Tag Archives: money

El Salvador’s president adopts McDonald’s uniform for Twitter profile after bitcoin plunge

El Salvador President Nayib Bukele, says Human Rights Watch, has “undermined basic democratic checks and balances” since taking office.

But he seems to have a sense of humor.

Bukele changed his Twitter profile to that of a McDonald’s employee, in wake of the latest plunge in bitcoin that brought the cryptocurrency down as much as 50% from its highs.

That’s a reference to an internet meme, where HODL’ers indicate their future career prospects when bitcoin slumps. McDonald’s pays as low as $11 per hour.

Bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-4.44%
again started to slide early Monday after a turbulent weekend, falling below $34,000. The cryptocurrency is down over 50% from its record high.

Under Bukele’s direction, El Salvador has been buying bitcoin, and uniquely has adopted it as legal tender. Coindesk reports the country now holds over 1,500 bitcoin, worth some $53 million in fiat Yankee dollars.

Financial markets have not been impressed. Since El Salvador adopted bitcoin as legal tender, its 5-year credit default swaps have surged to 1,812.81 , from 412.54, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

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Kanye Tells Paparazzi He Wants a Cut of the Money They Make Off His Image

Purported billionaire Kanye West wants a cut of the paparazzi’s earnings.

The 44-year-old artist explained his stance Saturday during a run-in with photographers in Miami. Ye told the pap he wanted celebrities to take more control of their likeness—and one way to do this was by ensuring each star received a percentage of the money made from paparazzi photos and interviews.

“Right now y’all get to shoot us without having to pay. I’mma change that,” he said as he was leaving the airport. “I’m not saying it in a negative way. It’s just like, right now, it’s just really one-sided. You guys can follow us, you guys can stand [outside] a hotel at any given time—you don’t give us any percentage of what you’re making off of us, off of our kids, and I’m gonna change that.”

Kanye went on to explain that he owns his image, and is, therefore, entitled to a portion of any money his image racks in. 

“We all gotta make money together … It can’t be a one-sided thing,” he said. “Look, if I’m just with my kids, I say I don’t want you to shoot me, then that’s just something y’all gotta respect … We can get that money together, but we gotta have a conversation.”

Ye went on to acknowledged that the current laws allow paparazzi to take photos of celebrities without permission—just as long as the photos are captured in a public setting. But Ye is looking to change that.

“I’m gonna make sure we get our rights …” he said. “We’re real people, also.”

He then referenced his altercation with Justin Poplawski, a 40-year-old autograph-seeker who was allegedly punched by Kanye in Los Angeles this month. Ye, who was named the main suspect in the battery investigation, told the paparazzi on Saturday that Poplawski wasn’t a fan, but rather someone who was simply trying to make money off his name.

“I respect your job. My dad was a photographer at a newspaper … I love paparazzi,” he said. “But as Americans, we gotta respect each other. We gotta bring the pride back to this country.”

You can hear Kanye’s full comments below.

 

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Arizona governor sues Biden admin over federal money for schools with mask mandates

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Republican Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey has filed suit against President Biden’s administration, seeking to bar the White House from withholding federal funds to the state over differences in school COVID-19 policy.

“The governor’s office will not eliminate or change the (education) programs to conform to Treasury’s unlawful dictates,” the lawsuit states, according to the Arizona Republic.

ARIZ AG MARK BRNOVICH: BIDEN’S VACCINE MANDATES, OTHER ABUSES MUST BE STOPPED BY THE STATES

In this Dec. 2, 2020, file photo, Arizona Republican Gov. Doug Ducey arrives for a news conference to talk about the latest Arizona COVID-19 information in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, Pool, File)

“In Arizona, our top priority is to get kids caught up, and we are using a wide range of resources to make that happen — including federal dollars allocated to our state,” Ducey said on Friday.

“Make no mistake, we will always support families and kids while protecting their right to choose an education that best fits their needs,” the governor added.

The Biden administration informed the state it must stop withholding federal funding from schools with mask mandates or the department may take back over $160 million in coronavirus relief money the state designated for schools

Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich firmly repudiated the administration’s threat, threatening swift legal action if pushed.

Mark Brnovich on Fox News
(Fox News)

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Brnovich published a letter Jan. 20 to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen after Yellen threatened, on behalf of the Biden administration, to withhold funds from the state due to a difference in COVID-19 policy.

