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  • Tehran to restrict water as Iran battles drought

    Tehran to restrict water as Iran battles drought

    Diminished water levels are pictured in the reservoir behind the Amir Kabir dam along the Karaj river in Iran’s northern Alborz mountain range on June 1, 2025.— AFP

    Iran was laying plans on Saturday to cut off…

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  • Holy Stone HS360E drone review

    Holy Stone HS360E drone review

    Holy Stone continues to release beginner-friendly drones at a range of sizes and price points to cater to the needs of a wider community of beginner drone pilots. The Holy Stone HS360E is a sub-250 g model that looks a little like the DJI Mini…

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  • 34-year-old is saving for early retirement: ‘I value my freedom’

    34-year-old is saving for early retirement: ‘I value my freedom’

    In 2020, Anita Kinoshita, 28 years old at the time, started looking into buying a house.

    Kinoshita was living in California and making around $70,000 a year as a software engineer for the Department of Defense.

    As a first-generation American from a farming family in Mexico, Kinoshita believed the best way to finally achieve the American dream her family had for her was to own property.

    “I had my first big girl job and thought the next responsible thing to do would be to buy a house,” Kinoshita tells CNBC Make It. “I didn’t necessarily want to buy a house. In fact, I was trying to figure out how to finesse the purchase.”

    Initially, Kinoshita was seeking a property with the intent to sublet some of the bedrooms and lower her share of the expenses. She had about $20,000 saved for a down payment.

    “My vision for the future was to be able to have a family and spend as much time with them and not necessarily have an office job. [But] I still went forward with what made sense for this American Dream path,” she says.

    “I was 28 at the time, so I still kind of cared what my community defined as successful, and homeownership was part of that. At the time, I thought it was the responsible thing to do.”

    Kinoshita always believed achieving the American Dream meant owning property.

    Anita Kinoshita

    Kinoshita wanted to learn as much as she could about the home-buying journey she was embarking on. She enrolled in a nine-week course that teaches people how to manage their money, offered by Financial Peace University.

    During the retirement module of the online class, Kinoshita used a retirement calculator that helped her realize that if she started contributing a bit more to her 401(k), she could retire around age 55 and buy a house at the same time.

    “All of a sudden, the vision I had for the future and the freedom and lifestyle I wanted became possible in my mind for the first time,” she says.

    For two years, Kinoshita looked at least a dozen places and put in a total of four offers. She got accepted for one, but then the sellers backed out. She was also approved for a single-family home, but there was a mismatch in the appraisal, so she walked away from the deal.

    “I ended up backing out because the only way to be competitive during that time was to invest less and save more for the down payment, and I wasn’t willing to do that,” she says.

    “Ultimately, I felt like it wasn’t the time for me at the moment, and I was not willing to invest less either. I wasn’t satisfied with my career and felt like I was living my dad’s dream and not really mine.”

    Kinoshita viewed a dozen properties and put in a total of four offers.

    Anita Kinoshita

    Redefining success

    Kinoshita switched her focus. Instead of saving for a down payment, she set a goal of having $500,000 invested in her retirement accounts. By April 2022, she had invested $200,000 and reached COAST FIRE — a strategy where you save and invest enough to eventually stop contributing to your retirement accounts and let the compound growth continue rising so you’re on track to have a traditional retirement. She decided to quit her job.

    Kinoshita isn’t alone in choosing to wait to buy a house. The median age of a first-time home buyer has gone up in recent years, from 35 in 2023 to 38 in 2024 alone, according to a report from the National Association of Realtors.

    After quitting her full-time job, Kinoshita started working part-time, creating curriculum for California State University, Monterey Bay and making financial literacy content online. Both of these positions made her more money than when she was working as a software engineer.

    Kinoshita, now 34, is going to wait until she reaches early COAST FIRE, which, when you have enough invested, lets you stop contributing by the age you decide, versus the traditional retirement age of 67.

    Kinoshita quit her job and is now making financial literacy content online.

    Anita Kinoshita

    Her projected retirement age is now 45, and she expects to have $1.5 million invested by then.

    “I value my time and freedom a little bit more than I value home ownership. In retrospect, I think if I had bought the house, I would have felt trapped in my career,” she says.

    Kinoshita and her husband recently moved to the California neighborhood where they would one day like to own a home. They pay $4,000 a month in rent and live in a single-family home in a gated community, according to documents reviewed by CNBC Make It.

    When the couple is ready to buy, she estimates they will have about $300,000 saved to put toward the home. But they still don’t know when they will start getting serious about buying.

    “I’m not in a rush. I don’t want to use it as a financial tool in any way. I’m looking at it more as a luxury and less as an asset these days,” she says. “I would rather have my money working for me in the stock market than in real estate.”

    Kinoshita and her husband are now renting in the neighborhood they hope to buy one day.

    Anita Kinoshita

    Kinoshita says her definition of a dream home has also changed.

    “I don’t want too many bedrooms. I think what I care more about these days is the charming architecture. I don’t want it to be overwhelming in terms of square footage. I want it to be in a really beautiful neighborhood where I feel safe. I want to look outside and see nature,” she says.

