Blog

  • David Corenswet drops bomshell about turning to ‘Superman’ veterans

    David Corenswet drops bomshell about turning to ‘Superman’ veterans

    David Corenswet’s desperate desire turned down by THESE two stars 

    David Corenswet recently revealed who he approached for a piece of advice on playing the role of Superman in the forthcoming film.

    While giving an interview to Heart at the red-carpet premiere of James Gunn’s Superman in London, the 32-year-old American actor reflected on reaching out to Henry Cavill and Tyler Hoechlin for guidance, as they both have played the DC icon in Man of Steel and Superman & Lois, respectively.

    Notably, Cavill and Hoechlin were “encouraging” but refrained from influencing Corenswet’s performance by sharing their words of wisdom.

    He said, “Both of them, interestingly, sort of said in their own words, ‘I’m not gonna try and give you any tips.’ And I think that’s a very Superman thing. Superman’s not so much for giving advice or dictating how other people should be.”

    The Twisters star added, “They really just conveyed to me an encouragement and a sense of ‘have fun with it’, which I think is Superman’s way of doing it too.”

    Corenswet remarked, “They were very encouraging and we had a lovely experience. I’m excited to meet them one day. It’ll be great when we can all get in a room together.”

    Before concluding, it is noteworthy to mention that the upcoming Superman movie is scheduled to hit theatres on July 11, 2025.


    Continue Reading

  • Dollar Doubters Seed Historic Gains for Developing World Debt

    Dollar Doubters Seed Historic Gains for Developing World Debt

    (Bloomberg) — US policy volatility has sent money managers scouring the world for alternatives, propelling local bonds from emerging-market countries to their best first half in 16 years.

    Most Read from Bloomberg

    The surge in demand for fixed-income assets in EM currencies is largely the flip side of sinking confidence in the US dollar, which has tumbled almost 11% this year, in part because of President Donald Trump’s trade war and push for tax cuts despite a swelling budget deficit.

    That’s the greenback’s worst performance since the 1970s, and the losses are across the board, with it falling against 19 of the 23 most-traded emerging-market currencies, and by at least 10% against 10 of them.

    The upshot is that an index of emerging-market local debt has returned more than 12% in the first half of the year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, beating hard-currency bonds, which were up 5.4% in the same period. The first-half gains were the strongest since at least 2009.

    “I don’t think anyone had this much dollar weakness on their bingo card,” said Edwin Gutierrez, head of emerging-market sovereign debt at Aberdeen Group Plc. “We thought local-currency debt would outperform hard-currency, but not by the magnitude that it ended up.”

    The money is flowing in unprecedented amounts. EM-debt funds attracted more than $21 billion so far this year, Bank of America Corp. said on Wednesday, citing EPFR Global data. These funds drew inflows for each of the past 11 weeks and $3.1 billion in the week through July 2.

    More Rate Cuts

    Boosting the case further is the prospect of interest-rate cuts in developing countries, according to Lewis Jones, a debt manager at William Blair Investment Management in New York.

    “We expect more capacity from emerging central banks to cut rates, and also the trend of a weaker dollar versus the euro to continue,” he said. “For European investors it could look more attractive looking forward.”

    Latin American economies have handed investors some of their best returns, with Mexico’s local bonds, known as Mbonos, generating a gain of 22%, while some of Brazil’s government bonds have returned more than 29%. The Brazilian notes bounced following a sharp selloff late last year, while traders piled into bets that policymakers are done with their hiking cycle.

    Continue Reading

  • The stock-market rally is broadening beyond Big Tech. Will consumer stocks bounce back in the second half of the year? – MarketWatch

    1. The stock-market rally is broadening beyond Big Tech. Will consumer stocks bounce back in the second half of the year?  MarketWatch
    2. The S&P 500 And Nvidia Hit New Highs, But Rotation Trades Are Smarter  Seeking Alpha
    3. Small caps, energy, and banks feels the love as Wall Street goes cold on Big Tech  MSN
    4. More Stocks Join the Surge, Signaling More Upside Ahead  AInvest
    5. Signs of a ‘broader, healthier’ market start to emerge at the start of the second half of 2025, says one strategist  MarketWatch

    Continue Reading

  • The stock-market rally is broadening beyond Big Tech. Will consumer stocks bounce back in the second half of the year?

    The stock-market rally is broadening beyond Big Tech. Will consumer stocks bounce back in the second half of the year?

    By Isabel Wang

    Tech can’t take all the credit for the stock market’s record rally into a ‘broader, healthier market’ heading into the second half of 2025

    After months of leadership by megacap technology stocks, Wall Street kicked off the second half of 2025 with a powerful, yet potentially healthier, shift in the U.S. stock market, as the rally has broadened.

