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Lloyds’ share price: with £1 in sight, is it time for cheer or fear?

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Image source: Getty Images

The last time the Lloyds Banking Group (LSE: LLOY) share price traded above £1 was just over 17 years ago. It’s bizarre to see it near that level again — especially since I remember it was near 50p last Christmas.

If it breaks above £1 before Christmas, it’ll have almost doubled in just one year. That’s relatively unheard of in the UK banking sector.

Lloyds share price
Created on TradingView.com

And it’s not the only one closing in on a significant high. The FTSE 100‘s a mere 1% away from achieving a historic record high above 10,000 points.

But with the UK economy still in a less-than-stable state, is there reason to celebrate?

A stark contrast

Given the current economic landscape, it seems surprising for a domestically-focused bank to do so well. Stubborn inflation, rising debt and possible tax hikes are all factors that should be suppressing growth.

At the same time, it isn’t all that surprising. During periods of economic uncertainty, people often turn to stocks or commodities as a safe haven against currency devaluation. This explains the rise in gold and global markets — but Lloyds may be at risk from other factors.

In this month’s Autumn Budget, Chancellor Rachel Reeves may no longer be expected to raise taxes, but it won’t be a giveaway Budget so whatever measures come in could make it harder for new buyers to afford mortgages. While Lloyds has begun to reduce its reliance on mortgages, they’re still a core part of the business.

So what does this mean for investors going forward?

Pros and cons

Much of Lloyds’ recent growth can be attributed to interest rates and share buybacks. So long as rates remain high, banks will continue to reap the rewards from borrowers.

It’s also achieved an impressive balancing act of paying dividends and buying shares. Over the past two years, it bought back £3.7m worth of shares while keeping its dividend yield above average.

This looks likely to continue for the immediate future, so I suspect the share price will rise above £1 before Christmas.

Risks

There are currently two key events that could derail Lloyds’ progress. If the Autumn Budget introduces any unexpected developments, the impact on the bank could be negative. The Chancellor’s reportedly ruled out a windfall tax on banks but this isn’t guaranteed.

The second is the ongoing probe into car finance mis-selling. Despite the Supreme Court ruling in favour of banks, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is still consulting on a redress scheme. It recently extended the deadline for consultation to 12 December 2025, with affected customers expected to receive an average of £700 per claim.

My opinion

It’s a tough call. While I expect Lloyds will crack £1, I’m not sure it’ll hold the level for long. Investors hoping to buy at a lower level than today might get that chance next year. And it’s not alone – other UK finance stocks may follow a similar pattern.

But I don’t believe chasing price dips is a good investment strategy. From a long-term perspective, Lloyds remains a top UK stock to consider for any type of portfolio. While there are some localised economic risks, it benefits from income, growth and defensive qualities. 

For me, that’s a triple-whammy that’s hard to ignore.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

Harvard trained doctor issues alert to anyone who drinks tea

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A Harvard-trained gastroenterologist has urged people to look over their tea drinking habits, as it could have damaging effects on your gut and liver.

Brits are known for loving their tea, as we consume over 100 million cups of tea daily, which adds up to approximately 36 billion cups annually.

According to the UK Tea & Infusions Association (UKTIA), 84% of the UK population drinks tea every day. But have you ever thought about how this affects your body?

Harvard trained gastroenterologist Dr Saurabh Sethi has now taken to his Instagram account to urge his 1.3 million followers to look over their tea drinking habits, to make sure it’s not damaging their health.

“I’m a board certified gastroenterologist and here are [the] seven worst tea habits wrecking your gut + liver,” he wrote at the start of the post.

1. Drinking tea on empty stomach

For his first point, Dr Sethi urged people not to have a cup of tea on an empty stomach, but to make sure to eat something before or while enjoying your cuppa.

He went on to explain that drinking tea on an empty stomach will irritate the stomach lining due to its acidity and compounds like caffeine and tannins

This can later lead to acid reflux, nausea, and general discomfort. It can also cause dehydration because tea is a diuretic and may interfere with iron absorption, particularly for those with anemia.

2. Sweetened teas

Next up, Dr Sethi went on to urge people to limit the amount of iced teas or milk teas they drink, due to the high sugar contents.

He told his followers: “Iced teas or milk teas can pack 30 – 40 grams of sugar.”

This means that drinking these kinds of sugary teas on a regular basis can increase the risk of someone getting conditions like non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, or diabetes.

3. ‘Detox’ or Slimming teas

For his third point, Dr Sethi revealed that detox teas, or ‘slimming’ teas might not be as good as they are advertised. While they might work for you, the doctor went on to reveal that the ‘slimming’ ingredient in these teas usually is some sort of laxatives.