    “I don’t see a reason to settle for something else, so for us it’s a as long as it takes kind of thing.”

    Want to level up your AI skills? Sign up for Smarter by CNBC Make It’s new online course, How To Use AI To Communicate Better At Work. Get specific prompts to optimize emails, memos and presentations for tone, context and audience.

    Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It’s newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life, and request to join our exclusive community on LinkedIn to connect with experts and peers.


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  • Disease of 1,000 Faces Shows How Science Is Tackling Immunity’s Dark Side

    Disease of 1,000 Faces Shows How Science Is Tackling Immunity’s Dark Side


    Doctor after doctor misdiagnosed or shrugged off Ruth Wilson’s rashes, swelling, fevers,…

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  • Sims streamers are distancing themselves from EA, but for some the choice is hard

    Sims streamers are distancing themselves from EA, but for some the choice is hard

    The Sims 4 community is in turmoil. Its biggest stars are distancing themselves from the game with the support of their millions of subscribers. Then there are creators in the middle: those big enough to be known, but not big enough to be…

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  • Cat Bond Holders Digest ‘Black Swan’ Event Triggered by Melissa

    Cat Bond Holders Digest ‘Black Swan’ Event Triggered by Melissa

    (Bloomberg) — A rare thing is about to happen in the $55 billion market for catastrophe bonds: a trigger event will wipe out 100% of a bond’s principal.

    Jamaica’s $150 million cat bond has been the subject of controversy since it failed to trigger last year after Hurricane Beryl destroyed large parts of the island. The development sparked calls for a fundamental rethink of the suitability of such financial instruments for developing countries on the frontlines of climate change.

    Investors in cat bonds are now hoping that the trigger event forced by Melissa — a massive category 5 hurricane — will finally put such doubts to rest.

    “It’s actually a good thing that this bond pays out,” Dirk Schmelzer, senior fund manager at Plenum Investments AG, a holder of Jamaica’s cat bond, said in an interview. “It shows how cat bond structures can help support countries get back on their feet again.”

    But skepticism toward the instruments persists.

    It took a “black swan” event to trigger the bond, says Jwala Rambarran, a former governor of the central bank of Trinidad and Tobago. “Melissa supersedes everything.”

    Rambarran is the co-author of a report by the Vulnerable Twenty Group, or V20 — a collection of nations most exposed to climate change — that last year called for an in-depth reappraisal of sovereign cat bonds. After Beryl, V20 warned that the bonds were becoming increasingly rigid in their structure, with narrow parameters that were shielding investors without helping poorer populations.

    Catastrophe bonds are used by issuers — mostly insurers but sometimes also governments — to transfer risk to capital markets. Bondholders risk losses if a predefined catastrophe occurs, but also face sizable returns if it doesn’t. Jamaica agreed to pay investors in its bond a floating rate of 7% above US money market rates.

    The last time a weather-related cat bond paid out in full was in connection with Hurricane Ian in 2022. The Swiss Re Global Cat Bond Index slipped about 2% that year, but has since delivered record gains. In the three years since Ian, the Swiss Re index has soared 60%.

    Jamaica has what is probably the most robust disaster-financing program of all Caribbean nations. In addition to the $150 million it will get from its cat bond, it can tap $300 million in contingent credit from the Inter-American Development Bank and draw a $92 million payout from a parametric insurance program.

    The insured costs of Hurricane Melissa’s damages to onshore property in Jamaica now range between $2.2 billion and $4.2 billion, according to data firm Verisk Analytics Inc. The actual cost, however, will be much higher with less than 20% of the Caribbean island’s residential properties insured, and a significant share lacking sufficient insurance, according to Verisk.

    The funds being made available to Jamaica via its cat bond and other instruments “will never be enough to do the restoration and even to do the relief work right now,” Dana Morris Dixon, minister of education, skills, youth and information, said in a briefing on Oct. 31.

    At the World Bank, which handled the issuance of Jamaica’s cat bond, Vice President and Treasurer Jorge Familiar said the island’s “comprehensive disaster risk management strategy and proactive approach serve as a model for countries facing similar threats and seeking to strengthen their financial resilience to natural disasters.”

    The payout “underscores the role of catastrophe bonds in effective risk management strategies and their efficiency in transferring disaster risks to capital markets,” he said.

    But Rambarran says that for highly destructive storms such as Beryl, the risk remains that cat bond triggers are “too hard and specific.” He says “we still need to continue to look at their design and strike a balance between providing a return and doing good.”

    Meanwhile, investors exposed to Jamaica’s cat bond are unlikely to suffer any meaningful hits to their portfolios, according to Mara Dobrescu, director of fixed income strategies at Morningstar.

    “No one had a huge amount” of Jamaica’s cat bond in their portfolio, she said. So investors will easily absorb any Melissa-related losses and continue to have “a stand-out year.”

    At Plenum, the expectation is that losses associated with its holding of the Jamaica bond will leave a dent of only 0.23% on one of its two cat bond funds, while the other will be untouched. The asset manager has no plans to scale back its interest in World Bank-backed issuances, Schmelzer said.

