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South Jersey businessman fights to protect property amid Super Wawa plans
South Jersey businessman fights to protect property amid Super Wawa plans

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

South Jersey businessman fights to protect property amid Super Wawa plans

MANTUA, N.J. - A South Jersey businessman, Mike Campbell, is fighting to protect his property from being partially taken for road improvements linked to a new Super Wawa planned at a busy Mantua intersection. Campbell feels caught in a David vs. Goliath situation as Gloucester County officials propose using part of his property at Route 45 and Harrison Avenue to widen the road and add a turning lane. What we know Campbell purchased the small house as an office building five years ago. Since then, the county announced the need for highway improvements, coinciding with Wawa's plans to build a new superstore at the intersection. Campbell suspects a connection between the two developments and has put up signs targeting Wawa. What they're saying "I'm not slandering Wawa," Campbell stated, "I think with a period of time that they've been there if they were offended, I'd be hearing from their attorneys." In January 2025, the Mantua mayor addressed the intersection improvements and the Wawa proposal, stating on the city's website, "These intersection improvements are warranted, especially with the proposed Super Wawa coming to this area in the future." Residents like Johnny Greco acknowledge the potential impact of a Super Wawa on traffic: "If this is a Super Wawa, it's already a busy intersection and it'll become a lot busier." Carl Jackson, another resident, empathizes with Campbell's predicament: "It would suck for him. I don't know how to balance that out. It's a tough one." What's next Campbell is seeking fair compensation for his property loss and hopes his signs will bolster his cause. He has rejected the county's low offer for part of his property. We have reached out to the county and Wawa for comment and will provide updates as they become available. As the situation unfolds, Campbell's fight highlights the challenges faced by small property owners in the face of large-scale development projects. Solve the daily Crossword

George Strait Shocks Fans By Bringing '80s Rock Icon on Stage: 'When Legends Collide'
George Strait Shocks Fans By Bringing '80s Rock Icon on Stage: 'When Legends Collide'

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

George Strait Shocks Fans By Bringing '80s Rock Icon on Stage: 'When Legends Collide'

George Strait Shocks Fans By Bringing '80s Rock Icon on Stage: 'When Legends Collide' originally appeared on Parade. Anyone who had the opportunity to catch on tour this summer was incredibly lucky, as he's one of the most iconic artists in country music. From "Ocean Front Property" to "All My Exes Live in Texas," to ballads that make you want to cry like "The Chair" and "I Cross My Heart," his song lyrics are truly unmatched. He played the final show of the summer tour on July 19 at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles, and fans were shocked when he brought out a true rock icon to perform alongside him. The crowd went absolutely wild when Mike Campbell of Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers came out on stage for "You Wreck Me." As the person who recorded the moment so perfectly stated, "When legends collide." Strait sounds amazing on this tune, though there honestly isn't anything he can't sing. People who watched the clip were clearly impressed, with one fan saying, "Tom would dig this! ♥️" Oh, he definitely would have. Another person added, "The cover that I never expected but I absolutely love!! 🥰" Someone else said, "Hard to beat!" And one fan noted, "He's been playing Tom for years. His son introduced him to Petty, he dug it, and has played ever since. Put it in his set prior to his death."Campbell was a founding member of Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, and he co-wrote many of their greatest hits, a lot of which were popular in the 1980s. In an interview with Tape Op, he once said, "Before Tom came along, to show how old I am, I wrote several songs, including 'Refugee,' 'Here Comes My Girl,' and 'Stop Draggin' My Heart Around.' Several of those songs I wrote with tape loops, which I learned in the studio." Having Campbell join him on stage was such a fitting way to end Strait's incredible tour. We can only hope that this wasn't his final run and that he returns to the road next summer so more people have the chance to witness a living legend. There's truly no one quite like the GOAT! 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 George Strait Shocks Fans By Bringing '80s Rock Icon on Stage: 'When Legends Collide' first appeared on Parade on Jul 21, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 21, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword

As interest rates normalise, private credit can help portfolios
As interest rates normalise, private credit can help portfolios