Drinking these tea ‘laxatives’ too often can lead to overall dehydration, electrolyte imbalance, as well as gut damage.

Because of this, it’s important to never drink more than is adviced, and you should also look up the NHS’ guidelines on laxatives in order to prevent any lasting damages in your body.

4. Overdoing green tea extracts

While drinking green tea is generally known to be a better and healthier alternative compared to your normal black tea, it’s also important not to overdo it.

If you don’t like the taste of green tea, then green tea supplements have become a popular way to still get the benefits of the green tea, such as the antioxidants and polyphenols, without having to drink it.

However, Dr Sethi went on to warn people not to rely on these supplements too much, as they have been linked to a rare, ‘but real’ liver toxicity.

5. Drinking too hot tea

While most of us will pour the boiling water directly from the kettle onto the teabag in our cup, Dr Sethi has urged tea drinkers to wait to drink it until the water has gotten below 65C.

He went on to explain that drinking tea that’s warmer than 65C on a regular basis has been proven to increase the risk of esophageal cancer.

A Chinese study that was published in 2020 showed that regularly drinking tea that was warmer than 65C was significantly linked to Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, a type of cancer that starts in the thin, flat squamous cells lining the esophagus, the tube that connects the throat and stomach

6. Drinking caffinated teas late at night

While different types of tea contains significantly less amounts of caffeine compared to coffee, it’s still important to acknowledge that it’s there.

Because of this, Dr Sethi urged tea drinkers to avoid drinking chai and green teas late at night. He went on to explain that caffeine lingers in our bodies, which can lead to our sleep getting disrupted.

This can later lead to your body not being able to repair itself as well during the night, such as your liver or gut.

7. Drinking too much boba or bubble teas

Finally, Dr Sethi went on to urge people to limit the amount of boba teas or bubble teas they drink due to the amount of sugar and ‘hidden calories’ that they contain.

He went on to explain that the amount of sugar in these drinks, mixed with the starchy boba pearls, which are made from tapioca, lead to hidden calories that you might not be aware that you’re drinking.

This later can lead to insulin resistance and non-alcholoic fatty liver disease. To prevent this, it’s important to look over your life and making sure you’re living an overall healthy lifestyle and eating a healthy diet.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Extensive search off Ireland’s coast for missing Navy crew member ends | World News

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An extensive multi-agency search off Ireland’s coast for a missing Navy crew member has ended without success, the Ministry of Defence has said.

The Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA) Tidesurge crew member was last seen at about 10.30pm on Friday.

The search has been taking place in the sea off the northwest coast between Tory Island, Co Donegal, and Eagle Island, Co Mayo.

Defence Secretary John Healey said: “After an extensive search, it is with deep sadness that we confirm the missing crew member of RFA Tidesurge has not been found.

“My thoughts are with their family during this tragic time, as well as their fellow crew members.

“I am hugely grateful to the Irish authorities, the RNLI, Royal Air Force and Royal Navy who have responded rapidly to this incident and have worked tirelessly on the search.”

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.

Please refresh the page for the latest version.

You can receive breaking news alerts on a smartphone or tablet via the Sky News app. You can also follow us on WhatsApp and subscribe to our YouTube channel to keep up with the latest news.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

Peru’s Indigenous guards battle coca growers in the Amazon : NPR

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Members of the Kakataibo Indigenous Guard who patrol the Peruvian Amazon, watching for coca crops being planted in the rainforest — a source of deforestation, violence, and bloodshed on their land.

Simeon Tegel for NPR


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Simeon Tegel for NPR

UCAYALI, Peru — As they patrol their ancestral territory deep in the Amazon, some of the members of the Kakataibo Indigenous Guard carry spears.

Others wield machetes. Several have traditional bows and arrows and one has an ancient shotgun slung over his shoulder.

Threading their way along overgrown paths and wading through rivers, the mission of this tightly-knit group of Indigenous villagers is deadly serious — to find illicit plantations of coca, the key ingredient in cocaine, on tribal land.

“We don’t want it here,” says one, who asks to go unnamed for fear of reprisals from the drug traffickers. “Coca just brings trouble. It means death, for us and the forest.”

Cultivation of the Andean crop is booming here in Peru — the world’s second-largest producer of cocaine.

An increasing amount is now being grown in the Peruvian Amazon. It’s a vast and often lawless frontier zone, larger than Texas. The region is also home to some of the last Indigenous hunter-gatherers on Earth, who still live cut off from the outside world.

