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Tag: dollar

  • How Trump Is Debasing the Dollar and Eroding U.S. Economic Dominance

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    To be sure, the sudden drop in the dollar, by itself, “isn’t large enough to break anything,” as Setser put it. And on Friday the U.S. currency recovered some of its recent losses after Trump nominated Kevin Warsh, an experienced Republican banker, to replace Jerome Powell as the chair of the Federal Reserve. The market’s immediate reaction reflected a perception that Warsh is an inflation hawk and that his influence at the Fed could bolster the dollar. That remains to be seen, though. In auditioning for the job, he told Trump that he favored lower interest rates, which is what the President wanted to hear. If Warsh came to be regarded as a yes-man for Trump, that would be very negative for the dollar. More generally, the fear is that currency weakness could feed on itself if foreign investors lose faith in U.S. economic stewardship. Not only is Trump undermining NATO and using tariffs coercively, Prasad pointed out to me, but he has also spent twelve months attacking many of the domestic pillars of U.S. economic might, including the rule of law, the system of checks and balances, and the independence of the Fed.

    For many decades, the U.S. dollar’s status as the dominant global currency was largely unchallenged. Foreign financial institutions and central banks built up large positions in U.S. financial assets, partly because they generated high returns and partly because they were widely viewed as a safe haven in an unsafe world. Right now, European countries are the biggest investors in America, holding an estimated eight trillion dollars in U.S. stocks and bonds. These investments help to finance the U.S. trade deficit and the U.S. budget deficit, both of which are very large. In the nineteen-sixties, Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, France’s finance minister (and subsequently its President), described the capacity of the United States government to attract large amounts of foreign money at low rates as an “exorbitant privilege” that enabled the country to live beyond its means. The privilege has endured. But, as Trump was issuing thinly veiled threats to invade Greenland, George Saravelos, the global head of foreign-exchange research at Deutsche Bank, Germany’s largest bank, suggested, in a note to clients, that these moves might make European investors less willing to accumulate U.S. financial assets and help America finance its dual deficits. “In an environment where the geoeconomic stability of the western alliance is being disrupted existentially, it is not clear why Europeans would be as willing to play this part,” Saravelos wrote.

    For a country that has more than thirty trillion dollars of debt, and which ran a budget deficit of nearly $1.8 trillion last year, any indication that foreign investors may hesitate before buying more of its assets cannot be taken lightly. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who was also in Davos, announced in an interview that the C.E.O. of Deutsche Bank, Christian Sewing, had called him to say that the bank, which has a large U.S. operation, didn’t stand by Saravelos’s report. But Saravelos himself hasn’t disowned his pessimistic analysis, and for good reason. Ultimately, the supremacy of the dollar rests on U.S. economic hegemony and trust in the American government, which Trump is busy eroding.

    At this point, it’s not entirely clear who has been selling dollars. “The price action is consistent with European institutions reconsidering whether they want to keep adding to their U.S. assets,” Setser said. “It’s also consistent with fast money”—hedge funds and other speculators—“anticipating this trend and front-running it.” In the markets, betting against the dollar is known as the debasement trade. By early last week, the currency had fallen far enough for a political reporter to ask Trump, whether it had gone too far. “No, I think it’s great,” he replied. “The dollar’s doing great.” These comments prompted further selling, and the currency hit a four-year low. As often happens, Bessent was left to explain away his boss’s remarks. He appeared on CNBC the following day and insisted that “we have a strong dollar policy,” and argued that, over time, Trump’s tax cuts and tariffs would lead to more money coming into the United States and greater dollar strength.

    Such an outcome isn’t inconceivable. Since the global financial crisis of 2007-09, the U.S. economy has grown faster than other major advanced economies; this has made it even more attractive to overseas investors. If, in the coming months and years, A.I. delivers the boost to G.D.P. and productivity which its promoters say it will, this U.S. outperformance could persist, or even quicken, and the dollar could rebound as Bessent predicted.

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    John Cassidy

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  • L.A.’s defense industry is booming. Federal funding crunch could change that

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    When former Space X engineer Josh Giegel launched his North Hollywood tech company Gambit in 2023, he had a vision for the battlefield of the future, one with fewer soldiers and more AI-driven assets.

    His software would allow unmanned tanks and swarms of armed drones to communicate and adapt in real time — without human intervention.

    The company now employs more than a dozen people and has contracts with the military, which is testing his software. But its growth has been clouded because of a funding dispute on Capitol Hill over the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program, which provides companies seed capital to develop new technology that can assist the government. Funding for it and related programs expired in September.

    The seed fund has been vital to many local tech startups. Gambit received $3.3 million from the program early on and was hoping to get another $5 million of the Small Business Administration money, which is allocated by the military.

    Workers at K2 Space in Torrance, where the startup is building high-capacity satellites for Medium Earth Orbit. (K2 Space)

    (K2 Space)

    “That funding really helps companies like ours that are putting tech into warfighters’ hands,” Giegel said. “Losing that money becomes more leg work to find other sources.”

    Gambit’s predicament is widely shared across Southern California, which has experienced a proliferation of tech startups launched by SpaceX alumni and other entrepreneurs with the support of SBA money.

    In 2024, 124 contracts worth $173 million were awarded to 71 California companies through SpaceWERX, an El Segundo-based arm of the Space Force that distributes SBA funding to innovative defense startups.

    The money also is disbursed by other branches of the military and departments of the government, which do not take stakes in the companies. Gambit received funds through the Air Force.

    Other local recipients of SBA funding include Costa Mesa autonomous weapons maker Anduril Industries, now valued at more than $30 billion; and satellite platform manufacturers K2 Space in Torrance and Apex Space in Los Angeles.

    The funds are allocated in phases, with initial feasibility awards up to about $300,000 and as much as $2 million for the development of prototypes. A maximum of $15 million is available through a companion SBA-funded program if the companies can bring in other funding.

    “I don’t know if I can name a single company that I work with, or that I know of, that did not start with SBIR” funding, said Maggie Gray, a partner at Silicon Valley venture capital firm Shield Capital, which invested in Apex. “We see SBIR as a crucial part of the defense-tech ecosystem. It’s kind of the way to get your initial foot in the door with the government.”

    Established in 1982, the SBA program provides more than $4 billion to government departments, with the military receiving the lion’s share. But SBA funding ran out on Sept. 30 as lawmakers clashed over proposed reforms.

    Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), who chairs the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, introduced a bill that would set a $75-million lifetime cap on funds for individual companies and establish performance benchmarks. The bill also would beef up due diligence to prevent new technology falling into the hands of foreign adversaries and end diversity, equity and inclusion preferences in funds distribution.

    The legislation, however, has faced stiff opposition from Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey, the ranking Democrat on the committee, who contends the reforms go overboard and would crimp innovation. A bipartisan House bill that would have reauthorized SBA funding for a year failed in the Senate amid opposition by Ernst, who is leaving Congress in a year.

    While negotiations have restarted on Capitol Hill, there is no guarantee SBA financing will be restored, though the military and other government agencies could fund startups through their own budgets.

    The SpaceWERX program, which has played a critical role in Southern California’s resurgent space economy, was established in 2020, just one year after the Space Force was founded.

    Director Arthur Grijalva said the program distributes several hundred million dollars in SBA funding annually across the nation and has not had an issue with foreign influence or companies receiving repeat awards without much to show for it.

    “Even though it might be small [funding] for a really big company, it’s really impactful for these small companies, these startups, where if they don’t have this funding, they might have to do layoffs, they might have to go into debt, or they might ultimately not be successful,” Grijalva said.

    Since September, $94 million in larger contracts has been held up for more than 25 companies, which follow funding for feasibility studies and prototypes, according to SpaceWERX.

