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Gardening pro's 3 key jobs to do this weekend to stop rose black spot – including £3 bloom boost
Gardening pro's 3 key jobs to do this weekend to stop rose black spot – including £3 bloom boost

The Irish Sun

time4 days ago

  • General
  • The Irish Sun

Gardening pro's 3 key jobs to do this weekend to stop rose black spot – including £3 bloom boost

WE love a rose in the UK - and traditionally our gardens are stuffed full of beautiful blooms that have been bred for thousands of years. But how frustrating is it when you spot the 3 Rosa laevigata has 'dinner plate-sized' flowers Credit: Alamy 3 Charles Shi is in charge of the Wild Rose garden at Kew Gardens, London Credit: Supplied 3 Black spot is a fungal disease that first appears as black spots on the roses' leaves. Credit: Alamy Black spot is the nemesis of all rose-growers - a fungal Then the leaf will start to yellow - and fall off - usually spreading further down the plant. And although it doesn't kill the rose - it can weaken it - making it susceptible to other Spores can overwinter on fallen leaves - and then infects the soil and then the plant next year. Read More Gardening Fight against it by making sure that all the fallen leaves are thrown away - not put on the compost. And make sure the rose is Although proper hard rose pruning is generally done in late winter or early Spring - a light prune now won't be a problem. Also - mulching over winter can help. Most read in Fabulous And make sure you're watering the base rather than from the top of the leaves. Give your rose a dose of proper liquid rose feed - Or Finally - try and choose roses that are resistant to blackspot. Everyone can spot the pot plants - but you have 20-20 vision & high IQ if you can find five red roses in just 19 seconds The general advice with roses is not to plant them in the same soil that a previous rose was in. It can - in extreme cases - cause replant disease - which is where the rose will struggle to grow. You may even find it dies. It's because the roots won't establish properly. But the By the time the cardboard box has rotted into the soil, the roots will have established. But if you're fed up of black spot, powdery mildew and rose rosette diseases - then have you considered growing a wild rose instead? They might not be quite as extravagant and blingy as the cultivated varieties - but wild roses - known as 'Species Roses' in the catalogues - do a very good job of growing without any human intervention at all. In fact - they're the roses that all our bred roses originated from - and almost thrive on neglect. Charles Shi is in charge of the Wild Rose Garden at As part of it's restoration, he and his team travelled as far afield as China and Vietnam to bring back roses that are so new, they haven't been named yet. He told me: 'One of the great things is whilst they flower for a short amount of time - wild roses make up for that by being very resistant to disease. 'Even if they get smothered in 'They're also more hardy. And the early flowers are followed by hips if they're not deadheaded, which feed the birds over Winter. 'It's so important to conserve them - as they could have medicinal compounds that could cure cancer - we're discovering up to 100 compounds every year in our research - which are being used in medical trials. 'They also play a crucial role in ecological conservation by providing food and habitat for pollinators and wildlife.' Some of Charles' favourites include... Rosa Soulieana - which he's nicknamed The Sleeping Beauty Rose - as it's like the one in the book that surrounds the castle. Smells of Cinnamon and up to 4m high. Rosa hirtula - from the Hakone, Japan, at the foothills of Mt Fuji - The only rose with a tree-like habit, with beautiful spiky hips Rosa x odorata 'Mutabilis' A bushy shrub, about 1.8m in height, with purplish young foliage and almost thornless stems Rosa laevigata - has dinner-plate sized flowers. Also in Veronica's Column this week... Top tips, news, plant of the week, competitions and more PLANT OF THE WEEK Rosa 'Gorgeous' - a very easy to grow hybrid tea rose - with stunning pinky orange colour and strong fragrance - which when in full bloom almost looks like fire. Good for beds, borders and containers - and flowers from June to November. WIN! JOB OF THE WEEK Keep picking For more gardening content follow me

Gardening pro's 3 key jobs to do this weekend to stop rose black spot – including £3 bloom boost
Gardening pro's 3 key jobs to do this weekend to stop rose black spot – including £3 bloom boost

Scottish Sun

time4 days ago

  • General
  • Scottish Sun

Gardening pro's 3 key jobs to do this weekend to stop rose black spot – including £3 bloom boost

