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The Fire TV Stick 4K is down to its lowest price EVER of £27.99 in Amazon's Prime Day sale - get all your favourite entertainment for less!

The Fire TV Stick 4K is down to its lowest price EVER of £27.99 in Amazon's Prime Day sale - get all your favourite entertainment for less!

Daily Mail​3 days ago
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Amazon's Prime Day sale has slashed the price of the Fire TV Stick 4K streaming device to its lowest-ever price. Yours now for under £30, it could be the cheapest way to watch a summer of sport and blockbusters.
Watch what you, like wherever you like, all without a smart TV, thanks to the now record-low Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K streaming device. The newest generation streaming device is on sale for a huge 53 per cent discount, now £27.99 making it one of the best tech deals we've found in the Amazon Prime Day sales.
Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K streaming device (Newest gen)
Now with an incredible 53 per cent discount in Amazon's Prime Day sale, you'll be able to access thousands of hours worth of entertainment, including hundreds of thousands of TV shows and films from Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Now, Disney+ and more.
You can also watch live and free TV in vibrant 4K Ultra HD with support for Dolby Vision, HDR and HDR10+.
£27.99 (save £32) Shop
We've used price-checking sites to guarantee you're getting the best deal, and we can confirm that the bestselling Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K streaming device is down to its lowest recorded price on Amazon.
In a Amazon Prime Day deal not to miss, you can get a better-than-half-price saving on the newest generation of Amazon's Fire TV Stick 4K.
Now on sale for £27.99, everyone can reap the rewards of live TV, supporting of Wi-Fi 6, and watch in vibrant 4K Ultra HD with support for Dolby Vision, HDR10+ and immersive Dolby Atmos audio. It's a super affordable way to upgrade your TV without investing serious cash on a new TV.
Prime Day is packed with tech deals, but for one way to upgrade your home entertainment without spending more than £28 is this live deal on the Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K (Newest gen).
Helping you get the best live and on-demand TV shows and films with a mega 53 per cent off, it's sure to be one of the most popular deals over the four day sale event, so you'll want to act fast so not to miss out.
Helping you get more from your TV, the streaming device allows you to access your favourite TV shows and films across multiple streaming services, including channels and apps, to find what you'd like to watch.
Users have compared the quality to 'like buying a new TV', with one writing: 'This is awesome! If you don't have a smart TV and you want one then save the money you'd spend on buying a new tv, instead buy one of these and it turns it into a smart TV for a fraction of the price.'
Amazon shoppers have called the Fire TV Stick 4K a simple and affordable way to stream hundreds of thousands of films and TV episodes, hailing it as a 'great alternative to sky/virgin media'. All you have to do is plug it in behind your TV, and off you go.
Elevate your entertainment with the Amazon newest 4K streaming stick, with improved streaming performance
'Gives new life to an old TV to give it streaming capability' wrote one impressed shopper. 'Easy to set up, configure and use - response to the remote is pretty good with no lag and the quick-access menu is customisable with your most-used apps.'
Another agreed, also investing in the Amazon Fire TV 4K Stick as a way to get all their favourite apps in one place: 'I bought this to use on a TV in a room that does not have an aerial connection and its great, it provides more channels that I need.'
Shoppers looking for an affordable way to smarten their TV can now nab the Fire TV Stick 4K for the incredible price of just £27.99. And you don't have to be a Prime member to score this deal.
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Joao Felix 'heading towards cut-price Chelsea exit' - as European club 'prepare to offer Blues HALF of what they paid to sign the forward' last summer
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Joao Felix 'heading towards cut-price Chelsea exit' - as European club 'prepare to offer Blues HALF of what they paid to sign the forward' last summer

Benfica are reportedly preparing to launch a cut-price approach to sign Chelsea outcast Joao Felix. Felix joined Chelsea from Atletico Madrid in a deal worth £42million last summer, after previously enjoying a loan spell at Stamford Bridge in 2023. Despite netting on his second debut for the Blues, the 25-year-old quickly fell down the pecking order in west London and ultimately spent the latter half of the campaign on loan in Serie A with AC Milan. Enzo Maresca has since made clear his stance on Felix's future at the club, stripping the Portuguese of his squad number and leaving him out of Chelsea's squad for the Club World Cup. Reports from Portugal claim Benfica are interested in offering Felix a way out of Stamford Bridge, but finances have complicated a prospective deal. According to A Bola, Felix's agent, Jorge Mendes, met with Benfica chiefs regarding a potential return for Felix to his boyhood club. However, despite the club's interest in bringing their academy graduate home, any move would see Chelsea be forced to take a significant financial loss to get him off the books. Benfica are said to be willing to offer just €25million (£21.6m) to secure Felix's signature. That figure is less than a quarter of the €126m Atletico paid Benfica to sign a then-teenage Felix in 2019. That deal remains the fourth most expensive transfer in football history. Felix's substantial wages in west London could also serve as a significant stumbling block in any potential deal between the two clubs.

