Top 20 Global MBA Rankings 2026
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This report forms part of the EduTimes MBA Ranking Program Ranking series, which evaluates MBA programs across global, regional, executive, online and hybrid, one-year, two-year, part-time, and dual-degree formats. The series assesses business schools based on institutional reputation, career outcomes, international reach, academic strength, employer access, alumni network quality, program structure, and long-term leadership value.
Global MBA programs remain one of the most visible segments of graduate management education. These programs serve candidates seeking career acceleration, international mobility, leadership development, access to elite employers, entrepreneurship opportunities, investment networks, and long-term institutional signaling.
Unlike pathway-specific rankings such as investment banking, consulting, technology, or entrepreneurship placement rankings, global MBA rankings require a broader institutional lens. A leading global MBA program must demonstrate strength across multiple dimensions: career outcomes, salary progression, employer access, academic reputation, alumni influence, student selectivity, geographic reach, international diversity, leadership training, entrepreneurship infrastructure, and long-term brand durability.
The global MBA market remains highly competitive in 2026. The Financial Times ranked MIT Sloan first in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking, while QS ranked Wharton first globally, followed by Harvard, MIT Sloan, and Stanford. U.S.-focused rankings also continue to place Stanford at or near the top, with U.S. News naming Stanford first in its 2026 Best Business Schools ranking and Bloomberg Businessweek placing Stanford first in its 2025–2026 U.S. MBA ranking.
This ranking identifies MBA programs whose global platforms demonstrate sustained excellence across career outcomes, institutional reputation, academic strength, leadership formation, employer access, and alumni network value. Rather than reproducing any single external ranking, the objective is to recognize programs whose MBA brands remain structurally important within the global business education market.
Market Overview
The global MBA market is dominated by a relatively small group of institutions with durable international recognition. U.S. schools remain especially powerful at the top end, led by Stanford GSB, Harvard Business School, Wharton, MIT Sloan, Chicago Booth, Kellogg, Columbia Business School, Berkeley Haas, Yale SOM, Dartmouth Tuck, Duke Fuqua, and NYU Stern. European schools such as INSEAD, London Business School, HEC Paris, IESE, IMD, Cambridge Judge, and Oxford Saïd remain essential global competitors, while Asian institutions such as NUS Business School and CEIBS continue to strengthen their regional and international visibility.
The market has become more complex because different rankings emphasize different forms of value. The Financial Times 2026 Global MBA Ranking evaluates the top 100 full-time MBA programs using 21 criteria, including alumni salary, career progress, value for money, diversity, research, and ESG-related factors. Alumni survey data accounts for the largest share of the FT methodology. QS, by contrast, highlights employer reputation, thought leadership, return on investment, entrepreneurship and alumni outcomes, and diversity indicators, with Wharton ranked first in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking.
This methodological variation matters. Stanford, Harvard, Wharton, and MIT Sloan tend to perform exceptionally well across broad prestige, employer access, compensation, and alumni network measures. INSEAD and London Business School are especially strong in international mobility and global consulting placement. HEC Paris, IESE, IMD, Cambridge Judge, and Oxford Saïd provide strong European and international platforms. Chicago Booth, Kellogg, Columbia, Berkeley Haas, Yale, Tuck, Duke, and NYU Stern each maintain clear strengths in specific career ecosystems.
The MBA market is also adapting to new pressures. Applicants increasingly evaluate programs based on return on investment, job-market resilience, international work authorization, AI-era career preparation, entrepreneurship access, and flexibility. Traditional prestige remains important, but candidates are also asking whether a program provides a credible pathway into consulting, finance, technology, entrepreneurship, corporate strategy, or cross-border leadership.
Industry Trend — 2026
The global MBA market in 2026 is shaped by five major trends: AI-driven career transformation, return-on-investment scrutiny, employer selectivity, regional diversification, and renewed importance of alumni networks.
First, AI has become central to MBA value. Programs connected to technology ecosystems, engineering schools, data science, AI commercialization, and digital transformation are especially well positioned. MIT Sloan’s rise to first place in the FT 2026 Global MBA Ranking reflects the growing relevance of technology-driven management education.
