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HOME SALES PROFITS FELL BELOW 45 PERCENT FOR FIRST TIME IN FIVE YEARS

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Typical home generated a 44.1 percent return on investment in first quarter; National median sales price stayed level quarter-over-quarter at $360,000

IRVINE, Calif., April 23, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — ATTOM, the leading provider of property data, AI-powered analytics, and real estate intelligence solutions, today released its latest U.S. Home Sales Report, which shows that homeowners made a 44.1 percent profit on typical single-family home and condo sales during the first quarter of 2026. That was down from 47.2 percent in the previous quarter and from 50.2 percent in the first quarter of 2025.

That 44.1 percent profit margin is the lowest since the first quarter of 2021, continuing a gradual decline from the recent peak of 63.5 percent in the second quarter of 2022.  Despite the drop, margins remain historically high compared to pre-pandemic levels.

Home prices held steady quarter-over-quarter at $360,000 but were up 3 percent year-over-year from $350,000 in the first quarter of 2025.

Nationwide, the typical single-family home or condo sold for a raw profit of $110,100 in the first quarter of 2025, down 5 percent from the previous quarter and 6 percent from the same time last year.

“The first quarter is typically a slower sales season and that was compounded this year by rising mortgage rates,” said Rob Barber, CEO of ATTOM. “After the record high home prices we saw last summer, prices appear to be leveling out.”

“The profit margins sellers enjoyed over the last few years, which were consistently over 50 percent, were unusual,” he added. “But even with the most recent dip, margins are still well above the 30 percent return on investment sellers were seeing before the pandemic.”

Profit margins drop in Florida metros, rise in several Midwest metros
Seller profit margins fell quarter-over-quarter in 74.2 percent (95) of the 128 metropolitan statistical areas in ATTOM’s analysis. Metro areas were included in the report if they had more than 1,000 home sales in the first quarter of 2026 and sufficient data to analyze. Profit margins fell year-over-year in 82.8 percent (106) of the metros.

The metro areas with the largest annual falloffs in home sale profit margins were Ocala, FL (down from 119.4 percent in the first quarter of 2025 to 58.1 percent in the first quarter of 2026); Punta Gorda, FL (down from 78.9 percent to 54.3 percent); Lakeland, FL (down from 62.2 percent to 38 percent); North Port-Sarasota, FL (down from 57.9 percent to 35.5 percent); and Prescott, AZ (down from 69.4 percent to 47.1 percent).

The metros that saw the largest annual increases in profit margins were Flint, MI (up from 65.5 percent to 81.8 percent); Evansville, IN (up from 40.9 percent to 53.5 percent); Lansing, MI (up from 48 percent to 57.8 percent); Canton, OH (up from 55.5 percent to 60.2 percent); and Syracuse, NY (up from 67.6 percent to 72 percent).

Among metro areas with populations of at least 1 million, the largest annual drop-offs in profit margins were in Raleigh, NC (down from 49.8 percent to 33.1 percent); San Jose, CA (down from 88.5 percent to 74.8 percent); San Diego, CA (down from 69.4 percent to 56.6 percent); Sacramento, CA (down from 57.5 percent to 45.1 percent); and Buffalo, NY (down from 82.5 percent to 70.3 percent).

Margins remain low in major Texas cities
Of the 128 metros in ATTOM’s analysis, 37.5 percent (48) had typical home sale profit margins exceeding 50 percent in the first quarter.

Among metros with populations of at least 1 million, the largest typical profit margins were in San Jose, CA (74.8 percent); Hartford, CT (72.4 percent); Providence, RI (71.9 percent); Rochester, NY (70.5 percent); and Buffalo, NY (70.3 percent).

The lowest profit margins among those largest metros were in New Orleans, LA (14 percent); San Antonio, TX (19.9 percent); Houston, TX (25.4 percent); Dallas, TX (27.4 percent); and Austin, TX (27.4 percent).

Western cities boast highest profits in raw dollars
Nationwide, the typical home sale in the first quarter of 2026 generated $110,100 in raw profit.

