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Observers feared that Israel would hit Iranian energy infrastructure. Instead, it hit those sites' defenses — making it easier to launch more strikes later. AdvertisementIsrael's recent attack on Iran's air defense network was limited in its scope, but all the same left a significant opening. Related storiesIn the aftermath of the attack, Iranian authorities sought to downplay the strikes, which killed four Iranian soldiers. AdvertisementVatanka said the attack was a demonstration of Israel's capabilities, and also avoided pushing Iran into a position where it would have to "hit back harder."
Persons: , Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Masoud Pezeshkian, Khamenei, Ali Akbar Velayati, Alex Vatanka, Vatanka Organizations: Observers, Service, New York Times, Institute for, Israel Defense Forces, IDF, Guardian, International Atomic Energy Agency, Financial Times, University of South, Middle East Institute Locations: Israel, Iran, Bandar, Abadan, Russian, Tehran, University of South Wales
The Russian central bank raised its key interest rate to 21% on Friday. Inflation in Russia hit 8.6% year-on-year in September, well above the central bank's 4% target. It has largely been driven by heavy defense spending amid the ongoing war in Ukraine. AdvertisementRussia's central bank raised its key interest rate to a record high on Friday as inflationary pressure continues in the country. The Bank of Russia raised the benchmark rate by 200 basis points to 21%, saying inflation was "running considerably above" its July forecast.
Persons: , Alexandra Prokopenko, Prokopenko Organizations: Service, Bank of Russia, Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, Financial Times Locations: Russian, Russia, Ukraine, Moscow, Europe
Members of the International Association of Machinists just rejected Boeing’s offer to return to work after a bruising six weeks of strike action. But with 64% of IAM members voting no on the company’s latest offer, getting a once-great American company back on track appears harder than ever. Our members haven’t forgotten that.”Why traditional pension plans matterTraditional pensions are what’s known as defined benefit plans. Traditional pension plans are “one of the hallmarks of retirement security,” Holden said Wednesday night. But he said so far in negotiations Boeing hasn’t entertained any kind of return to a pension plan.
Persons: Kelly Ortberg, Lindsey Wasson, ” Jon Holden, haven’t, ” Holden, It’s, ” Nataleen Anderson, Stellantis, John Lawler, Max, , , Holden, Boeing hasn’t, they’re, Ortberg, Marian Lockhart, “ We’re, We’ve Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, International Association of Machinists, Poor’s, , IAM, Volunteers, Research, CNN, KIRO, United Auto Workers, General Motors, Ford, Chrysler, GM, Reuters Locations: New York, Washington, Seattle, Everett , Washington
AdvertisementDeloitte and EY have trimmed staff as demand for professional services provided by the two Big Four firms declines. AdvertisementDeloitte is the world's largest professional services firm in the world by revenue and employees. Lucy North/PA Images via Getty ImagesMajor consulting firms are experiencing a slowdown in demand for advisory services. Professional services firm Accenture cut its revenue forecast for 2024 from between 2% and 5% to between 1% and 3%. AdvertisementAside from workforce reductions, consulting firms are also introducing new policies as they face up to an industry slowdown.
Persons: , EY, Lucy North, PwC, James Callander, Callander Organizations: Deloitte, Service, Big, Financial Times, Revenue, Getty, Accenture, UK, Business
U.K. Finance Minister Rachel Reeves on Thursday confirmed she intends to change the country's fiscal rules in the October budget, a move designed to free up billions of pounds for investment. Writing in The Financial Times on Thursday, Reeves said her "investment rule" will "get debt falling as a proportion of our economy." A Treasury spokesperson declined to comment when asked whether the fiscal rule change would target PSNFL in the U.K.'s measure of debt. The Institute for Fiscal Studies, an influential think tank, said on Sept. 30 that a change in the fiscal rules to target PSNFL would offer as much as £50 billion ($64.8 billion) of additional headroom for the government. Reeves confirmed the change to Britain's fiscal rules during a trip to the International Monetary Fund's annual meetings in Washington.
Persons: Rachel Reeves, Labour government's, Reeves, Keir Starmer Organizations: Britain's, Finance, Labour, Financial, Treasury, Fiscal Studies, International Monetary Locations: Washington
EY has fired dozens of staff in the US over code of conduct breaches, the FT first reported. The staff watched multiple online training courses simultaneously, the report said. The dismissals took place last week after an investigation found that the staff had watched multiple online training courses simultaneously during "EY Ignite Learning Week" in May, the FT reported. They said that there had been no warning that watching courses simultaneously was not allowed and that multitasking was part of EY's culture. The SEC said hundreds of EY accounting staff shared answers to exam questions "over multiple years."
