• Luigi Mangione wants five pairs of socks for an upcoming hearing. Here’s what that request reveals.

    Luigi Mangione's feet.
    Luigi Mangione opted to not wear the argyle socks to his February 21 court appearance.

    • Luigi Mangione has successfully asked a judge to OK an extensive wardrobe for an upcoming hearing.
    • The request for five pairs of socks signals the hearing in NY v. Mangione could last five days.
    • The request also suggests an end to Mangione's recent sox scandal.

    A judge on Wednesday okayed an extensive wardrobe — including five pairs of socks — for Luigi Mangione to wear at an upcoming state court hearing in New York City.

    The development offers a first glimpse at what's next, not just sartorially but legally, for Mangione, accused of the assassination murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.

    The public court schedule only says that Mangione is scheduled to be in court on Monday, December 1. The request for five pairs of socks signals that Mangione's defense team could be bracing for a possible Monday-through-Friday hearing lasting the entirety of the first week of December — including December 4, the one-year anniversary of Thompson's shooting on a Manhattan sidewalk.

    It suggests the hearing could involve lengthy testimony by multiple witnesses extending into Friday, December 5.

    The newly-approved clothing request also includes two suits, three shirts, three sweaters, three pairs of pants, and one pair of shoes without laces.

    Luigi Mangione is escorted into state court in Manhattan, where a judge dismissed the top murder-as-terrorism counts.
    Luigi Mangione is escorted into state court in Manhattan, where a judge dismissed the top murder-as-terrorism counts.

    The upcoming hearing concerns extensive evidentiary challenges involving Mangione's arrest and is set to be the first time Mangione is in court for more than a brief, one-day appearance.

    Mangione is fighting prosecutions in three jurisdictions. In Manhattan, he faces murder charges in federal and state court. In Blair County, Pennsylvania, he faces forgery and firearm-possession charges relating to his arrest there following a five-day manhunt.

    He is in federal custody, and so the wardrobe request required approval from a federal judge, even though it concerned a state court appearance.

    The success of Mangione's wardrobe request also heralds at least a temporary detente in one of the stranger and more heated public disputes between the defense, led by Karen Friedman Agnifilo, and lead prosecutor Joel Seidemann.

    Earlier this year, the two sides sparred in court filings over two heart-shaped notes that were nearly smuggled to Mangione inside a pair of argyle socks. The socks were part of the civilian clothes he'd been allowed to wear in lieu of his federal prison uniform for a February court appearance.

    Manhattan prosecutors say these heart-shaped notes were "secreted" into court inside a new pair of argyle socks being delivered to UnitedHealthcare murder suspect Luigi Mangione.
    Manhattan prosecutors say these heart-shaped notes were "secreted" into court inside a new pair of argyle socks being delivered to UnitedHealthcare murder suspect Luigi Mangione.

    The attempted smuggling was an abuse of the "special treatment" Mangione was receiving, Seidemann wrote to New York Supreme Court Justice Gregory Carro, the judge in the state-level case.

    Even after the notes were intercepted, "The defendant was permitted to wear the argyle socks, which he first changed into and later changed out of because he felt that 'they did not look good,'" the prosecutor added.

    Photographs showing Mangione's brown loafers and shackled, sockless ankles under the defense table were widely circulated.

    In her response, Friedman Agnifilo suggested "most respectfully" to the judge that prosecutors should focus on Mangione's "constitutional rights" instead of "whether or not he chose to wear socks."

    The February wardrobe malfunction cost Mangione his right to wear civilian clothes; he was back to wearing prison garb at his next state court hearing, in September.

    This latest approval suggests Mangione's sox scandal has subsided.

    On Tuesday, Seidemann joined with Judge Carro in consenting to Mangione's request to wear his specified wardrobe of civilian clothes at his December hearing — socks included. The request was approved on Wednesday by Mangione's federal judge, US District Court Judge Margaret Garnett.

    The December hearing will be comprised of at least two separate proceedings, as granted in September by Carro.

    In the first, the defense will challenge and the prosecution will defend how police in Altoona, Pennsylvania, elicited statements from Mangione during his arrest in a local McDonald's.