    The impasse comes at an inopportune time for the Trump administration, which has been overhauling weapons procurement.

    Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth announced in November a policy to speed up weapons development by first finding capabilities in the commercial market before the government attempts to develop new systems. Last week he visited several L.A.-area defense companies, including Torrance startup Castelion, a manufacture of hypersonic missiles that received SBIR funding.

    Kirsten Bartok Touw, managing partner of New Vista Capital, which invested in Castelion, agreed the program may have flaws but said it plays an invaluable role in attracting venture capital to companies that have drawn the funding.

    “That is an important signal to the market, which says, ‘You should invest in more of these, because this is a technology we want and need,’” she said.

    A report this month by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine found that one dollar of the funding distributed by the military attracts more than four dollars of venture capital or other third-party investment.

    Markey’s office said last week he submitted a proposal to Ernst that includes making the SBIR program permanent, increased allocations, a performance metric, foreign due diligence standards and fellowships for underserved small businesses, among other provisions.

    “This bill is [his] second attempt at breaking the logjam and restarting these critical programs to ensure America’s most nimble allies — small businesses — are not decimated,” a Markey spokesperson said.

    A spokesperson for Ernst said last week that the senator “remains focused on ensuring taxpayer investments in R&D do not benefit China and actually deliver cutting-edge technology for our warfighters.”

    Giegel said that while he is optimistic future SBA funding might come through for Gambit, he is not counting on it. He now assumes he will have to look for other sources of money to grow the company, which already attracted undisclosed venture capital.

    “We’re trying to find operational relevance faster,” he said.

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    Laurence Darmiento

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  • Washington National Opera is leaving the Kennedy Center in wake of Trump upset

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    In what might be the most decisive critique yet of President Trump’s remake of the Kennedy Center, the Washington National Opera’s board approved a resolution on Friday to leave the venue it has occupied since 1971.

    “Today, the Washington National Opera announced its decision to seek an amicable early termination of its affiliation agreement with the Kennedy Center and resume operations as a fully independent nonprofit entity,” the company said in a statement to the Associated Press.

    Roma Daravi, Kennedy Center’s vice president of public relations, described the relationship with Washington National Opera as “financially challenging.”

    “After careful consideration, we have made the difficult decision to part ways with the WNO due to a financially challenging relationship,” Daravi said in a statement. “We believe this represents the best path forward for both organizations and enables us to make responsible choices that support the financial stability and long-term future of the Trump Kennedy Center.”

    Kennedy Center President Ambassador Richard Grenell tweeted that the call was made by the Kennedy Center, writing that its leadership had “approached the Opera leadership last year with this idea and they began to be open to it.”

    “Having an exclusive relationship has been extremely expensive and limiting in choice and variety,” Grenell wrote. “We have spent millions of dollars to support the Washington Opera’s exclusivity and yet they were still millions of dollars in the hole – and getting worse.”

    WNO’s decision to vacate the Kennedy Center’s 2,364-seat Opera House comes amid a wave of artist cancellations that came after the venue’s board voted to rename the center the Donald J. Trump and the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts. New signage featuring Trump’s name went up on the building’s exterior just days after the vote while debate raged over whether an official name change could be made without congressional approval.

    That same day, Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio) — an ex officio member of the board — wrote on social media that the vote was not unanimous and that she and others who might have voiced their dissent were muted on the call.

    Grenell countered that ex officio members don’t get a vote.

    Cancellations soon began to mount — as did Kennedy Center‘s rebukes against the artists who chose not to appear. Jazz drummer Chuck Redd pulled out of his annual Christmas Eve concert; jazz supergroup the Cookers nixed New Year’s Eve shows; New York-based Doug Varone and Dancers dropped out of April performances; and Grammy Award-winning banjo player Béla Fleck wrote on social media that he would no longer play at the venue in February.

    WNO’s departure, however, represents a new level of artist defection. The company’s name is synonymous with the Kennedy Center and it has served as an artistic center of gravity for the complex since the building first opened.

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    Jessica Gelt

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  • Trump says Americans will receive $2,000 tariff dividend

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    President Trump said Sunday that most Americans would receive a $2,000 dividend payment as a result of his administration’s tariffs levied against foreign countries.

    Trump announced the potential payments on his Truth Social platform, calling opponents of his tariffs “FOOLS” in a post.

    “We are taking in Trillions of Dollars and will soon begin paying down our ENORMOUS DEBT, $37 Trillion,” the president wrote. “Record Investment in the USA, plants and factories going up all over the place. A dividend of at least $2000 a person (not including high income people!) will be paid to everyone.”

    Congressional approval would likely be necessary to provide the payments. There is no specific plan at this point for the dividends, which could cost the government hundreds of billions of dollars.

    The post by Trump comes after a difficult week for the president.

    The Supreme Court heard arguments in a case that questions whether Trump exceeded his authority in levying tariffs against foreign nations without congressional support. Most of the justices on the bench, including conservative justices such as Chief Justice John G. Roberts, appeared skeptical of the president’s authority under the Constitution.

    Most of the justices seemed to take the view that the Constitution gives Congress the power to raise taxes, duties and tariffs, not the president.

    That blow came on the heels of Democratic wins throughout the country on Tuesday.

    Since taking office, Trump has implemented steep tariffs on specific goods as well as particularly high tariffs on goods from specific countries such as India and Brazil.

    Trump said in remarks on Thursday at the White House that revocation of the tariffs would be “devastating” for the U.S.

    On Sunday in an interview with George Stephanopoulos, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that he had not yet spoken with Trump about the proposed dividend.

    “The $2,000 dividend could come in lots of forms and lots of ways,” Bessent said.

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    Noah Goldberg

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  • Dollar Steadies as Markets Focus on US-China Trade Tensions, Politics

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    The U.S. dollar recovered from a selloff in early trade on Monday as investors hoped Washington may temper its latest escalation of the trade war with Beijing, while political developments in France and Japan undermined the euro and the yen.

    The dollar index, which measures the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, edged higher to 99.002, retracing some losses sustained after U.S. President Trump announced 100 percent tariffs on China.

    That revived fears of Trump’s Liberation Day rollout of sweeping tariffs in April, sparking a selloff in stocks and cryptocurrencies on Friday. “Certainly it’s pretty nervous out there,” said Tim Kelleher, head of institutional FX Sales at Commonwealth Bank in Auckland.

    “If you look at the U.S. and China stuff, it looks like Trump has done a bit of a TACO again and softened his tone,” he added, referring to a trading rule of thumb that “Trump always chickens out.”

    Earlier in the day, Trump said: “Don’t worry about China, it will all be fine! Highly respected President Xi just had a bad moment,” he posted on the Truth Social network. “He doesn’t want Depression for his country, and neither do I. The U.S.A. wants to help China, not hurt it!!!”

    Market liquidity may be affected by holidays as the U.S. observes Columbus Day/Indigenous Peoples’ Day today, while Japan is also closed to mark Health and Sports Day.

    Against the yen, the dollar fetched 151.985 yen, up 0.5 percent as markets assessed the path ahead for new Liberal Democratic Party leader Sanae Takaichi after Komeito quit the ruling coalition on Friday, dealing a blow to her hopes to become the first female prime minister of the world’s fourth largest economy.

    The euro stood at $1.1609, down 0.1 percent, after the French presidency announced Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu’s new cabinet line-up on Sunday, reappointing Roland Lescure, a close ally of Emmanuel Macron, as finance minister.

    Cryptocurrency markets fluctuated between gains and losses after a sharp selloff on Friday, with bitcoin last trading up 0.4 percent at $115,486.04. Gold hit a fresh record of $4,059.30 and was last up 0.8 percent.

