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Business News

Fed in stride to pole-vault 5% policy rate, then perhaps catch its breath

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Howard Schneider

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Federal Reserve kicks off a two-day policy meeting on Tuesday that is likely to push the U.S. central bank’s benchmark overnight interest rate to its highest level in nearly 16 years, hitting a potential plateau that will test the economy in a way not seen since the onset of the financial crisis in 2007.

It will mark the Fed’s second straight meeting convened in the aftermath of a major U.S. bank failure, with JPMorgan’s Federal Deposit Insurance Corp-brokered takeover of First Republic Bank on Monday the latest evidence that the central bank’s historically fast run-up in interest rates is being felt in the financial system and potentially beyond it.

Global central banks are all now edging their way towards a possible stopping point for rate increases after aggressively tightening credit conditions to tame the worst outbreak of inflation in 40 years. The Fed’s meeting will be followed with expected rate increases by the European Central Bank on Thursday and the Bank of England next week.

But the U.S. central bank is furthest along in the process, and may signal that this week’s rate increase is the last, at least for now. A pause could allow time to see how the economy adjusts to higher borrowing costs and tougher banking conditions, and whether inflation falls.

Much remains unsettled. The economy is showing signs of ongoing strength as well as signs of a slowdown. Inflation has been edging down, gradually, with the main price index the Fed watches still more than double the central bank’s 2% target. Bank lending has stabilized after a roughly 1.7% drop in mid-March after the failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, but a survey of lending officers to be presented at this week’s meeting is expected to signal tighter conditions ahead.

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Given the tensions, “our base case remains that the May hike will be the last of this cycle as the economy responds to the tightening to date,” said Matthew Luzzetti, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank. But “we see risks tilted toward another increase in June. (Fed) Chair (Jerome) Powell is likely to emphasize the continued need for a hawkish bias to tame inflation, but not commit to any decision at the June meeting.”

The Fed will announce its policy decision at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) on Wednesday. Powell will hold a news conference half an hour later.

‘SET THE STAGE’

The expected move on Wednesday would be the 10th straight rate hike since March 2022, a tightening drive that will have seen the federal funds rate rise a full 5 percentage points – an average of half a percentage point at each meeting.

By contrast, when the Fed started tightening policy in June 2004, on the threshold as it turned out of what would become a destabilizing real estate bubble, it moved in “measured” quarter-percentage-point steps from 1% to around 5.25% over two years.

The anticipated quarter-percentage-point increase on Wednesday will put the target federal funds rate at roughly the same spot, between 5% and 5.25%.

That’s the level most Fed officials last December and in March said they felt would be a proper stopping point, high enough to continue slowing inflation without, they hope, causing more of a slowdown in the economy – and more job losses – than needed.

The test of that judgment begins now, with two comparable moments to measure against – the 2004-2006 rate hiking cycle that ended with a cataclysmic recession, and the “great moderation” of the 1990s when the Fed alternately raised and cut rates to manage nearly a decade of sustained growth.

Graphic: Rates hikes and outcomes – https://www.reuters.com/graphics/USA-ECONOMY/RATES/lbpggmonrpq/chart.png

Despite some financial market volatility, key parts of the real economy have motored along, with continued job growth, ongoing wage increases, and unemployment now lodged around a low 3.5% rate.

Torsten Slok, chief economist with Apollo Global Management, wrote on Monday that, based on the lag between past rate hiking cycles and the subsequent rise in joblessness, he anticipates unemployment will rise “within the next couple of months.”

“It usually takes 12 to 18 months for the Fed to soften the labor market and today is no different,” he said.

The U.S. government will release its monthly employment report on Friday.

With this rate increase, Fed officials will hit a level that will be about 1 percentage point above the rate they consider to have a neutral impact on economic activity. That “restrictive” rate should cause households and businesses to curb spending and hiring, slowing inflation in the process.

It may, however, take a while.

Analysts expect the Fed from here to adopt a meeting-by-meeting strategy of watching data to see if inflation declines as anticipated, shows signs of persistence that require even higher rates, or falls so fast it warrants a rate reduction.

Once the federal funds rate went above 5% last time, the Fed held steady for just over a year, until a developing crisis in mortgage markets prompted the start of aggressive rate cuts that drove that rate to the near-zero level by late 2008.

Levels of household leverage and the health of home values are far different now. But the sheer speed of the recent rate hikes has arguably added to bank stress, and a different set of issues related to the pandemic, in particular the health of the commercial real estate market, could fester.

Still, Fed officials have been adamant they will pin rates at a high level until they are sure inflation is broken – and will likely stick to that bias even if they open the door to a pause.

The meeting this week “will likely set the stage for a … period where hawks and doves duke it out over the June policy decision,” said Joe Brusuelas, chief U.S. economist at RSM. “Powell will likely eschew any idea that a rate hike pause is a foregone conclusion.”

(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)

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US and World News

Montana transgender legislator loses court bid to return to floor

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) – Censured Montana transgender Representative Zooey Zephyr on Tuesday lost a last-minute legal attempt to rejoin debate on the House floor, as a Montana judge rejected her attempt to overturn the legislature’s punishment that silenced her.

Republicans controlling Montana’s House of Representatives on April 26 barred Zephyr, a Democrat, from the House floor, anteroom or gallery for the remainder of the legislative session, which could end as soon as Tuesday night.

The censure was punishment for breaking decorum during debates on transgender bills including one that would deny healthcare treatment for transgender youth.

Zephyr told Republicans they would have “blood on your hands,” prompting them to cut off her microphone, and days later she was later denied floor privileges for encouraging a noisy but peaceful demonstration that disrupted a House session.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Montana had argued that Speaker of the House Matt Regier and Sergeant at Arms Bradley Murfitt had “unfairly, unjustly, and unconstitutionally” silenced Zephyr’s constituents.

District Court Judge Mike Menahan found the court’s authority was limited due to the constitutional separation of powers between the legislative and judicial branches.

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“Even if the Court ultimately finds the House of Representatives, Speaker Regier, and Sergeant at Arms Murfitt acted unlawfully under the facts of this case, it does not have the authority to issue a broad permanent injunction to effectively remove all legislative authority … in relation to a single member,” Menahan wrote in his order.

The ACLU of Montana was considering its options including appeal but acknowledged a practical difficulty considering the legislative session was expected to end Tuesday night or Wednesday, a spokesperson said.

Montana’s governor signed the bill denying gender-affirming care to minors into law on Friday, two days after the House voted to censure Zephyr.

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Richard Chang)

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Business News

Chesapeake Energy profit beats on higher output of natural gas

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Arshreet Singh

(Reuters) -U.S. oil and gas company Chesapeake Energy Corp on Tuesday beat estimates for first-quarter profit on higher production of natural gas despite lower prices.

The United States has emerged as the world’s largest LNG exporter after Western sanctions on major supplier Russia, which has boosted demand for U.S. natural gas and encouraged producers to increase output.

“Chesapeake turned a lot more wells to sale this quarter,” said Gabriele Sorbara of Siebert Williams Shank & Co, adding that the company put 53 wells to production, higher than the brokerage’s estimate of 36 wells, which led to more activity and “drove the volumes”.

