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Bloomberg
Morgan Stanley-Led Banks Face $500 Million Loss on Twitter Debt
(Bloomberg) — When banks led by Morgan Stanley agreed in April to help finance Elon Musk’s purchase of Twitter Inc., they were eager to aid an important client, the richest person in the world. Now neither Musk nor the banks have an obvious way to wriggle out of it.Most Read from BloombergRussia Races to Reopen Crimea Bridge Damaged in Fiery BlastPutin Orders Sakhalin-1 Project Transferred to Russian EntityFacebook Is Warning 1 Million Users About Stolen Usernames, PasswordsMinecraft Star Dream
Barrons.com
Elon Musk Says First Tesla Semi Truck Deliveries Due for PepsiCo in December
Elon Musk said in a tweet that Tesla would deliver the first of its delayed Semi electric trucks on Dec. 1 to PepsiCo. PepsiCo. The electric semitrailer truck was initially due out in 2019 but has been repeatedly delayed, with Musk, chief executive of Tesla (ticker: TSLA), blaming a shortage of battery cells and global supply-chain challenges. Musk said Thursday that the Semi would be able to travel 500 miles on a single charge as originally outlined in 2017 when the first details of the truck were announced.
MarketWatch
Why stock-market investors keep falling for Fed ‘pivot’ talk — and what it will take to put in a bottom
The right answer likely hinges on whether or not the Federal Reserve follows through with plans to raise its benchmark interest rate to 4.5% or higher, as market-based indicators and the Fed’s latest batch of projections anticipate. Global markets are on edge about the possibility of an emerging-markets crisis resulting from higher interest rates and a U.S. dollar at a 20 year high, or a slump in the housing market due to rising mortgage rates, or the collapse of a financial institution due to the worst bond market chaos in a generation. Fears that the Fed could cause something in the global economy or financial system to “break” have inspired some to question whether the Fed can successfully whip inflation by hiking interest rates by the most aggressive pace in decades without causing collateral damage.
TheStreet.com
CVS Could Decline Another 20% From Here
CVS Health is down sharply Friday — about 10% — in response to reports that it’s in talks to acquire primary care chain Cano Health and a Medicare Advantage plan downgrade. Let’s jump to the charts to see what they can tell us.
TheStreet.com
PayPal Sets Social Media Ablaze with Major Change
PayPal is in trouble. “You are independently responsible for complying with all applicable laws in all of your actions related to your use of PayPal’s services, regardless of the purpose of the use,” the document, called “Acceptable Use of Policy,” said.
Reuters
U.S. adds China’s YMTC and 30 other firms to ‘unverified’ trade list
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The United States on Friday added China’s top memory chipmaker YMTC and 30 other Chinese entities to a list of companies that U.S. officials have been unable to inspect, ratcheting up tensions with Beijing and starting a 60 day-clock that could trigger much tougher penalties. The new listings were the first of a slew of new restrictions announced on Friday on exports of technology to China aimed at blocking military advances. The crackdown included curbs on access to chipmaking tools for Chinese firms including Yantze Memory Technologies Co (YMTC), as reported by Reuters a day earlier.
SmartAsset
How to Retire Comfortably at 57
Choosing the right age for retirement means understanding all the planning that’s required beforehand, as well as what you may need to do afterward if you retire early. The way you shape your financial plan can be very different if … Continue reading → The post How to Retire at 57: Step-by-Step Plan appeared first on SmartAsset Blog.
Reuters
Brazil’s Bolsonaro says ally Trump would have averted war in Ukraine
Far-right Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro said in comments published on Friday that the war in Ukraine would not have happened if former U.S. President Donald Trump were still in office, but offered no explanation for how his close ally could have prevented the conflict. Bolsonaro told Veja that he had a good in-person meeting with U.S. President Joe Biden in June. “Some think that the war in Ukraine would not have happened if he were still in power,” Bolsonaro said.
Motley Fool
49% of Workers Think the Job Market Will Get Worse Over the Next 6 Months. Do These Things if You Agree
The U.S. has an inflation problem, and the Federal Reserve is trying to solve it by raising interest rates. In doing so, the Fed’s hope is that consumers will balk at higher interest rates for things like loans and credit cards and cut back on spending in response. Once consumer spending declines, it should narrow the gap between supply and demand that led to inflation in the first place.