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  • US stocks had a remarkable 2025. But international markets did much better

    US stocks had a remarkable 2025. But international markets did much better

    US stocks had a stellar 2025, but global markets stole the show.

    A major index tracking stocks outside the US, the MSCI All Country World ex-USA, gained 29.2% in 2025, handily outpacing the S&P 500’s gain of 16.39%.

    The artificial intelligence boom has benefited markets in Asia, where tech companies and chipmakers have seen surges in demand. In Europe, markets received a boost from plans for government spending on defense and improved prospects for economic growth.

    A weaker US dollar also provided a tailwind for international stocks. When the dollar weakens and other currencies strengthen, investments denominated in those currencies become more valuable when converted back into dollars.

    The US dollar index, which measures the dollar’s strength against six major currencies, fell by roughly 9.4% in 2025, its worst year since 2017.

    Heading into 2025, US stock valuations were already relatively expensive compared to the rest of the world, creating an incentive for investors to look for returns in different markets.

    “A lot of things went right for international stocks in 2025,” Michael Reynolds, vice president of investment strategy at Glenmede, told CNN.

    “After a couple years of lackluster fundamentals, foreign equities put together a strong year of earnings growth,” Reynolds said. “This was highlighted by fiscal stimulus in Europe and AI-related growth in Asia.”

    Markets in Asia have been riding the wave of AI enthusiasm.

    Tech companies and chipmakers in South Korea, Taiwan, Japan and China all benefited last year from investor interest in AI.

    South Korea’s Kospi index soared almost 76% in 2025 and posted its best year since 1999. Japan’s Nikkei 225 gained 26%, lifted by gains in tech companies and chipmakers.

    In Japan, shares of memory chip maker Kioxia surged 536%. And in South Korea, shares of tech giant Samsung surged almost 130%.

    “The AI trade has broadened materially over the past year,” said Arun Sai, senior multi-asset strategist at Pictet Asset Management. “That optimism has increasingly been priced in beyond the US, extending globally, particularly into markets such as Korea and Japan.”

    In Taiwan, shares in Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM) gained 46.54% last year and hit record highs. Meanwhile, shares of China-based Alibaba (BABA) soared 75.81% as the company embraced AI and launched its own chatbot.

    Commuters drive past the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company's fabrication plant in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, on June 7, 2025. TSMC shares hit record highs in 2025.

    Growth and defense

    Stocks in Europe rallied in early 2025 as the German government enacted historic reforms to boost spending on defense. European defense stocks rallied last year, with German manufacturer Rheinmetall gaining 154%.

    Meanwhile, improving outlooks for the economies in Greece, Spain and Poland benefited those countries’ markets. European banks like Santander (SAN) and Deutsche Bank (DB) also had standout years, each rising about 126% and helping lift markets.

    Spain’s benchmark IBEX 35 index gained 49% and had its best year since 1993. Italy’s FTSE MIB gained almost 32% and had its best year since 1998. Germany’s DAX climbed 23% and Greece’s ATHEX Composite gained 44%, each posting their best year since 2019. Poland’s WIG index rose 47%.

    “In a year when the falling dollar sent investors scrambling for global exposure, Poland offered a unique mix of growth and value,” said David Russell, global head of market strategy at TradeStation.

    “Greece is finally recovering from a decade-long debt crisis,” Russell said. “The country recovered its investment-grade rating at Moody’s and enjoyed a tourism boom. It’s a classic comeback story following a period of bad loans and low multiples.”

    The UK’s benchmark FTSE 100 index gained 21.51% and had its best year since 2009. The index then kicked off 2026 on a strong note, briefly rising above a record high 10,000 points on Friday for the first time ever.

    Tourists watch the 5th century B.C. Parthenon temple free of scaffolding after decades of restoration, in Athens on October 17, 2025.

    For US investors, analysts say the dollar will be key to gauge international stocks’ returns.

    “If the dollar continues to weaken, foreign stocks may continue to have the wind at their back,” Reynolds at Glenmede said.