The company, however, said in February that it would drop three drilling rigs in the coming months and would reduce gas output by 4% to 6% this year as prices of natural gas futures fell about 37% from last year as higher output collided with weaker heating demand.

The move followed that made by Comstock Resources, which earlier disclosed it would take down two rigs in coming months due to weaker prices.

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Chesapeake expects to drill 35 to 45 wells and place 30 to 35 wells on production in the second quarter.

Its net production in the January-March quarter was about 4.1 billion cubic feet equivalent per day, up 9.4% from last year and consisted of about 90% natural gas and 10% total liquids.

Chesapeake, which had announced plans to sell its oil position to focus on production of super cooled fuel, in February said it would sell oil assets in South Texas to chemical maker INEOS for $1.4 billion.

Cash proceeds from the asset sales have helped the company “weather weaker (gas) prices near term,” said Sorbara.

The Oklahoma City-based company reported adjusted earnings of $1.87 per share, while analysts had expected $1.72 per share, according to Refinitiv data.

(Reporting by Arshreet Singh; Editing by Shailesh Kuber)

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US and World News

US to temporarily send 1,500 troops to Mexico border

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Idrees Ali and Ted Hesson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden’s administration will temporarily send 1,500 additional troops to help secure the U.S.-Mexico border, the Pentagon said on Tuesday, in preparation for a possible rise in illegal immigration when COVID-19 border restrictions lift later this month.

The 90-day deployment of active-duty troops will supplement the work of the U.S. Border Patrol but not carry out law enforcement duties, Pentagon spokesperson Brigadier General Pat Ryder said in a statement. They will conduct ground-based monitoring, data entry and warehouse support to free up border agents and “fill critical capability gaps,” Ryder said.

The force will be in addition to an ongoing deployment of about 2,500 National Guard troops.

The so-called Title 42 restrictions, set to end on May 11, allow U.S. authorities to rapidly expel non-Mexican migrants to Mexico without the chance to seek asylum.

    Biden, a Democrat running for reelection in 2024, has grappled with record numbers of migrants caught illegally crossing the U.S.-Mexico border since he took office in 2021.

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Republicans have criticized Biden for rolling back the hardline policies of Republican former President Donald Trump, the front-runner for his party’s nomination. Some Democrats and immigration activists also have lambasted Biden for gradually toughening his approach to border security.

Senator Bob Menendez, a Democrat and chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said Biden’s decision to send troops was unacceptable.

“Trying to score political points or intimidate migrants by sending the military to the border caters to the Republican Party’s xenophobic attacks on our asylum system,” Menendez said in a statement.

The 1,500 troops could arrive at the U.S.-Mexico border by May 10, Ryder said during a briefing. The Pentagon is looking at ways to replace the active-duty personnel with those from the reserve force, he said.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, when asked about the troop deployment in a news conference, said the U.S. is a sovereign nation and that Mexico respects its decisions.

U.S. military troops have been used to help secure the border during previous presidential administrations, including Republican George W. Bush, Democrat Barack Obama and Trump, who deployed thousands of active-duty and National Guard troops.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called such deployments “a common practice.”

Pentagon leaders have long been frustrated about military deployments to the border, privately arguing that the mundane tasks are better suited for law enforcement agencies and can affect military readiness.

Immigration advocates have criticized previous efforts to send troops to the border.

“People seeking asylum should be met with humanitarian professionals, welcoming volunteers, and medical and mental health professionals. Not soldiers,” tweeted Bilal Askaryar, interim campaign manager of the #WelcomeWithDignity Campaign.

(Reporting by Idrees Ali and Ted Hesson; Additional by Phil Stewart, Jasper Ward and Andrea Shalal in Washington and the Mexico City Newsroom; Editing by Mark Porter, Richard Chang and Jonathan Oatis)

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US and World News

Sudan’s warring generals extend theoretical truce but keep fighting

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Mohamed Noureldin

KHARTOUM (Reuters) – Sudan’s warring military factions agreed to a new and longer seven-day ceasefire from Thursday, neighbour and mediator South Sudan said, even as more air strikes and shooting in the Khartoum capital region undercut their latest supposed truce.

Previous ceasefire pledges have ranged from 24 to 72 hours but there have been constant truce violations in the conflict that erupted in mid-April between the army and a paramilitary force.

South Sudan’s foreign ministry said in a statement on Tuesday that mediation championed by its president, Salva Kiir, had led both sides to agree a weeklong truce from Thursday to May 11 and to name envoys for peace talks. The current ceasefire was due to expire on Wednesday.

It was unclear, however, how army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and paramilitary Rapid Support forces (RSF) leader General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo would proceed.

On Tuesday, witnesses reported more air strikes in the cities of Omdurman and in Bahri, both on the opposite bank of the Nile River from Khartoum.

Al Jazeera television said Sudanese army warplanes were targeting RSF positions, and anti-aircraft fire could be heard from Khartoum.

India’s embassy in Khartoum was stormed and looted, Sudan’s army said in a statement, citing a report from the ambassador. Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry said early on Wednesday that the building in Khartoum that houses its cultural mission was similarly vandalised and looted by an armed group. No casualties were reported.

Army jets have been bombing RSF units dug into residential districts of the capital region. Conflict has also spread to Sudan’s western Darfur region where the RSF emerged from tribal militias that fought alongside government forces to crush rebels in a brutal civil war dating back 20 years.

The commanders of the army and RSF, who had shared power as part of an internationally backed transition towards free elections and civilian government, have shown no sign of backing down, yet neither seems able to secure a quick victory.

REGION AT RISK

Prolonged conflict could draw in outside powers.

Fighting now in its third week has engulfed Khartoum – one of Africa’s largest cities – and killed hundreds of people. Sudan’s Health Ministry reported on Tuesday that 550 people have died and 4,926 injured.

Foreign governments were winding down evacuation operations that sent thousands of their citizens home. Britain said its last flight would depart Port Sudan on the Red Sea on Wednesday and urged any remaining Britons wanting to leave to make their way there.

The conflict has also created a humanitarian crisis, with around 100,000 people forced to flee with little food or water to neighbouring countries, the United Nations said.

Aid deliveries have been held up in a nation where about one-third of people already relied on humanitarian assistance. A broader disaster could be in the making as Sudan’s impoverished neighbours grapple with a refugee influx.

“The entire region could be affected,” Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi said in a Japanese newspaper interview on Tuesday as a Burhan envoy met Egyptian officials in Cairo.

The U.N. World Food Programme said on Monday it was resuming work in the safer parts of Sudan after a pause earlier in the conflict, in which some of its staff were killed.

Graphic: Sudan’s conflict: https://www.reuters.com/graphics/SUDAN-POLITICS/gdvzqjmwrpw/chart.png

‘THE SITUATION IS A CALAMITY’

Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said it had delivered some aid to the capital from Port Sudan, a road journey of about 800 km (500 miles).

Some 330,000 Sudanese have also been displaced inside Sudan’s borders by the war, the U.N. migration agency said.

