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How on earth did this forgotten FTSE 100 stock jump 65% in a year?

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The FTSE 100’s always full of surprises. Who could have imagined a year ago that gold miner Fresnillo would rocket more than 250%? Or telecoms specialist Airtel Africa would soar 215%? Not me. Both stocks had largely passed my radar, until they suddenly went gangbusters. But another big success story was on my watchlist, so I’m kicking myself for missing out. It’s up a blistering 65% over 12 months so can it continue to soar?

The stock in question is Asia-focused insurer Prudential (LSE: PRU), which I actually owed a couple of decades ago. I banked a quick 70% gain and while I’m much slower to sell shares these days, preferring to buy and hold for the long run, I don’t regret my decision. This one has underperformed for years.

The Prudential share price soars

Prudential has huge potential in Asia and Africa, selling pension and protection products to the emerging middle class, yet the financial crisis and years of weak regional sentiment saw the shares largely ignored. The dividend was modest, below 2%, so I moved on.

Emerging markets have finally regained momentum, with the MSCI Emerging Markets index up almost 33% in the year to 31 October, against less than 20% worldwide. Investors have waited a long time for this moment.

Prudential had already posted a strong set of 2024 results, with adjusted operating profit before tax up 10% to $3.1bn, while 2025 has been upbeat, so far. The balance sheet’s strong, with a solid free surplus cash ratio of 234%. CEO Anil Wadhwani said long-term growth trends in Asia and Africa are “reasserting themselves”, creating real opportunities.

Dividends and buybacks

The board boosted the dividend 13% and returned $2bn through share buybacks across 2024 and 2025. Across 2024-2027, total shareholder returns including dividends could exceed $5bn.

So can this continue? There’s still recovery potential here. Prudential shares are down 18% over the last five years, and trade lower than they did 10 years ago. The price-to-earnings ratio stands at 15, so it’s not exactly expensive.

Analyst forecasts are optimistic, producing a median one-year target of 1,298p. If correct – and forecasts should be always be taken with a pinch of salt – that would imply solid 12-month growth of another 23% from here. An impressive 16 out of 18 analysts rate Prudential a Buy, and two say Hold. There are no sellers.

It’s always risky buying a stock after a strong run, chasing past performance can backfire. Emerging markets remain volatile. Income seekers should also check out rival FTSE 100 insurers, some of which can yield as much as 8% or 9%.

However, Prudential shows that even a long-forgotten FTSE 100 stock can spring back, rewarding patience and timing. The recovery in Asia and Africa is real and total shareholder returns generous, but the path remains bumpy. Investors might consider buying with a long-term view, while bracing themselves for volatility along the way.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

Symptoms as more fall ill with grim Victorian disease

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Parents and carers are being urged to make sure their children have received all routine childhood vaccines as new cases of an illness that can turn serious have been recorded.

Earlier this month, the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) issued a warning about measles, an illness it described as “nearly twice as contagious” as the common cold.

Health bosses want parents and carers to confirm their children have had all their routine childhood jabs, including polio and measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccinations. This follows a drop in MMR vaccination rates over recent years.

Since the beginning of the year, there have been 847 laboratory confirmed cases of measles in England, according to the latest data.

This represents a rise of 36 cases over the past month.

The majority of these cases (69%) occurred in children aged 10 years and under, whilst some 26% were in young people and adults aged 15 years and over.

Health officials caution that measles can result in complications such as “ear infections, pneumonia, and inflammation of the brain which require hospitalisation and on rare occasions can lead to long term disability or death”.

Anyone uncertain whether their child is current with all their routine vaccinations should examine their child’s red book (personal child health record) initially.

If you’re unsure or need to update your child’s vaccinations, contact your GP surgery to verify, and arrange an appointment. Measles usually starts with symptoms similar to those of a common cold, followed by a rash a few days later.

Some may also develop small spots in their mouths.

The rash begins on the face and behind the ears before spreading to the rest of the body. The measles rash spots can occasionally be raised and merge to form blotchy patches, but they’re not typically itchy.

Measles is known as a Victorian disease as it was very common during that era. For more information about vaccinations, symptoms, and when to seek medical assistance, visit the NHS website.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Controversial US and Israeli-backed aid operation the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation to close | World News

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The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a controversial US and Israeli-backed aid distribution group, has said it will permanently cease operations.

Set up as an alternative to United Nations aid programmes in May, GHF’s executive director John Acree said on Monday that it “succeeded in our mission of showing there’s a better way to deliver aid to Gazans”.

The foundation had already closed down aid distribution sites after US President Donald Trump’s ceasefire plan was agreed by Hamas and Israel in October.

The GHF which began operations in Gaza after an Israeli blockade of food deliveries, lasting nearly three months, was criticised by Palestinians, aid workers and health officials who said it forced people to risk their lives to reach the sites.

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File pic: Reuters

According to witnesses and videos posted to social media, Israeli soldiers repeatedly opened fire at the sites, killing hundreds. The IDF denied this, saying it only fired warning shots as a crowd-control measure or if its troops were in danger.

In July, analysis from Sky News’ Data and Forensics team found that aid distributions by GHF were associated with a significant increase in deaths.

