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Prince Andrew’s antics and scandals have tried royal patience, triggering headlines and suspicions

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Prince Andrew’s antics and scandals have tried royal patience, triggering headlines and suspicions [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now

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One scandal too many forces UK monarchy to sideline Prince Andrew

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One scandal too many forces UK monarchy to sideline Prince Andrew [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now

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I moved from NYC to Colombia earlier this year. The change has helped my burnout and saved me money.

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The author on her first day in Colombia in her new Airbnb, holding a bouquet of flowers.
The author loves living in Colombia after eight years in New York City.

  • I lived in New York for eight years, but moving to Colombia felt like a breath of fresh air.
  • My dollar stretches further in South America.
  • I’ve moved internationally before, and the decision came easily to me.

When I first moved to New York in 2017, I drank the Kool-Aid: work hard, play hard. I had just finished university and another journalism internship in Vienna, and flew across the Atlantic with one suitcase and my résumé in hand. It felt like a scene from a movie.

For eight years, I lived a Sex and the City lifestyle on a budget: strutting down the streets in high heels, heading to my first corporate job with fire and hope in my heart. I left for a scrappy PR agency, of which I’m now the Vice President. I also kept writing — not at a chic desk facing the window like Carrie Bradshaw, but in bed. My first apartment didn’t have a living room.

I enjoyed living in NYC for eight years.
The author at Little Island the Friday before moving.
The author realized she was ready for a new adventure after she returned from living with her family for five months.

Over time, I upgraded: from sharing a tiny apartment in Manhattan with difficult people to a larger place in Brooklyn with great roommates. From a bachelor’s degree to a master’s. From casual sex to celibacy. From undiagnosed to clarity about my mental health.

And I realized: I was craving stability. But New York, for all its glory, couldn’t provide that for me. Friendships sometimes felt hollow since I came from a different culture. Dating felt like trying to catch fish with my bare hands. The money I made went straight to rent, food, and the occasional festival.

When I first moved there at 22, I thought the world was my oyster. At 30, it still is.

After living with my family for five months, I realized I wanted to move to a new place.
The inside of the author's NYC storage unit in Upper Manhattan.
The author has a storage unit in Upper Manhattan.

In January, after five months in Europe living with my family, the city suddenly felt wrong. I stopped going out on weekends. Other than the gym, I barely left my apartment. That “New York or nowhere” slogan started to feel like brainwashing. My mentor once called New York “a playground for 24-year-olds,” and I started to think he was right. I was aging out of it — or my previous lifestyle.

Timing was on my side. My lease in East Harlem was up in March. My boss was supportive, some colleagues had already been working remotely, and client meetings had been online since the start of the pandemic. Plus, travel is great for writing.

So I set off to Argentina on a whim. Six weeks later, I was hiking Machu Picchu. In June, I landed in Medellín — a city the nomad community calls paradise.

Colombia is beautiful, and I’ve made lovely friends here, too.
The author in an elevator with her friend Jenni.
The author with her friend Jenni in Medellín.

As the cab from the airport turned a corner to reveal the valley, the mountains, and a soft fog blanketing it in the late-afternoon sun, I understood why. The visual evoked the same emotions as the New York skyline.

“Paradise” goes beyond the city’s beauty: I made local friends immediately, who don’t speak English, and thus helped me become fluent in Spanish within five months of learning it. We play beach volleyball on Sundays, followed by a barbecue dinner. Expats and locals merge in a very NYC way. I’ve replaced the subway with Uber Moto, and as we speed past cars and trees, I can barely remember what sweating on the train felt like.

I also save money here.
A picnic on a blanket in a park in New York.
The author had a solo picnic in McCarren Park in Brooklyn the week before moving.

That first Airbnb was in Laureles, and in July, I moved to another one in Ciudad del Río, Poblado. I’ve continued to stay in Airbnbs. I like not signing a lease; it gives me freedom and independence, and I like having a turnkey apartment.

Right now, I’m staying in a large studio in a luxury building with a pool and spa, and paying maybe 15% of what I would be paying for similar accommodations in New York. In Colombia, I buy high-quality groceries and rarely spend more than $50 a week. I can get coffee and a pastry for less than $5.

Being back in New York as a visitor confirmed my decision.
The author holding a bouquet in a kitchen in New York.
The author stayed in Greenpoint while visiting New York in August.

