Forget muddy fields and overpriced water bottles. Olas de Fuego: Nicky Jam x Virgin Voyages is here to bring some much-needed style and comfort to a traditional music festival experience.
From December 5-13, we’re turning the Caribbean…

Forget muddy fields and overpriced water bottles. Olas de Fuego: Nicky Jam x Virgin Voyages is here to bring some much-needed style and comfort to a traditional music festival experience.
From December 5-13, we’re turning the Caribbean…

Pakistani wrestler Hassan Ali on the Asian Youth Games podium with his bronze medal. PHOTO: Pakistan Olympic Association
Pakistan’s Hassan Ali grabbed…

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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
Meta is planning to raise $25bn from a bond sale to help it pay for soaring artificial intelligence costs, even as the Big Tech group’s share price fell amid concerns that its spending is too high.
The social media group has hired Citigroup and Morgan Stanley to raise up to $25bn in debt, ranging from five to 40 years in maturity, in what would be one of the biggest bond sales of the year, according to two people close to the matter.
It comes a day after chief executive Mark Zuckerberg warned that the US tech group would spend even more aggressively as part of an arms race to build the data centres and infrastructure powering the AI boom.
Meta’s shares fell 12 per cent after Wall Street’s opening bell on Thursday — wiping out about almost $240bn from its valuation — as investors fretted over the tech group’s huge outlay.
The sale underscores how technology giants are increasingly turning to the debt markets as they spend record sums to build AI infrastructure.
Meta raised $27bn of private debt from credit providers, including Pimco and Apollo, in recent months to fund construction of its huge “Hyperion” data centre in Louisiana. Oracle sold $18bn of bonds in September.
Large tech companies are projected to invest $400bn on AI infrastructure this year, including buying computer chips and building data centres. On Wednesday, Meta, Microsoft and Google’s parent Alphabet all disclosed larger than expected spending plans in the current quarter.
The social media company said capex could hit $72bn by the end of the year and that spending growth would be “notably larger” in 2026, implying a number far in excess of an earlier forecast for $105bn.
Zuckerberg defended huge spending on infrastructure for Meta’s own use. He told analysts on Wednesday that it was “the right strategy to aggressively frontload building capacity” as part of the tech group’s bid to be the first to build artificial superintelligence.
At a recent dinner with US President Donald Trump, Zuckerberg said the company planned to spend $600bn on US data centres and AI infrastructure through 2028.
Meta, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley declined to comment. The bond sale was first reported by Bloomberg.

Systemic light chain (AL) amyloidosis is a rare and life-threatening disorder characterized by the deposition of misfolded immunoglobulin light chains as insoluble amyloid fibrils in various tissues and organs, leading to…

About one-third of all drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration target the largest family of cell membrane receptors called G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs).
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A research team led by the Medical University of Vienna, the HUN-REN Research Centre for Natural Sciences and the Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest has developed a groundbreaking new chemotherapeutic agent, LiPyDau, which…

Late-night hosts recapped Donald Trump’s lavish visit to South Korea, where he received a ceremonial golden crown.
Trump continued his tour of Asia on Wednesday, where he’s been “getting the royal treatment he so desperately…

FILE PHOTO: Formula One F1 – United States Grand Prix – Circuit of the Americas, Austin, Texas, U.S. – October 23, 2022 Tim Cook waves the chequered flag to the race winner Red Bull’s Max Verstappen.
Mike Segar | Reuters
Apple reports fiscal fourth quarter earnings on Thursday after the bell.
The fourth quarter, which runs through the end of September, is the first quarter that includes a little more than a week of sales of the new iPhone 17 models.
Analysts have said that early signs are pointing to improved demand for the iPhone 17 models, especially the entry-level and Pro models. Investors will be looking for any color from CEO Tim Cook and CFO Kevan Parekh on the demand they’re seeing for the new devices.
Analysts polled by FactSet expect Apple’s fiscal 2025 to be the first year of iPhone sales growth since 2022.
Apple has also been negatively affected by Trump administration tariffs, although the company has gotten praise from President Donald Trump over its plan to spend $600 billion in the U.S. and boost American semiconductor manufacturing. Apple also announced last week that it was shipping artificial intelligence servers from a factory in Houston.
In July, Apple said it could incur $1.1 billion in tariff costs. Investors will be watching to see if its actual costs came in under its forecast, as well as what tariff costs it sees in the current quarter.
Some investors want to see Apple step up its level of capital expenditure and AI spending. Apple has largely sat out the data center and AI chip investment boom that other large tech companies are spending tens of billions on.
Last quarter, Cook said that it was “significantly” growing its investments in the technology. That will likely show up in the company’s capital expenditures, but commentary from Cook may provide insight into the company’s AI strategy.
Cook will also likely praise the company’s five-year deal with F1 to broadcast its races in the U.S. on Apple TV, the latest development in the company’s sports and media strategy.
Expectations remain high for Cook and Apple. In the June quarter, Apple reported 10% year-over-year revenue growth. For the September quarter, analysts polled by LSEG are expecting 7.7% sales growth.
Here’s what Wall Street is expecting, per LSEG estimates:
Analysts polled by LSEG expect Apple to guide to $132.31 billion in December quarter sales, and earnings of $2.53 per share.