BLOOMING LOVELY Gardening pro's 3 key jobs to do this weekend to stop rose black spot – including £3 bloom boost Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) WE love a rose in the UK - and traditionally our gardens are stuffed full of beautiful blooms that have been bred for thousands of years. But how frustrating is it when you spot the rose leaves going yellow and starting to fall - or the beautiful buds refuse to open and shrivel up instead? Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Rosa laevigata has 'dinner plate-sized' flowers Credit: Alamy 3 Charles Shi is in charge of the Wild Rose garden at Kew Gardens, London Credit: Supplied 3 Black spot is a fungal disease that first appears as black spots on the roses' leaves. Credit: Alamy Black spot is the nemesis of all rose-growers - a fungal disease that first appears as black spots on the roses' leaves. Then the leaf will start to yellow - and fall off - usually spreading further down the plant. And although it doesn't kill the rose - it can weaken it - making it susceptible to other pests and diseases. Spores can overwinter on fallen leaves - and then infects the soil and then the plant next year. Fight against it by making sure that all the fallen leaves are thrown away - not put on the compost. And make sure the rose is pruned to allow enough air to move through the branches. Although proper hard rose pruning is generally done in late winter or early Spring - a light prune now won't be a problem. Also - mulching over winter can help. And make sure you're watering the base rather than from the top of the leaves. Give your rose a dose of proper liquid rose feed - Westland do a decent high performance liquid plant food which helps build resistance to disease. You can get it at Tesco for £8.99. Or Temu is selling Doff Rose and Shrub Feed for £2.89 - which helps maintain healthy roses. Finally - try and choose roses that are resistant to blackspot. Everyone can spot the pot plants - but you have 20-20 vision & high IQ if you can find five red roses in just 19 seconds The general advice with roses is not to plant them in the same soil that a previous rose was in. It can - in extreme cases - cause replant disease - which is where the rose will struggle to grow. You may even find it dies. It's because the roots won't establish properly. But the RHS recommends that you line the planting hole with a cardboard box with a hole in the bottom. By the time the cardboard box has rotted into the soil, the roots will have established. But if you're fed up of black spot, powdery mildew and rose rosette diseases - then have you considered growing a wild rose instead? They might not be quite as extravagant and blingy as the cultivated varieties - but wild roses - known as 'Species Roses' in the catalogues - do a very good job of growing without any human intervention at all. In fact - they're the roses that all our bred roses originated from - and almost thrive on neglect. Charles Shi is in charge of the Wild Rose Garden at Kew - designed originally by Capability Brown in 1900. As part of it's restoration, he and his team travelled as far afield as China and Vietnam to bring back roses that are so new, they haven't been named yet. He told me: 'One of the great things is whilst they flower for a short amount of time - wild roses make up for that by being very resistant to disease. 'Even if they get smothered in aphids they're absolutely fine. 'They're also more hardy. And the early flowers are followed by hips if they're not deadheaded, which feed the birds over Winter. 'It's so important to conserve them - as they could have medicinal compounds that could cure cancer - we're discovering up to 100 compounds every year in our research - which are being used in medical trials. 'They also play a crucial role in ecological conservation by providing food and habitat for pollinators and wildlife.' Some of Charles' favourites include... Rosa Soulieana - which he's nicknamed The Sleeping Beauty Rose - as it's like the one in the book that surrounds the castle. Smells of Cinnamon and up to 4m high. Rosa hirtula - from the Hakone, Japan, at the foothills of Mt Fuji - The only rose with a tree-like habit, with beautiful spiky hips Rosa x odorata 'Mutabilis' A bushy shrub, about 1.8m in height, with purplish young foliage and almost thornless stems Rosa laevigata - has dinner-plate sized flowers.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (TSM) Stock: Needham Reiterates Buy Rating, $270 Price Target
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (TSM) Stock: Needham Reiterates Buy Rating, $270 Price Target

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (TSM) Stock: Needham Reiterates Buy Rating, $270 Price Target

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (NYSE:TSM) is among the 13 Best Global Stocks to Buy Right Now. On July 17, Needham reiterated a Buy rating for the stock and maintained its earlier price target of $270 per share. Pixabay/Public Domain The update follows the chipmaker's second-quarter results, in which it reported a 60.7% year-over-year increase in net profit, surpassing market estimates, amid a surging demand for semiconductors used in AI applications. Needham analysts Charles Shi and Ross Cole wrote the following about Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (NYSE:TSM)'s recent earnings in an investor note: 'TSMC delivered a strong beat-and-raise quarter, with the 3Q25 revenue outlook vastly exceeding consensus estimates and implied EPS guidance well ahead of the Street, despite the GM headwinds due to FX and overseas fab production ramp. On the back of strong 2Q25 and 3Q25, TSMC raised the FY25 revenue growth outlook from 24-26% to ~30%.' However, the analysts also pointed out Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (NYSE:TSM)'s guidance for the fourth quarter, which implies a high single-digit percentage quarter-over-quarter decline. This is the first time since Needham initiated coverage of the stock in 2021 that TSMC has guided to a decline in Q4. The analysts added that Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (NYSE:TSM)'s management discussed in the earnings call about the ongoing macro uncertainties that have led them to be conservative on guidance for the quarters ahead. While we acknowledge the potential of TSM as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 10 Best Small Cap Defense Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds and 13 Best Booming Stocks to Buy Now. Disclosure: None. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Needham Raises Synopsys (SNPS) Price Target, Maintains Buy Rating
Needham Raises Synopsys (SNPS) Price Target, Maintains Buy Rating

Yahoo

time16-07-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Needham Raises Synopsys (SNPS) Price Target, Maintains Buy Rating