    The offshore yuan traded at 7.137 yuan per dollar, tacking on 0.1 percent in early Asian trade. The Australian dollar fetched $0.6513, rising 0.6 percent in early trade, while the kiwi traded at $0.57345, up 0.3 percent. Sterling changed hands at $1.33415, up 0.1 percent so far on the day.

    Reporting by Gregor Stuart HunterEditing by Shri Navaratnam

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    Reuters

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  • Can Donald Trump put his image on a U.S. Mint coin? Probably

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    President Donald Trump appears poised to put his image on both sides of a commemorative $1 coin issued by the United States Mint.

    On Oct. 3, the White House reshared an X post from U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach confirming reports that the Trump administration was seeking to put the president’s image on the front and back of a dollar coin commemorating the nation’s 250th anniversary. 

    U.S. currency typically does not feature living people — or sitting presidents — but it’s not unprecedented. 

    “There have been times in the past where commemorative coins have been printed with the faces of living people,” White House National Economic Council chair Kevin Hassett said on CNN’s “State of the Union” Oct. 5.

    He’s right: Several living people have been featured on U.S. currency in both the recent and distant past, including one president. 

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    Although the concept of a Trump coin runs counter to a longstanding tradition, there are no unscalable legal obstacles to establishing a U.S. coin with Trump’s image on it. 

    What has the Trump administration proposed?

    Beach’s X post showed the coin’s front, featuring Trump’s side profile, and its flip side — an illustration of Trump pumping his fist after a 2024 assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania. The phrase, “Fight Fight Fight” lines the coin’s perimeter, referencing a Trump rallying cry repeated after the assassination attempt. Trump was not president at the time of the assassination attempt.

    (Treasury Department)

    At an Oct. 3 White House press briefing, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said, “I’m not sure if he’s seen it, but I’m sure he’ll love it.”

    Would this design be legal?

    Multiple pieces of coinage legislation enacted over the past few decades have included specific language prohibiting living people from being portrayed on U.S.-minted coins. In one case — a  series of coins launched in 2007 honoring every president — the law’s text goes further to specify that no coin in the series may “bear the image of a living former or current president, or of any deceased former president during the 2-year period following the date of the death of that president.”

    That barrier on living presidents was specific to that particular presidential coinage series, however — not to the series that would include the proposed Trump coin.

    The guidance governing the series the Trump administration is considering comes from legislation authorizing a series of coins for the nation’s 250th anniversary, known as the Circulating Collectible Coin Redesign Act of 2020. Trump signed the measure into law in January 2021, during his first presidency, following unanimous passage by both chambers of Congress. It authorizes the redesigns of quarters, half dollars and $1 coins in several sequential series, one of which is a 250th anniversary series to be launched in 2026.

    The law for the 250th series refers specifically to the reverse of the coin:”No head and shoulders portrait or bust of any person, living or dead, and no portrait of a living person may be included in the design on the reverse of any coin” in the series. But it doesn’t rule out a portrait on the front of the coin. 

    That may not be a high bar for Trump to jump if he wants to mint a coin with his image on it. 

    Unless Congress acts, the process from here would involve only administration officials, meaning the president could maintain direct control. Even if the courts were inclined to block the proposal, experts said it’s uncertain whether anyone would be able to cite a direct harm from producing a Trump coin — a requirement for filing a lawsuit. 

    “It’s unclear who would have standing to sue here,” said Gabriel Mathy, an associate professor economics at American University who has studied coinage issues.

    Legal or not, history has not favored using living people on U.S. currency 

    Whether or not a Trump coin would be legal, numismatic experts — those who specialize in coins and related items — said there’s a longstanding tradition in the United States of not depicting living people on coins.

    “Not featuring current presidents on coins is an important and enduring part of the United States’ history as a republic,” Mathy said. “Going back thousands of years, coins traditionally carried the image of the current monarch. This is still the case in the United Kingdom, where coins are minted with the face of the reigning monarch, as well as in some other monarchies. 

    “The United States was founded as a republic, and the founders wanted to avoid making the president into a monarch,” Mathy said. Putting a living president on a coin would be “inconsistent with a long tradition of American republicanism.”

    Despite the norm, living people have sometimes appeared on U.S. currency

    President Abraham Lincoln, his Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase and U.S. Army Gen. Winfield Scott were among a small number of living figures to appear on U.S. paper currency. 

    During the Civil War, Spencer Clark, an official with the federal office responsible for printing paper money, put his own image on a five-cent note. He did it by leveraging a legal loophole: Congress had approved a note featuring an image of William Clark, the explorer from the Lewis & Clark expedition of the Louisiana Territory, but lawmakers neglected to specify William Clark’s first name in the legislation, journalist Blake Stilwell wrote in Military.com. So Spencer Clark, having the same surname, inserted his own image instead of William Clark’s. Clark also produced a separate note that featured then-U.S. Treasurer Francis E. Spinner.

    (Smithsonian Institution)

    By the Civil War’s end, “Congress had time to pay attention to what the Bureau of Engraving and Printing was up to,” Stilwell wrote. 

    So in 1866, Congress passed a law saying no portrait or likeness of a living person would appear on “bonds, securities, notes, fractional or postal currency of the United States.” 

    The law doesn’t mention coins, however. Living figures — and even one living president, Calvin Coolidge — have occasionally been featured on coins, including some in recent years.

    In 1921, the U.S. released a commemorative coin to mark Alabama’s centennial, featuring side views of William Bibb, the state’s first governor, and Thomas Kilby, its governor during the centennial. “This coin was the first ever created by the Mint to carry a living person’s portrait,” the Mint’s website says.

    In 1926, during the nation’s sesquicentennial celebration, Congress authorized the minting of a commemorative coin. The designers settled on a joint portrait of George Washington and Coolidge, who was president during the sesquicentennial. 

    The coin proved unpopular; of 1 million half dollars that were minted, more than 850,000 were returned to the Mint and melted.

    Alabama centennial coin, left, and U.S. sesquicentennial coin, right (U.S. Mint)

    The other two examples we could find of a living figure minted on coins are more recent.

    The Mint created a congressionally authorized coin to commemorate the 1995 Special Olympics World Games. Congress didn’t dictate the design, but the front of the coin featured Eunice Kennedy Shriver, who founded the Special Olympics for people with intellectual disabilities. She died in 2009.

    On Feb. 6, 2016, the Mint released a congressionally authorized coin for former President Ronald Reagan and former first lady Nancy Reagan, tied to the late president’s 105th birthday. Nancy Reagan died one month later, on March 6, 2016.

    Special Olympics coin, left, and Nancy Reagan coin, right. (U.S. Mint)

    A country has already minted a coin with Trump’s image on it

    In 2025, the west African nation of Liberia produced a $1, one-ounce silver commemorative coin with Trump’s image on the front, crowned by a laurel leaf in gold as if he were a Roman emperor. The motto read, “In Don We Trust.”

    If you can find one in stock, it would cost about $150 to $200, according to Google searches.

    (GovMint.com)

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  • California voters were mailed inaccurate guides ahead of November special election

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    Californians were mailed inaccurate voter guides about the November special election asking them whether to redraw congressional district boundaries, according to the secretary of state’s office. The state agency announced that it would mail postcards correcting the information to voters, which is likely to cost millions of dollars.

    “Accuracy in voter information is essential to maintaining public trust in California’s elections,” said Secretary of State Shirley Weber. “We are taking swift, transparent action to ensure voters receive correct information. This mislabeling does not affect proposed districts, ballots, or the election process; it is solely a labeling error. Every eligible Californian can have full confidence that their vote will be counted and their representation is secure.”

    The voter guide was sent to California registered voters about Proposition 50, a ballot measure championed by Gov. Gavin Newsom and other state Democrats to try to boost the number of Democrats in Congress. The proposal was in response to Texas and other GOP-led states trying to increase the number of Republicans in the House at the behest of President Trump to enable him to continue to enact his agenda during his final two years in office.

