Finance
Sounding warning, Kerry urges new ways on climate finance
Washington (AFP) – Veteran envoy John Kerry called Friday for the United States to find major new climate finance methods, warning of “huge disappointment” if historic promises to transition from fossil fuels go unheeded.
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Kerry, who is stepping down as the US climate envoy, described an agreement in December in Dubai at the last UN summit as historic for its call on the planet to move away from fossil fuels in large part responsible for the planet’s rising temperatures.
But he warned that the COP28 agreement must not be “reduced to mere words on a piece of paper.”
“If we don’t do what we’ve said we’re going to do in these next months, that’s exactly what could happen, encouraging cynicism and dropout-ism and huge disappointment around the world,” Kerry said at the Council on Foreign Relations.
Kerry, an 80-year-old former secretary of state, senator and presidential contender, has said he will focus outside of government on mobilizing private funding to complement government efforts on climate.
Kerry said that the United States should consider a system of financial guarantees for investors, which would cover risks if projects fail.
“It’s time for creativity. We’ve come up with new financial instruments when we needed them before, and my judgment is we need them now,” he said.
He pointed to his work as envoy with Indonesia and Vietnam on so-called Just Energy Transition Partnerships, or JETPs — financing deals between a small group of wealthy countries and an emerging economy to reduce reliance on fossil fuels or take other climate action.
Calling such deals “very bespoke,” Kerry said, “We don’t have time to do that.”
“We need to help deploy larger sums with greater confidence that the deal is bankable and we de-risked it sufficiently,” he said.
A recent study by the Climate Policy Initiative pointed to assessments that credit guarantees could mobilize between six and 25 times as much financing as traditional loans, with developing countries in particular looking to reduce uncertainties.
Seeking common ground with China
Kerry also repeated his call for the world to phase out subsidies for fossil fuels — often politically sensitive in countries reliant on oil and gas.
“Why in God’s name we (are) subsidizing the creators of the problem is beyond me,” he said.
He voiced admiration for the European Union’s new “CBAM” carbon tariff, although he acknowledged it was not politically feasible in the United States.
President Joe Biden has overseen the investment of billions of dollars in green technology as part of his signature legislative achievement, the Inflation Reduction Act, in a sharp difference from his predecessor Donald Trump, his likely challenger in November elections.
Trump has cast doubt on the science behind climate change and walked out of the Paris climate accord, which Kerry helped negotiate as top diplomat under president Barack Obama.
Kerry credited the Dubai agreement in part to cooperation between the United States and China, the world’s two largest greenhouse gas emitters and frequent adversaries on the global stage.
Kerry developed an unusually warm relationship with his Chinese counterpart Xie Zhenhua, who even brought his grandson to Dubai to meet the US negotiator.
Kerry hinted that he had internal resistance even within the Biden team, saying, “I had to convince some people in the administration that we really needed to work with China at a time where, as you all know, the rhetoric of Washington and most of the currents are kind of moving against that idea.”
But he said that Biden agreed that on climate, “This is not and should not be an ideological fight.”
“We don’t have time to argue about the climate thing,” Kerry said.
© 2024 AFP
Finance
How a stock market crash could help set you up for lifelong financial freedom
Image source: Getty Images
A stock market crash might seem like an intimidating prospect. But for those who are prepared, it can be an opportunity to make life-changing investments.
Historically, the best returns come from buying shares when prices are low. So while it’s impossible to know when the next crash is coming, investors should probably be on the lookout.
Equity returns
There’s no magic formula that can tell you exactly when is the best time to buy shares. But that doesn’t mean investors shouldn’t try to make the most of the information that is available to them.
Data from JP Morgan Chase shows a strong negative correlation between valuations and returns. Put simply, returns have been best when the S&P 500 has traded at lower price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios.

Source: JP Morgan Guide to the Markets Q1 2026
The correlation isn’t perfect – especially over a short timeframe. But it becomes much stronger over a five-year period and this is something investors should pay attention to.
