35 Burst results for "Ten Months"

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ten months" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"This morning. Oil also climbing close to a ten month high so we keep an eye on that. Brent crude futures trading at $92 .39 the barrel up by half of 1 %. Those aren't the markets Stephen. Well let's get more now on that decision from the European Central Bank. Resting on a knife edge economists surveyed by Bloomberg spit almost 50 -50 on whether or not the bank will hike today or pause its unprecedented campaign of tightening our market supporter Valerie Titel joins us now for more. Valerie how are markets viewing this decision? The view of the markets has changed a lot this week and that's an understatement we went from assuming a 40 % chance of a hike before that ECB leak to now pricing near 70 % chance of a hike and again a lot of questions over how Lagarde is going to handle this today. The leak yesterday was really really focused on their inflation projections it said nothing about how they intend to vote but mention their inflation projections for for next year will be revised up but it didn't necessarily say anything about the direct policy implications however we know if a central bank assumes inflation is higher that it basically implies they have more work do to and another hike is on the table but this article yesterday really opened the door to whether it's going to be a hawkish hold a dovish hike or does Lagarde come out with another hawkish hike. Remember two months ago came she out very very hawkish and surprised the market. All of this happening meanwhile we have this backdrop of economic data in Europe just looking really really bad we have all three PMI indices in contraction the composite figures at 46 manufacturing is even lower than that at 43 so it's this it's this narrative around do we get some sort of triche mistake today from the ECB will they regret this last hike of the cycle very much like the triche did back in yeah so absolutely much I think about when it comes to the the ECB but elsewhere I mentioned the CPI US number that came out yesterday showing the core number ticking up slightly not 0 .3 percent does it really help us to understand though where the Fed is going next yeah the CPI print had a lot of caveats yesterday the one thing the market attached itself to was this uptick in month core -on -month to 0 .3 but honestly it was mostly shrugged off by the market not necessarily changing the narrative for the Fed we still assume a 50 % chance of an additional Fed hike come November that really didn't budge yesterday the attention now quickly goes to the meeting next week and what they'll reflect in that dot plot we know they're going to pause rates it's a matter of do they use that dot plot to tell the market they're still on the watch for an additional hike and they still want to keep rates higher for longer or do we see Powell shift dovishly does he talk about the need to proceed cautiously and use that to talk about the economic risks on the horizon and maybe those dots in that dot plot don't shift up that much higher leading the market to speculate that cuts next year are very much on the cards how should we be thinking about FX markets going into this decision today and then thinking about the Fed next week as well know you they're the kind of performance of the euro very much in focus today yeah very much in focus today and it's funny you read analysts calling for a hike saying it's gonna hurt the euro analysts calling for a hold saying it's gonna hurt the euro I think most people are just really bearish the euro right now essentially because of these growth concerns we have over Europe now it's a complicated one for the ECB to handle because they don't have a growth mandate they just have an inflation mandate but these growth risks on the horizon are really what's catching the markets eye and really thinking that the ECB even if they do do this last one rates probably aren't gonna stay this much high this high for longer here in Europe yeah okay very interesting Valerie thank you so much for being with us this morning that is our markets reporter Valerie Tytel up next China headhunting Britain's insensitive positions and growing calls to tax Britain's wealthy now the paper review on bluebird daybreak Europe the news you need to know from today's papers who makes me and Karen stones us now to look through the newspapers so the times has a headline China is headhunting Britain's insensitive positions I mean we were just hearing from the former Prime Minister Theresa May around the UK's relationship with China this is a big focus in Britain yes Caroline it absolutely is a big focus and things are going to be coming more to play today and the British government is actually expected to respond to this damning report on the UK's approach to Chinese espionage the response is going to come after a four -year inquiry by the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament is published so a lot of work has gone into this and the Conservatives are expected to

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ten months" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"It nine months, ten months, our trajectory has only been in one direction and that has been up and that is a despite good amount of geopolitical uncertainty and discord and that's, you know, we're company a global and so that's part of our global trade and we adapt and we evolve and we move on. I'd say in the last three months it's been pretty fascinating. We usually have our peak demand in bookings in the first quarter and our first quarter is December, January, February of the year and in fact we did have a record first quarter in bookings, highest bookings in the company's history. We thought that was great and then we got to our second quarter and we shattered it and so the demand that we see is carrying on in the first three weeks of our quarter third for the month of June, it hasn't stopped and so despite the fact of political uncertainty that is something that our consumers, our guests are taking in stride and end at of the the day they've got a desire to travel, they've got a desire for new experiences and they have a lot of pent -up demand for experiences as you know and that plays very well into our business. Josh, it feels like though investors maybe think it's as good as it gets considering the bounce back that we've seen in your share price this year, you know how it goes as someone who's been at Carnival a for while now and looked at it from several different angles but we still have the stock down from about 80 % from a high back in January of 2018. Is it as good as it gets do you think in terms of bookings and visibility right now? Oh not at all you know you know I so the short answer is no it is a matter of fact even though we're all the way back in our booking curve for our North American brands we're still only about 90 % back for our European brands and so their trajectory is the same thing going in the right direction but they've got a ways to run but to you the show strength of our portfolio of world -class brands our European brands in the second quarter they actually as compared to 2019 not only do they have double -digit increase percentages in the volumes booked for the rest of this year for the second half of the year it was on double -digit price increases and so first quarter seven and a half points up in pricing second quarter of this year seven and a half percent percent up in pricing with that demand on a forward -looking basis as in wind our back we're very well booked for the rest of this year into the first half of next year so with all respect due to um you know to the market you know i any one day you're gonna have ups you're gonna have downs as you said we've been a pretty big tear about about a hundred percent or so since the start of the year um our job is to focus on the business focus on that demand generation and continue to drive our business forward what needs to to happen bring the stock back to pre -pandemic levels or why hasn't it come back is it just that you took took on a lot of debt that you have a lot of investment to do i mean you're trading in the teens right now and before the pandemic hit you were trading more like 50 60 70 a care yeah well you know our profile has definitely been impacted by by what happened in 2020 and what we had to do to get through it frankly um you know we were a company that entered in with probably about you know the market cap and and the and the debt if you added it together it's probably not too dissimilar to exactly where are we now if you add it together it's just that our debt which used to be about 13 billion dollars is 33 billion dollars and hence the the value of the of the equity is down and it's our job over the next you several know years to effectively transfer that back by generating free cash flow we have a good of amount headroom to do to to take that and and de -lever and pay down debt we have the lowest order book of new builds in frankly my history I've been here for for 21 years and when I started back in November of 2007 as the treasurer as one of the stops along my my path here at Carnival Corporation we ships had 24 on order and so our ability to generate a lot of cash and we will continue to do that and use it to deliver is is quite strong to tell you now as far as you know what factors are the other involved for us it's about getting back to not only full capacity full occupancy but really leveraging our brands our brands are phenomenal I mean they are world -class cruise line AIDA in Germany created modern -day cruising they own Germany P &O Cruises in the UK they are synonymous with cruising they have a Union Jack as their livery we own those markets they very are good markets for us and they're rebounding and so the as far as I'm concerned there's only one way that we're going and it's up. Can I just ask about your debt you have a weighted average fixed coupon of 6 94 % which is not bad considering where we are right now and where I guess and about 2 2 .9 billion maturing in 2024 which is where it would be which is much lower than it would be had if you to refinance now is my point right you guys got in on this early and first do you think that puts you at an advantage relative to your competitors I think we're in good shape you know we've basically gotten to a point where we ended the quarter at about 7 .2 billion 7 .3 billion of liquidity and we've already started to deliver as far as we're concerned we can always be opportunistic we can refinance we can look at what's available but we as far as we see the future we have no to need go out to the markets at this point we can de -lever with the liquidity buffer that we have and starting to generate again all of that cash flow we do have export credits as well so for the new bills do that we have on order we've got about three billion dollars of very competitively priced export credit so these ready and waiting for us if we choose to use them between now and two years from now in the middle of 2025 when our last ship is ordered so we're in a very strong position when it comes to our ability to manage our debt down and manage our interest expense down over time you know as a matter of fact one of the one of the drivers that we have for being able to add 275 million dollars to the bottom line in our guidance change from March to June was in fact interest spent savings from