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Gaza deaths increase when aid sites open

MSF – also known as Doctors Without Borders – said in a report in August that the GHF sites “morphed into a laboratory of cruelty,” and described scenes there as “orchestrated killing”.

‘We are proud,’ says GHF director

Mr Acree said in a statement through the GHF’s website that “from the outset, GHF’s goal was to meet an urgent need” and to hand over a successful aid operation to “the broader international community”.

The GHF would hand over its work to the US-led Civil-Military Coordination Center in Israel overseeing the Gaza ceasefire.

“We are winding down our operations as we have succeeded in our mission of showing there’s a better way to deliver aid to Gazans,” Mr Acree said.

File pic: Reuters
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File pic: Reuters

The GHF director added: “At a critical juncture, we are proud to have been the only aid operation that reliably and safely provided free meals directly to Palestinian people in Gaza, at scale and without diversion.

“From our very first day of operations, our mission was singular: feed civilians in desperate need. We built a new model that worked, saved lives, and restored dignity to civilians in Gaza.”

According to the GHF website, the group distributed more than three million food boxes, totalling 187 million meals, and supplied 1.1 million packs of Ready-to-Use Supplementary Food (RUSF) for malnourished children.

Read more:
Sky’s Adam Parsons sees Gaza destruction
Israel launches strikes on Gaza
Israel strikes Beirut for first time in months

Hamas welcomes GHF closure

In a statement, Hamas welcomed the closure of GHF and accused it of being a project that “engineered starvation” in partnership with Israel.

A Hamas spokesperson said: “Since its entry into the Gaza Strip, this foundation was part of the occupation’s security system, which adopted distribution mechanisms entirely disconnected from humanitarian principles, and created dangerous and degrading conditions for the dignity of the starving Palestinian people during their attempts to obtain a piece of bread, resulting in the killing and injury of thousands, through sniper operations and deliberate killing.”

They also called on international legal bodies to hold “this foundation and its officers accountable for their crimes against our people”.

US state department deputy spokesperson Tommy Piggot also said on X that the aid group “shared valuable lessons learned with us and our partners”.

“GHF’s model, in which Hamas could no longer loot and profit from stealing aid, played a huge role in getting Hamas to the table and achieving a ceasefire,” he added.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

Italy’s Campi Flegrei supervolcano is stirring. Could it erupt? : NPR

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Aerial view of the densely inhabited area of Pozzuoli, located within the Campi Flegrei volcanic area. Over half a million people live in this region, which is continuously monitored due to the ongoing volcanic activity.

Valerio Muscella for NPR


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Valerio Muscella for NPR

POZZUOLI, Italy — In Greek and Roman mythology, the Campi Flegrei volcano is depicted as the opening to the underworld.

Its prehistoric eruptions blocked out the sun, turning summer into winter and covering Europe and Russia in thick volcanic ash. Now this powerful seismic giant near Naples is stirring again, shaking the ground in a way that scientists say it hasn’t for centuries.

“Two of the most recent earthquakes are the strongest we’ve ever seen,” said Giovanni Macedonio, the director of the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology in Naples. Earthquakes in March and June this year caused by the Campi Flegrei forced people “to evacuate and there are tens of families that can’t return to their homes because of the damage.”

Giovanni Macedonio, geophysicist and research director at INGV, one of the scientists of the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology engaged in the continuous monitoring of the Campi Flegrei Caldera, working at a computer station in the laboratory: 'This seismicity is a phenomenon of volcanic origin. Beneath the Campi Flegrei, at a shallow depth between 1 and 3 km, there is a hydrothermal system: fractured rock with water that is heated by deep gases rising from magma about 10 km below. This high-temperature steam, around 1000 degrees, heats the reservoir, pressurizes the hydrothermal system. This process produces degassing, ground uplift, and earthquakes.'

Giovanni Macedonio (right) is the director of the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology in Naples. He oversees the area and monitors seismic activity from an observatory.

Valerio Muscella for NPR


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Valerio Muscella for NPR

For everyone to survive an eruption, over half a million people would have to be evacuated from an area that Italian authorities have marked the “red zone” around the Campi Flegrei’s eight-mile wide crater. Here, Macedonio says, “there really are no countermeasures to protect yourself” from the pyroclastic flow of volcanic particles and ash — super-heated to some 1,472 degrees Fahrenheit — that would cover terrain at a speed between 30 and 60 miles per hour.

The Campi Flegrei volcano is considered a “national threat” for the “explosive” style of its eruptions, which, scientists believe could create an eruptive column — a kind of cloud of dust and ash — that could rise some 18 miles into the sky and spread on the wind. When that column of dust and ash eventually falls, its weight can even collapse roofs of homes.

At the observatory Macedonio oversees in Naples, a large red phone connects directly to the civil protection headquarters in Rome. The line is tested twice a day.

The INGV’s direct-line red telephone, used to communicate with the National Civil Protection, is a crucial tool for emergency coordination. Its functionality is tested three times a day to ensure that communication is always ready in case of volcanic or seismic alerts

A red phone at an observatory monitoring seismic activity in Naples connects directly to the civil protection headquarters in Rome. The line is tested twice a day.

