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CNN —Residents of Maui have suffered widespread devastation as wildfires ravage the Hawaiian island, along with Hawaii’s Big Island. Several sites help people find and support legitimate charities, including Charity Navigator, BBB Wise Giving Alliance, and CharityWatch. Dig deeper into an organization’s reputation after finding a legitimate charity you’re considering supporting. Look up the organization in the IRS’s Tax Exempt Organization Search. For larger disasters, like the Maui wildfires, GoFundMe told CNN they usually create a centralized hub of verified fundraisers.
Persons: Hurricane Dora, Patrick T, Fallon, you’ve, , It’s, GoFundMe, Don’t, Scottie Andrew Organizations: CNN —, CNN, Getty, US Federal Trade Commission, FTC, telltale Locations: Maui, Hurricane, Lahaina, Hawaii, AFP
Aug 8 (Reuters) - State banks that are a member of the U.S. Federal Reserve system should obtain a written supervisory nonobjection from the Fed before issuing, holding or transacting in dollar tokens used to facilitate payments, such as stablecoins, the central bank said in a new supervisory letter Tuesday. The Fed also said it is creating a new supervisory program to oversee the activities of the banks it supervises related to cryptocurrency, blockchain technology and tech-driven nonbank partnerships, with the aim of complementing its existing supervisory process and strengthening the oversight of tech-driven activities. Prior attempts by major mainstream companies to launch stablecoins have met fierce opposition from financial regulators and policymakers. For banks to receive a written nonobjection to be able to engage with stabelcoins, banks should demonstrate appropriate risk management, including having systems in place to identify and monitor any potential risks, including cybersecurity and illicit finance threats, according to the Fed. After receiving a written nonobjection, state member banks engaging in dollar token-related activities will continue to be subject to supervisory review as well as heightened monitoring of those activities, the Fed said.
Persons: Hannah Lang, Chris Reese, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: U.S . Federal, Federal Reserve, PayPal, ., Fed, Thomson Locations: Washington
Oil and food prices have jumped in recent weeks, and wages are still growing strongly in some of the world’s biggest economies. The UN global Food Price Index rose in July, notching only the second monthly increase in a year of steady declines. Oil supply cutsGlobal oil prices have shot up in recent weeks. The International Energy Agency has forecast that global oil demand will rise to a record 102 million barrels this year. Rising oil prices have spurred a jump in US gasoline prices, which hit an average of $3.82 a gallon Tuesday.
Persons: ” Randall Kroszner, , Price, Chris Ratcliffe, Richard Bronze, , , unraveled, ” Kroszner, — “, Michelle Bowman Organizations: London CNN, US Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, US Federal Reserve System, University of Chicago Booth School of Business, CNN, UN, Bloomberg, Getty, West Texas Intermediate, International Energy Agency, OPEC, Agriculture Organization, United Nations, Capital Economics, “ Labor, Bank Locations: Ukraine, United States, United Kingdom, Brent, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Moscow
A representation of the cryptocurrency is seen in front of Coinbase logo in this illustration taken, March 4, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File PhotoNEW YORK, Aug 4 (Reuters) - Coinbase Global (COIN.O) on Friday asked a judge to end the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's lawsuit accusing the world's largest publicly traded cryptocurrency exchange of violating federal securities laws. Coinbase was sued by the SEC in June, and accused of operating illegally as a national securities exchange, broker and clearing agency without registering with the regulator. Firms are closely watching the litigation between the SEC and Coinbase, with some onlookers deeming it an "existential" clash. Coinbase leaned on the recent Ripple matter in Friday's filing, noting the SEC's lawsuit hinges on the type of transactions that the judge deemed outside of the regulator's jurisdiction.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Coinbase, Paul Grewal, Chris Prentice, Toby Chopra, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: REUTERS, U.S . Securities, Exchange, SEC, Labs, Thomson Locations: Manhattan
For Biden, Trump’s third indictment is undoubtedly the most personal. The White House declined to comment on Trump’s indictment Tuesday, referring questions to the Department of Justice. The White House learned of the indictment through media reports, a White House official said, as was the case with past indictments. After Trump was indicted in June, Biden was repeatedly pressed for comment on the historic first federal indictment of a former president. Ahead of Trump’s indictment Tuesday, a Biden campaign official said the campaign once again did not intend to fundraise off a Trump indictment, determining that the risks of fundraising off the indictment – which would feed Republican attacks of a politicized prosecution – outweighed the potential benefits.