The number of hectares of coca in the South American nation rose from nearly 43,000 (106,255 acres) in 2013 to nearly 90,000 (more than 222,000 acres) in 2024. The country now produces an estimated 850 tons of cocaine a year, production fueled by the global demand for the drug, including in the world’s largest consumer market, the United States.

The local Indigenous Police watch over a once-busy clandestine airstrip, its surface scarred with deep holes dug by the Indigenous Ashaninka community to stop traffickers who once flew two to three cocaine-loaded planes a week to Bolivia.

Members of the local Indigenous police inspect a clandestine airstrip rendered unusable after the Indigenous Ashaninka community dug large holes to stop drug traffickers from flying light aircraft loaded with cocaine to Bolivia.

Simeon Tegel/NPR


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Here in the lowland region of Ucayali, there are an estimated 12,000 hectares (nearly 30,000 acres) of coca as well as dozens of clandestine landing strips, including on titled Indigenous land and even within reserves for some of those extremely vulnerable isolated tribes.

With the coca comes corruption, deforestation and bloodshed.

In recent years, around 20 Indigenous leaders have been murdered in Peru for opposing the drug traffickers and illegal loggers who frequently work hand in hand with them. Six of them were Kakataibo, a small ethnic group whose several thousand members are spread out across the central Peruvian Amazon.

The jungle heat actually results in a weaker, lower quality product than coca grown in the mountains. But it is also easier to smuggle the cocaine over Peru’s long jungle border with Brazil and Bolivia than transport it over the Andes to Peru’s Pacific ports and main international airport in Lima.

Dirandro, Peru’s specialist counternarcotics police, are struggling to keep up. Eradicating crops is like playing whack-a-mole in this sprawling jungle territory.

Dirandro Commander David Mori Trigoso says his men work valiantly in difficult circumstances as he shows a cocaine press, used to make 1 kilogram (2.2 pound) bricks of the hard drug, seized in a recent operation. “We’re always pursuing the narcos but they also keep evolving,” he adds.

Eventually, after nearly two hours of bushwhacking, the Indigenous Guard comes to a series of verdant cliffs rising spectacularly out of the rainforest.

This remote spot is not just where the Andes meets the Amazon but also the start of a government reserve for the last Kakataibo families still living in what anthropologists call “voluntary isolation.”

Segundo Pino, the leader of the Kakataibo Indigenous Guard, regulary receives death threats from drug traffickers.

Simeon Tegel/NPR


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Simeon Tegel/NPR

They prefer that term over “uncontacted.” These Indigenous communities have consciously chosen to retreat deeper into the jungle because of past traumatic encounters with outsiders — including disease, massacres and enslavement.

The Indigenous Guard launch a drone and within three minutes it has geolocated two separate fields of coca inside the reserve. They will now report this to the authorities.

One woman tells NPR that the Kakataibo inside the reserve, who may be her distant relatives, are terrified by the drug traffickers. “They’re in their habitat but they feel invaded,” she says. “So, we have to always protect them.”

The danger is all-too real. Segundo Pino, the leader of the Kakataibo Indigenous Guard, points out a recent death threat he has received on his cellphone. In misspelt Spanish brimming with epithets, it promises that Pino and other Kakataibo leaders are going to “fall one by one” and that “blood will be spilled.”

“How do we defend ourselves?” Pino asks. “We’ve lost faith in our authorities. That’s why we’ve set up the Indigenous Guard. We must defend ourselves. We have no choice.”



This story originally appeared on NPR

Best TV Quotes From All’s Fair, Bob’s Burgers, Ghosts And More Shows

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Thanksgiving is still a few weeks away, but we’re already feasting over here. What’s the on the menu, you ask? Why, only the best bits of TV dialogue in our Quotes of the Week round-up, of course.

This week, we’re serving up an eclectic mix of moments, including uninformed support for a disgraced celebrity on “Ghosts,” a perfectly deadpan delivery on “Grey’s Anatomy” and an expectedly savage one-liner from “All’s Fair.”

Reality shows also gave us plenty of memorable quotes this week, including an awkward exchange between exes on “The Amazing Race,” the introduction of a “hot Grim Reaper” on “Survivor” and one of the most piercing guilt trips we’ve heard in a minute on Netflix’s “Squid Game: The Challenge.”

And let’s not forget our animated favorites, with both “Bob’s Burgers” and “The Simpsons” making our list this week. 

Scroll through the list below to see all of our picks for the week, then hit the comments and tell us if we missed any of your favorites. (With contributions from Nick Caruso, Rebecca Luther and Dave Nemetz)

9-1-1

“Who had a French tip?”