    From cyclicals to small caps, more stocks have been joining the charge that has sent the S&P 500 SPX and the Nasdaq Composite COMP to new all-time highs, suggesting that this market’s recovery from April lows may have deeper roots than many anticipated.

    Investors have begun rotating out of richly valued technology names and into cyclical sectors when the calendar turned to the second half of the year. The S&P 500’s materials sector XX:SP500.15 was the best performer among the large-cap index’s 11 sectors last week, up 3.6%, while the S&P 500 only rose 1.7%. The financials XX:SP500.40 and energy XX:SP500.10 sectors also gained 2.4% and 2.1% in the same period, respectively, according to FactSet data.

    Small-cap stocks also have shown signs of rebounding in the second half. The benchmark Russell 2000 index RUT has popped 3.5% so far this month, outperforming other major large-cap equity indexes. The small-cap index on Thursday also closed in the green for 2025 for the first time since Feb. 20, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    “While the ‘buy everything’ approach worked really well off the April lows, and part of that was simply just a mean reversion trade after tech got asymmetrically punished … so going forward, stock selection is going to be more important and other areas of the market are starting to catch a bid,” said Talley Leger, chief market strategist for the Wealth Consulting Group.

    The broadening of the tech rally beyond the so-called Magnificent Seven cohort is a sign of “a broader, healthier market,” he said.

    Consumer in focus

    Meanwhile, some sectors that lagged in the year’s first half could be poised for a meaningful rebound in the rest of 2025.

    The S&P 500’s consumer-discretionary sector XX:SP500.25 was at the bottom of the large-cap index’s 11 sectors in the first six months of 2025, off 4.2% to log its worst first-half performance in three years, according to FactSet data.

    However, a look beneath the surface shows the story wasn’t so bleak: Many consumer-related stocks have held steady, and U.S. consumers might be in better shape than sector performance suggests.

    The S&P 500 Equal Weight Consumer Discretionary Index XX:SP500EW.25 – which gives equal value to all 51 stocks that are included in the sector, regardless of the size of the company – has actually risen 2.5% this year, according to FactSet data.

    Of course, Tesla Inc. (TSLA) – one of the largest-weighted stocks in the S&P 500’s consumer discretionary sector – has been largely to blame. Comprising 18.6% of the total assets within the market-cap-weighted sector index, shares of Tesla have tumbled nearly 22% this year, as weak EV sales, lower demand, intensifying competition from other automakers and Elon Musk’s political involvement have rattled investors.

    See: Opinion: Elon Musk takes us for fools as he renews his verbal assault on Trump

    Another megacap tech name – Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) – accounts for roughly 42% of the weighting in the discretionary sector, but its shares have remained relatively steady, rising 1.8% year to date, according to FactSet data.

    To be sure, Tesla and Amazon stand on their own perch within the consumer-discretionary sector, which also includes restaurant chains, apparel, luxury goods and travel stocks. Among those are McDonald’s Corp. (MCD), Lululemon Athletica Inc. (LULU) and Airbnb Inc. (ABNB), which all can rise in a resilient economy and labor market when consumers tend to spend more, but fall when unemployment rises.

    See: The June jobs report is grimy under the hood. Here’s the down and dirty.

    Watch the jobs market

    The U.S. economy added a stronger-than-expected 147,000 jobs in June, and the unemployment rate ticked down to 4.1% from 4.2%, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Thursday. Meanwhile, the University of Michigan’s closely watched gauge of U.S. consumer sentiment rose to 60.5 in a preliminary June reading from 52.2 in the prior month. This was the first improvement in six months.

    The Wealth Consulting Group’s Leger sees the previously negative consumer sentiment as a potential buying opportunity for the consumer-discretionary sector (see chart below).

    “The connection between the University of Michigan consumer-sentiment index and the performance of the consumer-discretionary sector fell into the contrarian buy zone on our radar when everything was at its worst [in April]. Now they are rebounding off those lows, and sentiment or morale is improving,” he told MarketWatch via phone on Wednesday.

    In Leger’s view, the surging stock market also adds to “the wealth effect,” which could increase consumer spending power. That, along with the improving consumer sentiment, falling oil prices, cooling headline inflation and potential interest-rate cuts from the Federal Reserve later this year “should release more money for spending on discretionary items,” and “help brighten the earnings outlook” for the sector, he said.

    However, Marta Norton, chief investment strategist at Empower Investments, said it’s still too early to “make heads or tails” of consumers’ emotions, as even the potential tariff threat doesn’t feel as concerning as it did when it first made headlines a few months ago.