Persons: EY, Organizations: Business, Service, Financial Times, US Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC, Big, Public Company Locations: Indonesia, Philippines
Oil prices ended down 7% last week and are lower this year-to-date, despite Middle East tensions. Oil prices have been depressed this year because China — the world's largest oil importer — is in a prolonged economic downturn. Last year, they each accounted for 11% of the world's oil supply. This means that Saudi Arabia is looking to corner a larger market share instead of targeting higher profit margins by restricting output. Advertisement"But the problem is when oil prices spike, it sends oil companies searching for temporarily profitable oil," he added, referring to the US shale boom as the most recent example.
Persons: , Abishur Prakash, Prakash, Anton Siluanov, Matthew Huber, we're, Huber Organizations: Service, , Financial Times, International Energy Agency, Brent, US West Texas, Syracuse University, Saudi, Trump, OPEC Locations: Saudi Arabia, Russia, China, Toronto, Israel, Iran, Europe, OPEC
Larry Fink says the US election won't impact markets long-term. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementLarry Fink doesn't think the US election will affect markets much. The BlackRock CEO doubled down on saying the outcome of the US election, which will be decided in two weeks, won't matter in the long run. Divided Wall StreetFink is not the only Wall Street heavyweight saying the election won't matter to financial markets.
Persons: Larry Fink, Fink, BlackRock, , Larry Fink doesn't, I'm, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Trump, Joe Biden, Adewale Adeyemo, Mike Pyle, Harris, Obama, Mike Gitlin, PGIM Organizations: Service, BlackRock, Securities Industry, Financial, The Financial Times, Republican, Republicans, Wall, Capital Locations: BlackRock, China
Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi appeared on Friday's episode of the Hard Fork podcast. Khosrowshahi recently appeared on Hard Fork, a tech podcast, to discuss Uber's position in the autonomous vehicle industry. On the Hard Fork podcast, Khosrowshahi championed Waymo, saying he believed Waymo could best Tesla. Khosrowshahi spoke about Waymo's hardware during the Hard Fork podcast, saying, "I think that hardware costs scale down over a period of time. AdvertisementUber originally tried to walk the autonomous vehicle path alone, creating a self-driving car unit called Advanced Technologies Group.
Persons: Dara Khosrowshahi, Khosrowshahi, Tesla, Musk, , Tesla's, Uber, Waymo, PATRICK T, FALLON, John Krafcik, Elon Musk, Elon, Andrej Karpathy, Karpathy Organizations: Service, Waymo, Getty, Financial Times, Technologies, Aurora, Business Locations: Phoenix, Atlanta, Austin
SEAL Team 6 is reportedly readying for a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan. AdvertisementCould SEAL Team 6 special operators help Taiwan fend off a Chinese invasion? Related storiesThe Naval Special Warfare Development Group (DEVGRU), formerly known as SEAL Team 6, is the Navy's top-tier special operations outfit. SEAL Team 6 represents the cream of the crop of the SEAL community. And the direct support personnel serving with the unit will often have passed, depending on their role, Green Team, SEAL Team 6's physically and technically rigorous selection process.
Persons: , DEVGRU, Richard Phillips, Osama bin Laden, Katie Cox Organizations: Service, Financial Times, Navy, Warfare Development, Army's Delta Force, DEVGRU, Maersk, U.S . Navy, Navy SEALs, 75th Ranger Regiment, Big Navy, Strategic, Navy SEAL, SEAL, Green Team Locations: Taiwan, Beijing, China, Maersk Alabama, Somali
In today's big story, Taylor Swift has a new book coming out, but how she's doing it might create some bad blood with publishers . On Tuesday, Swift announced plans to self-publish "The Eras Tour Book," a behind-the-scenes look at her record-breaking tour that'll be released exclusively at Target on Black Friday. News of a Taylor Swift book should have sent a publisher jumping for joy at the potential revenue. AdvertisementBig stars like Swift are exactly who book publishers are banking on these days. But even so, Miami, New Orleans, and Indianapolis — her remaining US tour dates — won't mind Swift coming to town.