“The situation is a calamity,” Hassan Mohamed Ali, a 55-year-old state employee, said during a stopover in Atbara, 350 km (220 miles) northeast of Khartoum, en route to the Egyptian frontier.

“We suffer from power and water cuts, our children have stopped school. What’s happening in Khartoum is hell.”

Displaced Sudanese families have also made their way, sometimes on foot under scorching desert sun, hundreds of kilometres (miles) to Chad and South Sudan.

About 800,000 people could eventually leave, according to the U.N.

More than 40,000 people have crossed the border into Egypt over the past two weeks but only after days of delays. Most migrants have had to pay hundreds of dollars to make the 1,000-km (620-mile) journey north from Khartoum.

It took Aisha Ibrahim Dawood and her relatives five days in a rented car to get from Khartoum to the northern town of Wadi Halfa, where the women and children crammed into a back of a truck that brought them to a queue at the Egyptian border.

“Our suffering is unprecedented,” she said.

(Reporting by Mohamed Noureldin; Additional reporting by Nafisa Eltahir in Cairo, Emma Farge and Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber in Geneva, Duncan Miriri in Nairobi and Ayenat Mersie in Dollow, Somalia; writing by Angus McDowall, Mark Heinrich and Cynthia Osterman; editing by Nick Macfie, Andrew Cawthorne and Grant McCool)

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Business News

Brazil pushes back on big tech firms’ campaign against ‘fake news law’

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Anthony Boadle

BRASILIA (Reuters) – Brazil’s government and judiciary objected on Tuesday to big tech firms campaigning against an internet regulation bill aimed at cracking down on fake news, alleging undue interference in the debate in Congress.

Bill 2630, also known as the Fake News Law, puts the onus on the internet companies, search engines and social messaging services to find and report illegal material, instead of leaving it to the courts, charging hefty fines for failures to do so.

Tech firms have been campaigning against the bill, including Google LLC which had added a link on its search engine in Brazil connecting to blogs against the bill and asking users to lobby their representatives.

Justice Minister Flavio Dino ordered Google to change the link on Tuesday, saying the company had two hours after notification or would face fines of one million reais ($198,000) per hour if it did not.

“What is this? An editorial? This is not a media or an advertising company,” the minister told a news conference, calling Google’s link disguised and misleading advertising for the company’s stance against the law.

The U.S. company promptly pulled the link, though Google defended its right to communicate its concerns through “marketing campaigns” on its platforms and denied altering search results to favor material contrary to the bill.

“We support discussions on measures to combat the phenomenon of misinformation. All Brazilians have the right to be part of this conversation, and as such, we are committed to communicating our concerns about Bill 2630 publicly and transparently,” it said in a statement.

The proposed law to penalize firms for not reporting fake news was due to be voted on in the lower house of Congress on Tuesday but it is facing opposition from conservative and Evangelical lawmakers. Later on Tuesday, Speaker Arthur Lira postponed the vote to allow for more debate.

Its critics say the bill needs wider debate because it was too hastily drawn up, allows censorship and will have the opposite result of rewarding those who post disinformation since the bill proposes that companies would have to pay content providers and copyrights on material posted on their sites.

The Supreme Court on Tuesday asked the chief executives in Brazil for Google, Meta and Spotify to testify within five days explaining their conduct regarding the bill.

“Such conduct could configure, in theory, abuse of economic power on the eve of voting on the bill by trying to illegally and immorally impact public opinion and the vote in Congress,” Justice Alexandre de Moraes said in his decision.

Brazil’s antitrust regulator Cade said it would investigate Google and Meta’s campaigns against the bill.

The Brazilian proposal is shaping up to be one of the world’s strongest legislations on social media, comparable to the European Union’s Digital Services Act enacted last year.

One of the bill’s authors who will report on it to Congress, Representative Orlando Silva of the Communist Party of Brazil, said the law is needed to curb fake news that has poisoned Brazilian politics and impacted elections.

“Fake news led to the storming of government buildings on January 8 and has caused an environment of violence in our schools,” he told Reuters.

The bill was fast tracked in the lower house after a series of fatal attacks in schools which social media allegedly encouraged, and new articles added to the bill have not been debated in Congressional committees before going to the vote.

Silva said the original draft of the bill included the creation of a state agency to watch out for illegal content, but this was dropped due to resistance in Congress.

($1 = 5.0416 reais)

(Reporting by Anthony Boadle, Ricardo Brito and Maria Carolina Marcello; Editing by Josie Kao, Conor Humphries and Lincoln Feast.)

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Business News

AMD shares sink on forecast miss as PC market remains weak

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Chavi Mehta, Jane Lanhee Lee and Stephen Nellis

(Reuters) -Advanced Micro Devices shares slumped on Tuesday after the chipmaker forecast quarterly sales below estimates due to a weak PC market, overshadowing the company’s optimism that the chip market would start to recover in the second half of 2023.

The company also missed analyst estimates for PC and data center chips sales for the first quarter, and its shares fell over 6% in extended trading.

That stood in contrast to rival Intel Corp, whose shares rose nearly 3% in extended trading. Intel last week said the PC market would start rebounding in the second half, raising Intel’s margins with it.

While analysts had watched AMD grab market share in the data center after Intel delayed ramping up the shipping of its most powerful data center processor chip code, named Sapphire Rapids, for over a year, some said they were seeing AMD now stall.

“I think AMD’s days of taking large swaths of share will likely be over, and it will probably see a more aggressive market for data center competing with Intel,” said Anshel Sag, analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy. “AMD has great products in data center, but Intel still has a lot of customers who are still using Intel and deep (customer) relationships.”

Still, AMD CEO Lisa Su told investors on a conference call that the first quarter was the bottom of the market for the company’s PC business and the industry.

“We remain confident in our ability to grow in the second half of the year,” she said.

Part of that growth, Su said, will come from a chip called the MI300, which will compete with Nvidia Corp’s flagship chips for artificial intelligence. Su said customer interest in the chip is growing.

“We do believe that we will start ramping revenue in the fourth quarter with cloud AI customers, and then it’ll be more meaningful in 2024,” Su said. “Success for us is having a significant part of the AI overall opportunity,” she added.

Nvidia has the bulk of the AI market, and analysts believe it has a strong hold on its position.

“We believe MI300 will be used primarily on special projects or on a case-by-case basis,” said Summit Insights Group analyst Kinngai Chan, adding that the MI300 is likely to be inferior to Nvidia’s latest H100 data center chip for large language model applications, such as ChatGPT.

AMD forecast current-quarter revenue of about $5.3 billion, plus or minus $300 million. Analysts polled by Refinitiv were expecting revenue of $5.48 billion.

Revenue in the fiscal first quarter ended April 1 came in at $5.35 billion, compared with estimates of $5.30 billion.

(Reporting by Chavi Mehta in Bengaluru, Stephen Nellis and Jane Lanhee Lee in San Francisco; Editing by Maju Samuel, David Gregorio and Leslie Adler)

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Seven bodies, including two missing teens, found in Oklahoma town

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) -The bodies of seven people, including two missing teens and a convicted sex offender, were found Monday afternoon on a property near the small Oklahoma city of Henryetta, the county sheriff said.