Peter Mandelson: ‘There's a kernel of truth in everything Trump says'
Peter Mandelson: ‘There's a kernel of truth in everything Trump says'

Times

timean hour ago

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Peter Mandelson: ‘There's a kernel of truth in everything Trump says'

A uniformed man patrolling the Port of Baltimore asks: 'Do we have a security breach?' It isn't clear if he's joking. Someone has started driving laps around the high-security industrial complex in a rather expensive car that does not belong to them. That someone is Peter Mandelson. The Aston Martin Vanquish (in dark green) is one of 200 American orders of Bond-mobiles that have just arrived at the dock from Gaydon, Warwickshire, and St Athan in south Wales: a dividend, we are told, of the UK-US trade deal that saw tariffs cut, saving several car companies from job losses. The other week Mandelson, 71, bought a secondhand car in Washington. But as we take in the warehouse, the Labour veteran appears to be having second thoughts. 'Look at the soft top,' he says longingly, glancing at a baby-blue convertible. 'We are seeing brilliant first-class British products arriving here to pass into the hands of grateful, high-paying American consumers,' he says, switching to ambassador mode. 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Reeves to stop green groups from blocking defence investment
Reeves to stop green groups from blocking defence investment

Telegraph

timean hour ago

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Reeves to stop green groups from blocking defence investment

The Chancellor will announce plans to stop environmental activists blocking investment in defence in a major speech next week. Banks and pension funds currently follow environmental, social and governance (ESG) standards drawn up by private firms, which are meant to measure their impact on wider society. But pension giants and banks have been criticised for allowing these rules to restrict how much they invest in defence companies, on the basis that the firms do not promote social good. Rachel Reeves plans to bring ESG ratings under the powers of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), to ensure there is only one set of rules in future. The Treasury is expected to lay out secondary legislation later this year to facilitate the change. The new rules will benefit defence companies by making it clear that investors must take into account their positive role in keeping Britain secure. A Treasury source told The Sunday Telegraph: 'Rachel has always been clear that supporting the defence industry is consistent with ethical investing. 'If opaque ESG ratings are getting in the way of private investment, that has to change.' Officials are said to be looking to raise the profile of the Defence Investors' Advisory Group, and believe this would be a good opportunity to do so, a City source said. The group, which will be comprised of venture capital and private equity firms, will support defence start-ups and advise on how best to generate investment. In addition, the Ministry of Defence is expected to devise a financial services strategy by March 2026. A government consultation last year concluded that requirements for transparency around ESG ratings would support 'greater investor awareness of the defence industry's role'. 'Ill-considered anti-defence rules' It comes after Sir Keir Starmer vowed to spend at least 5 per cent of the UK's GDP on national security by 2035, including core defence spending rising to at least 2.5 per cent by April 2027, and 3 per cent by 2034. In March, more than 100 MPs and peers signed an open letter to the UK's finance industry urging it to 'sweep away ill-considered anti-defence rules' that limit investments in the arms industry. The letter said: 'We must rethink ESG mechanisms that often wrongly exclude all defence investment as 'unethical'.' Signatories include high ranking military figures including Baron Robertson of Port Ellen, the former general secretary of Nato, and Baron West of Spithead, a former Admiral in the Royal Navy. Aviva, Royal London and the National Employment Savings Trust (Nest) were among pension giants to restrict defence investment on ethical grounds. Later that month, António Simões, the chief executive of major pension firm Legal & General, said that defence companies should be considered ethical investments because countries need to be able to defend themselves. He said: 'There's no reason in principle why investing in defence companies cannot be consistent with responsible investing. 'Governments should promote peaceful and inclusive societies but countries also may need to defend themselves. This is a UN-type of principle. We've always said that defence companies, including UK defence companies, can be invested in.' Around £17 billion is invested in ESG funds in Britain. These ethical funds boomed in popularity after Covid with nearly 3,000 launched between 2020 and 2023 globally, attracting $600 billion of investment. Concerns have been raised that funds with ESG labels do not return as much for investors. Investors in actively managed 'green' funds would have seen their money underperform the average UK equity market by 3.8 per cent a year between the end of 2019 and the beginning of 2025, analysis by SCM Direct found in February.

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