“Madam Secretary, the states created the federal government, not the other way around,” Brnovich wrote. “Unfortunately, members of the Biden administration have continuously ignored this fundamental principle of our great nation when proposing and enacting bureaucratic mandates and harmful regulations upon individual states.”

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Some money services reopen in Tonga, drinking water the priority

Jan 22 (Reuters) – Tongans queued for limited money services that were restored in the Pacific island’s capital on Saturday, as the clean-up continued a week after a devastating volcanic eruption and tsunami.

Tonga’s government said drinking water was the priority, and a national emergency team had already distributed 60,000 litres of water to residents. A desalination plant on a New Zealand naval ship that arrived on Friday, capable of producing 70,000 litres a day, has started drawing seawater from Tonga’s harbour.

Residents who had lost homes on outlying islands when a tsunami reaching up to 15 metres crashed over the South Pacific archipelago would be relocated to the main island, Tongatapu, because of water and food shortages, the Tongan prime minister’s office said in a statement distributed to Tongan officials.

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Volcanic fallout on the surface of the ocean was damaging boats and making marine transport between the islands challenging, and domestic flights were suspended, it said.

Ash fall and the tsunami had affected 84 per cent of the population, and inter-island communications remain an “acute challenge” with limited satellite and radio links, it said.

Burials were held earlier in the week for a Tongan man and a woman who had died when the tsunami hit the outlying Ha’apai islands. The official death toll is three. A field hospital has been set up on Nomuka Island after the health centre there was swept away.

Faka’iloatonga Taumoefolau, the coordinator for the project to rebuild Tonga’s parliament, said the restoration of international money transfer services, for limited hours on Saturday, was important for people to be able to buy essential goods.

“Tongans have demonstrated their resilience in this calamity and will get back on their feet,” he said, speaking to Reuters from Tongatapu.

More naval vessels from Australia, New Zealand and Britain are en-route to Tonga to deliver aid. Two aid flights, from Japan and New Zealand, arrived on Saturday with humanitarian supplies, after two flights from Australia on Friday evening.

COVID PRECAUTIONS

The Tongan government has implemented a strict COVID-19 policy that means people, including aid workers, cannot enter the country unless they have undergone a three-week isolation period. Aid deliveries have been contactless, with pallets quarantined for 72 hours after arrival at the airport before being distributed by Tongan authorities. One Australian aircraft returned to Brisbane midflight on Thursday after being notified of a COVID-19 case among the crew.

An aid delivery expected from China would also be contact-less to prevent the spread of COVID-19, the government said.

A satellite image shows Mango islands after Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano eruption, in Tonga, January 20, 2022. Satellite Image ©2022 Maxar Technologies/Handout via REUTERS

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Taumoefolau said Tonga had done a good job in avoiding a pandemic outbreak, recording only one case so far, and the border policy would not hinder aid reaching communities.

“It is doable to get the aid in without compromising efforts on keeping COVID out,” he said.

An Australian navy vessel, HMAS Adelaide, was expected to arrive in Tonga on Wednesday with more bulk water and a 40-bed field hospital, Australia’s minister for international development and the Pacific, Zed Seselja, told reporters in Canberra on Saturday.

The Tongan government was doing “an extraordinary job on the ground”, he said.

Australia and New Zealand were coordinating an international aid effort with support from Britain, France, the United States, Fiji and Papua New Guinea, he said, and the Tongan government had asked for support to be paced so the small airport was not overwhelmed.

Asked by reporters about China’s aid program in the Pacific, Seselja said: “We welcome offers of support from anyone, including the Chinese government”.

Sione Hufanga, the resident United Nations country coordination specialist, told Reuters that the agency is assisting the government in relief work as more people arrive at shelters and seek food and other supplies.

“Almost all crops in the country have been badly affected. Farmers have lost their homes and livelihood,” he told Reuters by phone from Tonga’s capital, Nuku’alofa. “The country will be heavily relying on aid food for some time.”

The agricultural sector contributed nearly 14% of Tonga’s GDP in 2015/16 and represented over 65% of exports.

The Tongan government said it is “deeply appreciative to the international community” for its assistance, which included US$8 million in funding from the World Bank and US$10 million from the Asia Development Bank.