The Breakdown
SEC Finally Responds to Coinbase Lawsuit
"All right Friends, well, today we have some updates in the legal battle to get regulatory clarity for the crypto industry. And if you follow the show for a while, you'll know that it seemed more and more over the last year or so, but even more the last 6 months that to get any actual answers. The crypto industry was going to have to avail itself of a legal path. Particularly in the wake of FTX, it's been clear and we'll get into this today that the various regulatory bodies are quite comfortable with regulation by enforcement rather than providing proactive guidance, and that's what many in the industry in a position where they have to actually follow through with legal threats in order to get anything done. Well, yesterday on Monday, we got some updates in at least one of those cases. On Monday, the SEC filed its response to a recent coinbase lawsuit. Coinbase had sued in late April, accusing the SEC of unreasonable delay in responding to the exchange's petition for rulemaking. While the petition was wide ranging and complex, coinbase's lawsuit had a simple contention. That contention was that rather than engaging with the substantial regulatory suggestions put forward, the SEC had decided secretly that no rulemaking would be done. Rather than publish this decision, the SEC had kept silent on the matter to avoid any potential for illegal challenge on rejecting the petition for rulemaking. With ten months elapsed since the petition for rulemaking was filed, coinbase sued, asking the court to require the SEC to make their decision on the petition public. In other words, to give a simple yes or no answer as to whether the regulator is considering rule making for the crypto industry. So what did we get back? Well, the SEC's response as coinbase chief legal officer Paul greenwald put it was a, quote, resounding maybe. The SEC argued that it's inaction regarding the coinbase petition did not imply that it is decided not to engage in rulemaking. To the contrary, the SEC claimed to be, quote, actively considering its regulatory approaches in this area, including the paths suggested in coinbase's petition.

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Mark Davis to Mainstream Media: 'Be Careful What You Wished For'
"Believe is there is a growing suspicion that it's only going to be Donald Trump in 2024 and I think the media is going to do its part to lift that up into assist that outcome. And this proves it. Mark, there's no way CNN is inclined to give Trump any favors. There's no way. I don't care what you could say about well, Chris Cuomo was fired and going one over to news nations. No, you're not CNN is still CNN. You're a 100% CNN. There's CNN and they hate this guy and the contempt for Donald Trump is profound. There's no way. So what they're saying, I'm getting text messages affirming this. Trump is the only Republican is the argument I. You know me, I'm a Trump guy, so I'm not agreeing with it, but here's the argument. Trump's the only guy that can lose to China Joe and the Democrats know it. And that to me, this CNN town hall is pretty compelling evidence that that may be true. We also to understand. So in a weird reverse psychology moment, CNN, which is playing the long game to make sure that a Democrat wins in 24 will play nice with Trump will invite him. Will perhaps treat him with some grudging deference in order to make him the nominee so that Biden can beat him. That is CNN's theory, which is the only explanation that makes sense. Be careful what you wish for is all I would tell them. 505 hundredth time, I'll tell you, I don't know which is true. I don't know what Trump's electability is going to look like. Ten months from now, he may be just a juggernaut ready to go and come back and reclaim that presidency that he felt he was so, so unfairly denied,

AP News Radio
2 abortion bans failed, 1 passed in US statehouses this week
"There's been a slew of legislative and court actions on abortion recently. I'm Lisa dwyer with the latest. Ten months after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down roe V wade and a nationwide right to abortion, states are pushing in opposite directions on the issue this week, North Dakota's governor signed a new ban into law becoming the 14th state with a ban on abortions at all stages of pregnancy, making it one of the strictest abortion bans in the country. Abortions of pregnancies caused by rape or incest are allowed only in the first 6 weeks and they're allowed later only for specific medical emergencies, and Utah, there's a court hearing to determine whether a ban on abortion clinics there is allowed to take effect. Lawmakers in Nebraska and South Carolina felt just short of passing their own bands. Meanwhile, though governors of Minnesota and Washington signed bills to protect access. I'm Lisa dwyer.

AP News Radio
Brittney Griner gets emotional discussing Russian detainment
"The WNBA star had to take a moment to compose herself in Phoenix after being asked about her resiliency over the ten months she was in a Russian prison on drug charges. No, I'm no stranger to hard times. Griner was arrested last year at a Moscow airport after Russian authorities said a search of her luggage revealed vape cartridges containing cannabis oil. What did she do to survive? Just dig in deep. Honestly, you know, you're going to be faced with adversities throughout your life. This was a pretty big one. But I just kind of relied on my hard work. Getting through it. Griner was exchanged for a Russian arms dealer in December. She kept a low profile following her return to the U.S.. I'm Ed Donahue

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
Is America Prepared for China's Potential Invasion of Taiwan?
"Well, we were talking about he's about to go off to Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan, try and bring back some business. But I also asked him about has he prepared the state for a world crisis with China. In other words, what would happen in Virginia with the largest shipbuilding yard in the world for the United States Navy and surge capacity if that world crisis tips over. And I want to ask you the same thing. Do you think Americans are thinking seriously at every level about what happens if the dress rehearsals for the invasion of Taiwan, the second of which has just finished wrapped up second and two months ten months becomes the real deal. What would happen in the United States? If China decided and I don't think they will. So we can come back to our views of timeline here. But let's park timeline, whether it's 6 months a year, three years, 5 years or ten years. Let's park that. So let's just say China decides to invade Taiwan. You are correct. They have shown us kind of two views of how they might approach it. Clearly, it includes a blockade. It includes long-range missile strikes ballistic missile strikes and includes a high degree of cyber activity. So now we've seen all that tracks with the war plans we've had. I think it's the United States saw those events, my belief is we would work aggressively to defend Taiwan.

AP News Radio
US speeds up Abrams tank delivery to Ukraine war zone
"The U.S. is speeding up its delivery of Abrams tanks to Ukraine. The original plan was to send newer versions of the Abrams, which could have taken a year or two to build and ship officials tell the AP The Pentagon will instead send a refurbished older model already in army stocks. They'll be easier for Ukrainian troops to learn to use and maintain, and could arrive in the war zone much sooner with the goal being 8 to ten months. Ukrainian leaders had been pushing for the Abrams, a battlefield workhorse for more than three decades. The Biden administration insisted for months the tanks were too complicated to maintain and repair, but then announced in January, it would send them. Sagar Meghani, Washington.

AP News Radio
Turkey's president says he will back Finland's NATO bid
"Finland's bid to join NATO has finally received the blessing of Turkish president. Finnish president salani minister thanked turkey for the announcement that Ankara would move forward with ratifying Finland's NATO application. It is very good to hear these news. We understood earlier on that you have done your dishes. And signing it today confirms that the Turkish parliament starts to work with ratification of finished membership. The move paves the way for the country to join the military block ahead of Sweden, the breakthrough came after ninis to met Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, both Finland and Sweden applied to become NATO members ten months ago in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, abandoning decades of non alignment. I'm Charles De Ledesma

