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Business News

Are Chinese houses for speculation now? Property investors say no

by Reuters August 10, 2023
By Reuters

By Liangping Gao, Ella Cao and Marius Zaharia

BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) – Shanghai businesswoman Kate Ren might have hoped that after Chinese leaders removed the slogan “houses are for living, not for speculation” from the nation’s policymaking dogma last month, someone would bid for her properties.

She hasn’t received a single phone call.

“I no longer live in fantasy,” said Ren, who used to own six apartments and is trying to sell the last two of them. “The glorious days of immediate profits after a purchase are gone.”

China’s top leaders first introduced that phrase at their annual meeting on the economy in December 2016, marking the beginning of a series of tighter rules in the property market that eventually led to the bursting of the bubble in 2021.

Its removal from a key policy document last month was seen as a major signal that policymakers would unwind some of those curbs in an attempt to shore up the battered industry, which accounts for around a quarter of economic activity.

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While it is early days, the market so far remains unconvinced that the sector has turned a corner with real estate agents reporting subdued transactions even in China’s biggest cities.

That suggests the downturn is driven by more fundamental factors than any immediate regulatory concerns and may therefore have further to run.

“Demand for homes may not rebound as much as markets might expect on several reasons: the slow growth of household income; weak confidence about the future; the legacy of unfinished homes; a falling population; the price decline of homes in many cities,” said Ting Lu, China Chief Economist at Nomura.

Investors may get their first read on the market reaction when official property investment and price data for August is released next month.

Since July’s Communist Party leadership meeting, known as the politburo, the central city of Zhengzhou and eastern Hangzhou have launched some property market support measures, and more such announcements are expected in coming weeks.

Stock market reaction so far has been mixed.

Hong Kong’s index of mainland developers, composed mainly of private firms, is down some 30% this year and has been little changed since the politburo. China’s domestic benchmark, which includes state-backed firms, is up some 9% since the politburo but still down 13% this year.

Owners of multiple properties told Reuters they were either looking to sell, or that they were in no rush to re-enter a market that for them has been the main avenue for accumulating savings. It was not the curbs that were holding the market down, they said, but Chinese doubts about better days ahead.

“There’s a widespread lack of confidence in the future. The post-pandemic recovery has fallen short of expectations,” said Sophia Chen, an intellectual property attorney in Shanghai, who owns eight properties, mostly in Shanghai, but hasn’t bought real estate since 2018.

Chen is not selling either as she thinks the stock market is too volatile as an investment alternative.

While not bullish on real estate, she thinks of big-city properties as a “slightly bruised apple amidst a bunch of rotten ones.”

Businessman Zhuran Zhang, who owns five properties across China, was similarly unswayed by the slogan’s disappearance and is resigned to prices falling further.

“I didn’t sell because I had to consider my parents’ views,” said Zhang. But he added: “I won’t buy property anymore. Property is the worst investment.”

At the same time, some younger people looking for their first home feel let down by the fact that speculators may be welcomed again to prop up real estate – and with it, the broader economy – potentially preventing further price declines to affordable levels.

“I’m concerned about the change,” said a 26-year-old pharmaceuticals worker surnamed Song, who had considered buying a property in Beijing before realising he needed his parents’ support.

“My salary is in the mid-range for Beijing, but I still can’t afford to buy a house.”

(Reporting by Liangping Gao, Ella Cao, Shuyan Wang and the Beijing newsroom; Editing by Marius Zaharia and Sam Holmes)

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Business News

Analysis-Bulging warehouses mean lean times for longer for US, European companies

by Reuters August 10, 2023
By Reuters

By Siddharth Cavale and Josephine Mason

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) – Lean times faced by many U.S. and European companies may last longer than expected as they try to sell off their bulging inventories in an economic climate where demand is stalling.

Full-to-bursting warehouses means fewer orders for manufacturers, which translates into lower levels of business activity and, ultimately, weaker growth.

The high stock levels are the result of retailers, wholesalers and manufacturers stockpiling everything from beer to DIY tools, chemicals and clothes as COVID-19 lockdowns snarled supply chains and shut factories.

They stocked up again after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine pushed up the price of raw materials such as energy and wheat.

Now, global demand is falling as borrowing costs have risen, so companies have started running down stocks. But the process has been much slower than expected and may drag into next year.

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Maersk CEO Vincent Clerc said the company, one of the world’s biggest container shippers, was caught off-guard by how long it was taking businesses to cut inventory.

“We had expected customers to draw down inventories around the middle of the year, but so far we see no signs of that happening. It may happen at the beginning of next year,” he said at a recent media briefing.

Maersk controls about one-sixth of global container trade, transporting goods for a host of major retailers and consumer goods companies.

A review of corporate statements and briefings shows more than 30 U.S. and European companies, including Hugo Boss, Heineken and A.P. Moller-Maersk, 3M Co and Stanley Black & Decker complained that destocking hurt their second-quarter performance.

Retailers particularly have struggled with stocks of clothing and footwear as consumers splurge on holidays rather than goods as they did during pandemic lockdowns.

The downbeat outlook comes amid low expectations for second-quarter results as China’s post-pandemic recovery slows. Refinitiv I/B/E/S data shows U.S. and European companies are expected to report their worst quarterly results in years.

RECORD HOARDING

Companies which stockpiled last year are finding it harder to shed inventories when higher borrowing costs and inflation crimp consumer demand, corporate executives and analysts said.

In the euro zone, stocks of finished products hit records in August last year and destocking only started in May, based on latest euro-zone manufacturing data.

In the U.S., an analysis of U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics by CFRA Research showed business inventories soared by 20% in mid-2022, the biggest jump on record based on data that goes back to 1993.

Retailers led the trend – raising inventories by a quarter from a year earlier.

Some companies, including BASF, Levi Strauss and Holcim, have said the worst is behind them, based on recent comments from executives.

For London-listed Coats Group, which makes thread and yarn, things are improving, but the destocking has been deeper and lasted longer than usual.

CEO Rajiv Sharma was looking forward to a burst in orders once customers emptied their warehouses, but he said during an analyst call on Aug. 1 he couldn’t predict the timing and scale of that recovery until the fourth quarter.

Shops are being careful not to load up again, but Arun Sundaram, vice president of equity research at CFRA Research, said he is worried about demand heading into the U.S. holiday season.

“Excess savings that consumers have built since the pandemic began are draining, and we think all of these excess savings could be depleted by year-end or early next year.”

Parul Jain, finance and economics professor at Rutgers University, reckons the problem might have got worse in the United States, not better.

The U.S. inventory-to-sales ratio was 1.4 in May, up from 1.33 a year ago, which means retailers, manufacturers and wholesalers have more inventory than they can sell at a higher rate than a year ago, she said.

Guillermo Novo, chair and CEO of U.S. ingredients company Ashland, said hopes destocking would be over by end-June was overly optimistic.

“Until the inventory-control actions taken by our customers have subsided, it will remain difficult for us to gauge current near-term end-market demand,” he said in a statement on July 25.

Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank, doesn’t expect restocking to start until 2024.

“Until then, there are some lean times ahead.”

(Reporting by Siddharth Cavale and David Gaffen in New York, Josephine Mason, Mark John, Jonathan Cable and Helen Reid in London. Editing by Jane Merriman)

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US and World News

Analysis-In New Zealand, defence and security become election issues amid China’s Pacific push

by Reuters August 10, 2023
By Reuters

By Lucy Craymer

WELLINGTON (Reuters) – For the first time in decades, foreign and defence policy are in the electoral spotlight in New Zealand, as opinion surveys show public concern about the security environment and the major parties wrestle with how to respond to an assertive China.

