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Family of Liverpool's Diogo Jota Gather for Wake After Fatal Car Crash
Family of Liverpool's Diogo Jota Gather for Wake After Fatal Car Crash

Fox Sports

time04-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Fox Sports

Family of Liverpool's Diogo Jota Gather for Wake After Fatal Car Crash

Family and friends of Liverpool forward Diogo Jota and his brother gathered at a chapel where their bodies were brought for a wake on Friday, a day after the Portuguese soccer players were killed in a car crash. Some hugged and wept before entering the Capela da Ressurreição São Cosme. The brothers' parents attended, as well as Jota's agent, Jorge Mendes. Mourners left flowers and candles next to a tree outside the chapel where visitation was held. Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa also visited to pay his respects. The chapel sits next to the Igreja Matriz de Gondomar church where the funeral for the siblings is planned for Saturday. Gondomar resident Ricardo Alves lamented the loss of the local star as he passed by. "It is a great sadness," he said. "Although I did not know him personally, he was from here and I knew many of his friends from the region where he lived. It is a great loss. He is a young man with a lot still to give, and he had a somewhat tragic fate." Jota, 28, and his brother, Andre Silva, 25, were found dead near Zamora in northwestern Spain after the Lamborghini they were driving crashed on an isolated stretch of highway just after midnight on Thursday and burst into flames. Their bodies were repatriated to Portugal after being identified by the family, Spanish government officials said. Jota and his parents both have homes in Gondomar, where he started his playing career as a child. Gondomar is a working-class town next to Porto, where Jota was born. Jota's death occurred two weeks after he married long-time partner Rute Cardoso while on vacation from a long season where he helped Liverpool win the Premier League. The couple had three children, with the youngest born last year. Spanish police are investigating the cause of the crash, which did not involve another vehicle, they said. They said they believe it could have been caused by a blown tire. Jota's brother Silva played for Portuguese club Penafiel in the lower divisions. The loss was felt sharply in his hometown, especially at his first soccer club, where Jota started playing at age 9. "He never forgot his roots, nor his friends, because he had a group of friends who were with him in the training here in Gondomar and who he even invited from time to time to go and watch Liverpool games in England," Gondomar SC director Anselmo Serra told The Associated Press. "They were like a group of friends that he never forgot over the years." Heading to England via boat Jota and his brother were driving overnight to catch a boat from Santander, on Spain's northern coast, to go to England to rejoin Liverpool, when they crashed, according to Portuguese media. Portuguese sports website Record published a video interview with Miguel Goncalves, who said he worked as a physical therapist for Jota. Gonçalves told Record that Jota was avoiding flying due to a lung condition that he recently treated. "I was in his house at night for a last treatment," Gonçalves said. "He was proud to have recovered from his pulmonary problem. He was happy to be with his brother. They were excited to spend some time together on the trip." Spanish police have yet to say which brother was driving. Liverpool mourns Jota Condolences poured in from Portuguese officials and the world of soccer as news of the accident spread. A moment of silence was held before Portugal played Spain at the Women's European Championship in Switzerland late Thursday. For a second day, Liverpool fans laid flowers and scarves outside Anfield Stadium. Former Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson was among those to place a bouquet at the impromptu memorial to Jota. Liverpool's players are not due back from their summer break until Monday. Mohamed Salah wrote on social media that it will be hard to return to the team without Jota. "Teammates come and go, but not like this," Salah wrote. "It's going to be extremely difficult to accept that Diogo won't be there when we go back. My thoughts are with his wife, his children, and of course his parents who suddenly lost their children. "Those close to Diogo and his brother Andre need all the support they can get. They will never be forgotten." Reporting by The Associated Press. Get more from English Premier League Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more in this topic

The best way to respond to a geopolitical crisis
The best way to respond to a geopolitical crisis

