A former News of the World journalist who covered the United States from Los Angeles for several years was arrested today in London for his role in the ongoing phone-hacking scandal , reports the Guardian . The arrest of James Desborough further raises questions about whether NotW hacked phones in the United…
Continue reading …Newser wasn’t the only media outlet making elementary-school-level puns at Gerard Depardieu’s expense after his peeing-on-a-plane incident came to light yesterday: Anderson Cooper went on what had to be a record-setting roll last night that must be seen to be believed. But one line proved to be too much for…
Continue reading …After weeks of brutal violence that has left more than 2,000 Syrians dead, President Obama today called for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to resign for the first time and announced new sanctions against the country, reports the AP . “We have consistently said that President Assad must lead a democratic…
Continue reading …Rebels in Zawiyah celebrate milestone of control over crucial oil refinery and coastal highway For Yusuf Hamad it was a happy moment. Standing under the shadow of a giant oil
Continue reading …Frenzied selling wipes £62bn off value of FTSE and Dow Jones plummets in another tumultuous day for world economy Financial markets on both sides of the Atlantic were convulsed by a fresh wave of selling amid fears that the world economy is sliding back towards recession. The FTSE 100 closed down 239 points, or 4.5%, at 5092, wiping more than £62bn off its value. By late afternoon on Wall Street, the Dow Jones was down by 480 points, or 4.2%. Growing disarray in the eurozone over the latest bailout for Greece, weak American manufacturing figures and a warning from Wall Street bank Morgan Stanley that the US and Europe are “hovering dangerously close to recession” all contributed to the mood of panic. A closely watched gauge of the US manufacturing sector produced by the Philadelphia Federal Reserve plunged, underlining fears that the recovery has ground to a halt. The yield on benchmark 10-year US Treasury bonds, which measures the cost of borrowing for the American government, slipped below 2%, as investors sought a haven from the storm. Gold, which has soared in value this year, hit another new record of $1,825 (£1,106) an ounce. Sal Catrini, managing director for equities at Cantor Fitzgerald in New York, said: “The market is in meltdown mode; the data continues to stink. I don’t know that there’s much more to be said.” In Europe, investors were spooked by news that at least five eurozone countries had asked the Greek government to put up collateral against their share of the latest emergency bailout for Athens. Austria, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Slovakia joined Finland in insisting that the Greeks put up assets as security, before they sign off on the €109bn (£95bn) emergency loan agreed in July. Their demands underline fears that eurozone countries have little confidence in the latest plans to shore up the single currency. “It does suggest that northern European states have a certain lack of faith in Greece,” said Simon Derrick, of the bank BNY Mellon. Europe’s banks also saw their shares fall sharply, despite the ban on short-selling imposed by several countries including France and Germany last week. It was reported that the European Central Bank has made an emergency short-term loan of $500bn to one struggling financial firm; while a story in the Wall Street Journal suggested that European banks with US operations had been hauled in by the New York Federal Reserve and asked whether they had enough capital to survive the market chaos. In the UK, shares in Royal Bank of Scotland and Barclays were down by 11%, and Lloyds by 9%. The turmoil came as Andy Haldane, the Bank of England’s executive director for financial stability, warned that the fears in financial markets have been exacerbated by the “psychological scarring” from the traumatic events of the past two years. “Memories of financial disaster are now fresh, as after the Great Depression, causing an over-estimation of the probability of a repeat disaster,” he said, in a paper published by the Bank. He called for “a more optimistic popular narrative” to help counter this ingrained pessimism. Despite the US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke’s pledge to keep interest rates at rock bottom until 2013, investors are increasingly nervous that central banks have run out of ammunition to rescue the ailing world economy. “Every time the economy got the sniffles, we had the Federal Reserve standing by with tissues,” said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank. “This time around, I think the box is empty, and we’re going to have to go through this alone.” Market turmoil Global economy Economics FTSE Stock markets Dow Jones United States Europe Heather Stewart guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Turkey is fed up with the Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK), and the military confirmed yesterday that its jets had crossed into Iraq to strike suspected rebels. Turkish jets struck an estimated 60 members of the rebel group, in attacks both near the Turkish border and along the Iraq-Iran border, according…
Continue reading …The Dow plunged more than 300 points at open today as investors worried about Europe and the global economy. It’s currently hovering just above 11,000, according to Marketwatch . The S&P 500 also dropped 37 points to 1,156, while the Nasdaq fell 94 points to 2,418. The Wall…
Continue reading …Looks like Jon Stewart was right —the media is grossly ignoring Ron Paul. A new study from the Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism has found that Paul is just the 10th leading newsmaker in the GOP field—behind even non-candidates like Donald Trump and Sarah Palin. Paul has been…
Continue reading …Assailants armed with heavy weapons, guns, and explosives launched three attacks in quick succession in southern Israel near the border with Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula today, killing at least five people and wounding about a dozen more, officials say. The rare violence in that part of the country targeted a passenger…
Continue reading …The FBI has finished screening the 60,000 September 11 first responders against the terrorist watch list to determine if they’re eligible for health care benefits and—surprise!—all of them passed, sources tell the Wall Street Journal . New York lawmakers decried the screenings, which were thrown into a law…
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