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| | World |
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe faced stiff opposition criticism after a report warned that many retirees won’t be able to live on pensions alone, a topic likely to become an issue in an election for parliament’s upper house. The furor over the report and Finance Minister Taro Aso’s refusal to accept its findings have created a headache for Abe’s coalition ahead of the upper house poll and amid speculation that the premier may also call a snap election for the more powerful lower chamber. | |
A rocket struck the site of the residential and operations headquarters of several global major oil companies, including U.S. giant ExxonMobil, near Iraq’s southern city of Basra early, wounding three people, Iraq’s military said. The rocket hit the Burjesia site west of the city, according to police and a statement released by the military. Police earlier said two Iraqi workers were wounded. | |
South Korea has provided its largest food and aid donation since 2008 to the U.N. aid program in North Korea, officials said, amid warnings that millions of dollars more is needed to make up for food shortages. South Korea followed through on a promise to donate $4.5 million to the U.N. World Food Programme, and announced it was also providing 50,000 tonnes of rice for delivery to its northern neighbor. | |
Brexit campaigner Boris Johnson took a step closer to becoming Britain’s next prime minister, winning 40 percent of votes in the second round of a contest on a firm promise to leave the European Union by Oct. 31. The former foreign minister was far ahead of the rest of the pack, stretching a lead which, for many, makes Johnson the all but inevitable victor to replace Prime Minister Theresa May. | |
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| | Business |
Airbus struck a 50-plane deal with veteran low-cost airline investor Bill Franke, bouncing back from the potential loss of a major customer a day earlier when IAG placed a lifeline order for Boeing’s grounded 737 MAX jet. Boeing seized on a lull in firm orders for passenger jets to sign more than $100 million in contracts for digital services for its newer but fast-growing global unit as the Paris Airshow enters a third day. For the more coverage. 8 min read | |
Last year, Wei Qing and his private equity investment team visited more than 20 Chinese electric vehicle manufacturing startups. The end result? They decided not to invest in any. His concerns reflect what bankers describe as increasingly tough funding times for Chinese EV makers which must jostle for attention in a crowded sector and produce convincing arguments about future profitability despite government cuts to EV subsidies and plans to phase them out. 6 Min Read | |
Shareholder activists want Google parent Alphabet to break itself up before regulators force the world’s biggest internet ad seller to split into different pieces. SumOfUs, a U.S.-based group that aims to curb the growing power of corporations, is set to make that proposal at Alphabet’s annual shareholder meeting at an auditorium at the company’s offices in Sunnyvale, California.
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| The European Union’s second highest court ruled that Adidas’s trademark consisting of three parallel stripes was invalid. https://reut.rs/2XmcLul 4:40 AM - Jun 19, 2019 |
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