I did go back to New York for three weeks in August — to see my friends and storage unit. Being back as a quasi-visitor felt exciting. But I also felt the same subtle panic I had grown accustomed to living there, only worse, after feeling transformed by five months in South America.

My weekly grocery haul was now $150, thanks to tariffs. The subway ride to Manhattan, squished between commuters, felt endless. My attempt to visit the dentist failed — I had already hit my insurance max for the year.

I’m proud of myself for moving.
The author with her friend Andrea.
The author (left) saw her friend Andrea on her first day back in Colombia.

When my redeye back to Medellín took off, I breathed a sigh of relief. And I was proud: of lugging 260 pounds of luggage down from my fifth-floor walk-up. Of making a decision for a calmer life.

The next morning, after coffee at my favorite spot, I called my mom in Germany: “I’m home.”

My Medellín friends welcomed me with flowers and chicharrón. New York will always be a home I can return to. But life in Colombia feels like a rebirth — I’m drinking the LATAM Kool-Aid now.

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Capitol Riot

Basic Rules for Positive and Negative Numbers – YourDictionary

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When using positive and negative numbers, you use the rules for signed numbers (numbers with positive or negative signs in front of them). Also known as operations for signed numbers, these steps can help you avoid confusion and solve math problems as quickly — and correctly — as possible.

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Trump backtracks again on Ukraine and expresses confidence in Putin

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During a meeting with Volodymyr Zelensky, at the White House on Friday, the US president declined to commit to providing Tomahawk cruise missiles to Kyiv.

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‘Cockroach’ jabs and regional bank breakdowns: The week private credit’s ‘golden’ narrative got a little less shiny

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Jamie Dimon, Marc Lipschultz, Jon Gray,
  • Jamie Dimon’s concern over “cockroaches” in credit has spawned a debate about private credit.
  • While some industry watchers sound the alarm on the booming industry, others are more sanguine.
  • Many industry leaders defended private credit this week following Dimon’s comments.

This week, the world’s leading financial institutions were acting like bad roommates. All it took was one multibillion-dollar “cockroach” for everyone to start pointing fingers and assigning blame.

Two years ago, Blackstone’s President Jon Gray said private credit was in a “golden moment,” and it has since become the hottest corner of Wall Street. There have always been private credit critics, but a deluge of digs from industry watchers turned the spotlight back on the so-called shadow lenders, challenging their shining narrative and raising uncomfortable questions about potential contagions.

It kicked off on Tuesday, when Jamie Dimon, Wall Street’s bluntest banking billionaire, said something he “probably shouldn’t say,” about the bankruptcies of auto parts giant First Brands and subprime auto lender Tricolor during JPMorgan Chase’s earnings call.

When you see one cockroach, there’s probably more,” Dimon said, after the bank disclosed a $170 million loss related to Tricolor.

And even though Dimon clarified that Tricolor, a company that offered financing for used cars to customers with limited or no credit history, is not typically what one would consider private credit (and may even involve fraud) and that there are “early signs” that there may be “some excess” in this 15-year credit bull market more broadly, many of the biggest private credit players took the comments from their longtime critic personally.

Blue Owl co-CEO Marc Lipschultz suggested that the focus on private credit may be a result of some people in the industry having their own “meaningful, parochial interests” to protect in the face of private credit’s growing popularity, which is eating their lunch.

“Blackstone’s market cap exceeds the market cap of most financial institutions in the world today,” he said at the CAIS Alternative Investment Summit conference. “It’s not as if that’s not coming from someone, and of course, those people don’t like it.”

When the interviewer, Bloomberg TV’s Dani Burger, suggested “those people” might be Dimon, Lipschultz smirked. He suggested that the focus on private credit in these cases is an “odd kind of fear-mongering.”

The pile on

On Thursday, two regional banks, Zion Bancorp and Western Alliance, revealed losses in their own lending books, which has added to fears that the credit ecosystem might be under threat.

And critiques of private credit continued to pile up from there.

A study by business school academics at Johns Hopkins and UC Irvine claimed the industry’s returns are “illusory” and fail to beat the market, or make the lack of liquidity worthwhile. And at the International Monetary Fund’s annual meeting, the organization’s head, Kristalina Georgieva, told reporters that the significant growth of non-bank lending has her organization “urging more attention to the non-bank financial institutions,” which are less regulated than banks.

“You are asking the question that keeps me awake every so often at night,” she said.

Jeff Hooke, an adjunct instructor at Hopkins, told Business Insider that his study doesn’t suggest that private credit is about to cause a crisis, but it’s not favorable to the industry’s narrative either.