    “From an ESG perspective we have a lot of clients who like to see these transactions in the portfolio,” he said. “Losses are losses, but this is a better loss than other ones.”

    Major holders of Jamaica’s catastrophe bond include Stone Ridge Asset Management LLC of New York, UK-based Baillie Gifford & Co., and Schroders, according to data compiled by Morningstar.

    Stone Ridge didn’t respond to requests for comment. Spokespeople for Baillie Gifford and Schroders declined to comment.

    The extent to which vulnerable nations should rely on capital markets to help deal with extreme weather looks set to shape the COP30 talks in Brazil. Such questions also feed into the so-called Baku-to-Belem Roadmap (a reference to Conference of the Parties summits in 2024 and 2025), which seeks to mobilize $1.3 trillion annually for developing countries.

    A study published in 2024 found that three years after hurricanes hit in the Caribbean basin, debt levels were 18% higher than in a baseline scenario.

    In the case of Melissa, “the extent of the destruction is going to be so large that even with the level of pre-arranged financing that Jamaica has, there won’t be enough funds to meet the extent of the loss,” Rambarran said.

    Melissa’s impact on Jamaica “puts us in front of a bigger issue,” he said. “We need a global financial architecture that can support these countries in a deeper way.”

    –With assistance from Lauren Rosenthal, Brian Eckhouse and Alexandre Rajbhandari.

    ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

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  • On the Practical Magic of Joan Mitchell’s Personal Style

    On the Practical Magic of Joan Mitchell’s Personal Style

    As Rose implied, Mitchell was not an obviously fashionable person. It seems highly plausible she felt the same way about clothes as she did about her work. “My paintings have nothing to do with what’s in and what’s out,” she told the New…

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  • Show-stopping Il Trattore Concept Tractor Celebrates Style that Underpins Substance of New Holland’s Italian Heritage

    Show-stopping Il Trattore Concept Tractor Celebrates Style that Underpins Substance of New Holland’s Italian Heritage

    • Il Trattore (“The Tractor”) styling concept to take pride of place on Agritechnica stand 
    • Styling inspired by the original 702, the first full production Fiat tractor    
    • Reflects New Holland’s evolution from Fiat roots through Italian design to meet today’s farmers’ needs

    New Holland’s heritage of innovation and style will be spotlighted at Agritechnica 2025. The show will see the debut of the T5.120 ‘Il Trattore’ styling concept tractor, celebrating the enduring legacy of research and development, engineering, and design expertise that began with the first Fiat tractor, the Fiat 702, which will be displayed alongside.

    The Il Trattore name signifies the importance of streamlined technology that defines the general-purpose tractor which can take on any task, the essence of that first Fiat tractor and of today’s T5 range. The tractor also underlines New Holland’s commitment to crafting farm machinery that blends style and innovation.

    Il Trattore is New Holland’s homage to the iconic 702, one of the earliest mass-produced tractors. Developed to address the labor shortages created by World War I, the 702 introduced a design that marked a turning point in agricultural mechanization. With a four-cylinder engine and load-bearing powertrain, it answered the demands from European farmers for mechanical power to ease physical strain and improve agricultural output. Its success helped establish Fiat’s enduring reputation for agricultural excellence alongside that of Italy’s engineers for innovation and design.

    Based on the range-topping model designed and manufactured at New Holland’s Jesi factory in Italy, Il Trattore bears striking green and red coloring and styling inspired by the original Fiat 702. A restored 702, on loan from a Bologna-based collector and dating to 1918, will be displayed alongside the one-of-a-kind special-edition, illustrating the sheer level of progress made in engineering technology over the past century. It highlights the influence of this tractor and its heritage on the style and technology that ensure today’s New Holland brand matches the pace of farmers’ advancing demands.

    After the 702’s launch in 1918, Fiat continued to innovate, producing iconically styled tractors such as the Piccola of the 1950s. In the 1970s and 1980s, Fiat demonstrated how style could enhance engineering substance, developing the 80 and 90 series in collaboration with renowned Italian styling house Pininfarina. This design philosophy continued through the 1990s into the era of Fiatagri – as the Fiat agricultural business had become – right through until it eventually evolved into today’s New Holland brand.

    Today, New Holland carries forward this legacy, blending Italian design heritage with cutting-edge technology to meet the evolving needs of farmers worldwide and underscoring New Holland’s focus on creating machines of which customers can be proud.

    “Our styling of Il Trattore was inspired by the simplicity and iconic face of the Fiat 702. We took the essence of the original design and recreated it for today’s farmers while retaining some retro touches,” says David Wilkie, CNH Head of Industrial Design. “From the Fiat graphic on the front grille to the saddle leather toolbox and seat, there is a wonderful link through form, color and materials in these two iconic designs. It’s been wonderful to be able to reimagine such an important machine and celebrate the essence of ‘Made in Italy’.”

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  • Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, and MDD Linked to Increased Risk for Developing Long COVID

    Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, and MDD Linked to Increased Risk for Developing Long COVID

    New findings reported in JAMA Network Open from a longitudinal cohort study utilizing electronic health records (EHRs) show that individuals with a prior serious mental illness (SMI), including schizophrenia, face a significantly heightened risk…

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