Second, return on investment has become a sharper concern. MBA tuition, living costs, opportunity costs, and uncertain hiring cycles have pushed applicants to examine salary outcomes, career mobility, scholarship support, and employment resilience more carefully. The FT methodology’s emphasis on alumni salary, career progress, and value for money reflects this market pressure.
Third, employer hiring remains selective. Consulting, finance, technology, and corporate leadership employers continue to recruit MBA talent, but many firms are more disciplined about headcount, timing, and role definition. Programs with strong career offices, alumni support, and diversified employer access have a structural advantage.
Fourth, global MBA demand is no longer only U.S.-centric. European and Asian programs remain important for candidates seeking shorter formats, international cohorts, lower opportunity cost, regional career access, or global mobility. QS reported that HEC Paris was the top European school in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking, while NUS ranked as the top Asian business school.
Fifth, alumni networks have become even more important. In uncertain markets, alumni can provide job access, mentorship, investment introductions, founder support, international mobility, and long-term career resilience. Programs with active, high-trust alumni networks are especially valuable.
Methodology — Core Eligibility Criteria
To ensure structural consistency within the category, MBA programs considered for this ranking were evaluated based on the following eligibility conditions:
- Operates as a globally recognized full-time MBA program or MBA-equivalent flagship management program
- Demonstrates meaningful relevance in career placement, salary progression, employer reputation, leadership development, entrepreneurship, consulting, finance, technology, corporate strategy, or international management
- Publishes or is associated with credible employment reports, alumni outcomes, employer access, ranking visibility, or institutional performance data
- Maintains institutional infrastructure supporting MBA students, including career services, alumni networks, academic departments, leadership development, entrepreneurship centers, international partnerships, student clubs, or employer relationships
- Represents a specific MBA program or business school, rather than a university-wide department, undergraduate business program, non-degree executive program, or specialized master’s program
Programs with limited full-time MBA visibility, insufficient global recognition, narrow regional-only reach, or weak evidence of graduate management outcomes were generally excluded.
Methodology — Ranking Factors
Programs included in the ranking were evaluated using a combination of quantitative, qualitative, and structural considerations. Key factors considered include:
- Global institutional reputation and long-term MBA brand strength
- Career outcomes, salary progression, employer access, and placement resilience
- Alumni network depth, senior leadership representation, and international reach
- Academic strength, faculty reputation, research visibility, and curricular breadth
- Student selectivity, cohort quality, leadership development, and peer network value
- Strength across major MBA career pathways, including consulting, finance, technology, entrepreneurship, and corporate strategy
- International diversity, global mobility, cross-border career access, and regional influence
- Long-term institutional stability, program quality, and relevance to AI-era management education
The objective of the ranking is to identify MBA programs whose platforms maintain sustained relevance in the global graduate management education market.
The MBA Ranking Top 20 Global MBA Rankings 2026 evaluates MBA programs based on institutional prestige, career outcomes, employer access, alumni network strength, academic credibility, leadership formation, international reach, and long-term global resilience.
The ranking universe consisted of approximately 150–200 globally visible MBA programs, from which 20 programs were selected for inclusion.
Tier classifications reflect relative institutional positioning within the global MBA market and do not represent admissions advice, employment guarantees, investment recommendations, procurement recommendations, or endorsement of any specific MBA program.
Tier I — Leading Global MBA Programs
Stanford Graduate School of Business
- Location: Stanford, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Entrepreneurship, technology leadership, venture capital, general management, global leadership
Stanford Graduate School of Business remains one of the strongest MBA programs in the world. Its combination of selectivity, Silicon Valley access, entrepreneurship ecosystem, alumni influence, and leadership brand gives it extraordinary global positioning.
Stanford’s strength lies in the intersection of elite leadership development and innovation-market access. The program is especially powerful for candidates pursuing entrepreneurship, venture capital, product leadership, technology strategy, founder pathways, and long-term executive leadership. Its location near Silicon Valley provides access to founders, investors, product leaders, AI companies, venture-backed startups, and technology employers that few schools can match.