Reliance, a repair ship due to reconnect the undersea cable that links Tonga to international telecoms networks, left its Port Moresby mooring and was expected in Tonga on Jan. 30, according to Refinitiv data on shipping movements.

The vessel was expected to arrive “in the next few days” to repair the fibre-optic cable, the Tongan government said.

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Reporting by Kirsty Needham;
Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Bitcoin, Netflix, Peloton, Coinbase: What to Watch When the Stock Market Opens Today

Stock futures are falling after disappointing earnings reports from some popular technology stocks. Here’s what we’re watching at the end of a rough week on Wall Street:

  • Bitcoin’s price fell below $40,000, and crypto stocks were dragged down with it.

    Coinbase

    COIN 0.97%

    dropped 5.6% ahead of the bell, and bitcoin miners

    Marathon Digital

    MARA -0.08%

    and

    Riot Blockchain

    RIOT -0.11%

    slid 7.8% and 8.7% respectively.

  • Netflix

    NFLX -1.48%

    plunged 19% premarket. The streaming giant said it expects to add a much smaller number of subscribers this quarter than it did a year ago as it adjusts to growing competition and lasting disruptions from the coronavirus pandemic. The bad news seemed to rub off on streaming-device maker Roku, which shed 4% premarket.

  • Peloton

    PTON -23.93%

    powered 5.5% higher premarket, but that only makes up a bit of Thursday’s 24% drop. The company is reviewing the size of its workforce and resetting production levels as it adapts to more seasonal demand for its exercise equipment.

A Peloton stationary bike at one of the fitness company’s studios in New York, Dec. 4, 2019.



Photo:

Scott Heins/Getty Images

  • Intel

    INTC -2.95%

    nudged down 0.2%. The company plans to invest at least $20 billion in new chip-making capacity in Ohio.

  • CSX

    CSX -0.03%

    fell 3.2%, though the railroad operator is projecting that shipping volume will rise faster than GDP this year and reported a slight earnings beat.

  • Ally Financial

    ALLY -0.02%

    shares slipped 2.4% premarket after it reported lower earnings per share during the recent quarter from a year prior.

  • Huntington Bancshares

    HBAN -2.51%

    ticked down 4.5% after it also reported a slight drop in earnings per share.

Chart of the Day
  • Europe’s tech scene has struggled to emerge from the shadows of giants in the U.S. and Asia, but friendly local policies and a global overflow of investment capital are now giving the region a gusher of cash.

Write to James Willhite at james.willhite@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Britney Spears slams ‘bully’ dad Jamie for ‘taking over $6M’ from her during conservatorship & demands money be returned

BRITNEY Spears ripped her father, Jamie, for “taking over $6million” from the iconic pop star during her conservatorship as she’s now wants the money back.

In November 2021, Britney’s conservatorship officially ended after 13 years without requiring any further mental evaluation.

5

Britney Spears is demanding her father, Jamie, give back $6million that he allegedly took from her during the conservatorshipCredit: Instagram/Britney Spears

5

Jamie was in control of the majority of his eldest daughter’s decisions for over 10 yearsCredit: AP

According to TMZ, the singer’s lawyer, Mathew Rosengart, has filed legal documents, which claim that Jamie, 69, engaged in self-dealing, financial and business mismanagement … engaged in abusive and bullying conduct toward his daughter, deprived his daughter of fundamental civil liberties…”

Britney’s lawyer also claims the controversial dad did not have a right to the $6 million he earned over the duration of the conservatorship, as the hitmaker hopes the judge from her upcoming hearing will order Jamie to returns the cash.

According to the legal docs, Jamie allegedly used a part of the $6million to pitch a program titled, Cookin’ Cruzin’ & Chaos.

Aside from the $6million, Mathew claims even more was spent on lawyers for the conservatorship- fees that were said to have totaled $30million.

The January 19 hearing will focus on finances as Jamie allegedly wants his eldest daughter to cover his lawyer fees.

Previous legal docs highlighted the massive amount of Britney’s fortune Jamie gained in past years.

It read: “… He reportedly received 1.5% of the gross revenues generated by Ms. Spears’s performances and merchandise sales associated with her highly-successful multi-year Las Vegas residency.