Among metro areas with populations of at least 1 million, the largest year-over-year growth in raw profits were Birmingham, AL (up 16.9 percent); Honolulu, HI (up 13.9 percent); Detroit, MI (up 13.3 percent); Hartford, CT (up 7.1 percent); and Philadelphia, PA (up 6.8 percent).

The metros with populations of at least 1 million with the largest typical raw profits in the first quarter of 2026 were San Jose, CA ($652,500); San Francisco, CA ($375,00); Los Angeles, CA ($332,875); San Diego, CA ($320,000); and Seattle, WA ($284,450).

Of all metros analyzed, the smallest typical raw profits were in Beaumont, TX ($23,578); New Orleans, LA ($30,000); Killeen, TX ($33,415); Davenport, IA ($42,000); and Baton Rouge, LA ($44,000)

Median home prices rose in more than two thirds of metros
The national median home sales price held steady between the fourth quarter of 2025 and the first quarter of 2026 at $360,000, but the median sales prices rose annually in 68.2 percent (88) of the 129 metropolitan statistical areas with sufficient data to analyze.

The metro areas with the largest year-over-year increases in median sales prices were Birmingham, AL (up 17.5 percent); Detroit, MI (up 17.2 percent); Augusta, GA (up 12.5 percent); Syracuse, NY (up 11.8 percent); and Madison, WI (up 11.8 percent).

The metros with the largest year-over-year drops in median sales prices were Cape Coral, FL (down 9 percent); Durham, NC (down 8.7 percent); Austin, TX (down 7.2 percent); San Francisco, CA (down 7.2 percent); and Ocala, FL (down 7.2 percent).

Historical Median Home Sales Prices

Homeownership tenure drops slightly nationwide
Owners who sold their homes in the first quarter of 2026 had held them for an average of 8.44 years, down slightly from the 8.46-year tenure for homes sold in the fourth quarter of 2025.

The metros with the longest average homeownership tenure—the time between purchase and sale—for homes sold in the first quarter of 2026 were Barnstable, MA (14.97 years); Napa, CA (12.65 years); Springfield, MA (12.64 years); Santa Rosa, CA (12.56 years); and San Francisco, CA (12.41 years).

The metros with the shortest homeownership tenures for homes sold in the first quarter of 2026 were Kansas City, MO (6.9 years); Provo, UT (7.07 years); San Antonio, TX (7.17 years); Oklahoma City, OK (7.24 years); and Panama City, FL (7.25 years).

Average U.S. Homeownership Tenure

Share of homes sold by lenders grows
In the first quarter of 2026, homes sold by banks or other lenders account for 1.6 percent of all home sales nationwide, up from 1.3 percent the previous quarter and 1.5 percent at the same time last year.

Among metro areas with sufficient data to analyze, the markets with the highest share of lender-owned sales were New Orleans, LA (4.9 percent); St. Louis, MO (4.8 percent); Baton Rouge, LA (4.6 percent); Chicago, IL (4.4 percent); and Davenport, IA (4.4 percent).

The metros with the smallest share of lender-owned sales were Los Angeles, CA (0.6 percent); Las Vegas, NV (0.8 percent); Seattle, WA (0.8 percent); Denver, CO (0.8 percent); and Phoenix, AZ (0.9 percent)

All-cash transactions down year-over-year
Nationwide, 41.7 percent of home sales were completed in all-cash transactions, down from 42.4 percent at the same time last year.

Among metros with sufficient data to analyze for the first quarter of 2026, the markets with the highest rates of all-cash sales (as a percentage of total sales) were Honolulu, HI (76.5 percent); Hilo, HI (74.2 percent); Athens, GA (67.6 percent); Naples, FL (66.6 percent); and Utica, NY (61.6 percent).

The metros with the smallest shares of all-cash sales were Vallejo, CA (23.2 percent); Bremerton, WA (23.3 percent); Olympia, WA (23.7 percent); Kennewick, WA (24.7 percent); and Cedar Rapids, IA (25.1 percent).

Institutional buyers scoop up smaller share of homes
In the first quarter of 2026, homes sold to institutional investors accounted for 6.6 percent of all homes sold nationwide, down from 6.8 percent at the same time last year.