The first part of the country’s defence review, released last week, said that New Zealand’s military capabilities had fallen behind and that its geographical isolation was no longer a security guarantee.

With a general election on Oct. 14, there is no clear path on how the country should respond – a quandary that experts say has voters closely considering external issues, uncommon in New Zealand politics since the 1980s.

A survey conducted alongside the defence review found 40% of respondents saw China’s rise as one of the greatest threats to New Zealand’s safety and security in the next 10 years.

“Foreign policy, defence, our relationship with the Pacific – all of that will be far more relevant and the public will be more conscious of it compared to other elections, where it’s been pretty much non-existent,” said Josie Pagani, a political commentator and host of the pre-election foreign policy debate.

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To be sure, political campaigns have stayed focused on domestic issues such as the rising cost of living, crime and the economy. Sixty-three percent of voters say inflation and the cost of living are a most important issues of the election, a poll by the Ipsos New Zealand Issues Monitor released in June said. By contrast, 1% of voters ranked defence and security as a top priority.

Until recently, the country thought it “was protected by its remoteness,” Defence Minister Andrew Little said in a speech launching the defence review.

But China’s growing presence in the Indo-Pacific and its decision to sign a security pact with the Solomon Islands have brought strategic challenges closer to home. The war in Ukraine has also illustrated the local impact of global geopolitics, as food and fuel prices rise in New Zealand.

A second survey released last week by the country’s national intelligence and security board found increasing levels of concern about defence, security and foreign policy.

Respondents said they saw about a 50% chance other countries would threaten the country’s interests in the Pacific or interfere in its affairs in the next 12 months and a 42% chance New Zealand would be in an armed conflict in the next 10 years.

“I think we were perhaps a little surprised on the upside that people actually wanted to engage on this,” said Chris Seed, secretary of Foreign Affairs and Trade, referring to foreign policy and defence issues.

Foreign policy doesn’t usually play in New Zealand elections, said Jason Young, an associate professor of international relations and politics at Victoria University. He said a notable exception was in the 1980s, when Labour’s decision to stop visits by nuclear-armed and nuclear-powered ships effectively ended the country’s military alliance with Washington – and helped it win the election.

Now New Zealand must decide how to approach defence spending, its relationship with the United States and China, and the AUKUS partnership, in which Australia, the United States and Britain are collaborating on nuclear-powered submarines. The country’s current defence budget is about 1% of gross domestic product.

The governing Labour party has suggested spending must increase but has not said by how much.

“New Zealand needs a full public debate on this (defence and security policy) and not an officialdom-driven realignment,” former prime minister and Labour leader Helen Clark posted on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, on Aug. 4. She did not respond to requests for comment.

New Zealand’s involvement in a second tier of AUKUS is also unclear. The defence review said it presented “an opportunity”, but Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta has said New Zealand does not want to compromise its anti-nuclear position.

The opposition National party, which polls indicate will win control of the government, hasn’t released its defence policy and said it needs more detail about AUKUS.

National’s foreign affairs spokesman, Gerry Brownlee, has highlighted the importance of ties with China – however contentious they may be.

“Tomorrow, they’ll be hundreds of thousands of New Zealanders who go to work, who have some dependence in their job on our trading relationship with China,” he told the audience at the pre-election Foreign Policy debate. “So that’s something that over time we have to deal with.”

(Reporting by Lucy Craymer. Editing by Gerry Doyle)

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US and World News

Factbox-Recent attacks on prominent figures in Latin America

by Reuters August 10, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) – Ecuador presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio, a vocal critic of corruption and organized crime, was killed on Wednesday evening during a campaign event in northern Quito.

Here are some other attacks on high-profile politicians from Latin America in recent years.

CRISTINA FERNANDEZ DE KIRCHNER, ARGENTINA

Argentina’s Vice President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner survived an apparent assassination attempt in September 2022 after a gunman threatened her at near point-blank range and the gun failed to discharge.

JAIR BOLSONARO, BRAZIL

During his first campaign trail in September 2018, far-right former Brazilian President Bolsonaro was stabbed. He was rushed to hospital and had emergency surgery on his liver.

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JOVENEL MOISE, HAITI

Haitian President Moise was shot dead in July 2021 and his wife, Martine Moise, was seriously wounded when heavily armed assassins stormed the couple’s home.

IVAN DUQUE, COLOMBIA

On a visit to an area near the Colombia-Venezuela border in June 2021, right-wing Colombian President Duque’s helicopter was struck by multiple bullets. Authorities blamed former FARC rebels.

FRANCIA MARQUEZ, COLOMBIA

Colombia’s now Vice President Marquez had a narrow escape in May 2019 before she ran for office, when attackers launched a grenade and shot at her and other environmental activists.

NICOLAS MADURO, VENEZUELA

Venezuelan President Maduro accused political foes of trying to kill him during an open-air speech in August 2018 by using explosive-laden drones in capital city Caracas.

(Compiled by Steven Grattan and Lincoln Feast)

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US and World News

In India’s brutal ethnic war, women are participants as well as victims

by Reuters August 10, 2023
By Reuters

By Krishn Kaushik and Sunil Kataria

MOIRANG/CHURACHANDPUR, India (Reuters) -In the sectarian violence that has ravaged India’s Manipur state, women have been victims of brutal attacks. Residents and security officials say they are also at the forefront of the conflict, picking up arms, blocking troops and according to police complaints, instigating sexual assaults.

India’s northeastern states have been historically prone to insurgencies and ethnic violence but the vicious conflict between majority Meiteis and minority tribal Kukis in Manipur hit world headlines last month when a video surfaced of two Kuki women being paraded naked through a jeering mob. In a police complaint reviewed by Reuters, one of the women said she was raped and her father and brother killed.

Kukis say a loosely formed group of Meitei women, known as Meira Paibis, or Women Torchbearers, is responsible for instigating some of the rapes of women of the minority community. The Meiteis deny the accusation but the incidents underline the bitterness between communities in the small state on the border with Myanmar.

“Women’s participation in it (the rapes) underscores the absolute breakdown of all social ties,” said Praveen Donthi, a senior analyst at the International Crisis Group who has written a report on the Manipur conflict.

“It has made the physical and emotional divide between the communities complete and reconciliation now looks unattainable.”

India’s Supreme Court announced this week that it will monitor investigations into cases of sexual violence in the state.

The federal parliament began a no-confidence debate on Tuesday against Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government for being unable to control the violence, although there is no threat to the administration.

Manipur police chief Rajiv Singh and other senior police officials did not respond to multiple requests for comment on the cases of sexual violence.

Since the fighting began in early May, at least 180 people, including 21 women, have been killed and tens of thousands made homeless, according to government data.

Security forces say women also block peacekeeping operations, taking advantage of laws that prevent male troops from any physical confrontation with women. They also occupy bunkers on the frontlines, rifles in hand.

In one case of sexual assault, a 19-year-old Kuki tribal woman told Reuters she was raped near the state capital Imphal on May 15 by three men after she was taken to a group of Meira Paibis and beaten in their presence.

“One of the women from the mob gave clear instructions to four men to kill me,” she said in a police complaint filed on July 21, which Reuters has reviewed. She escaped and said she had been too scared to file the report earlier.

Police did not answer questions about the case and there is no record of any arrests.