Corpses believed to be 14-year-old Ivy Webster and 16-year-old Brittany Brewer were found when officers searched the property where the sex offender, Jesse McFadden, lived, Okmulgee County Sheriff Eddy Rice said at a news briefing posted online by television station KOTV in Tulsa.

Other bodies likely included McFadden and members of his family, Rice said, cautioning that none of the victims had yet been formally identified by the county medical examiner.

The county issued an amber alert earlier Monday saying the two teens were missing, but the alert was called off after the bodies were found.

“Our hearts go out to the families and friends and schoolmates and everyone else,” Rice said. “It’s just a tragedy.”

Rice said officers arrived at about 3 p.m. (2000 GMT) to search the property and found the bodies.

KOTV reported that Brittany Brewer had gone to spend the weekend with the McFadden family, citing her father, Nathan Brewer. She was supposed to have returned home Sunday night but never arrived.

“Brittany was an outgoing person,” Brewer told the station in a video posted on its website. “She was actually selected to be Miss Henryetta coming up in July for the National Miss Pageant in Tulsa, and now she ain’t gonna make it because she’s dead. She’s gone.”

McFadden, 39, had been scheduled to begin a trial on Monday for using a cellphone while in prison to send sexual messages to a teenage girl, the station reported.

The Oklahoma Sex Offender registry shows a Jesse Lee McFadden, age 39, living at the address where the bodies were found, with a photo that matches the one of McFadden used in local media. It shows that he was convicted of first degree rape in Oklahoma in 2003.

Gerald Davidson, a spokesman for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, said an individual on Monday told the violent crime task force in the Okmulgee County District Attorney’s office that the two girls might be in the presence of someone at the property on Holly Road just outside of Henryetta.

Sheriff’s deputies went to the scene twice. The first time, they did not make contact with anyone, but on their second visit they discovered evidence that led them to the bodies, Davidson said.

(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Leslie Adler and Sonali Paul)

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Exclusive-White House: Fed interest rates having negative effect on banking

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Andrea Shalal

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A top White House economist on Tuesday said Federal Reserve interest rate hikes aimed at curbing inflation were having a negative impact on the banking sector, and warned Republicans against worsening the situation with their debt ceiling threats.

Heather Boushey, a member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, told Reuters that Republicans should not be “playing games” with the U.S. economy, by pegging an increase in the $31.4 trillion debt limit to budget cuts.

“The economy remains, it’s been strong. You don’t want to be pushing it off of the course that it’s on,” Boushey said, urging Republicans to back a debt ceiling increase without conditions. “The Fed is raising interest rates in the hope of reducing inflation. That is having this negative effect on the banking sector. Why would we add to that?”

Boushey said Congress could easily remove the risk of default by raising the debt ceiling, while the issue of interest rates and their impact on bank assets was a far more complicated question that no single entity had the power to solve.

“This is terrible. It’s scary. We should not be be playing these kind of games with the U.S. economy and with the full faith and credit of the United States,” Boushey said. “We need to be focused on how we’re going to keep the economy moving.”

Boushey’s comments come as Fed governors are gathered for a two-day policy meeting that analysts expect to result in a 25-basis-point increase in the federal funds rate on Wednesday.

House Republicans passed a bill to raise the debt limit last week that includes steep cuts to spending from healthcare to air-traffic controllers, which the Democratic-controlled Senate and President Joe Biden say they will not approve.

Biden on Monday summoned the four Senate and House of Representatives leaders – two fellow Democrats and two Republicans – to the White House next week, after the U.S. Treasury warned the government could run short of cash to pay its bills as soon as June 1.

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Leslie Adler, Jonathan Oatis and Lincoln Feast.)

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TikTok’s head of U.S. trust and safety will leave the company

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Sheila Dang

(Reuters) -TikTok said on Tuesday its head of U.S. trust and safety, Eric Han, will depart the company on May 12, leaving the popular short-form video app without a key executive as it fights the threat of a ban in the U.S.

TikTok, which is owned by Chinese tech company ByteDance, has already been banned from government-issued phones in countries such as Canada and Australia over concerns about whether the Chinese government can access user data or influence what people see on the popular app. It also faces calls from some U.S. lawmakers to ban the app across the country.

TikTok has long said that it has never shared data with the Chinese government and would not do so if asked.

Han, who has been at TikTok since 2019, oversaw efforts like improving content moderation and reducing election misinformation. He ran trust and safety for the company’s U.S. Data Security (USDS), a division that was created to store U.S. data in the country on servers controlled by Oracle, in an effort to appease security concerns.

His upcoming departure also comes as TikTok is preparing to hold a presentation for advertisers in New York on Thursday.

The Verge first reported the news of Han’s upcoming departure.

(Reporting by Sheila Dang in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler and Lisa Shumaker)

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Carrefour Brasil swings to quarterly loss as BIG purchase weighs

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

SAO PAULO(Reuters) -Carrefour Brasil reported a first quarter net loss of 113 million reais ($22.39 million), hit by high investment costs at its acquired food retailer Grupo BIG, the company said in a filing with Brazil’s main stock exchange on Tuesday.

The company posted a net profit of 370 million reais in the same January-to-March period last year.

The Brazilian arm of French retailer Carrefour SA said that net sales rose 29.4% to reach 24.39 billion reais in the first quarter, while its wholesale units posted 19% sales growth year-on-year.

Carrefour’s Brazilian unit said operating expenses soared 52% from a year earlier to total 3.8 billion reais, fueled by store conversion and the integration of BIG.

Chief Financial Officer Eric Alencar told reporters that a large part of the quarter’s losses were explained by investments in BIG.

The Carrefour subsidiary bought BIG in mid-2022 and announced last month a discount of up to 1 billion reais in the initial amount paid of 7.5 billion reais.

Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) for the company fell about 17% to total 1.038 billion reais, but the firm saw 0.6% growth in adjusted EBITDA when excluding Grupo BIG, reaching 1.254 billion reais.

Carrefour Brasil said it has opened three new wholesale format stores and 23 converted stores in the first quarter.

($1 = 5.0464 reais)

(Reporting by Andre Romani; Writing by Carolina Pulice; Editing by David Alire Garcia)

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Zelenskiy says White House did not inform him of documents leak, Washington Post reports

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) – Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy told the Washington Post in an interview published on Tuesday that the White House did not inform him about a leak of secret U.S. documents that grabbed attention around the world last month.

“I did not receive information from the White House or the Pentagon beforehand,” Zelenskiy was quoted as saying.

“It is unprofitable for us,” he added. “It is not beneficial to the reputation of the White House, and I believe it is not beneficial to the reputation of the United States.”

The materials posted online offered a partial, month-old snapshot of the war in Ukraine.

Ukraine’s defense minister, Oleksii Reznikov, said on April 12 the Pentagon document leaks contained a mixture of true and false information about his country’s military and downplayed its negative impact.

In response to Zelenskiy’s comments, a spokesperson for the White House National Security Council said: “We are in constant communication with our Ukrainian counterparts about a range of issues, including over the unauthorized disclosures, but we aren’t going to get into the details of those private discussions.”

A Pentagon spokesperson said U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin had spoken to a number of allies, including Reznikov, regarding the issue.