Valerio Muscella for NPR


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Valerio Muscella for NPR

Vesuvius — the best known volcano in this area, whose pyroclastic flow froze in time the ancient Roman city of Pompeii — rises to the east of Naples. Hans Christian Andersen, after witnessing an eruption in 1834, described the lava as “colossal, fallen stars.”

But the truth is it’s the much less visible Campi Flegrei, or Phlegrean Fields (from the Greek phlegraios for “fiery”), underground, that has the potential to be devastating. This is because today, hundreds of thousands of people live right on top of this volcano — in the eight-mile-wide crater left by past eruptions.

The crater of the Solfatara with Mount Vesuvius in the background. The Solfatara of Pozzuoli and Mount Vesuvius are both part of the Campanian volcanic system, although they belong to different types of volcanic structures. Solfatara is part of the Campi Flegrei caldera, known for ground uplift, seismic activity, and degassing, while Vesuvius is a classic cone volcano, famous for its catastrophic eruption that destroyed Pompeii.

The crater of the Solfatara with Mount Vesuvius in the background. The Solfatara crater of Pozzuoli and Mount Vesuvius are both part of the Campanian volcanic system, although they belong to different types of volcanic structures. Solfatara is part of the Campi Flegrei caldera, known for ground uplift, seismic activity and degassing, while Vesuvius is a classic cone volcano, famous for its catastrophic eruption that destroyed Pompeii.

Valerio Muscella for NPR


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Valerio Muscella for NPR

“All of us know we are living in a completely seismic area,” said Naples resident Maddalena Desario, whose neighborhood is situated on the rim of the Campi Flegrei caldera.

In the ancient city of Pozzuoli, which sits in the caldera, tourists follow a guide through winding, narrow alleyways. From a hilltop, they look out over a curving bay — the sea sparkling in the sunshine under an intense blue sky, and the island of Capri, playground of the rich, in the distance.

But this immense beauty belies the peril here. During the biggest volcanic eruption, some 39,000 years ago, the Campi Flegrei shot out 72 cubic miles of molten rock, according to Macedonio of the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology. Global temperatures plummeted, and the entirety of what is now Europe, as well as parts of Russia, were covered in volcanic ash. Some scientists have suggested the eruption could have contributed to the final disappearance of the Neanderthals.

A group of visitors takes part in a guided tour of the Rione Terra in Pozzuoli. The Rione Terra, the city’s oldest historic district, sits on a promontory overlooking the port. Its narrow streets, ancient buildings, and historic squares offer a glimpse into the city’s long and rich past, reflecting centuries of urban life in this remarkable coastal area. The district was evacuated on March 2, 1970, due to bradyseism events, and its inhabitants never returned to their expropriated homes, being relocated to neighboring municipalities

Visitors on a guided tour of the Rione Terra historic quarter in Pozzuoli look out onto the sea.

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Valerio Muscella for NPR

Experts say an eruption today would not occur on that scale. However, it could still be large enough to wreak havoc on millions of lives and halt air travel across Europe, perhaps even further around the globe. So Macedonio and his team monitor its every grumble and tremor.

At the observatory in Naples, screens on every wall show the seismic activity of all the volcanoes in the region. On the day NPR visited in September, a loud alarm sounded across the room, signaling that an earthquake had been detected. The scientists moved fast to assess the location and power of the tremor and send the information to the Italian public safety authorities.

It was in the Campi Flegrei. And this is not unusual. Last year, the scientists logged some 2,500 earthquakes caused by this volcano in a single month. And now the tremors are intensifying in magnitude: June saw an unprecedented 4.6-magnitude earthquake — enough to crack walls and send people fleeing from their homes.

Campi Flegrei is experiencing more earthquakes per year overall. Most are low-magnitude… (Stacked Bars)
…but they are starting to increase in magnitude as well. (Column Chart)

These earthquakes are coupled with bradyseism — a phenomenon in which the ground swells, slowly rising beneath people’s feet. At the old port in Pozzuoli, boats now stand nestled in long grass, marooned on new land that has risen out of the sea. Ancient Roman columns have fossils of mollusks halfway up, showing how they were once underwater.

Ancient Roman ruins are seen surrounded by modern buildings.

The columns of Pozzuoli’s Temple of Serapis have fossils of mollusks halfway up, evidence that they were once underwater.

Valerio Muscella for NPR


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Valerio Muscella for NPR

It’s as if this giant volcano were breathing — the ground rising and lowering over decades, with every breath. Before a last major eruption some 15,000 years ago, scientists say the ground rose about 85 feet. Now it’s steadily rising again — up by 4.6 feet since 2005, and the rate at which it’s swelling is getting faster.

“One thing that you learn very soon is that we do not have control. Nature has the control,” said Warner Marzocchi, a professor of geophysics and natural risk at the University of Naples, Federico II. “These kind of volcanic systems are used to having phases of unrest like this one that we are observing. The biggest scientific challenge is to understand what is driving this unrest.”

To meet that challenge, Marzocchi and his team — along with Stanford University and the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology — are using artificial intelligence to build what they and other experts say is the most accurate picture yet. The model identifies thousands of earthquakes not previously detectable with existing technology. The research expanded the total seismicity recorded by monitoring stations in the last three years from about 12,000 to more than 54,000 earthquakes in the Campi Flegrei alone.