Moirangthen Thoibi Devi, a Meira Paibis member in Moirang town near Imphal, said suggestions that any Meitei woman could instigate or even support acts of sexual violence were completely “untrue”.

“Meira Paibis does not differentiate between Kuki or Meitei,” she said, speaking alongside a group of other Meitei women. “Kuki mothers are also in pain, Meitei mothers are also in pain.”

WORSE THAN ANARCHY

The women said they had heard of nine Meitei women being raped, but they had no evidence and were not directly aware of any incidents. Reuters was unable to locate any victim and police and Meitei civil society bodies did not share information of any known cases.

Ngainekim, the president of the Kuki Women Organisation for Human Rights, said she had sent a letter to the prime minister in July saying that “sexual violence and rape as a method or tactic of warfare is being widely perpetrated” by the Meiteis.

Ngainekim, who uses one name, said in the letter that she knew of 13 cases of Kuki women being raped or murdered, including two women who “the Meira Paibis dragged out… from their hostel and handed over to the Meitei menfolk”. They were “later gang-raped and killed in a car wash shed” in East Imphal, she said in the letter, which was reviewed by Reuters.

In a police complaint reviewed by Reuters, the mother of one of the victims blames unnamed Meitei youth but does not mention Meira Paibis.

“The reports of women urging their menfolk on to rape Kuki women…should terrify us,” wrote historian and author Mukul Kesavan in a newspaper column. “A state where women abet the public rape and murder of other women is slouching towards a nightmare worse than mere anarchy.”

TAKING ADVANTAGE

    Security officials accuse women on both sides, but largely Meiteis, of blocking troops from conducting operations, and regulating entry points to their villages. With few women soldiers, the army does not have the authority to act against women.

    The Meira Paibis “have weaponised it very well, it’s a major chink in our system,” said a senior officer from the Assam Rifles paramilitary organisation assigned to peacekeeping duties.

“There is a reason we block the army…because they have directly supported the Kukis,” said Thoibi Devi, the woman from Meira Paibis, standing with other women at a checkpoint where they stop all vehicles, including military ones.

Vak Vaiphei, a Kuki leader in the tribal-controlled Kangvai village, said when military personnel try to take over their bunkers, women surround them and push them out.

    Nearby, a Kuki woman, wearing a black T-shirt, camouflage trousers and holding a double-barrelled gun, said she felt safer taking up arms against the Meiteis.

“I will be scared if I sit at home,” Lamnu Haokip, 23, said. “But now I’m here, so I can shoot them.”

(Reporting by Krishn Kaushik in Manipur; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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Business News

Italian government’s raid on banks undermined by confusion

by Reuters August 10, 2023
By Reuters

By Angelo Amante and Valentina Za

ROME (Reuters) -A drive to shore up its political base and appeal to the less well off lay behind the Italian government’s decision to impose a windfall tax on banks but its clumsy handling could do more harm than good by shaking investor confidence.

A market rout prompted a hasty clarification on the one-off 40% bank levy, which the government later said would be capped at 0.1% of bank assets in line with European Union recommendations.

The Treasury expects to draw less than 3 billion euros ($3.3 billion) from the measure, sources have said, or roughly 3% of this year’s budget deficit target.

The surprise initial move, announced at a news conference late on Monday, has damaged investor confidence in Italy and shown lapses in the government’s communications strategy.

“We consider the tax debacle a credit negative for Italian banks as an illustration of rising political risks in Italy,” said Suvi Platerink Kosonen, senior sector strategist, financials, at ING.

The levy targets the rise in profits banks booked from sharply higher rates by hiking loan costs but not deposit rates. The proceeds will be used to ease the pressure on mortgage holders, as well as those on low incomes and small pensions.

Matteo Salvini – a deputy of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and one of Italy’s most vocal populists – announced the plan at the press conference where Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti was noticeably absent.

“Giorgetti represents a pro-market soul of the coalition, and Salvini is a populist. That (the news conference) was a clear demonstration of ambiguity,” said Giovanni Orsina, politics professor at Rome’s Luiss university.

WHO THE CAP FITS

Giorgetti’s department put out a statement almost 24 hours later highlighting the existence of a cap, helping to reassure investors in the short-term.

“The cap has made a huge difference,” said Stefano Gatti, a banking professor at Milan’s Bocconi University, calculating the hit to banks’ core capital had been reduced to a third of the initial estimate.

However, the move heightens investors’ risk perception of Italian lenders, whose cost of capital is already influenced by Rome’s high debt and vulnerable economy.

“Capitalism that weakens bank lending will never lead to prosperity,” said Cole Smead, an investor in leading Italian bank UniCredit.

Both Meloni’s Brothers of Italy and Salvini’s League parties have built part of their reputation on an anti-establishment platform which depicted banks as greedy institutions.

Meloni’s government had toyed with the idea of a bank windfall tax but appeared to have set it aside. Giorgetti, who is deputy leader of the League, had lately merely urged banks to narrow the gap between loan and deposit rates.

“We are taxing unfair behaviour on the part of the banks. We are only taxing the extra profits resulting from the gap between interest income and expenses,” Giovanbattista Fazzolari, a senior government undersecretary, told Reuters.

The new tax hits the increase in net interest income for 2022 or 2023 above certain thresholds.

ROBIN HOOD RAID

The administration turned its attention to banks after recently coming under fire from the opposition for curbing a poverty relief scheme.

“They hit the banks, which are the symbol of power, to show they are close to weaker households, as if they felt an overwhelming desire to present themselves as Robin Hood,” said Francesco Galietti, founder of political risk firm Policy Sonar.

While still high, the government’s approval rate is at its lowest since taking office in October with some 49% of Italians expressing a positive opinion on the administration at the end of July, based on a poll in Corriere della Sera newspaper.

While Spain and Hungary have also hit their banks with one-off taxes, it could have greater impact in Italy given how central lenders are to its economy.

“Another arbitrary government move to adversely impact banks,” said Jerry del Missier, a former Barclays executive and founder of Copper Street Capital.

“It’s doubly painful for Italian banks as they still trade at steep discounts to market despite their strong capitalization and improved profitability.”

($1 = 0.9132 euros)

(Reporting by Angelo Amante in Rome and Valentina Za in Milan; additional reporting by Giuseppe Fonte and Karin Strohecker in LondonEditing by Keith Weir and Mark Potter)

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Breaking NewsLottery Winners

Liquor Store Sells $50k Instant Lottery Ticket

by Jessica Woods August 10, 2023
By Jessica Woods

ESSEX, MD – Was it the change in routine that led to his stroke of luck, or was it simply the universe favoring him? The devoted player from Essex may not have a clear answer, but he’s undeniably thrilled that his decision to stop by his favorite Lottery retailer after work resulted in a remarkable $50,000 win!

This environmental services employee, working for a federal agency, had developed a habit of purchasing scratch-offs and coffee from Beer Pump Wine & Spirits in Middle River on his way to work each morning. “I buy four at a time every day,” he shared, casting a playful glance towards his wife. Sharing a knowing laugh, he mentioned that this particular routine was a secret he kept from her.

For reasons he couldn’t quite recall, he deviated from his norm and visited the Lottery retailer after finishing work one day. Purchasing four Cash Money scratch-off games, he took them home to play. His wife and daughter were just heading out for errands when he got back. Approximately five minutes later, the 52-year-old gentleman uncovered a $50,000 top prize on one of the scratch-offs, prompting him to take a seat on the hallway steps in disbelief.

