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Trump had to choose between Israel and Qatar. He chose Qatar – Financial Times
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With rare earths, deft diplomacy (and ample flattery), Pakistan shows how to deal with Trump 2.0
Islamabad
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As US President Donald Trump took a victory lap in front of world leaders following the Gaza ceasefire on Monday, he gave a shout-out to Pakistan’s top soldier,…
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Cycling fashion group Rapha prepares for long climb back to profit
Rapha, the high-end British cycling fashion brand whose rapid ascent came crashing to a halt with the end of the pandemic bike boom, is gearing up for a long ride back to profit.
Industry veteran Fran Millar, who became the fourth chief executive in three years when she took charge in September 2024, says her turnaround of the maker of £300 cycling jerseys will take until 2027 to show full results.
“The decisions we’re taking now are things that are going to bounce” Rapha back to “not just profitability but significant growth”, Millar told the Financial Times.
Founded in 2004 by cycling enthusiast and branding expert Simon Mottram, Rapha quickly rose to become one of the biggest names in cycling fashion, known for minimalist designs, high quality and attention to detail.
But annual revenues dropped 13 per cent to £96.2mn in the year to the end of January while the company made a net loss — its eighth in a row — of £15.6mn, according to results due to be published next week. Meanwhile, holding company Carpegna took a £102mn impairment on the brand’s book value, a writedown of more than 60 per cent.
Millar, who was hired from fashion brand Belstaff and has previously run the Team Sky and Ineos Grenadiers professional cycling teams, insists the company can return to a “market pioneering” position after the sharp fall in revenue to a five-year low.
Her plan is to “reduce the losses next year and by 2027 we will be back at profitability” at an Ebitda level.
Rapha’s latest gloomy numbers show that even the biggest names in cycling are still struggling with the pandemic boom and bust, when a sharp rise in the popularity of cycling during lockdowns was followed by a sudden stop.
With 50 per cent year-on-year revenue growth for more than a decade to 2021, the brand “was the Apple of cycling”, former professional cyclist Anthony Walsh said in June in his Roadman podcast, with cyclists wearing its kit as “badges of honour”.
In 2017, Mottram sold a majority stake to RZC Investments — an investment vehicle owned by brothers Steuart and Tom Walton, cycling enthusiast grandsons of Walmart founder Sam Walton — in a deal that valued Rapha at about £200mn.
While Walsh claimed the change in ownership was one cause of Rapha’s problems, Millar rejected that idea, insisting “we’re very lucky in our owners”, who she said took a long-term view. RZC this year provided £15mn in additional capital, following an earlier £39mn debt-to-equity swap.
“The amazing growth in the pandemic probably masked some things that should have been addressed earlier,” Millar said, adding that “a lot of the damage was self-inflicted”.
When new rivals including Café du Cycliste and Pas Normal Studios started to target fashion-savvy cyclists, Rapha began to dabble in non-cycling gear such as hoodies and handbags. At the same time its customers started to complain about declining quality and “boring” designs.
The Rapha Cycling Club costs £70 a year to go on group rides and get access to exclusive kit © Rapha Membership numbers of the Rapha Cycling Club, where people pay £70 a year to go on group rides and have access to exclusive kit, has fallen by a third to 15,000 over the past two years.
Rapha “tried to do lots of things and [was] not focused on doing a few things brilliantly well”, Millar said.
After the pandemic boom faded, the brand had a glut of stock that had to be sold at heavy discounts, which dented profitability and was “not great for the long-term health of the brand” she said.
In her first year, Millar sought to return to a “full-price model”, saying this was the key reason for the drop in revenue last year and adding that a first success was to achieve stability in year-on-year sales of full-price kit.
Looking forward, she is ditching the lifestyle line, pausing the production of cycling shoes and merging the brand’s two long-distance cycling ranges. And this year’s 65 product launches will shrink to roughly half that number in 2026 after a design overhaul.
According to Millar, Rapha had come to rely too heavily on signature designs such as its armband and logo. The first of its new-look products will be unveiled in early 2026 and be available to customers from the summer.
Rapha would not target a return to the kind of sales growth it had last decade, Millar said, adding “low double-digit profitable growth” for the next few years “would be a huge success”.
Holding company Carpegna is set to continue to report net losses as it writes off Rapha’s intangible assets over time. This accounting treatment will not affect Rapha’s cash flows, the company said, but will reduce reported profit by about £10mn a year for a number of years.