    The special election will take place on Nov. 4, but voters will begin receiving mail ballots in early October.

    On page 11 of the voter guide, a proposed and hotly contested congressional district that includes swaths of the San Fernando and Antelope valleys and is currently represented by Rep. George Whitesides (D-Agua Dulce) was mislabeled as Congressional District 22. However, on more detailed maps in the voter guide, the district is properly labeled as District 27.

    “It is unfortunate that it was incorrect on the statewide map in the voter guide,” said Paul Mitchell, the Democratic redistricting expert who drew the new proposed congressional districts. “But the important thing is it is correct in the L.A. County and the Southern California maps,” allowing people who live in the region to accurately see their new proposed congressional district.

    There are 23 million registered voters in California, but it’s unclear whether the postcards will be mailed to each registered voter or to households of registered voters. The secretary of state’s office did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday evening.

    Even if the corrective notices are mailed to voter households rather than individual voters, the postage alone is likely to be millions of dollars, in addition to the cost of printing the postcards. The special election, which the Legislature called for in August, was already expected to cost taxpayers $284 million.

    Opponents of Proposition 50 seized upon the error as proof that the measure was hastily placed on the ballot.

    “When politicians force the Secretary of State to rush an election, mistakes are bound to happen,” said Amy Thoma, a spokesperson for one of the campaigns opposing the effort. “It’s unfortunate that this one will cost taxpayers millions of dollars.”

    Former state GOP Chairwoman Jessica Millan Patterson, who leads another anti-Proposition 50 campaign supported by congressional Republicans, added that such mistakes were inevitable given how quickly the ballot measure was written and the special election was called.

    “The Prop. 50 power grab was rushed through so fast by greedy politicians that glaring mistakes were made, raising serious questions about what else was missed,” she said. “California taxpayers are already on the hook for a nearly $300 million special election, and now they’re paying to fix mistakes too. Californians deserve transparency, not backroom politics. Secretary Weber should release the cost of issuing this correction immediately.”

    The campaign supporting the ballot measure did not respond to requests for comment.

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    Seema Mehta

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  • Opinion | The Cure for the Run on the Argentine Peso

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    Milei promised to dollarize and close the central bank. What is he waiting for?

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    Mary Anastasia O’Grady

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  • Here’s how Trump is changing the H-1B visa program

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    Here’s how Trump is changing the H-1B visa program

    The Trump administration is overhauling a visa program intended for high-skilled workers by hiking the application fee to $100,000 annually.

    Updated: 5:11 AM PDT Sep 20, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    President Donald Trump is overhauling a visa program intended for high-skilled workers by hiking the application fee to $100,000 annually from $215. It’s the latest step from the Trump administration aimed at limiting legal immigration. The move could shake up hiring strategies in major industries like technology, finance, health care and higher education. The H-1B visa program aims to bring in foreign workers for high-skilled, hard-to-fill jobs. Historically, these visas have been awarded through a lottery system. Opponents argue that businesses are abusing the program to pay overseas workers lower wages. At a press conference on Friday, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the steeper application fee will incentivize companies to hire Americans instead. He predicted program usage will ultimately fall below the current 85,000 annual cap as a result. “Train Americans. Stop bringing in people to take our jobs,” Lutnick said. This year, top recipients of H-1B visas included Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, and Google.In the past, debates over the future of the program have divided members of Trump’s coalition. Some have called for lower caps or eliminating H-1B visas entirely. Big Tech allies, like billionaire Elon Musk (a former H-1B recipient), contend the program plays a critical role in keeping American businesses competitive by attracting top talent from around the world.”The number of people who are super talented engineers AND super motivated in the USA is far too low,” Musk posted in December during a social media spat on this topic. “Think of this like a pro sports team: if you want your TEAM to win the championship, you need to recruit top talent wherever they may be. That enables the whole TEAM to win.” Also on Friday, Trump rolled out a new visa pathway that he’s calling the “Trump Gold Card.” It allows vetted individuals to pay $1 million in exchange for an expedited process and a pathway to lawful permanent resident status, according to the program’s website. Corporations sponsoring individuals would have to pay $2 million. “It’s going to raise billions of dollars, billions and billions of dollars, which is going to reduce taxes, pay off debt, and other good things,” Trump said. Critics argue that Trump can’t take these steps without approval from Congress. The plan is expected to face legal challenges.

    President Donald Trump is overhauling a visa program intended for high-skilled workers by hiking the application fee to $100,000 annually from $215.

    It’s the latest step from the Trump administration aimed at limiting legal immigration. The move could shake up hiring strategies in major industries like technology, finance, health care and higher education.

    The H-1B visa program aims to bring in foreign workers for high-skilled, hard-to-fill jobs. Historically, these visas have been awarded through a lottery system.

    Opponents argue that businesses are abusing the program to pay overseas workers lower wages. At a press conference on Friday, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the steeper application fee will incentivize companies to hire Americans instead. He predicted program usage will ultimately fall below the current 85,000 annual cap as a result.

    “Train Americans. Stop bringing in people to take our jobs,” Lutnick said.

    This year, top recipients of H-1B visas included Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, and Google.

    In the past, debates over the future of the program have divided members of Trump’s coalition. Some have called for lower caps or eliminating H-1B visas entirely. Big Tech allies, like billionaire Elon Musk (a former H-1B recipient), contend the program plays a critical role in keeping American businesses competitive by attracting top talent from around the world.

    “The number of people who are super talented engineers AND super motivated in the USA is far too low,” Musk posted in December during a social media spat on this topic. “Think of this like a pro sports team: if you want your TEAM to win the championship, you need to recruit top talent wherever they may be. That enables the whole TEAM to win.”

    Also on Friday, Trump rolled out a new visa pathway that he’s calling the “Trump Gold Card.” It allows vetted individuals to pay $1 million in exchange for an expedited process and a pathway to lawful permanent resident status, according to the program’s website. Corporations sponsoring individuals would have to pay $2 million.

    “It’s going to raise billions of dollars, billions and billions of dollars, which is going to reduce taxes, pay off debt, and other good things,” Trump said.

    Critics argue that Trump can’t take these steps without approval from Congress. The plan is expected to face legal challenges.

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  • Cash crunch chaos: Syrians endure banking hell to withdraw just a few pounds

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    Standing in the dilapidated ATM hall of his bank, Maher Elias huffed a sigh equal parts exasperation and exhaustion. Around him were lines dozens of people deep, all of them, like the 59-year-old Elias, waiting in the sweltering heat to withdraw cash.

    Ahead of him was a wait of at least three hours — assuming the ATM didn’t shut down from electricity cuts or run out of bills. On one of the hottest days in the Damascene summer, his words interrupted by the occasional argument between other vexed patrons, Elias spoke while his eyes remained fixated on the front of the slow-moving queue.

    “All this waiting, and for what?” he said, wiping the sweat from his brow. He could only withdraw 200,000 Syrian pounds (around $20) for the week.

    “And we’re five people in my family. Between food, gas and rent, how long do you think that lasts?”

    People queue up to enter Damascus’ Real Estate Bank to use a functioning ATM.

    A stack of money sits on a desk in a bank.

    A stack of money sits on a desk in a bank. Syria’s banking and financial sectors are a shambles, with capital controls limiting withdrawals at about $60 per month.

    Elias and the hundreds of others queuing in the lines that spilled out to the sidewalk of the Real Estate Bank of Syria were taking part in an often quixotic quest, as millions of Syrians contend with a cash crunch that resulted after former President Bashar Assad was toppled and a rebel-led government came in his stead.

    For months now, withdrawing money has become almost a second job, with employees forced to take off from work to queue before banks, even as the lack of liquidity is strangling a ravaged economy struggling to shuffle off nearly 14 years of civil war.