    Americans cut spending in May after buying lots of new cars and other goods earlier in the year to beat U.S. tariffs, underscoring how ongoing trade wars are disrupting the economy. Personal spending fell 0.1% in May, the government said in a June 27 report. It was the first decline since January.

    “I wouldn’t describe the consumer as unhealthy at all,” Norton said, but added there has been a marginal deterioration this year. “There is still a certain measure of uncertainty around what that trade policy ultimately looks like,” she said. That also casts a shadow over the long run for earnings of discretionary stocks.

    Yet despite recent weakness, the consumer-discretionary sector remains expensive on a price-to-forward-earnings (P/E) basis. The forward P/E multiple of the discretionary sector, calculated by dividing its current price by Wall Street analysts’ consensus estimate for its earnings per share (EPS) for the next 12 months, was pegged at 29.07 as of Wednesday afternoon, up from around 22.56 on April 8. Furthermore, the equal-weighted version of the discretionary index was trading at 17.57 times forward P/E, compared with 13.7 in early April, according to FactSet.

    When you add in that the sector’s not necessarily cheap, and that tariff headwinds remain, Norton said it looks tough to see a catalyst for meaningful moves higher for consumer-discretionary stocks.

    U.S. stocks finished higher on Thursday as investors digested the June employment report. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA jumped nearly 0.8%, ending only 0.4% off its prior record. The S&P 500 ended up 0.8%, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 1%, with both scoring fresh record closes, according to FactSet data.

    Major U.S. stock exchanges were closed on Friday for the July 4 holiday.

    -Isabel Wang

    This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

    (END) Dow Jones Newswires

    07-06-25 0830ET

    Copyright (c) 2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

    Continue Reading

  • Victor Gyokores transfer news: Arsenal in talks to sign striker

    Victor Gyokores transfer news: Arsenal in talks to sign striker

    Arsenal are in talks to sign Sporting’s prolific Sweden striker Viktor Gyokeres.

    As first revealed by BBC Sport on Thursday, Arsenal have had a clear focus on completing a deal for the 27-year-old in recent days and the club are now advancing in their pursuit of the forward.

    Discussions over personal terms for Gyokeres and with the Lisbon club over a transfer fee are accelerating, with Arsenal’s sporting director Andrea Berta leading negotiations.

    A deal has not been finalised though, and there remains a degree of caution at Arsenal until agreements are reached.

    Gyokeres has been heavily linked with a move to the Premier League after scoring 97 goals in 102 matches during two seasons in Portugal.

    The Gunners completed the £60m signing of Martin Zubimendi from Real Sociedad on Sunday.

    But the movement towards a deal for Gyokeres represents a significant development in Arsenal’s summer transfer business given a new striker was the club’s main priority.

    It is expected that Gyokeres, who spent three years as a youngster at Brighton and whose career took off during two seasons at Coventry City, would cost about £70m.

    Continue Reading

  • Woman who livestreamed Kneecap Glastonbury set targeted by online abuse | Kneecap

    Woman who livestreamed Kneecap Glastonbury set targeted by online abuse | Kneecap

    A woman who livestreamed Kneecap’s Glastonbury festival set to 2 million people on TikTok has described the “obscene” abuse she says has received in the aftermath, including people calling her a Nazi.

    Helen Wilson, a Swansea-based yoga teacher who also runs the Ground Plant Based Coffee cafe, said she had been sent a lot of personal insults, but that she had received “hundreds and hundreds times more support than negativity”.

    It came after she held up her phone in the crowd to stream the set by the Irish rap trio last Saturday, which the BBC refused to show live, over what it said were efforts to ensure it “meets our editorial guidelines”.

    The BBC later made an edited version available on iPlayer, though the broadcaster did not respond to the Guardian when asked what had been cut out.

    Wilson said: “I just thought, I’m just going to livestream it because the BBC aren’t showing it. And I really disagreed with that. I did not think for a moment that over 2 million people would see it.”

    It was only her second TikTok live stream on her handle HelenWilsonWales – her first, about her weight loss, had no viewers at all – and initially she had not realised how many people were watching because the sun was shining on her phone screen.

    “But I could see that when you’re doing a live stream, loads of messages pop up and people can talk to you. So the screen was going mental. People were just like ping, ping, ping, ping, ping, ping, ping, ping.

    “And I was like: ‘Oh, my god, something’s happening here,’ and so I just knew I had to carry on. People were saying to me: ‘Please keep going, do what you can, please keep going.’ And then that was it,” said Wilson, who grew up in Somerset and was working at the festival.