    Mangione's lawyers argue that he was not read his Miranda warnings until 17 minutes after they began asking about his identification, his possessions, and what he was doing in the fast food restaurant.

    In the second proceeding, both sides will fight over the admissibility of the evidence seized by Altoona police.

    According to prosecutors, Mangione's possessions as he sat in the restaurant included a black backpack containing a 9 mm "ghost gun" with a metal barrel and a 3D printed trigger and pistol grip. Prosecutors say this was the weapon used to murder Thompson.

    The 50-year-old father of two from Minnesota was repeatedly shot in the back from close range outside a Midtown Manhattan hotel where he'd been scheduled to address a UnitedHealthcare investor conference.

    Mangione's backpack also contained what Altoona police vouchered as a "manifesto," a red spiral notebook with handwritten pages. In it, according to prosecutors, Mangione described his misspelled intent to "wack the CEO at the annual parasitic bean-counter convention."

    Carro approved a third, Mosley hearing, at which the judge may assess the reliability of witness identifications.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • These ASX 200 blue chip shares could rise 25% to 40%

    A young man pointing up looking amazed, indicating a surging share price movement for an ASX company

    Blue chip shares are often the cornerstone of long-term portfolios. They offer stability, strong market positions, and the ability to grow earnings through multiple economic cycles.

    And with recent volatility pulling several high-quality names down meaningfully, analysts see buying opportunities emerging across the ASX 200.

    For example, here are three ASX 200 blue chip shares that brokers have flagged as top buys right now. They are as follows:

    Cochlear Ltd (ASX: COH)

    Cochlear could be an ASX 200 blue chip share to buy. It is a leader in implantable hearing devices globally. Demand for its products continues to rise as ageing populations grow and access to hearing treatments expands worldwide.

    The company’s ongoing investment in research and new product development has helped it maintain its dominant market share and support steady revenue growth. And with a strong balance sheet, rising volumes, and a history of delivering consistent earnings and dividends, Cochlear continues to stand out as a reliable long-term compounder.

    UBS is a fan of the company and has a buy rating and a $350.00 price target on the stock. This implies around 30% upside from current levels.

    CSL Ltd (ASX: CSL)

    Global biotech heavyweight CSL has come under pressure in recent months, with investor sentiment dampened by the planned Seqirus spin-off, regulatory uncertainty, and a slower-than-hoped recovery in plasma margins. But despite recent share price weakness, CSL’s long-term fundamentals remain strong.

    CSL continues to invest in expanding its plasma collection network, developing new therapies, and strengthening its manufacturing footprint in the United States. Demand for its core plasma-derived products remains robust, and analysts expect earnings momentum to rebuild as temporary headwinds ease.

    So, with its shares trading close to a 52-week low, CSL’s valuation looks significantly more appealing than it has in years.

    Morgans sees meaningful upside from current levels. It has a buy rating and a $249.51 price target on its shares, which suggests that they could rise almost 40%.

    REA Group Ltd (ASX: REA)

    Finally, REA Group could be an ASX 200 blue chip share to buy now. It dominates Australia’s online property advertising market, supported by powerful pricing power, strong customer relationships, and significant digital scale.

    It has also expanded beyond listings into financial services, data products, and international investments, broadening its growth runway. With more interest rate cuts potentially coming in 2026, the company’s premium positioning and deep integration into the property ecosystem give it substantial leverage to any improvement in listing volumes.

    Bell Potter remains bullish. It has a buy rating and $244.00 price target on its shares, implying nearly 25% upside from current levels.

    The post These ASX 200 blue chip shares could rise 25% to 40% appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

    Should you invest $1,000 in Cochlear Limited right now?

    Before you buy Cochlear Limited shares, consider this:

    Motley Fool investing expert Scott Phillips just revealed what he believes are the 5 best stocks for investors to buy right now… and Cochlear Limited wasn’t one of them.

    The online investing service he’s run for over a decade, Motley Fool Share Advisor, has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    And right now, Scott thinks there are 5 stocks that may be better buys…

    * Returns as of 18 November 2025

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    Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro has positions in CSL, Cochlear, and REA Group. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended CSL and Cochlear. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended CSL and Cochlear. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

  • Yann LeCun, Meta’s chief AI scientist, is leaving to create a new AI startup

    Yann Lecun
    Yann LeCun

    • Yann LeCun, Meta's chief AI scientist, is leaving the company.
    • LeCun said in a social media post that he is creating a new AI startup.
    • The departure comes amid a period of instability within Meta's AI organization.

    Yann LeCun, Meta's chief AI scientist and one of the most influential figures in the field, is leaving the company to start a new AI venture, a Meta spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider.

    LeCun announced the move on Facebook, sharing that he is building a startup centered on his long-standing interest in world-model research. Meta will partner with LeCun on his new venture, a Meta spokesperson told Business Insider, but didn't reveal any details about the nature of the partnership.

    LeCun's departure comes during a period of instability inside Meta's AI organization. Over the past few months, Meta has hired dozens of top researchers and engineers from rivals and reorganized its AI efforts under the new Superintelligence Labs division, led by former Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang. Tensions emerged within the newly formed team between the highly compensated new hires and the existing researchers, some of whom have threatened to quit, Business Insider previously reported.

    In August, the company made the biggest reorganization of its artificial intelligence operations to date, creating four distinct teams that focus on research, training, products, and infrastructure.

    This shift followed the company's pivot toward out-competing OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and Anthropic on large-scale AI models. At the same time, researchers have cycled in and out of key roles, and Meta's Llama 4 release drew muted reactions internally and externally. Earlier this week, Souminth Chintala, the creator of Meta's open source AI framework PyTorch, left the company after 11 years to join Mira Murati's Thinking Machines Lab.

    LeCun's departure isn't entirely surprising. He's been a vocal critic of relying too heavily on large language models, arguing instead for his JEPA approach — a method that trains AI to understand and predict the physical world from images and sensory data, rather than generating text. Meta, meanwhile, has increasingly focused on scaling LLMs and pushing commercially driven model development.

    Have a tip? Contact Pranav Dixit via email at pranavdixit@protonmail.com or Signal at 1-408-905-9124. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here's our guide to sharing information securely.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Fun and (video) games with Google’s Gemini 3 AI model

    Demis Hassabis
    Google AI guru Demis Hassabis

    • Google's Gemini 3 AI impresses with advanced multimodal and coding capabilities.
    • Gemini 3 enables users to create interactive websites, simulations, and video games easily.
    • Strong reviews for Gemini 3 have boosted Google's market value close to Microsoft's.

    Business Insider's amazing Google reporter Hugh Langley has been playing (er… working) with Google's new Gemini 3 AI service this week.

    This is the latest big AI model release, competing with OpenAI's GPT-5, xAI's Grok 4, and the latest offerings from Anthropic.

    Gemini 3 is getting good reviews so far. So good that Google shares hit a record on Wednesday, putting the company's market value very close to Microsoft.

    Here are Hugh's initial thoughts, after trying Gemini 3 out for a day or so:

    "I think where Gemini 3 is most impressive—and where it's already grabbing attention—is its ability to create new things from whole cloth, thanks to improved multimodal and coding capabilities."

    Gemini 3 is particularly good at designing interactive simulations. That could be interesting for visual learning, building websites and apps, or just having fun, Hugh told me.

    He played with this new model in a Google sandbox called AI Studio. It's like a real sandbox, but for developers. And it's digital, giving access to Google's AI offerings via the internet. There's no real sand.

    Hugh started with something basic: an interactive website about elephants.

    "I asked Gemini to include lots of fun widgets and trivia about the animal, but little else. I wanted to see how much Gemini would fill in the gaps."

    While the overall website design was a little sparse, it delivered. Hugh liked this little widget that generated a fun elephant fact every time he pressed a button.

    A screenshot from Gemini 3
    A screenshot from Gemini 3

    "It also included a mini game where I had to feed the elephant by giving it peanuts," Hugh said. "Once I filled the bar, a pop-up message informed me the elephant was now happy, so that's nice."

    A screenshot from Gemini 3
    A screenshot from Gemini 3

    Being able to visualize complex ideas is an area where AI could be particularly useful. Hugh asked Gemini 3 to create an interactive website to explain photosynthesis.

    "Gemini generated some sliders to adjust the levels of sunlight, water and carbon dioxide that were floating around as different colored particles," he said. "If I got the balance correct, it told me I had successfully created energy!"

    Hugh hadn't generated energy. In fact, that Gemini 3 model run probably sucked up quite a bit of power. Still, pretty impressive.

    A screenshot from Gemini 3
    A screenshot from Gemini 3

    Other Gemini 3 users are creating interesting new things. Hugh liked this idea to have Gemini build a Lego creator, through a simple prompt such as "Create a 3D Lego builder. Let me select different shapes of brick."

    Here's an example. Hugh was able to replicate his own version.

    Then, there are all the video games that users are getting Gemini 3 to create. Jeff Dean, one of Google's top AI researchers, posted several clips of these games.

    Hugh gave this a shot, too. This required a bit more back-and-forth with Gemini to get right.

    He wanted to make "Super Dario Land," a game where the player has to get Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei into the correct warp pipe. If they succeed, the player is rewarded with AGI (the theoretical moment when machines outperform humans on most tasks).

    A screenshot from Google Gemini 3
    A screenshot from Google Gemini 3

    Hugh asked Gemini to style it like one of Nintendo's old Game Boy games.

    "At first, Dario couldn't jump high enough, so I asked Gemini to fix that," Hugh told me. "With one extra prompt, the physics were solved!"

    The game was very quickly playable as Gemini did the work of mapping the controls to Hugh's computer keyboard without any direction from him.

    "The game itself might not be a hit, but I'm leaving the door open for a sequel. Dario, call me!" Hugh said.

    If anyone wants to play Hugh's game, send him an email at hlangley@businessinsider.com. It's fun!

    Sign up for BI's Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at abarr@businessinsider.com.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Elon Musk says AI and robotics will make money ‘irrelevant’

    Elon Musk is pictured with Donald Trump and Mohammed bin Salman.
    "At some point, currency becomes irrelevant," Elon Musk said at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum.

    • Elon Musk predicted a future where money will "stop being relevant," thanks to AI and robotics.
    • Speaking at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum, Musk also said that work would become "optional."
    • Musk has previously said that AI robotics, like Tesla's Optimus, would eliminate poverty.

    In Elon Musk's future, we won't need jobs or money, and there will be no poverty.

    At the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum on Monday, where Musk sat on a panel with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, Musk said that money would "stop being relevant" thanks to AI.

    "There will still be constraints on power like electricity and mass," Musk said. "But I think at some point currency becomes irrelevant."

    He linked it to the books of science fiction author Iain Banks, who wrote the Culture series between 1987 and 2012. Those books help "get a sense for what a probable positive AI future is like," he said.

    Musk also mentioned the end of work itself, saying that it will be "optional," like "playing sports or a video game."

    He compared the future of work to gardening. "It's much harder to grow vegetables in your backyard, but some people still do it because they like growing vegetables," he said."That will be what work is like: optional."

    Over the past few months, Musk has shared his vision for a future with AI. That includes ending poverty, something he described at a recent investor meeting.

    "People often talk about eliminating poverty, giving everyone amazing medical care," Musk said at the shareholder event earlier this month. "There's actually only one way to do that, and that's with the Optimus robot."

    When AI and robotics, like Tesla's Optimus, eliminate all work and money, the government should hand out a universal income, Musk told Joe Rogan in October.

    That income shouldn't just be a universal basic income — it should be a universal high income, he said.

    "We'll have, in a benign scenario, universal high income," Musk said. "Anyone can have any products or services that they want. But there will be a lot of trauma and disruption along the way."

    After describing the future irrelevance of money at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum, Musk ribbed his panelmate, Nvidia's Huang.

    "By the way, the Nvidia earnings call is today," Musk said. Nvidia will report its third-quarter earnings after the closing bell.

    "Since currency is irrelevant…," Huang said.

    "Cheers," Musk said. The CEOs clinked their bottles of Acqua Panna.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Buy these ASX dividend shares for 4% to 7% yields

    Man holding out Australian dollar notes, symbolising dividends.

    Fortunately for income investors, the Australian share market is home to a plethora of ASX dividend shares.

    But which ones could be buys right now? Let’s take a look at three that brokers are recommending to clients:

    Accent Group Ltd (ASX: AX1)

    The first ASX dividend share that could be a buy is Accent Group. It is an Australian footwear retailer that owns popular brands such as HypeDC, Platypus, and The Athlete’s Foot.

    Bell Potter remains positive on the company. It highlights its market leadership, strategic growth initiatives, the ongoing expansion into apparel, and the rollout of the Sports Direct brand across Australia as reasons to buy.

    It expects this to support the payout of fully franked dividends of 7.8 cents per share in FY 2026 and 9.2 cents per share in FY 2026. Based on the latest share price of $1.18, this equates to attractive dividend yields of 6.6% and 7.8%, respectively.

    Bell Potter has a buy rating and $1.80 price target on its shares.

    National Storage REIT (ASX: NSR)

    National Storage could be another ASX dividend share to buy according to brokers.

    It is the largest self-storage provider in Australia and New Zealand with over 250 locations providing tailored storage solutions to almost 100,000 residential and commercial customers.

    UBS is recommending the company to clients. This is due partly to its resilience and attractive valuation. In addition, it is expecting some good dividend yields in the near term.

    The broker is forecasting payouts of 12 cents per share in FY 2026 and FY 2027.  Based on its current share price of $2.27, this would mean dividend yields of 5.3% for both years.

    UBS has a buy rating and $2.57 price target on its shares.

    Transurban Group (ASX: TCL)

    Finally, Transurban could be an ASX dividend share to buy.

    It operates a network of toll roads across Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and North America. This includes CityLink in Melbourne, the Cross City Tunnel in Sydney, and Clem7 in Brisbane.

    The team at Citi is positive on the company and believes it is positioned to increase its dividends to 69.5 cents per share in FY 2026 and then 73.7 cents per share in FY 2027. Based on its current share price of $15.06, this would mean dividend yields of 4.6% and 4.9%, respectively.

    Citi currently has a buy rating and $16.10 price target on the ASX dividend share.

    The post Buy these ASX dividend shares for 4% to 7% yields appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

    Should you invest $1,000 in Accent Group Limited right now?

    Before you buy Accent Group Limited shares, consider this:

    Motley Fool investing expert Scott Phillips just revealed what he believes are the 5 best stocks for investors to buy right now… and Accent Group Limited wasn’t one of them.

    The online investing service he’s run for over a decade, Motley Fool Share Advisor, has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    And right now, Scott thinks there are 5 stocks that may be better buys…

    * Returns as of 18 November 2025

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    Citigroup is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro has positions in Accent Group. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Transurban Group. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Transurban Group. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Accent Group. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

  • 5 things to watch on the ASX 200 on Thursday

    Smiling man with phone in wheelchair watching stocks and trends on computer

    On Wednesday, the S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) gave back its morning gains and ended the day in the red. The benchmark index fell 0.25% to 8,447.9 points.

    Will the market be able to bounce back from this on Thursday? Here are five things to watch:

    ASX 200 expected to rebound

    The Australian share market looks set to rebound on Thursday despite a mixed night on Wall Street. According to the latest SPI futures, the ASX 200 is expected to open the day 23 points or 0.25% higher this morning. In late trade in the United States, the Dow Jones is down 0.3%, but the S&P 500 is up 0.15% and the Nasdaq is 0.35% higher.

    Oil prices fall

    ASX 200 energy shares Beach Energy Ltd (ASX: BPT) and Santos Ltd (ASX: STO) could have a poor session on Thursday after oil prices dropped overnight. According to Bloomberg, the WTI crude oil price is down 2.1% to US$59.48 a barrel and the Brent crude oil price is down 2.1% to US$63.53 a barrel. Traders were selling oil in response to optimism that the Russia-Ukraine war could end.

    Nvidia results

    All eyes will be on Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) after the market bell on Wall Street today. The chip maker is releasing its quarterly results and expectations are very high. In fact, there are concerns that if Nvidia fails to live up to market expectations, it could lead to the market selloff intensifying.

    Gold price rises

    It could be a decent session for ASX 200 gold shares Newmont Corporation (ASX: NEM) and Northern Star Resources Ltd (ASX: NST) on Thursday after the gold price pushed higher. According to CNBC, the gold futures price is up 0.15% to US$4,072.7 an ounce. This was driven by safe haven demand.

    Buy Nufarm shares

    Nufarm Ltd (ASX: NUF) shares could be great value according to Bell Potter. This morning, the broker has retained its buy rating on the agricultural chemicals company’s shares with an improved price target of $3.60. It said: “NUF delivered a FY25 result modestly ahead of consensus, driven by +170bp topline outperformance in Crop protection revenue growth (relative to sector aggregates) and highlighted by a better-than-expected net debt position. In recent weeks we have witnessed a strengthening in omega-3 oil pricing indicators (following the IMARPE catch quota) while also noting continued YOY growth in active ingredient values.”

    The post 5 things to watch on the ASX 200 on Thursday appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

    Should you invest $1,000 in Beach Energy Limited right now?

    Before you buy Beach Energy Limited shares, consider this:

    Motley Fool investing expert Scott Phillips just revealed what he believes are the 5 best stocks for investors to buy right now… and Beach Energy Limited wasn’t one of them.

    The online investing service he’s run for over a decade, Motley Fool Share Advisor, has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    And right now, Scott thinks there are 5 stocks that may be better buys…

    * Returns as of 18 November 2025

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    Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Nvidia. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

  • 1 of my favourite ASX shares just fell 17% in a day – and I’m buying more

    A group of people in suits watch as a man puts his hand up to take the opportunity.

    After recently reporting its FY25 result, the TechnologyOne Ltd (ASX: TNE) share price dropped 17% on the day. While it’s disappointing to see a decline that large for the ASX share, I’m seeing it as an opportunity to buy more shares at a reduced valuation.

    TechnologyOne is one of the world’s largest enterprise resource planning (ERP) software businesses with big ambitions, but the market wasn’t impressed enough by the numbers as the overall tech sector took a hit that day.

    I think the business still has a very promising future and I’m planning to buy more shares soon, assuming it remains as attractively valued as it is now.

    Strong revenue growth expected

    In FY25, the business delivered 18% revenue growth to $610 million and the annual recurring revenue (ARR) increased 18% to $554.6 million.

    TechnologyOne continues to win new deals including the London boroughs of Islington London Borough Council and the Council of the Royal Borough of Greenwich. That helped UKK ARR rise 49% and bodes well for future growth in the country.

    The ASX share also hit its target net revenue retention (NRR) rate of 15%, which is how much revenue growth it achieved from existing customers from last year. Revenue doubles in five years if it grows by an average of 15% per year.  

    The business is aiming to hit $1 billion of ARR by FY30, underpinned by ‘SaaS+’ (software as a service), its new AI transaction-driven ARR strategy, its significant investments in R&D, developing expanded products and modules, as well as a number of new products. UK growth is an important part of its growth targets.

    Rising profit margins

    While the business is delivering strong top-line growth, the bottom line is also growing at a very pleasing rate.

    In FY25, profit before tax (PBT) climbed 19% to $181.5 million, beating guidance of growth of between 137% to 17%. The business reported a profit before tax (PBT) margin of 30%.

    The business is expecting to deliver a PBT margin of at least 35% in the coming years, driven by “the significant economies of scale” of its software and the customer response to its SaaS+ offering.

    Considering businesses are usually valued based on their profit, this is a promising sign. As a bonus, higher profits can lead to bigger dividend payouts.

    The ASX share is better value

    According to the forecast on Commsec, the TechnologyOne share price is valued at 46x FY27’s estimated earnings, at the time of writing, following the large decline of the valuation this week.

    It’s not as cheap as it was in April, but I think this is a great time to pounce on a high-quality business which is trading at a much lower valuation.

    The post 1 of my favourite ASX shares just fell 17% in a day – and I’m buying more appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

    Should you invest $1,000 in Technology One Limited right now?

    Before you buy Technology One Limited shares, consider this:

    Motley Fool investing expert Scott Phillips just revealed what he believes are the 5 best stocks for investors to buy right now… and Technology One Limited wasn’t one of them.

    The online investing service he’s run for over a decade, Motley Fool Share Advisor, has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    And right now, Scott thinks there are 5 stocks that may be better buys…

    * Returns as of 18 November 2025

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    Motley Fool contributor Tristan Harrison has positions in Technology One. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Technology One. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Technology One. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

  • This wild-looking drone hunting drug runners at night helped the US Coast Guard seize a record-breaking cocaine haul

    The crew of US Coast Guard Cutter Stone stands behind rows of stacked cocaine packages on the ship's deck. A large drone is placed by the cocaine.
    The offload included over 49,000 pounds of cocaine seized by US Coast Guard Cutter Stone in the eastern Pacific.

    • US Coast Guard cutter Stone offloaded a substantial amount of cocaine seized from drug interdictions in the Pacific.
    • The deployment included 15 interdictions, three of which occurred within a single night.
    • A new drone capability helped the Stone track drug smuggling vessels.

    PORT EVERGLADES, Florida — A US Coast Guard crew successfully seized a record-breaking amount of cocaine from drug runners with the help of an unusual reconnaissance drone.

    The unique tail-sitter drone, capable of taking off and landing vertically, allowed the crew of the Coast Guard cutter Stone to easily put eyes in the sky and spot drug smugglers during a recent deployment in the eastern Pacific.

    The crew of the Stone, a large Legends-class National Security cutter, offloaded over 49,000 pounds of cocaine worth more than $362 million at Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on Wednesday. It was a landmark offload marking the most cocaine seized by a single Coast Guard cutter during a deployment. The majority of the cocaine taken during this deployment came from Colombia, officials said.

    "What you see behind me is more than just a pile of cocaine," Vice Adm. Moore, commander of Coast Guard Atlantic Area, said, standing amid cocaine packages stacked in long rows on the Stone's deck. "It represents a tangible victory in our ongoing fight against transnational criminal organizations and narcoterrorism."

    Packages of cocaine sit on the deck of the US Coast Guard Cutter Stone.
    The offload represented the largest amount of cocaine seized by one US Coast Guard Cutter in a single deployment.

    The deployment, which began in August, was part of the Coast Guard-led Operation Pacific Viper targeting drug-running operations in the eastern Pacific. Coast Guard officials say the service is accelerating its counter-narcotics missions, resulting in record numbers of drug interdictions. In fiscal year 2025 alone, the Coast Guard seized almost 510,000 pounds of cocaine, the most in its history.

    The Stone's recent deployment in the Pacific included 15 interdictions, three of which occurred on the same night.

    The three vessels were spotted in rapid succession by a new capability on the Stone, Shield AI's MQ-35 V-BAT. The uncrewed aerial vehicle, which was operated by a contractor team, spotted the first boat in dark waters during the night, prompting the Stone to prepare a boarding team.

    US Coast Guard service members sit in a blue drug boat that's been sized in the ocean. Nearby them is a large Coast Guard Cutter.
    TK

    Capt. Anne O'Connell, the commanding officer of the Stone, told Business Insider that as the team and the armed interdiction helicopter were interdicting the vessel, the V-BAT went out to patrol the area further. "That's when they saw the wake from the second TOI," or target of interest, she said.

    As the second boarding team went out, the drone set out on another patrol, finding a third boat nearby. That night, a total of 12,000 pounds of cocaine were seized, along with seven suspected narcotics traffickers.

    The drone, O'Connell said, was integral to the operations that night because it allowed the Stone's crew to continue monitoring surrounding areas while completing boarding processes, which can take anywhere from two to eight hours depending on the size of the vessel and the complex law enforcement procedures that Coast Guard teams must follow.

    The V-BAT flies over a designated area determined by the Coast Guard. The drone's operators receive specific instructions on what to look for, and once it's airborne, its live video feed is transmitted to the ship, where crew members can watch it on monitors.

    Two men lift and hold a large drone aboard a Navy ship at sea with a cloudy blue sky in the background.
    Shield AI inked a nearly $200 million contract with the Coast Guard last July to deploy V-BAT drones.