“I don’t see a few bankruptcies as a prelude to contagion,” Hooke said. “What my colleagues and I concluded is simply that the value that private credit claims for its asset class is simply not there.”

The golden age of private credit

Private credit, shorthand for non-bank lenders that have moved in to offer the loans that banks stopped underwriting after the Great Financial Crisis, has grown immensely since the bottom of the crisis.

They’re not just competing with banks on risky loans, but also writing multi-billion-dollar loans to investment-grade clients, a practice known as direct lending. Already booming before interest rates began to rise in 2022, the segment became the star of the investment world, offering high returns while banks pulled back.

Some of the private equity industry’s most famous firms now actually manage more debt than private equity, with Blackstone managing $407 billion in non-real estate credit and $389 billion in private equity as of Q2 of this year. Apollo is even more lopsided, with $690 billion in credit assets and $150 billion in equity strategies. It’s gone from a sleepier sidekick of the private equity investment world to a destination career for many future Wall Streeters.

In a report titled “Has the Golden Age of Private Credit Lost its Shine?”, private market investors Hamilton Lane asked whether the good days are over. Its analysis suggested that there’s still “room to run” in the golden age, but the fact that they have to answer concerns shows that questions abound.

Glenn Schorr, an analyst for Evercore who covers JPMorgan and large alternative investing firms, said that a few bankruptcies are not the same as an impending financial crisis, and that some people may have “misread” Jamie’s comments.

“Every indication from bank commentary, from alternative asset firms’ commentary, and from Moody’s head of private credit, tells you that we’re not seeing signs of a turn in credit,” Schorr said.

“Make no mistake about it, that does not mean there will be zero loss,” he added. “If defaults go up 1% to 2%, one person might say ‘big deal — 2% defaults are low’. Other people can say defaults have doubled.”

Coming to the defense of private debt

When Apollo CEO Marc Rowan was asked at a conference on Tuesday about the two bankruptcies, he said that it “does not surprise” him that there are some “late-cycle accidents.” He suggested that the “competitive market” may have led some to take “shortcuts.”

Rowan implied that this may be a sign of where the market stands, rather than a sign of any imminent concerns about the overall public or private credit markets. Other executives were more explicit in defending private credit.

“What’s interesting is both of those were bank-led processes,” Blackstone’s Gray said at the same conference. He said he does not think “this was a canary in the coal mine.” The firm is reporting results next week and may expand on this further then.

Also at CAIS, Carlyle Group CEO Harvey Schwartz noted that neither bankruptcies are related to “what you think of as direct lending or the traditional private credit market.”

And while the big publicly traded alternative investment providers have taken a beating due to credit concerns, banks have had their own set of woes.

Jefferies, which holds debt tied to First Brands, saw its stock slump as questions mounted on what went wrong — though it clawed back some ground Friday.

Zions Bancorp dropped 11% Thursday after revealing a $50 million loss on two commercial loans, and Western Alliance slid 10% after disclosing a lawsuit alleging a fraudulent credit line to Cantor Group V LLC. Both stocks have since recovered.

To hear the private credit industry tell it, there aren’t nearly as many cockroaches in their own loan books.

“We’ve been a little surprised by the First Brands, Tricolor sell-off and buzz because when we look at our credit portfolios, we actually see pretty healthy portfolios relative to almost any metric that you can look at,” Kipp deVeer, co-president of Ares, said during a panel at CAIS.

Maybe shadow banks aren’t so shadowy after all, they said.

“Private markets get referred to often as sort of like the shadow,” Carlyle’s Schwartz said during his panel. “I’ve never seen a shadow this bright ever in the history of time.”

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No Kings protests: What to expect at Saturday’s marches around the country

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This summer, organizers said more than 5 million people participated in No Kings protests against President Trump. Organizers say they expect an even bigger turnout this time around.

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New Research Reveals Age When Most Reach All-Around Mental, Emotional Peak

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You may think the mind peaks in your 20s. The data says otherwise. A new open-access analysis in the journal Intelligence reports that overall psychological functioning tends to crest in late midlife, with many adults hitting their best all-around stride near age 60. The research, led by Gilles…

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3 luxury handbags that add capital to your closet, according to resale data

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Louis Vuitton Speedy
The Louis Vuitton Speedy bag was Fashionphile’s most purchased bag this year.