Context is key here: Buck (Oliver Stark) is literally holding up a severed finger — with a French tip, of course — after the 118 responded to a family reunion in which everyone lost their digits in a tug of war gone wrong

ALL’S FAIR

“Hey, gals! Boy, do I love coming here, walking down that hallway shaped like a clown cervix.”

In an otherwise extremely heavy episode, you can at least count on Carrington (Sarah Paulson) for a little comic relief

THE AMAZING RACE

“I’m running with the love of my life and the best team standing next to us, too, so…”

“I was the love of her life.”

“Oh, shut the hell up!”

Taylor Hale’s ex Joseph Abdin cracks a joke, knowing darn well that Taylor was referring to her actual boyfriend Kyland Young

BOB’S BURGERS

“Hopefully Penelope and Zeke hit it off, and then he asks her to the dance, or she asks him to the dance, or they ask each other at the exact same time.”

“That’s how Simon and Garfunkel got together, and now they’ve been married 40 wonderful years.”

Sometimes we wonder if the Belcher family even listens to what Gene (Eugene Mirman) is saying half the time

GHOSTS

“Trevor says it has over 500 horses in it. My only question is, how do they crush the bones into such perfectly rounded curves?” 

Hetty (Rebecca Wisocky) doesn’t quite understand the science behind Trevor’s (Asher Grodman) new Porsche

GHOSTS (Bonus Quote!)

“No, I don’t want to be the annoying, nudgy dad. I want to be the cool ghost dad. By the way, ‘Ghost Dad’? Underrated Bill Cosby movie. If only he were here to help guide me. America’s dad, am I right?” 

“Great actor. Better man.” 

Apparently, not all news reaches the ghost community, as evidenced by Pete (Richie Moriarty) and Trevor’s (Asher Grodman) admiration of the “Cosby Show” star

GREY’S ANATOMY

“You called the chief of cardiothoracic surgery?”

“He’s a friend.”

With all respect to Jo (Camilla Luddington) in her time of crisis, Link’s (Chris Carmack) deadpan delivery here was really funny

NCIS

“And who are they? The new Tony and Ziva?”

“I’ve been here for nine years!”

Former NCIS team member Vera (Roma Maffia) sees something familiar in Torres (Wilmer Valderrama) and Jessica, but Torres doesn’t appreciate it

THE SIMPSONS

“This place is sweet! I wouldn’t mind being hunted for sport here.”

This endorsement means even more when you remember that Bart (Nancy Cartwright) has literally been hunted for sport on this show before

SQUID GAME: THE CHALLENGE

“I’m so sorry.” 

“You can tell that to my son.” 

Player 327 (Kate) lays on a thick guilt trip after Player 72 (Perla) sends her back to the start of Slides and Ladders in Episode 7

ST. DENIS MEDICAL

“I’m telling you, it was a goof, OK? I was trying to make an A.I. image of [Serena’s] baby with Tim.”

“Where’d you even get my photo?”

“It looks like they’re all from today!”

“Ugh, they’re all blurry. Ew, how old is your phone?”

Everyone else is horrified that Ron (David Alan Grier) seems to have covertly taken photos of Serena for his personal use; nurse Brandon (Dan Leahy) is horrified at Ron’s outdated technology

SURVIVOR

“I’m coming over like the grim reaper, but like, a hot grim reaper, you know?” 

Souped-up with a shiny new advantage and immunity, Savannah Louie aims to cause chaos at Tribal Council





This story originally appeared on TVLine

NYC Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani calls for Starbucks boycott as union strikes

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Coffee drinkers of the world, unite?

New York City’s socialist Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani is urging his followers to boycott Starbucks as union workers go on strike across the country.

The call could show how Mamdani – a pro-union voice who has promised New Yorkers free buses, a rent freeze and free child care – plans to use his newfound political influence, Business Insider noted.

New York City’s socialist Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani is urging his followers to boycott Starbucks. Getty Images

“Starbucks workers across the country are on an Unfair Labor Practices strike, fighting for a fair contract,” Mamdani wrote in a Thursday night post on X to his 1.1 million followers. “While workers are on strike, I won’t be buying any Starbucks, and I’m asking you to join us.

“Together, we can send a powerful message: No contract, no coffee.”

“New Yorkers can absolutely expect the Mayor-elect to stand unequivocally with labor,” said transition spokesperson Dora Pekec. 

Starbucks did not immediately respond to The Post’s requests for comment.

Starbucks workers in more than 25 US cities went on strike Thursday during “Red Cup Day,” when employees hand out free holiday-themed cups to customers. It’s typically a major sales day for the java giant every year.

