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  • LVMH explores sale of its 50% stake in Rihanna-backed Fenty Beauty, sources say

    LVMH explores sale of its 50% stake in Rihanna-backed Fenty Beauty, sources say

    Rihanna celebrates the launch of Fenty Beauty at ULTA Beauty on March 12, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.

    Kevin Mazur | Getty Images

    Luxury goods giant LVMH is exploring a sale of its 50% stake in Fenty Beauty, which it co-owns with Grammy Award-winning singer and entrepreneur Rihanna, according to four people familiar with the matter.

    The company is working with investment bank Evercore on the sale, three of the people said. All four asked not to be identified because the process is confidential.

    In 2017, Rihanna, whose full name is Robyn Rihanna Fenty, launched Fenty Beauty with the help of Kendo Brands, LVMH’s in-house beauty incubator. She and LVMH each own half of the company, sources said.

    LVMH and Evercore declined to comment. Fenty Beauty and representatives for Rihanna did not immediately return requests for comment.

    Fenty Beauty, which generated around $450 million of net sales in 2024, could be valued at somewhere between $1 billion to $2 billion, two of the people said.

    Barbados-born Rihanna, who also owns lingerie brand Savage X Fenty, started Fenty Beauty to create a makeup line that works for a wider range of skin tones and types, including Black, Hispanic and Asian women. The products, which include makeup, skincare, haircare and fragrance, are sold in Sephora and on Amazon.

    Elf Beauty bought Hailey Bieber’s company Rhode for $1 billion earlier this year.

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  • Best monitor deal: Save $300 on the Samsung Odyssey G7 gaming monitor

    Best monitor deal: Save $300 on the Samsung Odyssey G7 gaming monitor

    SAVE $300: As of Oct. 21, get the 40-inch Samsung Odyssey G7 gaming monitor for $899.99 at Amazon, down from its usual price of $1,199.99. That’s a discount of 25%.


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  • Our biggest competition is screens at home, says theme park boss

    Our biggest competition is screens at home, says theme park boss

    Sean FarringtonBusiness presenter and

    Michael Sheils McNameeBusiness reporter

    Getty Images Fiona Eastwood pictured in 2025. She is wearing a blue pastel coloured blazer, a salmon coloured blouse, and thick-rimmed dark glasses, and she has blonde shoulder length hair. She appears to be mid-talking during an on stage interview event Getty Images

    The head of global theme park giant Merlin Entertainments says its “biggest competition” is people choosing to stay at home on their phones and other devices….

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  • Champions League: An eventful evening as 43 goals scored, five red cards given, six penalties awarded

    Champions League: An eventful evening as 43 goals scored, five red cards given, six penalties awarded

    There were 43 goals scored, five red cards handed out and six penalties awarded – of which five were converted.

    It was a relentless evening of Champions League football on Tuesday.

    Last season’s winners Paris St-Germain hit seven past Leverkusen,…

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  • Just a moment…

    Just a moment…

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  • Just a moment…

    Just a moment…

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  • Early Universe’s Messy Galaxies Struggled to Settle

    Early Universe’s Messy Galaxies Struggled to Settle

    Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have captured the most detailed look yet at how galaxies formed just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang – and found they were far more chaotic and messy than those we…

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  • Japan's Takaichi makes history, but women ask: what changes now? – Reuters

    1. Japan’s Takaichi makes history, but women ask: what changes now?  Reuters
    2. Japan’s first female leader: A historic moment with caveats  BBC
    3. China hawk Sanae Takaichi named Japan’s first woman prime minister  Dawn
    4. Sanae Takaichi appoints just two…

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  • Papillary Muscle Scarring May Predict Cardiac Death in Patients with Dilated Cardiomyopathy

    Papillary Muscle Scarring May Predict Cardiac Death in Patients with Dilated Cardiomyopathy

    Papillary muscle scarring (papSCAR) as detected by dark blood delayed-enhancement cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) was present in 1 in 3 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in a recent trial and acted as an independent predictor of…

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  • Developing tidal power would push up UK electricity costs, study finds

    Developing tidal power would push up UK electricity costs, study finds

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    Developing large-scale tidal power stations in the UK would be likely to push up electricity costs, according to a study that marks the latest attempt to assess whether Britain should be making more of its geography by harnessing the tides.

    While tidal technology could lead to a lower wholesale cost of electricity, that would be outweighed by subsidies and other costs, modelling by the state-owned National Energy System Operator found. 

    “The results show that when the total cost to the consumer is considered, including wholesale market costs, subsidy requirements and the impact on existing subsidies . . . the counterfactual scenario where no tidal range is included is the cheapest,” it said. 

    The report, published on Wednesday, recommends further exploration of financing models for the technology as well as a “strategic approach” to where any projects are developed, to get value for money.  

    Neso was taken over by the government in 2024 and given a wider remit including advising the government on energy policy. 

    The government is trying to develop new sources of low carbon power to meet its goal of decarbonising the power system by 2030 and the whole economy by 2050. 

    Electricity demand is projected to at least double by 2050 compared with 2023 levels, boosted by consumers buying more electric cars and heat pumps and more data centres being developed. 

    So far, Britain has taken advantage of its climate and its coastlines to become the world’s second-largest offshore wind market. But there have been persistent questions over whether it should be making more of its tides. 

    Neso’s report, undertaken in conjunction with Arup, looks at tidal range technology — barrages or lagoons that use high tides to drive a turbine. Tidal stream technology, by contrast, uses tidal currents to spin turbines underwater. 

    Plans to build a tidal lagoon in Swansea Bay were not approved © Tidal Lagoon Power/PA

    Both involve high costs and technological complications that have held back large-scale deployment in Britain. 

    In January 2018, Greg Clark, then business secretary, refused to approve taxpayer subsidies for a planned £1.3bn tidal lagoon in Swansea Bay, saying it would not deliver value for money. 

    That was despite an independent review into tidal lagoons published by former energy minister Charles Hendry in 2017, which concluded they could “deliver low carbon power in a way that is very competitive with other low carbon sources”. 

    Neso’s report compared scenarios involving different amounts of tidal range deployed in the 2030s and 2040s with a scenario without any tidal range at all. It found that total electricity system costs were more expensive than the counterfactual across all scenarios. 

    However, the effect was muted if the projects were built under a regulated asset base funding model, in which consumers start paying for the technology during construction. The idea is to reduce developers’ risks and therefore cut finance costs. This model is currently being used to develop the Sizewell C nuclear power station in Suffolk.

    Electricity system costs are a major issue for the current Labour government. It has pledged to bring household bills down by £300 a year by 2030, despite widespread scepticism in the industry over whether this is possible. 

    One route would be to move the costs of subsidies and other policies off electricity bills and put them into general taxation, but that would be controversial given concerns about high costs across the economy.

    The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said: “We are open to considering well-developed proposals for harnessing tidal range energy in the bays and estuaries around our coastlines, which demonstrate value for money.”

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