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Boeing losses mount as company outlines $1.2bn hit from Ukraine war and supply woes

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Boeing losses mount as company outlines .2bn hit from Ukraine war and supply woes

Boeing mentioned its losses widened within the first quarter because it took a $1.2bn hit tied to the warfare in Ukraine and prices inside its defence, area and safety phase stemming from its Air Power One programme.

The aerospace group reported a internet lack of $1.24bn, or $2.06 a share, in contrast with a narrower lack of $561mn, or 92 cents a share, within the year-ago interval.

Chicago-based Boeing recorded a $212mn pre-tax cost attributable to “near-term challenges” stemming from the Ukraine warfare.

The corporate additionally outlined $1bn prices in a “messy quarter” for its defence enterprise, based on chief government Dave Calhoun. That included a $660mn cost associated to the manufacturing of Air Power One, the US presidential aeroplane, pushed by increased provider prices, in addition to a $367mn cost tied to its T-7A Crimson Hawk programme, a army pilot coaching system, attributable to provide chain constraints and inflationary pressures.

It additionally forecast an extra $1.5bn in irregular prices associated to its wide-body 777 programme starting within the present quarter because it stopped manufacturing and once more delayed the supply of the jet to 2025.

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Revenues fell 8 per cent from a yr in the past to $14bn, falling in need of expectations for $16bn, based on analysts polled by Refinitiv. Shares fell as a lot as 12.6 per cent to $146 in morning commerce on Wednesday, earlier than trimming their losses to commerce 9 per cent decrease.

“We nonetheless have extra work to do,” Calhoun mentioned in a message to staff as the corporate burned by way of $3.2bn of money within the first quarter. Calhoun expects Boeing to generate optimistic working money movement for the complete yr as different programmes get well.

The Air Power One and 777 delays come as Boeing has confronted quite a few setbacks inside its Dreamliner programme after the invention of producing flaws and a subsequent investigation by US regulators, thus compounding points for the corporate.

Manufacturing on the 787 Dreamliner remained stalled, although Boeing mentioned it had submitted its certification plan to the US Federal Aviation Administration, with reworks accomplished on the preliminary aeroplanes. Whole prices associated to the wide-body jet remained unchanged at $5.5bn.

Manufacturing has elevated on the 737 Max and is predicted to achieve a manufacturing price of 31 per thirty days within the second quarter. The plane has returned to service in most nations, with China the notable outlier, following its worldwide grounding after two deadly crashes.

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Video: What to Know About the Verdict in the Tyre Nichols Case

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Video: What to Know About the Verdict in the Tyre Nichols Case

Three former Memphis police officers were found guilty on Thursday of federal witness tampering charges in the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols, a 29-year-old Black man. They were acquitted of the more serious charge of violating his civil rights by causing his death. Emily Cochrane, a New York Times reporter who covers the American South, explains.

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Rachel Reeves vows to ‘invest, invest, invest’

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Rachel Reeves vows to ‘invest, invest, invest’

Rachel Reeves has vowed to “invest, invest, invest” as she prepares to ramp up borrowing to fund a multibillion-pound capital programme at this month’s Budget.

But the UK chancellor also sought to assure jittery markets, telling the Financial Times she would install “guardrails” and was not in “a race to get money out of the door”.

“It’s about making prudent, sensible investments in the long term and we need guardrails around that,” she said.

In an interview, Reeves also indicated higher taxes would help fill a £22bn hole she has identified in the public finances and take pressure off government departments, some of which faced real-terms cuts. “There won’t be a return to austerity,” she said. 

Reeves has signalled she wants to ease borrowing rules in her October 30 Budget, the first by a Labour government since 2010, to fund extra capital investment in areas such as green energy projects and transport schemes.

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But Reeves said the Office for Budget Responsibility, the fiscal watchdog, and the National Audit Office, the spending watchdog, would have key roles in scrutinising her plans and assessing their long-term value.

“We will make sure that investment genuinely boosts growth and we will look at the role of institutions to demonstrate that, including, for instance, the NAO as well as the OBR,” she said.

Yields on the 10-year gilt were at 4.12 per cent on Friday, the highest since late July, partly reflecting concerns among investors that Reeves will sharply increase borrowing in the Budget. 

Analysts have also argued that the chancellor should introduce robust reviews of investment to police valuations and net returns, reducing the risk that public money gets frittered away on poorly judged projects.

Reeves’s advisers have been discussing ways of ensuring the OBR fully reflects the growth-enhancing benefits of public investment as it pulls together its fiscal forecasts. “Invest, invest, invest is the theme of this Budget,” she said.

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Part of the problem, however, is that the time needed to put projects in place mean the bulk of the growth benefits from new infrastructure projects can take longer than five years to be felt — even though this is the time horizon under which the chancellor is assessed under her fiscal rules.

“I hope that at the Budget the OBR will look at not just the short-term impact of boosting capital investment but also the long-term impact and the catalytic impact of public sector investment crowding in private investment,” she said. 

Reeves was speaking on a train en route from London to Merseyside, where she and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer announced more than £21bn of support over 25 years to develop the carbon capture and storage industry.

The chancellor confirmed she was looking to revise her fiscal debt rule to “take account of the benefits of investment, not just the costs” but declined to say how much more borrowing this would allow for capital expenditure.

Reeves intends to stick to her rule that states that net debt as a share of GDP should be falling between the fourth and fifth year of the forecast, but crucially she is looking at changes to the way that debt is defined.