“These gross revenues for box office alone were approximately $137.7 million, plus merchandise sales.

“Mr. Spears cut from that residency is estimated to be at least $2.1 million. He also received a 2.95% commission on Ms. Spears’s gross revenues on her 2011 Femme Fatale tour, which yielded him an estimated $500,000…”

SHOCK CLAIMS

Britney was first placed in the strict conservatorship back in 2008, which gave her father control of a majority of her decisions.

In June, the star would make some shocking allegations against her dad during a court hearing.

According to Britney she was not allowed to get married and was forced to get an IUD she cannot take out to have another baby.

Britney shares sons Sean, 16, and Jayden, 15, with her ex-husband Kevin Federline.

However, the 40-year-old gained control back of her life last year after her conservatorship officially ended.

BRIT SOUNDS OFF

Ever since then Britney has been extremely vocal, slamming her family members especially her younger sister, Jamie Lynn.

In fact, the performer recently shared she wish she would have “slapped” her sibling as well as her mother Lynne, too

Britney and Jamie Lynn have continued to go back-and-forth amid the release of the Zoey 101 actress’ memoir Things I Should Have Said.

Plenty of harsh words and claims have been exchanged, including one allegation that Britney once grabbed a knife and locked her and Jamie Lynn in a room.

‘SO FEARFUL’

While speaking to JuJu Chang on ABC, Jamie Lynn reflected on the alleged incident: “I was scared. That was a moment I had.

“I also was fearful to really say anything because I didn’t want to upset anybody, but I also was so upset that she didn’t feel safe.”

Britney would slam the claims, calling them “crazy lies” and telling her sister she’s “stooped to a new low.”

5

The 69-year-old is said to have made ‘1.5% of the gross revenues’ from Britney’s Las Vegas residencyCredit: Getty

5

Following the end of her conservatorship, Britney has sounded off on her family, especially sister Jamie LynnCredit: Getty

5

The Zoey 101 actress has been promoting her memoir while also feuding with her older sisterCredit: Spotify/Call Her Daddy Podcast
Britney Spears’ sister Jamie Lynn breaks down in tears over rift with famous sibling on GMA Interview

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Brace for a volatile 2022, but cling to this tech stalwart when the storm comes, says investment adviser

The pain is piling up for equity investors after the long U.S. holiday weekend, with bond yields at levels not seen since early 2020, and oil prices tapping 2014 highs.

The pace of Federal Reserve monetary policy tightening amid the highest inflation in about 40 years, a bumpy start to the corporate earnings reporting season and pandemic uncertainties are just a few things on the worry list. Technology stocks
COMP,
-1.12%
are set to take the biggest hit on Tuesday, as a rapid rise in short term interest rates tends to make their future cash flows less valuable.

While a Deutsche Bank chart (below) reveals more tech-bubble worries, our call of the day makes a case for one of the biggest tech stalwarts, Apple
AAPL,
-0.43%,
saying the iPhone maker has an ace in the hole that few are paying attention to.

That call comes from investment adviser Wedgewood Partners, who kick off their fourth-quarter 2021 client letter with a warning about market volatility for 2022, triggered by central bankers who are about to usher in some market chaos by pulling the plug on years of cheap money. Even Chinese President Xi Jinping was heard warning the Fed not to hike interest rates at a virtual Davos on Tuesday.

However, the adviser also sees opportunities ahead as selling picks up speed, and they plan to stick to Apple, which they’ve owned for 16 years.

While Wedgewood said it couldn’t foresee the many products the company unveiled, “we did know that Apple’s vertically integrated [software and hardware] product development strategy was unique and extremely capable of creating products and experiences that customers thought worthwhile enough to spend growing amounts of time and money on,” said the adviser.

Today, that strategy remains intact, but more important Apple is commanding a key new realm, having developed over a dozen custom processors and integrated circuits, since launching its “A-series” processors. For example, one it produced in 2017 provided the iPhone X with enough power to operate FaceID 3-D algorithms, used to unlock phones and make digital payments.

“Apple has effectively created a semiconductor business that rivals and even surpasses some of the most established semiconductor-focused businesses in the industry,” said Wedgewood. “Apple continues to differentiate through vertical integration, which has been a hallmark of Apple’s long-term strategy to grow and capture superior profitability. It is difficult to predict what new products will be unveiled; however, we think this strategy should continue to serve
shareholders quite well.”