    And the worst part for Elias (and many others) was he would have to do it all over again another day so he could collect all of his 500,000 Syrian pound monthly salary — a little less than $50.

    Still, as a state employee and a patron of one of Syria’s six state-owned banks, Elias was luckier than many others. Across the street, Mohammad, 63, was shouting at no one in particular in front of the private bank where he has his account. He had come with his granddaughter, 6-year-old Masa, from his home in a Damascus suburb, hoping to plead with a manager to OK a larger withdrawal.

    But the manager told him there was no cash available; the ATMs weren’t even on. Mohammad, who gave his first name for reasons of privacy, didn’t have enough money for bus fare to go home.

    “What am I supposed to do? Beg on the street? I’ve been coming for weeks, and these bastards refuse to give me my money,” he said, angrily pointing at the bank’s entrance. Masa looked at her grandfather and didn’t say a word.

    A man reloads an ATM's depleted stock of Syrian pounds in Damascus.

    A man reloads an ATM’s depleted stock of Syrian pounds in Damascus.

    Sitting in his office, the bank manager, who refused to be identified because he was not allowed to speak to the media, insisted he had no choice but to turn away Mohammad and other patrons. Private banks, he said, were supposed to receive $20,000 in cash from the central bank every day. But more often than not, the banks got less, or nothing at all.

    “And even when the cash does arrive, it’s barely enough to cover the number of withdrawals,” the bank manager said. Moments later, a businessman entered his office seeking a withdrawal amounting to $500 to pay his bills; he too left empty-handed.

    When Syria’s new rulers came into power after a lightning fast offensive in December,they commandeered the Assad government’s financial institutions and took stock of a state-controlled economy enfeebled by war, corruption and sanctions: The Syrian pound, once valued at 47 to the U.S. dollar, plunged to 18,000 by the time Assad fled, turning most transactions into an arduous counting exercise involving sackfuls of pre-wrapped bricks of cash, each weighing more than a pound.

    The exchange rate has since improved — if you can call it improvement — to around 11,000 to the dollar.

    The economy’s output remains less than half of what it was in 2010, before the civil war erupted. A quarter of the country’s 26 million people live on less than $2.15 a day, according to a World Bank assessment in June. Two-thirds get by on less than $3.65 a day. Rebuilding the country will cost anywhere from $250 billion to $400 billion, estimates say.

    A row of broken ATM's inside Real Estate bank in Damascus.

    A row of broken ATM’s inside Real Estate bank in Damascus.

    The face of ousted Syrian dictator President Bashar al Assad decorates the Syrian pounds

    The face of ousted Syrian President Bashar Assad decorates Syrian pounds.

    The banking sector is no less destroyed. Civil war-era sanctions all but isolated Syrian banks from the global financial system. Although President Trump recently ordered many of those sanctions lifted, and European governments have done the same, Western banks are still reluctant to move the massive amounts of money needed for reconstruction.

    The new authorities swiftly loosened Assad-era restrictions, deluging the market with cheaper imports and lifting a moratorium that made dealing with dollars a criminal offense. They also imposed withdrawal limits, possibly in an attempt to prevent a run on the banks and stop former regime officials from emptying their accounts and fleeing.

    But nine months on, the limits persist with little clarity as to why, according to bank employees and economic experts. The World Bank reported a shortage of physical bank notes, despite a 105-fold increase in the amount of currency between 2011 and 2024. It added that recent planeloads of bills printed in Russia — which had a monopoly on producing Syrian pounds under Assad — were too small to meaningfully alleviate the liquidity crisis.

    Meanwhile, Syrians unable to access their bank accounts are relying on informal money changers — banned under Assad, but now flourishing — to buy Syrian pounds with gold or dollars they had amassed during Assad’s reign, despite the restrictions. Experts say such transactions are occurring at an artificially lowered exchange rate.

    “This appears to be a systematic policy aimed at pulling dollars from people in a country where the dollar has been unleashed, and has become the main source of revenue because of remittances,” said Samir Aita, a Syrian economist who also heads the Circle of Arab Economists.

    “Where are those dollars going? To the central bank? It seems not. This is something that keeps me up at night,” Aita said.

    Wads of U.S. dollars are handed to a money collector.

    A customer passes U.S. dollars to a money collector. Possessing dollars was a crime when President Bashar Assad was in power.

    Ammar Yusef, a Damascus-based economic expert, agreed with Aita’s assessment, adding that hard currency gathered by money changers is said to have been sent to the northwestern province of Idlib, for years the primary home of the Islamist group Hay’at Tahrir Al-Sham (or HTS) that ousted Assad.

    One solution authorities have recently turned to for the cash crunch is e-payments. Earlier this year, they decreed all public sector salaries would be disbursed through Sham Cash, an app HTS first released in Idlib but that technical experts say is insecure and is linked to an Idlib-based bank that is not recognized by the central bank.

    It’s unclear whether the app has the capacity to deal with an estimated 1.25 million civil servants, and whether it meets Western governments’ requirements on combating money laundering and terror financing — essential components to increasing trust in the country’s financial system.

    Other experts point to serious concerns on fees charged by the two money transfer companies exclusively licensed to disburse money from Sham Cash. Both are considered close to the new government, and stand to collect more than $3 million annually in commissions.

    “They’re in an open battle today with the country’s banks,” Aita said.

    The government’s recently announced plans to redenominate the currency and eliminate two zeroes from each bill, he added, will do little to change the situation.

    Inside Damascus' Real Estate bank, with reflections from the Syrian capital outside.

    Inside Damascus’ Real Estate bank, with reflections from the Syrian capital outside.

    Yet these machinations mean little for Elias. After waiting for almost four hours, and forced to switch queues twice before he encountered a functional ATM, he withdrew his Syrian pounds for the day. He would use them to buy bread and other essentials. He wouldn’t be able to take out money again for a few days.

    “It feels like half the week is gone lining up for cash,” he said, huffing once more as he pushed through the crowds out of the ATM hall.

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    Nabih Bulos

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  • Sacramento residents hope for luck as Powerball jackpot hits $1.1 billion

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    The Powerball jackpot reached $1.1 billion after no tickets matched all six numbers in Saturday night’s drawing, making it the fifth-largest prize ever. The cash value is nearly half a billion dollars. In Sacramento, hopefuls headed to Lichine’s Liquor on South Land Park Drive, a store known for its lucky streak, having sold a winning ticket worth $1.7 million last year.KCRA 3 asked several people buying tickets what they would do with the money if they won. “A lot of plans, I have a family to take care of. For myself, a vacation. I’m retired now, so it’s a good time to get some money and enjoy life,” said Shajendra Sharma. “Oh man, we’re gonna do a whole lot of magic,” said Frank Dumlao. “Take care of the family, take care of some of the people that need it more than others, you know, stuff like that.””I think it would be a great opportunity to take some vacation in Europe, you know. And buy a home on the French Riviera, yeah. My dream,” said Francis Bourton.The dreamers of winning big bought their tickets at Luchine’s Liquor Store, which has had several big winners in the past.”It’s why everybody comes here,” said Dumlao.The California Lottery once listed the store as the sixth-luckiest place in the state for winning $1 million or more.The Chevron gas station in Arden-Arcade was also busy on Monday. It’s a lucky store too.It sold a $41 million Super Lotto ticket in 2022.”We have sold many… two Powerballs and one Super Lotto, and it’s lucky. So that’s why people are coming and buying the lottos from here,” said clerk Rahul Riydan.Only six Powerball grand prizes have topped a billion dollars, and the odds of winning are about one in 292 million. Four Californians missed Saturday’s jackpot by just one number but still won seven-figure payouts. Learn more here. Unfortunately, no big winners in Sacramento on Monday. But one Californian matched five numbers, winning around $1.3 million. Learn more here. For anyone hoping for similar luck, the next drawing is Wednesday at 8 p.m., and tickets are $2.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    The Powerball jackpot reached $1.1 billion after no tickets matched all six numbers in Saturday night’s drawing, making it the fifth-largest prize ever. The cash value is nearly half a billion dollars.