This year’s 65 product launches will shrink to roughly half that number in 2026 © Rapha Meanwhile, Millar is committed to reinvigorating the Rapha Cycling Club, which the company says is still “the biggest cycling club in the world”, and larger than it was before the pandemic. “I’ve ridden thousands of miles now with our customers all over the world, and [RCC] is just a completely unique area for us.”
One of the most visible changes in the short term is the ending of the brand’s partnership with EF Pro Cycling, a team that participates in big races worldwide including the Tour de France.
Instead, Millar has signed a three-year deal with USA Cycling to sponsor the country’s Olympic team, banking on the 2028 Games in Los Angeles to boost American cycling.
“I was involved in London 2012 and Team Sky,” she said. “And I saw what home Games can do to a nation.”
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Royal London and M&G to enter Europe’s active ETF market
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Royal London Asset Management and M&G are planning to enter Europe’s active exchange traded fund (ETF) market, as the sector expands rapidly and traditional mutual funds come under fee pressure.
Hans Georgeson, chief executive of RLAM, told the Financial Times that the firm plans to open an office in Dublin within 18 months to support the £184bn group’s international expansion and entry into the active ETF market.
“The active ETF market is moving very fast,” Georgeson said. “We plan to enter in the top 10. We are very ambitious in the active ETF space. We will probably launch with both equity and fixed income.
“ETFs are more accessible internationally. It’s a key plank for passporting internationally.”
Active ETFs allow fund managers to try to beat a market index, such as the FTSE 100, but within a product that is cheaper to run and easier for investors to buy and sell than their older mutual fund equivalents.
By comparison, traditional “passive” ETFs provide the returns of an index — rather than trying to beat it.
According to a recent report by Goldman Sachs’ fund arm, assets under management in Europe’s active ETF industry have grown nearly sevenfold since 2019 to €68.6bn. The report added that the number of funds and providers has “followed a similar trajectory, with launches of active ETFs outpacing passive launches for the first time”.
M&G is preparing to unveil its first active ETFs within weeks, with the first products investing in UK government bonds and US Treasuries.
Neil Godfrey, global head of client group at M&G Investments, said: “[These] ETFs will open up possible new investor audiences and potentially expand our partnerships with our existing investor base.
“Given many clients already use and have familiarity with ETFs, we see a natural evolution towards active solutions, which will provide new opportunities to engage with capital allocators and their advisers across the UK, Europe and Asia.”Other traditional fund groups have entered the market this year. Last month, Schroders unveiled its first active ETFs in Europe, investing in global equities and high-quality corporate bonds.
Johanna Kyrklund, Schroders group chief investment officer, said the products bring the “flexibility and accessibility” of an ETF wrapper in combination with the group’s fund managers, who bring the potential to generate higher returns.
Jupiter also entered the sector at the start of the year with a global government bond active ETF.
Matthew Beesley, chief executive of Jupiter, said at the time that “the risk is that if you sit there and don’t do anything, ETFs will continue to cannibalise the assets held in traditional funds”.
While traditional mutual funds are priced once a day, based on the value of its investments, ETFs trade on an exchange and are priced throughout the trading day.
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‘Hip-hop is a contact sport — it’s not for the faint-hearted’
If rap is the new rock, then older rappers ought to inspire the same respect as classic rockers. But that’s not what Snoop Dogg noticed when he turned 50 in 2021.
“Don’t put no time limit on how old we are or what we are, because we…
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What I learnt from Irish folk singing sessions
A few years ago, Armagh singing legend Micheál Quinn was at the Inishowen Singing Weekend in Donegal. Brían Mac Gloinn from the band Ye Vagabonds and Ian Lynch from Lankum were sitting on either side of him. They’d been singing for days and…
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Mexico floods highlight need for better severe weather warnings
MEXICO CITY (AP) — The most recent torrential rains in east-central Mexico, which have left at least 72 dead and dozens more missing, have raised questions again about the government’s ability to alert…
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Art Basel Paris 2025 – Financial Times
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New Zealand vs Pakistan Live Streaming, Women’s World Cup 2025: When, where to watch NZ W vs PAK W live on TV, online
New Zealand and Pakistan have everything to play for when they take the field in the upcoming Women’s World Cup 2025 fixture at the R. Premadasa Stadium on Saturday. The matches in Colombo have been marred by rain, and several ties have been…
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Nanoparticles offer new hope for treating alcohol-related liver disease
Across the world, more than 1.5 billion people suffer from chronic liver disease. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that it kills more than 52,000 people a year in the United States alone – the ninth most…
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