Other top positions recommended by Wedgewood include telecom group Motorola
MSI,
-1.73%,
another tech stalwart Microsoft
MSFT,
-0.23%
and retailer Tractor Supply
TSCO,
-1.14%.

Here’s a final comment from Wedgewood about the stock storm it sees brewing. “The graphic below reminds us that when speculation reigns, markets can go far higher than what seems sober,” but when they fall “markets will repeat their long history of falling faster and further than what seems sober.”


Wedgewood Partners

“Long term investors should root for such downside. Such times are opportunities to improve portfolios. Our pencils are sharpened for opportunities as Mr. Market serves them up.”

The markets

Microsoft shares are slipping after the tech group confirmed it will buy Activision Blizzard
ATVI,
+27.39%
in a $68.7 billion cash deal. The gaming group’s shares are flying, along with those of rival Electronics Arts
EA,
+6.72%.

Goldman Sachs
GS,
-7.72%
added to a disappointing batch of bank results from last week, with shares down as earnings came up short, with Charles Schwab
SCHW,
-4.29%
also falling on gloomy results. Kinder Morgan
KMI,
-0.14%
and Alcoa
AA,
-1.43%
are still to come.

Airbnb shares
ABNB,
-2.49%
are slumping after ratings and target cut from an analyst who sees multiple headwinds and too-few catalysts.

The New York Empire state manufacturing index for January fell well short of expectations. A National Association of Home Builders index for the same month is still ahead.

An unpublished study by an Israeli hospital showed second Pfizer
PFE,
-1.78%
-BioNTech
BNTX,
-7.77%
or Moderna
MRNA,
-4.70%
boosters aren’t halting omicron infections. Separately, Moderna’s CEO Stephane Bancel said his company is working on a combined flu/COVID booster, while White House chief medical advise Dr. Anthony Fauci, said it’s too soon to tell if omicron will bring us out of the pandemic.

Another study says COVID infections are turning children into fussy eaters due to parosmia disorders that distort their sense of smell. And China state media says packages from the U.S. and Canada had helped spread omicron, as Hong Kong gets ready to cull thousands of hamsters.

An airline lobby group is warning of “chaos” for U.S. air travelers due to 5G services rolling out this month, in a letter signed by big carriers, UPS
UPS,
-1.55%
and FedEx
FDX,
-1.39%.

Larry Fink, chairman and chief executive of BlackRock
BLK,
-1.72%
said investors need to know where company leaders stand on societal issues.

Retailer Walmart 
WMT,
-1.28%
is looking at creating its own cryptocurrency and nonfungible tokens, according to U.S. patent filings.

The markets

Uncredited

The Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-1.12%
is sprinting ahead with losses, with the Dow
DJIA,
-1.43%
and S&P 500
SPX,
-1.24%
also lower Tuesday led by those for the Nasdaq-100
NQ00,
-1.28%
as bond yields
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.848%

TMUBMUSD02Y,
1.034%
surge across the curve. Oil prices
BRN00,
+1.06%

CL00,
+1.56%
are surging after Iran-backed Houthi rebels launched a deadly drone attack on a key oil facility in Abu Dhabi. Goldman Sachs also predicted Brent could top $100 a barrel in 2023, while the OPEC left its 2022 global oil-demand forecast unchanged.

Losses spread to Asian
NIK,
-0.27%
and Europe stocks
SXXP,
-0.77%,
with a key German bund yields
TMBMKDE-10Y,
-0.012%
about to turn positive for the first time in three years.

The chart

A January survey of more than 500 investors polled by Deutsche Bank shows a slightly gloomier mood. For example, they are more bearish:


Uncredited

Many, especially those over 34, think tech shares are in a bubble:


Uncredited

And they continue to see inflation as the biggest risk to markets, but are also fretting a more aggressive Fed:


Uncredited

Here are the top stock tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m. Eastern Time.

Ticker Security name
TSLA,
+1.47%
Tesla
GME,
-5.61%
GameStop
AMC,
-6.32%
AMC Entertainment
BBIG,
+29.75%
Vinco Ventures
NIO,
-0.71%
NIO
AAPL,
-0.43%
Apple
CENN,
-4.72%
Cenntro Electric Group
NVDA,
-1.57%
Nvidia
BABA,
-0.85%
Alibaba
NVAX,
-4.04%
Novavax
Random reads

Tulsa pastor apologizes for wiping his saliva on a man’s face during a sermon.

