On Saturday, Sydney Sweeney graced the red carpet for the premiere of her forthcoming film “Christy” during the AFI Fest 2025, clad in a soft pink custom Miu Miu gown.
Styled by Molly Dickson, the “Euphoria” star,…

On Saturday, Sydney Sweeney graced the red carpet for the premiere of her forthcoming film “Christy” during the AFI Fest 2025, clad in a soft pink custom Miu Miu gown.
Styled by Molly Dickson, the “Euphoria” star,…

PUBG and Subnautica 2 publisher Krafton has declared itself an “AI-first company”, announcing a move to “place AI at the centre of problem solving” via a “complete” company reorganisation.
The megacorp outlined its “transition to…

Signage for Novartis AG at a building in the company’s headquarters campus in Basel, Switzerland, on Monday, Jan. 8, 2023.
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Swiss pharmaceutical giant Novartis is nearing a deal to buy biotechnology company Avidity Biosciences for more than $70 a share, Bloomberg News reported, citing a person familiar with the matter.
A deal could be announced as early as Sunday, the report said.
Novartis and Avidity didn’t immediately respond to CNBC’s requests for comment.
Avidity specializes in developing an innovative class of ribonucleic acid (RNA) therapeutics called antibody oligonucleotide conjugates. RNA-based therapeutics are a relatively new class of medications that work by altering how genes are expressed to treat or prevent diseases.
The reported discussions come as Novartis ramps up its research and development division. The company earlier this year pledged to invest $23 billion to build out its U.S.-based infrastructure, which includes plans to construct a second R&D hub in San Diego.
The company has also struck two key deals with Anthos Therapeutics and Regulus Therapeutics this year to boost its development and manufacturing of cardiovascular and kidney disease drugs.
Avidity shares closed at $49.15 on Friday. The stock, which has a market capitalization of roughly $7.2 billion, is up nearly 70% since the beginning of the year. Novartis shares closed at $130.36 on Friday.
Read the complete Bloomberg News report here.

Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke told the UK’s Sunday Times that he won’t play in Israel again while Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is in power, and that Israel should not be part of Eurovision, while also criticizing pro-Palestinian…

“We are more than doubling the barrels (per day)… to 1.4 million from 650,000,” said Aliko Dangote, a Nigerian businessman who is Africa’s richest person.
“This will make it the largest refinery” globally, surpassing India’s Jamnagar Refinery, he told a news conference in Lagos.
The privately run Dangote refinery, which started operations last year, is a gamechanger for Nigeria, which previously had to import almost all its petrol despite being a major oil producer.
After years of neglect and mismanagement of public refineries, Dangote has shaken up the corruption-marred players in Nigeria and driven down prices of petrol for consumers.
“This expansion reflects our confidence in Nigeria’s future, our belief in Africa’s potential and our commitment to building energy independence for our continent,” and reduce import dependence, Dangote said, adding there was “quite a lot of demand” from west Africa and east Africa.
Dangote also exports aviation fuel, mainly to the United States, Europe and Brazil.
The Dangote refinery, which has sparked monopoly fears as it becomes a powerful player itself, plans to list on the Nigerian Stock Exchange next year.
“That is a step towards broader ownership and market transparency,” said Dangote.
A second privately owned refinery, BUA, is under construction by another Nigerian billionaire, Abdulsamad Rabiu.
Recent moves by the Dangote refinery to bring its own, natural gas-powered trucks to distribute petrol in the country in September sparked a strike by a fuel tanker drivers’ union, which accused the company of hiring new drivers on the condition they didn’t join a union.
The refinery denied the allegations.
The refinery suffered a two-day strike that ended October 1 after government mediation.
The PENGASSAN oil and gas workers’ union accused the refinery of firing 800 local workers because they unionised, and replacing them with 2,000 workers from India.
The refinery called the allegation false, and said it had fired an unspecified number of workers over “acts of sabotage”.
Dangote on Sunday thanked the federal government for its role “in mediating our recent disruptions at the (refinery), linked to union activities and some sabotage attempts”.
Nigeria pumps an average of 1.5 million barrels of oil per day, according to OPEC, but it is still short of its two million bpd target.
© 2025 AFP

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Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke has said in a British newspaper interview he would not now perform in Israel, eight years after the band defied pro-Palestinian activists to play a Tel Aviv gig.
“Absolutely not. I wouldn’t want to be 5,000 miles…