    While international markets had a year of outperformance, some investors say the fundamentals still support the United States.

    “We still favor the US first and international second,” said Sameer Samana, head of global equities and real assets at Wells Fargo Investment Institute. “We feel the dollar will stabilize, which will help to dampen the advantage for emerging market equities.”

    Wall Street remains optimistic about the outlook for US stocks as corporate profits have been resilient, and there is optimism that AI will continue to drive earnings growth. Still, investors last year looked overseas to diversify portfolios amid heightened uncertainty, and international — both developed and emerging — markets proved to be a strong pick.

    “One of the biggest and most underappreciated surprises of 2025 has been the extraordinary outperformance of emerging market (EM) equities,” Lisa Shalett, chief investment officer at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, said in a December 15 note.

    “Overweighting the US has served global investors well the past 15 years,” Shalett said. “That said, we believe shifting geopolitical, monetary and fiscal policy regimes amid technological upheaval and the constraints of developed world debt are creating a need for diversification beyond US stocks and bonds for long-term investors.”

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  • Kevin O’Leary on ‘Marty Supreme’ and Notes He Gave Josh Safdie – The New York Times

    1. Kevin O’Leary on ‘Marty Supreme’ and Notes He Gave Josh Safdie  The New York Times
    2. Kevin O’Leary on Marty Supreme, Shark Tank, playing the villain, and turning attention into power  https-//www.semafor.com
    3. Kevin O’Leary Wants to Be an…

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  • Introducing the 2026 ‘Beyond the Scale: Addressing Louisiana’s obesity epidemic’ | Louisiana Health

    Introducing the 2026 ‘Beyond the Scale: Addressing Louisiana’s obesity epidemic’ | Louisiana Health

    In 2026, Louisiana Health will launch “Beyond the Scale: Addressing Louisiana’s obesity epidemic.” This series will shine a spotlight on one of Louisiana’s biggest wellness issues and the efforts required to build healthier…

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  • Louisiana health notes: A new Livingston Parish hospital, $50K for psychosis care and more. | Louisiana Health

    Louisiana health notes: A new Livingston Parish hospital, $50K for psychosis care and more. | Louisiana Health

    Louisiana nonprofit benefit raises $50K to support early psychosis care

    Early Psychosis Intervention Clinic New Orleans, or EPIC-NOLA, and its early detection campaign, Clear Answers to Louisiana’s Mental Health, both affiliated with the Tulane…

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  • Halifax Water’s revised rate proposal is still rate shock, says consumer advocate

    Halifax Water’s revised rate proposal is still rate shock, says consumer advocate

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    Interveners in Halifax Water’s rate case are telling the regulatory board that the utility’s new proposal, which would cut its initial request by nearly half, is still inordinately high.

    The board-appointed consumer advocate said Halifax Water “may be closer” to finding a balance between recouping necessary costs and keeping rates reasonable and affordable, but he still has concerns.

    Halifax Water applied to the Nova Scotia Regulatory and Appeals Board in the spring for two rate hikes amounting to more than 35 per cent between January and April 2026. The regulator said that would constitute “rate shock” and ordered the utility earlier this month to bring the figure down. 

    Halifax Water returned with a new proposal for two smaller increases that would compound to about 18 per cent over the same time period.

    “Arguably, this still amounts to ‘rate shock,’” consumer advocate David Roberts wrote in a letter to the board this week.

    Roberts stopped short of suggesting whether the board should accept or reject the utility’s new proposal but said it’s clear “new rate strategies must be employed” if steep rate hikes are to be avoided in the future.

    He pointed to several measures the board has ordered, including seeking relief from some payments Halifax Water is required to make to Halifax Regional Municipality, and exploring whether HRM can absorb some of the utility’s financial shortfalls that are driving up its deficit.

    Halifax Water has said it’s been keeping rates artificially low since the pandemic and cannot continue doing so because it’s facing inflationary pressures and needs to make costly infrastructure upgrades.

