Apple is planning to launch new iPad and iPad Air models in the near future, Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman reports.
Writing in today’s “Power On” newsletter, Gurman explained that updated iPads are “coming soon,” including a new entry-level iPad…

Apple is planning to launch new iPad and iPad Air models in the near future, Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman reports.
Writing in today’s “Power On” newsletter, Gurman explained that updated iPads are “coming soon,” including a new entry-level iPad…
8 Feb 2026
Investcorp Saudi Arabia Financial Investments Company (together with its affiliates, “Investcorp”), a leading global alternative investment manager, and SNB Capital, Saudi Arabia’s largest asset manager, today announced a strategic partnership framework focused on cooperation across asset management, investment banking, and wealth management.
The partnership combines Investcorp’s global investment platform and deep experience across alternative asset classes with SNB Capital’s strong investment banking expertise and capabilities in fund structuring and development. Together, the firms aim to originate and capitalize on investment opportunities in Saudi Arabia and internationally, spanning Private Equity and Real Assets.
Both Investcorp and SNB Capital see significant potential in Saudi Arabia, underpinned by strong economic fundamentals and the ambitious Vision 2030 reform agenda. As the Kingdom’s growth accelerates, sectors such as technology, logistics, healthcare, and infrastructure are experiencing rapid expansion, creating compelling opportunities for strategic capital deployment that support long term economic diversification, resilience, and global competitiveness.
Leveraging deep local market expertise, strong regulatory engagement, and a proven track record of structuring and executing landmark transactions, SNB Capital supports the advancement of Saudi Arabia’s capital markets, in line with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 objectives. An autonomous subsidiary of Saudi National Bank, the largest bank in the region, SNB Capital is a market leader and the largest Sharia-compliant asset manager in the world, with Assets under management (AUM) of SAR 246 billion (USD 65 billion).
Mashaal AlJomaih, Managing Director and CEO of Investcorp Saudi Arabia Financial Investments Company, commented: “Through our strategic partnership with SNB Capital, we are uniquely positioned together to unlock new opportunities and drive innovation across asset management, investment banking, and wealth management. Together, we look forward to delivering value to our clients while supporting Saudi Arabia’s continued growth and economic development.”

The culture and creative sector is experiencing unprecedented strain during a period defined by intense polarization and precarity, growing economic and environmental concerns, deepening social inequities and urgent calls for justice….
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A Ford Explorer owner was slapped with a huge repair bill courtesy of some uninvited passengers. The gross and expensive experience could happen to anyone—even…

By Qasim
ISLAMABAD (MNTV) — In a university cafeteria in Pakistan’s capital, Ubaid Ahmed refreshes his phone every few minutes, scanning Bangladeshi news sites for the latest election updates.
The 23-year-old engineering student left Dhaka…

The hottest topic in astronomy is what exactly the little red dots (LRDs) hiding in JWST images really are.
Everyone agrees they’re high-redshift (and hence distant) systems, which are compact yet bright – but beyond that, everything is still…

BP will face pressure from shareholders to prove it can leave a turbulent period in the past as it prepares to reveal its full-year results this week.
The company is expected to follow industry rivals by reporting weaker annual profits after global oil prices fell for a third consecutive year in 2025, in the steepest decline recorded since the Covid pandemic.
City analysts forecast BP profits of about $7.5bn (£5.5bn), down from almost $9bn in 2024, following an expected slump in fourth quarter earnings after crude prices fell below $60 a barrel for the first time in almost five years.
Meg O’Neil, who will become the chief executive of BP from April, will face pressure from investors to set out a new strategic vision, while activist shareholders continue to push the oil company to prepare for a long-term decline in fossil fuel demand.
This month a group of investors led by the Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility, which includes the workplace pension scheme Nest, filed a resolution that called for the company to set out how it would control its spending on oil and gas projects in the years ahead.
Dutch shareholder activists at Follow This are also calling for BP to disclose its strategy for creating shareholder value under scenarios of declining demand for fossil fuels.
BP started up seven new oil and gas projects last year as the company returned its focus to fossil fuels in an effort to resuscitate itsfortunes after trying to diversify into major renewable energy investments. Five of the seven projects were delivered ahead of schedule.
Analysts at Citi told clients in a recent investor note that BP’s share price has outperformed its European rivals by 4.4%, the equivalent of about $4bn of additional equity value over the last six months. They expect that rival Shell’s “material exploration success” off the coast of Brazil could add a further $15bn to $20bn to the company’s value.
“We think all the ingredients are there for a substantial change in narrative,” Citi said.
However, shareholder activists and green groups are preparing to oppose BP’s fresh investments in new fossil fuel projects. They argue the projects will not prove to be financially sustainable as electric vehicles and that the shift to clean energy erodes demand for oil and gas.
“The new chief executive needs to come up with a strategy to address the world’s declining oil and gas markets,” said Mark van Baal, the founder of Follow This.
The International Energy Agency expects oil demand to begin falling from about 2030 in all but its most conservative outlook for global energy use.
Follow This said the new resolution, which was filed ahead of BP’s annual meeting in April, would increase shareholder pressure and focus attention on the financial unsustainability of fossil fuel business models.
“In recent years the strategy has been shaky; shifting from left to right,” Van Baal said. “In our opinion they didn’t fail because, as they suggested, they went too far too fast on green energy. They failed because their strategy was completely unclear.”
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BEIJING, Feb. 8 (Xinhua) — For the first time, scientists have confirmed that the impact cratering rates on the near and far sides of the moon are essentially consistent, laying a solid basis for the establishment of a globally unified lunar…