Business Times

time21-07-2025

  • Business
  • Business Times

As interest rates normalise, private credit can help portfolios

'HOW did you go bankrupt?' 'Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.' – Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises Often quoted and widely recycled, that response from Mike Campbell – the fictional once-wealthy friend of Jake Barnes, narrator in Hemingway's novel – captures more than just personal financial woes. It's an apt description of how long-running trends unravel – first with subtle shifts, then with violent clarity. Economist Rudiger Dornbusch put it more clinically: 'In economics, things take longer to happen than you think they will, and then they happen faster than you thought they could.' Both sentiments apply to today's bond market. For nearly four decades, falling interest rates created a generational tailwind for fixed income. Bonds didn't just pay income, they delivered capital appreciation, diversification, and ballast. Now, that dynamic is breaking down. Prices have fallen, and correlations have flipped. The 40 per cent in a 60/40 portfolio – which comprises fixed income, the supposedly steady part – has become a problem. But there's one corner of the market that has held steady amid all this instability: private credit. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up From tailwind to headwind The bond bull market began in 1981, when then-Federal Reserve chair Paul Volcker engineered a brutal double-dip recession to break inflation's back. At the time, the 10-year Treasury yield peaked near 16 per cent. What followed was a 39-year stretch of disinflation, financial globalisation, and central bank credibility, which drove yields lower and bond prices higher. For fixed income investors, it was a golden era where being long duration paid off. A simple strategy of buying 10-year Treasuries and rolling them annually would have delivered over 8 per cent in annualised returns from 1981 to 2020. The Bloomberg Barclays Aggregate Bond Index returned a similarly impressive 8 per cent over that same period. Bonds weren't just a buffer against equity risk; they were a consistent source of performance. But that golden era followed a very different one. In the 35 years before 1981, yields climbed steadily and were far more volatile. Bondholders clipped coupons while watching principal values erode. Price appreciation simply wasn't part of the fixed income playbook. There were no 'total return' bond funds because, frankly, there was no total return to chase. The middle ground We're not heading back to the 1970s. The US economy is structurally stronger; the Fed is more disciplined; and the lessons of the Volcker era still hold. But we're also not in a new bond bull market. Instead, we're in a period of normalisation where rates are higher than the recent past but still lower than long-term historical norms. Following the global financial crisis (GFC), the Fed supported the bull market in bonds with quantitative easing. But in 2022, the central bank began reducing its balance sheet, and by continuing to let its Treasury holdings mature without reinvesting the proceeds, it has kept upward pressure on rates with the increased supply. Increased fiscal spending and higher deficits bring uncertainty and expectations of higher future Treasury issuance, increasing the term premium demanded by investors. This middle ground comes with consequences: greater volatility and interest rate risk, less price support, and less reliable diversification. We've written extensively about how rising rates scramble traditional asset class relationships. In 2022, when the Fed launched its most aggressive hiking cycle in decades, the longstanding negative correlation between stocks and bonds broke down. Since then, the two have moved in the same direction in 31 of the past 40 months, nearly 80 per cent of the time – a dynamic that undermines the very foundation of balanced portfolios. If you believe that we're beginning a normalised inflationary regime, different from the sub-2 per cent post-GFC era, the unreliable stock-bond correlation is likely to continue. Based on historical data, the stock-bond correlation becomes positive beginning at 2 per cent inflation, strengthening as inflation increases. It's not just the lack of diversification that's troubling. Bond market volatility, once rare, is becoming routine as a result of policy uncertainty. Modest data surprises or policy comments now trigger exaggerated moves across the yield curve, and central banks retreating as a steady source of demand has reduced market liquidity that helped keep bond prices stable and predictable. Once major buyers of Treasuries, central banks are pulling back as rising yields in markets such as Germany and Japan make US Treasuries less appealing, especially after factoring in currency hedging costs. At the same time, heightened uncertainty has caused the term premium to resurface, hitting an 11-year high in May. Investors are demanding more compensation for interest rate risk, reflecting a structurally different regime. In April, high-yield bond prices suffered their steepest drop since the early days of the pandemic – second only to March 2020. Private credit's quiet consistency While public credit markets have endured drawdowns and dislocations, private credit has functioned as intended, providing financing to borrowers and liquidity to private equity sponsors without disruption. That resilience is showing up in the data. April's tariff-driven volatility caused liquid credit spreads to swing sharply – widening in one of the most significant moves in history, before recovering around 71 per cent by early May. In contrast, the private credit market operated as usual, providing a stable source of funding for companies throughout the turmoil. Private credit's advantages are structural. In a world of higher rates and unpredictable correlations, it can offer insulation from policy shifts, with floating rates and lower correlation to public markets. The private credit model brings lenders (investors) directly to borrowers in a 'farm to table' model, reducing the role of bank intermediaries and giving back this spread to investors. The strategy's floating rate nature reduces exposure to interest rate risk, leaving credit risk as the primary concern – one that experienced managers seek to address through careful underwriting, active portfolio management, and within private investment-grade credit, a focus on first-lien senior secured debt. Historically, private credit has delivered steady cash flows, limited volatility, and a reliable alternative source of return. Importantly, the private credit space extends far beyond traditional direct lending. Today, the total addressable market for private credit exceeds US$30 trillion, a significant expansion from less than US$100 billion prior to the GFC. Private asset-backed financing has become a vital source of capital for companies in high-growth areas such as energy, digital infrastructure, and transportation, while providing investors with hard asset collateral, amortising cash flows and over-collateralisation. The continued growth of these sectors may expand the asset-backed financing opportunity and potentially give investors an increasingly diverse mix of private credit strategies, providing more resilient portfolios. That's good news for investors, because as they confront the 40 per cent problem – the end of easy returns and automatic diversification from public traditional fixed income – they'll need to adapt. In a portfolio that's no longer self-balancing, we believe that tools like private credit are essential. The writer is chief investment strategist, Blackstone Private Wealth Solutions

