
Your Daily Career Tarot Card Reading for June 27th, 2025
27.6.25 The Pope: Your skills and experience are in demand, meaning you could be put in a teaching role or be required to act as a coach or mentor. You're ideally placed to share your knowledge and to help others or another to flourish. Additionally, creating an online tutorial that allows folks to benefit from your experience without it costing much, if anything, might also be a beneficial proposition.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


UAE Moments
17 hours ago
- UAE Moments
Viral French Pastry Chef Behind the Wedding Cake for Bezos
The superstar French patisserie chef, Cedric Grolet, has created 'one of the most expensive wedding cakes' for Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's wedding, happening on Friday, June 27. The Daily Mail reported that Grolet has spent weeks designing a wedding cake for the celebrity couple's nuptials, which the chef hopes will be an "unforgettable" part of the $20 million event, according to sources in Paris. Grolet's contribution to the wedding was revealed on Tuesday, June 24, by the Mail; however, no further details have been revealed about it. The wedding cake will be unveiled at the wedding reception on San Giovanni Evangelista Island in Venice. Grolet is the executive pastry chef at Le Meurice, which has branches in Paris, London, and Singapore. He has received various accolades, including from the World's 50 Best Restaurants.


Khaleej Times
21 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Blancpain's new 38mm Fifty Fathoms Automatique reinterprets the world's first true dive watch
In 1953, long before dive watches became 'desk divers' and fashion statements, the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms emerged from the abyss — not as a luxury accessory, but as a lifeline. Although Omega's Marine had tested the waters of deep-sea horology in the 1930s, it was the Fifty Fathoms that gave shape and soul to the modern dive watch. It was the first of its kind in many ways, forged by the needs of real divers and driven by the vision of then-CEO Jean-Jacques Fiechter, himself a man of the sea. Lockable bezel, luminous markers, automatic movement, anti-magnetic defences, and water resistance that defied convention weren't just flourishes — they were fundamentals. Together, they helped create the blueprint for what would shape the future of underwater timekeeping. The watch soon became the essential instrument for those who dared to go deeper. Among them was the legendary Jacques Cousteau and his pioneering diving team, who were among the first to adopt the Fifty Fathoms in the field — an early, unscripted endorsement that would help seal the watch's place in history. Seven decades later, the Swiss watchmaker has announced a delicate recalibration of the titan born in the marine depths. The new 38mm Fifty Fathoms Automatique, joining the 42mm and the 45mm models, is no mere downsizing exercise. It is a masterclass in proportion, restraint, and reverence — a quiet, confident re-balancing of scale, presence, and purpose. This new 38mm case reintroduces the spirit of the original 1953 Fifty Fathoms, which measured 41mm, not by matching its dimensions, but by echoing its balanced proportions and purpose-driven grace. With this new iteration, the Fifty Fathoms sheds its more imposing modern persona in favour of a slimmer, subtler silhouette, one that bridges modern sensibilities with its pioneering soul. Offered in stainless steel, grade 23 titanium, and 18-karat red gold, the 38mm line embodies three distinct temperaments. The steel model, with its black dial and bezel, honours the original's stoic utility. The titanium version injects a modern, kinetic flair, its sunburst blue dial catching light like ripples across the ocean floor. And the red gold model, combined with the same rich blue dial, introduces a more elevated aesthetic, highlighting Blancpain's ability to balance robust performance with discreet sophistication. All three are unmistakably Fifty Fathoms, with oversized luminescent markers, domed sapphire bezels, and Blancpain's hallmark commitment to functional beauty. Inside, the Manufacture Calibre 1150 hums with elegance: slim, reliable, and generous with its 100-hour reserve. A silicon balance spring ensures resilience against magnetic fields, while the 18k gold rotor — visible through the sapphire caseback — adds a flourish of mechanical theatre, its NAC-coated finish drawing a subtle line back to the watch's origin story. But perhaps the most striking aspect of this watch isn't technical or dimensional — it lies in its depth, in an emotional resonance that reaches well beyond its physical form. This is not a watch 'for men' or 'for women'. It's for those drawn to the sea's most closely guarded mysteries, and to the extraordinary legacy of the Fifty Fathoms. For those who know that true strength often speaks in the quiet language of elegance. With the 38mm Fifty Fathoms, Blancpain hasn't just resized an icon; it has reshaped our expectations. The abyss remains: vast, dangerously beautiful, and unyielding. But now, it calls to discerning wrists of every size.


Zawya
a day ago
- Zawya
Dollar hovers near 3-1/2-year low with market focus on US rate cuts, euro area inflation
The U.S. dollar was just above its lowest level in 3-1/2 years against the euro and sterling on Friday, with traders ramping up bets on deeper U.S. rate cuts, but tempering expectations of an ECB rate cut on higher inflation numbers from France and Spain. The euro got a small uplift in early European trade after data showed French consumer prices rose more than expected in June, while Spain's 12-month EU-harmonised inflation also inched higher. "Hotter French services CPI and Spain core CPI cast doubts on further ECB easing," said Kenneth Broux, head of corporate research FX and rates at Societe Generale. "This week for (the) September meetings we've gone from -20bp to -27bp for the Fed and from -11bp to -13bp for the ECB," said Broux. Meanwhile, the latest U.S. personal consumption expenditures (PCE) data further weighed on the dollar in afternoon trading. U.S. consumer spending unexpectedly fell in May as the boost from the preemptive buying of goods like motor vehicles ahead of tariffs faded, while monthly inflation increases remained moderate. By 1244 GMT, the euro was 0.26% higher at $1.173, just a fraction away from the $1.1745 it hit in the previous session, its strongest level since September 2021. Meanwhile the Swiss franc was last at 0.7971 a dollar, rising to its strongest level in over a decade. With the geopolitical tremors of the Israel-Iran conflict receding after a ceasefire that appeared to be holding, market focus this week has been on U.S. monetary policy, particularly given speculation that U.S. President Donald Trump will announce the next Federal Reserve chair earlier than usual to undermine current Chair Jerome Powell. Powell, whose term ends in May, was also interpreted as being more dovish this week in testimony to U.S. Congress, adding to expectations of more rate cuts. Traders are now pricing in 64 basis points (bps) of easing this year versus 46 bps expected on Friday. "The sooner a replacement is announced for Powell, the sooner he could be perceived to be a 'lame duck'," said Carol Kong, a currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia. Trump has not decided on a replacement for Powell and a decision is not imminent, a person familiar with the White House's deliberations told Reuters on Thursday. Elsewhere, the yen was unchanged at 144.47 a dollar, while sterling last fetched $1.3745, just below the October 2021 top of $1.37701 touched on Thursday. The dollar index, which measures the U.S. unit versus six other currencies, was lingering near its lowest since March 2022 at 97.114, on course for a 2.3% decline in June, its sixth straight month in the red. The index has dropped more than 10% this year as Trump's tariffs stoke U.S. growth worries, leading investors to look for alternatives. Investors are also looking for signs of progress on new trade deals ahead of the July 9 deadline for Trump's "reciprocal" tariffs as nations scramble to get an agreement over the line. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Thursday the EU should do a "quick and simple" trade deal with the United States rather than a "slow and complicated" one. (Reporting by Ankur Banerjee in Singapore; Additional reporting by Liang-sa Loh and Faith Hung in Taipei; Editing by Jamie Freed, Christopher Cushing, Andrew Heavens and Rachna Uppal)