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Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway surges past $1tn market value

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Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway surges past tn market value

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Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway became the first publicly traded US company outside the technology sector to be valued at $1tn, as a small advance on Wednesday pushed its market capitalisation into a club that had been dominated by companies such as Apple and Microsoft.

The sprawling conglomerate has been transformed by Buffett over the past six decades into a force touching almost every corner of the American economy. Its rail cars traverse more than 32,000 miles of track that criss-cross the country, it owns a critical parts manufacturer for Boeing, and it runs one of the largest US auto insurers.

Buffett, who turns 94 on Friday, has spent the year selling off stocks — including half of the stake in Apple that generated a mammoth trading profit for Berkshire — and pumping the proceeds into cash and short-term Treasuries.

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Shareholders have rewarded Berkshire, pushing its valuation up by more than $200bn this year. Its class A common stock is up nearly 30 per cent since the start of January, outpacing the broader S&P 500. The A shares stood at $697,225, up 0.9 per cent, in lunchtime trading on Wednesday.

Jeff Muscatello, a research analyst at Berkshire investor Douglass Winthrop, said the rise since Buffett took control of the company in 1965 was down to “the consistency of their approach” as well as Buffett’s investing rules.

“The first [rule] is don’t lose money,” Muscatello said. “The second is don’t forget rule number one and let the laws of compounding work over an incredibly long period of time.”

The surging valuations in Berkshire’s shares and the wider stock market have not been lost on Buffett. The billionaire in May slowed the company’s share buyback programme and disclosed in June that he had not repurchased a single share that month.

Buffett has sole discretion over the buyback programme and generally curtails buying when he believes the stock is overvalued.

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The company’s cash pile soared to a record high of $277bn in June as Buffett found few appealing investments in public markets. While periods of relatively sparse dealmaking have troubled Berkshire investors in the past, few are ringing alarm bells now, as the company looks to have avoided some of the troubles that have befallen private equity buyers who were active in 2020 and 2021.

“Building the cash position . . . when I look at the alternative of what’s available in the equity markets and I look at the composition of what’s going on in the world, we find it quite attractive,” Buffett told the company’s annual meeting in May.

Buffett first invested in Berkshire in 1962, taking control of the struggling textile maker three years later. Over the following decades, he and his late-partner Charlie Munger turned the company into an insurance behemoth and used policy premiums as the source of capital to buy up companies and invest in stocks.

The business now encompasses a $285bn stock portfolio, Duracell batteries, a $141bn utility company, ice cream purveyor Dairy Queen and paint maker Benjamin Moore, along with dozens of other companies.

Buffett has anointed longtime Berkshire executive Greg Abel as his heir apparent.

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After months on the run, a murder suspect falls through the ceiling and into custody

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After months on the run, a murder suspect falls through the ceiling and into custody

Authorities were searching a Memphis home for murder suspect Deario Wilkerson when he crashed through the ceiling from the attic space in which he’d been hiding.

U.S. Marshals Service


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U.S. Marshals Service

Authorities got a lucky break when the murder suspect they’d been pursuing for months fell, so to speak, into their laps — through the ceiling of the building where he’d been hiding.

The U.S. Marshals Service said agents captured 20-year-old Deario Wilkerson on Monday, months after a warrant for his arrest — on charges of first-degree murder and reckless endangerment — was issued in connection with a fatal shooting in Memphis, Tenn.

The task force investigating his whereabouts tracked him to a residence in Memphis, the agency said in a release. Law enforcement agents didn’t have to look long once they were inside.

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“Wilkerson attempted to hide in the attic as the USMS searched the residence; however, he fell through the ceiling,” it said.

Officials said Wilkerson was not injured in the fall and was taken into custody without further incident.

His dramatic arrest caps off a saga that started in early April, with a shooting that left a man dead and a woman injured. Wilkerson was one of three people ultimately arrested in connection with the incident, according to the Shelby County District Attorney’s office.

Memphis police were responding to a disturbance call near an apartment complex on April 2 when they heard multiple gunshots, the DA’s office said in May.

“The victim, Troy Cunningham, was discovered on the sidewalk near Peres and Merton Street, having sustained a fatal gunshot wound to the back of his head,” it added.

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Gunfire also struck a passing vehicle with two female passengers, one of whom was shot in the shoulder. She was taken to the hospital in noncritical condition, WREG reported at the time.

The outlet cited surveillance video that allegedly shows Wilkerson lunging at Cunningham, setting the fight in motion.

It says the two other suspects shot at the victim as he ran away, and that Wilkerson can then be seen on camera “running to the victim and picking something up off the ground next to him before leaving the scene.”

The other suspects were taken into custody in May, the same month the warrant was issued for Wilkerson’s arrest. It just took a little longer to carry it out.

NPR has reached out to the Memphis Police Department and the Shelby County District Attorney’s office for comment.