Police pushing ‘safe exchange zones' amid dozens of Facebook Marketplace thefts
Police pushing ‘safe exchange zones' amid dozens of Facebook Marketplace thefts

Yahoo

time11-07-2025

  • Yahoo

Police pushing ‘safe exchange zones' amid dozens of Facebook Marketplace thefts

Facebook Marketplace thefts are trending in the area, leading police to highlight spots around the city aimed at making those exchanges safer. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] News Center 7's Mike Campbell spoke with police about the safe exchange zones. He'll have their warning tonight on News Center 7 at 5:30. So far this year, there have been 40 instances where people have lost money on Facebook Marketplace in Dayton. TRENDING STORIES: 2 teens struck by lightning, killed Worker dies after being trapped under forklift at Ohio work site Dinosaur discovered under museum parking lot 'Sometimes the deals are too good to be true,' Lt. Randy Beane, of Dayton Police, said. Police want people to use one of their four 'safe exchange zones' for buying and selling. [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

Chaos after explosion in trash can at local fireworks show; 2 hurt
Chaos after explosion in trash can at local fireworks show; 2 hurt

Yahoo

time30-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Chaos after explosion in trash can at local fireworks show; 2 hurt

Chaos broke out at a local fireworks show after an explosion caused panic. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] News Center 7's Mike Campbell spoke with a woman who was at the show. Hear from her LIVE on News Center 7 at 6:00. As News Center 7 previously reported, during the Star-Spangled Heights event at Thomas Cloud Park, officers received a report of an explosion in a trash can near the food truck area, according to a press release from the Huber Heights Police Division. TRENDING STORIES: 23-year-old killed in shooting at Springfield party identified 27-year-old woman dead after trying to pass 2 semis, causing crash in Darke County Police investigating shots fired outside local Waffle House Upon arrival, officers discovered an 'unknown type of explosive device' that had been detonated inside a trash can, according to the release. Two juveniles were injured because of the explosion and were taken to an area hospital with minor injuries. We will continue to update this story. [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

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