The developments help scientists make more educated guesses about the likely magnitude of future quakes and learn more about why the Campi Flegrei has shown increasing activity since 2005. Marzocchi says the data suggest that, for now, the tremors are more the result of gases pushing superheated water up through the earth, rather than magma rising. Scientists hope this means an eruption is not necessarily imminent. But they cannot know for sure.

Marzocchi says the risk of an eruption is still “not zero” and therefore it is vital to remain vigilant.

In Pozzuoli in September, visitors wandered into historical buildings open to the public for a contemporary art exhibition. Down one cobbled street, local artist Pina Testa stood outside her studio. Her paintings include dozens of works showing volcanic eruptions — the giant plumes of ash depicted in a bright array of colors.

Pina Testa is an artist who lives and works in Pozzuoli. Her works feature volcanoes, fire and the local natural environment

Pina Testa is an artist who lives and works in Pozzuoli. Her works depict volcanoes, fire and the local natural environment.

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Valerio Muscella for NPR

“Fire, and everything that is the movement of the earth, speaks to the soul, and all this comes out in my paintings,” said Testa, explaining the inspiration she finds in the volcano. She laughed: “Sometimes when the earth quakes, I feel like it is right under my studio” — which she said is so far undamaged.

She admitted there’s even a kind of affection for this deadly companion. She remembers as a child the gatherings with neighbors on the street as they would evacuate their homes during an earthquake – sometimes in the middle of the night. It was a time to chat, to connect, and even share a pizza.

In the 1970s and 1980s, tens of thousands of residents were relocated from the Rione Terra, the historic district of Pozzuoli, in forced evacuations by the authorities, who believed the sharp upswell in the ground from bradyseism could be a sign of an imminent eruption. Police and military forced people from their homes. They were relocated to new apartments, and this oldest quarter of the city was seized permanently by the state. Today, tourists wander the still-empty streets of this quaint hilltop district, whose beautiful and historic buildings stand mostly uninhabited.

However, across Pozzuoli and the Campi Flegrei region, entire communities remain. The volcano and its seismicity have always been part of them, Testa explained. The real residents of Pozzuoli live in harmony with the volcano, she said. They can get scared sometimes, but never terrified. And they do not leave.

A view of Pozzuoli: in the foreground, the Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie; in the background, the waterfront, the marinas, and the hills of the Campi Flegrei, with the sea surrounding the city.

For everyone to survive a volcanic eruption, over half a million people would have to be evacuated from an area that Italian authorities have marked the “red zone” around the volcano’s eight-mile-wide crater.

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Valerio Muscella for NPR



This story originally appeared on NPR

Everybody Loves Raymond Reunion Recap — Best Moments And Cast Tributes

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Early on, Romano and Rosenthal make one thing abundantly clear: this is a reunion, not a reboot, and there will never be a revival. It’s a point they previously made to TVLine, and one they reiterate on stage.

“We’re never going to do one because we’re missing three cast members — three family members,” Romano clarifies, as pictures of Doris Roberts (Marie), Peter Boyle (Frank), and Sawyer Sweeten (Geoffrey), appear on screen. “We would never try to do it.”

Adds Rosenthal: “It wouldn’t be the same, and we have too much respect for the show itself, and for the beautiful audience, to keep it the way it is.”

The special devotes an entire segment to Roberts and Boyle, whose characters, Marie and Frank, were loosely based on Rosenthal’s mother and Romano’s father, respectively.

“I used to say, everything you saw Peter do, my father probably did in real life — without pants on,” Romano deadpans. He then shares a cherished memory from the making of the pilot: “I didn’t know then how sweet he really was, and I hadn’t really had a conversation with Peter. Our paths were crossing, and I swear to God, it must have been right here,” on set, behind Ray and Debra’s couch, “he just stops me. I haven’t said anything to him, and I guess he could tell that I was a little nervous, and he just looks and he goes, ‘It’s just like water. Just let it flow.'” 

Romano tears up as he reflects on that moment. “At that time, I’m like, what does that mean? As an actor, I didn’t know what exactly that meant, but I do now,” he says. “Just the gesture of him reaching out to me… it’s everything. It’s everything.”

Rosenthal goes on to reveal that more than 100 women auditioned for the part of Marie — they all read the Fruit of the Month scene — but “no one came close to Doris Roberts. She was what was in my head and in my life, and was so beyond. My real mother used to say, ‘it’s a little exaggerated,” but Roberts “was always spot on. She was always 100% believable.”

“We could be the best writers in the world,” Rosenthal says, “but it wouldn’t matter if we didn’t have these people — Peter Boyle and Doris Roberts.”

Heaton and Garrett commend Roberts’ unmatched work ethic, while Romano notes how different Boyle was from Frank. He was a “renaissance man” — and, fun fact, John Lennon was the best man at his wedding. The cast also acknowledges Boyle’s widow, Lorraine, who is in the audience for the taping. 