The metro areas with the largest shares of homes sold to institutional investors (as a percentage of all sales) were Mobile, AL (15 percent); Memphis, TN (14.8 percent); Boise City, ID (14.4 percent); Salisbury, MD (13.4 percent); and Huntsville, AL (12.4 percent).

The metros with the smallest shares of homes sold to institutional investors were Honolulu, HI (2.4 percent); Naples, FL (2.7 percent); New Orleans, LA (3.1 percent); Providence, RI (3.1 percent); and New York, NY (3.3 percent).

Historical Home Sales by Type

FHA-backed purchases at four-year low
Buyers using Federal Housing Administration loans purchased 7.4 percent of all homes sold nationwide in the first quarter of 2026, the lowest rate since the second quarter of 2022.

The metro areas with the highest proportion of sales involving FHA loans were Merced, CA (24.9 percent); Laredo, TX (21.8 percent); Visalia, CA (20.3 percent); Bakersfield, CA (19.7 percent); and Modesto, CA (17.9 percent).

Conclusion
Seller profit margins fell in the first quarter of 2026 as mortgage rates rose and home prices held steady after several quarters of record-breaking growth. While typical returns on home sales have continued to trend downward from their 2022 peak, they remain well above pre-pandemic levels, indicating that the market is normalizing but still historically strong.

Report methodology
The ATTOM U.S. Home Sales Report provides percentages of REO sales and all sales that are sold to institutional investors and cash buyers, at the state and metropolitan statistical area. Data is also available at the county and zip code level, upon request. The data is derived from recorded sales deeds, foreclosure filings and loan data. Statistics for previous quarters are revised when each new report is issued as more deed data becomes available.

Definitions
All-cash purchase: sale where no loan is recorded at the time of sale and where ATTOM has coverage of loan data.

Homeownership tenure: for a given market and given quarter, the average time between the most recent sale date and the previous sale date, expressed in years.

Home seller price gains: the difference between the median sales price of homes in a given market in a given quarter and the median sales price of the previous sale of those same homes, expressed both in a dollar amount and as a percentage of the previous median sales price.

Institutional investor purchases: residential property sales to non-lending entities that purchased at least 10 properties in a calendar year.

REO sale: a sale of a property that occurs while the property is actively bank owned (REO).

About ATTOM
ATTOM delivers AI-driven property intelligence built on one of the nation’s most trusted property data assets, covering 158 million U.S. properties—99% of the population. Our engineered, multi-sourced real estate data spans property tax, deeds, mortgages, foreclosure, environmental risk, property conditions, natural hazards, neighborhood insights, and geospatial boundaries, rigorously validated for advanced analytics. ATTOM supports analytics and AI-driven applications through flexible delivery options including APIs, bulk licensing, cloud delivery, market trend products, and the MCP Server for AI-powered, agentic access to engineered property data—enabling organizations to automate analysis and scale property intelligence across industries.

Media Contact:
Megan Hunt
megan.hunt@attomdata.com 

Data and Report Licensing:
datareports@attomdata.com

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AdaKami Contributes to National Dialogue on Strengthening Fraud Risk Management

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JAKARTA, Indonesia, April 24, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The continued rise in digital fraud highlights increasing risks to consumer protection and the sustainability of Indonesia’s digital financial ecosystem. Data from Indonesia Anti-Scam Centre (IASC) under the Financial Services Authority of Indonesia (OJK) recorded over 432,000 digital fraud reports between November 2024 and January 2026, with total losses reaching approximately IDR 9.1 trillion.

In response, AdaKami, a licensed fintech lending platform by OJK, continues to strengthen its fraud risk management framework through enhanced technology capabilities, ongoing user education, and collaborations with stakeholders.

This was reflected at the Executive Policy Collaborative Forum on Handling Digital Fraud and Scams, organized by The Indonesian Digitalization and Cybersecurity Association (ADIGSI) which brought together regulators, cybersecurity authorities, and industry associations including IASC OJK, the National Cyber and Crypto Agency (BSSN), the Indonesia Fintech Lending Association (AFPI), and the Indonesia Fintech Association (AFTECH). The forum underscored the importance of coordinated efforts to strengthen fraud prevention and reinforce the anti-scam governance ecosystem.