Persons: Joe Biden, Donald Trump’s, He’s, Trump, Jack Smith, , Biden, Department’s, Trump’s, , , Ian Sams, General Merrick, Garland, MSNBC’s Nicolle Wallace, Jill Biden, The Biden, ” Biden, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, they’re, Trump “, headwinds Biden Organizations: CNN, Mar, Biden, Trump, Capitol, Department of Justice, Justice Department, White, White House, aren’t, The, New York Times Locations: Maine, Freeport, Delaware, Siena, American
The Fed last week raised its policy rate to the 5.25%-5.50% range, the 11th increase in the last 12 meetings. Core inflation is still pretty elevated," Powell said in a press conference after the end of the Fed's two-day policy meeting. We think we're going to need to hold policy at restrictive levels for some time. The Fed's policy rate influences the economy by changing what lenders charge consumers for credit card, auto, and home loans or what businesses pay on bonds or for credit lines. "Given that inflation is still sticky, they're going to end up with rates either too high or as high as they are for too long.
Persons: Antulio Bomfim, Bomfim, what's, Jerome Powell, Powell, Lindsay Owens, Thomas Simons, Howard Schneider, Dan Burns, Paul Simao Organizations: Trust Asset Management, Fed, Reuters Graphics Reuters, STAR, North Star, Open, Jefferies, Thomson Locations: U.S
No matter what the Fed seems to do, it's become a game of whack-a-mole — whether it be wages, home prices, creeping commodities, or Fed subsidies that are about to roar in. The idea that the Fed is driving the price of a house to further unaffordability has taken hold. The yield curve can't be wrong, so it remains a matter of time before Fed Chair Jerome Powell crashes the plane — and let's not forget that lurking, lurking election. And the multiple on those profits is going up not because of hideous expansion, but because of a triumph over the pandemic. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade.
Persons: it's, Jerome Powell, let's, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Al Drago Organizations: Federal Reserve, Procter, Gamble, Treasury, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC, US Federal Reserve, Market, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Weimar Republic, Washington , DC
Still, businesses aren't feeling too optimistic, with most still expecting a recession this year. However, big companies are hiring, businesses are expanding, and lots of entrepreneurs are filing to open new startups. This was partly due to consumers spending more and business investment being way up. The main measure of business investment in the GDP report is well above pre-pandemic levels, and shows no signs of slowing down ahead of a hypothetical recession. Businesses also aren't feeling too optimistic according to the National Federation of Independent Business' Small Business Optimism Index.
Persons: , Gregory Daco, Daco, Jeffrey Roach, Jerome Powell, Powell Organizations: Service, Bureau, Infrastructure Investment, Jobs, US . Entrepreneurs, Economic Innovation Group, Economic, Nationwide, Edelman Data, Intelligence, National Federation of Independent Business, LPL, Federal Reserve, Fed Locations: Wall, Silicon
CNN —Japan’s central bank kept interest rates unchanged Friday despite rising inflation but hinted that it could gradually abandon years of ultra-cheap money, sending the yen soaring and stocks tumbling. “No introduction of the policy rate guidance suggests that the Bank [of Japan] left open the near-term policy rate hike optionality, in our view,” UBS analysts noted. The Japanese yen surged by as much as 1% against the US dollar in response to the BOJ announcement. It has stayed above the central bank’s inflation target for the fifteenth straight month. On paper, the headline numbers suggest the BOJ’s inflation target has already been met.
