Tuesday, November 25, 2025

 
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Beloved steakhouse chain is making a comeback

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Steakhouse chain Sizzler is making a comeback with a new, refreshed look, even as the quick-service restaurant sector continues to face a challenging environment that has prompted countless closures. 

Creative agency Tavern, tasked with helping the brand reinvent itself, said the steakhouse had been a pop culture icon in the 1980s and 1990s on the West Coast, but “over the years the brand faced an identity crisis and lost its way.”

Today, the agency said, “most Californians don’t even know where the nearest Sizzler is (if they even know the brand is still in business).”

The company is trying to change that, announcing its plans to refresh the brand last year.

The company said in a 2024 press release that it’s tapping “into the sentimental value associated with the brand” and plans to “compete with fast-food giants like McDonald’s and offer a more appealing alternative for parents seeking a dining experience that evokes comfort and familiarity.”

Chief Growth Officer Robert Clark told QSR last month that the company is seeing sales in the updated restaurants lift 47%.

One of them saw sales lift 100%.

Steakhouse chain Sizzler is making a comeback with a new, refreshed look. AFP via Getty Images

The company currently has 80 stores and has completed nine renovations in the last two years.

The company is also looking to make a plan for franchise owners to adopt, and most of them are agreeing to it, according to the outlet.

In its heyday, Sizzler operated more than 700 restaurants nationwide, according to several reports. 

The company said in a 2024 press release that it plans to “compete with fast-food giants like McDonald’s and offer a more appealing alternative for parents seeking a dining experience that evokes comfort and familiarity.” Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Diners at a newly remodeled Sizzler restaurant. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Fast-food companies are already facing margin pressures from supply-chain disruptions and rising labor costs, while industry-wide traffic remains subdued.

Lower foot traffic has forced many restaurants to roll out more promotions and even pursue rebranding efforts to attract their core customers, who have been pulling back on discretionary spending.

Sasha Shennikov, vice president of marketing, told QSR the brand is popping up “all over” Los Angeles with radio ads and billboard space. 

The company currently has 80 stores and has completed nine renovations in the last two years. Adriana – stock.adobe.com

Tavern is focusing on the brand’s history and modernizing its assets. 

“Instead of throwing away decades of heritage in the logo, we built upon it by stripping it back, slanting it and stamping it into place as a literal cattle brand,” Tavern previously wrote. 

It used a rich maroon color as the hero of the identity’s palette and also reused the “ZZ” design from the logo (and the word “sizzle”) as fun, secondary design elements that make the brand’s tone more playful and distinctive.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Snap out of your crisis of confidence, America — your country depends on it

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Our crisis of collective self-doubt has reached unprecedented levels.

The number of Democrats who declared themselves “extremely” or “very” proud to be American was a whopping 88% in 2004, even as the Iraq War was becoming more divisive.

It was 85% as recently as 2013. By 2022, the number had dropped to just 65%.

Remarkably, that figure fell to just 36% this year, the sort of rapid drop that might otherwise make a pollster doubt her results.

But the numbers are real, and they point to something darker. 

Shadi Hamid argues America must believe in its own exceptionalism — which Democrats and other liberals have become loath to do. Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

That a growing number of Americans are losing faith in both America as a reality and as an idea presents an unusually thorny problem for American power. It is difficult to wield power confidently if there is little confidence to begin with.

If you’re not proud to be American, then you’re more likely to think other cultures, peoples and nations are superior and it may very well be better to hand off global responsibilities to them.

If America is irredeemable, the real question isn’t how to wield power more effectively but rather whether to wield it at all. 

This tendency towards self-contempt is disproportionately concentrated among people of privilege, particularly left-leaning elites, young upwardly mobile progressives and those who helm mainstream institutions more broadly.

Waiting a generation is unlikely to help much. The younger you go, the lower the pride — only 24% of Gen Z Democrats say they’re extremely or very proud to be American.

This is not to exempt the United States from well-deserved criticism for a long list of destructive interventions abroad and its very real disappointments at home. Being able to look inward and acknowledge our own flaws is vital. In fact, one might argue self-criticism is essential to a healthy patriotism, to prevent it from devolving into jingoism or xenophobia.

Democracy itself encourages self-doubt. It fosters an environment of vigorous debate, and this in turn means it’s possible to reckon with the past without apology.

But something has changed. Until recently, such reckonings with the sins of the past could coexist comfortably with a hard-won patriotism.

As James Baldwin so eloquently put it, “I love America more than any other country in this world, and, exactly for this reason, I insist on the right to criticize her perpetually.”

In other words, his disappointment in America was a product of his love for it. Because he loved it so much, he couldn’t help but be let down.

Today, however, the necessary and difficult act of self-love despite great faults has grown increasingly rare.

Most Americans will be familiar with the term “xenophobia,” a particularly resonant word for a country of immigrants. Xenophobia is the hatred or fear of strangers and foreigners (or those who appear foreign).

The opposite of xenophobia, “oikophobia,” is likely a new word for many readers. Oikophobia is “the fear or hatred of home or one’s own society,” signifying a dislike or discomfort with the familiar.

Under the sway of oikophobia, one’s own home becomes the Other. Where home and “us” are devalued, other cultures and systems of government are idealized and even fetishized as superior. The more exotic, the better.

In this pendulum of sentiment between xenophobia and oikophobia, citizens — and sometimes even the same citizens — vacillate between dislike of “them” and dislike of “us.” Neither of these modes is particularly healthy.

Coined in 1993 by the British philosopher Roger Scruton, oikophobia is a relatively recent object of study.