Earlier in the segment, Rosenthal acknowledges just how many beloved performers have passed — including Heaton’s TV parents, Robert Culp and Katherine Helmond, and Horan’s TV parents, Georgia Engel and Fred Willard. “We were so lucky to work with these comedy legends that we idolize,” he says. “We stand on the shoulders of the great people that came before us.”



This story originally appeared on TVLine

How Trump plans to fund $2,000 tariff ‘dividend’ checks for most Americans

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President Trump has vowed to send $2,000 tariff “dividend” checks to most Americans by the 2026 midterms – but some Republicans are questioning how the president will get the funds for the payouts.

Trump has promised to send the so-called “dividend” checks to low- and middle-income Americans using revenue from his sweeping expanse of tariffs. 

How much will the checks cost?

Dishing out $2,000 to most Americans would cost as much as $600 billion – twice the revenue expected from tariffs, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

President Trump has vowed to send $2,000 tariff “dividend” checks to most Americans by the 2026 midterms. Susan – stock.adobe.com

The steep tariffs Trump imposed in April – with a 10% baseline rate on all foreign countries – had raised $90 billion as of Sept. 30, according to data from US Customs and Border Patrol. He recently lifted tariffs for over 200 products as part of his push to make the cost of living more affordable.

That leaves a substantial gap in funding the checks, though Trump has promised not to pay for them with taxpayer dollars.

Trump says tariff revenues will increase

In a Truth Social post on Monday, Trump said tariff revenues will soon “skyrocket” – which could help pay for the checks.

Businesses rushed to stockpile inventory earlier this year ahead of the tariff deadlines so they could avoid paying the new import levies. But soon, warehouses will start to run out of this backstock, and companies will be forced to cough up the import fees in full, the president predicted.

Americans have thus not yet felt “the full benefit of the Tariffs,” he added.

How would the tariff ‘dividends’ be different from the COVID stimulus checks?

Trump has promised not to use taxpayer dollars to fund the checks. Scott Habermann – stock.adobe.com

The $2,000 tariff checks would not be the first such payments sent out by Trump.

In March 2020, he signed off on congressionally-approved COVID stimulus checks. 

Democrats campaigned on bringing more stimulus payments to Americans, with then-President Joe Biden doing so in 2021. Many economists blame those checks for helping to spike inflation, which ultimately tanked Biden’s approval ratings.

Republican lawmakers have raised concerns that Trump’s tariff dividends could have a similar effect on inflation, which is already heating up – hitting 3% in September, its fastest rate since January, according to the Consumer Price Index.

In March 2020, Trump signed off on congressionally-approved COVID stimulus checks.  Getty Images

In an attempt to curb inflationary effects, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has urged Americans to save the checks instead of spending them.

“Maybe we could persuade Americans to save that, because one of the things that’s going to happen next year is the Trump account[s]” designed to store savings for kids, he told Fox News last week.

Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill” is creating a new class of investment accounts for children born between 2025 and 2028 that will be seeded with $1,000 from the US Treasury.

About 40% of Trump’s 2020 stimulus payments were spent, while 30% were used to pay down debt and 30% were saved, according to a National Bureau of Economic Research study.

Later stimulus payments were also mostly spent or used to pay down debt, according to the New York Fed.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

How Congress and industry can fill the jobs Trump is bringing home

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President Donald Trump has done what the old bipartisan consensus never dared: put trade and industrial policy squarely on the side of “Made in America.”

Tariffs are back, steering investment into domestic production.

Automakers, pharmaceutical firms and semiconductor giants are announcing new plants on American soil.

After three decades of offshoring, the signal from Washington is clear: Bring manufacturing home.

But there’s one thing no tariff or tax incentive can conjure out of thin air — a workforce.

Over the last few decades, the United States didn’t just lose factories; we let entire layers of process knowledge and shop-floor know-how wither.

Technicians and operators who once made our industrial base the envy of the world retired, moved on or were never trained.

If we’re serious about reindustrializing, we need a massive national effort to reskill and upskill American workers.

Our education system still worships a single brittle ideal: high school to four-year college to white-collar career.

Reality looks different.

Follow 100 kids entering ninth grade, and you’ll find that 13 of them won’t finish high school.

Another 29 will graduate but never enroll in college, and 27 more will enroll but never finish.

Of the 31 who do finish college, 13 of them will end up in jobs that don’t require a bachelor’s degree.

That leaves just 18 out of 100 — the “fortunate fifth” — who make the smooth trip from high school through college to a job that actually needs the diploma they earned.

The United States once had robust career and technical education in high school, but today our schools are almost exclusively college-prep academies.

For the majority who will never get a bachelor’s degree, Washington offers a thicket of “workforce development” programs that sound good on paper but mostly fail.

A federal review found dozens of training programs across nearly a dozen agencies, costing tens of billions of dollars a year, with little evidence they raise earnings.

Participants often lose wages while sitting in classrooms — and then earn no more than similar workers who never went through the training at all.

In other words, we train people for jobs that don’t exist and pay for programs that don’t work, while the jobs we’re now creating go unfilled.

If Trump’s second-term trade and industrial strategy is to succeed, it needs an ambitious workforce strategy to match it.

That doesn’t mean another round of federal “jobs programs.” It means changing who we trust with taxpayers’ money.