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ten months" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Over to James wolcott, who's got our global news briefing. Good morning, James. Good morning, Caroline. Australia's Central Bank has signaled that a pause in its ten month tightening cycle is in view. The RBA lifted its cash rate by 25 basis points to 3.6%, the highest level since 2012. Governor Philip Lowe says the rate path will depend on incoming economic data. And Bloomberg has learned that meta is planning a fresh round of layoffs and will cut thousands of employees as soon as this week. The world's largest social networking company is aiming to become a more efficient organization. The plan to come on top of November's losses which saw the Facebook and Instagram owner cut 11,000 workers in its first ever major layoff. And finally, let them eat cake, or at least sing about it. The highest successful great British break off TV show has been adapted as a musical and is opening in London. The channel four program is shown across the world and local editions are made in 35 territories. Global news, 24 hours a day, powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in over a 120 countries. I'm James wolcott and this is Bloomberg. Caroline, I don't know if you're looking for a new West End night out, but Helen Chandler world reviewed it for Bloomberg's website, her take is its cheeky and innuendo laden. Okay, and apparently British to its jammy core, I think, was one of the phrases that stuck out for me. Alex Webb won't know the backdrop to this. Maybe neither will our listeners. We had such a lot of bad news this morning. We were talking about air pollution, disaster in so many other things. And I said, we have to put this baker story into the mix just to give us a little lift this Tuesday morning. So thank you very much, James. For telling us about bake off, began at the BBC. Now it's a kind of global phenomenon though, the great British bake off. Anyway, lovely stuff. Let's talk about the markets though this morning, of course, because joining us this morning's Andrew Cole head of multi asset at picte asset management. He's a hopped over from the TV studio into the radio booth welcome and I think it's quite interesting that your top call around the inflationary risks in bonds that you're actually very short duration now. Tell us why what you expecting to hear maybe from Jerome Powell, if that might change your view. I really don't expect to hear very much from Jerome Powell that's going to change their view. Our central case is that inflation is going to be the buzzword that we've been watching, if not all last year, probably all of this year. And that having suffered a big rise in headline inflation last year where subsequently seeing a big fall, certainly in the headline rate. And we think that over the next few years, the amplitude of these swings in inflation is going to take some time to ebb away. So we think a constant feature of markets for the foreseeable future is going to be the inflation rate and I think bond investors just aren't geared for that. I just don't think there's enough risk premium priced in. Jamie Dimon says the soft landing in the U.S. is still possible. It is the no. Well, look, I think it's absolutely possible. But I suspect it's the growth is better than expected. Do we get inflation coming down sufficiently? I suspect not. So look, I think the economy will probably be better than expected. And I think there will still be discussing the terminal rate for the fed funds rate. A year from now, because I think the economy would be better inflation won't have come down quite enough. And we'll be starting saying, well, at what point does the fed need to go again? And then you throw in the presidential election cycle and all of the uncertainty is that. And so look, I just don't think that the long end of bond markets, both in the United States and here in Europe. Investors are being rewarded sufficiently for their uncertainty. What does that U.S. picture mean then for how your allocating capital? So look, it means that we want to be exposed to the nominal growth rate in the economy and one way of doing that is to be exposed to earnings. So thinking the economy is going to be slightly better than expected leads us to want to be more cyclical in our exposure, whether that be industrials or banks and yet we've heard bank of Ireland this morning. And so that's all very positive we think for the more lowly valued, cyclical value cyclicals and we throw energy and mining stocks into that mix. What we're wary about is that paying high PEs and for big growth stocks that are vulnerable to a persistent rise in the cost of capital. We've heard about the scope for more job cuts that meta, the Facebook parent this week. Do you think there are industries where we could yet see more job cuts coming down the pipe? I think we're going to see a redistribution of jobs. We've got the fiscal stimulus from the inflation reduction act in the United States and we're going to get something similar in Europe, which I think is going to continue to keep the jobs market, tighter than we expected. With regards

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Why Jennifer Sey Walked Away From Her Role at Levi's
"That theme of sacrificing children continued into what happened with you at Levi. So tell us your story of what it was, what awful sin you committed under the conditions of the pandemic here in America. Well, I lived in San Francisco at the time, which is a very left leaning city, and it had very much aligned with my values or what I thought they were up until that time. But in March 2020, when the schools shut and San Francisco was the first city in America to shut schools, they also shut playgrounds for close to ten months. Basically, anything kids could do was not allowed. And I was very outspoken about this being wrong from day one from March 13th, 2020, even before that, really. I asked questions on social media. I attended school board meetings. I wrote op eds. In defense of children, it was very clear from the first that the risk was very age stratified and that this was going to cause more harm for our kids. While being completely ineffective in quote unquote, slowing the spread. And in San Francisco's school stay closed for 18 months, disrupted for two and a half years, and we are seeing the impacts of that now. And like I said, I was very outspoken about this. I was warned, time and again, that I needed to stop. So let's get into the details. So tell us the first instance, what were you told by the powers that be? And what was their justification for curtailing your First Amendment rights? So I did not get a call until September of 2020. So I've been at it for 6 months and hadn't heard anything. And to be honest, I was sort of waiting and wondering when I might. My peer, the head of corporate communications called me, we were all working virtual, so nobody popped by the office. And she said, people are noticing your social media. You need to remember that when you speak, you speak on behalf of the company and I said, I don't. I'm a mom. I don't have the company or my title and my profile. I'm a mom of four public school children, and she said, well, people don't like it. And I said, I understand that. I don't see really why that matters. Your kids are going back to school at in person private. Why can't I advocate for the same for public school children? She didn't really have an answer. She asked me to hold the line. I said, I don't really know what that means. And I said, this was a continuation of advocacy for children that I'd done in regards to children in the Olympic movement in sports, and it was too important to me. And I would keep it to kids, you know, I wouldn't branch out beyond that to lock downs and all the other things I was opposed to. But that this was too important.

AP News Radio
US nominates Ajay Banga for World Bank president
"The U.S. is nominating a former Mastercard CEO to head the World Bank. The move comes days after Trump appointee David malpass said he'll step down as world bag chief ten months before his term ends. After being criticized last year for seeming to cast doubt on global warming's causes, addressing climate change impacts at the world bag is a U.S. priority. The President Biden is nominating Ajay banga to be its leader, citing his experience with climate change and other challenges. The World Bank under intense pressure to do more in helping poor countries fight climate change, leading climate figures have urged the Biden administration to leverage El Paso's early departure into starting a bank overhaul. Sagar Meghani, Washington.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ten months" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"They are surging right now by about 47% after the company announced ten month interim data from an early stage study of its experimental treatment for wet age related macular degeneration again shares of ocular they are up now by about 47%. I'm Charlie peloton that is a Bloomberg business flash. All right, Charlie, thanks so much while we often talk about the high child care costs that we have here in the U.S. this week, though, in the upcoming new issue of Bloomberg businessweek out on newsstands on Thursday, already on the Bloomberg and online at Bloomberg dot com slash business week, a story on the exorbitant child care costs in the UK, which happened to be the most expensive among the OECD countries and how the calls for reform in that country are growing louder. So let's get to it and let's get to her story from Bloomberg news equality reporter, Olivia, kind of a Hulu with us on the phone from London along with Bloomberg business week editor Joe Weber. He is here in our Bloomberg interactive broker studio. All right, Joel. I thought it was bad here. Really bad. I know. It is, actually. But it turns out that we are not alone in that the UK actually has things even worse. Olivia, what are the numbers reveal as you dug into this story? So I think the most striking one is what you mentioned in terms of just the fact that proportion that's proportionate to what people earn, the UK has the highest child care costs in the OECD, which is obviously very striking. And just a sense that some people are paying more on child care costs than their mortgages. Some people are some women are finding it's actually well, some parents and women in particular are finding it more cost effective not to work. Because they earn less than they would pay on child care. So that's coming some of the figures that we're seeing at the moment. Okay, so it's so expensive that people are giving up their jobs just to take care of their kids. That can not bode well for the economy. And this is an economy that is already, I know, I know the word Brexit maybe give you a little PTSD still Olivia, but what does this mean for the economy? So one of the general effects, one of the things that people generally find is that when child care is very expensive and when women are generally the people who will kind of take the hit and either cut back their hours or stay at home and what we're seeing is that potentially could be the case in the UK. So what we've seen in the latest data available that quite a few women left the workforce to stay at home and that's kind of been roughly happening over 2022, which is kind of the first time that's happened in about 20 years. So that's quite concerning and overall one report found that that cost the UK had a similar employment rate, female employment rate to Sweden. And then the economy would gain a 177 billion dollars a year. So that could potentially be quite a big economic win. Olivia, I think it's worth talking about why. Why are costs so high? Is this a function of supply? Because clearly you're seeing demand is strong, but maybe decelerating with all these women leaving the workforce because the cost is so high. There must be a supply constraint hidden in here that's creating high cost of child care. What is it? Well, this part of it so you do speak to women who parents where it's pretty normal for them, for example, to try and book a child care place before they're born. And that kind of can be exacerbated depending on where you live. But what if you talk to anyone in the industry, what could you watch everyone says without exception? Is that the way that child care subsidies are structured basically means that although child care costs are partly subsidized when your child turns three or four, the cost of that, the cost of those subsequently met by the government. So providers have to hike their costs in order to meet those costs, which makes have it which means there are anyone who's not getting those subsidies basically very, very, very expensive. So what people in the industry are generally saying is that for the immediate time, what's just needed is just more cash. Hey, Olivia, talk to us about the political will to actually do something substantial because when I think about it here in the U.S., I feel like it's very low when it comes to the list of priorities of you can throw billions of dollars around and still not really touch child care in the U.S.. Right. It's like remarkable. In the UK. Well, I think it is a growing it is a growing theme. So last year there was this big protest called march for mummies and it really kind of really caught people's attention because they were just all these moms saying that they were fed up basically. And also last year they started inquiring in the issue and the Labor Party, the opposition party is really kind of doubling down. So recently, one of their officials went to Estonia because they have a really good exemplary model of child care. And there's this growing kind of recognition that something needs to be done because a lot of people are really, really angry. And it is going to be potentially going to be a key electoral issue going forward. Did you stay Estonia? What can we learn from Estonia here? Well, it's interesting, apparently they have relatively low child care costs, but there's a lot of child care across a very low basically and that really has helped a few more employment rates. So yeah, labor's education spokesperson went to Estonia and they have really good educational outcomes as a result. Also, worth mentioning that if you're going to start a march of the mummies is definitely going to get some people's attention. I want the T-shirt that went along with that. So what's the likelihood that everything? All right, so Olivia, what's the likelihood though that anything changes? Or is there a time frame that is being thought about? Well, the thing is that the election, the next general election in the next two years. So if major reform is going to be done, then the clock is ticking. And one study said is that most kind of liberal economy, which are similar to us, have had some kind of major reform of child care in the past 5 years or so. But the UK is big as change within 2017 and a lot of people said that it made things worse. So what are some people would say that changes overdue basically? And considering the laundry list of issues, the Labor Party is going to try to contend with. This is obviously one of them, but how would you rank this relative to the other issues that the party is really focused on right now? Well, I think the cost of living in the UK does eclipse almost anything it feels like at the moment. And although inflation isn't as pronounced as it was, say, at some point last year, it's still I think just as people getting by and the help of the economy is the number one concern. But obviously part of that is child care cost poor families is just a really, really substantial expense. So I'd say for that particular group of voters, it is pretty high. So just on that political front, what could become of this, is anybody willing to really step into the ring and say, this is a political issue that we can really get behind, or is it still just so divisive like it is here in the U.S. that no one's really willing to go to bat for it? I think it's difficult because fundamentally what's being asked for in the short term at least is a lot of money. In the UK it'll be like there's a lot of things which needs another lot of money for example, the NHS, the health services, the other, it's another massive issue. A lot of public case servants want more higher pay to match inflation. There's so many things kind of competing for the government's attention. It's hard to know if they would it's hard to know if they will choose this as the issue where they're going to pour money into, but so I think that's my way of saying it's hard to know at this point. Yeah, and interesting aspect of the story too, that they're mostly or largely privately held companies, a lot of them are leveraged. And the insolvencies of such often leads to ultimately higher costs as well. Olivia really interesting story, Olivia Conte a Hulu. She's a quality reporter at Bloomberg news on the phone from London

