One lucky player has won the Euromillions jackpot for a life-changing sum of £157 million. The ticketholder, from France, can claim £157 million (or 179 million euros) after they correctly selected the five winning numbers and two lucky stars. It remains unknown who won the lottery prize, or if they have yet come forward to collect the jackpot. The winning combination was revealed by The National Lottery last night as: 5, 29, 33, 39, and 42. The Lucky Stars were: 3, and 9. Already, the National Lottery has announced the £14 million jackpot for next Tuesday and a festive £105 million EuroMillions prize for next Friday. Simon Horne from the National Lottery said: “Congratulations to the lucky French ticket holder who banked last night’s jackpot. Closer to home, one UK player won £1M in the UK Millionaire Maker, and we look forward to their claim. “On Friday next week (5th) there is a special festive £105M EuroMillions jackpot up for grabs. Players across the UK could add even more sparkle to Christmas if they won at the start of December.” The £157 million prize was one of the largest EuroMillions jackpots of the year so far, but the largest EuroMillions win ever in the UK stands at £195 million jackpot. Only 19 UK players have won prizes of more than £100m in its history. When people win the lottery, a 180-day countdown starts from the day the numbers are drawn to claim their prize. After that time, all unclaimed money – and any interest earned – goes to the National Lottery Good Causes fund. Patrick Lisoire, consumer communications manager at National Lottery operator Allwyn, told The Independent that people with paper tickets are less likely to claim their wins than online players. He said: “It’s retail tickets that may go unclaimed because you buy a paper ticket, if you misplace it, if you don’t get around to checking it in time, although it is nearly 6 months, those tickets could expire.” Online players are reminded repeatedly to check their login via phone and email, so people are more likely to claim them. £157 million up for grabs as EuroMillions jackpot rolls over to Friday Hitting it big twice: NJ couple wins $3M in lottery, months after $1M win Premium Bonds prize checker: When is December’s NS&I draw and have I won?
Jarden has set its rating on Accent’s stock (ASX: AX1) to neutral following its trading update on August 22, with a 12-month target price of $1.46. The group’s share price is currently at $1.41. This is down from its recent peak of $1.66 immediately prior to its FY25 trading update, where the share price plunged to as low as $1.37 in one day. In a note to investors, Jarden analysts confirmed it is waiting for improving operating conditions or signs of success in the company’s Sports Direct rollout after signing a ten-year deal with the sporting retailer’s UK-based parent company Frasers Group. The company also manages 30 other brands, including Platypus, Hoka and The Athlete’s Foot. This comes after Accent Group reported a soft total sales lift of 0.2 per cent to $1.62 billion in FY25, with its earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) down by around $200,000 to $110.2 million. According to Jarden analysts, Accent’s guidance for FY26 – where it is currently targeting high single-digit EBIT growth for this financial year – supports their view that the company continues to face a challenging promotional environment. The analysts told investors that industry feedback and comparative read-throughs have led to its stance, highlighting that Nike flagged significant promotional intensity in March 2025 and ongoing clearance activity in June 2025, while JD Sports downgraded guidance in January 2025 and in May 2025 noted there was more product in outlet channels and some retailers were discounting online. “We now wait for the core business of AX1 to see an improvement in operating environment as interest rate cuts start to flow through and the sustained promotional intensity begins to normalise,” the analysts wrote. “While we still consider AX1 to be a high quality retailer with strong management, long-term growth opportunities, and potential upside from Sports Direct, we wait for more evidence that AX1 can execute efficiently on Sports Direct or interest rate cuts can improve the demand and/or promotional environment (in which case there may be significant potential upside risk given the derating AX1 has recently experienced).” But not all industry reviewers are this rigid. Analysts at investment bank Petra Capital recently upgraded their rating on Accent Group stock to ‘buy’ following its results. In its note to investors, Petra Capital analysts noted five key reasons why they have a more positive outlook for the apparel and footwear conglomerate. This includes an improvement in like-for-like trend in lifestyle footwear, with Accent’s lifestyle banners recording a 0.8 per cent