In one of the few extensive treatments of the concept, the Swedish author Benedict Beckeld emphasizes the role of both evil and exceptionalism. For the oikophobe, he writes, “Western civilization has been uniquely evil in its pursuit of colonization and slavery, with the implication that other civilizations have not engaged in such things.”

As James Baldwin so eloquently put it, “I love America more than any other country in this world, and, exactly for this reason, I insist on the right to criticize her perpetually.” AP

The desire to recast America’s founding as inextricably linked to the country’s most inhumane moments — rather than its most humane — is one manifestation of the phenomenon.

But the United States is not particularly unique in this regard. The founding of any country includes unforgivable acts of violence.

As social scientists and historians have long pointed out, the process of state-building involves war and perhaps even requires it.

As the sociologist Charles Tilly memorably put it: “War made the state, and the state made war.”  

These are simply realities. They do not make America’s evils any less evil. But they do serve as a reminder we are not as special as we might suspect. We may be exceptional in other ways, but we are not exceptional in this way.

This raises the perennial question of whether “exceptionalism” is a useful prism for understanding America’s strengths, if not necessarily its flaws. I, for one, think it’s useful. And I would go one step further. America needs to believe in its own exceptionalism.

A country that doesn’t believe in itself is one that is vulnerable to challengers and competitors. 

The case for “exceptionalism” of any kind is getting more difficult to make. In my writing, I have asked myself many times whether I really wanted to use words like “dominance” or “exceptionalism,” which I know can be off-putting to a significant number of readers.

But I am increasingly convinced this instinctive discomfort is itself part of the problem.

Why does the idea of America being better elicit such negative reactions in the first place?

Roger Scruton coined “oikophobia,” the fear or hatred of home or one’s own society, in 1993. Getty Images

Somehow, over the course of a few decades, outward displays of patriotism became coded as uncouth and aggressive.

A year ago, I was asked to give a talk to a group of students who were part of a summer internship program in Washington, DC.

As I walked into the rented apartment that doubled as a living and events space, I noticed an American flag hanging on the wall. And it was really big.

I was a bit confused. It occurred to me I hadn’t seen an American flag in someone’s home for years. In fact, I have no real recollection of everseeing an American flag in someone’s home.

(The twist was that this was a Muslim internship program. And each of the interns was a child of immigrants. I don’t think this was an accident).

How did our flag come to be seen as a liability, as something to be ashamed of?

How did the mere expression of American pride become unfashionable among Democrats and progressives?  

Whatever the reasons, American self-doubt is now an integral part of mainstream elite cultural production, in universities, media and film.

The question of how a culture changes in this way is a difficult one.

As the conservative author Michael Brendan Dougherty notes, culture has almost a mystical quality to it — its judgments “so familiar that it exists like a voice in your head. And yet it is impossible to explain exactly how this happens.”

For better or worse, oikophobia is simply in the air we breathe, difficult to locate but also impossible to escape.

Yet it has never been more important for Democrats and liberals to escape it.

A party made up of people who do not believe in their country’s own founding principles is a party that will fail to gain traction with the American people. It will fail to win.

But the alternative is not just political defeat but something more fundamental: the gradual abandonment of any claim to lead a country they have convinced themselves isn’t worth leading.  

Shadi Hamid is a Washington Post columnist and a senior fellow at Georgetown University’s Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding. His new book is The Case For American Power,” from which this is adapted.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Meghan Markle & Husband Planning ‘Sensationally Unlikely’ Tell-All — Source

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According to reports, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are “seriously” considering what a source described as a “sensationally unlikely” tell-all with Piers Morgan. Morgan is a long-time critic of the couple. Thus, Meghan Markle and her husband, who stepped back from royal duties in 2020, are reported to be reviewing proposals for a new televised sit-down amid a quieter period of public activity.

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry ‘having conversations’ around Piers Morgan tell-all

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are reportedly considering a televised interview that sources have described as a “sensationally unlikely” scenario- a sit-down with outspoken critic Piers Morgan. According to Radar Online, sources close to the couple say they are discussing Piers Morgan’s tell-all proposal as they evaluate potential media opportunities amid a period of reduced public appearances.

Harry, 41, and Meghan, 44, have remained prominent in global headlines since stepping back from royal duties in 2020 and relocating to the United States. Their previous media projects, including their Netflix docuseries and their widely watched interview with Oprah Winfrey, cemented their reputation as high-impact interview subjects.

Morgan, 60, who famously departed “Good Morning Britain” in 2021 after publicly disputing claims made by Meghan during her Oprah interview. He has since returned to the program and has also indicated he would welcome an extended conversation with the couple. He stated that he would “rather interview Meghan Markle” and invited the pair to appear on his program “Uncensored” for a “two-hour interview anytime they like”.

Industry insiders say the idea is already being discussed behind the scenes. One source told Radar Online that although the proposal “sounds absurd,” those close to Harry and Meghan maintain that the couple “never rule anything out completely,” noting that a major interview still has “enormous weight.” The source added that if the couple wished to “reset the narrative,” pursuing an unexpected move could be part of that strategy.

Another television executive echoed that sentiment, calling the potential meeting “seismic,” while acknowledging uncertainty over whether Harry and Meghan would even consider appearing alongside their long-standing critic.



This story originally appeared on Realitytea

We lost our kids to social media. Now AI wants their minds

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Driving home from school, my 5-year-old asked, “Mommy, can we ask ChatGPT when dinosaurs went extinct?”

I turned on voice mode. The car lit up like a fifth passenger had joined us, explaining the Cretaceous Period in cheerful detail.

A few days later, I asked my six-year-old daughter, “What does ChatGPT do?”