At the start of the year, the S&P 500 was trading at a level corresponding to an average five-year return of around 3%. But if the multiple falls 20%, that historic figure doubles.
What to do?
This might make it look as though the best thing to do is to wait until a better buying opportunity presents itself. But I don’t think that’s a particularly good idea.
The S&P 500 as a whole might be historically expensive, but this isn’t true of stocks around the world. UK shares, for example, are actually trading at unusually low levels at the moment.

Source: JP Morgan Guide to the Markets – UK Q1 2026
It’s also worth noting that it isn’t even true of every stock within the S&P 500. A lot are actually trading at historically low multiples right now.
The best opportunities might come from taking advantage of low prices. But investors don’t have to sit around and wait for a stock market crash.
Looking for opportunities
One example from my portfolio is Gamma Communications (LSE:GAMA). At a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 13, the stock is trading at a level well below where it’s been in the past.
The reason I own it, though, isn’t just because it’s historically cheap. I think the company is in a really nice position to benefit from the UK’s upcoming shift away from copper phone lines.
There’s a danger the UK might delay switching off its copper network (it’s happened once before) and this wouldn’t be a good thing for Gamma. And that’s the main risk with the stock right now.
Sooner or later, though, businesses are going to have to move to cloud communications – which is the firm’s speciality. So even if it doesn’t come this year, I think the long-term picture looks good.
Financial freedom
Achieving financial freedom involves two things. The first is being able to put money aside and the second is finding ways to earn a good return on that capital.
When it comes to the second, the record of history is very clear. The best returns from the stock market come from buying when valuation levels are unusually low.
Given this, a stock market crash can present life-changing opportunities. But I don’t think investors have to wait for something dramatic to happen to find stocks to buy.
Finance
New Resource: Finance Fundamentals – Richardson ISD
We’ve launched a new Finance Fundamentals page to help our community better understand how Richardson ISD’s budget works. This resource breaks down where funding comes from, how dollars are spent, and how financial decisions support students and schools.
Whether you’re a parent, staff member, or community member, this page offers a clear, easy-to-understand look at district finances.
Explore the Finance Fundamentals webpage.
Finance
India’s Adani Green quarterly profit slumps on higher finance costs
BENGALURU, Jan 23 (Reuters) – India’s Adani Green Energy posted a 99% drop in third‑quarter profit on Friday, as higher finance costs inflated its expenses and offset gains from strong power sales and improved capacity utilisation.
Shares of Adani Group’s green arm were down 13.8%.
Group stocks fell 2% to 11% after the U.S. SEC sought court approval to serve summons to Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani by email in a fraud and $265 million bribery case.
For Adani Green, consolidated profit slumped to 50 million rupees ($544,051.88) in the quarter ended December 31, from 4.74 billion rupees a year earlier.
A sharp 27.14% rise in expenses to 29.61 billion rupees and a 35.73% surge in finance costs absorbed most of the company’s topline, even as power sales remained strong.
The company also booked a 1.03 billion rupees from its associates and joint ventures, offering a modest cushion to earnings.
Power consumption in India is expected to rise as the economy expands, requiring an estimated 40% increase in coal‑fired capacity to more than 307 gigawatts by 2035, according to government projections.
The country, which currently meets about a third of its power demand from thermal plants, aims to achieve net‑zero emissions by 2070 and plans to more than double its renewable capacity to 500 gigawatts as part of that effort.
Finance costs for the company include interest on borrowings as well as currency‑related gains and losses on its foreign‑currency loans and the impact of derivative hedges used to manage those exposures.
The renewable energy arm of billionaire Gautam Adani’s group, which operates solar, wind and hybrid assets across India, said revenue from power supply rose 21% to 19.93 billion rupees, helped by 5.6 GW of capacity additions over the past year.
The company said the growth also reflected strong plant performance and the commissioning of new capacity at resource‑rich sites in Khavda, Gujarat, and in Rajasthan.
($1 = 91.9030 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Yagnoseni Das in Bengaluru)
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