    In Sacramento, hopefuls headed to Lichine’s Liquor on South Land Park Drive, a store known for its lucky streak, having sold a winning ticket worth $1.7 million last year.

    KCRA 3 asked several people buying tickets what they would do with the money if they won.

    “A lot of plans, I have a family to take care of. For myself, a vacation. I’m retired now, so it’s a good time to get some money and enjoy life,” said Shajendra Sharma.

    “Oh man, we’re gonna do a whole lot of magic,” said Frank Dumlao. “Take care of the family, take care of some of the people that need it more than others, you know, stuff like that.”

    “I think it would be a great opportunity to take some vacation in Europe, you know. And buy a home on the French Riviera, yeah. My dream,” said Francis Bourton.

    The dreamers of winning big bought their tickets at Luchine’s Liquor Store, which has had several big winners in the past.

    “It’s why everybody comes here,” said Dumlao.

    The California Lottery once listed the store as the sixth-luckiest place in the state for winning $1 million or more.

    The Chevron gas station in Arden-Arcade was also busy on Monday. It’s a lucky store too.

    It sold a $41 million Super Lotto ticket in 2022.

    “We have sold many… two Powerballs and one Super Lotto, and it’s lucky. So that’s why people are coming and buying the lottos from here,” said clerk Rahul Riydan.

    Only six Powerball grand prizes have topped a billion dollars, and the odds of winning are about one in 292 million.

    Four Californians missed Saturday’s jackpot by just one number but still won seven-figure payouts. Learn more here.

    Unfortunately, no big winners in Sacramento on Monday. But one Californian matched five numbers, winning around $1.3 million. Learn more here.

    For anyone hoping for similar luck, the next drawing is Wednesday at 8 p.m., and tickets are $2.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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  • Millions of dollars flow into redistricting battle on the November ballot

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    Millions of dollars began flowing into campaigns supporting and opposing an effort to redraw California’s congressional districts on the November ballot, notably $10 million from independent redistricting champion Charles Munger Jr.

    The checks, reported Friday in state campaign finance disclosures, were made on Thursday, the day the state Legislature and Gov. Gavin Newsom called a special election to replace the congressional districts drawn by an independent commission in 2021 with new districts that would boost the number of Democrats elected to Congress in next year’s midterm election.

    The move is an effort by California Democrats to counter Texas Republicans’ and President Trump’s efforts to boost the number of GOP members.

    Munger, a GOP donor and the son of a billionaire who was Warren Buffett’s right-hand man, bankrolled the 2010 ballot measure that created independent congressional redistricting in California. He donated $10 million to the “No on Prop. 50 – Protect Voters First” campaign,” which opposes the proposed redistricting.

    “Charles Munger Jr. is making good on his promise to defend the reforms he passed,” said Amy Thoma, a spokesperson for the Voters First Coalition, which opposes the ballot measure and includes Munger.

    A spokesperson for the campaign supporting the redrawing of congressional boundaries accused Munger of trying to boost the GOP under the guise of supporting independent redistricting.

    “It’s no surprise that a billionaire who has given extensively to help Republicans take the house and [former Republican House Speaker] Kevin McCarthy would be joining forces to help Donald Trump steal five House seats and rig the 2026 midterm before a single American has voted,” said Hannah Milgrom, spokesperson for “Yes on 50: the Election Rigging Response Act.” “Prop 50 is America’s best chance to fight back – vote yes on November. 4.”

    The campaign backing the ballot measure received $1 million on Thursday from a powerful labor group, SEIU’s state council; $300,000 from businessman Andrew Hauptman; and a flurry of other donations, according to the California secretary of state’s office. That is on top of the $5.8 million the campaign reported having in the bank as of July 30, including millions of dollars in contributions from House Majority PAC, which is focused on electing Democrats to Congress, and Newsom’s 2022 gubernatorial reelection campaign.

    Redistricting typically happens once a decade after the U.S. census. Trump asked Texas lawmakers to redraw their congressional districts earlier this year, arguing that the GOP was entitled to five more members from the state. In response, California Democrats have pitched new district boundaries that could result in five more Democrats being elected to Congress.

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    Seema Mehta

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  • Will Packer on ‘Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist’

    Will Packer on ‘Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist’

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    Larry weighs in on the debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris. He’s then joined by producer Will Packer to discuss his new Peacock limited series Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist. They begin their conversation by discussing the premise and history behind the project, which leads to a discussion about the art of creating content in today’s entertainment industry (12:57). After the break, Larry and Will shine a light on the artistic way Don Cheadle, Kevin Hart, Terrence Howard, and Samuel L. Jackson embody their individual characters in Fight Night, which tells the story of a heist that took place at a Muhammad Ali boxing match (37:52). Finally, Will talks about his journey to becoming one of Hollywood’s top producers and shares some sage advice for aspiring filmmakers (56:06).

    Host: Larry Wilmore
    Guest: Will Packer
    Producer: Chris Sutton

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

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    Larry Wilmore: Black on the Air

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  • The six fire-, flood- and storm-prone cities where billionaires love to buy homes

    The six fire-, flood- and storm-prone cities where billionaires love to buy homes

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    Rising interest rates. Natural disasters. There are a host of reasons not to buy a home in the current real estate market — particularly in certain areas. But the ultra-rich are unfazed.

    As most of the market recovers from its pandemic hangover, megamansions in some cities have been immune to the slowdown. Across the country, billionaires are still spending tens of millions of dollars on homes, despite traditional logic telling them to park their money elsewhere.

    A new report from Realtor.com says that six cities have emerged as the favorites of the elite so far this year, and two of them are in California. Tops for the fat-cat crew are Malibu, San Francisco, Aspen, New York City, Miami and Palm Beach.

    All six have seen sales north of $50 million so far in 2024, and a handful have seen sales much, much higher.

    In May, a private island compound in Palm Beach fetched $152 million, setting the all-time price record in the Sunshine State. California saw a record of its own a month later when Oakley founder James Jannard sold his Malibu spread for $210 million.

    For every excuse not to buy, billionaires find a workaround, the report said.

    For example, climate change and its ripple effects — floods, fires and storms — threaten homes in coastal communities across California and Florida. But Federal Emergency Management Agency regulations and insurance providers have raised the standards for homebuilders and developers, requiring increased wind and flood protection. So well-heeled buyers in Florida, for instance, see many new homes, especially expensive ones, as hurricane-proof.

    Storm-prepped homes may be too expensive for some, but not for those with a budget of $50 million or more.

    The same logic goes for other environmental disasters, the report said. Wealthy beach-house hunters can minimize the effects of coastal erosion by buying a home with a concrete foundation and brand-new sea wall, which protects against crashing waves and shrinking beaches much better than do the older, less pricey homes built on wood stilts in the 1950s and ’60s.

    For mansions in fire-prone areas, billionaires outfit estates with fire suppression systems and even hire private teams of firefighters to protect their homes from the flames.

    The other factor barring some potential buyers from the housing market? Soaring interest rates.

    Unlike during the pandemic, when rates plummeted to 2% or lower, rates in the modern market hover around 7%.

    A mortgage payment with a 7% rate can cost thousands of dollars more per month — or even tens of thousands more for multimillion-dollar properties. But billionaires aren’t at the mercy of interest rates for a few reasons, the report said.

    Some affluent buyers can pay all-cash for a luxury property, avoiding interest altogether.

