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  • Lung Cancer Remission Rate: What Patients Need to Know in 2025

    Lung Cancer Remission Rate: What Patients Need to Know in 2025

    Lung cancer remains one of the most complex and challenging cancers worldwide, affecting millions of people each year. Because lung cancer often grows silently in its early stages, many patients are diagnosed when the cancer is…

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  • With 69% ownership of the shares, Begbies Traynor Group plc (LON:BEG) is heavily dominated by institutional owners

    With 69% ownership of the shares, Begbies Traynor Group plc (LON:BEG) is heavily dominated by institutional owners

    • Institutions’ substantial holdings in Begbies Traynor Group implies that they have significant influence over the company’s share price

    • The top 11 shareholders own 51% of the company

    • Ownership research along with analyst forecasts data help provide a good understanding of opportunities in a stock

    We’ve found 21 US stocks that are forecast to pay a dividend yield of over 6% next year. See the full list for free.

    To get a sense of who is truly in control of Begbies Traynor Group plc (LON:BEG), it is important to understand the ownership structure of the business. We can see that institutions own the lion’s share in the company with 69% ownership. That is, the group stands to benefit the most if the stock rises (or lose the most if there is a downturn).

    Since institutional have access to huge amounts of capital, their market moves tend to receive a lot of scrutiny by retail or individual investors. Therefore, a good portion of institutional money invested in the company is usually a huge vote of confidence on its future.

    Let’s take a closer look to see what the different types of shareholders can tell us about Begbies Traynor Group.

    Check out our latest analysis for Begbies Traynor Group

    AIM:BEG Ownership Breakdown November 30th 2025

    Many institutions measure their performance against an index that approximates the local market. So they usually pay more attention to companies that are included in major indices.

    We can see that Begbies Traynor Group does have institutional investors; and they hold a good portion of the company’s stock. This suggests some credibility amongst professional investors. But we can’t rely on that fact alone since institutions make bad investments sometimes, just like everyone does. It is not uncommon to see a big share price drop if two large institutional investors try to sell out of a stock at the same time. So it is worth checking the past earnings trajectory of Begbies Traynor Group, (below). Of course, keep in mind that there are other factors to consider, too.

    earnings-and-revenue-growth
    AIM:BEG Earnings and Revenue Growth November 30th 2025

    Investors should note that institutions actually own more than half the company, so they can collectively wield significant power. Begbies Traynor Group is not owned by hedge funds. The company’s largest shareholder is Begbies Traynor National Partnership, with ownership of 11%. With 7.7% and 5.7% of the shares outstanding respectively, TrinityBridge Limited and Hargreaves Lansdown Asset Management Ltd. are the second and third largest shareholders. Additionally, the company’s CEO Mark Fry directly holds 0.7% of the total shares outstanding.

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  • WST World Cup Kitakyushu Street 2025: Shirai Sora wins men’s crown with last trick

    WST World Cup Kitakyushu Street 2025: Shirai Sora wins men’s crown with last trick

    Shirai Sora saved the best for last.

    The two-time Olympian won the WST World Cup Kitakyushu Street 2025 in Japan on Sunday (30 November) with the final trick of the entire contest to lead a podium sweep for the host country.

    Shirai unseated…

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  • WST World Cup Kitakyushu Street 2025: Shirai Sora wins men’s crown with last trick

    WST World Cup Kitakyushu Street 2025: Shirai Sora wins men’s crown with last trick

    Shirai Sora saved the best for last.

    The two-time Olympian won the WST World Cup Kitakyushu Street 2025 in Japan on Sunday (30 November) with the final trick of the entire contest to lead a podium sweep for the host country.

    Shirai unseated…

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  • Egyptian FM meets Zardari, expresses ‘keen interest’ in expanding partnership with Pakistan in multiple fields – Dawn

    1. Egyptian FM meets Zardari, expresses ‘keen interest’ in expanding partnership with Pakistan in multiple fields  Dawn
    2. Pakistan to share 250-business whitelist with Egypt to boost trade  Profit by Pakistan Today
    3. Egyptian FM in Pakistan to review…

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  • Sheffield hospital tests combined asthma inhaler for children

    Sheffield hospital tests combined asthma inhaler for children

    Peter Byrne/PA Wire Close-up image of a blue inhaler device in a child's handPeter Byrne/PA Wire

    Younger children need to carry two inhalers containing different medication

    A new trial at Sheffield Children’s Hospital will test whether a combined inhaler can better control asthma symptoms and attacks in youngsters.

    The…

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  • China factory activity edges up in November but remains in contraction

    China factory activity edges up in November but remains in contraction

    A worker walks past molten steel at a steel factory in Huai’an, in China’s eastern Jiangsu province on July 22, 2025.

    – | Afp | Getty Images

    China’s factory activity edged higher in November but remained stuck in contraction for the eighth consecutive month, while services weakened as the boost from earlier holidays faded, according to official data released Sunday.

    The manufacturing purchasing managers’ index rose to 49.2, up 0.2 points from October, the National Bureau of Statistics said. The figures were in line with economists’ expectations in a Reuters poll, but remained below the 50-point mark that separates expansion from contraction.