He immediately called his wife, urging her to return home. “I need you to come back,” he implored. Perplexed about the unexpected change of plans, she inquired, “What is it?” Despite her questioning, he insisted she come back without revealing the reason. “I didn’t want you to get nervous driving,” he admitted, reflecting on the moment they sat together in the Lottery Winner’s Circle. Upon returning, she discovered him seated on the steps.

His words were simple: “You need to look at this.” His persistence was well-founded as they realized that the win they had been hoping for had finally come to fruition. In the midst of their joy, they embraced for nearly 20 minutes. With his prize, the husband intends to invest in the stock market and save the remainder.

While this victory marked his first significant prize, the committed player is resolute in his declaration that it won’t be his last. He expressed his fondness for the $5 Cash Money game due to its price point, and his attraction to it since its introduction in December was unwavering. The Cash Money game still boasts two more $50,000 top prizes, six $5,000 prizes, and other winnings ranging from $5 to $1,000.

The winning streak extended to the Lottery retailer as well. Beer Pump Wine & Spirits at 3 Compass Road in Middle River receives a $500 bonus from the Lottery for selling a top-prize winning scratch-off worth $50,000.

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Breaking News

Contractor Wins $50k Buying Lottery Ticket Birthday Gifts

by Jessica Woods August 10, 2023
By Jessica Woods

ANNE ARUNDEL CO., MD – In Anne Arundel County, a 26-year-old contractor found himself in an unexpectedly fortunate situation. Initially, his plan was simple: to purchase a few scratch-off tickets as a birthday present for his mother. However, he made a spontaneous decision at the last moment, opting to include a couple of games for himself. This impromptu choice led him to a game-changing discovery – one of the instant tickets he bought, a $50,000 Cash game, turned out to be a top-prize winner of $50,000.

Reflecting on the turn of events, the Severn resident shared, “I really had no plan to buy a ticket for myself. It was just a spur-of-the-moment kind of thing.” As he scratched the ticket outside of Dash In #70792, a wave of shock washed over him as he gazed upon the substantial prize. He admitted, “I seriously thought for a minute that I was having a heart attack.”

This $20 game, which made its debut in late December, stands out due to the 160 top prizes it offered. With this recent Anne Arundel County win, there are still 96 top prizes that remain unclaimed. The fortunate Dash In located at 7845 Quarterfield Road in Severn, where the ticket was sold, will receive a $500 bonus from the Lottery for selling the top-prize winning ticket.

The winner, who is on the lookout for a new house, expressed his plans for the prize money, stating, “This $50,000 will really help my down payment fund.”

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Business News

Marketmind: No respite from China woes

by Reuters August 10, 2023
By Reuters

A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Ankur Banerjee

Before investors get consumed by the U.S. inflation data, markets will likely focus on European banks in the wake of the Italian government announcing a windfall tax and then hastily easing its stance, unnerving fragile investor confidence.

Italy’s government announced late on Tuesday a windfall tax on the country’s lenders, sending banking stocks sharply lower but they rebounded on Wednesday after the government clarified that the 40% tax would not amount to more than 0.1% of their total assets.

Euro zone banks will aim to further step away from the near one-month low it touched on Tuesday. Futures indicate that European stocks are set for a much higher open.

Over in Asia, investors remained worried about China’s post- pandemic stuttering recovery after data on Wednesday showed it tipped into deflation. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.5% and was set to clock a second straight week in the red.

A fresh dose of geopolitical tensions between U.S. and China has so far had limited immediate market reaction but time will tell how far-reaching the executive order signed by President Joe Biden will be.

The order, which targets private equity, venture capital, joint ventures and greenfield investments, will prohibit some new U.S. investment in China in sensitive technologies like computer chips and require government notification in other tech sectors.

In corporate news, Walt Disney said it would hike the prices of its streaming services as it reported a better than anticipated third quarter profit.

Japan’s Sony reported a lacklustre first quarter, with the entertainment conglomerate posting dour performances in its movie and financial divisions.

The main event of the day, however, will be the U.S. inflation data.

U.S. CPI is forecast to show headline inflation picking up slightly in July to an annual 3.3%, while the core rate, which excludes the volatile food and energy segments, is forecast to rise by 0.2% in July, for an annual gain of 4.8%.

With markets more or less expecting the Federal Reserve to be done with its interest rate-hikes, the data will help chart out the next steps from the central bank.

Key developments that could influence markets on Thursday:

Economic events: Inflation data from Norway, Italy, Portugal and the United States

(Reporting by Ankur Banerjee; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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Philippines Q2 GDP growth slowest in nearly 12 years as rate hikes drag

by Reuters August 10, 2023
By Reuters

By Neil Jerome Morales and Enrico Dela Cruz

MANILA (Reuters) -The Philippine economy grew at its slowest pace in nearly 12 years in the second quarter as high inflation and interest rates hurt consumer demand, reducing pressure on the central bank to tighten monetary policy further.

Gross domestic product (GDP) rose 4.3% in the April-June quarter from the same period last year, the weakest growth since 2011, official data on Thursday showed, and much lower than the 6.0% expansion forecast in a Reuters poll.

A contraction in government spending after last year’s election-driven increase also dragged down GDP growth, which lost further momentum after the previous quarter’s 6.4% pace and the December quarter’s 7.1% growth rate.

On a quarter-on-quarter basis, the economic picture looked more dim after the GDP contracted 0.9% in the second quarter, the first decline in 12 quarters. That compared with the downwardly revised 1.0% expansion in the March quarter and 0.5% growth forecast of economists.

The country’s economic ministers also blamed high borrowing costs and commodity prices for the lacklustre growth, which they said outweighed the impact of tourism spending and investments.

Growth in the June quarter brought first half expansion to 5.3%, below the government’s 6.0%-7.0% target for the year. Even so, Economic Planning Secretary Arsenio Balisacan said the full-year target was still attainable.

“We firmly believe that the prospects of the Philippine economy remain strong and positive,” the economic ministers said in a statement read by Balisacan at a press conference.

ING economist Nicholas Mapa said the central bank, which will meet on Aug. 17 to review policy, “will need to consider a pause” to support growth.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has kept interest rates steady at 6.25% at its last two meetings after nine rate hikes to curb consumer price pressures.

The BSP’s combined 425 basis points of rate increases since May last year should bring inflation back to the 2%-4% target by the fourth quarter, Governor Eli Remolona told lawmakers on Thursday.

That should give authorities “the cause for a prudent pause” in its tightening cycle, he said.

(Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales and Enrico dela Cruz; Editing by Sam Holmes & Shri Navaratnam)

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Biden to host Australian PM for an official US visit

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) – Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will travel to the United States for an official visit in late October, the first since winning election last year, according to a statement from his office on Thursday.

The leaders will hold talks on topics including the AUKUS security deal, climate change and critical minerals during the four-day visit from Oct. 23-26.

“My visit is an important opportunity to discuss our ambitious climate and clean energy transition, and shared goal of a strong, secure and prosperous Indo-Pacific,” Albanese said in a statement.

The trip comes at a time when mutual concerns about China’s rise are pushing the long-standing security partners closer together, most notably with the AUKUS deal, which will see Australia buy several U.S. Virginia class submarines and contribute billions to expanding American shipyards.

Biden had originally planned to travel to Sydney in May for a meeting of Quad, an informal regional group made up of Australia, India, Japan and the U.S., but canceled due to debt ceiling negotiations in Washington.