She grinned. “Mommy, it knows everything.”

She said it with awe. I heard it with alarm.

The generation raised on AI won’t just think differently; they’ll lead differently. As executives rush to integrate generative tools across workplaces, we should ask: what happens when a workforce grows up never learning to struggle through a problem? The habits our children form with AI will shape the cognitive DNA of tomorrow’s leaders.

I felt a pang of déjà vu. I’m a geriatric millennial, part of the generation that came of age alongside the internet, the first guinea pigs of social media. As a college student when Facebook arrived, I remember the thrill of connection, the way a dorm-room post could ripple across campus. We didn’t question it. We were too busy marveling at how small the world suddenly felt.

Social media arrived with dazzling promise, connection, democratization, empowerment and no guardrails. We thought we were connecting. We were really rehearsing detachment.

Now we’re repeating the same mistake, only faster.

We talk about AI as if it’s a futuristic threat. But the real danger is more familiar: letting a new technology reshape what it means to be young before we decide what to protect. The companies building these tools won’t slow down; their incentives are speed, scale, and profit, not childhood well-being. We can’t count on Silicon Valley to guard our kids’ minds any more than we could count on it to guard their attention.

We missed our chance with social media. Back then, the harm was visible, kids glued to screens, chasing likes, losing focus. The damage was emotional and social. With AI, the danger is quieter but deeper: it’s reshaping how our children think.

Social media stole their attention; AI risks stealing their cognition. We let platforms seep into adolescence without question and only later counted the costs, attention spans, self esteem, even trust. A generation came of age in a haze of comparison and performance, watching half of childhood scroll by in 15-second bursts. It wasn’t malicious. It was thoughtless.

Now we debate whether to take our kids back to a simpler time, some parents fantasize about trading iPhones for landlines or banning smartphones until high school. But those questions already feel quaint. The new frontier isn’t what’s on the screen; it’s how our children think behind it.

If social media changed what it meant to connect, AI is changing what it means to think. Kids once learned to read tone in texts and navigate the awkward dance of friendship online. Now they’re learning to outsource cognition itself – to ask a robot before a parent, to get a synthesis instead of reading a source, to finish a thought before they’ve formed one.

At a friend’s elementary school, students were brainstorming names for their annual food drive. Third graders shouted out puns like “Can Do Good.” The room buzzed with the chaos of children trying to make something together. Then the counselor said, “Let’s just ask ChatGPT.” Within seconds, the bot produced a tidy list. The class voted. The names were fine. But the spark was gone. Later that night, one child shrugged: “It wasn’t as fun.”

The real dystopia isn’t killer robots. It’s children who never develop judgment because algorithms always have the answer. It’s classrooms that trade collaboration for convenience. When we outsource not only work but wonder, we risk raising humans who can process endlessly but can’t pause meaningfully. A 2024 Pew survey found that 58% of teens already use AI tools for schoolwork.

The stakes are higher this time because the shift is invisible and interior. Social media rewired how kids saw themselves; AI is rewiring how they think, what they believe, and how they decide. Not just their attention, but their cognition, judgment, and sense of meaning are on the line.

What we need now is to practice thinking the way we once practiced piano or handwriting: slowly, together, and by hand. With AI, we have a second chance to rebuild the muscle of thinking before outsourcing it.

That begins with small, daily rituals. One I love, from organizational psychologist Sumona De Graaf, is something she calls the Think Sandwich. It’s simple: think first, use AI to augment, think again. Before your child prompts a chatbot, pause with them. Ask what they really want to know and what they already think. Then let AI join the conversation, not replace it.

De Graaf puts it plainly: “AI is misnamed. It’s not artificial intelligence; it’s augmented intelligence. If your touch isn’t on it, we’ve lost the plot.”

Parents can model that touch by interrogating answers out loud. When an AI spits out a fact or story, ask: Where did this come from? Who might see it differently? What might be missing? These are the small muscles of discernment we forgot to build during the social-media boom and we can’t afford to skip them again.

Encourage your kids to write before they prompt. Have them draft a story or paragraph themselves, then see what AI produces. Compare the two. Which one sounds more alive? Which one sounds more them? That simple act teaches something no algorithm can: the joy of having a mind that makes, not just mimics.

When your child asks a question, resist the reflex to hand them the phone or summon a chatbot. Instead, ask, “What do you think?” Give their mind a chance to stretch before the algorithm steps in.

Even knowing all this, I still fall for it. I let ChatGPT tell my son a bedtime story because it was fast, easy, and good enough. He was delighted. I was relieved. But afterward, I realized what I’d traded away: not efficiency, but presence – the small, imperfect act of storytelling, the jokes that don’t land, the pauses that teach patience, the joy of creating something together.

If I, a parent who studies this for a living, can fall into that trap, what about a generation that never knew any different?

For business and policy leaders, that’s not just a family concern; it’s a future-of-talent concern. If we want a generation capable of innovation, we need to teach them discernment, not dependency.

Knowing is easy now. Thinking: that’s the real edge. I was the happy guinea pig of the social-media age. I don’t want my children to be the test subjects of the AI one. Because if AI “knows everything,” our job is to teach the next generation what’s worth knowing.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.



