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Worried about heart attack? Apollo doctor reveals 20-minute exercise to safeguard your heart
Boosting longevity and managing blood sugar doesn’t always require hours at the gym. According to Dr. Sudhir Kumar, a neurologist trained at CMS Vellore and currently at Apollo Hospitals, Hyderabad, even small, consistent doses of exercise can… -
Genomics study detects rare diarrheal infections
Google’s new AI tool can read DNA like a language, and see immediately if a word substitution will change the meaning of that sentence, the company says. — © AFP HO
British scientists have used advanced genetic and genomic techniques to…
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Global week ahead: ‘Cockroaches’ crawling toward Europe?
Europe’s banks take center stage this week as earnings season gets underway, but with heavy losses across the sector on Friday, credit concerns appear to be making their way across the Atlantic at a particularly tricky time for the region’s lenders.
Credit concerns hit European banks
Last week, the biggest names in American finance battled it out to make the most alarming quote of the week. The contenders: JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, Citi Group CEO Jane Fraser and Apollo boss Marc Rowan.
Dimon started the week with a stark warning about the private credit market, saying “when you see one cockroach, there’s probably more.”
Fraser was up next, warning of “pockets of valuation frothiness.” While Rowan was more explicit, suggesting that “there’s been a willingness to cut corners,” in a recent appearance with the Financial Times.
With the sirens sounding stateside, what does this mean for Europe, and how will the continents’ bankers narrate their concerns as earnings season kicks off in earnest next week?
iNueng | iStock | Getty Images
European earnings season kicks off
Unicredit, Barclays, Lloyds Banking Group and Natwest will lead the financial names reporting in Europe and the U.K.
Head of Financials for Credit at Federated Hermes, Filippo Alloatti, told CNBC that he expects CEOs to “shift from macro to micro risk” as a focus in their earnings calls this week, amid concerns around the private credit markets. Meanwhile, Johann Scholtz from Morningstar told CNBC that while he does not see a material deterioration of credit quality appearing in third-quarter results, “it will be interesting how candid management teams will be when discussing the future evolution of credit quality.”
Scholtz highlighted concerns about corporate and small-to-medium sized company loan books, saying “the market is underestimating the impact that (trade) tariffs could have on certain pockets of European banks’ lending books.”
On Friday, bank stocks across Europe sold off sharply as credit concerns drove big declines for the likes of Deutsche Bank, Société Générale, UBS and its peers across the sector.
Margin of error
CNBC’s Silvia Amaro will speak to Unicredit CEO Andrea Orcel as the bank publishes its latest set of earnings, with S&P Global predicting a subdued third quarter amid narrowing net interest margins and higher funding costs.
The Italian lender is continuing it’s M&A ambitions, increasing its stake in Greece’s Alpha Bank to 26%, with Orcel saying “we are grateful to the Greek government, the central bank and other Greek institutions for welcoming us and encouraging our investment.” The reception to Unicredit’s expansion plans in Germany remains cooler.
The UniCredit SpA headquarters in Milan, Italy, on Jan. 22, 2022.
Bloomberg | Getty Images
Car trouble
British lender Lloyds Bank will also report next week, having just announced a new £1.95 billion hit to its balance sheet following a regulatory ruling over the mis-selling of car finance loans. The Financial Conduct Authority estimates the scandal will cost U.K. lenders up to £11 billion. IG predicts this charge will offset what would have been a strong quarter for the bank, as unlike some of it European rivals, net interest income continues to rise.
Lloyds Banking Group said it was stopping people buying cryptocurrencies using credit cards.
Simon Dawson | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Economic data and earnings this week:
Monday: China GDP data
Tuesday: L’Oreal, Coca Cola, Netflix earnings
Wednesday: U.K. inflation data, Unicredit, Barclays, Tesla earnings
Thursday: Unilever, Lloyds Banking Group, SAP, Intel earnings
Friday: France, Germany, U.K. PMI data, Natwest, Procter & Gamble earnings
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How cutting lipids could starve breast cancer
Researchers at Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah (the U) have discovered that triple-negative breast cancer relies heavily on lipids for growth. These fatty acids, a defining feature of obesity, appear to drive tumor…
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Cambridgeshire firefighter’s fundraiser aims to buy cancer vaccine
Harriet HeywoodCambridgeshire
Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue Service
Paul Whitaker joined the Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue Service in 2008, and has most recently being promoted to Watch Commander A firefighter diagnosed with an aggressive brain…
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Weekly poll: will the vivo X300 or X300 Pro be your next phone?
Vivo introduced the X300 series this week and this year the family is smaller – there’s no mid-sized vanilla model and no “Pro mini”, just the small X300 and the big X300 Pro. Okay, there is likely an Ultra model and an FE model in…
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The Sneakiest Little Design Trick in Gaming Mice | by Alex Rowe | Oct, 2025
Press enter or click to view image in full sizeThe older Logitech Superlight mouse (left) is clearly sad and lame, while the newer slightly smaller Superlight 2C (right) is compact and sleek and cool, right? The endless march of computer game…
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Even “diet” soda may be quietly damaging your liver, scientists warn
A large-scale investigation has found that people who regularly consume both sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) and low- or no-sugar-sweetened beverages (LNSSBs) face a significantly greater likelihood of developing metabolic dysfunction-associated…
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