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  • A Look At Andean Silver’s Valuation As Cerro Bayo Drilling Success And Funding Support Restart Potential

    A Look At Andean Silver’s Valuation As Cerro Bayo Drilling Success And Funding Support Restart Potential

    Track your investments for FREE with Simply Wall St, the portfolio command center trusted by over 7 million individual investors worldwide.

    Andean Silver (ASX:ASL) is in focus after intensive drilling at its Cerro Bayo project delivered high grade silver and gold hits, new vein discoveries near existing plant infrastructure, and secured over A$60 million in fresh funding.

    That cash is earmarked for further drilling, permitting work, possible land right acquisitions, and early economic studies, with a revised Mineral Resource Estimate targeted for the first half of 2026.

    See our latest analysis for Andean Silver.

    The Cerro Bayo drilling update lands after a sharp 74.0% 90 day share price return and a very large 3 year total shareholder return, which suggests momentum has been building as investors reassess both growth prospects and project risks. Overall, the stock has delivered strong short term share price gains alongside outsized longer term total shareholder returns.

    If drilling success at Cerro Bayo has your attention, it can be worth broadening your search to other resource names with insider alignment and growth potential through fast growing stocks with high insider ownership.

    After a 74.0% 90-day share price run and a very large 3-year total shareholder return, with the stock trading at A$2.61 against an A$4.95 analyst target, is there still a buying opportunity here or is the market already pricing in future growth?

    The most followed narrative on Andean Silver places fair value at A$25 per share, far above the last close at A$2.61, which sets up a very wide valuation gap.

    Valuation Scenarios (AISC assumed $20/oz, industry average)

    Read the complete narrative.

    Curious how that A$25 fair value stacks up against those cash flow scenarios? The narrative leans on aggressive volume ramp up and rich profit assumptions. Want the full playbook behind that gap?

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  • Divers to be deployed in search for missing in Philippine ferry sinking – Reuters

    1. Divers to be deployed in search for missing in Philippine ferry sinking  Reuters
    2. Ferry sinking kills 18, leaves 24 missing in south Philippines  Dawn
    3. At least 18 killed and hundreds rescued in Philippines ferry disaster  CNN
    4. Eighteen dead after…

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  • Governor State Bank Gives Major Update on Availability of Newly-Designed Currency Notes

    Governor State Bank Gives Major Update on Availability of Newly-Designed Currency Notes

    The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said on Monday that it will begin printing newly designed currency notes of two to three different denominations once the federal cabinet approves the final designs.

    Speaking at a press conference after…

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  • Inside ABC News Correspondent Will Reeve and Amanda Dubin’s Wedding at the Rubell Museum

    Inside ABC News Correspondent Will Reeve and Amanda Dubin’s Wedding at the Rubell Museum

    Event planner Amanda Dubin and ABC News correspondent Will Reeves’s love story began online—a place where neither of them ever expected to meet their forever person. They matched in the late summer of 2022, but life logistics and scheduling…

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  • Nikon ZR Update Extends Max Recording Time to 6 Hours

    Nikon ZR Update Extends Max Recording Time to 6 Hours

    The Nikon ZR is receiving its first firmware update (version 1.10), which significantly increases the maximum record time to six hours, makes using it in multi-camera setups better, improves exposure monitoring, and more.

    Available…

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  • Nikon Releases First Firmware Update, Version 1.1, for Nikon ZR

    Nikon Releases First Firmware Update, Version 1.1, for Nikon ZR

    Nikon has just announced a new firmware update for their Nikon ZR cinema camera. Let’s have a look at some of the coming updates.

    As an owner of the Nikon ZR, I am keenly aware of the amazing benefits—and a few frustrations—of using the…

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  • Galilean Moons’ Water Differences Set During Formation

    Galilean Moons’ Water Differences Set During Formation

    How long did it take to establish the water content within Jupiter’s Galilean moons, Io and Europa? This is what a recent study published in The Astrophysical Journal hopes to address as a team of scientists from the United States and…

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  • AUD/USD surges 3.19% in strongest weekly gain since Liberation Day low

    AUD/USD surges 3.19% in strongest weekly gain since Liberation Day low

    AUD/USD posts strongest weekly gain since 2025

    AUD/USD closed last week higher at 0.6896, posting a robust 3.19% weekly gain – its strongest since the 4.14% rally from the Liberation Day low of 0.5912 in early April 2025.

