
Princess Kate attends hidden royal engagement after pulling out of Royal Ascot
The Princess of Wales has quietly returned to work after pulling out of Royal Ascot. Confusion was sparked last week when it was announced that Kate, who is in remission from cancer, would not be attending the second day of the horse racing festival.
It came after her name originally appeared on the official list of those taking part in a carriage procession alongside her husband Prince William as well as the King and Queen. When it was confirmed that she would not be attending, sources said she is still trying to find the right balance following her cancer diagnosis and subsequent chemotherapy treatment.
And although she has not appeared in public since then, it has emerged that she has carried out an engagement behind closed doors. According to the Court Circular, the record of official royal engagements, she and William met with philanthropist Melinda French Gates, the former wife of Microsoft billionaire Bill Gates, at Windsor Castle yesterday.
Ms French Gates is the owner of Pivotal Ventures, a company that aims to promote female power and influence and also is the co-founder of the Gates Foundation. No photos from the meeting have been released.
The meeting came after William had held an investiture ceremony yesterday where among those receiving their awards were the former England manager Sir Gareth Southgate, who picked up his knighthood.
It comes after a royal source reiterated that Kensington Palace has consistently stressed the need for 'flexibility' around the Princess of Wales ' public engagements.
They added that the princess completed three engagements in the week leading up to Royal Ascot, attending the new V&A East Storeroom exhibition space in London, the King's official birthday celebrations at Trooping the Colour and Garter Day in Windsor.
It is not clear when the princess took the decision not to join the royals at the races, but fans had been hoping to see Kate as William was one of the figures awarding prizes during the second day of the meeting.
She was named among the guests joining King Charles and Queen Camilla in the traditional carriage procession, but a revised list was quickly issued after Kensington Palace confirmed she would not be attending.
Kate announced in January she was now in remission and focussed on healing, while the King is still undergoing weekly treatment for the disease. Before she made her first public appearance after her diagnosis at Trooping the Colour last year, she revealed how she was "taking each day as it comes".
Speaking at the time, she said: "As anyone going through chemotherapy will know, there are good days and bad days. I am learning how to be patient, especially with uncertainty."
In September when her chemotherapy treatment ended, Kate described in an emotional video message how the previous nine months had been "incredibly tough for us as a family" and "doing what I can to stay cancer-free is now my focus". William later said in a separate interview that 2024 had been a 'brutal' year.
The princess' measured return to royal duties was welcomed by Queen Elizabeth II's former communications secretary Ailsa Anderson. Speaking before Kate's withdrawal from Royal Ascot, she told People magazine: "She's being sensible, listening to what her body is telling her and easing back into public life."
Hashtags

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


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Amazon tumbles after cloud computing growth disappoints investors
Aug 1 (Reuters) - shares fell 7% on Friday as the tech giant's results fanned investor fears its cloud unit was falling behind Microsoft and Alphabet in the artificial intelligence race. Amazon Web Services, long the cloud-computing market leader, edged past Wall Street estimates for June-quarter revenue on Thursday with a 17.5% increase, but it widely lagged the 39% growth seen at Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud's 32% gain. That disappointing growth came even as Amazon shelled out $31.4 billion in capital expenditure, more than rivals, and suggested it would spend a more-than-estimated $118 billion for the year. Google and Microsoft also pledged higher spending, but were rewarded from investors on signs AI was already becoming a major growth driver across their businesses, justifying the bill. The companies have been spending billions of dollars on datacenters and cutting-edge chips that they say are necessary to overcome supply constraints hampering their efforts to capitalize on soaring demand for AI services. "The spotlight was firmly on AWS and it didn't quite shine as brightly as expected," said Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown. "While Microsoft and Alphabet have already shown strong momentum in cloud growth, AWS wasn't the knockout many wanted to see." Growing expenses have also started to take a bite out of AWS's margins, the business that has long been Amazon's profit engine, accounting for about 60% of its operating income. AWS margins contracted to 32.9% during the quarter, their lowest level since the final quarter of 2023, and Amazon also issued a current-quarter total operating income forecast that was lower than market estimates. CEO Andy Jassy told analysts on a post-earnings call that it was still "very early days" in the AI race and that Amazon's massive cloud business, much larger than rivals, was primed to perform well once the AI capacity constraints start to ease. The stock, now down 1.5% for the year, was at $216.2 in late morning trading. The drop was set to erase around $170 billion from Amazon's market value, if the losses hold. The company still trades at a relatively high premium, with a 12-month forward price-to-earnings ratio of 33.87, compared with Microsoft's (MSFT.O), opens new tab 34.19 and Alphabet's (GOOGL.O), opens new tab 18.64, according to data compiled by LSEG. At least 30 analysts raised their price targets on the stock, while three lowered, giving it a median view of $260. Some of that analyst confidence comes from the strong performance of Amazon's retail business, which has remained resilient in the face of Trump administration tariffs that have hobbled many retailers and their supply chains. Amazon has yet to see a drop in demand or a notable rise in prices in the first half of the year, Jassy said, as its online store sales jumped a better-than-expected 11% in the second quarter. Manufacturers and suppliers have shouldered most of the tariff impact so far, analysts said, but noted that much of the inventory Amazon sold in the quarter arrived in the preceding three-month period. "If Amazon's retail business was a standalone entity, it would be trading dramatically higher following the near-perfect results," said Michael Morton, analyst at MoffettNathanson. "Unfortunately, as we all know, the success of the retail business is not what's going to matter in the near term for Amazon's stock price."