LFL lift for the first seven weeks of FY26. This was cycling a “tough” comp of 3.5 per cent in the same time last year. In its trading update late last week, Accent reported some early signs that its lifestyle banners, including Platypus and Skechers, are back to growth, with sports and performance banners continuing to grow. “We have a strong pipeline of committed wholesale orders,” the company reported. The analysts also noted there should be better comps emerging post-AGM for Accent, particularly on like-for-like sales and gross margin percentage. According to Petra Capital, this bodes well for momentum into Christmas. The third reason for a more positive outlook is the rebasing down of market expectations, with analysts claiming consensus for FY26e EBIT was too high. According to the footwear group, its FY26 EBIT target of a “high single digit” rise is based on achieving low single digit LFL sales growth, as well as growth from new and annualising stores, incremental profit from The Athlete’s Foot franchise acquisition program, new distributed brands and continued growth in Hoka and Nude Lucy. Accent added that gross margin percentage and cost-of-doing-business percentage are planned to be broadly flat to FY25, and noted that the full projection includes the impact of start-up costs for Sports Direct. “It is unusual for AX1 to provide guidance this early in the new year, but we believe they felt obliged to reset market expectations,” Petra analysts noted. The analysts added that this guidance implies Accent’s first half FY26 EBIT of $80 million, and FY26 EBIT in the region of $118 million. “Whilst this was above PCe, consensus was sitting too high at ~$126m. We believe the key delta was consensus did not adequately account for the upfront investment needed to launch Sports Direct.” Petra analysts also noted the share price pull-back in Accent stock off the back of its announcement also gives a positive outlook. AX1’s share price dropped from a recent high of $1.66 to $1.40 on the morning of its trading update on Friday, August 22. The group’s share price dipped further to a low of $1.37 by Friday afternoon. Petra’s target price is set at $1.65, with Accent’s share price nudging up to $1.49 on Monday afternoon. The icing on the cake for Accent is that the Sports Direct rollout is on track, with at least four stores set to open in FY26. The first store is set to open at Fountain Gate, Victoria in November. All this matches Petra’s forecasts. “AX1’s decision to provide this guidance early in FY26 lifts our confidence management has a good line of sight of new sites (extending into 1H27) secured/in advance negotiations.” Jarden analysts swooped back in to say that while Accent Group delivered a “robust” trading update, they noted that the group’s EBIT for FY25 was down 0.5 per cent when taking into account $3.3 million of non-recurring items. According to Accent’s annual report, this relates to the reversal of a historical impairment of the Hype DC brand carrying value of $9.7 million, the impairment of a number of underperforming Vans stores of $3.8 million and one-off costs and trading losses of $2.6 million relating to the discontinuation of the CAT brand distribution and the divestment of The Trybe. Jarden analysts also noted that Accent’s FY26 EBIT guidance implies downgrades to Visual Alpha consensus, which expects Accent’s FY26 earnings to hit around $122.1 million. This would require around 11 per cent growth. “Compositionally, [the guidance] was broadly in line with JARDe/VA Cons, with FY25 GPMs (54.9%) a key talking point, -85bps as AX1 continues to be impacted by the ongoing promotional environment,” Jarden analysts noted. “AX1 guided for GPMs and CODB as a percentage of sales (inc. Sports Direct investment) to remain flat y/y, while factoring in (among other areas) low single digit LFLs growth on a comp base that gets easier over the course of the year relative to the trading update.” Moreover, the analysts also spotlighted Accent’s store rollout, which hit 892 stores at the end of FY25. This is below the consensus of 909. Jarden analysts note this makes the FY26 consensus of 945 harder to achieve, given AX1 guided to at least 30 gross new stores. Newsletter Signup
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Talk about a holiday surprise. A family of four from San Pedro is celebrating big after winning half of the latest Mega Bingo jackpot. Earlier today, they made the trip to Belize City to collect a cheque worth about one hundred and four thousand dollars. The other lucky winner, still a mystery, hasn’t shown up yet. The family says the windfall couldn’t have come at a better time. They’re planning a modest home renovation and saving the rest. We caught up with them at JD Financials this afternoon during the official cheque handover.
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