    Last week’s gains were fuelled by exceptionally strong December employment data, which lifted market-implied odds of a Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) rate hike at next week’s board meeting to around 60%.

    Further tailwinds came from buoyant global risk sentiment, surging commodity prices, and a broader US dollar (USD) pullback following recent geopolitical drama regarding Greenland. The latter has potentially encouraged increased foreign hedging of US assets due to reduced confidence in the current US administration.

    Super funds eyeing hedging shifts

    Locally, the subject of foreign exchange (FX) hedging by Australian super funds has gained attention following reports that Australian Retirement Trust (ART), the nation’s second-largest fund (managing approximately A$353 billion), is considering higher FX hedging ratios on its offshore holdings.

    Traditionally, super funds hedge only 20% – 30% of their approximately A$4.4 trillion to A$4.5 trillion in assets, roughly half of which is invested overseas. This low ratio provides a natural cushion; during periods of risk aversion, the Australian dollar (AUD) traditionally falls, helping to offset portfolio losses on foreign assets.

    If Australian super funds do lift their FX hedges, it would reduce that cushioning effect – hence the caution. However, if more funds follow suit, it could deliver meaningful additional support for the high-flying AUD/USD.

    Looking ahead, AUD/USD’s near-term trajectory will hinge on evolving geopolitical headlines – which appear to be flowing freely at this point – as well as tomorrow’s fourth quarter (Q4) inflation report.

    Q4 CPI

    Date: Wednesday, 28 January at 11.30am AEDT

    In the third quarter (Q3) 2025, headline consumer price index (CPI) rose by 1.3%, accelerating from the 0.7% increase in the second quarter (Q2). This pushed the annual headline inflation rate higher to 3.2%, up from 2.1% in Q2 – the lowest since March 2021 – marking the highest quarterly rise since March 2023, largely driven by housing (electricity +9.0% due to price reviews and rebate timing), recreation/culture, and transport.

    The RBA preferred measure, the trimmed mean, increased to 3.0% year-on-year (YoY), up from 2.7% in Q2. This represented the first rise in annual trimmed mean inflation since December 2022, signalling a reversal of the prior downward trend.

    Since the Q3 CPI release, inflation has continued to show upside pressures. The transition to complete monthly CPI data revealed headline inflation peaking at 3.8% in October before easing to 3.4% in November, while the trimmed mean edged up to 3.3% in October before dipping slightly to 3.2% in November.

    These firmer prints prompted hawkish RBA commentary and a shift towards expectations of RBA rate hikes in 2026, further reinforced by last week’s unexpectedly strong labour force report for December.

    Expectations for Q4

    The Q4 CPI is expected to show headline inflation rising by 0.6%, lifting the annual rate to 3.6%. The core measure, the trimmed mean, is expected to rise by 0.8% quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) for an annual rate of 3.2%, in line with the RBA’s forecast.

    Implications for the RBA

    A downside surprise of 0.7% in the trimmed mean would potentially open the door for the RBA to remain on hold at its meeting next week.

    Conversely, a trimmed mean quarterly print of 0.9% or higher would likely see a 25 basis point (bp) rate hike at next week’s meeting.

    Ahead of the Q4 inflation report, the Australian interest rate market is pricing in a 60% chance of a 25 bp rate hike at next week’s meeting. Looking further out, a full 25 bp hike is priced in by May, with a cumulative 50 bp of tightening priced in for 2026.

    AU all groups CPI and trimmed mean chart

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  • Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for Jan. 27 #491

    Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for Jan. 27 #491

    Looking for the most recent regular Connections answers? Click here for today’s Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle and Strands puzzles.


    Today’s Connections: Sports Edition is…

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  • Olive oil type matters for cognition and gut health in older adults

    Olive oil type matters for cognition and gut health in older adults

    A large cohort study suggests that not all olive oils are equal, with virgin olive oil showing favorable links to cognitive aging and gut microbiota profiles over two years.

    Study: Total and different types of olive oil…

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