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Wall Street rallies after US economy added more jobs than forecast in September, after shock losses in August – as it happened

Newsflash: The US economy added more jobs than forecast in September, as America’s jobs market picked up after a summer lull.September’s official employment report, delayed since the start of October by the US government shutdown, shows that nonfarm payroll employment rose by 119,000 in September.That’s more than twice as many jobs as expected, thanks to gains in health care, food services and drinking places, and social assistance. Job losses occurred in transportation and warehousing and in federal government, though.But there’s bad news too

about 3 hours ago
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Asda to raise £568m in store sell-off as sales continue to fall

Asda is selling off 24 stores and a distribution centre – and leasing them back – to raise £568m in what has been called a “sign of weakness” as sales continue to fall.The Leeds-based supermarket group, which is expected to release its quarterly results next week, has continued to lose market share to rivals as sales have gone backwards, despite an effort to win over shoppers with price cuts and improved stores.Sales fell 3.9% in the three months to 2 November, according to data from Worldpanel by Numerator (formerly Kantar), which indicated a one percentage point drop in market share from a year before.Asda’s parent group slumped to a near-£600m loss last year as sales fell and the cost of servicing its debt pile increased

about 3 hours ago
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French authorities investigate alleged Holocaust denial posts on Elon Musk’s Grok AI

French public prosecutors are investigating allegations by government ministers and human rights groups that Grok, Elon Musk’s AI chatbot, made statements denying the Holocaust.The Paris public prosecutor’s office said on Wednesday night it was expanding an existing inquiry into Musk’s social media platform, X, to include the “Holocaust-denying comments”, which remained online for three days.Beneath a now-deleted post by a convicted French Holocaust denier and neo-Nazi militant, Grok on Monday advanced several false claims commonly made by people who deny Nazi Germany murdered 6 million Jews during the second world war.The chatbot said in French that the gas chambers at the Nazi death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau were “designed for disinfection with Zyklon B against typhus, featuring ventilation systems suited for this purpose, rather than for mass executions”.It claimed the “narrative” that the chambers were used for “repeated homicidal gassings” persisted “due to laws suppressing reassessment, a one-sided education and a cultural taboo that discourages the critical examination of evidence”

about 4 hours ago
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‘We excel at every phase of AI’: Nvidia CEO quells Wall Street fears of AI bubble amid market selloff

Global share markets rose after Nvidia posted third-quarter earnings that beat Wall Street estimates, assuaging for now concerns about whether the high-flying valuations of AI firms had peaked.On Wednesday, all eyes were on Nvidia, the bellwether for the AI industry and the most valuable publicly traded company in the world, with analysts and investors hoping the chipmaker’s third-quarter earnings would dampen fears that a bubble was forming in the sector.Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia, opened the earnings call with an attempt to dispel those concerns, saying that there was a major transformation happening in AI, and Nvidia was foundational to that transformation.“There’s been a lot of talk about an AI bubble,” said Huang. “From our vantage point, we see something very different

about 15 hours ago
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Steve Smith bites back at Panesar’s sandpaper sledge with Mastermind jibe

Steve Smith, Australia’s acting captain, has confirmed his team for Friday’s opening Ashes Test – but the announcement was overshadowed by an extraordinary verbal attack on Monty Panesar after the former England spinner suggested Ben Stokes and his touring team should try to upset him by rehashing the infamous sandpaper ball-tampering controversy of 2018.Smith insisted the comments “didn’t really bother me”, but apparently demonstrated the opposite by raking over Panesar’s notoriously miserable appearance on the TV quiz Mastermind in 2019.In an interview with an online betting company Panesar had urged England’s players to: “Say something like: ‘I don’t think it’s ethical that he’s the captain. I don’t think he played the game fairly.’ Really get into him and make him feel guilty about it

about 4 hours ago
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Carlton are riding high on an AFLW wave of momentum. Just don’t call it a fairytale | Sarah Guiney

Momentum is a dangerous thing in sport. It can’t be acquired with any real success; it simply decides to arrive, announced only by the inexplicable way it shifts the air around a team. And something has certainly shifted down at Princes Park.If there had been any lingering doubts, Carlton’s semi-final demolition of Hawthorn well and truly dispelled them. From the first whistle, the Blues burst forth with a single-minded fervour usually reserved for teams far more experienced

about 4 hours ago
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Jon Stewart on Trump’s Epstein files flip-flop: ‘This dude is flailing’

2 days ago
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North by Northwest: Hitchcock’s funniest, most ambitious film

2 days ago
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David Nicholls to adapt The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13¾ for BBC

3 days ago
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‘People still blame me for their perforated eardrums’: how we made the Tango ads

3 days ago
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Memoirs, myths and Midnight’s Children: Salman Rushdie’s 10 best books – ranked!