Persons: , Stephen Innes, , Kazuo Ueda Organizations: CNN, Bank of Japan, Bank, UBS, US Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, Nikkei Locations: Japan, EU, China
Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesThis report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. However, Chair Jerome Powell left the door open to a subsequent rate hike, saying the central bank will make decisions "meeting by meeting." At his post-meeting press conference, Chair Jerome Powell, in other words, deftly negotiated expectations from market bulls and bears, and somehow managed to reaffirm the case of both camps. The "hawkish" part will please the bears, while the "hold" portion will appeal to the bulls.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Al Drago, Hong, Mukesh Ambani, Dow, that's, , Powell, Frances Donald, CNBC's Fred Imbert, that'd Organizations: US Federal Reserve, Market, Bloomberg, Getty, CNBC, Federal, Dow Jones, Samsung Electronics, Wall, Revenue, Reality Labs, BlackRock, India BlackRock, Jio Financial Services, CNBC Pro, Manulife Investment Management, Nasdaq, Dow Locations: Washington , DC, Asia, Pacific, Indian
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank no longer forecasts a recession this year. It's a shift from previous meetings when the committee left the potential for a recession on the table. However, he punted recession concerns by saying that the Fed staff no longer forecasts a recession in 2023. This differs from previous Federal Open Market Committee meetings, during which the staff did leave a recession on the table. The most recent inflation data were quite encouraging."
Persons: Jerome Powell, Powell, Janet Yellen, Yellen Organizations: Service, Fed, Bloomberg Locations: Wall, Silicon
More than 10 million tickets have been purchased through the app, called Pay It Forward. During the movie’s July 4 opening, “Sound of Freedom” scored $11.5 million from direct box office sales and $2.6 million, or over 20%, from Pay It Forward ticket sales. A spokesperson for Angel Studios told CNN that these posts could be tied to group ticket sales. For individual tickets, Angel Studios’ system creates a code that allows another person to redeem a free ticket directly from theaters. Angel Studios does not release what percentage of ticket sales come from customers buying other people tickets.
Persons: “ Barbie ”, “ Oppenheimer, , Jesus, Angel, Daniel Loria, Jim Caviezel, Donald Trump, Caviezel, Ted Cruz, Ted Cruz of, theatergoers, Loria, Adam Aron, , Jeff Bock Organizations: New, New York CNN, , Angel Studios, Angel, , Twitter, New York Times, AMC, AMC Theatres, CNN Locations: New York, American, Texas, Ted Cruz of Texas
Editor’s Note: Sign up for Unlocking the World, CNN Travel’s weekly newsletter. Extreme weatherHeat waves, wildfires, floods and storms have been hitting regions across North America, Europe and Asia. Air travel woesUS passenger airline employment is now at its highest level in over two decades, says a new statement from the International Air Transport Association (IATA) as carriers build up their workforces to meet the huge demand for post-pandemic travel. However, passengers this summer are still facing “unacceptable delays and disruptions” because of a shortage of air traffic controllers in North America. If all this has got you wistful for a bygone “golden age of air travel,” however, you’d be very wrong.
Persons: you’d, we’ve, Jay Khan, Janet Yellen’s, jian, Yellen, Liesbet Collaert, she’d, Christina Ward, Wahid Kandil, you’re, they’ve Organizations: CNN, Southern, International Air Transport Association, US Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, NAV Canada, US Locations: North America, Europe, Asia, Italy, Southern Europe, Ireland, Denmark, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Las Vegas, Chicago, Hong Kong, Beijing, Yunnan, Belgian, California, Egypt, Barra, American, Paris
The data bolsters the chances the BOJ will revise up this year's inflation forecast in fresh projections due next week. Carol Kong, a currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA), said the market expectations for a BOJ policy tightening have ebbed and flowed over the past year. "The window for the BOJ to tighten policy is narrowing," Kong said, adding that CBA's base case is for the BOJ to keep monetary policy unchanged this year. The yen has slipped about 1% against the dollar this week and is on course to snap its two-week winning run. Against a basket of currencies, the dollar rose 0.03% at 100.78, after gaining 0.5%.
Persons: Carol Kong, Kong, Kazuo Ueda, Ryan Brandham, Ankur Banerjee, Sam Holmes Organizations: Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan's, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Validus Risk Management, Fed, European Central Bank, Thomson Locations: SINGAPORE, Central, Europe, Japan, United State, North America, U.S, Singapore
Dollar bills and Japanese currency Yen lying on a table on August 03, 2016 in Berlin, Germany. The data bolsters the chances the BOJ will revise up this year's inflation forecast in fresh projections due next week. Carol Kong, a currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, or CBA, said the market expectations for a BOJ policy tightening have ebbed and flowed over the past year. The yen has slipped about 1% against the dollar this week and is on course to snap its two-week winning run. Against a basket of currencies, the dollar rose 0.03% at 100.78, after gaining 0.5%.