Mint

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • Mint

The best way to respond to a geopolitical crisis

There's a better way for investors to respond to geopolitical crises, such as war and military conflict. The conventional advice is to increase equity exposure immediately after a crisis erupts, since the stock market following past crises was, on average, higher in three, six, and 12 months' time. While this advice isn't bad as far as it goes, a new study finds that investors could improve performance by increasing equity exposure before a crisis erupts but as the risk of a crisis grows. The study, titled 'The Pricing of Geopolitical Tensions Over a Century," began circulating in academic circles in March. Its authors are Andrei Gonçalves, Alessandro Melone, and Andrea Ricciardi of Ohio State University's Fisher College of Business. It might seem counterintuitive to respond to increased geopolitical risks by becoming more invested, since the stock market almost always responds to such risks by falling. But it makes theoretical sense to respond by increasing your equity exposure, Gonçalves and Melone tell Barron's, since by the time you know that risks have risen, the stock market will have already declined. By then, it's too late to decrease your exposure. Even if it weren't too late, however, they say the better response is to increase your exposure. That's because the stock market's immediate decline is its way of providing a higher expected future return to compensate investors for the greater risk. Increasing your equity exposure in response to a rising threat should therefore produce a higher return over the long term. This is exactly what the researchers found. They were able to quantify geopolitical threats by relying on an index created a few years ago by two economists at the Federal Reserve: Dario Caldara and Matteo Iacoviello. Their Geopolitical Threats Index, or GPT, data for which extends back over a century, was compiled by measuring the number of articles in major newspapers that mention any of a wide range of geopolitical threats. Gonçalves and Melone point out that the GPT in recent years has been highly correlated with surveys of fund managers' subjective assessments of geopolitical risk. They are therefore confident that the index's historical readings accurately reflected the geopolitical risk that investors perceived at any given time. To illustrate the profit potential of increasing equity exposure in line with the GPT, the researchers constructed a hypothetical portfolio whose baseline allocation was 60% invested in U.S. equities and 40% in long-term U.S. Treasuries. This portfolio increased its equity allocation (and reduced its bond allocation) whenever the GPT rose above its historical median. From 1930 until the end of April, this portfolio's return was 1.5 annualized percentage points above another portfolio that constantly maintained a 60% stock/40% bond allocation. It outperformed on a risk-adjusted basis, as well. You would have performed significantly worse if you increased your exposure only after geopolitical threats manifested themselves as actual crises—after war broke out, for example. That's because geopolitical risks don't always turn into actual crises, and you leave money on the table if you don't become more heavily invested in response to rising threat levels. 'In an era of global tensions, it's not just the wars we fight but the threats we fear that drive financial markets," Gonçalves and Melone explain. The implication of this new study is that you should currently be moderately overweight relative to your target equity allocation, since, as you can see from the accompanying chart, the GPT's latest reading is moderately above its four-decade median. You could increase your equity exposure by investing in a broad market index fund, but a more targeted approach would be to invest in those industries that historically have been most sensitive to geopolitical risks. Two that the researchers single out, based on various industries' reactions to the Russia-Ukraine conflict, are Oil & Natural Gas and Autos & Trucks. Mark Hulbert is a regular contributor to MarketWatch. His Hulbert Ratings tracks investment newsletters that pay a flat fee to be audited. He can be reached at mark@

Viktor Gyokeres Makes Transfer Admission to Teammate Over Arsenal, Man Utd Links
Viktor Gyokeres Makes Transfer Admission to Teammate Over Arsenal, Man Utd Links

Miami Herald

time22-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Miami Herald

Viktor Gyokeres Makes Transfer Admission to Teammate Over Arsenal, Man Utd Links

Viktor Gyökeres's message to his Sporting CP teammates when asked about his uncertain future was simple, "I'm not a fortune teller." The relentlessly prolific striker has attracted admirers from across the continent after racking up outrageous scoring statistics over the past two years. Gyökeres's outrageous haul of 39 top-flight goals sees him lead the race for the European Golden Shoe, even though strikes in the Portuguese division are worth less than those plundered in one of Europe's top five leagues. Arsenal are billed as one of the striker's most prominent suitors, with the Gunners expected to hand the 26-year-old a "generous" contract to convince him to choose north London, while there have been constant rumours about a possible reunion with former Sporting CP boss Ruben Amorim at Manchester United. The speculation surrounding Gyökeres has also seeped into Sporting's dressing room. "I asked him and we all asked him. He says he's not a fortune teller," Pedro Gonçalves revealed during an appearance on Canal 11 after winning the top-flight title. "We still have the Portuguese Cup against Benfica to play." "I have a very good relationship with him, but I don't talk about it with him. What I know is because of Fabrizio Romano," Gonçalves laughed. "I'm sticking with him. I don't know if he's going to leave." Gonçalves is hardly the only Sporting player desperate to keep Gyökeres. Francisco Trincão joked to Record that he would try to "lock" the Swedish striker up to keep him in Lisbon. Gyökeres has been coy when addressing the topic himself, insisting, "I don't know what's going to happen." What is less dubious is the striker's status as an elite forward. Gyökeres was once again voted the best player in the Portuguese top flight, becoming the first person since Porto's Brazilian cult hero Hulk a decade ago to claim the award in successive seasons. READ THE LATEST TRANSFER NEWS, RUMOURS FROM WORLD SOCCER Copyright ABG-SI LLC. SPORTS ILLUSTRATED is a registered trademark of ABG-SI LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Portuguese footwear industry to invest 600 million euros
Portuguese footwear industry to invest 600 million euros