Persons: , Meta, Taylor Swift, Chelsea Jia Feng, Taylor, Swift, Samantha Grindell, Madeline Berg, George Walker IV, we're, Natalie Ammari, it's, Goldman Sachs, Kalshi, Donald Trump, Trump, Blackstone, Jon Gray, Walid Berrazeg, It's, Lebaredian, Uber, Dara Khosrowshahi's, Tyler Le, Matt Garman, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Milan Sehmbi, Amanda Yen Organizations: Business, Service, Target, AP, Indianapolis, Super Bowl, UBS, Getty, Financial, Wall, Blackstone, Trump, Investors, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, TSMC, Optimus, Financial Times, Netflix, American Express Locations: Miami, Miami , New Orleans, Glendale , Arizona, Hsinchu, ASML, Texas, California, New York, London
Zeroing in on cyber insurance as a key area for reform comes as the U.S. government scrambles to find ways to disrupt ransomware networks. For many organizations, deciding whether to pay a ransom is a difficult and urgent decision. The hacker group allegedly demanded a ransom to return the stolen data, though it remains unclear whether NPD paid it. Darren Williams, founder of BlackFog, a cybersecurity firm that specializes in ransomware prevention and cyber warfare, is firmly against paying ransoms. UnitedHealth Group experienced this firsthand after its subsidiary, Change Healthcare, was hit by the ALPHV/BlackCat ransom group in April 2023.
Persons: Anne Neuberger, James S, Ann Neuberger, scrambles, Paul Underwood, Underwood, Bryan Hornung, Hornung, I've, they'd, , Ransom, LVHN, Darren Williams, BlackCat, LoanDepot Organizations: Brady, White, Washington , D.C, National Intelligence, FBI, Xact IT, Social, Lehigh Valley Health, Federal Trade Commission, NPD, Jerico, UnitedHealth Group, Change, Healthcare, LoanDepot Locations: Washington ,, what's, Pennsylvania, U.S
Elevance Health – Shares plummeted more than 10% after the health insurer reported weaker-than-expected third-quarter earnings. Taiwan Semiconductor – The stock surged more than 8% after the company reported a 54% gain in net profit for the third quarter. Nokia – Shares slid more than 5% after the company reported an 8% dip in sales for the third quarter, citing a slowdown in the Indian market. Alcoa reported third-quarter adjusted earnings of 57 cents per share, versus the 28 cents a share expected from analysts polled by LSEG. Kinder Morgan posted adjusted earnings per share of 25 cents on $3.70 billion in revenue.
Persons: Gail Boudreaux, Centene, Uber, Lucid, Pekka Lundmark, Kinder Morgan, LSEG, , Alex Harring, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Molina Healthcare, Taiwan Semiconductor, Nvidia, Financial Times, Public Investment Fund, Nokia, CSX, Alcoa –, Alcoa, LSEG Locations: Expedia, Saudi
New York CNN —Meta fired around two dozen employees from its Los Angeles office for misusing company meal credits for things like laundry detergent, wine glasses and acne treatment pads, a source familiar with the company confirmed to CNN. Many of the social media giant’s corporate offices feature elaborate food services to provide employees with meals as a perk. Meta’s two-year-old office near New York City’s Penn Station, for example, features a cafeteria that feels like an upscale food court, with various stalls all free for staff. An internal investigation found that some LA-based employees used the meal funds to purchase things other than food instead, or had meals delivered to their homes, the source said. Meta’s median total annual compensation for individual employees (other than CEO Mark Zuckerberg) is $379,050, the company said in a regulatory filing earlier this year.
Persons: Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, Tracy Clayton, ” Meta, Jane Manchun Wong, Zuckerberg Organizations: New, New York CNN, CNN, Financial Times, Meta, , Reality Labs Locations: New York, Los Angeles, , Instagram
Travelers' third-quarter earnings came in at $5.24 per share, topping the $3.55 a share expected from analysts polled by LSEG. Blackstone reported third-quarter earnings of $1.01 per share on revenue of $2.43 billion. CSX — Shares slipped 5.9% after the transportation company reported disappointing third-quarter results. Alcoa — The aluminum producer's stock shed more than 3% after the company reported third-quarter revenue of $2.90 billion, below the $2.97 billion LSEG consensus estimate. Synovus Financial — Shares popped 5% after the company reported better-than-expected adjusted earnings per share for the third quarter.