This story originally appeared on Fortune

Lakes, Vineyards & the Art of Leisure

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Italy has a unique way of turning landscapes into poetry. Nowhere is that more evident than Lake Iseo, a serene escape just an hour from Milan’s Linate Airport. Known as Sebino in Latin—meaning “double-hooked”—the lake winds between Bergamo and Brescia, touching a dozen small towns, many with medieval roots.

courtesy of Hotel Rivalago

I arrived on the eastern shore in Sulzano to a burst of fireworks, an unexpected welcome that set the tone for the days ahead. A short walk down a quiet, lamplit street brought me to Hotel Rivalago, a boutique four-star property overlooking the water. Morning revealed the true magic: Monte Isola rising in front of my window, its sun-washed facades glowing in warm tones of terracotta and ochre.

Hotel Rivalago elegance
courtesy of Hotel Rivalago

Family-owned and elegantly renovated, Rivalago feels intimate yet airy. The décor leans toward soft blues and creams, complemented by rich fabrics, antique furniture, and tall linen curtains. The lakeside lawn, dotted with palms, leads to a heated pool and floating pontoon where guests slip into kayaks or lounge by the water.

A Ferry to Monte Isola

Sulzano’s ferry stop makes exploring simple. I crossed the lake toward Monte Isola, the largest inhabited lake island in Europe. The scene felt almost Venetian: striped mooring poles, the clatter of wooden gates, and quiet churches anchoring tiny villages. Willow trees dipped into the water, shading narrow paths where locals and visitors wandered side by side.

Cyclists moved along the boardwalk between Peschiera Maraglio and Sensole, passing gardens, a cat sanctuary, and small cafés overlooking the lake. Life here unfolds at an easy pace, shaped by sunshine and stillness.

Sailing the Venetian Ketch “Nessa”

To see the lake from its most peaceful angle, I boarded Nessa, a 50-year-old Venetian wooden ketch. The two-masted boat carries up to eight guests and glides with an old-world grace. My skipper, Davide, offered light bites and local wine as we traced a route around Monte Isola.

Once he switched off the engine, the lake settled into silence. Only the soft splash of water against the hull remained. We drifted past the private islands of San Paolo and San Loreto, each with its own character—one lush with foliage, the other crowned with small castellations. Sailing Iseo Lake’s motto is simple: “What remains are the experiences.” They’re right.

Into Franciacorta: Italy’s Sparkling Secret

Between Iseo and Brescia lies Franciacorta, a region recognized for producing some of Italy’s finest sparkling wine. Made using the same method as Champagne, Franciacorta feels softer and more approachable, often preferred for its gentle acidity.

Lakes, Vineyards & the Art of Leisure
Albereta complex from vineyards. Courtesy of L’Albereta

L’Albereta: A Retreat in the Woods

My next stay was L’Albereta, a Relais & Châteaux property in Erbusco. Receptionists dressed in signature green-and-white uniforms greeted me warmly. The hotel stretches across five Neo-Renaissance buildings tucked inside a wooded estate. Each of the 57 rooms is unique; mine, a romantic attic hideaway, featured terracotta tones, marble floors, and a private balcony with sweeping views of vineyards and distant lakes.

Dining here is an experience in itself. Options range from the treetop terrace of Stanza 54 to the bio-light dishes at Ristorante Benessere. The showstopper is L’Aurum, a fine-dining theatre of mirrors, artful plating, and seasonal Italian ingredients.

Chenot Espace
Chenot Wellness Retreat. Courtesy of L’Albereta

Wellness the Chenot Way

L’Albereta houses a renowned Chenot Wellness Retreat, staffed by 40 specialists in hydrotherapy, nutrition, osteopathy, and more. My programme combined mud treatments, hydrotherapy, and a cupping lymphatic massage. The results were immediate—lighter, clearer, restored. With a helipad, boutique, and a celebrity guest list that includes Sophia Loren, the property sets the standard for wellness in Lombardy.

Bellavista & The Art of Sparkling Wine

A tour of nearby Bellavista Winery revealed Franciacorta’s dedication to hand-crafting. Rows of vines lined the hills with geometric precision. Harvest begins in late August, followed by traditional hand-turning of the bottles, known as riddling. The “non dosato” variety—crisp and sugar-free—was a standout.

Cadebasi: A Hidden Culinary Gem

Dinner at Cadebasi was revelatory. The dining room, with teal walls, exposed beams, and decorative wine racks, sets the tone for chef Cristiano’s inventive dishes. Owner Alex curated a tasting of local flavours—both indulgent and plant-forward. The menu’s slogan, buffetti, hints at small joys. It fits perfectly.

Crossing to Lake Maggiore

To explore where the Milanese escape on weekends, I headed 90 minutes west to Arona, on Lake Maggiore. This lake feels different—less international, more quietly European, often visited by Swiss, Dutch, French, and German travelers.

Arona’s Culinary Simplicity

Down a narrow street, I found Anticogallo, a rustic restaurant with tartan fabrics and a warm welcome from owners Isabella and Stefano. Their roast chicken was comforting and honest, the kind of meal that makes you feel like a local rather than a passerby.

Castello Dal Pozzo: A Historic Stay
Castello Dal Pozzo: A Historic Stay

Castello Dal Pozzo: A Historic Stay

A short drive brought me to Castello Dal Pozzo, a Preferred Hotels property run by the Dal Pozzo family. The estate dates back to the 10th century and spans 59 acres of manicured parkland. Three buildings make up the hotel: the historic Stables, the Neo-Gothic Castello, and the Palazzo.

My room in the Palazzo overlooked Lake Maggiore through French windows, with canopy bedding, antique furniture, and soft blue tones. The enfilade of reception rooms led to Le Fief, the elegant fine-dining restaurant. After dinner, I walked through Dan Garden Lounge’s beautiful lawns and then into the quiet village church of Oleggio Castello, its bells marking the hour.