“Austin has conducted a large number of phone calls, conducted a large amount of outreach to our allies and partners around the world to discuss the matter with them, to highlight how seriously we are taking this issue, to include several conversations with his Ukrainian counterpart, minister Reznikov,” Patrick Ryder told CNN.

(Reporting by Costas Pitas in Los Angeles and Eric Beech in Washington; Additional reporting by Steve Holland in Washington; Editing by Chris Reese and Matthew Lewis)

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Indexes fall 1% as regional banks tumble, investors fret before Fed

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Caroline Valetkevitch

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Major U.S. stock indexes fell more than 1% each on Tuesday as regional bank shares tumbled on renewed fears over the financial system and as investors tried to gauge how much longer the Federal Reserve may need to hike interest rates.

The Fed is expected to announce Wednesday it will raise rates 25 basis points, and investors are anxious for any signals from the central bank on whether it will be the last hike for now, or if further increases are possible if inflation remains high.

The KBW regional banking index fell 5.5% in its biggest daily percentage drop since March 13. During the session, it hit the lowest level since November 2020.

Energy shares dropped along with oil prices as investors worried about a potential U.S. debt default.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the federal government could be unable by June 1 to meet all of its payment obligations without legislation to raise Washington’s borrowing limit.

The S&P 500 energy sector dropped 4.3%, the most of any major sector, followed by S&P financials, which fell 2.3%.

U.S. regional banks extended losses from Monday after the seizure and auction of First Republic Bank. Most of its assets were bought by JPMorgan Chase & Co in a deal brokered by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

Two other U.S. regional banks collapsed in March.

“There are concerns that this is not over, and that rates are going to (continue to) go up, and it could be a catalyst for more problems,” said Quincy Krosby, chief global strategist at LPL Financial in Charlotte, North Carolina.

“There’s more and more talk about problems with commercial real estate,” an area associated with regional banks, she added.

Higher borrowing costs tend to hurt both consumers and businesses.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 367.17 points, or 1.08%, to 33,684.53; the S&P 500 lost 48.29 points, or 1.16%, at 4,119.58; and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 132.09 points, or 1.08%, to 12,080.51.

The Cboe Volatility index closed at nearly a one-week high.

Among bank stocks with the biggest declines, PacWest Bancorp tumbled 27.8%, while Western Alliance Bancorp fell 15.1% and Comerica Inc dropped 12.4%.

Educational services company Chegg tanked 48.4% on a downbeat second-quarter revenue forecast as competition from ChatGPT grew.

After the closing bell, shares of Starbucks fell 2% following the release of its quarterly results. The stock ended the regular session down 0.1%.

While investors worry that the Fed’s aggressive rate hikes will tip the U.S. economy into recession, discussions on recent quarterly conference calls may be hinting that corporations and analysts have become a bit less concerned.

With first-quarter reports over halfway through, analysts see aggregate earnings for S&P 500 companies declining 1.4% year over year, according to IBES data from Refinitiv Tuesday. Before companies began to report at the start of April, Wall Street had been bracing for a 5.1% drop.

Volume on U.S. exchanges was 12.33 billion shares, compared with the 10.44 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers on the NYSE by a 3.55-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.46-to-1 ratio favored decliners.

The S&P 500 posted 17 new 52-week highs and 13 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 46 new highs and 407 new lows.

(Additional reporting by Ankika Biswas and Sruthi Shankar in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila, Vinay Dwivedi, Anil D’Silva, Subhranshu Sahu and Richard Chang)

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Russia’s war on Ukraine latest: General says Ukraine won’t give up on Bakhmut

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) – The Ukrainian general in charge of ground forces said his troops would not give up the eastern city of Bakhmut as they prepare to begin a counteroffensive against occupying Russian forces.

FIGHTING/MILITARY

* The United States plans to announce as soon as Wednesday a $300 million military aid package for Ukraine that will for the first time include a short-range air-launched rocket, two U.S. officials said.

* Ukrainian President Zelenskiy told the Washington Post in an interview that he was not informed by the White House about a leak this year of U.S. classified military documents. The materials posted online offered a partial, month-old snapshot of the war in Ukraine.

* The European Union plans to boost ammunition production to aid Ukraine and replenish the stocks of EU member countries.

* An explosion caused a second freight train to derail in the Russia region of Bryansk bordering Ukraine. One also derailed on Monday following a blast.

* The Kremlin rejected as “plucked from thin air” a U.S. assessment of 100,000 Russian military casualties in Ukraine in the last five months, including more than 20,000 deaths.

ECONOMY

* Turkey’s trade data has started to reflect that Ankara has stopped allowing the re-exportation of Western goods under sanctions to Russia after repeated warnings from Washington, a senior U.S. Treasury Department official said.

* The European Commission said it set restrictions until June 5 on imports of Ukrainian wheat, maize, rapeseed and sunflower seed to ease the excess supply of these grains in Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia.

* Ukraine’s grain exports could fall to around 26 million tonnes in the 2023/24 season, largely due to Russia’s invasion.

QUOTES

* “We will continue, despite all the forecasts and advice, to hold Bakhmut, destroying Wagner and other most combat-capable units of the Russian army” – General Oleksandr Syrskyi, commander of Ukrainian ground forces.

RECENT IN-DEPTH STORIES

* INSIGHT-Russia digs in as Ukraine prepares to attack

* ANALYSIS-Russia crosses new lines in crackdown on Putin’s enemies

* EXCLUSIVE-The Russian military commandant who oversaw reign of fear in Ukraine town

* EXCLUSIVE-Kazakhstan has ramped up oil exports bypassing Russia -sources

* Liberated villages offer glimpse of precarious Ukrainian health system.

(Compiled by Reuters editors)

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Vanda Pharmaceuticals sues U.S. government over drug trade secrets

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Blake Brittain

(Reuters) – Vanda Pharmaceuticals Inc has sued the federal government in Washington, D.C., federal court over accusations that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration passed trade secrets about its schizophrenia drug Fanapt and sleep-disorder medication Hetlioz to generic competitors.

In a complaint made public Tuesday, Vanda said the agency disclosed confidential details from its applications for FDA approval to companies seeking to make generic versions of its drugs, and that it “routinely” reveals confidential information about brand-name drugs to generic drug applicants.

An FDA spokesperson said the agency does not comment on pending litigation.

The FDA approved Vanda’s antipsychotic drug Fanapt in 2009 and its circadian-rhythm regulator Hetlioz in 2014. Vanda’s lawsuit said the FDA has also approved several generic versions of the drugs.

Washington, D.C.-based Vanda earned more than $159 million from sales of Hetlioz and more than $94 million from Fanapt last year, according to a company report.

Vanda told the U.S. Court of Federal Claims that the FDA gave confidential information about Fanapt and Hetlioz, its only two drugs, to generic competitors including Lupin Ltd, Apotex Inc and Teva Pharmaceutical.

It accused the FDA of revealing its dissolution specifications for the drugs, which indicate how much they must dissolve after administration to be safe and effective, to other drugmakers in correspondence about their generic versions.

