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  • Ferrari SC40 revives the spirit of the F40 with a modern, hybrid twist

    Ferrari SC40 revives the spirit of the F40 with a modern, hybrid twist

    • The Ferrari SC40 is a one-off berlinetta based on the 296 GTB, producing 610kW and 740Nm of torque.
    • Its design pays tribute to the 1987 F40, featuring angular geometry and a fixed rear wing.
    • Carbon-Kevlar elements and hybrid V6 tech link the…

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  • Evaluating Valuation Following Recent Share Price Fluctuations

    Evaluating Valuation Following Recent Share Price Fluctuations

    Thales (ENXTPA:HO) shares recently saw some movement, drawing attention to how investors are weighing the company’s momentum over the past year. Its recent returns spark interesting discussions about long-term strategy and sector positioning.

    See our latest analysis for Thales.

    Thales’s recent share price action, including a modest dip to €253.4 after a sharp year-to-date surge, reflects the market’s recognition of its strong operational momentum. The 1-year total shareholder return of 69.57% and a huge 5-year return over 400% suggest that momentum remains firmly in Thales’s favor, which hints at investor optimism about its long-term prospects even with some near-term fluctuations.

    If you’re curious what other companies are drawing attention in this space, check out the full list of aerospace and defense stocks in the following section: See the full list for free.

    With a nearly 70% return in just one year but shares now hovering close to analyst targets, the key question now is whether Thales is undervalued or if the market already anticipates its future growth. Could this be a true buying opportunity?

    The most widely followed narrative puts Thales’s fair value meaningfully above its last close at €253.4. This scenario creates a compelling opportunity for investors weighing current optimism against future growth expectations.

    Heightened innovation and R&D in next-generation technologies (AI, secure communications, space tech, digitization), along with cross-business synergies from acquisitions, position Thales to remain a market leader amid secular shifts toward digital transformation in security, favorably impacting long-term revenue growth and margin resilience.

    Read the complete narrative.

    Want to know the drivers behind this bullish outlook? The most intriguing part is how bold revenue and margin forecasts converge with shifting industry trends. The real surprise lies in the financial leap analysts are betting on. What key growth rate and profit assumptions are they making? Dive in to see what’s fueling this ambitious fair value calculation.

    Result: Fair Value of €275.56 (UNDERVALUED)

    Have a read of the narrative in full and understand what’s behind the forecasts.

    However, execution challenges in Thales’s digital transformation or unexpected government budget delays could quickly temper the current bullish outlook.

    Find out about the key risks to this Thales narrative.

    The market seems excited by Thales’s growth story, but a look at its price-to-earnings ratio gives pause. Thales trades at 49.8x earnings, which is far higher than its peers (31.9x) and even higher than the industry standard (35.2x). This premium suggests buyers are taking on extra valuation risk if optimism fades.

    See what the numbers say about this price — find out in our valuation breakdown.

    ENXTPA:HO PE Ratio as at Oct 2025

    If you see things differently or want to put the numbers to the test yourself, you can easily craft your own Thales narrative in just a few minutes. Do it your way

    A great starting point for your Thales research is our analysis highlighting 3 key rewards and 1 important warning sign that could impact your investment decision.

    Opportunities extend far beyond this single stock, and the right screener can help you spot hidden gems, growing sectors, and income powerhouses before others catch on. Make sure you’re keeping an edge by checking out these handpicked options:

    This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.

    Companies discussed in this article include HO.PA.

    Have feedback on this article? Concerned about the content? Get in touch with us directly. Alternatively, email editorial-team@simplywallst.com

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  • Metropolitan Bank Holding (MCB) Net Margin Rises, Reinforcing Bullish Valuation Narrative

    Metropolitan Bank Holding (MCB) Net Margin Rises, Reinforcing Bullish Valuation Narrative

    Metropolitan Bank Holding (MCB) delivered net profit margins of 24.3%, up from last year’s 23.1%, with average annual earnings growth of 7.6% over the past five years. This year’s 6.5% earnings growth trails the longer-term average, but analysts see a sharp acceleration ahead. They forecast 28.7% annual earnings growth and 18.4% annual revenue growth, both well above the US market. At $70.9, shares trade considerably below some fair value estimates, adding to the positive sentiment around the company’s high-quality earnings and strong value positioning.

    See our full analysis for Metropolitan Bank Holding.

    The next step unpacks how these figures compare with the market’s prevailing narratives, highlighting where consensus is confirmed and where surprises may lie.

    See what the community is saying about Metropolitan Bank Holding

    NYSE:MCB Earnings & Revenue History as at Oct 2025
    • Net profit margins expanded to 24.3%, up from 23.1% last year, building on a consistently strong five-year track record.

    • Analysts’ consensus view holds that margin expansion is being driven by investments in technology and fee-based income streams,

      • The consensus narrative notes these tech and fintech partnerships are already supporting stable funding, which helps boost profitability in markets like New York City.

      • Analysts also point out that prudent risk management and diversified loan portfolios have contributed to earnings durability by limiting credit risk and supporting margins versus peers.