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
The Idea of Sending Western Weaponry to Ukraine Is Insane
"Comes to supplying weapons, this is really, this is hugely important. Right at the beginning of the war, I wrote an analytic piece, I think it was for breitbart. And what I said back then, ten months ago, hasn't changed today. The idea that we should be sending that anybody, the Germans, the Brits, or the Americans, should be sending western weaponry to Ukraine and cash is insane. This is a former republic of the Soviet Union. What they need is Soviet era equipment, which is standing in stockpiles in former Warsaw Pact nations like Hungary, like Poland, the Baltic states and Romania. They need to this is the Polish deal. Remember the Polish deal, Poland said, we've got MiG 29s while given to Ukraine if America backfills. Biden says yes and then 48 hours later because he's a feckless senile old get changes his mind. So they should be supplied equipment they know how to use, not Abrams tanks that nobody in Ukraine has ever driven that have 19 different types of oil to run them and that need a resupply chain from America. No, give them Soviet air equipment that we don't want anyway. Give them ammunition and lastly, just because we have a dominance in ISR in intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance when it comes to military satellites give them the target packets to hit the Russians that are on their territory where it hurts.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ten months" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Have to consider other things. Like their tax situation, their risk tolerance, and so on. All of my work, Tom, as you know, has been focused in on institutional investors. And I think that we have seen this revaluation of assets in 2022 that makes me far more comfortable than I was say 9 or ten months ago. The bonds, 15 to 18 months ago, when I thought bonds were incredibly overpriced. That is yields were too low. And we've now seen a very significant change. The fed like everyone else I assume will be doing a small increase this year. But most of what they're going to be doing, I think, has now occurred. They might do a little bit more, but after we've already seen 6 extremely large rate increases, most of the damage has occurred to bonds. So that looks like their opportunities. Am I a lot of time? What's the revaluation in equities makes them more appealing than they were a year ago? I got to squeeze this in Abby. It's so important. The risk free rate is back. Taleb says we've got gravity back in the system. How do the zombie companies have never been profitable companies weak free cash flow companies? How do they work out in 2023? I think there will be failures. I also think that good private equity investors may see opportunities, but I also think that M and a activity strategic M and a from successful companies will be taking a look at some of these operating assets and figure out ways that they can acquire and improve the underlying margins. What I worry about in terms of going through the year really is the potential for the debt crisis. The debt ceiling crisis to become real. And the reason I'm worried about it is I take a look at some of the people and the Republican Party who have publicly stated, they think it's okay if the U.S. goes into default. That to me suggests a big problem and the meeting I'll be watching today in addition to the FOMC is the meeting at The White House between President Biden and speaker McCarthy. Abby, thank you so much. Professor Joseph Cohen, if the Columbia business school, she's going into a great. I think like roach, roach went to Yale's brutal. He gave out a couple season, you know, there was basically a protest. What she said there was fascinating. Many friends, this idea that we've already priced out free money in stocks, giving it a sort of more equal feel in terms of risk and reward and an ability to actually look at what companies are doing rather than just financial policy. But then on a broader scale, the question mark around some of the less liquid areas. And you mentioned that BlackRock real estate fund and this question of redemptions of what happens when you do start getting the same kind of reckoning and some of these less liquid areas. I can't say enough how this return to a rate structure and rate regime affects everyone away from the obvious financial markets. I think it's. And so we haven't seen it in every single one. And that was her point. And I think it's a really good one. You ready for one 30? I am. We get to see each other again. From Columbia, professor clarita will join us one 30 as

The Charlie Kirk Show
Senator Josh Hawley Talks Foreign Policy Threats
"Let's play cut 36. Raytheon CEO says Ukraine is depleted. The weapon stocks faster than expected boy. This is a gift to the weapons manufacturers. They're going to have record profits. I'm not telling anybody what stocks to buy. But if you were to buy Northrop Grumman or Lockheed Martin or Raytheon, I can't imagine you'll do poorly even in a recession. Play cut 36. So as we think about all of the weapons that have been delivered to Ukraine have come out of, I would say, current inventory. We're not building any of those replenishing any of those today, although we're working on it. The fact is we are drawing down weapon stocks much faster, and I think I said this last week, we've gone through in the first ten months of the war 5 years worth of production on javelin anti tank missiles, and we've gone through 13 years worth of stinger production. So it's going to take us some time to catch up. I mean, it's great for business, obviously, for Raytheon, senator, but that's not good for our national security. No, it's terrible for our national security, but it's really terrible for us. Is our effort and our desperate need, Charlie, to deter China. If you think about our foreign policy threats here, where is our greatest foreign policy threat? It is an imperialist China that wants to dominate our supply chains that wants to shut down our ability to trade on fair terms that wants to steal our jobs and steal our technology. What are we doing to counter that? Basically nothing. And what China sees right now is the Americans are completely tied down in Europe. The Americans are spending all of this money and using all of their munitions on Ukraine in this proxy war with Russia and therefore the Chinese are concluding, they can run rampant in Asia. They can continue their efforts at imperial domination, Taiwan will be next and why do we care about any of that? Well, because it's about our security and prosperity. I mean, if you take the supply chain crunch as a problem now, wait until China invades Taiwan and shuts down our shipping lanes, wait until they kick us out of our trade routes in the Pacific, which is what they want to do.

CoinDesk Podcast Network
What's Next for Sam Bankman-Fried?
"Sam bankman freed pleads not guilty to fraud and conspiracy charges. He doesn't have to go back to court. I believe until October 2nd of 2023. So basically, he is free for approximately ten months to do whatever is he's going to do. So just because he pled not guilty doesn't mean he is in fact actually not guilty, most people plead not guilty anyways, not a legal expert or anything like that, but that's just what I've seen in the TV and stuff like that. But again, we're talking back about the names that we're going to be remained secret for now from the other two people that posted bond as well. It's important to note. But since Jen's back and I miss her, I really, really, really would like to get your take on this story. I missed you too, Wendy. One day away from you guys, and I just had to come running back. I love you guys. Well, I think it's not surprising, right? Sam bankman freed went on this PR tour. He kept saying, I didn't know I didn't know. I didn't know for him to clean guilty. I think would have been a surprise. What I'm interested to see in October is, you know, we have the new CEO of FTX, John J ray the third, we have Caroline Ellison and Gary Wang who have taken plea deals. These people probably have a lot of evidence against Sam bankman fried. That would say that, you know, he maybe was a little bit guilty. And so I'm interested to see what evidence comes out. I'm a little bit saddened that we have to wait until October for this to happen. You know, Sam bankman freed's going to be at his parents house over there in California all the way until October, you know, living probably a pretty cushy life. And so I just, I don't know how this is going to, how this is going to turn out, given all of the evidence that we've already seen come out against him. But Zach, what do you think? Season two, baby. It's shaping up to be a good one with ten months of craziness that's going to unfold. What if Sam starts tweeting again? What if he starts trying to make things right with his users? What is going to happen? He's probably talking to all sorts of people. Reporters, anyone out there still trying to get his story out to the masses.