Starbucks said about 99.9% of its stores remained open.

Starbucks Workers United, which represents about 9,000 of the chain’s 200,000-plus baristas, has accused Starbucks of being unwilling to negotiate. The union warned the strikes could expand if there is no progress in reaching a fair contract.

The company has accused the union of putting forth unreasonable contract proposals, arguing it already offers “the best job in retail” with an average pay of $19 an hour – a salary worth more than $30 an hour when benefits are included, Starbucks claims.

The current strike is the fourth such action the union has organized against Starbucks since 2023, and the third since Brian Niccol took over the chain in 2024.

Starbucks workers in more than 25 US cities went on strike Thursday during “Red Cup Day.” Michael Nigro

Talks seemed promising last February, but they quickly broke down amid mutual recriminations just a few months later.

Workers United said it has filed more than 1,000 charges against Starbucks for alleged unfair labor practices to the National Labor Relations Board.

The labor board itself has accused Starbucks of anti-union tactics, like closing stores and firing workers who join strikes. The company has denied those claims.

Thursday was not the first time union workers have targeted “Red Cup Day” during contract negotiations. 

Starbucks Workers United has accused Starbucks of being unwilling to negotiate. Michael Nigro

Last year, workers went on strike during the holiday-themed event and caused about 60 stores to temporarily close, the company said.

Tensions have bubbled up as workers have pushed back on some of Niccol’s turnaround efforts.

Soon after he took the helm, he announced plans to buy 200,000 Sharpies and have workers doodle friendly messages on coffee cups. 

But workers lambasted the doodle policy, claiming it takes up too much time and can be misinterpreted by customers as flirting.

Starbucks hands out free holiday-themed cups on Red Cup Day. Starbucks

Starbucks has also faced backlash after it recently closed hundreds of stores around the country, including 59 unionized locations, on a few days’ notice.

The closures targeted dozens of New York City Starbucks, sparking chaos for employees, city officials and landlords.




This story originally appeared on NYPost

Centrist Democrats must beat the socialists at their own game

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Every child knows the fable of the scorpion who swears not to sting the frog who ferries him across a river — but unsheathes his poison at the end of the journey.

 “I thought you promised not to sting me!” the incredulous frog exclaims as he perishes. 

 “Well, you knew I was a scorpion,” the other responds.

Sen. Chuck Schumer seems unaware of the tale — and its lesson.  

Leftist revolutions tend to eat their own: The French Revolution’s Maximilien Robespierre met the Jacobins’ guillotine, and Josef Stalin murdered the onetime allies who tried to moderate his fervor. 

Yet Schumer prostrated himself to the far left’s ill-conceived government shutdown this fall. 

After resoundingly losing the White House, the House and the Senate in 2024, there is no world in which the Democrats could have won the shutdown battle and taken the reins in health-care policy.

It was dumb politics, a tantrum act of narcissism and unreality. 

Do the leftists take responsibility? No.

Instead they want to send Schumer to the political guillotine. How Jacobian.

Rather than alter their failed “Oppose Trump at All Costs” strategy, the progressive socialists are doubling down.

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) seeks to Mamdanify the US Senate by boosting far-left candidates’ primary challenges in Maine, Michigan, Minnesota and elsewhere.  

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-Bx-Queens) says the “Old Guard” must give way to the socialists and cultural revolutionaries.  

And while a few liberal writers like Ezra Klein, worrying of a party-ending civil war, say the Democrats need to show some ideological tolerance, Schumer’s public flogging proves that’s a distant pipe dream.

Democratic moderates find themselves wilting on the vine. 

They are meek. They have no clear agenda.

They lack charisma and influencer savvy, living in fear of the flying monkeys of the online leftist enforcers. 

Yet ironically, the moderates’ way forward lies in copying some of the progressive socialists’ own tactics. 

For decades, leftists have formed new parties as a means of pushing the Democrats toward their policy preferences.

Minnesota’s Farmer-Labor Party pulled the state Democratic Party far to the left in the mid-1900s — so much so that the two have now merged. 

New York’s Working Families Party, formed in 1998, has used electoral fusion laws as leverage to win progressive health-care and criminal-justice battles.

Today’s Democratic Socialists of America essentially function as a political party, campaigning for members like Zohran Mamdani and AOC in Democratic primaries.   

Centrists have occasionally attempted something similar.

In the 1990s, Will Marshall and Al From led the then-nascent Democratic Leadership Council’s attempts to shift the party’s policies away from the left — but the group never sufficiently scaled a grass-roots effort to elect moderate candidates.