    • To see how analysts’ consensus aligns with deeper margin trends and future expectations, check out the full story for Metropolitan Bank Holding. 📊 Read the full Metropolitan Bank Holding Consensus Narrative.

    • Earnings are projected to grow 28.7% per year and revenue 18.4% per year, both far above the US market averages of 15.5% and 10% respectively.

    • Analysts’ consensus view emphasizes that these growth projections depend on continuing digital transformation and low-cost deposit growth,

      • The narrative highlights that successful integration of an advanced tech stack and growth in core deposit verticals are expected to underpin higher noninterest income and expanded lending for the next several years.

      • However, they acknowledge risks such as delays in tech upgrades or increased deposit competition, which could pressure both margins and growth if not managed carefully.

    • Shares trade at $70.90, creating a wide gap versus the DCF fair value estimate of $151.56 and the peer price-to-earnings average of 18x, with Metropolitan at just 11.6x.

    • Analysts’ consensus narrative describes this valuation as reflecting both the company’s profitable growth and some caution around concentration risks,

      • The below-fair-value price aligns with the company’s strong earnings quality and long-term digital growth opportunities, according to consensus forecasts.

      • Still, the narrative weighs risks like reliance on commercial real estate and regulatory scrutiny, which could explain why the market offers such a substantial discount to estimated fair value.

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  • Scientists discover a hidden gene mutation that causes deafness—and a way to fix it

    Scientists discover a hidden gene mutation that causes deafness—and a way to fix it

    Mutations in a gene called CPD have been found to play a key role in a rare inherited form of hearing loss, according to an international research collaboration. Scientists from the University of Chicago, the University of Miami, and several…

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  • Scientists discover a hidden gene mutation that causes deafness—and a way to fix it

    Scientists discover a hidden gene mutation that causes deafness—and a way to fix it

    Mutations in a gene called CPD have been found to play a key role in a rare inherited form of hearing loss, according to an international research collaboration. Scientists from the University of Chicago, the University of Miami, and several…

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  • Yahoo ist Teil der Yahoo-Markenfamilie.

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  • Thames Water paid £20mn to cover KKR’s due diligence for abortive bid

    Thames Water paid £20mn to cover KKR’s due diligence for abortive bid

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    Near-bankrupt Thames Water paid £20mn to cover the due diligence costs of KKR for its abortive attempt to rescue the UK’s largest water utility.

    Thames Water selected KKR, the private equity giant, as its preferred bidder for an emergency rescue earlier this year. Thames Water was obliged to pay for the cost to potential buyers of assessing and researching the state of the utility’s infrastructure, operations and finances under the terms of the deal. The cost of that exercise topped £20mn, according to people familiar with the situation, largely due to fees paid to KKR’s advisers.

    KKR pulled out of the deal in June, citing the risk of government intervention. It then passed its due diligence to lenders that are now trying to win approval from regulators for their own takeover of Thames Water, which provides water and sewerage services to about 16mn customers. Any deal will also need to be approved by London’s High Court.

    The fees will raise concerns that cash is leaking out of the utility, which receives all of its income from customer water bills. Thames Water is struggling under the weight of £20bn debt and is trying to avoid temporary renationalisation under the government’s special administration regime after its previous owners — a clutch of pension and sovereign wealth funds — wrote off their investments and walked away from the business in 2024.

    The scale of the due diligence effort, which included site visits to water and waste treatment facilities, was borne from the poor visibility Thames Water has over the state of its crumbling infrastructure, with documents revealing last year that the utility has failed to map almost a third of its sewage pipe network.

    Reports produced by KKR and the creditors underscored the dangers of so-called “single point of failure risk” at some of Thames Water’s biggest sites, according to people familiar with the matter and documents seen by the Financial Times.

    Beckton sewage works, which KKR and Thames Water creditor analysis suggests is at risk of failure © Jeff Gilbert/Alamy

    Coppermills water treatment works and Beckton sewage treatment works in East London were identified as the two facilities at the highest risk of outages, according to this analysis.

    The cost of the due diligence work has added to a multimillion pound fee bonanza for advisers, bankers and lawyers trying to secure the financial future of the troubled company. The total advisory bill could top £200mn a debt restructuring is agreed, the High Court heard earlier this year; costs that the utility itself is covering from its own cash-strapped balance sheet.

    KKR’s advisers on its abandoned bid included investment bank PJT Partners, law firm Kirkland & Ellis and management consultant Roland Berger.

    Had KKR completed its rescue of Thames Water, the private equity firm would have covered the costs of its due diligence, according to a person familiar with the situation.

    The senior creditors — which include US investment firms Elliott Management and Apollo Global Management — submitted their latest rescue proposal to regulator Ofwat earlier this month, pledging £3.15bn in equity and a 25 per cent writedown of the nominal value of their exposure. 

    They have also asked for concessions on regulatory fines and targets. The creditors said they had “an ambition” to reduce sewage outflows by 30 per cent by 2030, well below the government’s target of 50 per cent.