AP News Radio
Evidence of Russian crimes mounts as war in Ukraine drags on
"Ten months into the war and there is overwhelming evidence to show that Russia has disregarded international laws on the treatments of civilians and conduct on the battlefield. Ukraine is investigating over 58,000 potential Russian war crimes, ranging from killings to sexual assaults, Karim Khan, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court in The Hague, told the AP that Ukraine is a crime scene while there is a staggering amount of evidence most of those responsible are unlikely to be arrested any time soon. Ukrainian authorities face serious challenges in gathering airtight evidence in a war zone and the vast majority of alleged war criminals have evaded capture and are safely behind Russian lines.

AP News Radio
Lavrov: Ukraine must demilitarize or Russia will do it
"Russia's foreign minister has warned that Ukraine must demilitarize claiming Kyiv in the west were responsible for fueling the war that started with Moscow's invasion. Sergei Lavrov said Ukraine must remove any military threat to Russia, otherwise he said the Russian army will solve the issue. He also insisted Ukraine and the west were responsible for the ten month war, which has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced millions Lavrov reiterated that the west was feeding the war in Ukraine until we can Russia and said that it was up to Kyiv and Washington how long the conflict will last. In an apparent reaction, Ukrainian presidential adviser tweeted that Russia needs to face the reality I'm

The Dan Bongino Show
Sen. Rand Paul: $1.7T Spending Bill Is Taking on More Dangerous Debt
"In the Senate people like senator Rand Paul who are trying to stand up against this madness as well Let's play clip 5 A bra with me the army 4155 pages When was it produced in the dead of the night one 30 in the morning when it was released Now people argue that it's conservatives fault You don't have the Christmas spirit Somehow you're holding up government Well whose job is it to produce this The people in charge of spending The people in charge of both of the parties When did they know that this would be necessary Well it's in the loss September 30th You got 9 months almost ten months to produce a plan to have a spending plan They weren't ready on September 30th so they voted themselves 90 more days They weren't ready last week either So they voted themselves another week And now we have it at one 30 in the morning this morning But what's the clamor of the clamors devote vote now Let's get it done Why are you standing in the way of spending Well the real question is this What is more dangerous What is more dangerous to the country $1.1 trillion in new debt or is Republican leadership likes to say oh but it's a win It's a big win We're getting $45 billion for the military

AP News Radio
Ukraine's Zelenskyy on his way to Washington to meet with Biden, address Congress
"Ukraine's president is on his way to Washington for a summit with President Biden and a speech to Congress. Its volodymyr zelensky's first known trip outside Ukraine since the Russian invasion began nearly ten months ago. The two presidents will hold a joint news conference at The White House before zelensky is expected to address a joint session of Congress in the evening. Zelensky has been pleading for more military aid as Russian missile strikes bad or Ukraine's infrastructure. Officials say the U.S. today will announce the transfer of a patriot surface to air missile battery and precision guided bombs as

AP News Radio
Ukraine's Zelenskyy says he's on his way to Washington for Wednesday visit
"Ukraine's president is said to visit Washington today in his first known trip outside the country since the Russian invasion ten months ago. Yesterday, Vladimir zelensky visited troops in a frontline town who gave him an autographed flag. Which he promised would be delivered to Congress and President Biden. Zelensky will have a chance today. AP sources say he will visit The White House and deliver an address on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers are said to vote on a spending bill that includes the highest amount of emergency aid do Ukraine yet. Some $45 billion. Officials say the U.S. will also announce the transfer of a patriot missile battery to Ukraine, which has been pleading for more advanced air defense systems amid rising Russian missile strikes. Sagar

Mark Levin
Mark Levin Warned About Democrat Redistricting Since January
"Here it is This is from January 4th Of this year So this is from ten months ago Well before the election when the Republicans at the RNC when the Republicans in the state had plenty of time to prepare for this cut 6 go Now ladies and gentlemen there's something here I want to get to You know my wife Julie says people are getting too cocky about this 2022 election They keep saying Republicans are going to win They're going to win big Rather than saying she points out that we're going to win and win big We have to make sure we win and win big And it starts it starts with the rugby match And the rugby match is redistricting And our Friends over at just the news John Solomon listen to this headline Redistricting has so far given Democrats 6 seats ahead of the 2022 midterm election 6 seats Now follow me on this Because you're here for a reason The Voting Rights Act of 1965 And the civil rights division of the department of injustice led by meritless Garland His radical Marxist kook racist bigot who's the assistant attorney general heading the civil rights division And I don't use that phrase lightly I use it when it's true like with joy Reid but nonetheless She's in charge They've already challenged Texas They want to steal one or two seats out of Texas saying that Texas drew lines that are harmful to minorities What they really mean are not minorities but the Democrats And they are poised to challenge other states in half Because they're there not to ensure that the 1965 Civil Rights Act is actually enforced Properly and in good faith But to use it to create more Democrat districts

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ten months" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"In the U.S. Senate. And in that capacity I have led a ten month bipartisan investigation of corruption abuse and misconduct in the federal prison system, focused on U.S. penitentiary Atlanta in my home state of Georgia, and having reviewed thousands of pages of internal government records interviewed dozens of witnesses, including whistleblowers from within the bureau of prisons, what's clear is that for at least 9 years, serious misconduct abuse and corruption have prevailed in this major federal prison facility, the bureau of prisons knew about it, their leadership had access to this information and for years they let it continue. This is a facility that has been rife with weapons and drugs, enabled by staff corruption, criminal conduct within the prison at an appalling rate inhumane and abusive conditions, including for pre trial, presumptively innocent detainees. Folks who have been convicted of no crime, crowded into cells, crawling with vermin, emaciated from malnutrition without access to clean drinking water, hygiene products, or healthcare. Our prison system is a disgrace to the U.S. government. That is why I will continue to lead bipartisan oversight. Thanks to senator John ossoff of Georgia. The Secret Service has faced scrutiny over missing texts involving the January 6th attack on the capitol. For more on the congressional investigation, I spoke to the chair of the Senate Homeland Security committee, Gary Peters of Michigan. We're trying to get information. We're trying to see if we can recover some of those texts. To me, it is, it's kind of unfathomable that the Secret Service would erase these texts, particularly in the January 6th commission, that they were contacting their families. The crew that