    The non-manufacturing business activity index fell to 49.5, down 0.6 points from October, while the composite PMI output index eased to 49.7, indicating a slight pullback in both manufacturing and services activities.

    Supply and demand in manufacturing improved modestly, said Huo Lihui, chief statistician at the bureau’s Service Industry Survey Center, with the production index reaching the 50 threshold and new orders rising to 49.2.

    High-tech manufacturing stayed in expansion for a tenth straight month at 50.1, even as equipment manufacturing and consumer goods producers slipped below 50. Energy-intensive industries posted a mild rebound to 48.4, up 1.1 percentage points from October.

    Smaller factories recorded the strongest improvement. The PMI for small enterprises jumped to 49.1, its highest in nearly six months, while medium-sized firms edged up to 48.9. Large manufacturers weakened, falling to 49.3.

    Market confidence showed a slight uptick. The index measuring expectations for production and operations rose to 53.1. Industries including non-ferrous metal smelting and aerospace-related equipment reported particularly strong sentiment, with readings above 57.

    Holiday boost fades

    Non-manufacturing activity, covering construction and services, softened, weighed down by services. Huo attributed the decline partly to the fading impact of earlier holiday-driven spending.

    China’s Golden Week holiday, which typically lifts travel and consumer spending before activity normalizes in the following months, ran from Oct. 1 to 8 this year.

    Service-sector activity fell to 49.5, down 0.6 percentage points from October, though pockets of strength remained: railway transportation, telecommunications, broadcasting and satellite transmission, and financial services all posted readings above 55.

    Real estate and residential services continued to lag below the 50 mark, underscoring persistent weakness in property-related activity. Construction activity improved to 49.6, aided by stronger expectations for near-term growth, with that sector’s sentiment index climbing to 57.9.

    The non-manufacturing new orders index slipped to 45.7, reflecting softer demand. Input prices rose to 50.4, and service-sector sales prices, while still below 50, narrowed their decline.

    Manufacturing employment ticked up slightly to 48.4, while non-manufacturing employment rose marginally to 45.3. Supplier delivery times for factories improved to 50.1.

    China surveys roughly 3,200 manufacturers and 4,300 non-manufacturing firms for the monthly PMI readings, which are seasonally adjusted and considered a leading indicator for economic momentum.

    Trade strains

    China’s manufacturing activity has contracted since April, when U.S. President Donald Trump launched new tariffs that squeezed producers.

    Industrial profits fell 5.5% in October, the sharpest drop since June, reversing the strong gains seen in late summer. Earnings for the first ten months at major industrial firms rose 1.9%, slowing from the January–September pace.

    The broader Chinese economy has cooled as growth slipped to 4.8% in the third quarter.

    Trade tensions with the U.S. spiked in October as Washington threatened new 100% tariffs before both sides reached a late-month deal in South Korea. The agreement cut U.S. fentanyl-linked tariffs to 10% from 20%, paused Beijing’s rare-earth controls for a year and reopened China’s purchases of American soybeans and other farm goods.

    Despite the truce, demand at home remains soft. A drawn-out property slump and weak labor conditions are weighing on consumer spending. Policymakers have signaled a longer-term push to lift consumption and tech self-reliance but have avoided major new stimulus as the economy remains on track to meet its 5% growth target.

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  • Stubborn PCOS symptoms? Gastro doc, Dr Pal says not hormone but this may be the real culprit

    Stubborn PCOS symptoms? Gastro doc, Dr Pal says not hormone but this may be the real culprit

    Many women spend years trying to fix their PCOS by tracking hormones, changing diets, or switching medications, only to feel like nothing is really improving. That frustration is exactly what gastroenterologist Dr Pal addressed in a recent video,…

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  • At least four killed in shooting at child’s party in northern California, officials say | California

    At least four killed in shooting at child’s party in northern California, officials say | California

    Four people have died after 14 people were shot at a family gathering in northern California on Saturday night, police said.

    The victims, who range from “juveniles to adults”, were taken to local hospitals, Heather Brent, a spokesperson for…

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  • Harper Adams University gets £500,000 for AI and engineering

    Harper Adams University gets £500,000 for AI and engineering

    A university has received £500,000 to improve teaching of artificial intelligence and engineering.

    Harper Adams University, said £400,000 would be spent on developing a new centre in Telford for artificial intelligence in manufacturing, agricultural technology and engineering.

    The rest would be spent at its Edgmond campus to develop its simulation laboratory, where it tested products before they are produced.

    Harper Adams is one of 60 universities or colleges to receive funding from the Office for Students, England’s higher education regulator.

    University Vice-Chancellor Professor Ken Sloan, said: “This funding will help us to deliver high-quality AI learning in the heart of the community we serve.”

    The university’s base in Telford town centre, in a building known as the Quad, will house “high-specification IT equipment, including AI workstations, immersive learning pods, edge computing servers, and VR/AR devices” it said.

    Its Collaborative Simulation Laboratory at its main campus was “already at the heart of engineering teaching and research”, it said, and used “advanced simulation techniques to test and refine products before physical versions are made”.

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