Alongside industry and regulatory stakeholders, AdaKami reiterated its commitment and efforts to strengthen fraud prevention, by integrating technology, education, and collaboration as core pillars of consumer protection.

“Fraud and digital scams have evolved into a systemic challenge that requires coordinated action across regulators, industry, and stakeholders,” said Hudiyanto, Head of Secretariat of IASC OJK.

Karissa Sjawaldy, Chief of Public Affairs AdaKami, added: “AdaKami remains committed to strengthening consumer protection by enhancing technology-driven security systems, reinforcing user education, and maintaining close collaboration with regulators and industry partners.”

AdaKami continues to strengthen its security infrastructure through technology advancement, including AI, machine learning, and big data, to protect users on the platform and mitigate  cyber threats. Concurrently, AdaKami recognizes the importance of user awareness in reducing fraud risks. Through ongoing educational initiatives such as the #SelaluWaspada campaign, AdaKami educates users to stay vigilant against evolving fraud schemes, including safeguarding personal information, recognizing common fraud tactics, and engaging only through official verified channels.

AdaKami remains focused on strengthening risk management, enhancing consumer trust, and supporting a more resilient digital financial ecosystem in Indonesia.

***

About AdaKami

Established in 2018, AdaKami is a licensed fintech lending platform in Indonesia, operated by PT Pembiayaan Digital Indonesia and supervised by OJK. AdaKami provides accessible financing through technology-driven, fast, and reliable services, bridging the gap between traditional financial institutions and underserved communities. More information: www.adakami.id

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RWA.LTD Announces Comprehensive Consumer Goods Token Ecosystem Layout at Hong Kong Web3 Festival, Leading the Launch of the Consumer RWA Alliance

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HONG KONG, April 24, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — During the Hong Kong Web3 Festival, RWA.LTD, the world’s first platform dedicated to consumer goods RWA (Real World Assets), officially announced the completion of its comprehensive consumer goods token ecosystem layout. At the event, the platform spearheaded the unveiling of the “Consumer RWA Alliance”. Positioned as the “Asian Consumer Goods Asset Trading Center,” RWA.LTD aims to enhance consumption efficiency through AI, reconstruct value distribution via Web3, and connect cross-city and cross-country consumer networks through tokens to accelerate the arrival of the “Smarter Consumer” era.

RWA.LTD stated that consumer goods RWA is not a single product, but a set of new infrastructure developed around consumption scenarios, the circulation of consumer rights, and brand interaction. Since CEO Fu, Rao Tony first proposed the concept of “Consumer Goods RWA” in late 2024, the team simultaneously prepared the RWA.LTD platform and completed Beta testing in September 2025. Following several months of iteration, the platform completed a comprehensive upgrade in mid-March 2026, marking RWA.LTD’s formal transition from the proof-of-concept stage to the ecological development stage.

RWA.LTD Ecosystem

In this public announcement, RWA.LTD systematically disclosed its four major ecological sectors for the first time. First, RWA.LTD | Mall (Winpoint Mall) was officially launched during the Hong Kong Web3 Festival, providing consumers with diverse brand rights driven by RWA Coin; current offerings include the CDAA (Chartered Digital Asset Analyst) Course, Matrix E-commerce Services, and more. Second, RWA.LTD | Exchange was fully launched in mid-March 2026 as a primary issuance and secondary trading market for consumer goods tokens, with plans to list 100 types of consumer goods tokens within the year to provide bidirectional exposure for brands and users. Third, RWA.LTD | Fund plans to collaborate with established VC funds to focus on brand token ecosystem construction and explore new paths for the synergistic development of consumer brands and on-chain capital. Fourth, RWA.LTD | Bot (rwaclaw.ai, rwabot.ai) has completed domain layout and is currently under development; it will provide consumers with real-time AI price comparisons, intelligent recommendations, and automated ordering tools to enhance decision-making efficiency and consumer experience.