A Final Crossing

On my last morning, I took the ferry from Arona to Santa Caterina, passing market stalls and village docks. The Eremo hermitage clings to the cliffs with the Alps rising behind it—an unforgettable sight. Returning to Arona, I dined at La Vecchia Arona, where chef Gabriele and his wife Sabrina offered refined lake fish and thoughtful service in a nautical-inspired dining room.

As evening settled and fireworks lit the sky once more, I felt the perfect symmetry of my Italian journey—beginning and ending in celebration.



This story originally appeared on Upscalelivingmag

Why did the ICG share price just jump 10%+ to lead the FTSE 100?

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Image source: Getty Images

The ICG (LSE: ICG) share price jumped 11% in early trading Tuesday (18 November). It’s back around a 7% rise at the time of writing, but still spearheading the FTSE 100.

It comes after the company formerly known as Intermediate Capital Group posted two items of news. One is a first-half results update, which I’ll come back to shortly.

In the other, ICG announced a new partnership with French asset manager Amundi. It’s “to develop private markets products managed by ICG and distributed by Amundi targeted at wealth investors“.

10-year deal

The agreement starts with an initial term of 10 years. And “Amundi will provide structuring, sales and aftersales support for products managed by ICG that Amundi distributes“.

The plan includes Amundi acquiring “over time, and by no later than 30 June 2027, a non-dilutive 9.9% economic interest in ICG, becoming a strategic shareholder and anchoring the long-term partnership“.

Amundi will be able to nominate a non-executive director to ICG’s board. So this is a lot more than just a sales and distribution agreement.

Tying up with Europe’s largest asset manager looks to me like it could be a great move for ICG, especially after Brexit gave British firms doing business in Europe such a kicking.

First half

Turning to first-half results, ICG’s assets under management rose 6% in the half for an annualised growth of 14%.

The company saw its management fees grow 16% compared to the first half last year, to £334m. That’s definitely positive, but we need to remember this can be a very cyclical item. Stock markets generally had a better first six months this year than last, helping boost ICG’s asset performance.

It led to profit before tax growing 78% to £352m year on year. Earnings per share also rose 78%, to 102.8p, and the interim dividend is up 5.3% to 27.7p per share. Forecasts suggest a full-year yield of 4.4%.

What next?

Prior to the latest news, forecasts saw ICG growing its full-year EPS by 28% between 2025 and 2028. And this first-half figure has already hit 63% of the forecast 163p for the current year. They also see a year-end price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of around 11.5, dropping to 9.6 based in 2028 forecasts.

Those predictions will be up in the air now, particularly on the news of ICG’s new partnership with Amundi. I’m not sure we’ll get much in the way of meaningful updates though, at least not until we get close to full-year results.

Saying that, I really don’t see analysts being disappointed by what we’ve just heard. They already had a strong consensus Buy on the stock, with an average price target of 2,590p. That’s 28% ahead of the ICG share price at the time of writing.

Time to buy?

ICG looks to me like it’s been overlooked by investors on the back of a few years of economic gloom. We do have to remember the likely cyclical nature of future earnings though — and the shares have taken a few sharp falls over the years. I think a P/E lower than average is probably warranted.

But I think ICG has to be worth serious consideration — for investors comfortable with the chance of short-term volatility.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

On paper, Trump’s Gaza plan looks convincing – but there’s more to this story | World News

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At the United Nations, there was broad agreement about the Trump plan for Gaza. The Americans heralded the resolution as a key step forward in securing precious peace. Even the Russians, who had put forward a rival resolution, decided to merely abstain.

On paper, it looks convincing. Thirteen votes in favour, none against and the two abstentions of Russia and China. But that isn’t the whole story.

The challenge is that the people who actually fought the war aren’t quite as happy.

Israel goes along with most of it but is adamant that there should be no road to Palestinian statehood. That desire was inserted into the resolution to placate some countries who felt that too much power was being put into the hands of Israel and America.

But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has made it abundantly clear that he will allow no such thing. And the reality is that, were Netanyahu to lose his job at next year’s elections, he’s incredibly unlikely to be succeeded by anyone with a very different take on the subject. So, while the resolution might say there’s a path towards a two-state solution, it’s hard to find that path running through Israeli politics.

Then there’s Hamas, which objects, just as vehemently, to the idea that foreigners will not just be running Gaza, but will also be maintaining its security and taking responsibility for disarming Hamas itself.

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6:59

From October: How will peace plan unfold?

Clinging to a shred of optimism

There is still more we don’t know than we actually do know. Who will make up this stabilisation force, what mandate it will follow, how much influence will be exerted by the UN, who will pay for the rebuilding and how the much-heralded Board of Peace will work – including the role of Tony Blair? When, and how, will Israeli troops leave? What happens if the remaining deceased hostages are not returned? When will humanitarian aid really start flooding into the region? What will actually happen to Hamas? And so, so many more questions beyond that. The list stretches to the horizon.

Questions remain over how involved figures such as Tony Blair will be. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Questions remain over how involved figures such as Tony Blair will be. Pic: Reuters

Read more:
Inside Jordan warehouse where Gaza aid is backing up
Remains of Israeli soldier killed in Gaza returned – 11 years later

It is easy to be overwhelmed by it all, but there are those here clinging to a shred of optimism. The resolution has been passed and that means the ongoing engagement of America, which many see as the key to ongoing peace.

The number of American military personnel, as well as diplomats and private sector employees, now actively planning for Gaza’s future runs into many thousands. The optimistic logic runs that, so long as the US is planning for peace rather than war, then peace – shaky, transactional, pragmatic and unpredictable as it may be – is to be welcomed.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

Is a 50-year mortgage really that much crazier than a 30-year one? : Planet Money : NPR

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Last week, President Trump caused a media frenzy after he floated the idea that the government should back the creation of a 50-year fixed mortgage.

