibiting transit in the straits right now is Iran shooting at shipping. It is open for transit should Iran not do that,” the former Fox News weekend host told reporters at a Pentagon briefing.

Hegseth, in a particularly angry appearance, also attacked press accounts suggesting that Iran’s attacks on shipping were not anticipated by President Donald Trump and his top aides when he unilaterally took the United States into war against that country two weeks ago.

“As the world is seeing, they are exercising sheer desperation in the Straits of Hormuz, something we’re dealing with. We have been dealing with it and don’t need to worry about it,” he said, and then attacked CNN by name. “The sooner David Ellison takes over that network, the better.”

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The narrow passage between the Arabian Sea and the Persian Gulf normally sees about 20% of the world’s crude oil supply pass through. That flow has dropped to a trickle, with the exception of Iran’s own oil.

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Sex offender Stephen Bear, 36, announces wife Miami, 19, is pregnant

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Sex offender Stephen Bear, 36, announces wife Miami, 19, is pregnant

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Convicted sex offender and former TV personality Stephen Bear, 36, is set to become a dad, as his 19-year-old wife, Miami, is pregnant.

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Bear rose to fame on reality shows such as Shipwrecked (2011), Ex on the Beach (2015), and Celebrity Big Brother, winning the 2016 series.

In January 2021, he was arrested for uploading private CCTV footage of himself having sex with his ex-girlfriend, Georgia Harrison, on his OnlyFans account.

That May, Bear was charged with voyeurism, disclosing private, sexual photographs and films with intent to cause distress, and harassment without violence.

He pleaded not guilty, but in December 2022, he was convicted. The following March, he began serving his 21-month prison sentence but was released early in January 2024.

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Following his release, Bear relocated to Brazil, telling social media at the time: ‘The police can’t catch me now.’

Convicted sex offender Stephen Bear and his wife, Miami, are having a baby (Picture: Instagram)
Sex offender Stephen Bear, 36, announces he's having a baby with wife Miami, 19
The 36-year-old says his wife, 19, is three months along (Picture: Instagram)

While it’s unknown how he met his now-wife, they wed last year when she was 18.

Now, the couple have revealed that she is three months pregnant, whooping and cheering in an Instagram video after announcing: ‘Guys, we have a baby!’

‘We can confirm the baby is three months old,’ said Bear. ‘The doctor said it’s fit and healthy.

‘I’ve been wanting to tell you lot for a few weeks, but it had to be three months old before we announced the news.’

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Bear added that he is ‘over the moon’, explaining that they are not going to find out the unborn baby’s sex, but because he is English and ‘really good at football’, while his wife is Brazilian, ‘[they’ve] decided that [their] baby is gonna play for the Brazilian national team’.

Miami then excitedly held up a baby’s yellow sleepsuit emblazoned with the team’s logo and with ‘Bear’ across the back.

Sex offender Stephen Bear, 36, announces he's having a baby with wife Miami, 19
He shared footage of Miami, who met Bear following his move to Brazil, during her scan (Picture: Instagram)
Grabs: Stephen bear married Credit: Instagram/bearzy1_
The disgraced TV personality wed her last year when she was 18 (Picture: Instagram)

‘We’re super excited,’ he shouted.

‘Guys, there’s a new Bear on the way! Woo! Come on!’

The video then cuts to footage of Miami having a scan while the baby’s heartbeat is played aloud.

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Bear frequently shares posts online from his new life in Brazil with Miami, while she also posts vlogs, sketches, and dancing clips.

Upon his move to South America, Bear filmed himself from the beach, swigging a beer and saying: ‘I’m just chilling out; licence is finished, police is finished. I can be completely left alone, ready to enjoy my life now. All my conditions are just lifted.

‘Now I can post on social media; that was the main condition. Watch this space.’