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ten months" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"I don't see the conditions for a price to come down in the next ten months Probably will be mid 23 that 23 that the price will start to come down if nothing happens in the meantime There's also changes constantly impacting any agriculture because in general that agriculture productivity is decreased year by year as a consequence of climate change But there's also shipping costs So overall how's your cost structure Like how much more are you able to pass on these higher coffee prices to the end consumer So as far as the cost is concerned we had a kind of a perfect storm because it's not only the coffee due to climate change and you have packaging due to the general situation and then you have energy is a consequence of the war And then you have shipping costs as a consequence of the COVID Let's say logistic troubles So we have a cost increase of nearly 50 million and we pass the 50 million that's how much it's over the 16% 15% It's all been 50% of our cost structure And we can pass over only a portion of that So big exercise is increasing sales in creating more efficiency And hopefully by the end of the year the inflation will be a little bit slower so that we can maybe make another little adjustment and then pass So why is it difficult actually to pass on 20% increase Because you're at the higher end of the premium coffee Yes we are at the higher end We did a price increase We are global in over 140 countries We are omnichannel in home out of home plenty of channels So it's an exercise which is a little bit tricky to readjust prices So there is a tradeoff The right moment and the right way This is why we just made one Now we expect that we will wait for the next window of opportunity for another price which will be probably not before the end of the year So is there a danger that if you hike prices too much unlike luxury bags people move to a cheaper brand or that people drink less coffee There is a little price elasticity in coffee because people are kind of dependent It's also an accessible luxury even if it is a little bit more expensive It's a pleasure in life It's also something which really help us living better also in terms of success in life This is the only reason why I can talk on TV because my espresso in the morning Exactly So I don't think this is a danger However you know there is also the trade in between the consumer and the producer and also you have the competition So that's it Talk to me a little bit about regenerative agriculture which actually were one of the first ones that I had a conversation about this with maybe 6 years ago which is trying to mitigate the impact of climate change by doing things differently than how we grew products in the past Regenerative agriculture is probably one of the world that has been mentioned in the world Everybody speaks about originated agriculture now Because it is a relevant solution for food security and sustainability in the future Many crops are in many big companies are now pursuing virginity agriculture because in the growers are shifting towards a regenerative agriculture because by consuming organic compost organic biomass they dramatically reduce the cost of fertilizers and also defensive agents Also they agrochemical in terms of defense from testes and diseases less and less effective So the biological let's say a fight against diseases with a regenerative agriculture seems to be more effective But under is this also a consequence of the war that suddenly everyone understands fertilizer Well understand or says they understand fertilizer and the fact that actually we don't have enough fertilizer because of what's happening in Ukraine As I mentioned this in Brazil I had the opportunity to visit many farms and they are accelerating as much as they can in their own internal production of compost for the sake of consuming much less mineral fertilizers Also because fertilizers if you add too much fertilizer then you have higher emissions of greenhouse gases which you don't want because everybody wants to have a sustainable agriculture right So regenerative is sustainable in a way that is the same practice is good for adaptation to climate change and mitigation So do you feel like out of this crisis and again very little visibility prices going up unable to pass the price increases of consumer some good can come out of it which is the attention and focus on climate change Yes there has been many different possible kind of reading about the situation Difficult to find the cause and the solution but for sure one of the kind of way or to see an exit for the future of the world to create prosperity and also jobs is accelerating the so called ecological transition So energy transition to energies plenty of sonic pan and everywhere wind biomass whatever And the so called agro ecological transition which is the one we mentioned about regenerative agriculture but also reforestation Which go along because it's about biodiversity building biodiversity and also sequestering carbon through agroforestry This combined effect of a nature in agriculture And there thank you so much As always Andrea ile the chairman of that was Bloomberg's francine lacquer in Davos speaking about all things coffee to Andre Ely and as you heard in that interview she loves coffee She always says to me she's half coffee half human needs an expresso to start the morning I hope you're all feeling very humid today and enjoying the bank holiday The extra one we get So I'm just going to bring you some of the front pages of the newspapers this morning and to start that off the queen's platinum juvenile dominates many of them with most of them publishing a new portrait of her majesty We look to the future with confidence and enthusiasm says a Daily Telegraph a quote from her brief written message to the nation The daily mail also focuses on that saying now let's make happy memories a grateful nation salute you man Now that's a headline on the front of the daily express Now The Guardian says a powerful standards watchdog has accused Boris Johnson of a failing and a falling two allies fears that he and his ministers are above rules and he's trying to overhaul the code of conducts the times also focuses.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ten months" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Zimbabwe's inflation boomerang back to triple digits in May That's after a ten month period with a rate was below a 100% inflation jumped back after the Central Bank Effectively devalued the local currency by introducing a new interbank rate Food prices They've increased a 150% so far on the nation's finance minister joins the team now in truly in kube from Davos Thank you for joining us I look at inflation about a 100% again Are you in panic mode Oh no we're not in panic market basically we are in shooting measures that every other country in the world is instituting right now And we are being impacted by basically two forces one is the global spillovers so we put a depression through the channels of fuel food and fertilizer So we are aware that we are managing our way through that kind of global shock that excludes into the economy Then locally we look at currency has been one of ten again because the bubble is most liked in globally because we do use the United States dollar for transactions antenna So we are immediately planning to the global company and once in the dollar has been very strong as they have been the strongest in the last I don't know 20 years or something Longer So the way packet by that but also impacted by the general rise in global interest rates So we are managing those shocks including domestic currency volatility I'll do those in spike but we expect that to ameliorate and level off I was thinking through one of the research notes here from Amara and they specialize in some of the African sovereigns and their view is that you're going to have to start injecting food subsidies and maybe devalue the local currency even further Instead of you you can subscribe to given some of the tenuous painful global macro points you just mentioned Well there's a limit to which we can apply subsidies on various things We're already subsidizing it to an extent If you are a sector by lowering the taxes on fuel we've been doing that already And it will of course we look at other sectors but there's a limit to which we can institute subsidies The subsidies anyway in the world is that we set accumulating high budget deficits again or indeed high debt in our levels as countries borrow to try to work their way in paying their way through the crisis But there isn't a case You have 5 million Zimbabwe's a third of the population according to the World Food Program facing hunger January through to March a third of your population can't eat Is there a moral responsibility on you to deliver substantial food subsidies What are you doing to say 5 million people from hunger Or zoom up with a private tested social protection program that involves providing food to the vulnerable we will be doing that to start doing that We do cash transfers We support children We're going to school through the four to go to school We support the LW And also we're very robust to what we call a productive social protection program due to the agricultural sector where we are supply seed fertilizer and technical assistance to our over 2 million households across the country to support them through difficulties and to make sure that they are protected So the tried to test on social protection program which is going into gear So there's no danger of us living anyone behind How can the African development bank or other multilateral agencies help in either easing the burden or some of your subsidy ambition give it a little bit more size and scale to really make a difference on the ground The international community bilateral partners or the African development bank or the World Bank are ready on the ground working with the government of survival But also through other UN agencies supporting vulnerable populations on the ground This has been going on for a while And we will accomplish so that we are looking into it But also they're looking at much more medium to long-term strategies such as climate proofing or agriculture For example making sure that our farmers use a climate proof method in terms of farming They are supporting us in those in those ways And also supporting the health sector as supporting the education sector So welcome this support But in the main it.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ten months" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Prisoner 1 p.m. on Wall Street right now with the Dow industrial average down about 1.2% in the broader market the S&P weaker by about 8 tenths of 1% and the NASDAQ composite weaker by about 6 tenths of 1% The days economic news was disappointing and it certainly is not helping matters retail sales sank in December by the most in ten months This seems to imply that surging inflation is taking a greater toll on consumers At the same time growth in U.S. factory output unexpectedly declined persistent struggles with both material and labor shortages are getting the blame and at the same time today U.S. consumer sentiment dropped in early January by more than forecast This is from the survey at the University of Michigan and it also shows that consumers are expecting inflation to erode their disposable income In the bond market right now at ten year treasury up more than 6 basis points in yield we are at 1.77% We'll check on commodities after we check on American depositary receipts pretty good to hear with the ADR story hi kriti will several big knit stories when it comes to the ADR split let's just start off with fans China up 23% this comes after new gaming legislation unveiled by the Macau government suggests casino operators could have their licenses renewed for a period of ten to 13 years of course that follows some questions about whether Beijing would tighten control looks like they're not going to buy the extent previously thought to those ADRs are up 23% moving over to Europe You do have the French electricity company EDF slumping down to the tune of 14% after the French government asked the utility to sell more power but at a deeper discount with a company also slashing its nuclear output estimate as a result of an extended outage at several of its nuclear power plants those ADRs like I said down 14% I'm going to end here Doug with shipping company mayors raising its profit forecast for 2021 as a global disruption in supply chains how boost those rates for shipping that they can charge their customers that should mean a positive share reaction but instead you're seeing the ADRs down about 4.4% of this comes after the upgrade not seen as a big surprise saying that the guidance was conservative according to analyst Doug All right kriti thank you Well today's price action has been a little volatile to.