Many commenters, including some of Trump’s own supporters, hated the idea. They complained that it would result in Americans being in debt for their entire adult lives, essentially renting from a bank. They complained that this type of mortgage would explode the amount of interest homeowners would have to pay over the lifetime of their loans. They complained that borrowers would be stuck paying interest-only payments for many years and be prevented from actually paying down their principal and building equity in their homes.

“It will ultimately reward the banks, mortgage lenders, and home builders while people pay far more in interest over time and die before they ever pay off their home,” posted Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green (R-Ga.). “In debt forever, in debt for life!”

President Trump “is creating generational debt,” said Josh Johnson on The Daily Show. “They’re going to be fighting to get out of grandma’s will. Grandkids will be like, ‘I barely knew her!'” (Side note: Josh Johnson is very funny. I’m a fan.)

The uproar over the 50-year mortgage idea reached such a high pitch that apparently the White House was furious with the administration official who pitched President Trump the idea, according to reporting from Politico.

Sure, it won’t solve our housing affordability problem. But is a 50-year mortgage really such a crazy idea?

“It’s not quite as outlandish as it sounds,” says John Campbell, an economist at Harvard University.

“Honestly, I kind of think it’s a fine idea,” says Eric Zwick, an economist at The University of Chicago Booth School of Business. “It’s not obviously so different from a 30-year fixed mortgage.”

The 50 vs The 30

First of all, the reality is most homeowners ditch their mortgage well before its end date. Some refinance. Others move.

In America, unlike some other countries, including the UK, you can’t take your mortgage with you if you sell your house. So when people sell their house and move, they end their mortgages.

The typical American homeowner spends less than 12 years in their home, according to a Redfin analysis of the U.S. Census data. That’s actually high compared to recent history. Back in the early 2000s, Americans typically spent only about seven years in their houses.

“ Most people will not have that 50-year mortgage product for that length of time,” says Daryl Fairweather, the chief economist of Redfin. “I think in a world where this product exists, a lot of people might sign up for it initially and then try to refinance later.”

In other words, the 50-year mortgage would not be a 50-year trap. It would basically serve as another option on the menu for homebuyers looking to finance their homes. And, because you have longer to pay off the loan, it comes with the benefit of having somewhat lower monthly payments. Maybe that could help some secure their dream house or reap the benefits of investing in the housing market.

“I think affordability is a concern in the housing market,” Zwick says. “And one element is the down payment, but another element is the monthly payment. And a longer duration mortgage is gonna lower the monthly payment.”

And, sure, there are real drawbacks to this sort of financing, including especially a much higher interest bill over the life of the loan and an extended period where homeowners aren’t paying down their principal and building equity. But those same issues also arise with the 30-year fixed mortgage, albeit to a lesser degree.

And Americans apparently love the 30-year mortgage. More than 90% of American mortgage holders have one!

The American mortgage market is weird

The fact that so many American homeowners have long-term, fixed rate mortgages, and they’re able to basically refinance pretty easily whenever they want, makes the U.S. mortgage market pretty weird compared to most other countries.

We won’t get into the complicated history here (we might actually do a Planet Money episode on this history in the future). But, for now, we’ll say the 30-year mortgages date back to the Depression era. And they’re fundamentally a creature of government intervention. The government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac buy mortgages from private lenders, allowing them to offload (and socialize) the risks associated with lending large sums of money for decades at fixed interest rates.

Without this intervention, the 30-year mortgage would probably not be so ubiquitous. I mean, think about it. Would you want to lend someone hundreds of thousands of dollars for decades and freeze the amount they will pay you for providing them with that money? What if they lose their jobs or die? What if interest rates skyrocket and you can find much more favorable terms for lending out that money? And then, to boot, if interest rates fall, the borrower can just walk away from that loan and get a new mortgage at any time when economic conditions are more favorable to them? I mean, yikes. No thanks.

A long time ago, Planet Money interviewed financial journalist Bethany McLean about 30-year fixed mortgages, and she described them as “a financial Frankenstein’s monster” from the perspective of lenders.

Without an important role for the government in backing these loans, “I don’t think any rational bank would offer this product,” says David Berger, an economist at Duke University.

“ You need the public sector to play an important role for really long duration mortgages to be viable in the financial system,” says Joseph Gyourko, an economist at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business.

It helps explain why this sort of mortgage system is so rare in the world.

The Pros of long-term, fixed-rate mortgages 

There are some clear benefits of the weird mortgage system we have in the United States. One is lower monthly payments because homebuyers can pay off their loans over 30 years. Another is homebuyers are given an incredible ability to freeze their housing costs in stone and then refinance when it suits them.

Several of the economists we spoke to had 30-year mortgages themselves, and they had refinanced when rates sank below 3 percent a few years ago. They were very nice people, but I hate them now. (I bought a house more recently and the mortgage rate is close to 7 percent).

Anyways, the ability to freeze rates and then refinance later if the opportunity arises is clearly a huge benefit to homebuyers. It offers predictability on your housing costs. And, especially nice, a fixed-rate mortgage basically shields you from inflation and its accompanying higher interest rates. Everything else may get more expensive, but your housing payment actually falls in real terms when there’s inflation!

The Cons of long-term, fixed-rate mortgages

That said, as we already alluded to, both 30-year and hypothetical 50-year mortgages come with costs: they tend to have higher interest rates than adjustable rate mortgages and you have a longer period upfront paying interest and not actually paying down your loan much.