The company also said the FDA disclosed secret information about its Hetlioz manufacturing process to Apotex and Teva during their bids for generic approval.

Vanda accused the government of unconstitutionally taking its confidential information and violating an implied contract to keep it secret, and requested an unspecified amount of money damages.

(Reporting by Blake Brittain in Washington)

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Starbucks profits beat on China recovery, shares dive on guidance

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Deborah Mary Sophia and Hilary Russ

(Reuters) -Starbucks Corp beat Wall Street estimates on Tuesday for quarterly profits, powered by a sharp recovery in business in China, but shares fell about 6% in after-hours trading after the company did not lift its 2023 guidance.

With most of China’s COVID-19 curbs now scrapped, consumer mobility and spending in the region bounced back sharply in March.

Even so, some analysts had expected China sales to remain in the red after tumbling 29% the previous quarter.

Instead, the world’s largest coffeehouse chain posted a 3% rise in China comparable sales in its second quarter ended April 2, helping boost international sales 7%, more than double the 2.94% increase of the average analyst’s estimate, according to Refinitiv data.

While the China recovery was better than the company expected, growth in average weekly sales there will be at a more moderate pace in the second half, Chief Financial Officer Rachel Ruggeri said during an earnings call.

“We’ve already seen it start to moderate,” she said, noting uncertainty about consumer behavior and international travel. “So when we take all of that into account, when we look at our guidance for the full year, we believe reaffirming our guidance allows us to continue to convey the momentum, but also for the confidence we have while still navigating a rather uncertain environment globally.”

Restaurant shares broadly have outperformed the S&P 500 Index this year, and McDonald’s Corp and others reported a strong quarter.

Some Starbucks investors may have taken profits after Starbucks’ stock jumped 16% in the past five weeks with “a pretty big run” into the earnings report, Edward Jones analyst Brian Yarbrough noted.

Globally, Seattle-based Starbucks’ comparable sales climbed 11%, trouncing analysts’ expectation of a 7.36% rise.

Customers visited more often and spent more per trip, according to the earnings release. Excluding one-time items, Starbucks earned 74 cents per share, beating estimates of 65 cents.

Starbucks, whose customers are typically younger, wealthier and relatively unfazed by inflation, has doubled down on its cold and customizable beverages, boosting traffic in the U.S. and driving a 12% jump in comparable store sales in its North American market.

The chain also keeps adding customers to its rewards program, which now has 30.8 million active members in the United States, up 15% over this time last year, according to its earnings release.

And it is building more cafes, adding 100 net new stores in North America and more than 360 internationally.

(Reporting by Deborah Sophia in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur and David Gregorio)

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Ford’s profit rises on strong truck demand but EV outlook weighs

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Joseph White and Nathan Gomes

(Reuters) -Ford Motor Co on Tuesday posted robust first-quarter revenue and profit, thanks to strong demand for trucks and SUVs, but issued a measured full-year outlook tempered by continued losses in its electric-vehicle unit.

In a late briefing, Ford Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley said he hopes the company becomes “boringly predictable” at meeting investor expectations. Ford missed Wall Street estimates for the fourth quarter, leaving $2 billion on the table, Farley said earlier this year.

Farley also said Ford does not intend to pursue EV sales volume “at any cost” – after the automaker earlier in the day slashed Mustang Mach E prices for a second time this year.

Farley’s stance contrasts sharply with that of Tesla Inc CEO Elon Musk, who said last month that the EV maker could cut profit margins on vehicle sales to zero and make up the difference through sales of software-enabled services. Tesla, however, has the advantage of earning higher profit margins on its EVs than Ford and other legacy automakers have across their full portfolios.

Facing declining demand for its products in China, Ford will restructure its operations there to run on lower investment, and “double down” on its commercial vehicle business there, including EVs, Farley said. Ford’s joint venture with Chinese automaker JMC Corp can become an export hub for lower-cost commercial electric and combustion vehicles, he added.

Ford handily beat analysts’ expectations for first-quarter earnings before interest and taxes, reporting EBIT of $3.4 billion, compared with consensus of $2.4 billion.

The automaker reaffirmed guidance for full-year adjusted EBIT of $9 billion to $11 billion. Those numbers include an anticipated loss of $3 billion in Ford’s Model e electric vehicle unit.

Shares were down 2% in after-hours trading.

Although U.S. vehicles sales in April were much stronger than expected, Ford cautioned that “higher industrywide customer incentives as vehicle supply-and-demand rebalances” will be a “headwind” for profitability.

AGGRESSIVE MOVES

The company for the first time broke out financial results for its Ford Blue, Ford Pro and Ford Model e units. Ford Blue earnings before interest and taxes doubled to $2.56 billion, a margin of 10.4%, and Ford Pro EBIT nearly tripled to $1.4 billion, a margin of 10.3%.

Ford’s overall EBIT margin was 8.1%, after factoring in losses from Model e.

For 2023, the automaker expects full-year EBIT for Ford Blue to climb slightly to $7 billion, while Ford Pro EBIT could nearly double, to almost $6 billion.

Ford lost more than $60,000 per electric vehicle sold in the first quarter. Its combustion-vehicle business, Ford Blue, averaged pretax profit of $3,715 a vehicle, while the Ford Pro commercial business earned $4,053 per vehicle, based on the company’s financial data.

In a briefing, Chief Financial Officer John Lawler said the company is on track for its Model e electric vehicles to be EBIT margin-positive by the end of 2024. Ford expects the unit to post an EBIT margin of 8% by the end of 2026, a target CEO Farley described as “totally realistic” given the company’s “aggressive” moves to take cost out of its next-generation EVs.

Demand for the electric Ford F-150 Lightning pickup is “really, really strong,” Farley said. Ford is sticking with plans to boost Lightning production to a rate of 150,000 vehicles a year by the end of this year.

In the meantime, the company expects continued pricing pressure on its Ford Blue combustion models, while Ford Pro commercial vehicles retain some pricing strength.

Ford’s profit in the first quarter was $1.8 billion, or 44 cents per share, compared with a loss of $3.1 billion, or 78 cents per share, a year ago. Adjusted diluted earnings per share were 63 cents, compared with 38 cents a year ago. Analysts had expected 41 cents.

The Dearborn, Michigan-based company reported revenue of $41.5 billion for the quarter through March, compared with $34.5 billion a year ago.

(Reporting by Nathan Gomes in Bengaluru and Joseph White in DetroitWriting by Paul LienertEditing by Ben Klayman and Matthew Lewis)

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Amgen sues Novartis to block generic osteoporosis, bone cancer drugs

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Blake Brittain

(Reuters) – Amgen Inc sued Novartis AG’s Sandoz in New Jersey federal court Monday, accusing Sandoz’s proposed versions of its multibillion-dollar bone-strengthening drugs Prolia and Xgeva of infringing several patents.

Amgen asked the court to block Sandoz’s biosimilars of the drugs until its patents expire. One of the patents named in the complaint does not expire until 2037.

Sandoz declined to comment on the lawsuit Tuesday. Novartis, which is also named in the complaint, is preparing to spin Sandoz off into a standalone company later this year.