The people best positioned to train workers for real, productive jobs are the ones who actually do the hiring: employers, often in partnership with unions and community colleges.

They know the equipment, the standards, and which skills matter when a new hire walks in the door.

But left to their own devices, firms under-invest in training the workers who need it most.

If a company spends its own funds to turn a high-school grad into a skilled tradesman, that worker can walk down the street to a competitor and cash in.

The payoff is uncertain, and the cost is real.

That’s where the American Workforce Act comes in.

Introduced last month by Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton, and based on a proposal developed by American Compass, the law would create a straightforward federal grant of up to $10,000 per worker placed in a high-quality, earn-while-you-learn training program.

To qualify, a worker must be a “trainee” whose time is split between paid work and structured technical instruction.

The training can be delivered by the employer, a group of firms, a union training center or a community college — but it must be tied to a real occupation in a real industry with a clear wage ladder, not just a credential of uncertain value.

In exchange for public funding, programs would have to publish their results, including completion rates, job placement in the relevant field, and wages before and after.

Funding wouldn’t come from new debt, but from reallocating resources: The law would trim subsidies and tax breaks for wealthy universities that gorge on public money, and redirect some of the federal cash spent on “training” into a much more effective model.

Trump’s tariffs and industrial policies have finally put Washington on the side of American production.

Now it’s time to put Washington on the side of American workers learning to produce.

Reindustrialization isn’t just steel and silicon. It’s workers who know how to make things.

Let’s stop pretending the college-for-all model and a failed federal bureaucracy will somehow produce an industrial workforce for the 21st century.

Instead, let’s start paying employers and their partners to train Americans, at scale, for the jobs we’re finally bringing home.

Daniel Kishi is a policy adviser at American Compass.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Educator Sandeep Singh Reveals the Mindset Behind Sustainable Success – Hollywood Life

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Image Credit: Sandeep Singh

Quick tips and “easy wins” overrun the online space. Sandeep Singh, known as Sandeep Singh, stands apart for preaching patience over profit. As an educator and founder of Sandeep Singh, he teaches people to think differently about goals, discipline, and long-term achievement. His lessons go beyond tactics and techniques to focus on mindset, emotional intelligence, and psychology. It’s an approach that separates sustainable success from reckless decision-making.

The Missing Piece in Personal Development

Self-improvement education often skips the mental side of achievement. Most learners enter new ventures with ambition, but there’s a drawback. They usually lack the discipline to handle setbacks, overcome impatience, or manage doubt. The internet has only magnified this problem. “Fake gurus” promise instant results, while genuine education gets lost in the noise. For newcomers, it’s challenging to know whom to trust. As a result, many end up paying a high emotional price for poor guidance.

Gill saw this first-hand in his early years building ventures. While many mentors emphasized formulas and strategies, few discussed emotional control. “Any serious pursuit is a business, not a buzzword—treat it with structure, metrics, and calculated risk,” he says. That mindset became the foundation for everything he teaches today.

A Community Built for Thinkers

Early in his career, Gill faced the same emotions most ambitious people try to hide. The fear of missing out. Overcommitting. Second-guessing himself. Instead of letting those mistakes define him, he turned them into a system. By publicly sharing his planning process, analyzing decisions, and explaining his thought patterns, he built a community.

The result was the Sandeep Singh Channel. It’s a transparent space where over 85,000 members learn from real examples instead of empty promises. Through content focused on risk management, decision-making, and process, Gill’s followers have reported tangible improvements. His “Mind Mastery” video series explores impatience, frustration, and doubt—emotions few educators openly discuss. His message is that long-term success depends more on emotional control than perfect timing.

Sandeep Singh

The Influence of Personal Loss

Gill’s story began far from the spotlight. While studying Medicinal Chemistry, he realized that exchanging time for money had limits. As he sought independence, his father passed away during Gill’s time at university. In the midst of this personal tragedy, he took over his father’s electronic manufacturing startup, which became both a duty and a lesson in leadership.

That experience equipped him with the skills to build businesses, manage risk, and adopt a long-term perspective. With his growing interest in education and mentorship, Gill later founded his platform, a global learning community that makes personal development feel accessible and practical.

Mindset as the Real Edge

Gill doesn’t promise shortcuts. Instead, he focuses on mindset as the true edge in any endeavor. His educational materials and content remind learners that “fast results equal fast problems.” His lessons resonate with people who are tired of noise and craving authenticity. “In a world where fakeness is prevalent, authenticity compounds and wins the day,” he says.

His growing influence now extends beyond his core teaching. Gill has expanded his reach with short-form content on entrepreneurship, AI-driven productivity, and personal discipline. In the process, he’s building a brand that challenges conventional self-improvement education. By making learning transparent and accessible, he’s helping people think differently about success.

Education Without the Hype

Educator Sandeep Singh isn’t trying to build followers. Instead, he tries to develop thinkers. His story shows that mindset, not circumstances, drives results. As he often reminds his audience, patience and process will always outlast hype.

Sandeep Singh



This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife

I spent £56 at huge UK Christmas market — one food cost the most

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Whether you’re popping to the supermarket or dining out, fifty quid doesn’t stretch as far as it used to. With the cost of living crisis looming, no one ventures to Manchester Christmas Markets expecting a bargain.

