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Suspect in custody after hour-long 2-county pursuit ends in Sylmar

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Suspect in custody after hour-long 2-county pursuit ends in Sylmar

A driver is in custody after leading the California Highway Patrol on a chase from south Orange County into the San Fernando Valley Tuesday night.

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Reports of the chase came in around 7:40 p.m. in the Buena Park area of Orange County. According to reports the chase started after the driver sped away when officers were trying to do a welfare check. 

The driver was seen on the 5 Freeway, and eventually made their way into Los Angeles County in the Downey area. From there, the driver kept heading north on the 5 Freeway, traveling at speeds around just 50 miles per hour, making their way into East Los Angeles and Boyle Heights.

SUGGESTED: Police chase alternatives exist, so why don’t SoCal agencies use them?

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Once in Boyle Heights, the driver transferred over to the 10 Freeway headed east before getting back on the 5 North, eventually making their way into the San Fernando Valley.

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Once in the Sun Valley area, officers used a spike strip on the car, and the driver slowed down to speeds around 30 miles per hour but continued on. Miles later in the Arleta area, SkyFOX captured as the driver’s side front tire ripped to shreds. Both the tire and part of the car’s bumper appeared to fly off the car.

Miles later, an officer used a PIT maneuver to bring the car to a stop in the Sylmar area, however the driver still refused to get out of the car. Officers eventually shot pepper balls at the car, but the driver remained in the car. Officers then walked up to the car, smashed both the passenger and driver door windows, then finally pulled the driver out of the car.

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Bridgewater opens strategy to retail investors through State Street ETF

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Bridgewater opens strategy to retail investors through State Street ETF

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Bridgewater, one of the world’s largest hedge funds, is joining forces with State Street’s asset management arm to tap retail investors in the latest effort by money managers to look for new customers beyond their traditional strengths.

The partnership announced on Tuesday will get started with an exchange traded fund that will track one of Bridgewater’s best-known strategies. State Street Global Advisers has filed plans with the US Securities and Exchange Commission for an “All-Weather” ETF, which seeks to profit in all types of market conditions by holding a wide range of assets.

If approved by the regulator, it will be sub-managed by Bridgewater using its “risk parity” strategy, which uses leverage to weight assets by expected volatility. Once it starts trading, the ETF could offer other investors new insights into Bridgewater’s famously secretive methods.

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The two groups also announced a larger partnership aimed at enlarging the potential market for complex products including hedge funds and private equity and credit.

It is part of a stampede by traditional asset managers such as State Street to strike such agreements with the big names in alternative assets. In the past six months, there have been tie-ups between Capital Group and KKR, BlackRock and Partners Group, and SSGA has a separate partnership with Apollo.

The alternatives managers hope to reach wealthy individual customers at a time when the institutional investors are holding firm or cutting back on their complex investments. The traditional managers want to stay relevant as retail customers and their advisers move into new sectors and like the higher fees these products can command.

“Bridgewater is known for its 40-year history of delivering resilient, diversified portfolios and insights to many sophisticated institutional global investors,” Anna Paglia, State Street Global Advisor’s chief business officer, said. “This strategic relationship will now bring that portfolio construction expertise to retail investors as well.”

State Street, which invented the ETF, is best known for its low-fee passive funds but the $4.7tn money manager is making a big push into racier products, with more than 80 launches since Paglia’s arrival earlier this year. They include ETFs focused on digital assets and one done in conjunction with Apollo to invest in public and private credit.

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Bridgewater, which was founded by Ray Dalio, is attempting to rebuild after a difficult period that included a stormy succession process and poor returns accompanied by significant outflows. People familiar with its results said it had $100bn under management at the end of August, well below its all-time peak of $160bn. Its flagship Pure Alpha fund sustained large losses in 2022 and 2023.

The new ETF seeks to follow the strategy behind Bridgewater’s other well-known product, the All Weather hedge fund.

“At Bridgewater, we see global investors increasingly focused on portfolio resiliency and desiring durable client portfolios,” Karen Karniol-Tambour, Bridgewater’s co-chief investment officer, said. “We are excited to broaden access to our approach.”

Both companies declined to comment beyond their official statements, citing SEC rules that bar investment managers from discussing specific products before they have been approved.

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Manhattan prosecutors ask for additional pause in Trump hush-money criminal case

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Manhattan prosecutors ask for additional pause in Trump hush-money criminal case

Donald Trump sits in a Manhattan criminal courtroom with members of his legal team for the continuation of his hush money trial on April 25, 2024 in New York City.

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Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg on Tuesday asked a judge to pause further proceedings in the criminal trial against President-elect Donald Trump in order to give both sides time to weigh the unprecedented nature of the situation.

A jury in May found Trump guilty of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. But now that Trump has been elected president and will be inaugurated on Jan. 20, 2025, New York state Judge Juan Merchan should weigh arguments specifically on whether the case should be dismissed, the district attorney and assistant district attorneys argued in a legal filing.