The school continues to perform strongly across major ranking systems. U.S. News ranked Stanford first in its 2026 Best Business Schools ranking, while Bloomberg Businessweek placed Stanford first in its 2025–2026 U.S. MBA ranking. QS ranked Stanford fourth globally in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking.
Stanford’s global prestige, entrepreneurship ecosystem, technology access, alumni influence, and long-term leadership value support its position as a Tier I global MBA program.
Harvard Business School
- Location: Boston, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: General management, leadership, entrepreneurship, private equity, global executive network
Harvard Business School remains one of the most powerful MBA brands globally. Its case-method pedagogy, alumni scale, leadership orientation, global recognition, and influence across business, investing, entrepreneurship, government, and nonprofit leadership make it central to the global MBA market.
HBS is especially strong for candidates seeking broad leadership formation rather than a narrow functional pathway. Its graduates move into consulting, finance, entrepreneurship, technology, corporate leadership, family business, private equity, and public-sector leadership. The school’s alumni network gives graduates long-term access to founders, CEOs, investors, board members, and institutional leaders across regions.
Harvard also remains highly ranked across global MBA rankings. QS ranked Harvard second in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking, while U.S. News placed Harvard in a tie for fourth among U.S. business schools in 2026.
Harvard’s brand durability, alumni network, leadership pedagogy, entrepreneurship ecosystem, and global executive reach support its Tier I placement.
The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
- Location: Philadelphia, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Finance, private equity, consulting, analytics, corporate leadership, global business
The Wharton School remains one of the most important MBA programs globally, with exceptional strength in finance, analytics, consulting, private equity, entrepreneurship, corporate strategy, and leadership development. Its broad curriculum and large alumni network make it one of the most versatile MBA platforms.
Wharton’s strength lies in combining analytical rigor with global employer access. The program is especially powerful for candidates targeting investment banking, private equity, investment management, corporate development, fintech, consulting, and senior corporate leadership. Its alumni network is deep across Wall Street, private capital, technology, consulting, and multinational corporations.
QS ranked Wharton first in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking, ahead of Harvard, MIT Sloan, and Stanford. U.S. News ranked Wharton second in its 2026 Best Business Schools ranking.
Wharton’s global reputation, finance strength, employer access, alumni scale, and broad pathway credibility support its Tier I position.
MIT Sloan School of Management
- Location: Cambridge, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Technology management, AI leadership, analytics, entrepreneurship, innovation, operations
MIT Sloan is one of the most important MBA programs in the world for the AI and technology-driven management era. Its connection to MIT’s broader ecosystem in engineering, computer science, robotics, climate, healthcare innovation, entrepreneurship, and analytics gives it a distinctive position among global MBA programs.
Sloan’s strength lies in the intersection of management and technology. The program is especially relevant for candidates targeting AI commercialization, product leadership, technology strategy, operations, entrepreneurship, venture-backed startups, climate technology, analytics, and enterprise transformation.
The Financial Times ranked MIT Sloan first in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking, marking the first time Sloan reached the top position in that ranking. QS ranked MIT Sloan third globally in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking.
MIT Sloan’s technology ecosystem, analytical culture, employer credibility, innovation infrastructure, and AI-era relevance support its Tier I placement.
INSEAD
- Location: Fontainebleau, France; Singapore; Abu Dhabi
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: International management, consulting, global mobility, leadership, cross-border business
INSEAD is one of the strongest global MBA programs outside the United States and one of the clearest international management platforms in the MBA market. Its one-year format, multi-campus structure, highly international cohort, and consulting placement strength give it a distinctive global position.
INSEAD is especially valuable for candidates seeking international mobility, consulting access, cross-border leadership, emerging-market exposure, European and Asian career options, and a fast-return MBA format. Its alumni network spans Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Latin America, and North America, making it one of the most globally distributed MBA communities.
QS ranked INSEAD eighth globally in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking, and the school remains one of the most visible non-U.S. MBA programs in global business education.
INSEAD’s international reach, consulting strength, alumni geography, and one-year global MBA model support its Tier I inclusion.