The high environmental cost of your beloved fish-oil pills.

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JPMorgan Chase still minting money even as inflation and rates rise

JPMorgan Chase posted strong results for the fourth quarter Friday, including a $10.4 billion profit that topped forecasts. Still, JPMorgan Chase’s earnings were down 14% from the same quarter the previous year as trading revenue fell.

Shares of JPMorgan Chase (JPM) dipped more than 4% in premarket trading on the news.
Consumers are starting to show signs that they’re fed up: Retail sales surprisingly fell in December. Nonetheless, CEO Jamie Dimon was upbeat about the quarter and 2021’s full year results. The bank posted an annual profit of $48.3 billion.

“The economy continues to do quite well despite headwinds related to the Omicron variant, inflation and supply chain bottlenecks,” Dimon said in a statement. “Credit continues to be healthy … and we remain optimistic on US economic growth as business sentiment is upbeat and consumers are benefiting from job and wage growth.”

JPMorgan Chase and other big banks are benefiting from rising interest rates, which makes their loans more profitable — and an economy that has bounced back from the depths of the credit recession. Commercial lending rates have been rising in anticipation of Fed rate hikes this year.

JPMorgan Chase also posted strong increases in advisory fees thanks to a booming environment for merger activity as well as strong demand for initial public offerings. JPMorgan Chase said that global investment banking fees rose 37% from a year ago.

Bank stocks have rallied sharply so far this year and have outperformed the market over the past six months.

But rising interest rates could slow the recovery. The Federal Reserve has hinted that it will boost rates three or even four times this year.

Dimon said in response to a question from CNN’s Matt Egan that the Fed has to “to thread the needle” to make sure that it can keep inflation in control and not slow the economy too much.

Still, Dimon added in a follow up question from CNN Business that the economy is in much better shape now than in March 2020 and that we should “count our blessings” about that.

Dimon said he was not going to spend too much time worrying about what the Fed will do and when because it would be a “waste of time to do so.”

Wells Fargo tops forecasts

Rival Wells Fargo also reported solid results Friday. Earnings and revenue topped analysts’ expectations. The bank has been taking steps to repair its public image after a bruising series of scandals that hurt its reputation and made it the target of more scrutiny and regulation in Washington.

“The changes we’ve made to the company and continued strong economic growth prospects make us feel good about how we are positioned entering 2022,” said Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf in a statement. “But we also remain cognizant that we still have a multiyear effort to satisfy our regulatory requirements — with setbacks likely to continue along the way — and we continue our work to put exposures related to our historical practices behind us.”

Shares of Wells Fargo (WFC) were down slightly though.
Citigroup, which also reported earnings and revenue that topped forecasts, continues to sell assets under the watch of new CEO Jane Fraser. Citi’s stock fell 4% in early trading.
Citi said Friday that it plans to sell its consumer banking businesses in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam to Singapore’s UOB Group for $3.7 billion. The deal comes just a few days after Citi announced it was planning to get out of consumer banking in Mexico.

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Ellen Pompeo RETURNS to Grey’s Anatomy for 19TH SEASON… after admitting she stuck to ‘make money’

She famously admitted that she stuck with Grey’s Anatomy to ‘make money’ instead of pursuing a much more diverse and creative career.

And Ellen Pompeo has added even more stability to her life.

The 52-year-old actress has closed a deal to continue as Dr. Meredith Grey for season 19 of Grey’s Anatomy as the series was renewed by ABC according to a Monday report from Deadline.

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She’s back! Ellen Pompeo (seen at The Emmys in September) has closed a deal to continue as Dr. Meredith Grey for season 19 of Grey’s Anatomy as the series was renewed by ABC according to a Monday report from Deadline

Moving on  up: Though she has kept the title of doctor on the series, one name will change as she has been upped from co-executive producer to executive producer for the upcoming season

Though she has kept the title of doctor on the series, one name will change as she has been upped from co-executive producer to executive producer for the upcoming season.