That is what moderates must now do: organize their own party around the commonsense center where most voters reside.

Call it the Democratic Populists or the Democratic Builders’ Party. 

Only 9% of voters classify themselves as progressive, according to Gallup. 

By contrast, independents alone make up 43% of electorate — and if you couple them with Democratic moderates, the number grows higher.  

An established centrist wing has far more potential electoral leverage than the progressive socialists do.

Such a party would lay out a platform that explicitly occupies the sensible middle lane.  

It could champion a Marshall Plan to train American workers for the AI revolution, rather than relying on imported H1-B visa holders.

It would pledge to fix broken public schools and an ideologically imbalanced university system that’s a captive of foreign-funded anti-Western ideology. 

It would attack the affordability crisis the only way possible: by rejecting the narcotic of government control and handouts while increasing productivity and the supply of goods and services.

It would embrace renewable energy along with fossil fuels and nuclear power to build an energy future for the AI revolution. 

It would support equal opportunity, not equal outcomes, and would back democracy and pluralism in the Mideast rather than movements aiming to destroy those ideas. 

It would embrace bipartisanship, seeking to work with the president — even a Republican president — when possible, to achieve its goals.    

It would explicitly reject identity grievance and the cultural revolution of the progressive socialists.

Forming this new party offshoot would do Bill Clinton one better — it’s the ultimate Sister Souljah move, a challenge that could counter the admitted online smarts of the influencer left.

The Champagne Socialists have created a toxic image for the Democratic Party: 70% of the American electorate thinks we’re “out of touch” with their concerns. 

Moderates can keep on swimming with a scorpion on their shoulders — or they can grow a spine and push him off their backs.

Julian Epstein is the former chief counsel for the House Judiciary Democrats and the former staff director of the House Oversight Committee.  



This story originally appeared on NYPost

McKinsey studied the most successful Fortune 500 CEOs and found they share one similar trait

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The modern leader faces a leadership environment that is rapidly growing in complexity, grappling with roughly twice as many issues on a CEO’s desk as just five to seven years ago. This pressure has driven senior partners Kurt Strovink and Carolyn Dewar, co-leaders of McKinsey & Company’s CEO Practice—the firm’s top “CEO whisperers”—to empirically study the world’s top 200 corporate chiefs.

Their new book, A CEO for All Seasons, breaks down the mindsets and methods required to succeed in a role that 68% of incumbent CEOs admitted they felt “ill-prepared” for when they stepped into the shoes. While the research conducted by Strovink, Dewar, and co-authors Scott Keller and Vikram Malhotra found that these elite performers possess unique habits for challenging complacency, fostering brutal candor, and staying humble enough to keep learning.

The high-performing leaders studied in the book distinguish themselves through a pervasive “curiosity and learning mindset,” which came through in “almost every interview,” Dewar said in an interview with Fortune.

The top leaders are the first to admit they don’t know everything, Strovink told Fortune. “It wasn’t that they were superhuman. It’s that they learned faster, they were more adaptable and they had structures … institutionalized methods for being able to neutralize their excesses and capitalize on their strength and edge.”

One of the most striking mandates for high-performance culture came from JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon. As Strovink related it, Dimon tells his teams: “don’t bring your best self, bring your worst self—put the problems on the table.”

Dewar added that this isn’t meant to encourage bad behavior, but rather organizational candor. It means being “willing to share when things aren’t going well … so we can fix it.”

Strovink added that this level of discomfort is necessary, as great leaders must create conditions for “edge thinking, for candor and for confidence building over time … they put it in the room, they put it on the table and they create, and they do it in their own authentic styles.” Strovink said that good leaders have to find a way to have tough conversations that maybe wouldn’t happen under another leader, “but not have those be scarring, brutalizing experiences.”

The challenges of modern leadership

Strovink explained that advising CEOs, while a core of McKinsey’s mission stretching back nearly 100 years, has reached a new level under the CEO Practice, founded several years ago. This was partly a reflection “that the role of the CEO is becoming more and more important.” We live in an era, Strovink added, “where people are pulling down leadership and saying it’s a bad thing and nobody wants to be led. But the reality is if you’re led by an enlightened leader who’s doing it well, it’s actually a glorious thing that’s so relevant in this generation, maybe even more important than ever.”

Dewar turned to hard data, arguing that the book and the practice are both vital now because it’s frankly challenging to be a CEO. She alluded to the reporting (some of it in the pages of Fortune) about the ever-shortening tenure of the CEO, “but it turns out it’s actually quite bifurcated.” She explained that 30% of CEOs don’t make it past the first three years, and the odds of a long tenure rise significantly once that threshold is passed. She noted that private equity looks closely at this, talking about the cost of churn for a CEO. “We don’t want people churning.” Dewar cited estimates that in the S&P 500, $1 trillion in value is destroyed each year due to failed CEO transitions.