The four leaders instead met in May on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Hiroshima.

The White House said in a statement issued on Wednesday that the visit underscored both nations’ commitment to an open, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific.

Albanese has also been invited to visit Beijing but has yet to set a date for a trip.

(Reporting by Shivani Tanna in Bengaluru and Lewis Jackson in Sydney; Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Michael Perry)

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China to require all apps to share business details in new oversight push

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Josh Ye

HONG KONG (Reuters) -China will require all mobile app providers in the country to file business details with the government, its information ministry said, marking Beijing’s latest effort to keep the industry on a tight leash.

The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) said late on Tuesday that apps without proper filings will be punished after the grace period that will end in March next year, a move that experts say would potentially restrict the number of apps and hit small developers hard.

You Yunting, a lawyer with Shanghai-based DeBund Law Offices,said the order is effectively requiring approvals from the ministry. The new rule is primarily aimed at combating online fraud but it will impact on all apps in China, he said.

Rich Bishop, co-founder of app publishing firm AppInChina, said the new rule is also likely to affect foreign-based developers which have been able to publish their apps easily through Apple’s App Store without showing any documentation to the Chinese government.

Bishop said that in order to comply with the new rules, app developers now must either have a company in China or work with a local publisher.

Apple did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

The iPhone maker pulled over a hundred artificial intelligence (AI) apps from its App Store last week to comply with regulations after China introduced a new licencing regime for generative AI apps for the country.

The ministry’s notice also said entities “engaged in internet information services through apps in such fields as news, publishing, education, film and television and religion should also submit relevant documents.”

The requirement could affect the availability of popular social media apps such as X, Facebook and Instagram. Use of such apps are not allowed in China, but they can be still downloaded from app stores, enabling Chinese to use them when traveling overseas.

China already requires mobile games to obtain licences before they launch in the country and it had purged tens of thousands of unlicenced games from various app stores in 2020.

Tencent’s WeChat, China’s most popular online social platform, said on Wednesday that mini apps, apps that can be opened within WeChat, must also follow the new rules.

The company said that new apps must complete the filing before launch starting from September, while exiting mini apps have until the end of March.

(Reporting by Josh Ye; Editing by Miyoung Kim and Kim Coghill)

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South Korea think-tank raises inflation forecast on higher energy prices

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

SEOUL (Reuters) – A South Korean government think-tank revised its annual inflation projection upwards on Thursday, citing the recent rise in energy prices, although it said the need for interest rate hikes has lessened.

The Korea Development Institute (KDI) said in its quarterly revision of economic forecasts this year’s inflation would be 3.5%, compared with the 3.4% it had projected in May. The forecast compares with the government and the central bank’s inflation estimates of 3.3% and 3.5%, respectively.

“While the economic sluggishness eased and the labour market continued a solid trend, a slowdown in inflation reduced the need for interest rate hikes,” the KDI said in a statement.

The think-tank often conducts research for the government but rarely gives specific policy suggestions. Market participants tend to read policy advice from the KDI as the views of the finance ministry.

The Bank of Korea, which is independent from the government, held interest rates steady for a fourth straight meeting last month, but said it would maintain a tight stance amid still high prices and kept the door open for further tightening.

On growth, KDI kept its forecast unchanged at 1.5% for this year, higher than the government and the central bank’s 1.4%. In the second half, stronger exports would likely offset weaker consumer spending, it said.

Risk factors to its growth forecast include sluggish growth in China, continued monetary tightening in major economies on higher inflation, and weaker domestic demand on smaller fiscal spending due to limited tax revenues, the KDI added.

(Reporting by Jihoon Lee; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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Biden unlikely to attend ASEAN summits in September on trip to Asia -sources

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

By David Brunnstrom and Stanley Widianto

WASHINGTON/JAKARTA (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden is unlikely to attend summits with Southeast Asian leaders in Jakarta next month, multiple sources told Reuters, an absence that would raise questions about U.S. commitment to a region vital in its efforts to push back against China’s expanding influence.

Biden is due to attend a Sept. 9-10 G20 summit in India and said on Tuesday he plans to visit an important emerging Southeast Asian partner Vietnam “shortly” to upgrade ties, but his presence at the Sept. 4-7 summits of the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is in significant doubt.

One source close to the matter said Biden would not go to Indonesia, and another cited a Washington-based ambassador from an ASEAN member as saying that Indonesia had been informed on Monday that Biden would not be going. Other sources cited White House officials as saying that Biden’s attendance was “unlikely.”

Asked if it was correct that Biden would not be going to Indonesia, a senior White House official told Reuters on Tuesday: “We’re still working on it … we’ll probably have more to say about it soon.”

White House spokespersons did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Sources said Biden’s schedule for Asia is not official until it has been announced and could change.

Several ASEAN diplomats said it would be a significant disappointment if Biden did not go to Jakarta, given the public emphasis his administration puts on the importance of ties with the region.

One senior diplomat referred to Indonesia having scheduled the ASEAN summits, which are normally held in November, for September, specifically to make is possible for Biden to attend and then go on to the G20.

Sources said Biden was expected to send Vice President Kamala Harris in his place. Harris, the first Asian American vice president, has conducted diplomacy in the region before.

DISAPPOINTMENT IN REGION

Biden already caused disappointment in the region when he canceled what would have been the first visit by a serving U.S. president to Papua New Guinea in May and a subsequent planned visit to Australia because he was working to close a deal with lawmakers to resolve the U.S. debt ceiling crisis.

In an address to an ASEAN-related event in Washington on Tuesday evening, Biden’s deputy national security adviser Jonathan Finer hailed the U.S.-ASEAN relationship and said that “ASEAN centrality” was at the heart of the administration’s strategy for the Indo-Pacific region.

Policy analysts said another no-show by Biden, who attended ASEAN meetings in Cambodia in November, would call that characterization into question.

“It will be viewed as another let down by the region,” said Murray Hiebert, a senior associate with the Southeast Asia program at Washington’s Center for Strategic and International Studies.

“Southeast Asia has been impressed that Washington under Biden has stepped up engagement with the region,” Hiebert said.

“For him to skip the summit when he will already be nearby attending a summit in India, and likely making an official visit to Vietnam, will prompt many in the region to wonder whether the U.S. is again slipping back to its episodic and half-hearted engagement with the region.”

Ted Osius, a former U.S. ambassador to Vietnam who heads the U.S.-ASEAN Business Council, said there would likely be some disappointment if Biden was unable to go to Jakarta, although he stressed the “dramatic” increase in U.S. government-to-government engagement with ASEAN under Biden, a Democrat.

ASEAN members were unhappy when Biden’s Republican predecessor Donald Trump skipped regional summits for three consecutive years, something policy experts saw as playing into China’s expansion of its influence in the region.

Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama attended every U.S.-ASEAN and East Asia summit from 2011, apart from 2013, when he canceled due to a government shutdown at home.

(Reporting by David Brunnstrom, Simon Lewis and Michael Martina in Washington and Stanley Widianto in Jakarta; Editing by Grant McCool)

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Hawaii cannot ban guns on beaches, US judge rules

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Nate Raymond

(Reuters) -A federal judge has blocked the state of Hawaii from enforcing a recently enacted ban on firearms on its prized beaches and in other areas including banks, bars and parks, citing last year’s landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling expanding gun rights.

U.S. District Judge Leslie Kobayashi in Honolulu on Tuesday concluded that the prohibitions likely infringed on the rights of permit-carrying gun owners to carry firearms in public under the U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment.