RWA.LTD believes that the traditional consumer market has long suffered from information asymmetry, price opacity, and inactive membership systems, while the combination of blockchain and AI provides a new consumption model. By standardizing, digitizing, and placing consumer rights on-chain, consumers are no longer just end-buyers but can become active participants in the consumption network; brands are no longer limited to one-time interactions with consumers but can build stable, sustainable consumer relationships through on-chain tools.

Consumer RWA Alliance

At the Hong Kong Web3 Festival, the Consumer RWA Alliance, spearheaded by RWA.LTD, was inaugurated. The alliance aims to unite consumer brands, channel platforms, technology service providers, ecological partners, and cross-regional resource providers to jointly promote the co-construction of standards, ecological synergy, and scenario implementation for consumer goods RWA. The alliance members attending the unveiling ceremony included Dr. and Professor Lawrence Yu, Founder and Chairman of the Asia Pacific Economic Leaders’ Confederation; Dr. Wang Ping, President of the RWA Ecological International Federation and Chairman of the Asia Pacific M&A Fund; Dou Jun, Secretary General of the Hong Kong RWA Global Industry Alliance and Executive Secretary General of the Blockchain Professional Committee of the China Communications Industry Association (CCIA); Dr. Yu Jianing, Principal of Uweb Business School (Hong Kong) and Rotating Chairman of the Academic Committee of the Hong Kong Certified Digital Asset Analysts Association (HKCDAA); Dr. Jingle, Founder of Hong Kong Meta Strategy; Dr. Qiu Yueying, CEO of Winchain Technology; Tongjian Sun, CEO of INOVAI TECH K.K.; and Wen Hua, Director of the Australia & New Zealand Center of the Hong Kong RWA Global Industry Alliance, with RWA.LTD CEO Fu, Rao Tony serving as the Chairman. The establishment of the alliance marks an important step for consumer RWA moving from platform exploration to industry collaboration, signifying that the RWA narrative is extending from the relatively singular field of financial assets to the consumer industry which is more closely related to real life.

Industry insiders pointed out that the establishment of the Consumer RWA Alliance holds industry significance beyond platform business. On one hand, it helps break the market’s inherent impression of RWA as being “over-financialized” and encourages the outside world to re-recognize the application value of RWA as digital infrastructure in real consumption scenarios. On the other hand, it provides a new organizational framework for the Asian consumer market, making cross-regional brand cooperation, mutual recognition of consumer rights, and on-chain circulation mechanisms more operational. RWA.LTD stated that it hopes to promote the formation of a more diverse, open, and sustainable RWA world through the alliance mechanism, making RWA not just a synonym for asset securitization, but also a key driver for consumer innovation and industrial upgrading.

Regarding compliance issues of market concern, RWA.LTD provided a brief explanation in this announcement. Consumer goods tokens do not fall within the definition of “virtual assets” under Section 53ZRA of the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing Ordinance (AMLO), as they are neither payment tokens nor governance tokens. Even if there is overlap in certain characteristics, the relevant tokens can ultimately be defined as “Limited Purpose Digital Tokens” under Section 53ZR of the AMLO, which are explicitly excluded from the scope of “virtual asset” in the AMLO. Based on this, RWA.LTD does not fall within the regulatory scope of the Virtual Asset Trading Platform (VATP) licensing regime. Meanwhile, the U.S. SEC’s previous No-Action Letter to the Fuse project, along with the definition of “Digital Tools” in the regulatory interpretation published on March 17, 2026, further supports the stance that consumer goods tokens are non-securities, non-commodities, and are not regulated under the virtual asset framework. RWA.LTD emphasized that the company consistently adheres to advancing product design and business development within a compliance framework and will continue to monitor regulatory dynamics in different jurisdictions.

The RWA.LTD team possesses a rich international background and overseas market experience, having long followed the development trends of the Web3 and RWA markets in Europe and the United States. The team observed early on that the Asian RWA market has long been concentrated on financial narratives with relatively monotonous scenarios, and platforms that truly integrate deeply with mass consumption and high-frequency lifestyle scenarios remain scarce. Consequently, the team began preparing the consumer goods RWA platform as early as 2024, hoping to take the lead in completing infrastructure, model verification, and resource integration before an industry consensus was formed.

