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  • high in the Alps, artificial snow will still play role

    high in the Alps, artificial snow will still play role

    Next year’s Olympics return to the Alps after three Winter Games criticised for being located in non-ski areas

    An aerial view shows the Olympic rings and the Olympia delle Tofane track in Cortina, which will host the women’s alpine skiing…

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  • China's ravenous appetite for iron ore remains as steel output slips – Reuters

    1. China’s ravenous appetite for iron ore remains as steel output slips  Reuters
    2. China’s Coal and Steel Production Shrink Again as Demand Slumps  Bloomberg
    3. China’s ravenous appetite for iron ore remains as steel output slips: Russell  TradingView
    4. CSC Financial: Crude steel production declined in September, and the profit rate of steel mills continued to fall.  富途牛牛
    5. CICC: Monthly demand for cement declines further, while steel supply and demand remain weak.  富途牛牛

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  • CVC announces sale of majority of CVC Capital Partners VII’s stake in Tipico to Banijay Group

    CVC announces sale of majority of CVC Capital Partners VII’s stake in Tipico to Banijay Group

    CVC, one of the world’s leading private markets investment firms, today announced the signing of a binding agreement to sell a majority of CVC Capital Partners VII’s stake in Tipico Group (“Tipico”), the leading sports betting and online gaming operator in Germany and Austria, to Banijay Group (“Banijay”). The transaction will see Tipico combine with Betclic, establishing a new European champion in sports betting and online gaming under the Banijay Gaming umbrella.

    The combination will unite two local champions, Betclic and Tipico, each with strong local roots and complementary strengths across Germany, Austria, France, Portugal, Poland, and Côte d’Ivoire. While Betclic and Tipico share an entrepreneurial mindset and strong cultural alignment, they will continue to operate with their own governance and autonomous management teams and will preserve their unique brands and their proprietary platforms.

    CVC will remain invested as a minority shareholder alongside Banijay Group as well as Tipico’s and Betclic’s founders, reflecting a strong partnership and full alignment on future value creation.

    Daniel Pindur, Managing Partner at CVC Capital Partners and Co-Head of CVC DACH, said: “Since our investment in Tipico, we have worked closely with its founders and management to transform the company into the leading sports betting and gaming operator in the DACH region, with scale, innovation and a strong position in regulated markets. The combination with Betclic is the natural next step in this growth story, uniting two market leaders with complementary strengths to create a European champion. We are proud of what has been achieved together and look forward to supporting the new group as it enters its next phase.”

    The proposed transaction is subject to customary conditions precedent, in particular merger control and gambling regulations approvals, and is expected to close by mid-2026.

    The full transaction announcement can be viewed here.

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  • A Love Story’ Pushes Indian Release Date To March 2026

    A Love Story’ Pushes Indian Release Date To March 2026

    EXCLUSIVE: Dacoit: A Love Story (original title Dacoit: Ek Prem Katha), the bilingual action drama starring Adivi Sesh and Mrunal Thakur, will launch worldwide on March 19, 2026.

    The romantic action thriller was originally due…

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  • Bavarian Nordic Provides Further Support to Mpox Outbreak

    Bavarian Nordic Provides Further Support to Mpox Outbreak

    COPENHAGEN, Denmark, October 28, 2025 – Bavarian Nordic announced today a donation of mpox vaccines to Africa CDC to support the response to the ongoing mpox outbreak in Africa.

    The donation of 110,000 doses of the vaccine has been allocated…

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  • Sudan’s army loses key city of el-Fasher to rival RSF paramilitary force

    Sudan’s army loses key city of el-Fasher to rival RSF paramilitary force

    Sudan’s military chief has confirmed the army’s withdrawal from its last western stronghold of el-Fasher after the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) declared control of the city.

    In a televised address, Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan said he had…

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  • Greenland cave reveals the Arctic once fully melted in mild climate

    Greenland cave reveals the Arctic once fully melted in mild climate

    The Arctic wasn’t always frozen and lifeless. Millions of years ago, parts of northern Greenland were wet, green, and alive with flowing water. Beneath its present-day ice, a cave now holds evidence of that forgotten warmth.

    A team of scientists…

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  • This easy daily habit cuts heart risk by two thirds

    This easy daily habit cuts heart risk by two thirds

    People who walk for 10-15 minutes at a time can reduce their risk of cardiovascular disease by up to two thirds compared to those who take only brief walks lasting less than five minutes. Even when covering the same total number of steps, longer,…

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  • Mining firms embrace bumper interest from the Middle East

    Mining firms embrace bumper interest from the Middle East

    Guests enjoy the Fortune Global Forum 2025 Gala Dinner on October 26, 2025 at Diriyah Gate, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

    Cedric Ribeiro | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

    Mining executives have welcomed a sharp upswing in investor interest from the Middle East, as Gulf states seek to expand their critical mineral ambitions and take on established global players.

