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  • ‘Don’t eat more fiber, but more types of fiber’: Cardiologist Dr. Pradip Jamnadas reveals how a colorful plate can supercharge your gut health

    ‘Don’t eat more fiber, but more types of fiber’: Cardiologist Dr. Pradip Jamnadas reveals how a colorful plate can supercharge your gut health

    A leading cardiologist is reminding people that supporting gut health requires more than just eating any fiber. Dr Pradip Jamnadas, Orlando-based interventional cardiologist and founder of Cardiovascular Interventions, shared an educational post…

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  • A Longitudinal Multicenter Study Comparing the Effectiveness of Pharmacological and Lifestyle-Only Interventions in Adults With Prediabetes for Preventing Acute Hyperglycemic Crises and Progression to Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

    A Longitudinal Multicenter Study Comparing the Effectiveness of Pharmacological and Lifestyle-Only Interventions in Adults With Prediabetes for Preventing Acute Hyperglycemic Crises and Progression to Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus


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  • iQOO 15, Realme GT8 official, Galaxy XR is here, Week 43 in review

    iQOO 15, Realme GT8 official, Galaxy XR is here, Week 43 in review

    The iQOO 15 went official this week, and it’s rocking a Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 SoC and a potent 7,000mAh battery. The 6.85-inch 144Hz gaming phone is out in China first, and it shattered the sales records, selling in just 30 minutes what its…

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  • Finally See Comet Lemmon On Sunday Before It’s Gone For 1,150 Years

    Finally See Comet Lemmon On Sunday Before It’s Gone For 1,150 Years

    Topline

    If you’ve not seen the two green comets yet, 90 minutes after sunset on Sunday, Oct. 26, is your last best chance before they fade. The brighter Comet Lemmon (C/2025 A6) and much dimmer Comet SWAN (C/2025 R2) are now barreling away from…

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  • The Sky Today on Sunday, October 26: Iapetus at inferior conjunction – Astronomy Magazine

    1. The Sky Today on Sunday, October 26: Iapetus at inferior conjunction  Astronomy Magazine
    2. This Week’s Sky at a Glance, October 24 –November 2  Sky & Telescope
    3. See a razor-thin crescent moon line up with Mars and Mercury at sunset on Oct. 23  Space

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  • Where next for markets after the gold rush

    Where next for markets after the gold rush

    Gold prices rallied hard amid the chaos of the reciprocal tariff roll-out in early April. Once that episode was over, they went into a holding pattern and stayed there until Chair Powell’s dovish speech at Jackson Hole on August 22, which unleashed a true frenzy of precious metals buying. The IMF/WB annual meetings burst that bubble and precious metals prices have gone back into the same holding pattern they went into once the April tariff shock had worn off. However, my sense is that the underlying drivers of the “debasement trade” are only getting stronger, so that will keep going.

    In today’s post, I lay out how markets might evolve now that the “gold rush” of recent months has ended. Needless to say, forecasting is a dangerous business and I’ll likely be wrong on many fronts. But I feel strongly that the “debasement trade” is here to stay and will only build over the medium term. If that is true, the question then becomes where this trade will pop up next. Will it again be in precious metals, in longer-term yields, in equities or in currencies? I discuss all this in today’s post.

    • Why the “debasement trade” will build: the Fed is cutting as underlying inflation rises. The “debasement trade” is about the fear that central banks will bend to the will of politicians and monetize unsustainable government debt levels. Some of this “fiscal dominance” is already playing out in the US. The left chart below shows the drivers of monthly core CPI inflation (black line). My preferred measure of underlying inflation – what inflation is after you filter out all the noise – is the blue bars, which have trended up for half a year. That just isn’t an environment where the Fed should be cutting, let alone be in a substantial easing cycle. The blue line in the right chart below shows that markets price almost five 25 basis point rate cuts between now and the end of 2026. The fact that the Fed isn’t pushing back on this market pricing understandably raises questions about its credibility and is one reason why longer-term Treasury yields (the red line in the right chart below) remain high even as more and more Fed cuts get priced.

    • Why the “debasement trade” will build: fewer safe haven assets. I’ve been banging on about how safe haven countries like Japan or Germany are losing that status. Indeed, there are many places across the G10 where fiscal policy is unsustainable, not just in the US. This is why the Dollar was stable in the course of the precious metals rally in recent months, as the blue line in the left chart below shows. The debasement trade isn’t about the US, it’s about a much broader loss of confidence in fiat currencies. The Japanese Yen would have been a key place to hide in the past, but the blue line in the right chart below shows that’s tumbling against the Dollar. The safe havens of today are Switzerland (black line), Sweden (red line) and Norway (orange line). Unsurprisingly, these are places where government debt is low because fiscal policy hasn’t become unmoored.

    • Where will the “debasement trade” pop up next? Precious metals are back in the same holding pattern they were in after the April tariff shock wore off. Longer-term bond yields are in a similar holding pattern as markets price more and more rate cuts for G10 central banks, which is pulling long-end yields down for now. Perhaps the best “debasement trade” currently is the S&P 500, which is up over 15 percent so far this year. President Trump frequently looks to the stock market as validation of his policies. The S&P 500 won’t be allowed to fall. What will also not fall is the Dollar, which – as the left chart below shows – has been stable since its sharp fall in April. So much “bad news” is priced into rate differentials, which have moved massively against the Dollar, that the only way for the greenback is up. Indeed, over the past few weeks, I’ve heard more and more talk of a return of “US exceptionalism.” Sentiment on the Dollar is changing for the better.

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  • Eurogamer Weekly Digest, 26th October – highlights you might have missed this week in features, reviews, and news

    Eurogamer Weekly Digest, 26th October – highlights you might have missed this week in features, reviews, and news

    And here we are again; seven days older, seven days wiser, and if you were silly enough to watch that VHS tape, seven days to die. That means we’re back with another Weekly Digest – in which we recap some of the highlights…

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  • The world’s fourth-largest mobile giant is coming to Israel

    The world’s fourth-largest mobile giant is coming to Israel | The Jerusalem Post

    The smartphone brand Infinix has officially launched its operations in Israel, with three new models, home pickup and return service, and…

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  • the man who collected the world

    the man who collected the world

    Patrycja Boryka and

    Paul Johnson,East Yorkshire & Lincolnshire

    Getty Images A three masted wooden sailing ship, about 100ft long, is docked in the harbour of a modern city, with tall office buildings in the background under a grey sky. Getty Images

    A replica of HMB Endeavour in Sydney, Australia

    He made his name on a voyage around the world alongside Captain James Cook, before becoming a friend of King George III and…

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  • Jupiter Enabled Solar System’s Unique Inner Architecture, Says Study

    Jupiter Enabled Solar System’s Unique Inner Architecture, Says Study

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