The prosecutors’ office asked for a December 9 deadline for the next filing, focused on whether the case should be dismissed. The judge is likely to acquiesce to the request as both the defense and prosecution appear to be in agreement.

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In their motion, Manhattan prosecutors said the judge must weigh how to balance Trump’s status as president-elect with the verdict of the jury.

“The People deeply respect the Office of the President, are mindful of the demands and obligations of the presidency, and acknowledge that Defendant’s inauguration will raise unprecedented legal questions. We also deeply respect the fundamental role of the jury in our constitutional system,” the filing said.

Trump’s lawyers had asked for the case to be immediately dismissed because Trump was elected to a second term in the White House, and because of a July Supreme Court ruling given presidents immunity from prosecution for official acts in office. Trump’s defense had argued the hush-money trial partly relied on evidence taken from Trump’s first term as president.

Steven Cheung, Trump’s communications director, called the request for a pause “a total and definitive victory for President Trump and the American People who elected him in a landslide.”

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But the prosecutors on the case said the jury’s deliberations, which came before the July Supreme Court ruling, should also be given weight — and suggested they may argue the case should wait until after Trump’s second term in office.

“Given the need to balance competing constitutional interests, consideration must be given to various non-dismissal options that may address any concerns raised by the pendency of a posttrial criminal proceeding during the presidency, such as deferral of all remaining criminal proceedings until after the end of Defendant’s upcoming presidential term,” the filing said.

Merchan had been expected to rule on Tuesday on whether the Supreme Court decision gives Trump immunity from prosecution in this trial. The filing from the attorneys signals the next decision in the case is likely to be broader than that: about whether the entire case should be thrown out.

“The Manhattan DA has conceded that this Witch Hunt cannot continue. The lawless case is now stayed, and President Trump’s legal team is moving to get it dismissed once and for all,” Cheung, the Trump spokesman, said in a statement. Trump on the campaign trail had argued that the legal cases against him were motivated by politics.

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Goldman Sachs’ chief warns global investors are staying on the ‘sidelines’ in China

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Goldman Sachs’ chief warns global investors are staying on the ‘sidelines’ in China

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Goldman Sachs’ chief executive has warned that global investors are still “predominantly on the sidelines” over deploying capital in China because of weak consumer confidence and difficulties getting money out of the country.

David Solomon said investors “continue to be concerned” about cashing out of investments in the world’s second-largest economy.

“It’s been very difficult over the course of the last five years to get capital out,” he told an event on Tuesday organised by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the territory’s de facto central bank.

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“I think you’ve got a combination of issues that have global investors predominantly on the sidelines with respect to capital deployment,” Solomon said.

He added that investors would like to see “an improvement in consumption” in China and “continued progress in the opening up of the capital markets”. 

Speaking on the same panel, Morgan Stanley chief executive Ted Pick said he agreed with Solomon. “Transparency is important and battling deflation takes time,” he said.

Deflationary pressures have increased in China, where the country’s leadership is trying to stabilise a property sector crisis and boost domestic consumption in order to meet its economic growth target of 5 per cent for the year.

Chinese stocks rallied in September after Beijing launched a stimulus package, including measures to boost the stock market. But the rally has cooled as authorities held off from making significant new fiscal spending announcements.

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The CSI 300, China’s blue-chip index, on Tuesday closed down 11 per cent from a post-stimulus peak on October 8.

“The fiscal piece will take time, the real estate dynamic is going to take a number of quarters,” said Pick. “Clearly the name of the game here is to reignite consumer confidence and that’s something that takes a while to take hold, but we’re seeing some green shoots.”

The conference is a sign of HKMA’s sway over global financial institutions even as US-China relations fray. The annual event is attended by the biggest names on Wall Street, in part because the HKMA oversees hundreds of billions of dollars and is a valuable client and limited partner of many of the institutions.

Attendees included Apollo Global Management’s chief executive Marc Rowan, Blackstone president Jon Gray, and leading figures from buyout groups KKR, TPG, CVC and Carlyle.

Solomon and Pick were responding to a question from deputy HKMA chief Howard Lee about whether China’s stimulus package and “positive remarks” from Beijing officials, who stressed the importance of China opening up to the world, would make investors “feel more assured” about the country.

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Earlier in the morning, China’s vice-premier He Lifeng delivered a speech in which he said mainland officials wanted to preserve Hong Kong’s status as an international financial centre while encouraging greater mutual market access between the city and the rest of mainland China.

The bank bosses spoke briefly about Donald Trump’s US election victory. Citi chief executive Jane Fraser said it had prompted a “big unlock” in demand for initial public offerings and mergers and acquisitions that had been “very gummed up” in recent years.

The prospect of reduced regulation “puts many CEOs in a good mood”, she said.

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