Strovink added that their research really has put a number on good leadership. The top quintile CEOs that we’ve studied, over time, create disproportionate value for their companies, for economies as a whole, for the world,” he argued, adding that McKinsey estimates that the top quintile generates 30x the economic profit of the next three quintiles combined. Leadership—and CEO talent—is “unevenly distributed,” he said.

Jim Rossman of Barclays, global head of shareholder advisory, has been tracking hedge-fund activist campaigns against publicly traded companies for decades, including CEO churn. He found in early October that CEO turnover resulting from activist campaigns was set to hit a record in 2025, exceeding the 2024 record. He told Fortune in an interview that this was making the CEO role more tenuous than ever before. “It feels like what activists have done is basically [to hold] public companies to the standards of private equity,” he said, and they view the CEO “more as an operator, not somebody who’s risen through the ranks.”

Shareholder activists have successfully enforced the strict standards of private equity ownership onto public companies, according to Rossman, holding them to quarterly performance measures focused relentlessly on maximizing efficiency and value. This contrasts sharply with the historical view of a CEO as a “local hero” or “revered figure.” Activists realized they didn’t need to take a company private the way a private-equity firm would to enforce this view, Rossman said; they could simply buy a stake and lobby the board, making the organization instantly subject to immense external pressure. “I think the CEO [churn] is directly linked to the ongoing infiltration of the private equity model in the public companies,” Rossman added.

Rossman noted that this operational focus is accelerated by technology, which provides instant information on a company’s performance relative to peers, and by the consolidation of ownership among index funds, making it easier for activists to organize support among the top ten shareholders. Consequently, new boards—themselves adopting a more private-equity-like mentality—are highly brand-conscious and quick to replace underperforming executives.

Dewar agreed with this line of thinking, saying, “if you think about how much of the economy is shifting to private equity and privately held companies, their churn rate is much higher.” She recently shared an anecdote about talking to a board member at a private equity firm, who said that 71% churn was average for them in terms of leadership turnover. This central question is why she is so passionate about leading the CEO Practice, she added: “how do we actually serve CEOs and boards and organizations to help each of those stages go well?”

Power of candor and discomfort

To survive in this high-stakes environment, McKinsey’s research found that top CEOs are adaptable, not necessarily ruthless. They succeed by embracing a “curiosity and learning mindset” and structuring discomfort into their operations.

Strovink and Dewar referred again to JPMorgan’s Dimon, who has a crucial technique for combating complacency in this relentless environment. The investment bank chief believes that every large organization has a tendency to “rest,” Strovink noted, and this requires the CEO to constantly be “catalyzing it and pushing it.” The “sociology of large organizations” means things turn incremental if a leader is complacent, he added.

This proactive discomfort is the necessary internal counterbalance to the external pressure. Michael Dell exemplifies it, Dewar noted, who fought complacency by forcing his team to imagine an attacker who understood their customers better, encouraging his company to “disrupt ourselves.” (She also noted that Dell has been disrupting himself since becoming a founder CEO at age 19.)

Dewar recalled how Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella told her the CEO Practice’s previous book, CEO Excellence, about the loneliness of the job, stemming from an “information asymmetry problem” in which he literally cannot talk to many of his colleagues about what he knows. They can’t afford to realize it. “No one else in your organization or above you, like your board or your investors, see all the pieces you see.” She said she thinks it’s vital for CEOs to have some trusted advisors, “a kitchen cabinet” of sorts.

Ultimately, the book suggests that the most successful leaders in this highly accelerated, private-equity-influenced era are those who can navigate the core duality of the role: making bold, confident decisions with incomplete information while sustaining the humility and constant learning required to meet relentless performance demands.

The authors emphasize that the goal of the book is to trace the “development of leaders through time,” including the fourth season, which sets up the next generation. Brad Smith, the former CEO of Intuit, was cited as an extraordinary example of legacy building, having had succession discussions with his board 44 times over 11 years—every single quarter. Smith is “really proud of the fact that many people who worked with him went on to be CEOs other places,” Dewar said, calling him a “sort of engine of leadership development. And I think that’s really remarkable as a leader, as part of his legacy.”

Strovink said he was particularly surprised by one, maybe counterintuitive finding: at least for the population of 200 leaders profiled in the book, the authors did not find the famous “sophomore slump” in leadership. “At least for this group, they didn’t have a sophomore slump. They were consistently getting better over time.”