Those restrictions were enacted after the conservative-majority Supreme Court in June 2022 declared for the first time that the Second Amendment’s guarantee of a person’s right to “keep and bear arms” protects an individual’s right to carry a handgun in public for self-defense.

That decision, New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, announced a new test for assessing firearms laws, saying restrictions must be “consistent with this nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.”

The ruling prompted Hawaiian lawmakers to pass a bill that Democratic Governor Josh Green signed into law in June that sought to comply with the decision while deterring gun violence by barring firearms in “sensitive places.”

The measure was challenged by three Hawaii residents and the gun rights group Hawaii Firearms Coalition.

The state argued the law was consistent with historical gun regulations and served a state interest in protecting public safety.

But while Kobayashi acknowledged the important role beaches play in Hawaii’s economy, “the state does not provide any evidence that this nation has a historical tradition of regulating or prohibiting the carrying of firearms on beaches.”

Kobayashi, an appointee of Democratic then-President Barack Obama, said Hawaii’s ban on guns in bars and restaurants that serve alcohol likewise failed due to the “confounding” and “curious” way the Supreme Court defined what constitutes a “historical tradition” of gun regulation.

“We profoundly disagree with this decision and will request that the decision be put on hold pending further proceedings,” First Deputy Hawaii Attorney General Matt Dvonch said in a statement.

Alan Beck, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, hailed the judge’s temporary restraining order, saying Kobayashi “faithfully applied Supreme Court precedent and came to the correct result.”

(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; editing by Jonathan Oatis, Robert Birsel)

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‘I’ll Let It Be Known’: Trump Declines To Say If He Will Attend GOP Debate

by The Daily Caller August 9, 2023
By The Daily Caller

‘I’ll Let It Be Known’: Trump Declines To Say If He Will Attend GOP Debate

Harold Hutchison on August 9, 2023

Former President Donald Trump did not say if he would attend an Aug. 23 debate sponsored by the Republican National Committee during a Wednesday interview.

“You’re not going to that debate, are you?” Newsmax host Eric Bolling asked Trump. Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy both announced they would be at the debate, which will be held in Milwaukee, by signing a pledge to back the Republican nominee.

“I’ll let it be known next week, but look, I’m leading by 50 and 55 points over DeSanctimonious,” Trump said. “The nice part is I’m leading by a lot over Biden, nobody’s ever led by so much over somebody, we just have to make sure they don’t cheat on the elections.”

WATCH:

In addition to Trump, DeSantis and Ramaswamy, former Republican Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, former Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, Republican Gov. Doug Burgum of North Dakota, former Vice President Mike Pence and Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina have met the requirements to be on the stage for the first debate, according to The Associated Press.

Trump currently leads DeSantis in the Real Clear Politics average of polls taken from July 12 to Aug. 6, 53.9% to 15.9%, a margin of 38 points, with Ramaswamy in third place with 5.9%. Trump’s poll numbers have not declined despite multiple indictments.

Trump pleaded not guilty to all charges during his Thursday arraignment after special counsel Jack Smith secured a four-count indictment of Trump relating to his efforts to contest the results of the 2020 election. Smith previously secured a 37-count indictment against Trump in June based on an investigation into allegations surrounding classified documents.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg secured a grand jury indictment against Trump in March in a case centered around a $130,000 payout to [censored] star Stormy Daniels in 2016, during Trump’s successful run for the White House.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who launched a probe into Trump’s efforts to contest the 2020 election results in that state in 2021, announced in April that the probe could lead to the indictment of Trump.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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Nicaragua freezes bank accounts of top university led by Jesuits – source

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Ismael Lopez

(Reuters) – Nicaraguan authorities froze the bank accounts of the country’s top private university, a source from the institution told Reuters, marking the latest move against a Catholic-led institution in an ongoing crackdown by the government.

The Jesuit-run Central American University (UCA) is the alma mater of many youth leaders who protested the government of President Daniel Ortega in 2018, which were initially triggered by old-age pension cuts.

The protests turned violent, and rights groups blamed Ortega’s police and other government-affiliated security forces for killing more than 300 civilians.

“I can tell you that the accounts are frozen. We are trying to find out what is going on but we don’t want to cause alarm,” said a university official who requested anonymity to speak candidly.

Earlier on Wednesday, digital news outlet Divergentes reported that UCA officials sent an email to staff and students advising that they were not receiving any payments due to reasons beyond their control.

The government did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

In May, authorities also froze bank accounts belonging to Catholic parishes across the country as prosecutors launched what they called a money laundering investigation. Officials have also arrested and jailed priests including Bishop Rolando Alvarez, a major Ortega critic.

Catholic church leaders had acted as mediators in the aftermath of the 2018 protests.

Founded in 1960, UCA graduates include many from Nicaragua’s political and business class, including Ortega who began law studies there in 1962 before leaving to join the Sandinista rebel movement. Three of his sons later studied there.

The university had already been singled out for budget cuts and its leaders targeted, including UCA rector and Jesuit priest Jose Idiaquez who last year was barred from returning to Nicaragua after traveling to Mexico.

(Reporting by Ismael Lopez; Writing by Sarah Morland; Editing by David Alire Garcia and Michael Perry)

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Japan ex-PM Aso’s ‘fight for Taiwan’ remark in line with official view, lawmaker says

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Kantaro Komiya

TOKYO (Reuters) – Former Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso’s remark on Tuesday that his country must show “the resolve to fight” to defend Taiwan from attack was in line with Tokyo’s official stance, a lawmaker close to Aso told a TV show late on Wednesday.

Aso, vice president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), said in Taipei that Japan, the United States and others must show strong resolve to come to Taiwan’s defence if it were attacked, signalling deterrence against China.

Aso’s speech angered China, which claims Taiwan as its territory. A Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said on Wednesday that Beijing urges Japan to abide by the One China principle and refrain from supporting pro-independence Taiwan forces in any way.

Keisuke Suzuki, an LDP lawmaker who accompanied Aso’s Taiwan visit this week, told the BS Fuji talk show on Wednesday that Aso had discussed the issue with Japanese government officials, indicating that Aso’s view did not deviate from the official position.

“The comment was not lawmaker Taro Aso’s personal remark, but a result of arrangements with government insiders”, Suzuki said. “I think the Japanese government clearly regards this as the official line.”

Aso’s visit, which marked the most senior Japanese political official to visit Taiwan since 1972, when Japan normalised diplomatic relations with China, came as tensions have risen over democratically governed Taiwan amid China’s increasing military pressure on the island during the past three years.

The United States unveiled a Taiwan weapons aid package worth up to $345 million last month. Japan, a close U.S. ally, is in the midst of a historic boost to defence spending.

U.S. President Joe Biden has repeatedly said U.S. forces would defend Taiwan in the event of a Chinese invasion, which the White House said was not a shift in U.S. policy.

Asked about Aso’s speech, Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno, Tokyo’s top government spokesperson, said on Wednesday that Japan has consistently hoped for a peaceful settlement of issues regarding Taiwan thorough dialogue.

Asked whether Japan would deploy its military to Taiwan if there is a crisis, Matsuno declined to comment, saying the government would not answer a hypothetical question.

(Reporting by Kantaro Komiya. Editing by Gerry Doyle)

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Sony shares slide after earnings highlight concern about games, sensors

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Sam Nussey

TOKYO (Reuters) -Shares in Japan’s Sony fell 6% in Tokyo trade after first-quarter profit tumbled, with the entertainment conglomerate reporting lacklustre performances by its movie and financial divisions.

