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  • Mother’s Voice Enhances Preterm Brain Growth

    Mother’s Voice Enhances Preterm Brain Growth

    NEW MRI-based research shows that preterm infants exposed to recordings of their mother’s voice had more mature language-related brain tracts than those who did not, highlighting the nurturing power of maternal sound. 

    Sound Stimulation in…

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  • Pakistan confronts a new reality: It may have lost the Taliban – The Washington Post

    1. Pakistan confronts a new reality: It may have lost the Taliban  The Washington Post
    2. Afghanistan accuses Pakistan of breaking truce as 10 killed in air attacks  Al Jazeera
    3. Shift in Kabul ties imminent as more terror hideouts hit  Dawn

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  • Precision, Imprecision, Intellectual Honesty, And Little Green Men – Hackaday

    Precision, Imprecision, Intellectual Honesty, And Little Green Men – Hackaday

    1. Precision, Imprecision, Intellectual Honesty, And Little Green Men  Hackaday
    2. Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS seen in new photos from Mars  NBC News
    3. The stranger that stirred the solar system  Pakistan Today
    4. A Sunward Jet from 3I/ATLAS, Imaged by the…

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  • $20 million NASA mission to visit ‘God of Chaos’ asteroid saved from budget cuts in last-minute decision

    $20 million NASA mission to visit ‘God of Chaos’ asteroid saved from budget cuts in last-minute decision

    NASA’s plans to fly a spaceship alongside a potentially hazardous asteroid in 2029 will continue — for the next year, at least.

    After threats of mission cancellation, the OSIRIS-APEX spacecraft received a last-minute $20 million allocation in…

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  • ‘Rocky IV’ star Dolph Lundgren shares the money mistake that made him more hands-on with his finances

    ‘Rocky IV’ star Dolph Lundgren shares the money mistake that made him more hands-on with his finances

    By Charles Passy

    The Swedish-born actor, who played the boxer Ivan Drago in ‘Rocky IV,’ has now gone into the vodka-making business and taken a more hands-on approach with his finances

    Dolph Lundgren has appeared in more than 75…

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  • Pokémon Legends: Z-A makes a big, welcome change for shiny hunters

    Pokémon Legends: Z-A makes a big, welcome change for shiny hunters

    Pokémon Legends: Z-A hadn’t been out even a few hours before the tweets started rolling in: Shiny pokémon don’t despawn. You can walk away from a shiny, and it’ll still be there when you come back.

    To shiny collectors, this is big news. In…

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  • A Jewish film festival in Sweden has been postponed. Organizers say cinemas won’t screen the films

    A Jewish film festival in Sweden has been postponed. Organizers say cinemas won’t screen the films

    The organizers of the Jewish International Film Festival say they were forced to postpone the event because cinemas in Malmö, Sweden, would not screen the films

    STOCKHOLM — STOCKHOLM (AP) — The organizers of the Jewish International Film…

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  • Jerome Powell may have just given stock investors a new reason to be worried

    Jerome Powell may have just given stock investors a new reason to be worried

    By Mark Hulbert

    Fed plans to end its ‘quantitative tightening’ – but stocks do better under those conditions

    Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank will end its bond purchases soon.

    The economy and the stock market may eventually respond favorably to the change of policy, but if history is any guide, things will get worse before they get better.

    U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has announced that the Fed will soon end its balance sheet reduction program, known as quantitative tightening, or QT. But this policy shift isn’t the bullish stock-market driver most investors believe it is.

    Of course, the Fed’s decision is meaningful; the central bank has been draining a large amount of liquidity from the financial system. Since some of that liquidity otherwise would have found its way into equities, QT presumably has been a significant headwind for the stock market: Since June 2022 the Fed has shrunk its balance sheet by $2.2 trillion. It seems plausible that ending it should provide a big boost for the stock market.

    Yet history suggests just the opposite. Over the past two decades, the stock market has done better during QT periods than when the Fed was injecting liquidity into the markets – quantitative easing (QE).

    Just take the most recent QT phase since June 2022. During this period in which the Fed drained $2.2 trillion from the financial market, the S&P 500’s SPX total return index has risen at the annualized rate of 20.9%, about twice its historical average.

    This recent experience is the rule rather than the exception. Since 2003, the S&P 500’s average gain has been 16.9% during 12-month periods in which the Fed’s balance sheet was shrinking. That compares to an average gain of 10.3% during 12-month periods in which the Fed’s balance sheet was expanding.

    What is the source of this inverse correlation between Fed balance sheet growth and the stock market? It has to do with what’s going on in the U.S. economy when the Fed decides to expand or shrink its balance sheet. When the economy is slumping, the Fed will flood the markets with liquidity in hopes of turning the ship around. Since that takes time, the economy typically will weaken while the Fed is expanding its balance sheet.

    Notice from the chart above that the Fed hugely boosted its balance sheet during the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and during the recession that accompanied the Covid-19 pandemic lockdown. The stock market suffered severe bear markets during those times of QE.

    The same story in reverse applies to the past couple of years. It was precisely because the economy was so strong that the Fed felt comfortable draining liquidity from it.

    This puts a surprisingly bearish spin on Powell’s announcement this week that the central bank was ending the three-plus year period of QT. This suggests we’re entering a period of economic weakness. The economy and the stock market may eventually respond favorably to the change of policy, but if history is any guide, things will get worse before they get better.

    Mark Hulbert is a regular contributor to MarketWatch. His Hulbert Ratings tracks investment newsletters that pay a flat fee to be audited. He can be reached at mark@hulbertratings.com

    Also read: Not every dip is a buying opportunity. Here’s how to think about future stock-market pullbacks.

    More: Bitcoin just lost more than stocks did in the 1929 market crash. It won’t be the last time.

    -Mark Hulbert

    This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

    (END) Dow Jones Newswires

    10-18-25 0958ET

    Copyright (c) 2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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  • Music could help ease pain from surgery or illness. Scientists are listening

    Music could help ease pain from surgery or illness. Scientists are listening

    Nurse Rod Salaysay works with all kinds of instruments in the hospital: a thermometer, a stethoscope and sometimes his guitar and ukulele.

    In the recovery unit of UC San Diego Health, Salaysay helps patients manage pain after surgery. Along with…

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  • Death toll in Gaza tops 68,000, Israel identifies one more hostage body – France 24

    1. Death toll in Gaza tops 68,000, Israel identifies one more hostage body  France 24
    2. LIVE: Israel releases Palestinian bodies to Gaza as part of ceasefire deal  Al Jazeera
    3. Hamas accuses Israel of breaching ceasefire by ‘killing at least 24…

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