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Switching to balance sheet measures such as public sector net worth or public sector net financial liabilities would boost budget headroom by upwards of £50bn by the end of the parliament, allowing her to borrow tens of billions more for investment.

Investors are seeking reassurances that only part of this extra borrowing capacity would actually be used if she went down this route.

Reeves inherited plans from the previous Conservative government that would have seen a succession of cuts in public sector net investment.

Reversing those cuts and keeping net investment at this year’s level as a share of GDP would imply £24bn of extra annual spending by 2028-29, the Institute for Fiscal Studies said. Treasury officials admitted it would be “difficult” to achieve that figure.

Reeves will also use her Budget to raise taxes to help boost day-to-day Whitehall budgets, ripping up spending plans by ex-Conservative chancellor Jeremy Hunt that implied real-terms cuts for “unprotected” departments such as justice and local government.

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“The idea of this Budget is to wipe the slate clean and make an honest assessment of spending pressures and tax as well,” she said. “The previous government was relying on a fiction. The Budget is an opportunity to bring honesty to the public finances.”

Reeves hinted that the £22bn fiscal “black hole” she claims to have unearthed this year was not a one-off. Many of this year’s costs — such as higher public sector pay — will recur in later years, along with other unexpected costs, and would need permanent funding.

“The truth is, if you add £22bn every year, you’re underwater on the previous government’s fiscal rules,” she said. She has refused so far to set a timetable for balancing the current budget but said that “five years is obviously the maximum”.

Reeves said the need to find tax revenues to cover current costs was “the real binding constraint at this Budget”.

She suggested that the wealthy should accept that they would have to pay their share, arguing that “bringing back stability” to the public finances would create the foundations for growth and future wealth creation.

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Higher taxes on private equity bosses, private school fees and non-doms — albeit scaled back — are expected in the Budget, with speculation of higher rates of capital gains tax. “I’m not being ideological about this but we need to raise money,” Reeves said.

Meanwhile, Reeves admitted that the public was unsettled by the recent controversy over free clothes and other gifts donated to senior Labour figures. The issue has come at a time of tough financial pressure and after her early decision to cut £1.5bn of winter fuel payments to about 10mn pensioners.

In 2023 and this year Reeves accepted a total of £7,500 from an old friend, which was used to buy clothes before the election. She also accepted tickets for an Adele concert.

“I do understand why people think it is a little bit odd,” she said. “I’ve not taken any of these donations since I became chancellor. It’s important when you’re in government that you’re held to higher standards because you’re actually making decisions that affect the public.”

     

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A victim of a crypto ‘pig butchering’ scam just got his $140,000 back

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A victim of a crypto ‘pig butchering’ scam just got his 0,000 back

The office of Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell, pictured here, sued a crypto scam company known as SpireBit and seized its assets. The proceeds have now been handed back to victims of the scheme.

Charles Krupa/AP


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Charles Krupa/AP

Aleksey Madan never thought the day would come.

This week he received a $140,000 check in the mail from Massachusetts officials. That was the full amount Madan had lost after falling for a get-rich-quick crypto scam.

“How would you feel if all your money was stolen and you never expected to get it back, then you did?” said Madan, 69. “It feels amazing. I’m overjoyed. And also in shock.”

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Those funds were among the hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of cryptocurrency Massachusetts authorities seized from a fraudulent operation that targeted Russian-speaking seniors online and, in some cases, stole their life savings.

The Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office began investigating the company, known as SpireBit, followed an NPR investigation last year detailing the stories of two victims who were lured into an investment scheme, only to realize it was a sham after they transferred large quantities of money into SpireBit’s cryptocurrency wallets.

SpireBit drew victims into its ruse by using ads on social media promising lucrative investment returns. SpireBit took out ads on Facebook and Instagram that falsely portrayed Elon Musk as endorsing the company through a Russian voice-over. 

But NPR could find no trace of a real investment company: The people listed as the company’s executives turned out to be just stock photos and fake LinkedIn profiles. A supposed London address for SpireBit turned out to be a kitchenware business. When victims tried to withdraw their money, the company sent them forged bank documents. After NPR’s reporting, financial regulators in the United Kingdom issued a public warning about SpireBit, classifying it as an operation run by “fraudsters.”

When NPR tried to reach out to SpireBit for comment last year, it responded through the Telegram messaging app by stating that crypto trading is volatile, and saying “the activities of our company are regulated according to the legislation of the country in which the head office of the company is located.” Now, that account has been deleted.

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NPR’s investigation caught the attention of Massachusetts authorities, who in December sued SpireBit under its incorporated entity known as SBT Investments.

Investigators posed as a SpireBit customer and were able to pinpoint crypto wallets used by SpireBit. In a judgment issued in May, state officials won a court order that froze the company’s assets on the trading platform Binance.

While the full extent of SpireBit’s operation remains unknown, the company’s tactics are part of a proliferating type of online fraud known as pig butchering. The name comes from the process of gaining someone’s trust and building a friendship with them over the course of weeks or months — fattening up the pig before the kill, which in this case means stealing a large sum of money.

According to the FBI, crypto scammers stole more than $5.6 billion from Americans online last year.

According to the May court order, investigators in Massachusetts were able to seize a total of $269,000 from SpireBit’s crypto wallet, most of which is being distributed to four victims in the state.

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Another SpireBit victim profiled by NPR, Naum Lantsman, 75, of Los Angeles, lost his life savings of $340,000 that he earned over decades as a small business owner. His family reported the theft to the California Attorney General’s Office, but a formal investigation was never initiated.

Officials from the Massachusetts and California attorney general offices did not return interview requests.

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