Your Grandparents Did What?
"ten months" Discussed on Your Grandparents Did What?
"Oldest record of postpartum instructions can be found in the old testament. Of course okay. So on leviticus. Twelve five which rate twelve five discussion already as a biblical scholar cracked rachel a biblical biblical assessment name. You do She must not touch anything sacred or go into a sanctuary until the days of her purification or complete because women are unclean after giving birth. Okay to mention children. The lord's children. I mean it's a good thing that women are pushed into doing right and then also then are also coming on. Babies were born like not consensually many and then once they are born now. You're like some dirty unclean. He them so offer. Rest if you had a son you would get thirty three to forty days. Okay and a daughter would give you sixty six to eighty days because the manar leslie yes. Inherently the original sin like from the bible. Yes from eve the whole yes. Women are just inherently cling from birth. There's nothing you could do get it like you're just born a woman you're born as a biblical scholar of us are born sinners right. Yes that's part of it. I i did take a world history. Colonised that i showed up to bolt right western religion. Yes we are. All born centers So back to my biblical scholar nece the postpartum depicted in the bible. Had new more bleeding at than did with resting. Okay back to the sin so it didn't really matter that you were healing. You just gave per day jim. Fuck like when you're done being dirty. He them disgusting anger women harm. You can come back okay. Carrie good moving to any ancient egypt. K new mothers were advised to have their backs rubbed. Great with oil sounds great in which a nile perch had been sued. You want they wanted to increase increase airflow milk. It's not how you do at bam smelly fish. You just get dirty old dead fish dirty old oil studio s can you imagine so Eating a mouse was thought to cure a number of ills and it was not the extent mother. Eight the mouse. She could pass along those cures through her milk. No passing the hantavirus through your milk or other Diseases of Yeah the roads are disgusting. Disease carriers yes so okay. Menstrual blood was another potent medicine and it was rebuilding infant to drive away any demons that might wish to hundred child. I mean so you just put your one station blood. I'm but like okay. So but yeah. Like i don't know if there's a distinction between measure blood in postpartum bleeding right like who different actions yet not that they would necessarily understanding. No i guess they just thought Baby on your period. Just blow up coming for coming out. Yeah you're not talking disagree about like shedding your lining with ovulation alerts as being a you being a Open wound inside of your body. Yes yep so. Ancient greece and the birth was followed by a period of rest lasting roughly forty days from other child which the forty day thing comes up over and over and over and over again. It's crazy to me i'm attempts. I read the theory days. And i don't know why i don't know if it's just like a nice number i'm guessing it hasn't been new six week postpartum thing which we also subscribe to now like when you go get your first offers visit. Yeah postpartum is it must. I guess there's an again. I was actually going to ask you that too because i was like when is how many visits like win is the first time now d- touchdown with a doctor after you give birth and i was released weeks weeks. It's horrifying come your every two seconds then buy post-partum dangerous tyner or person like a recovering because there's just so many things that can go wrong because you go to your pediatrician. A lot. they're like surf. Doctor is like laying is not fair. to your pediatrician. Auto be keeping an eye out. I don't think that. I think people care enough about birth parents. No

90 Day Fiance Trash Talk
"ten months" Discussed on 90 Day Fiance Trash Talk
"He's like no no meaning. You just get drunk. And she's like why do they wear masks. And he's like it's just a hide your hangover and also like if you assault a woman on the street like you. Just want to kind of be in disguise right. You're incognito that's what it is. Yeah because also. You're going to be showing your boobs on camera so you want to just like hide your face so that no one from church recognizes you because everyone goes to church immediately after the party. I like that she tells him like. I'm ready to wear this mask. And she's like listen. I don't wanna live here but actually you fit in here perfectly. So she's calling him trash. Which was hilarious. She's so good at like these little to him. Yeah she's good right back in it so now she wants to move but they have nine to ten months on the lease left and that's a bad timeframe. No neither do why. Because it's like you don't wanna move when you're pregnant right. I think that also when you have a little baby they just sleep in your room right. Exactly they don't need their own room right now no so. I think that it's good. If you have the bbc how it is and then figure out where you wanna live. Sure i agree. So she's like. I don't know i mean maybe i'll be in the ukraine. We'll see where we're going to move and he's like why you keep saying that you want to be in america and she's like i don't i've never seen it. She's like. I love the ukraine i would. I had a very good life there. She's like i had friends and family. That loves me and we're nice to me and we're in hammered all day long and he just doesn't pay attention but he's going to be trying harder. Okay well he's gonna see if he can care more he's gonna try to care more he definitely is and let me tell you something different lifestyles really can wreak havoc on your skin..

My Drafts folder
"ten months" Discussed on My Drafts folder
"I mean you're on vacation just like we spoke out with our earlier when you're on vacation you wear cute things. Sure your boyfriend that you haven't seen in ten months. Why why is this your choice of out. I'm gonna tell you. There are definitely areas that maybe she does not wanna show okay. Oh i thought you meant that. It's not okay for her to show parts of her body in that area in case assaulted. You know it's gross. Yes no not at all. I think that remember something now. i'm not body shaming her so ever but you do have to understand that she is a very vain person and that's what she cares about. She owns a med spa. Again nothing wrong with that. But she does Think that her appearance and her youth is the most important thing. Okay but so. I think that she's trying to avoid exposing certain of her body. Because i think like it's like this if you're fat and you wear something oversized and in a dark color. You think that no one thinks you're right. Stephanie things that if she dresses maybe like how a toddler dresses. That no one's gonna know what age she is the diaper a along shirt when she's wearing that onesie that snaps at her crotch she's wearing a body suit and A huggies it regardless of what your body type is you can dress cute without revealing. But she doesn't know that she doesn't know that she is she the way she dresses is very odd as well. I don't think that this is just who she is. There's there's always something that she's trying to hide or try to. Accentuate the these weird parts of her body. I think that her shorts always way too big on her. Yes is too big in in that next. Each is she's literally Gave the benefit of the doubt. And i wrote down t shirt dress. That's not. it's not a t shirt dress. Don't just his t shirt yet. But i think that she also likes back because she feels like like when you're in like you know when you're a teenager and you wanna wear your boyfriend hoodie. It bad no she but she wants everyone to know that they're together and then this young couple that's very important to her is that they're a fun loving young couple so his mom just just blocked her and she said that she's trying to keep them fed and keep the lights on and now she doesn't send them any money now that his mom blocked her so she asked him. How many thousands of dollars do you think i've sent you. He's like. I don't know i want you to leave me alone but also i mean still semi money but also leave me alone. He really you can see him like clenching his jaw as he speaks to her and like really restrains his respond on what she's like Tell me understand. like i understand. He's orleans she gives me money she gives you money. She gives me money. Just sh- calm down. Ryan calmed down ryan. You've gotten I don't know an unprecedent amount of money from her. Please ryan just be quiet. You could do this. Mom's already blocked her mom's already blocked. Refine we're gonna be okay..

90 Day Fiance Trash Talk
"ten months" Discussed on 90 Day Fiance Trash Talk
"This just doesn't work. And i mean you're on vacation just like we spoke with our earlier when vacation. You wear cute things. Sure your boyfriend that you haven't seen in ten months. Why why is this your choice of out. I'm gonna tell you. There are definitely areas that maybe she does not wanna show okay. Oh i thought you meant that. It's not okay for her to show parts of her body in that area in case assaulted. You know it's gross. Yes no not at all. I think that remember something now. i'm not body shaming her whatsoever but you do have to understand that she is a very vain person and that's what she cares about. She owns a med spa again. Nothing wrong with that but she does Think that her appearance and her youth is the most important thing. Okay but so. I think that she's trying to avoid exposing certain of her body. Because i think like it's like this if you're fat and you wear something oversized and in a dark color. You think that no one thinks you're right. Stephanie things that if she dresses maybe like how a toddler dresses. That no one's gonna know what age she is the diaper in along shirt. When she's wearing that onesie that snaps at her crotch she's wearing a body suit and A huggies it like regardless of what your body type is. you can dress cute without revealing. But she doesn't know that she doesn't know that she is she the way she dresses is very odd as well. I don't think that this is just who she is. There's there's always something that she's trying to hide or try to. Accentuate the these weird parts of her body. I think that her shorts always way too big on her. Yes everything is too big. In in that next each is she's literally iphone. I gave the benefit of the doubt. And i wrote down t shirt dress. That's not. It's not a t shirt dress. Don't just his t shirt yet. But i think that she also likes back because she feels like like when you're in like you know when you're a teenager and you wanna wear your boyfriend toady bad. No she but she wants everyone to know that they're together and then this young couple that's very important to her is that they're a fun loving young couple so his mom just just blocked her and she said that she's trying to keep them fed and keep the lights on and now she doesn't send them any money now that his mom blocked her so she asked him..