Tier II — Established Global MBA Programs
(Alphabetical order)
Columbia Business School
- Location: New York, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Finance, investment banking, private equity, consulting, entrepreneurship, New York employer access
Columbia Business School is one of the most important MBA programs globally because of its New York location, finance reputation, employer access, and alumni network. The school benefits from proximity to Wall Street, private equity firms, hedge funds, media companies, technology firms, luxury brands, healthcare organizations, and multinational corporations.
Columbia’s value lies in market access. Students can interact with employers, alumni, investors, and executives throughout the academic year, which is especially valuable in finance, consulting, entrepreneurship, fintech, media, and corporate strategy. Its location creates a structural advantage that few schools outside New York can replicate.
Although Columbia does not appear in every ranking dataset in the same way each year, its long-term brand remains exceptionally strong. It is particularly important for candidates targeting finance, investing, corporate development, entrepreneurship, and New York-based leadership roles.
Dartmouth College — Tuck School of Business
- Location: Hanover, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: General management, consulting, leadership, alumni network, close-knit MBA community
Dartmouth Tuck is one of the strongest smaller MBA programs globally. Its core advantage is not class scale, but community intensity, alumni loyalty, career support, and general management formation. For many candidates, Tuck offers an elite MBA experience with a more intimate institutional culture.
Tuck is especially strong in consulting, general management, leadership development, corporate strategy, and relationship-driven career paths. Its alumni network is known for responsiveness, which matters in uncertain markets where job access and mentorship often depend on trust.
The school’s position in global MBA competition is distinctive: it does not rely on urban location or massive class size, but on high-touch community, employer credibility, and alumni engagement. That model supports strong long-term career resilience.
HEC Paris
- Location: Jouy-en-Josas, France
- Program: MBA
- Core strengths: European leadership, luxury and consumer sectors, consulting, international management, corporate strategy
HEC Paris is one of Europe’s strongest MBA programs and a major global business school brand. It is especially relevant for candidates seeking European leadership roles, consulting, luxury, consumer goods, finance, entrepreneurship, and international management.
QS ranked HEC Paris fifth globally and identified it as the top European school in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking. This positioning reflects the school’s strong global visibility, European prestige, and employer credibility.
HEC’s value lies in combining French and European institutional strength with international MBA appeal. It is particularly powerful for candidates targeting Paris, continental Europe, luxury, consulting, finance, corporate strategy, and global consumer sectors.
IESE Business School
- Location: Barcelona, Spain
- Program: MBA
- Core strengths: General management, case-method education, international leadership, family business, consulting
IESE Business School is a leading European MBA program with strong global recognition. Its case-method pedagogy, international student body, leadership orientation, and values-driven management culture make it especially relevant for candidates pursuing general management, consulting, entrepreneurship, family business, and international corporate leadership.
IESE’s strength lies in broad managerial formation. The program emphasizes decision-making, leadership, ethics, international business, and general management rather than only narrow career specialization. This gives it strong relevance for candidates seeking long-term executive development.
The school is particularly attractive to students targeting Europe, Latin America, family-business leadership, consulting, entrepreneurship, and multinational corporate roles. IESE’s global alumni network and international positioning support its Tier II placement.
Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University
- Location: Evanston / Chicago, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Consulting, marketing, leadership, corporate strategy, general management
Kellogg is one of the strongest MBA programs globally for consulting, marketing, leadership, corporate strategy, and general management. Its collaborative culture and employer relationships make it especially powerful for candidates targeting client-facing, team-based, and growth-oriented careers.
QS ranked Kellogg ninth globally in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking, while U.S. News placed Kellogg in a tie for fourth among U.S. business schools in 2026. This reflects Kellogg’s continued strength across both global and U.S. ranking systems.
Kellogg’s distinctive strength lies in leadership through collaboration. It is particularly relevant for candidates seeking consulting, consumer strategy, healthcare, technology, product marketing, growth, corporate leadership, and general management pathways.
