BARRON’S MAGAZINE – JANUARY 12, 2025

Stock Market and Economy Outlook for 2026, According to Barron's Roundtable  Pros - Barron's

BARRON’S MAGAZINE: The latest issue features Stock Market and Economy Outlook for 2026, According to Barron’s Roundtable Pros

Our Roundtable Pros See More Gains for Stocks, Especially Those Left Behind Until Now

This year’s panelists offered plenty of reasons beyond AI to expect gains in 2026. Plus, 13 investment ideas.

Never Mind Venezuela. Latin America’s Future Looks Bright.

Opportunities abound in Mexico, Brazil, Chile, and more.

Beating Back the Bubble: A Defensive Fund Portfolio for These Times

Spreading your bets among a host of different sectors can help protect you in a down market.

Gold and Silver Funds Surged. Crypto Took a Dive.

Miner stocks did especially well in the fourth quarter, while crypto funds plunged. The other winners.

Retirees: Here’s How to Invest for a Fracturing World

International stocks and gold may be good bets for both gains and safety in a riskier global market.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 2026

How Venezuela’s New Leader Went From Revolutionary to Trump’s Orbit

Delcy Rodríguez, a guerrilla’s daughter, started out as a provocateur. She pivoted to revive a ravaged economy, making her vital to U.S. plans to run Venezuela.

U.S. and Venezuela Explore Restoring Diplomatic Ties

The move embodied the contradictions and fast-changing nature of the two countries’ relationship after the capture of President Nicolás Maduro.

Iran’s Protests Were Set Off by a Plunging Currency

In a serious challenge to Iran’s authoritarian government, angry protests have spread from major cities to the impoverished towns in the hinterland.

Iran Is Bracing for a Weekend of Unrest. Here’s What to Know.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 2026

U.S. Hiring Remains at a Modest Pace, and Weaknesses Are Evident

Employers added 50,000 jobs in December, and the unemployment rate fell to 4.4 percent as hiring continued despite economic uncertainty and volatile public policy.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Vows to ‘Not Back Down’ as Protests Swell

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dismissed days of fierce protests as wanton destruction and accused the demonstrators of trying to “please” President Trump.

December’s Jobs Data Reinforces Fed’s Cautious Approach to Future Cuts

Wary of Investing in Venezuela, Big Oil Heads to the White House

The amounts of money, time and political uncertainty trouble executives at large Western oil companies, who plan to meet with President Trump today.

Trump Defends U.S. Military Spending Plan to Combat ‘Real Threats’

President Trump said in an interview on Fox News that the U.S. needed a $600 billion increase in military spending next year. He did not specify the threats.

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE – JANUARY 10, 2026 PREVIEW

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE: The latest issue featuresThe Donroe delusion‘…

In Donald Trump’s world, the strong take what they can

That will be bad for America—and everyone else

Do not mistake a resilient global economy for populist success

Protectionism is failing to revive manufacturing

Does Japan have a “foreigner problem”?

Yes—but it is not what populist politicians say it is

AI is transforming the pharma industry for the better

It is changing the way drugs are discovered and tested

France is paralysed, and everyone is to blame

The budgetary impasse is just one symptom of collective political uselessness

THE NEW STATESMAN MAGAZINE – JANUARY 9, 2025

What Trump wants

THE NEW STATESMAN: The latest issue features What Trump wants‘…

The age of invasion

How Trump’s new global strategy will assert Washington’s hemispheric ambitions By John Bew

Why Starmer won’t condemn Trump on Venezuela

Jeremy Corbyn, Clare Short, Robert D Kaplan and others reflect on the consequences of the Caracas attack By Ailbhe Rea

The world after Trump’s Venezuela gambit

By New Statesman

Fiona Hill: “The UK needs to think of its own sovereignty”

By Megan Gibson

THE NEW YORK TIMES – THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2026

Trump Says U.S. Oversight of Venezuela Could Last for Years

In a wide-ranging interview with The Times, President Trump said “only time will tell” when it comes to how long the U.S. aims to control the country.

Videos Contradict Trump Administration Account of ICE Shooting in Minneapolis

A Times analysis of footage from three camera angles shows that the motorist was driving away from — not toward — a federal officer when he opened fire.

When It Comes to Russia, Trump Navigates Conflicting Goals

President Trump’s efforts to court President Vladimir Putin of Russia are rife with contradictions about stability and displays of American power.

Colombia’s President Feared a U.S. Attack. Then Trump Called.

The conversation appeared to defuse a crisis that erupted after President Trump said military action against Colombia “sounds good.” President Gustavo Petro spoke to The New York Times just before the call.