Persons: Uber, LSEG, Elevance, Blackstone, Equifax, Synovus, — CNBC's Sean Conlon, Hakyung Kim, Alex Harring, Pia Singh Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor, Nvidia, Micron, Times, Expedia, , LSEG, CSX, Nokia —, Alcoa, FactSet, Dynamics, Steel, Walgreens, Alliance
Uber discussed a bid for the $20 billion travel booking company Expedia , CNBC confirmed, in a deal that would push the ride-share company into new markets beyond car travel and food delivery. Expedia is familiar territory for Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, who previously served as CEO of the travel group from 2005 to 2017. Expedia reported $28.8 billion total gross bookings in its second-quarter results in August. An acquisition of Expedia would be a "‘major strategic home run" for Uber, Dan Ives, Wedbush Securities managing partner, told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Thursday. "I think they're going to be on the hunt for M&A."
Persons: Uber, Dara Khosrowshahi, Khosrowshahi, Expedia, Dan Ives, CNBC's, they're, Ives Organizations: CNBC, Financial Times, Wedbush Securities
Expedia stock climbed 8% while Uber stock fell more than 3% in premarket trading on Thursday. Uber spoke with advisors about a potential takeover in recent months, The Financial Times reported. AdvertisementExpedia stock jumped as much as 8% in Thursday's premarket, while Uber tumbled more than 3% following a report the ride-hailing giant recently explored a takeover of the travel group. A third party raised the idea of buying Expedia to Uber, sources told the FT, adding that merger talks were nascent and a deal might not materialize. One source told the newspaper that Uber hasn't formally approached Expedia, and there were no ongoing discussions between the two companies.
Persons: Uber, , Expedia, Uber hasn't, Dara Khosrowshahi Organizations: Financial Times, Service Locations: Thursday's premarket
The potential deal would take Uber closer to "super app" status, according to one analyst. CEO Dara Khosrowshahi has said he wants to make Uber a one-stop app for transportation and delivery. AdvertisementUber's reported interest in travel booking website Expedia points to one way the ride-hailing app could get closer to CEO Dara Khosrowshahi's vision of an everything app. AdvertisementHowever, in a May interview with Skift, Khosrowshahi resisted describing Uber as a potential "super app," calling the term "loaded." Meantime, Uber might not need to buy Expedia in order to offer Expedia bookings, according to Gordon Haskett's Mollins.
Persons: Uber, Dara Khosrowshahi, , Dara Khosrowshahi's, Gordon, Robert Mollins, Khosrowshahi, Elon Musk, Skift, Gordon Haskett's Mollins, Mollins Organizations: Financial Times, Service, Uber, Twitter Locations: China
Several airlines have criticized Boeing for delivery delays. Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary told Reuters Wednesday that the airline is likely to cut its traffic growth expectations for next year as it predicts delivery delays. Also on Wednesday, at an Irish think tank event, the head of the world's foremost airline trade group spoke out about delivery delays. AdvertisementLast Friday, Boeing announced further delays to its 777X jet, with its first delivery pushed from 2025 to 2026. AdvertisementThe Boeing 777X was delayed again last week, leading to sharp criticism from the boss of Emirates, one of Boeing's biggest customers.
Persons: Michael O'Leary, , O'Leary, Willie Walsh, Walsh, Tim Clark, GIUSEPPE CACACE, I've, Carsten Spohr, Spohr Organizations: Boeing, Service, Ryanair, Reuters, International Air Transport Association, Guardian, Airbus . Supply, Alaska Airlines, Emirates, Business, Getty, Lufthansa, Airlines, Europe, Financial Times, BI Locations: Irish, AFP, Emirates
Jane Street is one of Wall Street's most lucrative trading firms. Some internships at the firm offer a base salary equivalent to $250,000 annually. AdvertisementLucrative trading firm Jane Street is one of Wall Street's leading market-makers. In a sign of its success, Jane Street currently has 58 job vacancies in its New York office. AdvertisementA quantitative researcher internship, which runs from May to August, offers a base salary of $250,000 annually.