Stephen Bear, makes a gesture as he leaves Chelmsford Crown Court, Essex, after his confiscation hearing following his conviction for voyeurism and two counts of disclosing private sexual photographs and films with intent to cause distress, and for posting a CCTV video of himself and The Only Way Is Essex star Georgia Harrison having sex. Picture date: Thursday March 28, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story COURTS Bear. Photo credit should read: Lucy North/PA Wire
In 2022, Bear was charged with voyeurism, disclosing private, sexual photographs and films with intent to cause distress, and harassment without violence (Picture: Lucy North/PA Wire)
Stephen Bear snr, walks behind his son, Stephen Bear, who shared a private video of himself having sex with his ex-girlfriend Georgia Harrison on his OnlyFans website, as they leave Chelmsford Crown Court after a confiscation hearing brought by the CPS following the reality TV stars revenge porn conviction. Picture date: Friday January 26, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story COURTS Bear. Photo credit should read: Yui Mok/PA Wire
He shared CCTV footage of himself having sex with ex-girlfriend Georgia Harrison on his OnlyFans account (Picture: PA)

He also debuted Miami on his page, telling the camera as he panned to her: ‘This is my 18-year-old Latina girlfriend. Say hello, baby.

‘We just chilling. I got eight music videos I got to shoot while I’m in Brazil. Thinking of looking at some property while I’m over here.’

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‘As they say in Brazil, te amo, ciao. That means I love you, goodbye,’ he concluded, blowing a kiss.

He and Miami now live together in an apartment.

Bear, who served just 10 months of his jail sentence, earns a living by continuing to share explicit videos on OnlyFans, for which he charges $20 (£15) each.

Meanwhile, former Towie star Harrison, 31, who dated Bear between 2018 and 2019, waived her right to anonymity during his criminal and civil cases.

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Georgia Harrison, from Loughton, Campaigner, is made a Member of the Order of the British Empire by the Prince of Wales at Windsor Castle. The honour recognises services to tackling online privacy and cyber crime awareness. Picture date: Wednesday October 8, 2025.
Harrison waived her anonymity to share her experiences and raise awareness. Last year, she was appointed an MBE for her campaigning (Picture: PA)

She has continued speaking publicly about revenge porn to raise awareness and highlight its prevalence, as well as demanding increased support for victims.

Harrison also donated part of the £207,900 that Bear was ordered to pay her in compensation damages to multiple charities that supported her after the incident, which, while it involved consensual sex between her and Bear at his home in Loughton, she had no idea that it was being filmed and didn’t consent to footage being shared.

Speaking previously at the Proceeds of Crime hearing, she recalled: ‘I had to live in fear that this was going to come out and my family were going to know about it.

‘It was just like the worst feeling you can ever possibly imagine. I felt violated, I felt embarrassed – I hated myself for a really long time.’

Harrison’s other work since has included fronting the documentary Revenge Porn: Georgia vs Bear (2023) and the two-part series Georgia Harrison: Porn, Power, Profit (2025).

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Last year, she was appointed an MBE for her services to the prevention of violence against women and girls and for her campaigning around cybercrime. She also welcomed her first child

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Liverpool FC vs Tottenham: Prediction, kick-off time, TV, live stream, team news, h2h results, odds

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Liverpool FC vs Tottenham: Prediction, kick-off time, TV, live stream, team news, h2h results, odds

In fact, defeat at Molineux saw the Reds slip a place to sixth by virtue of an inferior goal difference to Chelsea.

Tottenham, meanwhile, are in real danger of being relegated. Currently sitting just one point above the bottom three, this will be the first of nine ‘cup finals’ to preserve their status as a Premier League club.

Date, kick-off time and venue

Liverpool vs Tottenham is scheduled for a 4.30pm GMT kick-off on Sunday, March 15, 2026.

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The match will take place at Anfield.

Where to watch Liverpool vs Tottenham

TV channel: In the UK, the game will be televised live on Sky Sports. Coverage starts at 4pm GMT on Sky Sports Premier League and Sky Sports Main Event.

Live stream: Sky Sports subscribers can also catch the contest live online via the Sky Go app.