RWA.LTD CEO Fu, Rao Tony pointed out that consumer goods RWA is currently one of the directions most likely to land and scale quickly. Compared to financial RWA, consumer goods RWA has a stronger efficient foundation in terms of compliance structure, user understanding, scenario adaptation, and promotion paths. Its core value lies in using blockchain technology to release liquidity that the consumer industry has long lacked, allowing consumer rights—which were originally fragmented, dormant, non-tradable, or difficult to circulate across regions—to achieve more efficient allocation and redistribution. Through this mechanism, the relationship between brands, platforms, and consumers will be redefined.

Fu, Rao Tony further stated that as the digitalization of the Asian consumer market continues to improve, the combination of consumer RWA and the real consumer industry is expected to release trillion-dollar economic potential in the future. For Hong Kong, this is not just an emerging Web3 track, but could become an important hub connecting international consumer networks with digital asset innovation. Hong Kong possesses unique advantages as an international financial center, an international trade center, and a highland for institutional innovation. If it can take the lead in forming scale synergy in the field of consumer RWA, it has the opportunity to occupy a leading position in the global wave of consumer asset digitalization.

In the future, RWA.LTD will continue to advance its layout around consumer goods RWA infrastructure construction, ecological cooperation expansion, alliance network improvement, and AI consumer tool research and development, exploring new on-chain paradigms for the consumer industry with more brands, institutions, and partners. As the Mall, Exchange, Fund, and Bot sectors gradually mature, RWA.LTD hopes to drive consumer RWA from concept to large-scale application, providing a more efficient, intelligent, and participatory new value network for the Asian and global consumer markets.

About RWA.LTD

RWA.LTD is positioned as the Asian consumer goods asset trading center, committed to enhancing consumption efficiency with AI, reconstructing consumer value distribution with Web3, and establishing cross-city and cross-country consumer alliance networks via tokens. The company focuses on the consumer goods RWA track, continuously promoting the digitalization of consumer rights, the circulation of consumer assets, and the synergy of the consumer ecosystem to explore the future consumption model of “Smarter Consumer”.

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Fox ESS Ranks No. 1 Globally in Residential Energy Storage

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WENZHOU, China, April 23, 2026 /CNW/ — Fox ESS, a global leader in renewable energy solutions, has been ranked No. 1 among residential energy storage providers worldwide for 2025, based on MWh shipments in S&P Global Energy’s Residential Energy Storage Market Tracker.

The report also places Fox ESS at No. 1 in Germany and the UK, highlighting the company’s momentum in key markets and expanding distribution footprint.

Compared with 2024, Fox ESS’s global market share rose 50% in 2025, reinforcing its position in a rapidly growing residential storage sector. The company has continued to scale internationally, with global headcount doubling from the end of 2024. As of April 2026, Fox ESS employs more than 5,000 people worldwide, and has added local support through new offices, including in Sydney, Australia.

“We’re thrilled for this remarkable achievement. It reflects our commitment to innovation and product quality, and to making clean, reliable energy practical for households around the world,” said Michael Zhu, CEO of Fox ESS. “We will continue pushing the boundaries to deliver solutions that help homes and businesses move toward energy independence.”

Notably, Fox ESS has launched the Champion’s Choice campaign globally, combining the endorsement of sports champions with recognition from prestigious organizations. With the first stop in Australia, the company signed Ian Thorpe, a five-time Olympic champion last December. The campaign underscores Fox ESS’s ambition to deliver better value for customers and partners.

Fox ESS is committed to building long-term trust with customers and partners. The company delivers reliable, high-quality energy storage systems engineered for consistent performance, supported by rigorous quality-control processes designed to help ensure every product meets the highest standards.

Fox ESS develops solutions that serve both installers and end users. With ongoing investment in R&D, the company stays ahead of evolving market needs, helping installers work more efficiently while enabling homeowners to move toward energy transition and reduce electricity costs.

With a team of more than 400 experts in R&D, Fox ESS continues to refine its product design for easier transportation, installation, and everyday use. The AI-powered FoxCloud app also makes energy management more intuitive, enabling users to monitor and control home energy consumption, manage smart devices, and track detailed generation and usage data in a single streamlined platform, delivering greater peace of mind.

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