Amgen’s Prolia is used to treat osteoporosis. Xgeva, with the same active ingredient denosumab, treats bone cancer and prevents fractures in bone-cancer patients.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved both drugs in 2010. Thousand Oaks, California-based Amgen sold $3.6 billion worth of Prolia and $2 billion worth of Xgeva last year, according to a company report.

The FDA accepted Sandoz’s application for biosimilar versions of the Amgen biologic drugs — which are derived from living cells, unlike traditional small-molecule drugs — in February.

Amgen said the proposed biosimilars infringe 21 patents covering Prolia and Xgeva.

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Clorox rethinks strategy on Kingsford charcoal ahead of summer grilling season

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Jessica DiNapoli

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Clorox Co is revamping its sales plans for its Kingsford grilling briquettes and pellets, staples at summer barbecues across the United States, after hiking prices and losing market share to competitors, an executive told Reuters on Tuesday.

The Oakland, California-based company bumped up prices on Kingsford charcoal in December along with other products it makes ranging from bleach to natural cosmetics, Chief Financial Officer Kevin Jacobsen said.

But its competitors in grilling, including store brands, did not follow suit, making Kingsford far more expensive than similar products ahead of major summer cookout occasions including the Memorial Day and Independence Day U.S. holidays.

For example, an 8-pound bag of Kingsford Original Charcoal briquettes costs $7.92 on Walmart Inc’s website, while a 16-pound bag of the retailer’s Expert Grill briquettes costs $7.88.

“You don’t get it right in every country, every category,” Jacobsen said. “We’re going back and making some adjustments.”

The misstep means Clorox’s team focused on the brand is revising its marketing plans, Jacobsen said.

“We have to invest some more money here,” he added, saying Clorox would work with retailers to better feature the product in stores in hopes it will boost sales despite the steep prices.

Half of Kingsford’s sales come in the three months ended June 30, Jacobsen said, adding that Clorox’s financial results that quarter could be hit if the brand does not perform.

“(Kingsford) did not deliver what we expected,” Jacobsen said, referring to its sales in the three months ended March 31. “What we’re seeing is increased competitive activity early in the season in the grilling category.”

Clorox’s competitors in its other categories closely followed the price hikes it announced in December, Jacobsen said.

U.S. consumers have been accepting double-digit price increases on everyday basics although some major manufacturers, including Clorox, have seen their sales volumes fall.

(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

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Florida prosecutor suspended by DeSantis over abortion seeks reinstatement by US court

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Brendan Pierson

(Reuters) – A lawyer for a Florida prosecutor on Tuesday urged a federal appeals court to reinstate his client after the state’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, indefinitely suspended him over his pledge not to prosecute people seeking or providing abortions.

“This governor punishes dissenting voices,” David A. O’Neil, a lawyer for suspended prosecutor Andrew Warren, told a three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “It’s what he does.”

O’Neil said suspending Warren, a Democrat who was elected head of the state attorney’s office in Tampa, violated his right to free speech under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and subverted the will of the voters who elected him.

Henry Whitaker, a lawyer in the Florida Attorney General’s office representing DeSantis, said Warren was suspended for his conduct of refusing to enforce the law, not for his speech.

Whitaker urged the court to uphold a January ruling in favor of DeSantis by U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle. The judge found that the suspension violated Florida state law, but that as a federal judge he did not have the power to overrule it.

Circuit Judge Kevin Newsom, an appointee of former Republican President Donald Trump, appeared the most skeptical of Warren’s case, at one point saying outright that he did not see a First Amendment violation.

Circuit Judge Jill Pryor, who was appointed by former Democratic President Barack Obama, and U.S. District Judge Anne Conway, who normally sits in federal court in Orlando and was appointed by former Republican President George H.W. Bush, also sat on the panel. They did not clearly signal how they would rule.

Warren, who won re-election in 2020 as the Hillsborough County state attorney, sued DeSantis last August. He said the governor illegally retaliated against him after he joined prosecutors around the country in signing a statement vowing not to use their offices to criminalize reproductive health decisions. He signed on June 24, the day the U.S. Supreme Court overturned its landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that recognized women’s constitutional right to abortion.

Florida at the time banned abortion after 15 weeks. Last month, DeSantis signed a bill banning it after six weeks.

(Reporting By Brendan Pierson in New York, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and David Gregorio)

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Cryptoverse: Digital coins lure inflation-weary Argentines and Turks

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

By Medha Singh and Lisa Pauline Mattackal

(Reuters) -Can inherently volatile cryptocurrencies become safe-havens? Apparently they can in some parts of the world, such as Argentina and Turkey, where soaring prices and tumbling local currencies have forced people to seek refuge in digital coins.

Ownership of digital currencies in Turkey was the highest in the world at 27.1% followed by Argentina at 23.5% — well above global crypto ownership rate estimated at 11.9% — according to data from research firm GWI.

What’s common to Turkey and Argentina besides their pole positions in crypto adoption is high inflation, which has led to crumbling currencies and capital controls to deter local residents from taking money out. Turkey’s annual inflation was 50.51% in March, Argentina’s was even higher at 104%.

The lira and peso have been plunging and are at record lows. Argentina’s peso trades around 464 per dollar in the black market, more than double the official exchange rate of 222.

Much of the safe-haven buying has been of stablecoins such as USD Coin (USDC) and Tether (USDT), which are crypto tokens pegged one-to-one to a traditional asset such as the U.S. dollar or gold, giving investors an alternative to scarce dollars.

“Folks, whether they’re on the retail side or institutional side, are thinking about how can we hedge against currency devaluation,” said Ehab Zaghloul, chief research scientist at Tribal Credit, a digital payments platform for startups in emerging markets.

“They want to potentially hold additional assets pegged to a stronger currency, so, things like USDC or USDT or anything pegged to a stronger currency like the U.S. dollar.”

Trading volume for the USDT-Turkish lira pair reached a multi-month high last week, driven by the weakening of the Turkish currency and the upcoming landmark presidential and parliamentary elections, Kaiko analyst Dessislava Aubert said.

“In general, crypto adoption tends to be higher in countries with capital restrictions, financial instability, and political instability,” analysts at K33 Research wrote.

GLOBAL CRYPTO FEVER

While bitcoin, the world’s biggest and best-known cryptocurrency, is up 72% this year at $30,000, its highest in 10 months, overall trading volumes are far from levels seen last summer after investors were spooked by a series of collapses of crypto players culminating in FTX’s demise.

Trading volumes for spot bitcoin are highest during U.S. opening hours, with little change from 2022, Kaiko data showed.

However, regulatory issues faced by crypto exchange Binance in recent months have led to a slight shift in derivative trading volume towards Asia Pacific hours from Americas, Kaiko said.

If dollar to crypto volumes are excluded, then the next most dominant currency is South Korea’s won.

Crypto trading volumes in South Korea are back to levels seen in first quarter and second quarters of 2022 after a weak fourth quarter in 2022, analysts at crypto investment firm Matrixport said.

“The dominance of altcoins makes South Korea a very interesting market to analyse,” Matrixport analysts said.

“This is in stark contrast to other crypto exchanges where bitcoin and Ethereum account for the majority of the volume.”