They also report that fellow executive producer Krista Vernoff will remain as the showrunner for the highly-successful medical drama.

It is also interesting to note that ABC has also not designated the 19th season as the final one for the show or Pompeo herself as was the case for the Season 18 renewal in May 2021.

Back in August 2020, Pompeo made waves as she admitted the financial security the show has given her has been a major factor for her staying on the show as she said on podcast Jemele Hill Is Unbothered at the time: ‘You know, I made choices to stay on the show.

Keeping it going: It is also interesting to note that ABC has also not designated the 19th season as the final one for the show or Pompeo herself as was the case for the Season 18 renewal in May 2021

Back in August 2020, Pompeo (seen in October)  made waves as she admitted the financial security the show has given her has been a major factor for her staying on as she said on podcast Jemele Hill Is Unbothered at the time: ‘You know, I made choices to stay on the show’

‘For me, personally, a healthy home life was more important than career. I didn’t grow up with a particularly happy childhood. So the idea that I have this great husband and these three beautiful children [and] a happy home life was really something I needed to complete, to close the hole in my heart.’ 

Pompeo is married to 55-year-old musician Chris Ivery and the couple has three children, daughter Stella, 12, daughter Sienna, seven, and son Eli, five. 

It was revealed in 2018 that Pompeo had negotiated a salary of $20 million per year, making her one of the highest paid actresses on TV.

She also earns an undisclosed sum for producing the Grey’s spinoff, Station 19. 

Raking it in:It was revealed in 2018 that Pompeo had negotiated a salary of $20 million per year, making her one of the highest paid actresses on TV

Pompeo continued, ‘And so I made a decision to make money, and not chase creative acting roles, I don’t like chasing anything ever, and acting to me, in my experience, was a lot of chasing. 

 ‘You’ve got to chase roles, you’ve got to beg for roles, you’ve got to convince people… and although I produce and it’s the same kind of thing, I think I still do it from a place of, I’m never that thirsty because I’m financially set.’

The news comes at an interesting time as last month Pompeo told  Insider she has ‘been trying to focus on convincing everybody that [the show] should end.’

Pompeo says she’s often focused on the creative possibilities for the series, whereas others focus on the commercial success.

Hmm: The news comes at an interesting time as last month Pompeo (seen in October 2018) told Insider she has ‘been trying to focus on convincing everybody that [the show] should end’

‘​I feel like I’m the super naive one who keeps saying, “But what’s the story going to be, what story are we going to tell?”’ she said. ‘​And everyone’s like, “Who cares, Ellen? It makes a gazillion dollars.”‘

The Shonda Rhimes-created show, which is currently in its 18th season, initially hit the air in 2005.

Pompeo previously echoed similar sentiments speaking with Entertainment Weekly  in September of 2018, where she said she thought about a ‘change’ in her career.

‘I am really feeling like we have told the majority of the stories we can tell,’ Pompeo said. ‘It’s about time that I mix it up.’

Pompeo plays Dr. Meredith Grey on the ABC medical drama 

Pompeo said that she looks to present her three children with ‘examples of other people being active in fighting for things that matter, rather than trying to tell them what to do’

The following month, she appeared on Ellen and said there was ‘no end in sight’ to the hit show and that she wanted to continue because the show was ‘touching lives and making a difference’ with its stories.

The Everett, Massachusetts native was speaking to the outlet about her company Betr Remedies, which works alongside the non-profit organization SIRUM, which focuses on redistributing prescription medications that were not used to communities in need working with charitable pharmacies.

Pompeo told Insider she ‘had no idea how much actual medication goes into landfills’ prior to her work with Betr Remedies, and saw the collaboration ‘as a pretty interesting opportunity to be a part of a startup that was addressing some real issues that we have.’

Pompeo, who shares daughters Stella, 12, and Sienna, seven, and son Eli, four, with husband Chris Ivery, 54, said that she looks to present her children with ‘examples of other people being active in fighting for things that matter, rather than trying to tell them what to do.

‘I like to point out how many good people there are really working hard to try to make significant change in whatever areas they’re passionate about.’

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Los Angeles Taco Bell employee shot dead by customer attempting to pay with counterfeit money: Police – KRON4

  1. Los Angeles Taco Bell employee shot dead by customer attempting to pay with counterfeit money: Police KRON4
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