London Business School
- Location: London, United Kingdom
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: International finance, consulting, global management, entrepreneurship, European and Middle East access
London Business School is one of the strongest non-U.S. MBA programs globally. Its London location gives students access to financial institutions, consulting firms, technology companies, private equity firms, venture capital investors, multinational corporations, and international employers.
QS ranked London Business School sixth globally in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking. The school remains one of the most important MBA platforms for candidates seeking careers in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and global finance.
LBS’s strength lies in global mobility. Its highly international cohort, alumni network, and employer base make it especially relevant for candidates who want cross-border careers in finance, consulting, technology, entrepreneurship, and corporate leadership.
University of California Berkeley — Haas School of Business
- Location: Berkeley, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Technology leadership, entrepreneurship, sustainability, innovation, social impact
Berkeley Haas is one of the strongest MBA programs for technology, entrepreneurship, sustainability, climate, and innovation-oriented careers. Its Bay Area location and connection to UC Berkeley’s broader research and engineering ecosystem give it strong relevance in the AI and startup era.
Haas is particularly powerful for candidates targeting product management, technology leadership, venture capital, climate technology, fintech, social impact, and entrepreneurship. Its culture emphasizes innovation, values-driven leadership, and proximity to Silicon Valley and San Francisco startup ecosystems.
Bloomberg Businessweek ranked Berkeley Haas third among U.S. MBA programs in its 2025–2026 ranking, behind Stanford and Wharton. Haas’s technology placement strength and Bay Area access reinforce its global relevance.
University of Chicago Booth School of Business
- Location: Chicago, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Finance, analytics, economics, consulting, entrepreneurship, flexible curriculum
Chicago Booth is one of the world’s strongest MBA programs in finance, analytics, economics, consulting, entrepreneurship, and strategic decision-making. Its flexible curriculum and analytical culture give students significant control over their academic and career development.
U.S. News ranked Chicago Booth third in its 2026 Best Business Schools ranking, highlighting its continued strength among elite U.S. MBA programs. Booth also remains highly relevant globally because of its reputation for rigorous thinking and finance-oriented leadership.
The school is especially strong for candidates targeting investment banking, private equity, investment management, consulting, corporate strategy, entrepreneurship, fintech, and analytics-driven leadership roles. Booth’s analytical brand and alumni network support its Tier II position.
University of Cambridge — Judge Business School
- Location: Cambridge, United Kingdom
- Program: MBA
- Core strengths: One-year MBA, entrepreneurship, technology commercialization, consulting, European leadership
Cambridge Judge Business School is one of the leading global MBA programs in the United Kingdom and Europe. Its one-year MBA format, connection to the University of Cambridge, and access to the Cambridge technology and research ecosystem give it a distinctive position.
QS ranked Cambridge Judge seventh globally in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking. This reflects the school’s strong international visibility and institutional brand.
Cambridge Judge is especially relevant for candidates interested in entrepreneurship, technology commercialization, consulting, sustainability, healthcare innovation, and European leadership. Its broader university context gives MBA students access to research, technical talent, and interdisciplinary networks.
Yale School of Management
- Location: New Haven, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Integrated management, public-private leadership, consulting, finance, healthcare, social impact
Yale School of Management has become one of the most important MBA programs in the global market, supported by the broader Yale University brand, an integrated curriculum, strong student quality, and growing employer access.
Yale SOM is especially relevant for candidates interested in leadership across business, government, nonprofit, healthcare, sustainability, finance, consulting, and social impact. Its mission-oriented identity gives it distinctive appeal for candidates seeking cross-sector leadership rather than only traditional corporate tracks.
The program’s strength lies in its ability to connect business education with public-purpose leadership, institutional governance, global affairs, and complex stakeholder environments. Yale’s rising MBA brand and broad institutional platform support its Tier II placement.
Tier III — Globally Relevant MBA Programs
(Alphabetical order)
Duke University — Fuqua School of Business
- Location: Durham, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Team leadership, healthcare, consulting, general management, technology strategy
Duke Fuqua is a globally relevant MBA program with strong placement in consulting, healthcare, technology, finance, and general management. Its collaborative culture and leadership identity make it especially attractive to candidates who value team-based management and cross-functional leadership.