    Rival potential buyers including CK Infrastructure, owner of Northumbrian Water, have recently written to Ofwat claiming they have been “excluded” from the bidding process meaning it was unlikely to get the best deal for customers. CKI has indicated it would bid for Thames Water if the government puts it into its SAR.

    The creditors said their plan “will see £20.5bn invested over the next five years and is the fastest and most reliable route to turn around Thames Water, deliver on customer priorities, clean up waterways and rebuild public trust.”  

    KKR declined to comment on its due diligence costs.

    Thames Water said: “Advisor fees are part of an extensive, complex recapitalisation; customers will not pay for these fees. We remain focused on securing a market-led recapitalisation that establishes the financial and regulatory foundations required to support the investment and performance improvements our customers expect and return the company to a stable financial foundation.”    

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  • Tony Blair Institute undertakes restructuring as losses mount

    Tony Blair Institute undertakes restructuring as losses mount

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    The Tony Blair Institute is undergoing a major restructuring that includes staff lay-offs, as the not-for-profit set-up by the former UK prime minister searches for a more sustainable funding model.

    Sir Tony Blair, whose institute advises nearly 50 governments worldwide, emailed staff on Thursday to inform them the TBI would be entering a “new stage of its journey” including changes in senior management, said three people familiar with the matter.

    The email spelled out a number of changes affecting the leadership of the organisation including the appointment of a new finance chief and operating officer, while setting out plans for a regional managing director in Europe.

    The TBI would also now focus on four global functions with an emphasis on “[artificial intelligence] and innovation”, including the appointment of a new chief AI and innovation officer, former Treasury official and longtime Blair adviser Benedict Macon-Cooney.

    “This is a genuine restructuring,” TBI said in a statement to the Financial Times. “We’re evolving, particularly as we focus on governing in the age of AI and the technology revolution.”

    Changes come as the not-for-profit, which undertakes commercial consulting to fund pro-bono work for governments, suffered deepening losses last year. TBI reported a $4.3mn loss in 2024 despite turnover increasing 11 per cent to $161mn, according to accounts published earlier this month.

    The TBI attributed increased expenditure to rising staff costs — it recruited former Finnish prime minister Sanna Marin and former UK chief of defence staff general Sir Nick Carter last year — as its portfolio of work grew and it expanded to eight new countries.

    TBI said: “We have taken the decision in the last couple of years to invest in expansion and run a small deficit, given our strong reserves and cash position.” The TBI had reserves of more than $33mn at the end of 2024.

    Staff numbers climbed to 786 in 2024, up from 719 a year earlier, with the bulk of the increase in the not-for-profit’s advisory arm. It incurred $2.2mn in costs attached to redundancies last year, triple the amount incurred in 2023.

    Two people familiar with the matter said the not-for-profit has been seeking to increase sources of funding, particularly through consulting work, amid concerns that it was dependent on too few individual donors.

    Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison has pledged or contributed nearly $350mn since 2021, according to public filings © Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

    Billionaire Larry Ellison’s contribution in 2023 was equivalent to more than a third of the TBI’s operating costs in the same year.

    The Oracle co-founder has pledged or contributed nearly $350mn since 2021, according to public filings. Blair, who serves as the institute’s executive chair, has a close personal relationship with Ellison spanning back to his time serving as Britain’s premier.

    “TBI income this year has grown again and will do so again next year. And every year for the last three TBI has increased its own income from sources other than donors,” the not-for-profit added.

    The TBI also receives grant funding from organisations including the Gates Foundation, Wellcome Trust and World Bank.

    Blair left Downing Street in 2007 after a decade in power. Since leaving office the former British premier has dispensed advice to governments across the globe, while he is expected to play a role on a supervisory board overseeing the running of postwar Gaza.

    The TBI has been criticised for undertaking advisory work for controversial clients such as Saudi Arabia, while the FT previously reported that staff were involved in a project alongside Boston Consulting Group that envisaged a “Trump Riviera” in Gaza.

    Although Blair does not take a salary from the institute, TBI’s other four directors were paid a total of $2.1mn last year, up from $2mn in the previous 12 months. The highest-paid director took home $1.3mn. The director is not named in the accounts.

    Additional reporting by Kieran Smith and Peter Andringa

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  • A modern marriage of ornamented ceramics and Arts & Crafts architecture

    A modern marriage of ornamented ceramics and Arts & Crafts architecture

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    The ceramicist Frances Priest was 10 when her father gave her a copy of The Grammar of Ornament, a compendium of global…

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  • Fermin Aldeguer suffers embarrassing Malaysian MotoGP qualifying crash

    Fermin Aldeguer suffers embarrassing Malaysian MotoGP qualifying crash

    2025 MotoGP rookie Fermin Aldeguer suffered an embarrassing crash in the paddock at the Malaysian MotoGP during qualifying.

    Having become MotoGP’s first rookie winner since Brad Binder’s Czech triumph in 2020 at the Indonesian Grand Prix,

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