Let’s face it, it’s never been a steal, but we’re all feeling the pinch more than ever – traders and shoppers alike. That’s why Manchester Evening News’ Parents Editor Emma Gill was assigned to explore the markets as a party of four. She went to gauge the cost of a quick bite and a hot chocolate.

The Bratwurst are among the crowd favourites – and some of the most affordable options – but, at £8 each, four of them still set Emma back £32 from the stall at Cathedral Gardens.

Next, she ordered four hot chocolates, which, at £9.50 apiece, totalled £38. For that price, you get to keep the festive mugs they’re served in (and so you should) or you can return them after your drink for a £3.50 refund on each one.

So all in all, with the mugs returned, Emma was down by £56 and pondering what people must be shelling out if they’re ‘out for a few’, or heaven forbid, ‘out out’.

Their food and drink vanished in an instant too, reports Manchester Evening News.

Reflecting on her experience, Emma shared: “Having cream on the hot chocolates means they need drinking pretty quick before they go cold, but even I was shocked at how fast the kids threw them down their necks.

“And that’s the thing with the markets, isn’t it. Yes, you can have a little wander and enjoy the decorations – and there is some free entertainment including the huge Christmas Day Parade which comes to the city on Sunday, December 7 – but really you need a decent amount of money to be able to enjoy it properly.

“And for a lot of people at the moment, they just don’t have that cash to spare.

“Don’t get me wrong, the sausages were decent – and we’d highly recommend the pork, honey and marmalade sausage if you’re getting one – but it’s hard to justify spending nearly £60 on something that we could eat and drink for a fraction of the price at home. And we wouldn’t even have to queue.”



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

8 Best Christmas Quotes From ‘Die Hard’

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Few movies spark as much debate every December as Die Hard. Released in 1988, John McTiernan’s action classic didn’t just redefine the genre, but also quite effortlessly slipped into the holiday canon. It kicked off as a high-stakes thriller about a New York cop trapped in a Los Angeles skyscraper and aged into something of a Christmas tradition. Every year, fans revisit Bruce Willis’s John McClane crawling through air ducts, trading quips with terrorists, and ultimately saving the day. It’s proof that the movie’s seasonal setting is essential to the narrative.

So, the brilliance of Die Hard lies in how it uses Christmas as a part of the story’s DNA. The Nakatomi Plaza party, the decorations, the music, even the language of miracles, all of it shapes the tone and gives the movie its unique flavor. Even Argyle’s playful banter is peppered with the kind of holiday references that remind us Die Hard is a Christmas movie with explosions woven in. The quotes, sometimes funny, biting, and ironic, are somehow tied closely to the season. That’s why we’re celebrating the lines that prove Die Hard belongs with the classics.

Here’s our list of the 8 best Christmas quotes from Die Hard, because nothing screams holiday season quite like Bruce Willis with a machine gun.

8

“Not a Creature Was Stirring, Except the Four A******* Coming in the Rear.” – Theo

20th Century Fox

Theo (Clarence Gilyard Jr.), Hans Gruber’s tech wizard, delivers this line over the radio as the LAPD SWAT team makes its move on Nakatomi Plaza. It’s one of the sharpest examples of his sardonic humor. He is riffing on ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas while narrating the cops’ doomed infiltration. The full quote reads, “’Twas the night before Christmas, and all through the house, not a creature was stirring — except the four assholes coming in the rear in standard two‑by‑two cover formation.”

By this point in the movie, Theo has already proven himself indispensable. He’s the one who picks all the locks that open the vault containing the $640 million in bearer bonds, and as soon as the infiltration begins, he’s back at work, juggling the technical side of the heist while mocking the opposition.

7

“Now I Have a Machine Gun. Ho Ho Ho.” – John McClane (In Writing)

Die Hard 20th Century Fox

This moment is one of Die Hard’s most famous visual gags. After John McClane (Bruce Willis) kills Tony, one of Hans Gruber’s henchmen, he sends a message to the terrorists by leaving Tony’s body in a chair, dressed in a Santa hat, with the words “Now I have a machine gun. Ho Ho Ho.” scrawled across his sweatshirt. It’s not spoken out loud but written, and it’s McClane’s way of announcing to Gruber that he’s armed and ready.

The scene happens early in the movie, right after McClane secures his first weapon, and it sets the tone for the cat‑and‑mouse battle between him and Hans. It’s also the perfect collison of holiday imagery and action-movie intrigue. McClane’s message is both funny and threatening, and the “Ho Ho Ho” turns a deadly situation into a twisted Christmas card. Fans love it because it’s cheeky, memorable, and instantly quotable.

6

“I Got Invited to the Christmas Party by Mistake. Who Knew?” – John McClane

Die Hard 20th Century Fox

This quote comes from Die Hard during the tense but slyly humorous encounter between John McClane (Bruce Willis) and Hans Gruber (Alan Rickman), when Hans pretends to be a hostage named “Bill Clay.” McClane, suspicious but playing along, introduces himself with a laugh, “Yeah. I got invited to the Christmas party by mistake. Who knew?” It is a deceptively casual moment in the middle of the movie, and it shows that McClane can keep things light even if he is staring down a terrorist mastermind.