(Reporting by Medha Singh and Lisa Mattackal in Bengaluru; Editing by Vidya Ranganathan and Sam Holmes)

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Morgan Stanley in talks to resolve probes into block trading practices – filing

by Reuters May 2, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) – Morgan Stanley is looking to resolve more than a year long investigation by U.S. regulators into its block trading practices, the Wall Street bank said in a filing on Tuesday.

The company is engaged in discussions with the enforcement division of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, the regulatory filing said.

Block trading tends to increase during times of volatility as institutional investors rebalance their portfolios.

Broker-dealers frequently buy and sell blocks of shares, either on behalf of clients or as part of a hedging strategy, which are large enough to move a company’s share price.

Still, the filing cautioned that there is no assurance that the investigations into the Wall Street firm’s blocks business and sales and trading practices will be resolved.

The company disclosed in February that it was cooperating with U.S. regulators over those investigations.

Reuters reported last year that the SEC was probing whether financial executives may have broken the rules by tipping off hedge funds ahead of such trades.

(Reporting by Mehnaz Yasmin in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)

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CBP Seizes 3,175 Pounds of Marijuana at Detroit Cargo Facility

by US Border Patrol May 2, 2023
By US Border Patrol

DETROIT — U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers assigned to the Port of Detroit intercepted 3,175 pounds of marijuana at the Fort Street Cargo Facility, April 20.

Tires

The illicit cargo was discovered after an inbound tractor trailer hauling a shipment of tires was selected for additional screening. The subsequent physical inspection conducted by officers revealed multiple packages of marijuana concealed inside the tires among brown packing paper and garbage bags.

“The CBP officers in Detroit continue to work diligently—day and night—to accomplish our border security mission in order to protect our nation and the communities we serve,” said Port Director Devin Chamberlain. “This success is a testament to their hard work and dedication.”

The marijuana, cargo, tractor and trailer were seized by CBP.

Marijuana remains a Schedule I controlled substance in the U.S., therefore importation is prohibited and contrary to federal law.

Travelers are encouraged to learn more about current regulations before attempting to bring items into the United States to avoid penalties, seizures, and even arrest.

Follow us on Twitter @DFODetroit and @CBPGreatLakes.

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Baltimore CBP and FDA Seize $688k Shipment of Apetamin, an Appetite-Stimulating and Potentially Harmful Supplement

by US Border Patrol May 2, 2023
By US Border Patrol

BALTIMORE – For decades, consumers have been bombarded with products pitching weight loss that failed to work as promised, or worse, that presented health complications to consumers. Now, social media and the internet marketplace is fostering a trend reversal and pitching supplements to help consumers bulk up to a more-curvy appearance. That too may prove to cause severe health consequences, and so U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration are stepping in to protect U.S. consumers.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers and U.S. Food and Drug Administration consumer safety officers seized over 25,000 bottles of Apetamin, an appetite-stimulating and potentially harmful weight-gain supplement popularized on social media, on April 28, 2023, after it arrived from Ghana.
The prohibited Apetamin arrived in a shipment of over 25,000 units of 200ml bottles.

On Friday, CBP officers in Baltimore seized 25,200 bottles of Apetamin, an alleged appetite stimulating weight-gain supplement, after an FDA consumer safety officer determined that Apetamin has not been approved for sale in, or import to the United States.

According to the FDA, Apetamin is a syrupy concoction that contains cyproheptadine, an antihistamine that requires a physician’s prescription in the U.S., the amino acid lysine, and vitamins. Apetamin, which may also be found in pill form, is largely marketed on social media to consumers searching for quick weight gains to help achieve a certain “slim thick” physique.

However, the FDA warns consumers that Apetamin has not been reviewed for safety and effectiveness, and that it reportedly poses potentially dangerous side effects, such as hallucinations, convulsions, decreased heart rates, coma, and death.

CBP initially inspected the shipment on April 3. Manifested as “African Black Soap,” the shipment arrived from Ghana and consisted of 1,008 boxes that collectively contained 25,200 units of 200ml bottles. CBP officers detained the shipment, which was destined to an address in the Bronx, N.Y.

An FDA consumer safety officer examined the shipment on April 11 and a week later confirmed that the Apetamin is prohibited as an unapproved product. FDA requested that CBP seize the shipment.

CBP’s Agriculture and Prepared Products Center of Excellence and Expertise, the agency’s trade experts, appraised the shipment at $688,464.

CBP seized the shipment on April 28. No arrests have been made.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers and U.S. Food and Drug Administration consumer safety officers seized over 25,000 bottles of Apetamin, an appetite-stimulating and potentially harmful weight-gain supplement popularized on social media, on April 28, 2023, after it arrived from Ghana.
Apetamin is an appetite-stimulating and potentially harmful weight-gain supplement popularized on social media.

“Apetamin is a relatively new phenomenon here in the U.S., but one that reportedly poses a serious health and safety threat to U.S. consumers. Customs and Border Protection and our FDA partners will continue to identify these shipments and take these dangerous, unapproved products out of circulation,” said Adam Rottman, Area Port Director for CBP’s Area Port of Baltimore. “Besides, I think many of us have found out by now that loading up on fast food is a really effective way to gain weight.”

CBP’s border security mission is led at our nation’s Ports of Entry by CBP officers and agriculture specialists from the Office of Field Operations. CBP screens international travelers and cargo and searches for illicit narcotics, unreported currency, weapons, counterfeit consumer goods, prohibited agriculture, invasive weeds and pests, and other illicit products that could potentially harm the American public, U.S. businesses, and our nation’s safety and economic vitality.

See what CBP accomplished during “A Typical Day” in 2022. Learn more at www.CBP.gov.

Follow the Director of CBP’s Baltimore Field Office on Twitter at @DFOBaltimore for breaking news, current events, human interest stories and photos, and CBP’s Office of Field Operations on Instagram at @cbpfieldops.

May 2, 2023 0 comments
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MIsc. News

Falfurrias agents stop major human smuggling attempt

by US Border Patrol May 2, 2023
By US Border Patrol

FALFURRIAS, Texas – Falfurrias Border Patrol agents interdicted the driver of a commercial vehicle attempting to smuggle 45 people on Monday morning.

On May 1, 2023, Falfurrias agents encountered a commercial vehicle at the USBP Checkpoint near Falfurrias, Texas.  While searching the vehicle following a canine alert, agents discovered 45 non-citizen migrants in the vehicle including two juveniles.  The migrants encountered were from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador.  All subjects were placed under arrest, including the driver of the commercial vehicle.  Homeland Security Investigations took lead of the investigation.

This year, RGV Sector agents have disrupted over a hundred smuggling attempts in commercial vehicles.

This smuggling attempt is a grim reminder of the treatment and endangerment of migrants by human smuggling organizations.  There is no compassion or care for those smuggled, sick or injured. Also, these smuggling events often include children”, said Chief Patrol Agent Gloria I. Chavez.

Please visit www.cbp.gov to view additional news releases and other information pertaining to Customs and Border Protection.  Follow us on Twitter @CBPRGV and @USBPChiefRGV.

May 2, 2023 0 comments
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