Persons: Jane, , Jane Street, Jane Street's, Sam Bankman, Caroline Ellison, Fried, Donald Trump's, Glassdoor, Goldman Sach, JP Morgan Organizations: Service, Bloomberg, Financial Times, World Trade Center, Alameda Research, Jane, JPMorgan, Barclays, FT Locations: New York, Hudson, Alameda
BMW CEO Oliver Zipse says a 2035 gasoline ban will hit the European auto industry. Zipse's warnings come amid fears in the auto industry of a Darwinistic price war with China. AdvertisementA "correction" of the planned 2035 gasoline vehicle ban, Zipse said, would help reduce European OEMs' reliance on China for batteries. This, Tavares said, is because automakers will have to continue to invest in both electric and gasoline vehicles, thus incurring higher costs. Mercedes-Benz CEO Ola Källenius told attendees at the Berlin Global Dialogue conference on October 2 that the Western auto industry is fighting a "Darwinistic-like price war" with their Chinese rivals.
Persons: Oliver Zipse, , Zipse, weren't, Carlos Tavares, helms, Tavares, Ola Källenius, Källenius Organizations: BMW, Service, Union, Paris Automotive Summit, EU, Zipse, BMW didn't, Business Insider, Western, Chrysler, Fiat, Maserati, Peugeot, Financial Times, European Automobile Manufacturers ' Association, Benz, Berlin Global Locations: China, Europe
Ark Invest's Innovation ETF realized $3.5 billion in losses in the fiscal year ending July 2024. AdvertisementCathie Wood's Ark Invest recently filed its annual report for its fiscal year ending July 31, and it reveals some steep losses. Ark's flagship Innovation ETF realized $3.5 billion in losses from July 31, 2023, through July 31, 2024. The Ark Innovation ETF is down 9% year-to-date and off 70% from its record high. AdvertisementHere are the stocks in Ark Invest's flagship ETF that saw the biggest realized losses for the fiscal year ending July 31.
Persons: Cathie Wood, , Wood, Ark's Organizations: Ark Invest, Service, Invest, Times, Veracyte, Beam Therapeutics, Teladoc
North Korea destroyed parts of roads and rail lines connecting it with South Korea. It comes after North Korea last week accused South Korea of flying drones over its capital. In response, South Korea fired warning shots within its own border, according to South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff. The detonations come after North Korea last week accused South Korea of flying drones over its capital Pyongyang. Howell added that historically, North Korea has stepped up provocations during US election years.
Persons: , Jim Hoare, Kim Jong, Kim Yo Jong, Edward Howell, Howell, ", Hoare, Peter Ward Organizations: North, Service, South Korea's, Chiefs, Staff, Inter, Korean, Office, Bloomberg, Korea, Chatham House, Bloomberg Economics, Sejong Institute, Financial Times Locations: Korea, South Korea, North Korea, South, British, Kaesong, Korean, Pyongyang, North, Seoul
Israel is facing an interceptor missile shortage, sources told the Financial Times. The head of an Israeli manufacturer of interceptor missiles said its production lines are working 24/7. Stroul also noted that the US is reaching a "tipping point," and may struggle to keep supplying Ukraine and Israel with interceptor missiles at the current pace. AdvertisementHe told Business Insider that he doubts Israel would fully exhaust its interceptor missile supply, and to approach the narrative of an Israeli interceptor missile shortage with caution. According to estimates, the Iron Dome's "Tamir" interceptor missiles cost about $50,000 each.
Persons: , Dana Stroul, Stroul, Ehud Eilam, Israel, Boaz Levy, Levy, Wertman, Hassan Nasrallah, Tamir, Pat Ryder Organizations: Financial Times, Service, Israel's Ministry of Defence, Israel Defense Forces, NPR, Israel Aerospace Industries, University of South, US, Defense, Pentagon Locations: Israel, Iran, Ukraine, Tel Aviv, Gaza, Hezbollah, Lebanon, Yemen, University of South Wales
The head of Germany's domestic intelligence service said a plane crash was narrowly avoided. A "lucky coincidence" meant a package caught fire on the ground instead of midflight, he said. German intelligence bosses warned of the growing threat from Russia in a parliamentary hearing. AdvertisementA plane crash was narrowly avoided when a package caught fire before being loaded on board, in what German intelligence suspects was an act of sabotage. Haldenwang said it was "only a lucky coincidence" that the package caught fire on the ground and not during the flight.
Persons: midflight, , Thomas Haldenwang, Haldenwang, Vladimir Putin, didn't, Bruno Kahl Organizations: Service, Bundestag, Federal, RedaktionsNetzwerk, DHL, German Press Agency, Financial Locations: German, Russia, RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland, Leipzig, Germany
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