    Others are able to broker special deals with banks due to their longstanding relationships and massive holdings. In other words, the more zeroes you have in your account, the better rate you’ll score from a bank.

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    Jack Flemming

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  • $10-billion climate bond will go before voters in November

    $10-billion climate bond will go before voters in November

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    California voters will get to decide in November if they want the state to borrow $10 billion to pay for climate and environmental projects — including some that were axed from the budget because of an unprecedented deficit.

    The 28-page bill to put the Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness, and Clean Air Bond Act of 2024on the ballot was approved by both the Senate and Assembly late Wednesday.

    This was the last day lawmakers had to approve the climate bond proposal to get the measure on the Nov. 5 ballot.

    Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) was acting as governor Wednesday because Gov. Gavin Newsom was in Washington. McGuire is a supporter of the proposed climate bond and was expected to sign the legislation Wednesday night.

    “Ensuring that our communities have the resources to protect themselves from wildfires, drought and floods is critical to the long-term success of the Golden State,” McGuire said in a press release Monday.

    The language of the bill had been negotiated in secret over the last several months but did not become public until 9:57 p.m. Saturday.

    California taxpayers would pay the bond back with interest. An analyst for the Assembly estimated that the $10 billion bond would cost the state $650 million a year for the next 30 years or more than $19 billion.

    Scott Kaufman, legislative director at the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn., said the cost could be much higher if the interest rate on the bonds turns out to be higher than the 5% rate the analyst used.

    “These bonds will be paid by people decades from now that didn’t even get to vote for their authorization,” Kaufman wrote to the bill’s author in a letter opposing the measure.

    Earlier this year, Sacramento legislators had proposals to place tens of billions of dollars of bonds on the November ballot for efforts as varied as stopping fentanyl overdoses and building affordable housing.

    But those plans were deflated in March when a $6.4-billion bond measure promoted by Newsom to help homeless and mentally ill people got 50.18% of the vote, barely enough to win approval.

    In a recent survey by the Public Policy Institute of California, 64% of likely voters said it was a “bad time” for the state to issue bonds to pay for state projects and programs.

    Dozens of environmental groups, renewable energy companies, labor unions, water agencies and social justice advocates have been lobbying state lawmakers to place the climate bond on the ballot.

    The lobbying intensified after Newsom proposed spending $54 billion on climate efforts in 2022 but then cut that funding to close recent massive budget deficits.

    According to the bill, $3.8 billion would be allocated to water projects, including those that provide safe drinking water, recycle wastewater, store groundwater and control floods.

    An additional $1.5 billion would be spent on wildfire protection, while $1.2 billion would go toward protecting the coast from sea level rise.

    Other money would be used to create parks, protect wildlife and habitats and address extreme heat events.

    The language requires that at least 40% of the money go to projects that provide benefits to disadvantaged communities, defined as populations where the median household income is less than 80% of the area average or less than 80% of the statewide median.

    Some legislators pulled their support of the bond, saying this provision had recently been weakened so that more money would go to people who were not financially disadvantaged.

    Jasmeet Bains (D-Delano) said before the Assembly vote that the definition of vulnerable populations had been diluted. “It’s fundamentally unjust,” she said.

    Hundreds of millions of dollars from the bond would benefit private industry. For example, it would provide $850 million to clean energy projects, including the proposed offshore wind farms. Those planned wind projects are already benefiting from subsidies in President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act.

    Governments often take out long-term debt to pay for infrastructure projects that are expensive to build but will last for decades. Yet some of the planned climate bond spending would go to operate programs that could long be over by the time the bonds are paid off. For instance, a portion will go to “workforce development” or the training of workers.

    And up to 7% of the money or $700 million can go to administration costs.

    “We are already seeing the devastating effects of climate change — more extreme heat waves, catastrophic fires and floods, coastal erosion, and severe droughts,” Sen. Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica) said in a press release. “Every part of our state is affected, and unless we take action now, the cost to address these impacts will become increasingly overwhelming.”

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    Melody Petersen

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  • Rupee ends almost flat on likely RBI intervention

    Rupee ends almost flat on likely RBI intervention

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    The Rupee ended almost flat on Wednesday despite robust dollar demand from corporates, especially oil companies, as RBI likely intervened in the non-deliverable forward market to prevent it from depreciating to a new low.

    The Rupee closed at 83.5450 per Dollar against Tuesday’s 83.5650, which was an all time closing low

    Traders say that the RBI probably sold Dollars in the NDF market to stem the rupee’s fall in the spot market.

    To a question on the proposed expansion of RBI’s intervention kit, Governor Shaktikanta Das, at the last monetary policy press meet, said: “Our intervention in the NDF (non-deliverable forward) market has also undergone a change. We are now very clear and explicit that the RBI is there in the forward market, and we are there. “

    In his monetary policy statement, Das emphasised that the Indian rupee (INR) has moved in a narrow range with low volatility during 2024-25 so far (up to June 5), despite trading under pressure amidst foreign portfolio investment (FPI) outflows.

    The relative stability of the INR bears testimony to India’s sound and resilient economic fundamentals, macroeconomic and financial stability, and improvement in the external outlook, he added.

    Meanwhile, the 10-year benchmark (7.10 Government Security 2034) opened little changed at 7.01 per cent despite a fall in treasury yields overnight (following better than expected treasury auction), according to Nuvama said in a report.

    “Yields were ranged through the day as market participants remained on sidelines awaiting CPI inflation in India and the US. In addition, caution ahead of the FOMC meeting outcome also kept participants on the sidelines,” it added.

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  • Did you buy a home with a high interest rate and intend to refinance later?

    Did you buy a home with a high interest rate and intend to refinance later?

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    Ever since mortgage interest rates jumped in 2022, some Californians have had a strategy: Buy now and, once rates drop, refinance to save hundreds of dollars each month.

    The idea — pushed by some real estate agents — was supposed to be a trade-off. The buyer could pick up a home in a slower market, and though interest costs would be high, they wouldn’t stay that way.

    The strategy may still work, but so far, high borrowing costs are here to stay. In recent weeks, rates have climbed higher, surpassing 7% for the first time since last year.

    If you bought a home with this strategy, The Times would like to speak with you about how it has worked out.

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    Andrew Khouri

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  • Forex reserves + Rupee

    Forex reserves + Rupee

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    The Reserve Bank of India’s move to absorb most of the Dollar (USD) flows in a bid to prevent a sharp appreciation of the Rupee (INR) has led to a record build up in forex reserves, which stood at $642.49 billion as of March 15.

    India holds the fourth largest foreign exchange (forex/Fx) reserves in the world. China, Japan and Switzerland are the top three holders of forex reserves.

    India’s Fx reserves have surpassed the previous record of $642.45 billion in September 2021.

    “We believe India’s growth resilience, along with the forthcoming bond index inclusion (worth about $30 billion of flow and nearly half of India’s annual Current Account balance), will keep the capital account in a surplus.

    “We estimate a reasonable BOP (balance of payments) surplus of about $40 billion in FY24 and $20 billion in FY25, which would bode well for FX reserve accretion,” said Tanvee Gupta Jain, Economist; Nihal Kumar, Associate Economist; and Rohit Arora, Strategist; UBS Securities India.

    Reflecting the CA balance forecast revisions (estimating India’s CAD/ current account deficit narrowing to less than 1 per cent of GDP in FY24 vs 1.2 per cent forecast earlier; and CAD modestly rising to 1.3 per cent in FY25), UBS has shifted its USD/INR end-FY25 forecast from 84 to 82.

    Suman Chowdhury, Chief Economist and Head- Research, Acuité Ratings & Research, said the Indian rupee has moved within a narrow trading band of 81.6-83.5 in FY24 so far.