    The stream was spreading through word of mouth, as viewers sent it to their friends and family, and Wilson found out later that at one point it was playing on a big screen in a pub in the band’s home town.

    She told the Guardian: “I have had a lot of trolling. When you rang, I was just in the middle of deleting some obscene comments off my business Facebook page.”

    “There was somebody on Instagram just saying he sent me a message saying: ‘You’re just a wrinkled old woman looking for attention.’”

    “[In a tabloid newspaper] I’ve been referred to as a middle-aged woman. Like, what has that got to do with anything?” said the 44-year-old.

    She said: “This is about the genocide in Palestine, and this is about the failure of our government to act, to do anything about it.”

    Wilson added: “More people need to know what is going on in Palestine. And we shouldn’t be censoring bands under freedom of speech, full stop. We shouldn’t be censoring anybody who is trying to raise awareness of the atrocities that are taking place.”

    Afterwards, Kneecap called her a “legend” and offered her free tickets to any of their shows.

    On Saturday, while supporting Fontaines DC in Finsbury Park, the band once again led 45,000 people in chants of “fuck Keir Starmer”.

    The band were far from alone in their sentiments at Glastonbury – dozens of acts and figures at the festival spoke out in support of Palestine, including CMAT, the Libertines, Gary Lineker, Joy Crookes, TV on the Radio, Sorry and Paloma Faith.

    Kneecap were also backed by Emily and Michael Eavis, the festival’s organisers, with Emily telling the BBC that “everyone is welcome”, before their set.

    Continue Reading

  • Multisensory VR forest reboots your brain and lifts mood—study confirms

    Multisensory VR forest reboots your brain and lifts mood—study confirms

    In Japan, Shinrin Yoku or forest bathing has already been used for therapeutic applications, for instance, to lower blood pressure and stress levels. For their study, the researchers wanted to find out whether forest bathing – consciously immersing oneself in nature – can also be effective when done virtually, and focused on whether the positive effect is stronger when several senses are addressed simultaneously.

    For the project, a high-quality 360° VR video was produced in Europe’s largest Douglas fir forest, the Sonnenberg nature reserve near Parchim – complete with original sounds and the scent of essential oils from the Douglas fir. The participants experienced the virtual forest scenery either as a full sensory experience (with images, sound and scent) or in a reduced form whereby forest stimuli appealing to just a single sense – visual, auditory or olfactory – were used. In variants where only hearing or scent was activated, participants were placed in a neutral virtual environment to minimize visual stimuli and the influence of VR technology.

    Significantly better effect with sensory combination

    More than 130 participants were first put into an acute stress situation using stress-inducing images. Then, equipped with VR glasses, they experienced one of the four forest stimulation/ bathing variants. The results show that the combination of all three sensory stimuli led to a significantly greater improvement in mood and a stronger feeling of connection with nature compared to when individual sensory stimuli were presented. In addition to positive effects on mood, there were also limited improvements in working memory – the cognitive function that enables us to store, process and retrieve information in the short term.

    However, the researchers point out that the effects are area-specific and cannot yet be considered universally valid. Further studies with larger samples are needed to confirm the results and provide a better understanding of the mechanisms behind the restorative effects of virtual nature experiences.

    “We can already say that digital nature experiences can absolutely produce an emotional effect – even if they don’t replace actual nature,” reports Leonie Ascone, lead author of the study and researcher in the Neuronal Plasticity working group at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE).

    Potential for clinics, waiting rooms and urban spaces

    Simone Kühn, head of the study and Director of the Center for Environmental Neuroscience at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, adds: “Especially in places with limited access to nature – such as clinics, waiting areas or urban interiors – multisensory VR applications or targeted nature staging could support mental well-being. The images, sounds and scents of nature offer previously underestimated potential for improving mood and mental performance in everyday situations.” Kühn conducts intensive research into the effects of the environment on the human brain and, together with colleagues from universities in Vienna, Exeter and Birmingham, was recently able to prove that just from watching nature videos, patients perceive physical pain as less intense (Steininger et al., 2025).

    In brief:

    • Forest bathing in Virtual Reality improves emotional well-being and increases connectedness to nature, particularly when several senses (sight, hearing, smell) are simultaneously engaged
    • The study used a 360° VR forest video complete with original sounds and the scent of Douglas fir essential oils
    • There is potential for application especially in clinical, urban and other environments with limited access to nature

    Continue Reading

  • Got $1,000? 2 Cryptocurrencies to Buy and Hold for Decades

    Got $1,000? 2 Cryptocurrencies to Buy and Hold for Decades

    Many cryptocurrencies skyrocketed during the buying frenzy for speculative investments in 2020 and 2021. That rally was fueled by near-zero interest rates, stimulus checks, social media buzz, and commission-free trading platforms. But in 2022 and 2023, many of those tokens crashed as interest rates rose and a new crypto winter began.

