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CTS Eventim reports 19% revenue growth in 2024

CTS Eventim reports 19% revenue growth in 2024

Reuters18-02-2025
Feb 18 (Reuters) - CTS Eventim (EVDG.DE), opens new tab on Tuesday said its 2024 revenue grew by 19% according to preliminary figures, driven by both its ticketing and live entertainment segments.
The German ticketing group's revenue came in at 2.81 billion euros ($2.94 billion), up from 2.36 billion in the previous year, it said in a statement.
The group's adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) rose by 21.9% to 542 million euros, it added.
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CTS Eventim shares were seen up 2.5% in Lang & Schwarz indications ahead of the 0800 GMT market open.
Sales from its ticketing segment rose 22.7% to 880 million euros in 2024, while revenue at its live entertainment segment grew by 17.6% to 1.97 billion euros, boosted by a very strong fourth quarter, the company said.
($1 = 0.9564 euros)
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Investors react to US-Russia summit reaching no agreement
Investors react to US-Russia summit reaching no agreement

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time2 hours ago

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Investors react to US-Russia summit reaching no agreement

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Foreign holdings of US Treasuries climb to record $9.13 trillion in June
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Foreign holdings of US Treasuries climb to record $9.13 trillion in June

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Charles & Camilla weep at VJ Day ceremony as veteran goes off script with royal tribute before telling of horrors he saw
Charles & Camilla weep at VJ Day ceremony as veteran goes off script with royal tribute before telling of horrors he saw

Scottish Sun

time6 hours ago

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Charles & Camilla weep at VJ Day ceremony as veteran goes off script with royal tribute before telling of horrors he saw

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) KING Charles and Queen Camilla were reduced to tears yesterday by a 105-year-old war veteran. Yavar Abbas, who served as an officer in the Far East and witnessed the horrors of the atom bomb at Hiroshima, was due to read from his war diary at a service to mark the 80th anniversary of VJ Day. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 9 King Charles and Queen Camilla are reduced to tears by a 105-year-old war veteran's speech Credit: Paul Edwards 9 Red Arrows soar overhead during the VJ Day service Credit: Getty 9 King Charles and Yavar Abbas, who served as an officer in the Far East Credit: Reuters But live on national TV, Yavar switched from his talk about his experiences in the four-year battle against Japan. Instead, he paid a moving tribute to the King, hailing his bravery in the face of cancer. 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War doesn't grant you the luxury of goodbyes John Harlow "I wish today for us to remember all the crew of HMS Porpoise, Mark and all lost at sea for in remembering they live on.' The King, Queen, PM and military top brass began the service by laying wreaths at a drumhead set up on the steps of the Arboretum's spectacular Armed Forces Memorial. At noon, the veterans and guests stood in 80-degree heat for the national two-minute silence to remember the almost 30,000 British forces killed in the Far East along with 13,000 who suffered unimaginable brutality as prisoners of war. 9 Camilla shares a smile with one of the guests at the service Credit: Reuters 9 Robert Lindsay read words Britain's last two Chindits had written about their time with the famous Long Range unit fighting behind the enemy lines Credit: Reuters During the silence, eight Red Arrows screamed overhead. Celia Imrie, who fell in love with India while filming The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel movie, paid tribute to the veterans and all who served: 'We wish to share our gratitude with all who served and were imprisoned. 'Your spirit and determination in the face of unspeakable horrors will not be forgotten.' Bill Jones, 99, of Staines, Surrey, was a Fleet Air Arm Fitter on the island of Ponam. Before the service he said 'I saw the prisoners, thin as rakes, bruises everywhere.' Britain's last two Chindits, Sid Machin, 101, of Christchurch, Dorset, and Charlie Richards, 104, from Kettering, Northants, sat side-by-side. Robert Lindsay read words they had written about their time with the famous Long Range unit fighting behind the enemy lines. 'Never be forgotten' The actor read: 'As we neared the end of our time in Burma, death became an everyday occurrence, with bodies to bury almost every evening, some from enemy action, most from the appalling conditions caused by the monsoon. 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But the audience was shocked when the host, actress Celia Imrie, said Tom, of Salford in Gtr Manchester, had died on Thursday afternoon after a short illness. In May, Tom told today's schoolchildren to 'choose peace' because war was 'truly terrible'.

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