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At least 9 dead after Israel launches large-scale West Bank raid

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At least 9 dead after Israel launches large-scale West Bank raid

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The Israeli military has launched a large-scale raid in the occupied West Bank, killing at least nine Palestinians and sealing off a large refugee camp in the northern city of Jenin.

Israeli forces, including armoured carriers, bulldozers and infantry, were seen surrounding the Jenin camp, a hotbed for Palestinian militancy, and closing off the area around a nearby city. Residents reported snipers, drones and intermittent gun battles in one of the largest incursions into West Bank Palestinian cities in months.

The Israel Defense Forces also carried out at least two drone strikes, including on a house in the Nur Shams refugee camp, near the Palestinian town of Tulkarem that abuts a major Israeli highway and villages, and the other in the Jordan Valley. Israeli drone attacks have become an increasingly common occurrence in the West Bank, killing dozens since Israel and Hamas went to war in October, according to UN data.

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The IDF said the strike near Tulkarem killed five men, including one released in a November hostage-for-prisoner swap, describing them as being involved in manufacturing explosives.

The Palestinian health ministry said three more people had been killed in a separate drone strike on a car about 10 miles south of Jenin, a restive Palestinian city that has been raided several times by the Israeli military in recent months.

An Israeli military bulldozer destroys a road during a raid in the Nur Shams refugee camp near the city of Tulkarem in the Israeli-occupied West Bank © Jaafar Ashtiyeh/AFP/Getty Images

Two residents in the Jenin camp told the Financial Times that the area had again been sealed off from the rest of the city by Israeli armoured vehicles, and that drones could be heard overhead. The IDF denied that any of the areas being raided had been sealed off.

A Palestinian health ministry officials, speaking by phone, said at least a dozen more injured people had been taken to local hospitals with bullet wounds, with more trapped within Jenin because ambulances were being blocked at the camp entrance.

The ministry also said that Israeli forces were operating near a Jenin hospital, but the IDF said it did not intend to take over the medical facility.

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The IDF said it was in the “first stages” of an operation, and was acting in self defence to thwart attacks directed at Israeli civilians.

A map showing the location of Nur SHams and Jenin camps

Nadav Shoshani, an IDF spokesperson, tied the raids to an overall attempt to prevent Iran from funding and supporting Palestinian militants. He also said he was unaware of any efforts to force Palestinians to evacuate Jenin, a measure urged by foreign minister Israel Katz on Wednesday.

Israel has carried out repeated raids across the West Bank during 10 months of war with Hamas in the Gaza Strip, as it tries to clamp down on increasing militant activity by the Islamist group. Hamas has seen a resurgence of its popularity among Palestinians in the West Bank, which is run by the secular Fatah, a Hamas rival.

At least 600 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank since October, including 11 killed by armed Jewish settlers and the rest by the Israeli military, according to UN data. At least 30 Israelis have been killed in the West Bank in the same period, the Israeli military said.

The hostilities erupted in Gaza after a cross-border raid by Hamas militants who killed 1,200 in southern Israel, and took at least 240 people hostage, according to Israeli officials. More than 40,000 people have been killed in the war that has shattered the coastal enclave, according to Palestinian officials.

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Trump Vs Harris: The Battle Over Hot Mics Heats Up Ahead Of Key Debate

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Trump Vs Harris: The Battle Over Hot Mics Heats Up Ahead Of Key Debate

Donald Trump and Kamala Harris will face off on September 10

In just under two weeks, Republican candidate Donald Trump and his Democratic rival Kamala Harris will participate in the first Presidential debate. Ahead of the September 10 face-off, the two campaigns are already at loggerheads over the issue of “hot mics”. 

Harris Campaign demands an open mic

The Harris campaign is pushing for an open microphone policy, meaning both candidates will have their mics on throughout the debate. This approach, they argue, ensures transparency and spontaneous interactions, giving the audience a complete picture of each candidate’s responses and reactions in real time.

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According to Brian Fallon, spokesperson for US Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee is fully prepared to handle Donald Trump’s tactics that often entail interruptions and offhand remarks. However, the Harris campaign insists the microphones remain live for the entire debate, ensuring neither “hides behind the mic” or avoids direct responses.

Trump wants mics muted

The Trump campaign, however, is advocating for the same rules as previous debates held in June. For the CNN debate, microphones were muted when it was the other candidate’s turn to speak. The Trump team argues that this rule prevents interruptions and maintains order during the debate, allowing each candidate to present their points without disruption.

US President Joe Biden, before stepping down as the Democratic party nominee, had agreed with Donald Trump’s campaign on the controversial microphone policy. 

The differences over debate rules escalated when Trump implied that the ABC network, which is hosting the September 10 debate, was biased. In a social media post, Trump indicated he had reached an agreement for the microphones to be closed, similar to the rules from the previous CNN debate.

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The Trump campaign proposed an additional debate on September 4 on Fox News, which the Harris team rejected. 

The use of “hot mics” has been a topic of debate in previous presidential debates, with some arguing for more authentic and spontaneous discussion, while others saying it only leads to candidates speaking over each other and avoiding direct answers.

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