A pro-Russian former president of Moldova has been detained as part of an investigation into treason and corruption amid worries about threats to the country from the war in neighbouring Ukraine. Igor Dodon, who governed the country from 2016 to 2020, is being investigated over allegations he accepted illicit funding, Moldova’s acting anti-corruption prosecutor Elena
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Is there going to be a recession in the US and other leading economies? This question has naturally arisen among participants at this year’s meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos. This is, however, the wrong question, at least for the US. The right one is whether we are moving into a new era
Snap lost more than a third of its value on Tuesday after the social media group said in an unscheduled earnings warning that it would be stung by worsening macroeconomic conditions. The Snapchat parent said in a regulatory filing late on Monday that since it issued guidance at its earnings on April 22, “the macroeconomic
Chinese and Russian strategic bombers flew over the Sea of Japan as Joe Biden attended a Quad summit in Tokyo, in a joint exercise the Japanese government denounced as “unacceptable”. The nuclear-capable bombers conducted a joint flight on Tuesday that began over the Sea of Japan as the US president was meeting his counterparts from
Times of big global upheaval may not be good for the world, but the dirty secret of journalism is that regular opinion writers find them professionally quite rewarding. Books, however, are a different matter. The economic shocks have been rolling in so fast that the slow process of book publishing leaves years of painstaking work
Food-to-go retailers are passing on price rises to customers, pushing up the cost of a cheap lunch just as commuters start to return to offices in greater numbers. Greencore, the UK’s largest sandwich maker, said on Tuesday that demand had returned to 91 per cent of pre-pandemic levels even though the company was passing on
Next month sees the launch of Wokenwine, the first trading platform dedicated to fine wine NFTs. But what does this mean for drinks? While some NFTs correspond to intangible things (such as Jack Dorsey’s first tweet), a drinks NFT corresponds to a physical bottle. The NFT is minted by the company that makes the product
Cranswick, one of the UK’s largest pork producers, has called for government action to save the pig industry after feed price rises added to labour shortages to place farmers under “unsustainable strain”. Adam Couch, chief executive of the listed group, said ministers must do more in the coming months to ensure that the UK had
The OECD has admitted that its groundbreaking international deal to increase the amount of tax paid by multinationals is falling significantly behind schedule and has no hope of being implemented next year. Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Mathias Cormann, the OECD secretary-general, said there were “difficult discussions under way” and that the
Six years ago, Britain began an experiment that was called “bold” by some economists and “reckless” by others. George Osborne, then Conservative chancellor, announced the minimum wage for over-25s would accelerate sharply to reach 60 per cent of median hourly pay by 2020. His decision was linked to his determination to cut welfare spending. But
The writer is professor of business at Columbia Business School and a retired partner of Goldman Sachs Much has been written about the wicked declines in financial asset prices this year. These commentaries are often framed in the language of technical analysis. For example, has an equity bear market begun? Far more relevant to investment
Your browser does not support playing this file but you can still download the MP3 file to play locally. This month’s crash in the value of cryptocurrencies has wiped out investments for people all over the world. In Bangalore, 29-year-old Subbaiah watched in horror as his $7,000 crypto holdings in luna and terra collapsed. Even
The diversity of digital assets presently lumped together as “crypto” is a branding disaster that shouts criminality. This is reminiscent of “hedge funds” — widely diverse strategies, little understood but often tagged together in the popular mind as opaque, venal, too-clever-by-half and borderline dodgy. For some, the recent fall in cryptocurrency values (“Crypto’s collapse highlights
Brooke Masters’ report on the US baby formula shortage, with the US government controlling fully two-thirds of the market (Opinion, May 19), calls to mind Milton Friedman’s warning that if you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara desert, in five years there would be a shortage of sand. Michael J Bond Mercer
Banks take hugely varying approaches in their commitments to tackling climate change. But there’s at least one point of consensus. You have to be seen to be taking it seriously. A talk entitled “why investors need not worry about climate risk” from an HSBC executive hints at disharmony in the ranks. Predictably, HSBC has moved
As incoming prime ministers from opposition parties tend to do, Anthony Albanese declared that Australians had “voted for change”. In fact, this was an election lost due to the unpopularity of the nine-year-old conservative Liberal-National coalition and especially the outgoing premier, Scott Morrison, more than it was won by the uncharismatic, somewhat gaffe-prone Albanese and
Criminal solicitors in London will refuse to take on low-paid cases this week in protest over the government’s legal aid reforms, adding pressure to the post-coronavirus pandemic backlog of criminal cases in England and Wales. More than 100 lawyers at the London Criminal Courts Solicitors’ Association, which has about 800 members, have voted to stop
Starbucks has become the latest consumer brand to pull out of Russia as the wider exodus of multinational companies from the country continues three months after its invasion of Ukraine. The US coffee shop chain on Monday said that following the temporary suspension of its Russian business in March, it had “made the decision to
JPMorgan needed to convince investor day attendees that it has not lost its profit advantage over competitors. Shares have been reeling since the US banking giant warned in mid-January that higher spending could cause it to miss a key profitability target. Investors delivered a stinging rebuke to boss Jamie Dimon last month by rejecting his
History was made at Stormont on May 13. In the imposing white edifice built to house what Northern Ireland’s first prime minister called the partitioned region’s “Protestant parliament for a Protestant people”, a speech was delivered entirely in Irish. Headsets provided translation for Aisling Reilly, a legislator for the nationalist Sinn Féin party which in