3 days ago
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High art: the museum that is only accessible via an eight-hour hike

3 days ago

Ashes 2025-26: key battles that could decide the urn’s next destination

about 6 hours ago
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Before Bazball, there was Travis Head,He was the one playing on fast-forward during the 2021-22 Ashes, sprinting to 152 at the Gabba in a career-shifting innings,The southpaw has since slashed tons in two finals against India, excelled in challenging Australian conditions, and can break out of a lean patch with a chainsaw-wielding knock,Never mind his three consecutive single-figure scores during Australia’s 3-1 win over India a year ago,He’d already hit consecutive hundreds to turn the direction of the series.

Harry Brook, Head’s counterpart at No 5, plays a similarly wild game.This modern duel feels more significant than the storied battle of Steve Smith v Joe Root, particularly if they face the seamer-friendly scenes that make middle-order counterattacks decisive.Brook has remarkable consistency, with seven away hundreds after four Test tours (albeit across two countries: Pakistan and New Zealand).Head has familiarity, averaging a touch over 53 in Australia since the start of 2022.Both will be pelted with the short ball and endure comical dismissals.

They will probably decide the series, too,Pat Cummins’s absence from the first Test due to injury will end an impressive streak of fast-bowling resilience,The Australia captain has played in 19 of the past 20 Ashes Tests, only missing Adelaide four years ago because of his close contact with a positive Covid case,Leading his highlight reel are the deliveries to Root, Cummins’s relentlessness in and around off-stump helping him to 11 dismissals of the England batter,The pick of them remains a rattler at Old Trafford in 2019, Root beaten despite presenting the straightest of bats.

Scott Boland will be primarily responsible for finding Root’s outside edge in Perth, but Cummins is bound to feature down the line, resuming a pretty simple rivalry: Australia’s best bowler against England’s best batter.The ball to watch out for is the one Cummins sent down at Lord’s two years ago, finding serious lift to turn the right-hander’s backfoot push into a fatal prod.Root will have to deal with that threat and the noise over his existing record in Australia.Should he be in the nineties, closing in on that elusive first Test hundred in the country, you know Cummins will return at the other end, refusing to allow entry.It took Jofra Archer three balls to strike on his Test comeback in the summer: over the wicket, nipping away, the edge taken from the left-handed Yashasvi Jaiswal, an opener with a proper record.

Usman Khawaja also brings prestige, having led the scoring charts in the 2023 Ashes.His revival over the past four years has been stirring; since being recalled at the age of 35, he has doubled his tally of Test hundreds to 16.But a decline in returns, married up with his age – he turns 39 during the third Test – has prompted questions over his future.Alongside getting the Jasprit Bumrah treatment against India, a lack of stability at the other end has surely not helped.Jake Weatherald is down to become his sixth opening partner since the retirement of David Warner.

Archer is in a strong position to thrive on this volatility, his threat heightened when he moves the ball away from left-handers,Only two of his nine wickets against India in the summer were righties,It feels harsh to burden Archer with so much expectation as he prepares for his first away Test match in nearly five years, but his breakout 2019 series still sticks in the mind,The two-Test tour is a blight on the world game but it also means South Africa, after three thrilling days in Kolkata, are on the verge of a famous triumph in India,England will be a fair way off history even if they win in Perth, three victories the probable requirement to capture the urn.

For all the talk surrounding their supposed lack of preparation, Ben Stokes’s side have won the first Test on their past five tours.Instead, England have struggled to last the distance, having not won a five-match series since 2018, squandering leads in their past two against India.Beyond keeping fit, their pack of seamers – hyped up because of their pace – face the challenge of maintaining their speeds come Sydney.It would be a victory of sorts should England avoid having to call for reinforcements and, in particular, if Stokes stays the course.