90 Day Fiance Trash Talk
"ten months" Discussed on 90 Day Fiance Trash Talk
"And i mean you're on vacation just like we spoke with our earlier when vacation. You wear cute things. Sure your boyfriend that you haven't seen in ten months. Why why is this your choice of out. I'm gonna tell you. There are definitely areas that maybe she does not wanna show okay. Oh i thought you meant that. It's not okay for her to show parts of her body in that area in case assaulted. You know it's gross. Yes no not at all. I think that remember something now. i'm not body shaming her so ever but you do have to understand that she is a very vain person and that's what she cares about. She owns a med spa. Again nothing wrong with that. But she does Think that her appearance and her youth is the most important thing. Okay but so. I think that she's trying to avoid exposing certain of her body. Because i think like it's like this if you're fat and you wear something oversized and in a dark color. You think that no one thinks you're right. Stephanie things that if she dresses maybe like how a toddler dresses. That no one's gonna know what age she is the diaper in along shirt. When she's wearing that onesie that snaps at her crotch she's wearing a body suit and A huggies it like regardless of what your body type is. you can dress cute without revealing. But she doesn't know that she doesn't know that she is she the way she dresses is very odd as well. I don't think that this is just who she is. There's there's always something that she's trying to hide or try to. Accentuate the these weird parts of her body. I think that her shorts always way too big on her. Yes everything is too big. In in that next each is she's literally iphone. I gave the benefit of the doubt. And i wrote down t shirt dress. That's not. It's not a t shirt dress. Don't just it's his t shirt yet. But i think that she also likes back because she feels like like when you're in like you know when you're a teenager and you wanna wear your boyfriend hoodie. It abed no she but she wants everyone to know that they're together and then this young couple that's very important to her is that they're a fun loving young couple so his mom just just blocked her and she said that she's trying to keep them fed and keep the lights on and now she doesn't send them any money now that his mom blocked her so she asked him. How many thousands of dollars do you think i've sent you. He's like. I don't know i want you to leave me alone but also i mean still some money but also leave me alone. He really you can see him like clenching. His jaw as he speaks to her and like really restraints his respond on. Tell me understand. like i understand. He's orleans she gives me money she gives you money. She gives me money. Just sh- calm down. Ryan calmed down ryan. You've gotten I don't know an unprecedent amount of money from her. Please ryan just be quiet. You could do this. Mom's already blocked her mom's already blocked. Refine we're gonna be okay. She's such a hero though she so his mother wants space from her telling fair and i mean they were like. Bff's when they were they were they or is this how she pushes herself on. People enforces say. I love you back to her. She's like say you love me or i'm not going to send the money. I love you. Stephanie she sends a scripted. she's like when i send you money. This is how you this is. This is what you say. Because i clearly wasn't clear before. She's very old in the voice. She needs to get a voice injection. Maybe at the medicine they can do that. So she stricken heavy. I think it's a lot of her problem. She is drinking very heavy and they still have not had relations since she's been there i think she's been there for four to five hours the way i couldn't tell how long she had been there but she's checking in with her psychic so don't worry about it god they go to dinner and her. His mask is a picture of her. A it's another rebecca bad. I wonder where he got that from. Or do you want one. I think that do you think do you think he makes them for himself or you think that she sends that now that was in her luggage and his mom's why do i have stephanie mass. Everyone

Road to Thriving
"ten months" Discussed on Road to Thriving
"Remember that life is not about working all the time and getting completely lost in work and you know always like in a way working for future and not working for the president or for who i am right now or for my situation right now so a nature really helped me to understand that but i need to slow down because everything in nature has has it space has its purpose and it's not just to go crazy and work like an insane person though a big part of the help to understand that we're for example the living more with Taught me a lot about how nature takes everything that comes whether it's freezing. Temperatures or droughts or floods or whatever it is it accepts the What what is happening. It adapted over comes it. you know. Imagine imagine nature would complain every time something happened co it just works. It changes the leaves. The leaves change from green to brown. And you know and everything comes back in spring when the strength is air nature is not upset because it has to die off in winter. It's it's just part of life. It's part of the moment of life in the life cycle and it knows that the knicks spring and come come back with more force. That's one of the things you can learn from nature. It's it's incredible really talk about it for hours. Yeah it's all about sitting and listening to it. I love that so much and do you find that. That's something you get time to do now or not enough that you would like to do are not enough definitely because i feel like that's also most people see it. They work and then on weekends. We go out to nature or in the afternoons. they were jog or for hike For me that's that's not enough. I i want to be in nature part of nature and nature's part of me. So i want uh either fulltime and that's that's actually why i think van life is such a good tool to be there all the time then. I also think it makes us understand how we have to take care of it. You know because it visit different places and you see there just flooded with trash or in that type of stuff. It's it breaks. It's heartbreaking so it teaches about ourselves and about how we take care of it When he said that. I dislike chivas. My body i. I mean for context. I grew up in the city and so for me. Moving into them life I've actually spent ten months on the road. And i think spent nine and a half of ours actually deconstructing old ways that i used to operate and like i was my buddy was so used to this ethically fast pace of life and i just honestly. I didn't know how to slow down..

The Steve Warne Project - Sports
"ten months" Discussed on The Steve Warne Project - Sports
"When they're you know weighing in on they gotta trade this guy in the hate this team and you guys are going through it in ottawa. Where everyone's you know writing off the ottawa senators right now and but some of it. I i understand i understand it now. Where where you know. I got a friend in winnipeg. Who when the when the winnipeg jets left for the i. Guess the second time They've only left once or the. Yeah okay so when they left it brought the town. You know like there was like this depression. My buddy he was. I was talking on the phone back then and he just went. He went on at length. About how how. It's harmed him. So fans are fans man. They're big and and that. I'm just thinking today that might you wake up and go. What a drag man. What a drawback. Because i put a lot of time into undetermined for those guys. So yeah it's it's up situation right now in in town here and and i would. I would encourage this exercise if you're an ottawa. Senators fan and want wanna get back to curt schilling here in a moment. But i would encourage ottawa senator fans to do this as an exercise. Like remove the sense from the equation and remove any allegiance. You have to what i'll call team axe. Just random off the shelf major league franchise this team team. X has not played a single game in ten months. They haven't had a preseason. they haven't had exhibition games. And after ten months they get a few days to mensa boat in training camp to decide on their team. And then it's whammo zero to sixty right into the heart of a regular season and that regular season has now lasted all of eleven days Are you really that upset that this team doesn't have his act together right now after just eleven days taken away. The sins allegiance. And all that it's just team ex-. How can you possibly realistically expected team. In those circumstances which also by the way turned over half its roster to be any good at all in those eleven days you know. I agree with a lot of what you say steve But there's something that is interesting with this. Because i do take it easy. Okay we're playing these inordinate amount of games and the schedules crazy. Cova did You guys you got to watch for that thing all the time. Three games in four nights. The you know the travel the all canadian division is is this thing gonna work or not With a lot of teams Vancouver montreal right. There's there's a ton more travel than if you're winnipeg for example right you're in the middle here you can zip two hours either way So i think everyone does have to take it easy. What i think might happen is we're watching that winnipeg game healers and and wheeler went down in kinda sorta innocent little body checking you know and i began to think what may happen out of. This doesn't happen all the time is the incidents of injury From from plan so many freaking games in such a short time. I remember seeing players after game..

Anything But Idle
"ten months" Discussed on Anything But Idle
"Able to change my position over the course of the day times usually in being able to do that quickly and to your point alexis without friction is huge mine environments really designed around. How do i set up my devices. Appropriately versus how do i have spaces for non electric materials. Which i try not to have in general. I'm going through this radical change in terms of my own office desk organization because for the past ten months i have been in a new home and that new home has now also been my and that was not in the plan when we when we purchased this place so there there's just been a huge learning curve for me in terms of how to make this space both acoustically sound because i'm training most of the time you know in my my normal work with my clients i am training and so therefore when my little dog downstairs in loss starts barking which you may hear this evening it's it's utterly impossible to drought that noise without creating another room in essence We actually talked about sealing off the whole off too so that i could have walls and you know it's just like all of these things that come up because your your office space you know. It's it's so important for you to be able to know what's going on in your kind of deck. Think of it as kind of a dashboard or cockpit dashboard. You want everything to be in view when you needed in view. You don't want to not know the altitude that you're flying at when you look at the altitude meter You know like those are the kinds of things that i think about when i'm sitting at my desk and all of those pieces are so important and i'm all of these talking about the raising and lowering desk adjustable desk i'm thinking about you know what that would look like and having multiple deaths so that i'm able to switch gears between training and teaching too i just wanna sit in right because those two different modalities very different for me and i want my desk organized differently for those things and you know just like building out..