    Critical minerals refer to a subset of materials considered essential to the energy transition. These resources, which tend to have a high risk of supply chain disruption, include metals such as copper, lithium, nickel, cobalt and rare earth elements.

    “The interest in rare earths in this part of the world is phenomenal,” Tony Sage, CEO of U.S.-listed rare earths miner Critical Metals, said during a business trip through the Middle East.

    “I didn’t expect it because, you know, they can’t mine it. There [are] really no discoveries in this area, but they want to be able to participate somehow in the downstream,” Sage told CNBC by telephone.

    His comments come as policymakers and business leaders flock to Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative (FII) in Riyadh, an event nicknamed as the “Davos in the Desert.”

    The annual event, which got underway on Monday, is being held under the theme: “The Key to Prosperity: Unlocking New Frontiers of Growth.” It is expected this year’s FII will lean into areas such as artificial intelligence, particularly as the oil-rich kingdom continues with its mission to diversify its economy.

    A wheel loader takes ore to a crusher at the MP Materials rare earth mine in Mountain Pass, California, U.S. January 30, 2020.

    Steve Marcus | Reuters

    Analysts say Gulf states, led by the likes of Saudi Arabia and the UAE, are increasingly seeking to leverage their financial capital and geographic location to capture critical minerals market share.

    A series of targeted acquisitions and international partnerships forms a key part of this regional strategy, according to an analysis by the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), with Gulf states seeking to present themselves as alternative partners to Western nations.

    Critical Metals, for its part, has partnered with Saudi Arabia’s Obeikan Group to build a large-scale lithium hydroxide processing plant in the kingdom.

    A strategic push

    Kevin Das, senior technical consultant at New Frontier Minerals, an Australian-based rare earths explorer, linked investor interest in rare earths from the Middle East to exponential growth in the field of AI.

    “It’s no surprise that you’re seeing interest, not just in the Western world, but spreading into the Gulf States because I think people are realizing that we’re probably on the cusp of an AI boom,” Das told CNBC by telephone.

    “If you start to see the emergence of robotics, every robot is going to need these rare earths. And I think the supply is only going to get tighter,” he added.

    Rare earth elements have emerged as a key bargaining chip in the ongoing U.S.-China trade war, although global stocks rallied on Monday amid investor hopes of thawing tensions between the world’s two largest economies.

    U.S. officials have touted the prospect of China delaying strict rare earth export controls as part of a high-stakes summit between President Donald Trump and China’s Xi Jinping on Thursday.

    Rare earths refer to 17 elements on the periodic table whose atomic structure gives them special magnetic properties. These elements are widely used in the automotive, robotics and defense sectors.

    U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during a “coffee ceremony” at the Saudi Royal Court on May 13, 2025, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

    Win Mcnamee | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Shaun Bunn, managing director at London-listed Empire Metals, said his company had also received considerable investor interest from the Middle East.

    “I think that it is very much part of the kingdom’s strategic push to diversify away from its oil. I mean, they are always going to make the most money out of oil at the moment at least, but they are trying to diversify,” Bunn told CNBC by telephone.

    Critical mineral ambitions

    Analysts have flagged a number of barriers facing the Gulf states’ push for critical minerals, however, noting that regional players remain marginal producers at present.

    “Many of Saudi Arabia’s mining ventures remain in early or even conceptual stages, and the country still depends on foreign partners for expertise, such that it may take years for Saudi Arabia, and the Gulf states more generally, to scale up enough to dent Chinese dominance or to fully meet Western demand,” Asna Wajid, research analyst at IISS, said in an analysis published in late July.

    “Many in the West, moreover, may be wary of replacing their dependence on China with dependence on the Gulf states, which already exercise considerable strategic leverage due to their oil and gas supplies,” Wajid said.

    China is the undisputed leader of the critical minerals supply chain, producing roughly 70% of the world’s supply of rare earths and processing almost 90%, which means it is importing these materials from other countries and processing them.

    U.S. officials have previously warned that this dominance poses a strategic challenge amid the pivot to more sustainable energy sources.

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  • GSK and Empirico enter license agreement for clinical-stage, first-in-class oligonucleotide candidate to treat respiratory diseases

    GSK and Empirico enter license agreement for clinical-stage, first-in-class oligonucleotide candidate to treat respiratory diseases

    GSK plc (LSE/NYSE: GSK) and Empirico Inc. (Empirico), a clinical-stage biotechnology company with leading capabilities in human genetics-driven target discovery and siRNA medicines, today announced that they have entered into a worldwide…

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