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Live blog: You can follow all the action on matchday via Standard Sport’s live blog, with expert analysis from Sam Tabuteau at the ground.

Liverpool vs Tottenham team news

Federico Chiesa also missed out in midweek, because of illness, but is expected to make a full recovery to take a place in the matchday squad.

Alexander Isak, Wataru Endo, Giovanni Leoni and Conor Bradley are all sidelined, while Jeremie Frimpong, Cody Gakpo and Andy Robertson are pushing to start.

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Doubtful: Alisson

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Why a short, sharp climate shock affects your pension more than a slow, looming threat

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Why a short, sharp climate shock affects your pension more than a slow, looming threat

When severe floods struck Valencia in late 2024, the damage quickly spread beyond the affected neighbourhoods. Infrastructure was disrupted, insurance claims surged and supply chains were hit across the region. Within days, the financial implications were clear. Events like these illustrate how sudden climate shocks can rapidly enter financial markets.

For many people, this matters more than they might think. Pension funds, insurance portfolios and long-term savings are heavily invested in companies, infrastructure and energy systems exposed to climate risk. As extreme weather events become more frequent and environmental pressures intensify, the way financial markets react to climate risks increasingly affects the economic security of savers.

Yet not all climate risks provoke the same reaction from investors. Sudden events such as floods, storms or even climate-related lawsuits (such as the landmark case brought by green groups against oil giant Shell in the Netherlands) can quickly influence market expectations.

Slower environmental changes – things like rising sea levels, prolonged drought or gradual ecosystem degradation – rarely produce the same immediate financial response. But their long-term economic consequences may ultimately be just as significant.

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Understanding why financial markets react unevenly to different types of climate risk leads to an emerging area of research known as neurofinance. This field combines insights from neuroscience and finance to explain how investors evaluate uncertain future outcomes.

Although markets are often described as systems driven by data, models and algorithms, they ultimately reflect the judgements of people – investors, analysts and portfolio managers. Their decisions depend on how risks are perceived and evaluated. Neurofinance research suggests that these decisions are influenced by how the brain processes time, uncertainty, attention and risk.

More distant, but no less risky

One study showed that people often react more strongly to immediate and emotionally vivid threats than to slower or more abstract risks. This can be true even when the long-term consequences of those slower risks are just as serious.

This pattern is not limited to financial decisions. People may respond quickly to an acute danger such as a fire alarm or a storm, while slower but potentially serious risks can attract less urgent responses. In other words, risks that are visible, concrete and near-term tend to command more attention than those that unfold gradually over long periods.

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This does not mean that long-term risks are ignored, but it may mean that their influence on decisions emerges more slowly.

This difference in attention is often described using the concept of “salience” – how strongly a particular signal stands out at the point where a decision is made. Risks that are vivid, identifiable and easy to explain are more likely to enter discussions about valuation and investment strategy. More distant or complex risks may receive less attention, even when their potential economic impact is large.

Climate change provides a clear illustration of this dynamic. After all, different types of risk vary significantly in how salient they appear. Some risks emerge suddenly. New laws or regulations, carbon-pricing policies or litigation can quickly alter the outlook for companies and industries.

Because these developments resemble familiar economic shocks, they often attract investors’ attention immediately. Other risks – rising temperatures, shifting rainfall patterns and long-term environmental degradation – typically unfold over decades. Their effects may be significant but are often harder to link to a single moment or event. As a result, they can appear more abstract in day-to-day investment discussions.

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Sudden, shocking events present clear risks that investors react to rapidly.
amine chakour/Shutterstock

The key difference may lie less in the objective scale of these risks than in how easily they capture people’s attention. Sudden events generate clear signals that investors can process quickly.

This helps to explain why markets sometimes appear highly reactive to climate-related headlines while adjusting more slowly to deeper environmental trends.