This story originally appeared on Fortune

Kim Kardashian’s Sheer Hot Pink Dress Is One for the Books

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In true Kim Kardashian style, the reality TV star recently turned a mundane moment into a full-on fashion statement. The mom of four visited the Christ the Redeemer statue in Brazil in full glam. Within moments, Kardashian, in a hot pink sheer dress, was one of the most searched topics.

Kim Kardashian visits Christ the Redeemer statue in sheer hot pink dress

Kim Kardashian donned a hot pink sheer dress with a deep neckline as she stepped out in Brazil. She shared the photos via Instagram, where she was glowing under the purple lights leading up to the statue.

For her hairstyle, she chose a sleek updo with soft-glam makeup. Channelling her inner Kim K energy, she also shared a throwback photo from her first visit in 2013. Ironically, wearing the same color as this year, pink.

With the bar exam setback, a new season of her reality TV show coming up, and new Kardashian drama unfolding, this outing seems to be one of impeccable timing wrapped in great high fashion.



This story originally appeared on Realitytea

This growth stock down 50% reminds me of Netflix in 2009

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Many growth stocks have done really well in my portfolio in 2025, including Rolls-Royce, Uber, Cloudflare, Roblox, and Crowdstrike.

However, the most disappointing by far has been Duolingo (NASDAQ:DUOL). Since I invested, my total paper loss is now around 50%. Ouch!

Sticky platforms

Whenever a stock collapses like this, it’s important to revisit the original investment thesis. If this is broken, it’s better to face up to reality because the stock may keep falling and never recover.

When I first explored Duolingo, I was sceptical the language learning app had any durable competitive advantage (moat). Yet it quickly reminded me of Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX). Both are scalable, global consumer platforms monetised by subscriptions (mainly) and adverts.

As with Duolingo today, it wasn’t obvious back in 2009 that Netflix had a durable moat. Its streaming model could easily be replicated, and indeed has been since by the likes of Amazon, Apple, Disney, Paramount, and ITV. Ever more competition is a risk to growth.

Yet Netflix has endured because of its brand power, popular shows, and sophisticated AI/algorithms used to recommend content.

Likewise, Duolingo has a strong brand, highly engaged user base, and strong AI credentials. Its Birdbrain AI system processes over 1.25bn daily exercises, helping feed machine-learning models that personalise users’ learning experiences.

Crucially, both also have distinct corporate cultures focused on long-term value creation over short-term profits.

Our long-term goals remain unchanged: To be a great Internet movie service…and to grow subscribers and earnings every year while
continuing to invest in streaming
.

Netflix CEO Reed Hastings, 2009 annual report.

One of our five operating principles is ‘take the long view’. The opportunity ahead of us is to teach billions of people, and while we’ve made incredible progress, we know we’re early in our journey.

Duolingo CEO Luis von Ahn, 2025.

Broken thesis?

Looking at Duolingo’s Q3 results, I see no evidence the growth story’s unravelling. Daily active users hit a record 50.5m while monthly users topped 135m.

Revenue jumped 41% year on year to $271.7m and adjusted EBITDA surged 68% to $80m.

Source: Duolingo (Note: net income was inflated by a one-off tax benefit).

Looking ahead though, management will shift focus from increasing paid subscribers (monetisation) to improving teaching quality to drive long-term user growth. And this risks some margin pressure and, possibly, lower-than-expected bookings.

Netflix in 2009 Duolingo in 2025
Market-cap $3.1bn $8.9bn
Revenue $1.7bn $1bn (forecast)
Net profit $116m $245m (forecast, normalised)
Total subscribers 12.3m 11.5m (as of Q3)

Being realistic

Now to be clear, I’m not saying Duolingo will become a global juggernaut worth $480bn like Netflix. The streaming leader’s shares are up roughly 14,000% since 2009, and such returns are exceptionally rare. Hence why I said it only reminds me of a young Netflix.

Also, I don’t want to downplay AI threats or live translation from Google and Meta glasses. Although it’s worth remembering that people use Duolingo regularly to learn a second language, not translate conversations.

Meanwhile, ChatGPT has no structured curriculum and/or gamified features like streaks to keep users engaged.

Of Duolingo’s 135m users, only 9% (11.5m) today are paid subscribers. Considering there are 1.5bn people learning a foreign language, the market opportunity remains massive, especially in Asia. And this excludes maths, music, chess and other future subjects.

With the stock trading at a far cheaper valuation than six months ago, I think it’s worth assessing. I think the crashing share price doesn’t reflect the actual strength of the underlying business.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool