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Teofimo Lopez has already plotted his next fight, a shot at three-division world championship status, beyond his upcoming showdown with Shakur Stevenson.
Back then, ‘The Takeover’ claimed his world title at 140lbs with a clear unanimous decision victory, before making two unspectacular defences against Jamaine Ortiz and Steve Claggett.
But despite his lack of consistency over the years, along with a shock defeat to George Kambosos Jr in 2021, Lopez always brings out his A game for the big occasions.
That much became apparent following his monumental points victory over Vasyl Lomachenko back in 2020, when Lopez cemented himself as the leading champion at 135lbs.
So now, one can only imagine that the Brooklyn man is approaching his fight with Stevenson, a three-weight world champion who holds the WBC lightweight title, with the same level of tenacity.
But while many feel that Stevenson could have his number, Lopez has already named Devin Haney as a potential opponent for when, in his mind, he takes care of business later this month.
Speaking with FightHype around three weeks ago, Lopez insisted that the American is firmly on his radar.
“All the roads lead to a bigger fight between me and Haney.
“It makes sense now, right? It has momentum, right? It’s got motion, right?”
A fight with Haney, who claimed his WBO welterweight crown by outpointing Brian Norman Jr in November, would certainly represent another opportunity where Lopez cannot afford to make many mistakes.
China has eclipsed its own – and the US – record, building a monster underground hypergravity centrifuge that can model scenarios with 1,900 times the real-world gravitational force of Earth, bending space and time with unprecedented power.
Xinhua
Built by Shanghai Electric Nuclear Power Group as part of China’s Centrifugal Hypergravity and Interdisciplinary Experiment Facility (CHIEF), CHIEF1900 will soon function at 1,900 g-tonnes, surpassing the previously most powerful centrifuge the CHIEF1300.
“We aim to create experimental environments that span milliseconds to tens of thousands of years, and atomic to [kilometer] scales – under normal or extreme conditions of temperature and pressure,” Chen Yunmin, CHIEF’s chief scientist and a professor at Zhejiang University, told South China Morning Post. “It gives us the chance to discover entirely new phenomena or theories.”
We first reported on the facility in 2024, when the scale of the project was unveiled, but with only the preliminary machinery in place. The impressive CHIEF1300 came online in September 2025, with the ability to generate up to 1,300 g-tonnes of hypergravity. The new centrifuge is about 46% more extreme in its capacity.
Xinhua
Both centrifuges are used to model intense gravity to compress time and scale in experiments – which essentially lets scientists simulate long-term or large-scale physical phenomena such as dam structural integrity, earthquake damage, landslides, nuclear waste storage and more.
By increasing effective gravity, researchers can accelerate years or even decades of structural and geological stress into just a few hours, enabling experiments that would be impractical in the real world.
The CHIEF1900 has been installed 49 feet (15 m) below Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, in order to reduce the vibrational disturbance it’d cause if contained in an above-ground facility. Meanwhile, a vacuum-based coolant and air ventilation circulation system offsets the intense heat generated by the centrifuges operating at high speeds.
The hypergravity facility is reported to have cost around US$285 million to build and is expected to be a beacon of international research, with the Chinese team inviting scientists from around the world to use the technology.
The CHIEF1900 is yet to begin conducting experiments, but it’s expected to be operational soon.
Source: South China Morning Post
new video loaded: Displaced Palestinians in Egypt Await Reopening of Gaza Border
transcript
transcript
This is 9-year-old Islam Al Farany. Two years ago, Islam’s life changed when his relative’s home was hit in an Israeli strike. With the help of a nonprofit, Islam and his mother, Tahrir, were evacuated to the United States via Egypt, so Islam could be fitted with a prosthetic. The strike left Islam with other physical and emotional scars. Tahrir and Islam came back to Egypt, planning to return to Gaza and reunite with the rest of the family. The father of the family died in another strike while Tahrir and Islam were away. But Islam and his mother are unable to return despite an agreed upon cease-fire. The only border crossing from Egypt remains closed for Palestinians trying to get in or out of Gaza. Tahrir’s six other children are in Gaza. They’ve been separated for nearly a year. To speak to their mother and brother, they go to a nearby barbershop, which has better internet. five of Islam’s six siblings were also injured in the same strike. Eight-year-old Ahmed broke both his hips. Six-year-old Aya lost her sight in one eye. Seventeen-year-old Mohammed is the oldest. There are tens of thousands of Palestinians currently in Egypt who were able to leave Gaza soon after the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel. The Rafah border crossing has been mostly closed since Israel seized it in May 2024. As part of the latest truce, Israel agreed to reopen it, but has more recently said it would allow Palestinians to return only after Hamas hands over all the remains of the captives held in Gaza. While many Palestinians say they still want to go back, some wonder what is left to return to. Haneen Farhat fled over a year ago and began selling Palestinian food from her small home kitchen to make ends meet. She’s now organizing Gazan cooking classes, which are proving popular with both locals and tourists, and have been providing a steadier income. But life in Egypt is difficult for Palestinians. Their temporary Egyptian visas have expired, and they now find themselves without official legal status. This means they can’t officially work, buy property or attend Egyptian schools. Egypt says allowing a mass influx of Palestinian refugees could lead to their permanent displacement. The restrictions on residency have meant that some are looking to migrate elsewhere. But for those separated from their loved ones, all that’s left to do is wait.
By Alex Pena, Saher Alghorra, Monika Cvorak and Jon Hazell
January 7, 2026

Bright Minds Biosciences prices $175 million public offering
These are the key developments from day 1,414 of Russia’s war on Ukraine.
Published On 8 Jan 2026
Here is where things stand on Thursday, January 8:
Russian attacks left Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk and Zaporizhia regions in southeastern Ukraine “almost completely without electricity”, Ukraine’s Ministry of Energy said in a statement on Telegram. “Critical infrastructure is operating on reserve power,” the ministry added.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said that any deployment of UK forces under a declaration signed with France and Ukraine would be subject to a parliamentary vote. “I will keep the house updated as the situation develops, and were troops to be deployed under the declaration signed, I would put that matter to the house for a vote,” Starmer told parliament on Wednesday.
Ukraine’s foreign minister said on Wednesday that Kyiv welcomed the move. “The apprehension of a Russian-flagged ship in the North Atlantic underscores the United States’ and President Trump’s resolute leadership,” Andrii Sybiha wrote on X. “We welcome such an approach to dealing with Russia: act, not fear. This is also relevant to the peace process and bringing a lasting peace closer.”
US Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said that President Trump has “greenlit” a long-awaited bipartisan bill imposing sanctions on Russia after the pair met on Wednesday. “I look forward to a strong bipartisan vote, hopefully as early as next week,” Graham said in a statement.
For the first time in modern history, the United States is on the brink of losing its most basic engine of growth: more births than deaths.
According to the Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO) Demographic Outlook, released Tuesday, the year 2030 marks a tipping point that will fundamentally reshape the economy and social fabric. That’s the year the “natural” U.S. population—the balance of births over deaths—is projected to vanish.
“Net immigration (the number of people who migrate to the United States minus the number who leave) is projected to become an increasingly important source of population growth in the coming years, as declining fertility rates cause the annual number of deaths to exceed the annual number of births starting in 2030,” the CBO writes. “Without immigration, the population would begin to shrink in 2030.”
From that point on, every additional person added to the U.S. population will come from immigration, a demographic milestone once associated with aging countries like Italy and Japan.
The shift is striking not only for what it says about America’s rapidly aging society, but also for how soon it is expected to arrive. Just a year ago, many demographic forecasts—including the CBO’s own forecast—placed this crossover well into the late 2030s or even the 2040s. The updated outlook from CBO moves the timeline forward by nearly a decade.
This rapid acceleration, the CBO said, is driven by the “double squeeze” of declining fertility and an aging populace, combined with recent policy shifts on immigration. CBO analysts have drastically lowered their expectations for the total fertiility rate, now projecting it to settle at just 1.53 births per woman — well below the 2.1 “replacement rate” needed for a stable population. At the same time, the massive “Baby Boomer” generation is reaching ages with higher mortality rates, causing annual deaths to climb.
The timeline further compressed following the passage of the 2025 Reconciliation Act, which increased funding for more ICE agents and immigration judges to process cases faster, resulting in approximately 50,000 immigrants in detention daily through 2029, CBO said. The office calculated that these provisions will result in roughly 320,000 fewer people in the U.S. population by 2035 than previously estimated.
The new projections show that U.S. population growth will steadily decelerate over the next three decades until it finally hits zero in 2056. For most of the 20th century, the population grew at close to 1% a year: a flat population would represent a historic break from that norm.
The economic consequences of this shift are hard to overstate. While the number of retirees swells, the pool of workers funding the social safety net — and caring for the aging population — is narrowing. Americans aged 65 and older are the fastest-growing segment of the population, pushing the “old-age dependency ratio” sharply higher. In 1960, there were about five workers for every retiree. Today, that ratio is closer to three-to-one. By the mid-2050s, the CBO projects it will fall to roughly two workers per retiree. The contraction will have “significant implications” on the federal budget, including outsized effects on Social Security and Medicare, placing pressure on those trust funds which rely on a robust base of payroll taxes that a stagnant population cannot easily provide.
Further, because national GDP is essentially the product of the number of workers multiplied by their individual productivity, the loss of labor force growth means the American economy will have to rely almost entirely on technological breakthroughs and AI to drive future gains. This may be happening ahead of schedule, as continued weak employment growth in December showed a “jobless expansion,” in the words of KPMG chief economist Diane Swonk, as Fortune previously reported.
Gabriela Pomeroy,
Alicia Curryand
Adrienne Murray,in Copenhagen
Mia Chemnitz“The people of Greenland do not want to become American,” Mia Chemnitz tells the BBC. “We are not for sale.”
The 32-year-old business owner in the Greenlandic capital Nuuk reflects the sentiments of many who spoke to the BBC about how they felt about recent rhetoric from the Trump administration.
The White House has said it was “actively” discussing an offer to buy the territory that has for centuries belonged to Denmark. US President Donald Trump and his officials had earlier intimated a willingness to take it by force if necessary.
This has been met with nervousness and opprobrium among Greenlanders – both on the world’s largest island and elsewhere.
This nervousness has only grown since the US took Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro from his residence in Caracas to New York on drug-trafficking and narco-terrorism charges in an unprecedented military move.
Almost immediately after, the wife of a senior White House staffer indicated that Greenland was next.
“That’s when it stopped feeling abstract,” says Tupaarnaq Kopeck, 40, who moved to Canada – another place Trump has threatened to annex – for family and work.
“For the first time, I contacted my sister in Greenland and told her that if the unthinkable ever became reality, they would have a place to stay with us.”
Aaja Chemnitz, one of two MPs in the Danish parliament representing Greenland, says the comments from the Trump administration are “a clear threat” that she was “appalled” by.
“It’s completely disrespectful from the US side to not rule out annexing our country and to annex another Nato ally,” she says.
Tupaarnaq KopeckGreenland is the world’s most sparsely populated territory. With much of the Arctic island covered by ice, most of the population lives in Nuuk and the surrounding south-western coastline.
But it is strategically significant to the US – which is why it has had a military presence there since World War 2.
Greenland’s location between North America and the Arctic makes it well placed for early warning systems in the event of missile attacks.
More recently, there has also been increased interest in Greenland’s natural resources, including rare earth minerals, which are becoming easier to access as its ice melts due to climate change.
“It’s not fun being 56,000 people and having these threats – if you can call them that – from a giant like the US,” says Masaana Egede, Editor in Chief from Greenlandic newspaper Sermitsiaq.
“The citizens of Greenland are nervous about this, because this is not something that we take lightly.”
Experts generally agree that a military takeover of Greenland would be an easy undertaking for the US – but that the geopolitical fallout would effectively end the Nato alliance.
After the issue of Greenland’s ownership was raised anew by the White House, six European allies issued a statement saying Greenland’s future should be decided by its people – something Mia says she is grateful for.
But she worries this will matter little to the US “if it’s not backed with consequences and actions”.
“As a Greenlander, I can’t help but wonder: what are we worth to these allies? To what lengths are they willing to go to protect us?”
Tupaarnaq says: “Respect is about more than alliances on paper. When powerful nations talk about you instead of with you, that respect disappears very quickly.”
Aleqatsiaq PearyThe Trump administration has stressed its intention was to buy Greenland from Denmark – despite Copenhagen reiterating the territory was not for sale – while retaining a military intervention as an option.
Aaja sees annexation by force as unlikely – instead, “what we are going to see is that they will put pressure on us in order to make sure that they will take over Greenland over time”.
Polling consistently shows that Greenlanders generally favour eventual independence from Denmark but oppose being owned by the US. The territory is largely self-governing, with control of foreign affairs and defence retained by Copenhagen.
This is perhaps why Aleqatsiaq Peary, a 42-year-old Inuit hunter living in the remote northerly town of Qaanaaq, seemed unfazed by the prospect of US ownership.
“It would be switching from one master to another, from one occupier to another,” he says. “We are a colony under Denmark. We are already losing a lot from being under the Danish government.”
But he says: “I don’t have time for Trump. Our people are in need,” explaining hunters like him hunt with dogs on the sea ice and fish, “but the sea ice is melting and hunters cannot make a living anymore”.
For Sermitsiaq editor Masaana, the rhetoric from the US is pushing a fallacious binary choice.
“We really have to try to avoid getting the story going to a place where it’s Greenland that has to decide between the US and Denmark, because that is not the choice that the Greenlandic people want.”
Christian KeldsenFor others, who see the strong relationship Greenland already has with the US being soured, there is a clear sense of indignation.
“People in Greenland are getting really irritated with this,” says Christian Keldsen of the Greenland Business Association.
“Greenlanders are welcoming and open-hearted, it’s the best thing about the country. But now with this, some people are scared.”
Greenland is open for business with the US, Christian stresses, noting that there are new direct flights from Greenland to New York – a sure sign “they don’t need to take us over”.
“We are a well-functioning democracy and our government has a strong mandate,” Mia says. “We are a Nato ally and the US has had military bases in Greenland for over 70 years and still has the right to establish and run new and more.
“As it has been stated from Greenland before: we are not for sale, but we’re open for business.”
The amount of money spent on music subscriptions by UK consumers grew modestly last year, up 3.2% YoY.
That’s according to new preliminary stats from the UK’s Entertainment Retailers’ Association (ERA), whose members include Spotify, Amazon, YouTube, and SoundCloud.a
According to ERA’s data, some GBP £2.045 billion (USD $2.69bn) was spent on music streaming subscriptions in 2025, up from GBP £1.982 billion in 2024.
In monetary terms, that represented a YoY increase of GBP £63.0 million.
(ERA’s figures are retail amounts – i.e. what consumers spent on subscriptions, rather than the wholesale figure paid to music rightsholders. They don’t include revenue from ad-supported tiers.)
The 3.2% growth rate reported for 2025 marked the slowest annual increase in UK streaming subscription revenues over the past five years, and represents a deceleration from 2024’s 5.9% growth and 2023’s 10.2% growth.
Crucially, the 3.2% YoY growth rate in 2025 matched the UK Office for National Statistics’ inflation rate of 3.2% for the 12 months to November 2025. (The full annual rate will be in this ballpark, but officially determined when December’s figures are confirmed later this month.)
This represents a stark contrast to the market’s performance earlier in the decade: UK streaming subscription revenues grew by double-digits in 2020 and 2021, posting YoY increases of £199.4 million and £191.3 million respectively.
Note: ERA has revised its annual streaming subscription revenue figure for 2024 down by £36 million from the number it initially reported, resulting in a 5.9% YoY increase for 2024 vs 2023.
The slowdown is particularly notable given that the UK subscription market benefited from yet another Spotify price increase in 2025, albeit towards the end of the year.
In October 2025, Spotify announced it was increasing prices for multiple subscription tiers in the UK for the third time in just over two years.
Spotify’s Premium Individual tier increased by GBP £1 per month to £12.99, marking an 8.3% increase. Its Duo and Family plans rose to £17.99 per month and £21.99 per month, respectively.
That followed UK price rises in July 2023 (when Spotify moved from its long-held £9.99 price point to £10.99) and April 2024 (when it increased to £11.99). The Premium Individual tier has therefore risen 30% in less than two and a half years.
As MBW has previously reported, data captured by the UK’s Competitions and Markets Authority (CMA) showed that in December 2021, Spotify’s market share of all music streaming’s monthly active users (‘free’ plus ‘premium’) in the UK stood at over 50%.
In addition to streaming revenues, ERA’s latest numbers also cover physical music sales and downloads. (ERA’s members include UK physical music retailers such as HMV, plus a network of independent retailers).
Annual UK physical music revenues (across CD and vinyl sales) surged 11.5% YoY in 2025 – totaling £368.1 million (USD $484.2m).
The strong physical performance was driven by vinyl, which grew 18.5% to £238.5 million, while CD revenues remained essentially flat, down just 1% to £125.0 million. Other physical formats – predominantly cassette – nearly doubled, up 95% to £4.6 million.
Physical formats increased their share of music revenues to 15%, their highest share since 2021.
Download sales continued their decline, down 3.5% YoY, to GBP £39.9 million (USD $52.5m).
Total UK 2025 recorded music sales – including subscription streaming, physical music, and downloads – stood at GBP £2.453 billion (USD $3.23bn), up 4.2% YoY.
That GBP £2.453 billion figure, said ERA, was the UK recorded music industry’s highest annual revenue tally of all time.
ERA CEO Kim Bayley said: “Streaming services in the UK fund around 60 different programmes supporting music, with a third of them focussing on new and emerging UK talent. Record shops too are playing their part, promoting more than 4,000 instore and outstore performances a year, the majority of them featuring UK artists.
“Streaming services and retailers are committed to supporting new UK music and the emergence of a new wave of UK artists is vindicating their approach.”
The combined UK music, video and games markets surveyed by ERA reached £13.257 billion in 2025, up 7.1% YoY and marking their 13th consecutive year of growth.
ERA noted that entertainment sales grew more than four times faster than the 1.5% GDP growth predicted for the UK economy by the Office for Budget Responsibility.
2025’s total in UK entertainment sales was more than 66% larger than the total in 2019, the last pre-pandemic year.
Bayley added: “This result vindicates the transformational role of streaming services and retailers in driving the entertainment sector to new heights, thanks to a potent combination of technology, investment and innovation. While conditions may be tough in the wider economy, streaming services and retailers are winning a greater share of consumer spending and proving their central role in the UK’s creative economy.”
All GBP to USD conversions in this story have been made at the average annual exchange rate for 2025.
Music Business Worldwide
new video loaded: Residents Flee As Fighting In Aleppo Reignites
By McKinnon de Kuyper
January 7, 2026