It also fits neatly into the narrative because it highlights McClane’s outsider status. He is not supposed to be there, yet he’s the one who ends up saving everyone. Also, McClane is not a superhero, he’s just a cop who stumbled into a holiday party gone wrong. But the Christmas element is naturally baked in because the whole hostage crisis is happening during a corporate holiday bash.

5

“Just Once, I’d Like a Regular, Normal Christmas!” – John McClane

Die Hard 2: Die Harder 20th Century Fox

Die Hard 2: Die Harder features this unforgettable quote. In it, John McClane finds himself in yet another holiday nightmare, this time at Dulles International Airport. As terrorists seize control of the runways, McClane vents his frustration, “Just once, I’d like a regular, normal Christmas. Eggnog, a fuckin’ Christmas tree, a little turkey. But, no! I gotta crawl around in this motherf**kin’ tin can!”

It is delivered to Captain Lorenzo (Dennis Franz) in the middle of the chaos, and it’s pure McClane. It works narratively because it underscores the absurdity of lightning striking twice. It’s also the most relatable quote among all others mentioned here. Everyone wants a peaceful Christmas, and McClane’s complaint is both hilarious and human. Willis is at his best, too. Grumbling, self-aware, cracking jokes under pressure, but still pushing through.

4

“It’s Christmas! You Could Steal City Hall!” – Random Kid

Die Hard with a Vengeance 20th Century Fox

Die Hard with a Vengeance breaks tradition by setting the action in summer New York rather than Christmas Eve, but the film still sneaks in a sly nod to the franchise’s holiday roots with this quote. It comes when McClane (Bruce Willis) stops a kid from robbing a convenience store. The boy, frustrated by the lack of police presence, blurts out, “It’s Christmas! You could steal City Hall!”.

It may seem like a throwaway moment on the surface, but it is so cleverly placed. McClane suddenly realizes that Simon Gruber (Jeremy Irons) is using his elaborate “Simon Says” riddles as a distraction and pulling the cops away from the real target. The kid’s offhand remains become the spark that helps McClane piece together the true scope of the heist, which is the Federal Reserve. Also, it is spoken by a random kid, not McClane or Gruber, which makes it feel authentic, almost like background chatter that suddenly matters.

3

“This IS Christmas Music!” – Argyle

Die Hard 20th Century Fox

The quote comes early in Die Hard, when Argyle, John McClane’s limo driver, is cruising him from the airport to Nakatomi Plaza. McClane asks if Argyle has any Christmas music, and Argyle fires back with a grin. He says, “This IS Christmas music!” while blasting Run‑DMC’s “Christmas in Hollis” from the stereo. It is a small exchange, but it sets the tone for the movie’s playful holiday backdrop.

Argyle has an easygoing vibe, and it’s a contrast from McClane’s tension about visiting his estranged wife, but the music choice grounds the movie firmly in its Christmas setting while also giving it an urban edge. And Argyle is right. “Christmas in Hollis” is a holiday track, even if it’s not the traditional carols McClane expected. Because Die Hard has proved that Christmas doesn’t have to be sentimental, it can be cool, ironic, and even funky.

2

“It’s Christmas, Theo, It’s the Time of Miracles, so Be of Good Cheer.” – Hans Gruber

Die Hard 20th Century Fox

Hans Gruber (Alan Rickman) delivers this line to Theo (Clarence Gilyard Jr.) as the tech expert works on the final lock of the Nakatomi vault. Theo warns that breaking the last barrier will take a miracle, and Hans coolly replies, “It’s Christmas, Theo. It’s the time of miracles. So be of good cheer… and call me when you hit the last lock.” The quote also comes at a pivotal moment, as it explains the stakes of the heist and Hans’s belief that everything is falling into place.

It also deserves a mention because it is one of the rare times the villain explicitly ties his scheme to Christmas. Also, Rickman’s delivery is smooth, almost charming, which makes it chilling to hear. The holiday element is ironic. Miracles here don’t mean goodwill or family, they mean cracking a vault and stealing millions.

1

“If This Is Their Idea of Christmas, I Gotta Be Here for New Year’s!” – Argyle

Die Hard 20th Century Fox

Die Hard closes out with this quote in the limo and the words are spoken by Argyle after the chaos at Nakatomi Plaza has finally ended. As McClane and Holly reunite and wish each other Merry Christmas, Argyle quips, “If this is their idea of Christmas, I gotta be here for New Year’s!” It is the last line of the movie, and it is delivered with Argyle’s trademark humor, and it works as a release valve after two hours of tension.

In a way, it’s the perfect send-off. Argyle’s perspective is that of an outsider who stumbled into the madness, and his joke reframes the night as just another wild holiday adventure. He is comparing the chaos of Nakatomi Plaza to a holiday celebration, and the idea of sticking around for another week, for New Year’s, makes it even funnier. It is light and playful and a reminder that Die Hard never loses its sense of humor.


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Release Date

July 15, 1988

Runtime

132 minutes

Writers

Jeb Stuart, Steven E. de Souza

Producers

Joel Silver





This story originally appeared on Movieweb