Fuqua is particularly strong in healthcare and life sciences, supported by Duke University’s broader medical and research ecosystem. It is also relevant for candidates targeting consulting, corporate strategy, technology leadership, and leadership development programs.
The program’s brand may be less globally dominant than the top Tier I schools, but its employer relationships, alumni network, and sector strengths make it a strong global MBA platform.
IMD Business School
- Location: Lausanne, Switzerland
- Program: MBA
- Core strengths: Executive leadership, general management, international business, leadership development
IMD is one of Europe’s most distinctive MBA programs, known for leadership development, executive education, and general management. Its small class size and intense leadership-oriented model differentiate it from larger MBA programs.
IMD is especially relevant for experienced candidates seeking personal leadership development, international management exposure, and direct interaction with executives and global companies. Its Swiss location and strong executive education identity reinforce its premium institutional positioning.
The program is less large-scale than many U.S. MBA programs, but its leadership reputation and international business focus support its Tier III placement.
National University of Singapore Business School
- Location: Singapore
- Program: MBA
- Core strengths: Asian business, international management, finance, technology, regional leadership
NUS Business School is one of Asia’s strongest MBA platforms. Singapore’s role as a financial, technology, logistics, and regional headquarters hub gives NUS strong relevance for candidates targeting Asia-Pacific leadership roles.
QS identified NUS as the top Asian business school in its 2026 Global MBA Ranking, where it ranked 23rd globally. This reflects NUS’s importance as a regional and increasingly global MBA platform.
The school is especially relevant for candidates seeking careers in Southeast Asia, finance, technology, consulting, supply-chain leadership, public-private strategy, and regional corporate management. Its Singapore location gives it a strong structural advantage in Asia.
New York University — Stern School of Business
- Location: New York, United States
- Program: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Finance, fintech, media, luxury, technology, urban business ecosystems
NYU Stern is a globally relevant MBA program with particular strength in finance, fintech, media, luxury, entertainment, technology, and New York-based corporate careers. Its location gives students access to one of the world’s most important business ecosystems.
Stern is especially strong for investment banking, financial services, fintech, media strategy, product roles, corporate strategy, and entrepreneurship. Its proximity to employers allows students to build networks throughout the academic year.
While Stern may not always rank in the same global tier as the M7 or top European programs, its sector-specific strengths and New York location make it one of the most commercially relevant MBA programs in the world.
University of Oxford — Saïd Business School
- Location: Oxford, United Kingdom
- Program: MBA
- Core strengths: One-year MBA, social impact, entrepreneurship, finance, global leadership
Oxford Saïd Business School is a globally relevant MBA program supported by the University of Oxford’s historic institutional brand. Its one-year format and international cohort make it attractive to candidates seeking a globally recognized degree with lower opportunity cost than a two-year MBA.
Oxford Saïd is especially relevant for candidates interested in entrepreneurship, social impact, finance, public-private leadership, sustainability, and global institutional careers. Its broader university environment provides access to interdisciplinary networks across policy, science, law, medicine, technology, and global affairs.
The program is younger and less deeply embedded in MBA employer networks than some U.S. peers, but the Oxford brand and international reach give it strong global relevance.
Remarks
Global MBA rankings require a broader lens than career-pathway rankings. Strong programs must demonstrate more than excellence in a single field; they must provide durable institutional prestige, career mobility, employer access, alumni network strength, academic credibility, leadership formation, international exposure, and long-term resilience.
The programs recognized in this ranking represent MBA platforms whose graduates maintain sustained relevance across consulting, finance, technology, entrepreneurship, corporate strategy, general management, and international leadership. Tier classification reflects relative institutional positioning within the global MBA market rather than a guarantee of admissions success, employment outcomes, salary levels, or career advancement.
Tier classification reflects relative global reputation, career outcomes, employer access, alumni network strength, academic credibility, international reach, pathway breadth, student selectivity, and long-term leadership value. The ranking does not constitute admissions advice, employment guarantee, investment recommendation, procurement recommendation, or endorsement of any specific MBA program.
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