Operating profit slid 31% and comments by Sony executives over demand for its games and image sensors units also sparked concern.

The PlayStation 5 console launched in late 2020 but supply was badly affected by supply chain problems during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite an easing of those snarls, Sony said sales of were below expectations in the April-June quarter. It is targeting sales of 25 million units for the full year.

Sony sold 3.3 million PS5 units in quarter. By comparison, Nintendo’s Switch console, which is in its seventh year on the market, sold 3.9 million units in the same period as consumers rushed to play the latest “Zelda” title.

Sony said promotions that began are July are improving sales momentum for the PS5.

“Sony started discounting the PS5 in the West, which is never a good sign,” said Serkan Toto, founder of the Kantan Games consultancy.

“The company has a lot of work to do, first and foremost to make sure those blockbuster first-party games come out quicker.”

“Marvel’s Spider-Man 2” is due for release in October ahead of the key year-end shopping season. Its predecessor has sold more than 13 million units.

Sony, a leading maker of image sensors used in cameras, also revised down its expectations for a gradual recovery in the smartphone market, saying it now does not expect one until 2024 at the earliest due to weak demand in major markets.

The company trimmed cut its annual operating profit forecast for the unit by 10%, citing the impact of lower sales.

Adjustment to procurement by smartphone manufacturers is having a large impact in the second quarter, Sony said.

The current financial year “will be tough” for the sensors division, Jefferies analyst Atul Goyal wrote in a client note, adding that higher margins are expected in the following year.

(Reporting by Sam Nussey; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

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Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan board defeat shareholders’ Jeffrey Epstein lawsuit

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Jonathan Stempel

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A federal judge has dismissed a shareholder lawsuit accusing JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Jamie Dimon and his board of directors of ignoring red flags surrounding disgraced former client Jeffrey Epstein.

In a Wednesday evening decision, U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff said shareholders led by Miami and Pittsburgh pension funds failed to first ask the bank’s board directly to address their concerns, or show it would be futile to do so, before suing.

The Manhattan-based judge said he will explain his reasoning in due course. Rakoff did not address specific accusations about the largest U.S. bank’s relationship with Epstein.

Epstein died by suicide in a Manhattan jail in August 2019 while awaiting trial for sex trafficking.

Lawyers for the shareholders did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Shareholders had accused Dimon, seven other directors and Jes Staley, a former private banking and investment banking chief, of having “put their heads in the sand” as Epstein used his accounts to further abuses of young women and girls.

The so-called derivative lawsuit sought to have the defendants or their insurers pay damages to JPMorgan, for the benefit of shareholders.

Rakoff is also overseeing two Epstein-related lawsuits against JPMorgan by the U.S. Virgin Islands, where the financier owned two neighboring islands, and by Epstein victims.

The U.S. Virgin Islands is seeking at least $190 million in damages, while a $290 million settlement with victims awaits final court approval.

JPMorgan is suing Staley, who has expressed regret for his friendship with Epstein and denied knowing about his sex trafficking, to cover its losses in both lawsuits.

Staley was also Barclays’ chief executive from 2015 to 2021.

The case is City of Miami General Employees & Sanitation Employees Retirement Trust et al v Dimon et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 23-03903.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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Biden Admin Secretly Encouraged Overthrow Of Leader Who Wasn’t Pro-Ukraine Enough, Leaked Cable Reveals

by The Daily Caller August 9, 2023
By The Daily Caller

Biden Admin Secretly Encouraged Overthrow Of Leader Who Wasn’t Pro-Ukraine Enough, Leaked Cable Reveals

Arjun Singh on August 9, 2023

President Joe Biden’s administration’s diplomats encouraged Pakistani political leaders to remove former Prime Minister Imran Khan from office after he hesitated to criticize Russia for its war against Ukraine, according to a new report on Wednesday.

Imran Khan was removed from office in April 2022 after a controversial vote of no-confidence by the Pakistani National Assembly. On March 7, 2022, officials from the Department of State met with Pakistan’s then-Ambassador to the United States Asad Majeed Khan and encouraged Imran Khan’s removal from office after he visited Russia shortly after it began hostilities in Ukraine, according to a diplomatic cable that was published by The Intercept.

“I think if the no-confidence vote against the Prime Minister succeeds, all will be forgiven in Washington,” said Donald Lu, the Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs, according to the cable. “[T]he Russia visit is being looked at as a decision by the Prime Minister.”

Lu claimed that Imran Khan’s visit had damaged the Pakistan-U.S. bilateral relationship and that, absent Khan’s ouster, relations “will be tough going ahead,” the cable shows.

The US openly admitting to have interface in Pakistan politics directly. 1/2 pic.twitter.com/u0wjowytnT

— Survivor (@Wasim_wazir) August 9, 2023

“I think isolation of the Prime Minister will become very strong from Europe and the United States,” Lu told Asa Majheed Khan, according to the cable, and separately criticized Khan for visiting Russia “for bilateral economic reasons.”

The ambassador noted that “[Lu] could not have conveyed such a strong demarche without the express approval of the White House,” according to the cable.

The cable’s existence has been known since 2022, though had not been published in full until The Intercept’s report. On March 27, 2022, Imran Khan brandished a paper at a political rally and claimed that it proved a “plot” against him, according to Dawn.

He repeatedly blamed the United States for the no-confidence motion, according to The News, a Pakistani news organization.

Khan’s successor, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, acknowledged in May 2022 that the cable was authentic, but denied that Khan was removed at the behest of the United States, according to the Business Recorder.

The cable is a part of Pakistan’s long-running political and constitutional crisis since 2022, beginning with Khan’s attempt to dissolve parliament and call a general election mid-term, the New York Times reported. While on a protest march against his ousting in November 2022, he faced an assassination attempt and was shot in the leg, The Guardian reported.

Khan was also convicted of corruption charges on Aug. 5 for selling state property for personal profit while prime minister and banned from seeking public office for five years, according to Reuters. His initial arrest on those charges, on May 9, led to nationwide riots, Al Jazeera reported.

Amid Pakistan’s domestic instability, the U.S. has expressed concerns about the safety of its nuclear weapons, with President Joe Biden calling Pakistan “one of the most dangerous nations in the world,” The Guardian reported.

Pakistan is set to hold a general election within 90 days after its parliament was dissolved on Wednesday, Reuters reported.

The White House and the Pakistani Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

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‘What’s Your Favorite Color?’: Laura Ingraham Rails Against Biden’s Response To Business Allegations

by The Daily Caller August 9, 2023
By The Daily Caller

‘What’s Your Favorite Color?’: Laura Ingraham Rails Against Biden’s Response To Business Allegations

Harold Hutchison on August 9, 2023

Fox News host Laura Ingraham ripped President Joe Biden Wednesday over his response to a reporter’s question about allegations surrounding Hunter Biden’s business dealings.

Fox News White House correspondent Peter Doocy asked President Biden about his son’s dealings Wednesday, citing testimony from Devon Archer, a former business associate of President Biden’s son. Archer spoke to House Oversight Committee investigators July 31 prior to surrendering to serve a prison sentence, and told them that then-Vice President Biden spoke with his son, Hunter, multiple times about their business deals.

“There’s this testimony now where one of your son’s former business associates is claiming that you were on speaker phone a lot with them, talking business. Is that what …?,” Doocy asked Biden while the president was in New Mexico touting so-called “Bidenomics.”