    This was the Stone's first deployment with the V-BAT, and it's also one of the first cutters to have it on board, O'Connell said. Its usefulness was especially notable in the large operating area of the eastern Pacific, as the uncrewed aerial system could make up for a lack of fixed-wing aircraft doing reconnaissance.

    The V-BAT is an unusual drone design, featuring ducted-fan technology for lift. Built to have a small tactical footprint, according to its maker, the drone can take off in winds up to 25 knots from vessels on the move at up to 10 knots. Shield AI says it can offer over 13 hours of flight time for persistent surveillance.

    The company notes that a two-man team can have the V-BAT assembled and operational in under 30 minutes.

    While the V-BAT, like other capabilities making the Stone a premier vessel for these types of missions, proved valuable, officials said credit belongs primarily to the crew.

    "All of those elements, with the UAS and our HITRON [Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron] and our small boats," O'Connell said, are incredible capabilities. "But the secret sauce is our people, and they are what makes us successful."

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • We’re in that chapter between parenting and grandparenting. We left our permanent address to travel the world.

    Couple posing for photo
    The author and his partner are taking a gap year around the world.

    • My partner is 58, and I am 69, and our kids have all left our home.
    • We are between parenting and becoming grandparents, so we decided to explore the world.
    • We call it rotational living, and are giving ourselves time to figure out where to live next.

    My partner Deb, 58, and I, 69, are taking a gap year that began in January 2025. Except, we have no hard ending — we call it rotational living.

    We gave up our fixed address, a rental too large and expensive for our needs, while we explore the world. We spent several weeks in São Paulo, about the same amount of time in Providence, and a few days in rural Vermont, watching spring settle into the mountains. We lived in Montreal for a month and a half this summer and depart for three months in Brazil again the first week in December. We look forward to Europe, South Africa, and the Middle East next year.

    Rotational living works for us in part because we both prefer travel as though living in a new place. When one trip ends, another begins, in a different city, state, or country.

    We learned a lot from our travels

    We've learned a few things while traveling together. First, you have to truly enjoy your partner. We're both writers and consultants, so we create work in similar ways. We've realized how much we rely on the predictable — the same coffee maker, clocks you don't have to search for, all the different shoes — and how exhausting unpredictability can become.

    We accommodate these challenges by going to bed early and leaving room in our days for uncertainty. These few negatives of rotational living don't detract much from the pleasures. Not knowing lies at the core of exploration, and so we have learned to master uncertainty, embrace adventure, and love freedom.

    We had talked about living this way for years. Then my mother died in the fall of 2024 after a long and glorious life. The kids — my two in their 30s, Deb's three in their 20s — have launched, all of them in careers they trained for, and none of them have children yet. This little gap, between parenting and grandparenting, arrives like a gift. We look forward to becoming our future grandkids' default babysitters and embracing a fixed address when that moment arrives. But in the meantime, we contemplate where to go next.

    We are spending less money

    Our decision also has a financial underpinning, although the professional freedom Deb and I enjoy might have led us to this choice anyway.

    We lived outside Boston, in a community for people who moved there for the top-notch schools. Our large apartment cost an absurd sum compared to our needs, but nothing within a two-hour radius saved us much money. In truth, we don't yet know where we want to live, so rather than spend thousands a year on rent for a place we don't love, why not spend less and live everywhere?

    Calculating the cost of rotational living clarified that a conventional home led to a life at the edge, whereas rotational living brought us the luxuries we most desire: learning new cultures, eating well, time with friends and family, and artistic inspiration. We started a blog called Breakfast: A Love Story to share this joy with the world.

    When we visit Brazil, we can rent comfortable apartments for under $1,000 a month, pretty much whenever we want to go. The same goes for India, another destination on our list. We're looking for an open month for Europe, where we will mostly stay with friends. Work obligations sometimes set our travel map. Just as often, we imagine places we want to experience, such as Japan and Australia. The moment we make friends in those places, we will go.

    Andy Hoffman began writing professionally as a teenager and has founded several businesses, largely in educational technology. He currently lives everywhere.

    Read the original article on Business Insider