Fashion United

time15-05-2025

  • Business
  • Fashion United

Portuguese footwear industry to invest 600 million euros

The Portuguese footwear, components, leather goods manufacturers association (APICCAPS), which represents the footwear industry in the country, is looking to invest 600 million euros in the industry by 2030 with a focus on innovation, sustainability, worker skills and international growth. 'This is our largest investment ever. We believe that we can increasingly become a major international reference,' Paulo Gonçalves, spokesperson for APICCAPS, told FashionUnited. 'We are not particularly focused on increasing production, as the sector already manufactures 80 million pairs of shoes a year; our main goal is to optimise processes and make the Portuguese footwear industry an international benchmark in the development of new products.' The 600-million-euro investment planned by the end of the decade includes two major projects already underway (BioShoes4All and FAIST), which are expected to be completed by the end of this year, in the areas of automation, digitalisation, and sustainability. Gonçalves added: 'Every year, 22 billion pairs of shoes are produced internationally, 90 percent of which are in Asia, which means nine out of ten people wear Asian shoes. We don't think this is sustainable. 'We believe that it is possible to produce excellent footwear in Europe at fair prices and we are making the investment in areas such as automation, digitalisation, qualification, sustainability and internationalisation of our sector.' APICCAPS 2025 campaign image Credits: APICCAPS Portugal's footwear industry looking to become an international benchmark for sustainability One of the main focuses of APICCAPS' strategy plan is its green commitment, which includes the Portuguese Shoes Green Pact signed three years ago by 140 companies, involving audits to improve energy efficiency, material use and eco-design. The Portuguese footwear industry is working with 100 partners, including 14 universities, to place Portugal 'at the forefront' in creating sustainable footwear. 'Instead of prioritising the product, our main concern was to optimise the process, reducing water and energy consumption, ensuring savings in raw materials, and ensuring product traceability and packaging concerns,' explains Gonçalves. 'If we have more capable, more productive and more solid companies, we are contributing to a more robust ecosystem. We also continue to invest in local production in Europe.' APICCAPS offers a range of services to companies, including technical support and training with its established Portuguese Footwear Technology Centre (CTCP), which it founded in 1986 with the Portuguese government. The centre is at the forefront of research for the footwear industry, conducting physical and chemical laboratory tests of raw materials and final products, product certification, as well as research into new materials, equipment and processes, such as producing more sustainable footwear, and the use of robotics and 3D printing. Portuguese footwear investing in sustainable materials and processes It is also looking into how to make the industry more sustainable and how new generation of products, such as biomaterials like fruit peels, natural materials from cork to wood, and recycled materials, can be developed, as well as continuing to promote leather as a 'durable product'. Gonçalves added: 'We are making a very large investment, of about 70 million euros, within the scope of the Biosgies4all project, in the development of a new generation of products. We are working with universities, technology centres and several companies. 'However, we continue to consider leather to be the best raw material on the market. It is a natural raw material, a byproduct of the food industry, abundant, technically extraordinary and with a long lifespan. Despite all these characteristics, we are developing new leathers, reducing water consumption in the process, and optimising the dyeing, replacing chemical products with dyes based on natural products.' The Portuguese footwear industry specialises in the export of leather shoes, representing 83 percent of foreign trade, with Portugal being the tenth largest exporter in the world. Last year, the leather goods sector exported more than 353 million euros, a record-breaking figure. APICCAPS 2025 campaign image Credits: APICCAPS Portuguese footwear industry targeting growth from the US and UK The footwear sector contributes more than one thousand million euros annually to the Portuguese economy, and in 2024, the footwear industry exported 68 million pairs of shoes, worth 1.724 million euros. Its biggest trading markets are Germany, France, and the Netherlands, followed by Spain, the UK, and the US. One of the growth areas for the country's footwear is the US, where it exported more than 90 million euros worth of footwear, and in the last decade, growth has increased by 109 percent. However, the ongoing uncertainty of the US tariffs being introduced by the Trump administration could see the sector affected. Commenting on the impact of the US tariffs on Portugal, Gonçalves said: 'It is difficult to make a precise assessment. To begin with, American consumers will be the ones most affected. Given that China is the main supplier to the market, we could even be doing something fair for countries like Spain, Italy or Portugal. 'Even so, it is difficult to see whether there will be a reduction in consumption and whether China will become more competitive in the European markets. In any case, we will not give up on the American market, which is currently the 6th destination for Portuguese footwear, worth around 100 million euros.' According to the Business Conditions Survey, World Footwear's survey, global footwear consumption is set to grow by 8.4 percent in 2025, driven by growth in Oceania (up 25 percent), followed by Africa (up by 13.3 percent), Asia (up by 9.2 percent) and North America (up by 8.3 percent). A more modest increase is forecasted for South America (up by 3.2 percent), while Europe is expected to stagnate by 0.5 percent. 'We expect 2025 to be a year of recovery for the footwear sector internationally,' added Gonçalves. 'There are still several signs of uncertainty, especially in Europe and companies must continue to find new markets. North America and Asia are expected to show the greatest growth potential this year, and the Portuguese industry will be looking to increase its focus on relevant markets, such as the US, Korea and Japan.' There are currently 1,500 companies in the footwear cluster (footwear, components and leather goods), responsible for 40,000 jobs in Portugal. The sector exports 90 percent of its production to 173 countries on all five continents, worth close to 2 billion euros. 'Regardless of economic cycles, we are here to stay. The greatest proof of our confidence is that we are making the biggest investment in our history. We know that Portugal can be a great international benchmark in terms of developing a sustainable industry, an industry for the future,' Gonçalves concluded. APICCAPS 2025 campaign image Credits: APICCAPS

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