    Roberts acknowledged that infrastructure improvements and other expenses are necessary to keep water services at a level that “customers expect and deserve.”

    “However, the rates customers are required to pay to generate that revenue must be reasonable and affordable,” he added.

    The consumer advocate is not alone in lodging its concern about Halifax Water’s revised rate proposal.

    The landlord-advocacy group Rental Housing Providers Nova Scotia is calling on the board to cut the cumulative increase in 2026 to 10 per cent, and order Halifax Water to negotiate a settlement agreement on rates with stakeholders for 2027 to 2031.

    Kevin Russell, the group’s executive director, told the board in a letter that the revised rate is “far too high and represents an increase more than six times the current rate of inflation.”

    Killam Apartment REIT, one of the province’s largest landlords, said the revised rates would still strain household affordability.

    The board is expected to release a decision about the revised rates in the first few days of the new year.

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  • How I changed my personality in six weeks

    How I changed my personality in six weeks

    Neuroticism is not the only personality dimension that can cause psychological vulnerabilities. Sauer-Zavala says high levels of conscientiousness can tip into perfectionism, something I relate to. The interventions Sauer-Zavala suggests for this…

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  • Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra: Expected Launch Date and Pricing Details

    Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra: Expected Launch Date and Pricing Details

    Samsung is preparing to launch its next flagship smartphone series. The Galaxy S26 lineup is expected to arrive in early 2026. Recent leaks now give a clearer idea about the launch date, location, and pricing of the Galaxy S26 Ultra.

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  • Helsinki woman wins €74m Eurojackpot prize | Yle News

    Helsinki woman wins €74m Eurojackpot prize | Yle News

    The win marks the 24th time the lottery’s top prize has gone to Finland.

    File photo. Lottery tickets. Image: Esa Huuhko / Yle

    A woman from Helsinki won more than 74 million euros in Friday night’s Eurojackpot draw, Finnish gambling monopoly Veikkaus said.

    The Eurojackpot is an international lottery across Europe starting at 10 million euros.

    Veikkaus confirmed that they had been in contact with the winner, who has chosen to keep her identity private and limit knowledge of the win to a small circle of people.

    Publicity around major lottery wins can attract unwanted attention. Yle has previously reported on jackpot winners who received large numbers of requests for financial help after their winnings became public.

    According to Veikkaus, the woman checked her ticket early on Saturday morning after hearing that the main prize had gone to Finland.

    “I don’t think I fully understand yet how much money I’ve won,” she said in a statement released by Veikkaus.

    “Maybe it will become clearer once the money is actually in my bank account.”

    She said the moment she realised she had won was overwhelming.

    “I could barely stay in my chair,” she said, adding that she struggled to sleep afterwards.

    The winner told Veikkaus that she plans to renovate her home and expects her working life to change.

    “I probably won’t be working on public holidays anymore,” she said.

    Despite the life-changing sum, she said her immediate plans were modest.

    “Now I’m going outside to clear snow,” she added.

    The win marks the 24th time that the Eurojackpot’s top prize has gone to Finland.

    Gambling remains widespread in the country. A study by the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL) found that 70 percent of Finns gambled in 2023, most commonly on Veikkaus games.

    Estimates suggest Finns spent more than one billion euros on gambling in 2024.

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  • Australia’s “Super-K” flu strain drives record global outbreaks

    Australia’s “Super-K” flu strain drives record global outbreaks

    Australian scientists say the country’s record-breaking 2025 flu season has triggered a fast-spreading “Super-K” strain now driving record global outbreaks.

    The influenza A (H3N2) subclade K viruses were first detected in Australia and…

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  • The Real Pain of Climate Change Is Easy to Feel, but Increasingly Difficult to Study

    The Real Pain of Climate Change Is Easy to Feel, but Increasingly Difficult to Study

    Dawn Gibson can literally feel storms coming in her bones.

    “I’ll start feeling like this gnawing and throbbing in my bones and joints,” the 48-year-old suburban Detroiter said. “I get this feeling like my body is getting very…

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