WATCH:

“I never talked business with anybody, and I knew you’d have a lousy question,” President Biden responded.

The New York Post reported on the contents of a laptop abandoned by Hunter Biden at a Delaware computer repair shop on Oct. 14, 2020 that included emails related to business dealings by the Biden family. The Daily Caller News Foundation confirmed the authenticity of one of the emails in October 2020.

“What is a good question for Joe Biden? What’s your favorite color? What astrological sign are you?” Ingraham asked. “Now, anyone with a White House press badge who doesn’t demand answers on this topic should not show up to work at all tomorrow. Just send your resume to the DNC and get it over with.”

“Because the truth is they all know what we all know: That Hunter’s only knowledge about foreign transactions involved hookers and the only high returns he could promise were from cocaine,” Ingraham continued. “Only expertise back then and now is limited to one area: Selling access to his father and his father’s vast network of contacts.”

Ingraham played video of CNN and MSNBC dismissing the allegations around Hunter Biden’s business dealings. The House Oversight Committee released bank records Wednesday showing that Hunter Biden received $3.5 million in 2014 from Russian oligarch Yelena Baturina, who dined with the then-vice president at Café Milano, a Washington, D.C., Italian restaurant that year, according to Archer’s testimony.

“The question isn’t whether Joe Biden himself got direct payments from foreign business interests, even oligarchs,” Ingraham said. “He is stupid, but he is not that stupid, right? But he benefited because his son benefited. His only remaining son, and it sent a message to the world that American policy was for sale, and what policy in particular was for sale? Well, we may not ever know. But as long as Joe Biden is in power, a cloud of corruption hangs over this White House.”

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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US and World News

North Korea’s Kim dismisses top general, calls for war preparations

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Hyunsu Yim

SEOUL (Reuters) -North Korean leader Kim Jong Un replaced the military’s top general and called for more preparations for the possibility of war, a boost in weapons production, and expansion of military drills, state media KCNA reported on Thursday.

Kim made the comments at a meeting of the Central Military Commission which discussed plans for countermeasures to deter North Korea’s enemies, which it did not name, the report said.

The country’s top general, Chief of the General Staff Pak Su Il was “dismissed,” KCNA reported, without elaborating. He had served in his role for about seven months.

Pak was replaced by General Ri Yong Gil, who previously served as the country’s defence minister, as well as the top commander of its conventional troops.

Ri also previously served as the army chief of staff. When he was replaced in 2016 his sacking and subsequent absence from official events sparked reports in South Korea that he had been executed. He reappeared a few months later, when he was named to another senior post.

Kim also set a target for the expansion of weapons production capacity, the report said, without providing details. Last week he visited weapons factories where he called for more missile engines, artillery and other weapons to be built.

Photos released by KCNA showed Kim pointing at Seoul and areas surrounding the South Korean capital on a map.

The United States has accused North Korea of providing arms to Russia for its war in Ukraine, including artillery shells, rockets and missiles. Russia and North Korea have denied those claims.

Kim also called for the military to conduct drills with the country’s latest weapons and equipment to keep its forces ready for combat, the report said.

North Korea is set to stage a militia parade on Sept. 9, marking the 75th anniversary of the Day of the Foundation of the Republic. North Korea has a number of paramilitary groups it uses to bolster its military forces.

The U.S. and South Korea are scheduled to hold military drills between Aug. 21 and 24, which the North sees as a threat to its security.

(Reporting by Hyunsu Yim and Josh Smith in Seoul; Editing by Stephen Coates)

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Florida’s DeSantis replaces elected Democratic prosecutor

by Reuters August 9, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) -Florida Governor Ron DeSantis on Wednesday suspended a county prosecutor after accusing her of being soft on crime, making her the second elected Democratic law-enforcement official to be removed by the Republican presidential hopeful.

DeSantis issued an executive order suspending Monique Worrell, the lead prosecutor in Orange and Osceola counties, and replacing her with Orange County Judge Andrew Bain, who the governor appointed to the bench in 2020.

“Worrell’s practices and policies have too often allowed violent criminals to escape the full consequences of their criminal conduct,” DeSantis said in a statement.

Worrell, elected in 2020, said her dismissal was an “attack on democracy” and her legal team was exploring options.

“Everyone – Democrat, Republican, independent or otherwise – should be concerned that here, in the state of Florida, one person can remove duly elected officials because they are not politically aligned,” Worrell said during an appearance on MSNBC’s “The Reid Out”.

Fair and Just Prosecution, an organization of progressive prosecutors, criticized the move.

“This is a deeply disturbing abuse of power that overrules the will of voters and threatens the separation of powers,” the group’s executive director, Miriam Krinsky, said in a statement.

Worrell is not the first Florida prosecutor whom DeSantis has dismissed. Last August, he suspended the Democratic state’s attorney for Hillsborough County, Andrew Warren, who had pledged that he would not bring criminal cases against people seeking or providing abortions despite legal restrictions that Florida has placed on the procedure.

Warren’s lawyer accused DeSantis of targeting dissenting voices, but a federal judge upheld the suspension.

In public opinion polls, DeSantis is running a distant second behind former President Donald Trump in the race for the Republican nomination in the 2024 presidential election.

He replaced his campaign manager on Tuesday in an attempt to reboot his campaign.

DeSantis’ office sent a letter in April to Worrell’s office demanding that she hand over the criminal and judicial record of a suspect accused of killing three people, including a 9-year-old.

At the time, the governor criticized her office for failing to keep the suspect in jail for previous crimes. Worrell responded by saying she stood behind all decisions regarding the suspect’s juvenile and adult dispositions.

(Reporting by Brendan O’Brien in Chicago; additional reporting by Jasper Ward in Washington; Editing by Andy Sullivan and Stephen Coates)

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Dem Rep Tells Reporter She ‘Championed’ Infrastructure Bill Despite Voting Against It

by The Daily Caller August 9, 2023
By The Daily Caller

Dem Rep Tells Reporter She ‘Championed’ Infrastructure Bill Despite Voting Against It

Harold Hutchison on August 9, 2023

Democratic Rep. Cori Bush of Missouri claimed Wednesday she “championed” the bipartisan infrastructure bill, despite having voted against it in the House of Representatives.

“Obviously Congresswoman Bush voted for the bipartisan infrastructure law, which made that happen, was leader in that,” Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm said, prompting a reporter to ask Bush for a clarification of her position on the legislation.

“I said before, the bipartisan infrastructure bill is — is the bill that I worked with, that I championed from the very beginning,” Bush claimed.

WATCH:

Bush was one of six Democrats in the House of Representatives, known as “The Squad” who voted against passage of final version of the $1.2 billion bipartisan infrastructure bill on Nov. 5, 2021, which drew the support of 13 Republicans in that body. Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Jamaal Bowman of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts joined Bush in voting “Nay” on the bill.

“A vote in favor of the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act alone would have jeopardized our leverage to improve the livelihood of our health care workers, our children, our caregivers, our seniors, and the future of our environment,” Bush said in a statement released after the vote. “That’s why I joined several of my close colleagues in standing firm behind our promise to our districts and the American people that we will not leave our communities behind.”

“If a vote on the BIF is held today, I’m a no,” Bush told reporters on Oct. 28, 2021. “I feel a little bamboozled because this is not what I thought was coming today.”

Bush voted for the initial version of the legislation that passed the House of Representatives on July 1, 2021.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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