Coin Geek
2 hours ago
- Coin Geek
Samourai Wallet founders face prison after guilty plea
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Keonne Rodriguez and William, co-founders of the Samourai Wallet coin mixing platform, have pleaded guilty in a United States federal court to charges of operating an unlicensed money transmitting business. They did not plead guilty to several other charges against them, including money laundering. In April 2024, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) accused Samourai Wallet of facilitating over $2 billion in illegal transactions and laundering more than $100 million in criminal proceeds through its mixing services. At the time, Samourai's co-developers, Rodriguez and Hill, pleaded not guilty to charges of money laundering, conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business, wire fraud, and computer fraud. However, court documents filed Tuesday in the Southern District of New York indicated that CEO Rodriguez and Chief Technology Officer Hill intended to change their pleas. Sure enough, during a Wednesday morning hearing before Judge Denise Cote, the pair pleaded guilty to the second charge in their indictment, conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business. Rodriguez and Hill will be sentenced in November and face a maximum prison sentence of five years and a $250,000 fine each. They will also still have to contest the other charges, and if convicted on all counts, could be looking at up to 25 years in prison. Samourai Wallet case On April 24, 2024, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York announced the arrests of Rodriguez and Hill over their involvement in the development and operation of the Samourai Wallet mixer. The indictment alleged Samourai 'executed over $2 billion in unlawful transactions' due to its lack of a money transmitting license as well as its founders' 'deliberate failure to implement' anti-money laundering (AML) and know your customer (KYC) protocols. Samourai was also accused of facilitating 'more than $100 million in money laundering transactions from illegal dark web markets, such as Silk Road and Hydra Market.' Rodriguez was arrested in the U.S., while Hill was detained in Portugal and later extradited stateside. This was followed by the platform's dot-com domains being seized and Google Play halting downloads of the Samourai app for U.S. users. Meanwhile, with the help of law enforcement agencies in Iceland, Samourai's servers were also seized. Unlike many coin mixers based on the Ethereum blockchain, Samourai was set up to obfuscate the digital trail of BTC tokens and to keep users' 'identity masked.' Samourai also offered a feature called Ricochet, which added 'extra hops of history to your transaction' and allowed customers to '[s]tump the blacklists and help guard against unjust 3rd party account closures.' The DOJ claimed such features were actively marketed to criminals and, in one of Rodriguez's court hearings, Judge Cote noted a tweet from Samourai's X account that read 'Welcome new Russian oligarch Samourai Wallet users.' Other than their ill-advised flaunting of the platforms' legal grey areas, along with seemingly leaning in to the mixer's appeal to questionable groups and individuals—on which a judge and jury is unlikely to look favorably—Rodriguez and Hill's chances of a positive outcome in their federal case took a further hit in March 2024, with the conviction of Roman Sterlingov. Sterlingov, the Swedish-Russian operator of the Bitcoin Fog mixer, was convicted in a U.S. court on similar charges to those leveled against the Samourai duo, namely money laundering, operating an unlicensed money transmitting business, and violating the District of Columbia Money Transmitters Act. At the time, U.S. Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said Sterlingov 'thought he could use the shadows of the internet to launder hundreds of millions of dollars in [BTC] without getting caught. But he was wrong… no matter where you operate, if your cryptocurrency service reaches the United States, you must abide by U.S. law.' Parallels with the Samourai case can also be found in the trial of the Tornado Cash mixer co-founder, Roman Storm, which wrapped up this week. The 34-year-old Russian expat is currently awaiting a verdict on charges of money laundering and facilitating sanctions violations. With Sterlingov's conviction and guilty pleas now lodged for Rodriguez and Hill for unlicensed money transmitting, if Storm is also found guilty, these cases together will establish a pattern and significant precedent for how privacy-preserving platforms and the open-source developers behind non-custodial software are treated under U.S. law. Watch: Teranode is the digital backbone of Bitcoin title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen="">


Daily Record
4 hours ago
- Daily Record
Airdrie father-daughter hairdressing duo reach finals of British Hairdressing Awards 2025
William and Bianca Gray from Gray's International have secured a coveted place as finalists in the Avant Garde Hairdresser of the Year category. A father-daughter hairdressing duo from Airdrie have styled and profiled their way to the finals of the British Hairdressing Awards 2025. With such an incredible standard of entries, competition was fierce, but having impressed the judges with their exceptional level of creativity, technical skill and artistic flair, William and Bianca Gray from Gray's International have secured a coveted place as finalists in the Avant Garde Hairdresser of the Year category. They will now go head-to-head with some of the most talented names in the industry, with the winners set to be revealed at a glittering awards ceremony at the iconic JW Marriott Grosvenor House, London on November 24. On being named a finalist alongside his daughter Bianca, William said: "It's such as honour to have been selected as a finalist for the British Hairdressing Awards. "This recognition means the world to us. We're constantly striving to push boundaries, stay inspired, and bring something fresh to our clients and the wider industry. "Bring on the awards night in November." William is no stranger to success, having won a lifetime achievement award at the Scottish hair and beauty awards in 2021. The British Hairdressing Awards, sponsored by Schwarzkopf Professional, remains one of the most respected and celebrated events in the global hairdressing calendar. From salon stylists to creative visionaries, the awards shine a spotlight on those who are shaping the future of the craft - and this year's Regional and Specialist finalists are a true reflection of the talent, passion and dedication driving the industry forward. From rising stars to industry icons, the event promises to be a significant moment in every finalist's journey - a must-attend night full of glamour, pride, and career-defining recognition. *Don't miss the latest headlines from around Lanarkshire. Sign up to our newsletters here. And did you know Lanarkshire Live had its own app? Download yours for free here.