A wolf that escaped from a zoo in South Korea remained at large on Thursday, authorities said, prompting a local school to close over safety concerns as the search continued. The male wolf – born in 2024 and weighing about 30kg (66lbs) – escaped from O-World, a zoo at a theme park in Daejeon, about 150km (90 miles) south of Seoul, on Wednesday, triggering a wide search in surrounding areas. It rem...
A wolf that escaped from a zoo in South Korea remained at large on Thursday, authorities said, prompting a local school to close over safety concerns as the search continued. The male wolf – born in 2024 and weighing about 30kg (66lbs) – escaped from O-World, a zoo at a theme park in Daejeon, about 150km (90 miles) south of Seoul, on Wednesday, triggering a wide search in surrounding areas. It remained at large on Thursday, authorities said, with a nearby school closing for safety. “Daejeon...
The average one-year price target for Target (XTRA:DYH) has been revised to 107,81 € / share. This is an increase of 18.84% from the prior estimate of 90,72 € dated February 23, 2026. The price target is an average of many targets provided by analysts. The lat
The average one-year price target for Target (XTRA:DYH) has been revised to 107,81 € / share. This is an increase of 18.84% from the prior estimate of 90,72 € dated February 23, 2026. The price target is an average of many targets provided by analysts. The lat
narvikk/iStock via Getty Images By Padhraic Garvey, CFA , Regional Head of Research, Americas; Michiel Tukker , Senior UK & Eurozone Rates Strategist; and Benjamin Schroeder , Senior Rates Strategist The dust settles on the craziness of the past 24-48 hours, and talk now rumbles on Our reading of events, as they unfold, points to the logic of upholding the Iran war ceasefire and an extension throu...
narvikk/iStock via Getty Images By Padhraic Garvey, CFA , Regional Head of Research, Americas; Michiel Tukker , Senior UK & Eurozone Rates Strategist; and Benjamin Schroeder , Senior Rates Strategist The dust settles on the craziness of the past 24-48 hours, and talk now rumbles on Our reading of events, as they unfold, points to the logic of upholding the Iran war ceasefire and an extension through to a virtual end to these specific hostilities. The US will want to get its hands on Iran's enriched uranium, and if they do, they may then hold their nose as Iran assumes a 'monitoring' role over the Strait (even if no more than a covert thing). The market reaction to all of this was predictable: risk-on and generally relief trades. For the rates market, front ends are under less rate hike pressure, and in the US, the rate-cut story for later in 2026 is very much in play (has remained our view). For longer maturities, it's more opaque. The reality is, we are still left with an elevated inflation dynamic through the coming number of months, and that remains an issue for inflation-unprotected fixed income products. The impact reaction of the ceasefire news has seen yields fall right across curves, but the lingering effect risks a subsequent re-elevation in longer tenor yields, steepening curves from both ends. The 5yr area of the US curve has been re-richening, in line with a rate cut expectation, but that often co-exists with overall curve steepening. Markets are retracing some of the rate hikes, but the growth impact may be more lasting With oil trading well below $100 again, rate markets have more room to breathe, and so do central banks. At first sight, rates are simply following the playbook from the past month and are returning to the state when oil was at these lower levels before. This is in line with the idea that any inflation triggered by oil will only be short-lived with limited second-order effects. As a consequence, markets are less set on European Central B...