For long-term investments such as pension funds, this uneven response presents an important challenge. Pension portfolios are designed to manage risks over decades. Yet financial markets often react most strongly to events that occur suddenly. As a result, portfolios may adjust quickly to regulatory changes or litigation and more gradually to environmental pressures that build over time.

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Research also suggests that investors’ views about climate risk do not always translate directly into investment decisions. Surveys indicate that many investors recognise the financial importance of climate change, yet portfolio allocations vary widely. Economists often describe this as the difference between stated views and revealed behaviour in financial decision-making.

Institutional structures within financial markets may reinforce these patterns. Investment managers are frequently assessed on quarterly performance and benchmark comparisons. These incentives naturally draw attention to risks that influence markets in the near term. Slower-moving risks may receive less focus in day-to-day portfolio decisions.

None of this implies that markets are ignoring climate change or behaving irrationally. Financial markets reflect the decisions of millions of individuals and institutions operating under uncertainty and time pressures. But insights from neurofinance suggest that the way risks capture people’s attention influences how quickly they affect decision-making.

Understanding how attention and perception shape financial decisions may help to explain why markets sometimes react dramatically to climate headlines while adjusting more slowly to long-term environmental change. This is a pattern that matters for investors, policymakers and pension-holders alike.

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Too good to go down? Ranking shock Premier League relegations

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Graphic of Alan Shearer, Jamie Vardy and Roy Keane

Aston Villa 2015-16 – Position: 20. Points 17

Talking of FA Cup finals, it was gilet out, shirt and tie in as Tim Sherwood led Aston Villa to Wembley in 2015, his tactics “bamboozling” Liverpool en route before a heavy final defeat by Arsenal.

Sherwood also steered Villa away from the drop but, shorn of influential stars Christian Benteke and Fabian Delph in the summer, was sacked after six successive defeats left them bottom in October.

Kevin Macdonald, briefly, Remi Garde and Eric Black all had a stab at getting a tune from the young prospects Villa reinvested in but, with ownership issues rumbling, the club – one of only seven Premier League ever-presents at the time – dropped out of the top flight for the first time since 1988.

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Middlesbrough 1996-97 – Position: 19th. Points 39

Silver hair shimmering in the Teesside sunshine, the sight of Fabrizio Ravanelli celebrating a debut hat-trick against Liverpool – months after scoring in Juventus’ Champions League triumph – had Middlesbrough fans dreaming.

Throw in Brazilian trio Juninho, Emerson and Branco, with Bryan Robson in the dugout, and the Riverside faithful felt they could win the lot.

They almost did an FA and League Cup double, losing both finals, but those dazzling runs could not be replicated in the league.

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Ravanelli, reportedly the highest-paid man in the league, scored at almost the same rate he bemoaned the club’s professionalism in the Italian press, suggesting Juventus coaches were having to fax him fitness plans.

Emerson went missing, his wife not very complimentary about Teesside.

But what effectively sent Middlesbrough down was the decision to not play against Blackburn because of an illness and injury crisis – the FA docked Boro three points, they finished two from survival.

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Zelenskyy says US waiver on Russian oil sanctions does not help peace

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Zelenskyy says US waiver on Russian oil sanctions does not help peace

PARIS (AP) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Friday that the U.S. 30-day waiver on Russian oil sanctions amid the Iran war is “not the right decision” and won’t help bring a stop to Russia’s more than 4-year-old invasion of Ukraine.

“This easing alone by the United States could provide Russia with about $10 billion for the war,” Zelenskyy said. “This certainly does not help peace.”

“I believe that lifting sanctions will, in any case, lead to a strengthening of Russia’s position. It spends the money from energy sales on weapons, and all of this is then used against us,” Zelenskyy said at a news conference with French President Emmanuel Macron during a visit to Paris.

“Therefore, ultimately lifting sanctions only so that more drones will later be flying at you is, in my opinion, not the right decision,” he said.

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The U.S. Treasury Department announced Thursday a 30-day waiver on Russian oil sanctions. The step aims to free up Russian cargoes stranded at sea and ease supply shortages caused by the Iran war.

