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  • Exclusive: The Economist stake draws interest as deadline approaches, sources say

    Exclusive: The Economist stake draws interest as deadline approaches, sources say

    • Exor holds largest stake in The Economist at 43.4%
    • Few opportunities to buy into British media empires
    • Rothschild stake sale could value Economist at £800 million, source says
    NEW YORK/LONDON, Nov 28 (Reuters) – The sale of a large stake in the storied Economist publication is coming to a head this week, as bidders submit expressions of interest by Friday’s deadline for a 27% stake, three people familiar with the matter said.

    At least a dozen parties, including ultra wealthy individuals and media companies, have already shown preliminary interest, one of the people said.

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    It’s been a decade since anyone has been able to buy a share close to this size, not since Britain’s Pearson (PSON.L), opens new tab sold its 50% stake in 2015 to the holding group of the wealthy Italian Agnelli family, for 469 million pounds ($531 million), ending its near-60-year ownership in the magazine.

    Philanthropist Lynn Forester de Rothschild is putting the banking dynasty’s share of The Economist up for sale three years after the death of her husband Evelyn de Rothschild, who chaired the company from 1972 to 1989, according to the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the matter is private.

    Requests for comment from the Rothschild family and The Economist weren’t immediately returned.

    Founded in 1843, the publication’s shareholding total nearly 1,000, with Exor, a holding vehicle for Italy’s Agnelli family, owning a 43.4% stake and the Rothschilds owning 27%, according to the Economist’s annual results.

    The sale is made more complex as The Economist’s governance is structured to ensure the editorial process at the 182-year-old publication remains independent, prohibiting any one individual or company from owning a controlling stake in the corporate parent.

    The sale of the Economist comes at a time when there are few opportunities to buy into highly coveted British media empires. The owner of the Daily Mail, DMGT, recently stepped in to scoop up the Telegraph Media Group after UK regulators banned foreign ownership of UK newspapers.
    The move forced U.S.-based Redbird Capital to withdraw its 500 million pound ($658.5 million) joint bid with Abu Dhabi-backed IMI for the Telegraph.

    The Economist is profitable and has been growing its subscriber base. First-half revenue for the six months ended Sept. 30th 2025, was 170 million pounds and operating profit was 20 million, up 23% on the year prior, according to its most recent published figures.

    The sale of the Rothschild stake, which includes about 20% in voting shares, could value the media company at around 800 million pounds ($1.06 billion), a person familiar with the matter said.

    Two top U.S. media executives said a stake in The Economist would give ultra-wealthy people access to even more elite circles.

    “Even if you’re at Davos, it’s crowded. But The Economist gets you respect,” one media CEO said. “It will open a lot of interesting doors.”

    Reporting by Dawn Kopecki in New York and Amy-Jo Crowley in London. Editing by Anousha Sakoui and Nick Zieminski

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

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  • Newly Found Organics In Enceladus’ Plumes

    Newly Found Organics In Enceladus’ Plumes

    NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

    Dramatic plumes, both large and small, spray water ice out from many locations along the famed tiger stripes near the south pole of Saturn’s moon Enceladus in this image released on Feb. 23,…

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  • Ford workers told their CEO ‘none of the young people want to work here.’ So Jim Farley took a page out of the founder’s playbook

    Ford workers told their CEO ‘none of the young people want to work here.’ So Jim Farley took a page out of the founder’s playbook

    • Ford CEO Jim Farley learned from older employees that some young workers at the carmaker were taking shifts at Amazon to make ends meet, he said at the Aspen Ideas Festival. Farley said he drew on founder Henry Ford’s decision to raise factory wages to $5 a day in 1914 to make temporary workers into full-time employees. Young people have previously eschewed manufacturing jobs due to low wages.

    Some economists credit carmaker Henry Ford for jump-starting the American middle class in the 20th century when, in January 1914, he hiked factory wages to $5, more than double the average wage for an eight-hour work day.

    More than 100 years later, facing the reality of many employees “barely getting by,” Ford CEO Jim Farley said he took a page out of the founder’s playbook.

    The carmaker’s chief executive recognized the need to make a change in his workplace when he spoke to veteran employees during union contract negotiations and learned young Ford employees were working multiple jobs and getting inadequate sleep due to low wages, Farley said in an interview with journalist and biographer Walter Isaacson at the Aspen Ideas Festival earlier this year.

    “The older workers who’d been at the company said, ‘None of the young people want to work here. Jim, you pay $17 an hour, and they are so stressed,’” Farley said.

    Farley learned some workers also held jobs at Amazon, where they worked for eight hours before clocking in to a seven-hour shift at Ford, sleeping for only three or four hours. At a Ford Pro Accelerate event in September, the CEO said entry-level factory workers told him they were working up to three jobs.

    As a result, the company made temporary workers into full-time employees, making them eligible for higher wages, profit-sharing checks, and better health care coverage. The transition was outlined in 2019 contract negotiations with the United Auto Workers (UAW), with temporary workers able to become full-time after two years of continuous employment at Ford.