Persons: Carol Kong, Kong, Kazuo Ueda, Ryan Brandham Organizations: Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan's, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Validus Risk Management, Fed, European Central Bank Locations: Berlin, Germany, Central, Europe, Japan, United State, North America, U.S
July 20 (Reuters) - The US Federal Trade Commission is poised to pause its in-house trial against Microsoft Corp's (MSFT.O) $69 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard (ATVI.O) opening the door to potential settlement talks, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday. Microsoft and FTC did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment. Reporting by Mrinmay Dey in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh KuberOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Mrinmay Dey, Shailesh Organizations: US Federal Trade Commission, Microsoft, Activision Blizzard, Bloomberg, FTC, Thomson Locations: Bengaluru
I don't know what the hell is going on," Musk, the CEO of car company Tesla, said during a second-quarter earnings call with analysts on Wednesday. Tesla has already slashed prices for its electric vehicles, or EVs, repeatedly this year to not only keep up with the competition but also the economy. Tesla reported an all-time high revenue of $24.93 billion on Wednesday, beating the $24.47 billion analysts had forecast, per Refinitiv data. Earnings per share came in at 91 cents per share adjusted, beating the 82 cents per share analysts had expected. Tesla's share prices fell 4.2% to $279.07 apiece in after-hours trade.
Persons: Elon, Tesla, it's, Elon Musk, Musk Organizations: Service, US Federal Reserve Locations: Wall, Silicon
Fed fines Deutsche Bank $186 million
  + stars: | 2023-07-20 | by ( Hanna Ziady | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
London CNN —Deutsche Bank has been trying to leave its troubled past behind for years. The Fed found that Deutsche Bank (DB) has made insufficient progress since 2018 to tighten its anti-money laundering controls, improve customer due diligence and ensure compliance with sanctions, among other failures. The Fed had already fined the bank a total of $99 million in 2015 and 2017 over the same issues. Deutsche Bank exited the relationship in 2015. In November, Germany’s financial watchdog BaFin threatened Deutsche Bank with a fine if it failed to take action on money laundering and terrorist financing controls.
Persons: , , BaFin Organizations: London CNN — Deutsche Bank, US Federal Reserve, Deutsche Bank, DB, Fed, Danske Bank, Deutsche, Danske Locations: Danske Bank Estonia, Danske Estonia
Warren Buffett exited his wager on Microsoft buying Activision Blizzard last quarter, filings show. Buffett built a $5 billion Activision stake, wagering the stock would hit Microsoft's offer of $95. One of Buffett's deputies oversaw Berkshire's purchase of 14.7 million Activision shares in 2021. After Microsoft bid $69 billion for Activision in January 2022, Buffett scooped up nearly 50 million shares as an arbitrage. The good news has sent Activision stock up 11% this month to $93, less than 2% below Microsoft's offer price.
Persons: Warren Buffett, Buffett, He's, Berkshire Hathaway, he'd, Charlie Munger, Charlie, Munger, Warren Organizations: Microsoft, Activision Blizzard, Activision, Service, Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC, US Federal Trade Commission Locations: Wall, Silicon, British
[1/2] The Pfizer logo is pictured on their headquarters building in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., November 9, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo/File PhotoJuly 14 (Reuters) - The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has sought additional information and documentary material related to Pfizer's (PFE.N) proposed acquisition of Seagen Inc (SGEN.O), Seagen said on Friday. The antitrust agency sent the requests separately to both the companies, a regulatory filing said. Pfizer struck a $43 billion deal in March to acquire Seagen and its targeted cancer therapies, to counter the fall in COVID-related sales and generic competition for some top-selling drugs. The recent scrutiny by the antitrust agency to block Amgen's (AMGN.O) $27.8 billion deal to buy Horizon Therapeutics (HZNP.O) has made investors jittery around the Pfizer-Seagen deal as well.