Synopsys, Inc. (NASDAQ:SNPS) is one of the Best Non-Mega Cap NASDAQ Stocks to Buy Right Now. Synopsys, Inc. (NASDAQ:SNPS) received a boost on Monday, July 14, after Needham analyst Charles Shi raised the firm's price target on the stock to $660 from $650, while reiterating a rating. The revision follows the announcement that China has conditionally approved Synopsys's acquisition of engineering software firm Ansys, a key regulatory hurdle in the deal's global approval process. A close-up of a tech engineer soldering a modern system-on-chip circuit board in a laboratory setting. According to Needham, the transaction is expected to close around July 17, marking a significant milestone for both companies. The merger brings together Synopsys's strength in semiconductor design automation with Ansys's expertise in multiphysics simulation, creating what the firm describes as the definitive chip-to-system design software leader. Once combined, the companies are projected to generate over $10 billion in total revenue by fiscal year 2026, according to Needham's estimates. The scale and breadth of the unified platform are expected to unlock long-term synergies, particularly in the areas of AI-driven design, automotive, and industrial markets. Investors have closely followed the deal since it was first announced, viewing it as a transformative move for Synopsys, Inc. (NASDAQ:SNPS) in a consolidating software landscape. With Chinese regulatory clearance now secured, attention shifts to final closing logistics and early integration plans. Synopsys shares edged higher following the update, reflecting growing confidence in the strategic upside of the Ansys acquisition. While we acknowledge the potential of SNPS as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: Top 10 Healthcare AI Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds and 10 Consumer Defensive Stocks to Buy Now. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

A $90 Billion Reason to Buy This AI Stock Now
A $90 Billion Reason to Buy This AI Stock Now

Yahoo

time10-07-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

A $90 Billion Reason to Buy This AI Stock Now

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM) stock ticked higher last week as investors digested bullish projections for the chip giant's artificial intelligence revenue trajectory, with analysts outlining a clear path to $90 billion in AI-driven sales by 2029. Needham analyst Charles Shi upgraded his price target for TSMC stock to $270 from $225, maintaining a 'Buy' rating on the world's largest contract chipmaker. His analysis suggests that TSMC can achieve its ambitious AI revenue target without requiring dramatic volume increases, instead relying on higher silicon content per package and custom high-bandwidth memory solutions. This Underdog AI Stock Just Got a New Street-High Price Target Texas Just Passed Quantum Computing Legislation. How Should You Play IONQ Stock Here? 'The Most Patriotic Thing You Can Do Is Not Pay the IRS' Says Grant Cardone as OBBBA Signed into Law — Here's How Much You'll Save Tired of missing midday reversals? The FREE Barchart Brief newsletter keeps you in the know. Sign up now! TSMC's 2-nanometer technology remains on track for volume production in the second half of 2025, positioning the chipmaker to capitalize on the demand for next-generation AI chips. The foundry expects to double both its AI-related revenue and chip-on-wafer-on-substrate (CoWoS) packaging capacity in 2025. While Shi warns of potential headwinds in 2026 due to slower AI accelerator volumes, he projects a strong recovery with nearly 40% growth in 2027 and 45% in 2028 as advanced architectures drive higher silicon content requirements. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing delivered strong first-quarter results that exceeded profit expectations. A solid Q1 performance reinforces its position as the world's leading contract chipmaker amid surging demand for artificial intelligence. The foundry giant reported net income of $10.97 billion, beating estimates and marking a remarkable 60% increase from the previous year. Revenue climbed 41.6% year-over-year to $25.50 billion, slightly surpassing analyst forecasts. The standout performance was driven by TSMC's high-performance computing division, which encompasses AI and 5G applications, accounting for 59% of total revenue with a 7% quarterly increase. Advanced technologies of 7-nanometer and below represented 73% of total wafer revenue, highlighting the company's technological leadership. TSMC has also demonstrated strategic foresight by expanding its U.S. operations. It announced an additional $100 billion investment in Arizona facilities, bringing total U.S. commitments to $165 billion. This expansion will enable approximately 30% of TSMC's 2-nm and other more advanced capacity to be manufactured within the U.S., addressing geopolitical concerns while serving major American clients. Early indicators suggest that 2-nm adoption will exceed both 3-nm and 5-nm technologies during their initial years, driven by smartphone and high-performance computing applications. TSMC expects to double both its AI-related revenue and CoWoS packaging capacity in 2025. Looking ahead, gross margins are expected to face pressure from overseas facility startup costs, with an anticipated decline from 58.8% to approximately 58% in the second quarter. Nevertheless, TSMC maintained its full-year revenue growth forecast of approximately mid-20%, underscoring its confidence in sustained AI demand. The company's strategic positioning in cutting-edge manufacturing technology and geographic diversification should support long-term growth as artificial intelligence reshapes the semiconductor landscape. Analysts tracking the semiconductor stock expect it to increase sales from $87.88 billion in 2024 to $170.3 billion in 2027. Comparatively, adjusted earnings are forecast to expand from $7.04 per share to $12.92 per share in this period. If TSM stock is priced at a forward earnings multiple of 25x, it should trade around $325 in early 2027, roughly 40% above the current trading price. Out of the 11 analysts covering TSM stock, eight recommend 'Strong Buy,' two recommend 'Moderate Buy,' and one recommends 'Hold.' The average target stock price for TSM is $243.75. On the date of publication, Aditya Raghunath did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on

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