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – JANUARY 9, 2026 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘The Donroe Doctrine’ – Donald Trump stakes his claim to the Western Hemisphere.

Donald Trump consigned the remnants of the rules-based international order to the bottom of the Caribbean Sea as US forces extracted Nicolás Maduro to face trial in the US. With allies and adversaries of Washington still adjusting to last weekend’s audacious assault on Caracas, Trump and his inner circle are thinking about their next steps to secure US interests in what they regard as “our hemisphere”.


Our reporting team, led by Latin American correspondent Tom Phillips, gauges the reaction to Maduro’s abduction on the ground in Caracas and among Venezuela’s closest neighbours, while Dan Sabbagh explains how the US military had planned and executed the operation.

Since the start of the US military buildup and blockade of Venezuela, Trump had claimed that Maduro needed to be “brought to justice” for his alleged role in drug trafficking, which Trump claimed had caused thousands of deaths in the US. But, as international commentators Julian Borger and Nesrine Malik explain, that has proved the thinnest of justifications and already by last Saturday it was clear that Venezuela’s huge oil reserves were uppermost on his mind.

Spotlight | Iran in turmoil
An ailing economy and plummeting exchange rate have prompted the biggest street protests in many years, report Deepa Parent and William Christou

Science | Is de-extinction really possible?
Bringing woolly mammoths and dire wolves back to life captured the public’s imagination last year but, Patrick Greenfield reports, there are questions around what can actually be achieved

Feature | The power and purpose of guilt
Psychologist Chris Moore saw first-hand how powerful and complex an emotion it is, as he explains to Emine Saner

Opinion | Adieu to the French art of lunch
Paul Taylor mourns the demise of a convivial lunch at a bistro serving freshly prepared food and the end of an unpretentious part of working culture

Culture | Is the crisis in masculinty just a joke?
It’s a ridiculous time to be male – and that’s good news for a new genre of social media comedy poking fun at the manosphere, finds Matthew Cantor

NATURE MAGAZINE – JANUARY 8, 2026

Volume 649 Issue 8096

NATURE MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Branch Management’ – How the need to minimize surface area governs growth of 3D physical networks.

Oddly cool super-hot planet has an atmosphere it shouldn’t

It’s a mystery why TOI-561 b’s blanket of gases hasn’t boiled off.

Hot spot: plants use infrared signals to say they’re ready to reproduce

Some cycads warm up their reproductive organs to attract specially equipped pollinating beetles in the dark.

How the Romans built their empire of concrete

A unique archaeological site at Pompeii, Italy, reveals the secrets of peculiarly durable Roman building materials.

TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT – JANUARY 9, 2026 PREVIEW

TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT: The latest issue features ‘Constable vs Turner’ by Ferdinand Mount….

As unalike as ever

Turner is on our banknotes, Constable in our hearts By Ferdinand Mount

Coming out of Tate Britain just before noon on Budget Day, you are blinded by a blistering white sun behind Vauxhall Cross. The steepling glass towers south of the river are washed in an opal mist, the ziggurats of the MI6 HQ eclipsed to a ruined beige. Vauxhall Bridge gleams in the scarlet and yellow of a Turner sunset. J. M. W. would have rushed to the Embankment, whipped out his sketchbook, then worked up the whole shimmering scene into a six-footer and called it something like “The End of England”. John Constable would probably have turned away to catch the next coach to Hampstead Heath to paint Branch Hill Pond again.

‘One day, they’ll find me out’

How the young Dylan Thomas repeatedly stole from others By Alessandro Gallenzi

Mother was always right

A love-hate relationship recalled by France’s ‘greatest living writer’ By Marie Darrieussecq

The notebook fallacy

Why stylish stationery won’t change your life By Ian Sansom

THE NEW YORK TIMES – WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7, 2026

U.S. Forces Intercept Oil Tanker That Defied Blockade of Venezuela

The U.S. had been pursuing the Russian-flagged tanker as part of its pressure campaign against Venezuela. The move deepens a confrontation with Russia.

Europe and Rest of World Try to Come to Terms With Trump the Imperialist

Needing support to fend off Russia in Ukraine, European leaders are cautious about criticizing President Trump on Greenland, Iran, Venezuela and much else.

Stephen Miller Offers a Strongman’s View of the World

President Trump’s trusted adviser is casting his hard-right gaze abroad, saying the world must be governed by “force.”

Cuba’s Long-Suffering Economy Is Now in ‘Free Fall’

Warner Bros. Board Rebuffs Paramount’s Latest Buyout Offer

The board said the blockbuster deal it reached with Netflix last month posed less risk.