But there’s more.

If the housing market gets dicey and prices start plummeting, having a large outstanding loan at a fixed interest rate can create serious problems. Gyourko, the economist at Wharton, says long-term, fixed-rate mortgages increase the probability that you can go underwater on your home, a situation where you owe more on your house than it’s worth.

“ The borrower on a really long duration loan — 30 or 50 — does not build equity very quickly at all,” Gyourko says. “ There’s a risk that if there’s a severe drop in house prices, you go underwater.”

Going underwater is a nightmare. If you sell, it means the money you get won’t cover your debt. It gets much harder to refinance, meaning you’re stuck with a higher interest rate than you could otherwise get in a situation where the housing market tanks.

If you have a fixed-interest rate and the housing market tanks, “your house price goes down and you’re kind of stuck,” says Berger, the economist at Duke. “No one is gonna lend to you when you’re underwater. If you had an adjustable rate, your rate would’ve just dropped automatically,” and maybe that would help you make your housing payments and not lose your house.

“And are you more likely or less likely to be laid off if house prices drop a lot? Answer: more likely,” Gyourko says. “So you run that risk of those two events coinciding, and then you’ve lost a huge amount of your personal wealth.”

Depending on the state of the economy, the direction of interest rates, and your financial circumstances, it might not make sense to fix your interest rate. Actually, that may be the case right now. Interest rates spiked in 2022 and 2023 and have already started to come down, and many expect them to go down further, especially if the economy enters a recession.

“ Right now, I think it does make more sense for people to get an adjustable rate mortgage,” Fairweather, the chief economist at Redfin, says.

Adjustable-rate mortgages typically start with lower interest rates than fixed rate mortgages. Fairweather says you can think about the choice to buy a long-term, fixed-rate mortgage instead of an adjustable rate mortgage as effectively paying extra for insurance against future interest rate hikes. And, just like the standard advice for buying any other kind of insurance, “you don’t really want to get insurance if you can afford to self-insure,” she says. In other words, if you think you could afford the possibility that interest rates spike in the near future, it probably makes sense to get an adjustable rate mortgage.

“ So if you get the adjustable rate mortgage, what I would advise is to make sure you have some room in your budget left over for when the mortgage rate resets potentially at a higher level so that you’re not hit with costs that you aren’t able to pay,” Fairweather says. “But if you could take that savings and you know, put it in your savings account, then you’ll probably end up a-okay with an adjustable rate mortgage and actually save money compared to the fixed rate.”

Fixed-rate mortgages may distort our economy

But there are other, economy-wide issues with having so many mortgage-holders with long-term fixed rates.

One is that the government involvement in the housing market that makes our system of widespread 30-year mortgages possible can occasionally result in big problems for taxpayers, especially if regulators aren’t vigilant in preventing shady loan practices. Just see what happened during the global financial crisis back in the late 2000s.

“The worst possible situation is what happened in the global financial crisis when Fannie and Freddie were basically insolvent, were put on the treasury’s balance sheet and to this day remain there,” Gyourko says.

Another problem with America’s weird system of ubiquitous fixed-rate mortgages is that it may weaken the Fed’s ability to juice the economy or lower inflation when needed (aka conduct monetary policy).

That’s because fixed-rate mortgage holders are shielded from interest rate changes. If everyone had an adjustable rate mortgage, the Fed could maybe more easily juice the economy by lowering people’s monthly payments, nudging them to spend more in the economy. That said, if interest rates go low enough, it will induce many American homeowners to refinance, lower their payments, and potentially goad them to increase their spending and boost the economy.

In inflationary times though, when the Fed needs to bring down spending in the economy, the Fed’s job may be tougher and more distortionary to the economy. If everyone were on adjustable rates, the Fed could just raise rates and, boom, homeowners would probably start spending less and inflation would come down. But most American homeowners are shielded from rate increases, so it’s new homebuyers — often younger people — who feel more of the pain. Some argue that’s unfair.

Speaking of unfairness, Harvard’s John Campbell points out that maximizing your personal wealth in our weird mortgage system relies on considerable financial literacy, and populations that are poorer and less educated tend to be less financially literate. So this system results in greater inequality.

“A lot of people don’t know when to refinance and they just don’t do it,” Campbell says. “And there’s some very troubling evidence that, in this country, black and Hispanic borrowers are much slower to refinance than white borrowers.” The result, he says, is they tend to pay higher interest rates.

There’s another problem with our system: lock in. This has been talked about in recent years. There are tons of homeowners out there who now have rock-bottom interest rates on their mortgages — like, ahem, many of the very financially literate economists I spoke to — and they’re reluctant to move.

Lock-in may be one reason why American home prices have been stubbornly high over the past few years, even as interest rates have spiked. Other countries, where adjustable rate mortgages are more the norm, have seen their housing prices dip a lot more in recent years.

“ I think that their housing markets are more reactive to their overall economies,” Fairweather says. “So in other places where there’s more adjustable rate mortgages, when interest rates go up, that means that homeowners have a reason to sell because their payments are going up. And if they can’t afford them or they don’t want to pay them, then they’ll put their homes on the market.  In our housing market, that doesn’t happen. There is this unequal treatment between first time home buyers and existing homeowners. And it really benefits long-term homeowners.”

Even more, economists believe that the lock-in that fixed mortgages create is bad for the economy. Many people may be refusing jobs where they could be more productive because they don’t want to move.

The real fix for housing affordability

So, yeah, many of the problems identified with the 50-year mortgage idea are also present with the 30-year mortgage.