Persons: Carlo Allegri, Seagen, Khushi, Shailesh Organizations: Pfizer, REUTERS, US Federal Trade Commission, Seagen Inc, Horizon Therapeutics, Thomson Locations: Manhattan, New York City , New York, U.S, COVID, Bengaluru
The FAA just approved the first electric flying car, the Alef Model A, for test flights. The first flying car, a Model T with wings attached, was created 106 years ago. In 1930, the first flying car was featured in a movie, kicking off a long line of flying cars appearing on screen. The possibility of a flying car being available for an estimated $300,000 is exciting, but humans and engineers have been fascinated with the idea of flying cars for over 100 years. With the potential of flying cars around the corner, here's a look through the history of our obsession with making cars fly and the ups and downs that have come with it.
Persons: Carl Benz, Ford, Glenn Curtiss Organizations: FAA, Automotive, US Federal Aviation Administration Locations: California
(Advisory: This article includes links to photos and videos depicting death penalty scenes)The Washington Post did not publish a report earlier this month saying Bill Gates had been arrested. The Washington Post’s Public Relations Manager Savannah Stephens said in a July 13 email that no such story was published. Washington Post” (here). A search for articles related to Gates being arrested does not return any relevant results on The Washington Post site (tinyurl.com/35sucwh6). There is no evidence that The Washington Post published a report on Bill Gates being arrested for crimes against humanity.
Persons: Bill Gates, Gates, Savannah Stephens, retweets, Bill, Melinda Gates, Read Organizations: Washington Post, The Washington, Public, US Federal Marshals, Watch, . Washington Post, YouTube, Reuters Locations: The, Guantanamo, . Washington, U.S
New York CNN —Bank of America was fined $250 million this week by US federal regulators for allegedly harming customers by double-dipping on fees, withholding credit card rewards and opening fake accounts. Of those fines, $100 million is set to go directly to consumers who were impacted by the bank’s alleged wrongdoing. People are generally bad at keeping or knowing how to access relatively recent bank records, said Harvey Rosenfield, founder of Consumer Watchdog, a nonprofit consumer advocacy group. It’s unlikely the average customer saved copies of their bank records or credit reports for over a decade, he said. As part of the agreement Bank of America settled with the CFPB, it is also required to identify consumers who were harmed.
Persons: they’re, you’re, you’ve, there’s, Bank of America’s, Harvey Rosenfield, didn’t, CFPB Organizations: New, New York CNN — Bank of America, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, CNN, Bank of America, Bank of, Consumer Watchdog, Bank, of America Locations: New York
The European Parliament said it's auditing its YouTube advertising from 2020 to date. The European Parliament is auditing its Google advertising going as far back as 2020 following a report that alleged YouTube placed ads on third-party sites that violated its own standards. This evaluation process is still ongoing," said a European Parliament press representative in an emailed statement. From its initial assessment, the use of the GVP Network by the European Parliament was "residual," the representative said. The European Parliament has been put under pressure to suspend all of its Google advertising.
Persons: TrueView skippable, Adalytics, Marvin Renaud, Renaud, Roberta Metsola, Pravda.ru, monetization, Adweek, Ruben Schreurs Organizations: Google, YouTube, Fortune, Partner, GVP, GVP Network, US Treasury, Street Journal, Ebiquity Locations: TrueView, Russia, Russian, Ukraine
Spot prices of Russia's crude oil this week surpassed the $60-per-barrel threshold of the Group of Seven's oil price cap scheme, as Moscow and Riyadh tighten supplies. The G7 introduced its oil price cap mechanism on Dec. 5 to retain Russian flows in the market while also limiting revenue for the Kremlin's war coffers. Under the G7 scheme, Western shipping and insurance providers can offer services to non-G7 buyers of Russian crude if the crude oil is acquired at a price below $60 per barrel. Spot assessments from commodities pricing agency Argus show that Urals prices on July 12 reached $60.18 and $60.78 per barrel for Primorsk and Novorossiysk-loaded cargoes, respectively. S&P Global Platts meanwhile valued Primorsk cargoes at $60.32 per barrel on July 11 and Novorossiysk Urals crude at $60.26 per barrel on July 12.
Persons: P Global Platts, , Giovanni Staunovo, they're, David Fyfe Organizations: Argus, P Global, CNBC, Ice Brent, of, Petroleum, International Energy Agency, UBS, P, Commodity Insights Locations: Moscow, Riyadh, Ust, Luga, Novorossiysk, , Libya, OPEC, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Turkey, Iraq, Lower U.S
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