    This marks the tightest trading band for the currency in 29 years, something that is also reflected in its current levels of extremely subdued volatility.

    “While a mild strength in the INR was visible over the last one month, a rise in volatility driven by the demand for dollars during the fiscal year end and the pressure on the Chinese yuan may lead to a weakness in the INR towards the end of March.

    “We continue to expect INR to post a moderate weakness towards 84.5-85.0 levels by March 2025 (given the delay and the relatively moderate rate cuts in the developed nations along with RBI’s active management of the currency to keep it reasonably anchored to the real effective exchange rate),” Chowdhury said.

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  • Is your student still struggling with pandemic setbacks? A state legal settlement offers help

    Is your student still struggling with pandemic setbacks? A state legal settlement offers help

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    A landmark settlement announced Thursday sets new accountability rules for how California public schools spend $2 billion to help students recover from pandemic learning setbacks: Educators must rely on proven academic strategies and track progress, which will be publicly disclosed — and if parents are not satisfied, they can file complaints.

    The agreement brings an end to sweeping litigation that dates to the fall of 2020, when students were learning remotely from home, with campuses closed because of safety concerns. The lawsuit was silent on the merit of school-based COVID-19 safety measures and campus shutdowns. But it argued that students fell behind during online schooling and the state was not doing enough to remedy the harm.

    Officials including Gov. Gavin Newsom and State Supt. of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond have repeatedly defended California’s efforts as thoughtful and generous. They pointed to billions of dollars in state aid for computers and COVID safety measures as well as early access to vaccines for teachers and other school workers.

    In the settlement, the state admits no wrongdoing. State officials were not immediately available for comment as the settlement was announced.

    The agreement comes as a report, released Wednesday, added to the body of research about the depth of harm to students in California and throughout the nation, starting from the pandemic’s outset in about March of 2020. The latest research indicates that recovery is lagging.

    Students in seventeen states, including California, remain more than a third of a grade level behind 2019 levels in math. Students in 14 states remain more than a third of a grade level behind in reading. While California’s English language arts scores were high enough to avoid this list, its scores actually got worse from 2022 to 2023, despite students’ being back on campus, stated the report, titled the Education Recovery Scorecard.

    Overall, academic recovery in California had “barely begun” as of spring 2023, according to this ongoing research, a collaboration between the Center for Education Policy Research at Harvard University and The Educational Opportunity Project at Stanford University.

    Moreover, the academic setbacks were larger in high-poverty districts such as San Bernardino, Bakersfield, Fresno and Long Beach, where achievement fell by more than two-thirds of a grade level in math and more than a third of a grade level in reading, the report said.

    “Educational outcomes are more unequal now than in 2019,” said Stanford Professor Sean Reardon. “If California state and local education policymakers don’t act soon and decisively, that inequality is likely to become permanent.”

    “No one wants to see poor kids footing the bill for the pandemic, but that is the path California is on,” said Harvard Professor Thomas Kane. “With federal relief dollars drying up, state leaders must ensure the remaining dollars are used for Summer 2024 and for tutoring and after-school next year.”

    Thursday’s settlement is part of ongoing efforts to help students recover.

    The state funding is not new. These dollars were previously set aside, as part of the 2023-24 budget, for pandemic recovery. School districts have left portions of these funds unspent, taking advantage of a multiyear timeline for making use of the money, said the attorneys who sued the state. The settlement overlays a detailed structure for how this money must be used moving forward — with the intent of reaching more of the students most in need — and with more safeguards.

    In addition, there are new rules to hold schools and school districts accountable, including making the spending plans and their results more transparent to parents and the public.

    “This settlement has some strong accountability measures that should help ensure students get the resources they need,” said attorney Chelsea Kehrer of Morrison Foerster, which filed the suit in tandem with the public-interest law firm Public Counsel.

    The settlement will rely on a process that already exists but remains obscure outside education circles. It’s called the Local Control and Accountability Plan. These plans were part of reforms, led by then-Gov. Jerry Brown, that poured more resources into schools and students with high needs — including Black and Latino students, those from low-income families and students learning English.

    Broadly speaking, that’s also the intent of the settlement. Schools must explain how their recovery spending will contribute directly to a positive outcome, such as higher test scores or improved attendance.

    Settlement rules also require school districts to use the money to help the most hard-hit or poorly performing schools or student groups.

    A new federal report lends support for providing better oversight of school-improvement plans. In its sample, the federal review found that less than half of school-improvement plans had components widely considered necessary to be successful. A good plan is supposed to include an examination of needs, assessing where and how resources are unfairly distributed and identifying proven strategies that will be used to help students.

    Because the settlement makes changes to how state money is to be spent, the Legislature‘s approval of the agreement is required.

    Under the settlement, the total funding available must reach at least $2 billion statewide. If it doesn’t, the state must devise a plan to make up the difference, which could require action from the Legislature. If the pieces don’t fall into place, the settlement would unwind.

    So far, however, advocates are confident that at least $2 billion is available in unspent funds for the state’s nearly 1,000 school districts.

    The money is likely to be available because school systems have tried to stretch out the use of pandemic aid for as long as possible as they sound alarms about upcoming budget problems that could result in reduced services and layoffs. Los Angeles Unified, for example, has tracked the deadlines for each tranche of state and federal pandemic aid, spending the money with the earliest deadlines first.

    For a while, so much aid was flowing in that districts were unable to spend it quickly, unable to hire the extra teachers, tutors and mental-health workers who could have helped students. But that surplus period is drawing to a close.

    “If they were waiting for a rainy day, they need to be reminded that California’s most disadvantaged students are in the midst of a thunderstorm,” said Mark Rosenbaum, senior special counsel for strategic litigation at Public Counsel.

    Absent the settlement, this $2 billion still would have been available for pandemic recovery, but with fewer rules on spending, tracking and reporting.

    “At least now, there will be visibility and attention, and the uniform complaint procedure added means that anyone, including parents and caregivers, has a process to call out a district not using the resources in a timely or diligent fashion as mandated by the strategic plan,” Rosenbaum said. “So these are resources that were meant to be used as an urgent crisis dictates, and they now will be.”

    Schools will have four years to spend the money.

    If existing funds are available as expected, the settlement will have little to no effect on the impending state budget negotiations. Gov. Gavin Newsom is trying to close an estimated $38-billion deficit that looms over his proposed budget for the fiscal year that begins on July 1. Total state revenues are expected to surpass $291 billion.

    The original lawsuit focused on harms to students as they were occurring during the period of remote learning.

    The suit cataloged children’s lack of access to digital tools as well as to badly needed academic and social-emotional supports. The suit also alleged that students were harmed by schools that failed to meet required minimum instructional time and to provide adequate training and support to teachers.

    Angela J., a plaintiff named in the complaint and a parent of three elementary-age children in the Oakland Unified School District, said that her twins, who were in the second grade at the onset of the pandemic, received live instruction with a teacher only twice from the time when schools closed in mid-March 2020 to the end of the school year. The students weren’t assigned packets or other materials to make up for the lost time.

    Once in-person learning resumed, the focus of the litigation shifted to the harms that students had suffered and the adequacy of recovery efforts.

    The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County Superior Court on behalf of students and parents, named as defendants the state, the Department of Education, the state Board of Education and Thurmond.

    Community groups that participated in the litigation included the Oakland REACH and L.A.-based Community Coalition.

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    Howard Blume

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  • You get very strange gifts when you work in a hotel

    You get very strange gifts when you work in a hotel

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    A guest of mine who I made a good impression on, apparently, decided to gift me this gold plated dollar bill. It’s legal tender in several places, honest to god, but I’m going to get it graded and then professionally framed and put in my office. With this and the Lions winning tonight, I’m doing pretty damn good lately.

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