Meta is discontinuing its Gaming Creator Program on Facebook, phasing out the specialized support and monetization features designed for gaming content creators. The move marks the end of an era for Facebook’s attempt to carve out a gaming…
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A Great Year for US Stocks? Not Compared to Rest of the World
An S&P 500 chart displayed during the Alliance Laundry Holdings Inc. initial public offering (IPO) on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025. Alliance Laundry Holdings Inc. and its private equity owner raised $826.3 million in an initial public offering, pricing the shares at $22 each, the top of a marketed range. (Bloomberg) — Check a ranking of the best-performing equity indexes this year and the US doesn’t crack the Top 10. You won’t find it in the Top 25, either. Double that, and the S&P 500 is still absent.
The tally needs to unfurl all the way to 66 before the world’s most valuable equity index shows up — leaving it way behind Greece’s Athex and even Israel’s TA-35. It’s one of the worst relative performances since the global financial crisis for the US benchmark.
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The underperformance is even more surprising given the S&P 500’s rally to countless records in 2025. But it’s still trailing most developed market benchmarks like Germany’s DAX and Japan’s Nikkei 225, and lags behind gauges in South Korea, Spain and Ghana, when measured in dollars.
That last qualifier is critical, though not determinant. The US currency has fallen this year, helping to boost returns on foreign bourses in dollar terms. That’s certainly the thrust behind gains of at least 39% in Colombia and Morocco.
But even in local-currency rankings, the S&P 500 comes in just 57th, hardly befitting of a measure home to the six most valuable companies in the world, along with the likes of Coca-Cola Co., McDonald’s Corp. and Walt Disney Co.
The underperformance, market participants say, owes just as much to a broader shift in the mindset among foreign investors, who have started targeting domestic champions as President Donald Trump wages a global trade war. Tensions ramped up on Friday after the president renewed threats of tariffs on China. Even in the US, they’re being more selective, with a focus on big tech rather than broad-based indexes.
Added to that is a growing sense of concern about political and fiscal stability in the world’s largest economy. Trump’s tax and spending bill is projected to blow out the deficit. The government has been shut down since the start of October, the president is increasingly threatening the central bank’s independence and public investment decisions have become less policy-based.
Together, the moves have shaken confidence in America, weakened the dollar and helped stoke a torrid rally in gold. While long-term Treasury yields haven’t exploded in any similar fashion, they’ve been elevated relative to recent years.
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Accurate Wavefront Reconstruction With Optical Vortex Sensors Enables Stable Phase Tracking In Incoming Beams
Measuring the shape of light waves, known as wavefront sensing, is crucial in many optical applications, and researchers continually seek more accurate and robust methods. Magdalena Łukowicz, Aleksandra K. Korzeniewska, and Kamil Kalinowski,…
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India beat Great Britain 3-2 in opener
The junior Indian hockey team opened its Sultan of Johor Cup 2025 campaign with a 3-2 win over Great Britain at the Taman Daya Hockey Stadium in Johor Bahru, Malaysia, on Saturday.
Captain Rohit (45+’, 52′) and Ravneet Singh (23′) were the…
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Victoria Beckham reveals her journey from uncool kid to fashion designer in Netflix series
Designer and ex-Spice Girl Victoria Beckham describes herself as someone who “desperately wanted to be liked” in a new three-part documentary about her life.
In the Netflix series, which debuted on October 9, the 51-year-old once known as Posh…Continue Reading
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Mystery of jet streams on gas giants explained with unified model
Researchers from the Netherlands Research School of Astronomy have created a new model that, they believe, explains the extreme jet streams seen on large planets like Jupiter and Saturn.
All four of the giant planets (Jupiter, Saturn,…
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Anti-Israel protests rock Pakistan: Police fire on Gaza protesters – what we know so far about violence that killed 11 in 3 days
Massive protests by the hardline Islamist group Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) escalated into violent clashes across multiple cities on Friday and Saturday, leaving at least 11 people dead and dozens…
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Cable stripped from rail line at Shenfield causes disruption
Cables have been stripped from an area near a major rail junction causing disruption for weekend passengers, a train operator said.
Greater Anglia said the theft between Shenfield and Brentwood, in Essex, resulted in a “loss of signalling” and the lines being blocked to London Liverpool Street on Saturday morning.
Network Rail and British Transport Police teams were sent to replace the cables in order to reopen the railway, with trains then resuming about lunch time.
A Greater Anglia spokesman said it was “sorry for the disruption” and affected passengers would be able to claim compensation for any delays.
The spokesperson added Saturday travel tickets could now be used on Sunday instead.
It was expected to take up to three hours before the train timetable was back to normal.
Greater Anglia said trains would be delayed, altered and cancelled in order to get crews and vehicles back into the correct places.
Signalling problems were first reported early on Saturday, before Greater Anglia later said the cable has been stolen.
Shenfield is a major junction for many services, including trains using the Great Eastern Main Line.
The blocked lines had prevented trains from running between Shenfield, Romford and London.
Passengers had also been unable to travel as normal on intercity trains between Norwich, Ipswich and London Liverpool Street.
Routes between Clacton-on-Sea, Colchester, Braintree Town and Southend Victoria to Liverpool Street were blocked too.
Passengers from Norwich were told to travel to London via Cambridge instead on GTR trains between Ely and London King’s Cross.
The incident also affected trains on the Elizabeth line between Stratford and Shenfield.
Greater Anglia, which runs trains across the East of England and into London, is to be brought into public ownership on Sunday.
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Gisele Bündchen joins The Earthshot Prize as Prize Council Member
For over two decades, Gisele Bündchen has been deeply committed to environmental advocacy. She has worked closely for many years with the United Nations Environment Programme, helping lead UNEP’s awareness campaigns….
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Boycotting Israel has gone mainstream: ‘We’ve never seen such traction before’ | Gaza
For more than a decade Shouk offered an Israeli-inspired, plant-based and kosher menu in and around Washington. Last week the chain was forced to close the last of five locations and lay off the last of 30 staff. It said the war in Gaza had made…
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