    “It wasn’t easy to do,” Farley said. “It was expensive. But I think that’s the kind of changes we need to make in our country.”

    Ford’s own decision to double factory wages in 1914 was not altruistic, but rather a strategy to attract a stable workforce, as well as provide a stimulus for his own workers to be able to afford Ford products.

    “He said, ‘I’m doing this because I want my factory worker to buy my cars. If they make enough money, they’ll buy my own product,’” Farley said. “It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy, in a way.”

    Farley, a proponent of growing U.S. manufacturing productivity to support the essential economy, has advocated for young workers to have strong trade experiences. Earlier this month, he sounded the alarm on the shortage of manual labor jobs, saying in an episode of the Office Hours: Business Edition podcast that Ford had 5,000 open mechanic positions that have remain unfilled, despite an up-to $120,000 salary for the role.

    “Our governments have to get really serious about investing in trade schools and skilled trades,” he said at the Aspen Ideas Festival. “You go to Germany, every one of our factory workers has an apprentice starting in junior high school. Every one of those jobs has a person behind it for eight years that is trained.”

    Despite the U.S. seeing 3.8 million new manufacturing jobs by 2033, according to Deloitte and the Manufacturing Institute, the younger generation of workers has largely turned away from the career path. As as some ditch college degrees, Gen Z enrollment in trade schools is on the rise, but the newest generation entering the workforce is largely eschewing factory jobs, citing low wages, according to a 2023 Soter Analytics study. U.S. manufacturing jobs in the U.S. have an average $25-per-hour wage—about $51,890 per year—falling short of the average American salary of $66,600.

    American carmakers like Ford may be trying to make it appealing for young workers to embark on manufacturing careers, but they are still not immune to workers’ grievances over wages. In 2023, thousands of UAW members, including 16,600 Ford employees, went on strike before reaching a contract deal in October of that year, which, beyond increasing wages, also further decreased the period of time necessary for a temp worker to become full-time.

    Farley called the strike “completely unnecessary” from management’s perspective and maintained the onus of improving trade workers’ wages isn’t just on Ford.

    “We’re not just going to hope it gets better,” he said. “We have the resources, and we have the know-how, after 120 years, to solve these problems, but we need more help from others.”

    A version of this story originally published on Fortune.com on June 30, 2025.

    More on Gen Z work trends:

    This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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  • ‘We never stop’ – Scotland leave it late to salvage damp squib friendly

    ‘We never stop’ – Scotland leave it late to salvage damp squib friendly

    Who knows what the football gods are playing at with all this late drama in Scotland internationals, but they could save us all a few years if they showed a bit of kindness.

    Andreatta said earlier in the week her players were “inspired” by the…

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  • REPORT: Two cars in top 10 after Qatar Sprint qualifying

    REPORT: Two cars in top 10 after Qatar Sprint qualifying

    For the second time in three Sprint events, Atlassian Williams Racing had both cars in SQ3 and are in the hunt for points on Saturday.

    Carlos Sainz will start from P8 with Alex Albon in P10, maximising the conditions and making minimal mistakes on…

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  • Black Friday 2025 App Deals – MacStories

    Black Friday 2025 App Deals – MacStories

    1. Black Friday 2025 App Deals  MacStories
    2. Black Friday 2025: Best Mac and iOS app deals  Mashable
    3. Today’s iOS app deals and freebies: World of Goo 2, Mooselutions, Animoog Galaxy, FINAL FANTASY, more  9to5Toys
    4. Don’t miss out on these 800+ app…

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  • Type 1 diabetes reversed in landmark study, paving the way for human studies

    Type 1 diabetes reversed in landmark study, paving the way for human studies

    A potential cure for type 1 diabetes has been identified by scientists in a new mouse study.

    In an animal study, researchers at Stanford School of Medicine discovered that resetting the immune system in diabetic mice and creating new…

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  • All Course Subscriptions 50% Off

    All Course Subscriptions 50% Off

    If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, WWD may receive an affiliate commission.

    One of the very best things you can give someone this holiday season isn’t a thing at all. Instead, it’s…

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  • New X-Ray Signals Reveal Wild Activity Around a Black Hole – SciTechDaily

    1. New X-Ray Signals Reveal Wild Activity Around a Black Hole  SciTechDaily
    2. Balloon-Borne Telescope Delivers Most Accurate X-Ray Polarisation of a Black Hole Yet  Orbital Today
    3. A high-altitude telescope just changed what we know about black holes  

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  • British-Malaysian artist Mandy El-Sayegh, Danish author Solvej Balle and women’s collective Charlie Goes To

    British-Malaysian artist Mandy El-Sayegh, Danish author Solvej Balle and women’s collective Charlie Goes To






    British-Malaysian artist Mandy El-Sayegh, Danish author Solvej Balle and women’s collective Charlie Goes To – Monocle