The real motivation for this idea is to enable more Americans to buy houses. With high prices and higher interest rates than a few years ago, many Americans are priced out.

The economists we spoke to all stressed that this new financial product will not solve the fundamental problem of housing affordability. To do that, we need to start building a lot more homes. Some even said that by juicing demand with this new financial product and not increasing supply, this proposal could actually make housing prices go higher, contributing to the problem.

“Proposals to help home buyers — whether it’s this 50-year mortgage or whether it’s Kamala Harris’s proposal in her presidential campaign to give money to first time homebuyers — the main beneficiaries are actually the people selling houses,” Campbell says. “Because given the supply, if you make it easier for buyers, they’re bidding against each other for the same supply. The price is gonna go up. The winner is gonna be the person selling.”

So, yeah, we need to build more homes. But, in that world, maybe a 50-year mortgage would have some benefits for some people. Of course, they will need to know the facts about this financial product and make sure it’s the right product for them.

Berger, the economist at Duke, recommends that the government invest more in helping Americans become more financially literate about mortgages and provide better information about alternative financial options to the 30-year mortgage. This stuff is complicated!



This story originally appeared on NPR

UK government unveils asylum crackdown: PM Starmer says current regime is “pull factor” for migrants

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Shabana Mahmood, Labour’s new interior minister, announced late Saturday, November 15, plans to drastically reduce protections for refugees and end automatic benefits for asylum seekers, slashing irregular immigration and countering the hard right. Under her proposed reforms, refugees in Britain who arrived on small boats will have to wait up to 20 years for permanent settlement and could be deported if the situation in their home country improves. Those with valuables will be forced to fund the cost of their own accommodation.

The measures were announced as Prime Minister Keir Starmer comes under pressure from surging popularity for the anti-immigrant Reform UK party. France 24 journalist Claire Paccalin takes a closer look at the issue and discusses her report from the UK on the deepening divisions within the country.


This story originally appeared on France24

Chance of more showers in L.A., with new storm set to hit Thursday

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Showers could linger in Los Angeles on Tuesday following four straight days of rain — and even more rain is likely on Thursday and Friday.

There’s a 20% to 30% of showers and thunderstorms Tuesday across much of Los Angeles County, the National Weather Service said, although it’s expected to be mostly sunny. The thunderstorms will remain a slight risk because of a cold front that ushered in unstable air Monday.

By Tuesday, the cold front will have moved away from L.A., but the cold core of the low-pressure system will still be around. “This will bring enough instability to the area for a slight chance of thunderstorm development,” the weather service in Oxnard said.

Temperatures have chilled with the latest storm. While the L.A. coast and San Gabriel Valley on Monday reached the mid-60s, due to late arriving rain, most of L.A. County’s coastal areas and valleys “struggled to get out of the 50s,” the weather service said.

Wednesday will bring a reprieve with sunny skies, but another storm is expected to enter Southern California on Thursday and continue through Friday.

Thursday’s storm is expected to drop from 0.25 to 0.75 inches of precipitation. That’s on top of the 0.74 inches of rain that fell on downtown L.A. in the 24-hour period that ended at 9 p.m. Monday. Before that, the weekend storm that began Friday brought 2.68 inches of rain to downtown.

For the 24-hour period ending 9 p.m. Monday, Porter Ranch received 1.61 inches; La Cañada Flintridge, 1.5; Northridge, 1.43; Bel-Air, 1.21; Castaic, 1.15; Van Nuys, 1.12; and Beverly Hills, 1.11.

Warm Springs Camp, in the mountains overlooking the Santa Clarita Valley, recorded an 18-hour rainfall total of 2.5 inches by Monday evening.

The storms, thus far, have caused some mayhem but no severe or life-threatening damage in recently burned areas.

By late Monday night, landslides and flooding were reported on a number of roads. The 5 Freeway near Highway 14, between Sylmar and Santa Clarita, suffered flooding Monday afternoon, as did an offramp on the 91 Freeway at Carmenita Road. The California Highway Patrol said there was flooding at onramps to the 10 Freeway in El Monte and the 605 Freeway on the southern border of Baldwin Park.

Mountain roads were hard hit. One motorist on Angeles Crest Highway, a road that winds through the San Gabriel Mountains, became “stuck in mud, dirt and rock” in a northbound lane, while the southbound lane was completely blocked with multiple landslides, according to reports filed to the National Weather Service. Snowplows couldn’t haul away the debris because it was too heavy.

Near the 101 Freeway in Hidden Hills, a number of vehicles hydroplaned as Round Meadow Road flooded near Mureau Road.

Monday afternoon and evening also brought rockslides or mudsldies to San Francisquito Canyon Road, the mountainous route that connects Santa Clarita to the Antelope Valley; a section of Kanan Dume Road, which leads into the Santa Monica Mountains from Malibu; and on Mulholland Highway south of Calabasas.

Snow levels were at around 7,000 feet on Monday but were expected to drop to 5,000 feet by Tuesday. Officials issued a winter weather advisory for the eastern San Gabriel Mountains and the northern Ventura County mountains that is set to last through Tuesday night. About 2 to 5 inches of snow could fall in the mountains.

“As for the Grapevine area, there is a chance of a dusting of snow Tuesday morning as the snow levels lower,” the weather service said. The Grapevine is a key travel corridor on the 5 Freeway that connects L.A. and Santa Clarita with the Central Valley and the San Francisco Bay Area.

The highest point of the Grapevine section is the Tejon Pass, which peaks in elevation at 4,144 feet above sea level. At that location, “some non-accumulating snow is possible,” the weather service said.



This story originally appeared on LA Times