  • Classic handbags from a select few designers tend to hold their value best.
  • Styles from Hermès and Louis Vuitton were among the most purchased on luxury retailer Fashionphile this year.
  • Here are three bags to buy that will have lasting appeal on the secondary market.

Sometimes when you get the bag, you are also, literally, getting the bag.

The secondhand market is a bright spot for luxury. The global resale market is growing three times as fast as the firsthand market and is expected to reach as high as $360 billion by 2030 — up from between $210 billion and $220 billion today — according to a report by BCG and Vestiaire Collective released this month.

Handbags reliably drive luxury secondhand sales. The nearly 8,000 respondents to BCG and Vestaire’s survey said that an average of 40% of their handbags were purchased secondhand — an outsize share, given that, on average, 28% of their total closets were purchased secondhand.

“A classic handbag is a classic handbag is a classic handbag,” Lara Osborn, the SVP of merchandising and fulfillment at luxury secondhand retailer Fashionphile, told Business Insider. She said that bags tend to be more evergreen in style than clothing or shoes, handle wear better, and are generally one-size-fits-all.

They also tend to hold their value, something customers are “now trained to think about,” Osborn said.

Many seek out handbags with original packaging — down to the tissue paper — and authentication materials, knowing that will make it easier to resell them down the line, she said.

According to the BCG and Vestaire survey, 41% of secondhand sellers offload their pieces to recover residual value, and 62% sell so they can shop more.

While a select few handbags can be resold at a price higher than their retail value — marking a true return on investment — most customers, Osborn said, aren’t looking for that when they “invest” in a bag.

A shopping win is “when you can buy, use, and enjoy it, and sell it at some point and get a big portion of your money back,” she said. “You own a piece of capital that you can apply to something else; it’s money in your closet, sitting and waiting to be spent.”

The bags most likely to retain their value are also among Fashionphile’s top-selling. These are generally considered “safe styles” and “heritage icons,” according to Fashionphile’s 2025 Ultra-Luxury Resale Report.”

“The appetite is just for timeless, classic,” Osborn said. “I’m not going to look out of place carrying this in a year, two years, three years.”

These are three of Fashionphile’s top-selling evergreen bags that will add capital to your closet.

The Louis Vuitton Speedy
Louis Vuitton Speedy
The Louis Vuitton Speedy, which comes in a variety of sizes and editions, is routinely among the most-purchased bags at Fashionphile.

Fashionphile’s top-shopped bag of the year is the Louis Vuitton Speedy.

The nearly 100-year-old style has been a reliable staple for decades, Osborn said. It comes in a number of sizes and iterations, something which fuels a collector’s mindset — and continued purchasing.

“It’s like, oh, here’s the newest version,” she said. “Are other people collecting it? And then you start to think, ‘I’m supposed to do that too.'”

The Speedys available on Fashionphile range in price from $615 to $12,875. The top-handle style, purchased new from Louis Vuitton, starts at $1,920.

The Chanel Double Flap
Chanel Flap Bag
The Chanel Double Flap Bag was Fashionphile’s second most-purchased style of the year.

Originally designed by Karl Lagerfeld in the 1980s, Chanel’s classic Flap bags are iconic: the double C clasp and a chain strap laced with leather. Not only was it the second most-purchased bag overall at Fashionphile this year, but it was also popular across all generations.

Elements of the style have since extended to wallets and smaller crossbody bags, which are among Fashionphile’s top-sellers in their respective categories.

The Double Flap commands a higher price point than the Speedy. On Fashionphile, it ranges from $2,080 to $33,075, and purchased from Chanel, the Flap bag starts at $5,500.

The Hermès Evelyne
Hermès Evelyne
The Hermès Evelyne was Fashionphile’s most purchased style from the brand.

With Louis Vuitton and Chanel, Hermès rounded out Fashionphile’s top brands of the year.

While the more expensive Birkin and Kelly are the most famous styles from the French house — and can often command more on the secondhand market than at retail — the Evelyne was the brand’s top seller at Fashionphile and is a practical evergreen option.

“It’s a really popular city bag,” Osborn said. “That’s another one where you could buy it at full price plus tax and wear it a little bit and probably get most of your money back.”

At Fashionphile, the Evelyne ranges in price from $1,720 to $5,095. Only one Evelyne is listed for purchase on Hermès’ website, at $2,425.

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Donald Trump’s Mass Layoffs Hit By Another Legal Blow

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The Trump administration has been using the threat of mass federal layoffs to increase pressure on Democrats in Congress.

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