Analysts say that spiraling oil prices due to Persian Gulf production blockages are benefiting the Russian economy. Moscow relies heavily on oil revenue to finance its invasion, and sanctions were a growing handicap.

U.S.-mediated talks between Moscow and Kyiv that seek to stop Europe’s biggest conflict since World War II are on hold due to the Iran war, though they could resume next week, according to Zelenskyy.

Macron noted that broad sanctions on Russia still stand despite the temporary U.S. waiver.

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U.S. waivers announced in recent days are “limited” and “taken on an exceptional basis,” Macron said. “It does not broadly or permanently roll back the sanctions that they themselves decided to apply,” he added.

German leader says US sanctions waiver for Russian oil is ‘wrong’

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz adopted a more critical stance. He said Friday that a meeting earlier this week of heads of state and government from the Group of Seven industrialized democracies discussed with U.S. President Donald Trump the issue of Russian oil and liquefied natural gas supplies.

“Six members of the G7 expressed a very clear view that this (waiving of Russia sanctions) is not the right signal to send,” Merz said during a visit to Norway. “We learned this morning that the U.S. government has apparently decided otherwise. Once again, we believe this is the wrong decision.”

Merz added: “There is currently a price problem, but not a supply problem. And in that regard, I would like to know what additional motives led the U.S. government to make this decision.”

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Ukraine offers its drone expertise

Ukraine has become one of the world’s leading producers of drone interceptors, and Kyiv is offering its expertise to the United States and its Gulf partners for the war in the Middle East, hoping to receive in return the high-end weaponry it can’t manufacture at home.

Zelenskyy said that Ukraine has received requests from six countries for drone combat assistance. It has already sent expert teams to three countries, he said, without naming them.

Separate requests, which he didn’t detail, have also come from the United States and Jordan, he said.

Zelenskyy noted that providing interceptors was not enough to help fight drone attacks. The Ukrainian military has expertise in deploying the systems, he said.

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“There must be proper, systematic work with radars and with the entire air defense system,” Zelenskyy said. “Ukraine is ready to share this experience for the sake of the security of those partners who are helping us.”

Ukraine is awaiting White House approval for an agreement on producing battle-tested drones, Zelenskyy said on Thursday.

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Novikov contributed from Kyiv, Ukraine. Associated Press writer Kostya Manenkov in Tallinn, Estonia contributed to this report.

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Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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Cheltenham Festival jockeys banned after shock 50/1 winner as suspensions confirmed

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Daily Mirror

Two jockeys have received a suspension after an investigation was conducted at the Cheltenham Festival

Two jockeys have been handed a suspension by the British Horseracing Authority (BHA) after an investigation into a race at the Cheltenham Festival. Apolon De Charnie, priced at 50/1, won the JCB Triumph Hurdle on the final day of the festival on Friday, ahead of Maestro Conti in second and Minella Study in third.

Patrick Mullins, rider of the winning horse, secured the win for trainer and father, Willie Mullins. Jockey Harry Skelton finished second on Maestro Conti for his brother and the trainer of the horse, Dan Shelton.

However, the BHA conducted an investigation into the race and have handed a suspension to both Patrick Mullins and for careless riding.

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“An enquiry was held to consider interference approaching the final fence involving Maestro Conti (FR), placed second, ridden by Harry Skelton, and Selma De Vary (FR), placed fourth, ridden by P Townend,” the statement from the BHA read.

“Skelton was suspended for three days for careless riding for allowing his mount to drift right-handed when insufficiently clear resulting Selma De Vary (FR) being tightened against the rail with Townend having to switch his mount.

“An enquiry was held to consider interference in the final half furlong involving the winner, Apolon De Charnie (RE), ridden by Mr P W Mullins, and Minella Study, placed third, ridden by Ryan Mania.

“Mullins was suspended for two days for careless riding for allowing his mount to move right-handed under a left-hand drive for a number of strides without correction, taking Minella Study off its intended line.”

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