    Over the past year and a half, investors have gradually pivoted back toward cryptocurrencies as interest rates declined and President Donald Trump’s crypto-friendly administration took the helm. So if you’re still bullish on cryptocurrencies, it might be a great time to go shopping again.

    Image source: Getty Images.

    You shouldn’t stake your life savings in cryptocurrencies, but it might be smart to set aside a modest $1,000 in a few tokens that could soar over the next few decades. I’d personally stick with the two largest cryptocurrencies — Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) and Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) — instead of the smaller and more speculative meme coins.

    Bitcoin, the world’s most valuable cryptocurrency, still has plenty of upside potential for a few simple reasons. First, it’s still mined with an energy-intensive proof-of-work (PoW) consensus mechanism, which becomes more costly every four years with each “halving” that cuts its mining rewards in half. Its maximum supply is also capped at 21 million tokens. Nearly 19.9 million of those Bitcoins have already been mined, and the final token is expected to be mined in 2140. There isn’t much room for long-term inflation in this model.

    Bitcoin’s increasingly difficult mining process, scarcity, and deflationary nature make it more comparable to gold, silver, and other physical assets than many other cryptocurrencies. That makes it a potential hedge against inflation and the devaluation of fiat currencies.

    Bitcoin’s first spot price exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which were approved in January 2024, made it easier for retail and institutional investors to invest in the coin without a crypto wallet. Big companies like MicroStrategy (NASDAQ: MSTR) continued to accumulate Bitcoin, the Trump administration recently established a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, and inflation-wracked countries like El Salvador and Central African Republic even adopted Bitcoin as a national currency for a while. All of those developments supported the notion that Bitcoin was becoming “digital gold.”

    Continue Reading

  • Paleontologists Unearth New Species of “Mystery” Dinosaur – SciTechDaily

    1. Paleontologists Unearth New Species of “Mystery” Dinosaur  SciTechDaily
    2. New dinosaur species unveiled at London’s Natural History Museum  Yahoo
    3. This Dinosaur Was the Speed Demon of the Jurassic Era—And It Was the Size of a Dog!  The Daily Galaxy
    4. Natural History Museum’s new dinosaur specimen acquired from London dealer David Aaron  Antiques Trade Gazette
    5. ‘New To Science’ Species Of Dinosaur Goes On Display At London’s Natural History Museum  Yahoo

    Continue Reading

  • Reuters X accounts ‘withheld’ in India: local media – World

    Reuters X accounts ‘withheld’ in India: local media – World

    The Reuters news agency’s X account handles were “withheld” in India “in response to a legal demand”, Indian outlet The Print reported on Sunday.

    The accounts for both Reuters and Reuters World were inaccessible in India; however, users were still able to access 30 other Reuters accounts, The Print added. The Reuters news website is also accessible.

    X users in India have posted screenshots showing that they are unable to access the news agency’s accounts.

    Reuters has yet to issue a statement, while the Indian Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) told India Today that no order was given to restrict the accounts.

    “There is no requirement from the Government of India to withhold the Reuters handle. We are continuously working with X to resolve the problem,” an official spokesperson for the ministry told outlet India Today.

    The Print reported that in previous instances of X restricting access to accounts in India due to legal requirements, the platform issued statements through its Global Government Affairs handle.

    The account has yet to issue a statement on the restriction.

    This is not the first time India has blocked accounts on the platform, formerly known as Twitter.

    According to an Instagram post by The Hindustan Times, the accounts were withheld as per orders issued amid Operation Sindoor, when India launched missiles at sites in Pakistan in May.

    “The centre (government) has reportedly responded to social media platform X blocking the account of news agency Reuters in India, saying that it is a mistake on the part of the Elon Musk-owned company,” the outlet wrote in the post’s caption.

    According to The Print, X issued a statement on May 8 saying it had “received executive orders from the Indian government” to “block over 8,000 accounts in India, subject to potential penalties including significant fines and imprisonment of the company’s local employees”.

    “In most cases, the Indian government has not specified which posts from an account have violated India’s local laws. For a significant number of accounts, we did not receive any evidence or justification to block the accounts,” X wrote.

    Though X stated that it disagreed with New Delhi’s demands, the platform withheld access to the account solely within India.

    Continue Reading