ReportWire

Tag: nationwide

  • U.S. economy grew at 3% rate last quarter, final estimate says

    U.S. economy grew at 3% rate last quarter, final estimate says

    [ad_1]

    The American economy expanded at a healthy 3% annual pace from April through June, boosted by strong consumer spending and business investment, the government said Thursday, leaving its previous estimate unchanged.

    The Commerce Department reported that the nation’s gross domestic product — the nation’s total output of goods and services — picked up sharply in the second quarter from the tepid 1.6% annual rate in the first three months of the year.


    What You Need To Know

    • The American economy expanded at a healthy 3% annual pace from April through June
    • It was boosted by strong consumer spending and business investment, the government said
    • The nation’s gross domestic product — the nation’s total output of goods and services — picked up sharply in the second quarter from the tepid 1.6% annual rate in the first three months of the year
    • The final GDP estimate for the April-June quarter included figures showing that inflation continues to ease, to just above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target


    Consumer spending, the primary driver of the economy, grew last quarter at a 2.8% pace, down slightly from the 2.9% rate the government had previously estimated. Business investment was also solid: It increased at a vigorous 8.3% annual pace last quarter, led by a 9.8% rise in investment in equipment.

    The third and final GDP estimate for the April-June quarter included figures showing that inflation continues to ease, to just above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target. The central bank’s favored inflation gauge — the personal consumption expenditures index, or PCE — rose at a 2.5% annual rate last quarter, down from 3% in the first quarter of the year. Excluding volatile food and energy prices, so-called core PCE inflation grew at a 2.8% pace, down from 3.7% from January through March.

    The U.S. economy, the world’s biggest, displayed remarkable resilience in the face of the 11 interest rate hikes the Fed carried out in 2022 and 2023 to fight the worst bout of inflation in four decades. Since peaking at 9.1% in mid-2022, annual inflation as measured by the consumer price index has tumbled to 2.5%.

    Despite the surge in borrowing rates, the economy kept growing and employers kept hiring. Still, the job market has shown signs of weakness in recent months. From June through August, America’s employers added an average of just 116,000 jobs a month, the lowest three-month average since mid-2020, when the COVID pandemic had paralyzed the economy. The unemployment rate has ticked up from a half-century low 3.4% last year to 4.2%, still relatively low.

    Last week, responding to the steady drop in inflation and growing evidence of a more sluggish job market, the Fed cut its benchmark interest rate by an unusually large half-point. The rate cut, the Fed’s first in more than four years, reflected its new focus on shoring up the job market now that inflation has largely been tamed.

    “The economy is in pretty good shape,’’ Bill Adams, chief economist at Comerica Bank, wrote in a commentary.

    “After a big rate cut in September and considerable further cuts expected by early 2025, interest-rate-sensitive sectors like housing, manufacturing, auto sales, and retailing of other big-ticket consumer goods should pick up over the next year. Lower rates will fuel a recovery of job growth and likely stabilize the unemployment rate around its current level in 2025.’’

    Several barometers of the economy still look healthy. Americans last month increased their spending at retailers, for example, suggesting that consumers are still able and willing to spend more despite the cumulative impact of three years of excess inflation and high borrowing rates. The nation’s industrial production rebounded. The pace of single-family home construction rose sharply from the pace a year earlier.

    And this month, consumer sentiment rose for a third straight month, according to preliminary figures from the University of Michigan. The brighter outlook was driven by “more favorable prices as perceived by consumers” for cars, appliances, furniture and other long-lasting goods.

    A category within GDP that measures the economy’s underlying strength rose at a solid 2.7% annual rate, though that was down from 2.9% in the first quarter. This category includes consumer spending and private investment but excludes volatile items like exports, inventories and government spending.

    Though the Fed now believes inflation is largely defeated, many Americans remain upset with still-high prices for groceries, gas, rent and other necessities. Former President Donald Trump blames the Biden-Harris administration for sparking an inflationary surge. Vice President Kamala Harris, in turn, has charged that Trump’s promise to slap tariffs on all imports would raise prices for consumers even further.

    On Thursday, the Commerce Department also issued revisions to previous GDP estimates. From 2018 through 2023, growth was mostly higher — an average annual rate of 2.3%, up from a previously reported 2.1% — largely because of upward revisions to consumer spending. The revisions showed that GDP grew 2.9% last year, up from the 2.5% previously reported.

    Thursday’s report was the government’s third and final estimate of GDP growth for the April-June quarter. It will release its initial estimate of July-September GDP growth on Oct. 30. A forecasting tool from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta projects that the economy will have expanded at a 2.9% annual pace from July through September.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • California governor signs law banning plastic shopping bags at grocery stores

    California governor signs law banning plastic shopping bags at grocery stores

    [ad_1]

    “Paper or plastic” will no longer be a choice at grocery store checkout lines in California under a new law signed Sunday by Gov. Gavin Newsom that bans all plastic shopping bags.


    What You Need To Know

    • “Paper or plastic” will no longer be a choice at grocery store checkout lines in California under a new law signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom
    • California had already banned thin plastic shopping bags at supermarkets and other stores, but shoppers can purchase bags made with thicker plastic that purportedly makes them reusable and recyclable
    • The new measure was approved by state legislators last month and signed Sunday by the governor. It bans all plastic shopping bags starting in 2026
    • Consumers will now simply be asked if they want a paper bag


    California had already banned thin plastic shopping bags at supermarkets and other stores, but shoppers could purchase bags made with a thicker plastic that purportedly made them reusable and recyclable.

    The new measure, approved by state legislators last month, bans all plastic shopping bags starting in 2026. Consumers who don’t bring their own bags will now simply be asked if they want a paper bag.

    State Sen. Catherine Blakespear, one of the bill’s supporters, said people were not reusing or recycling any plastic bags. She pointed to a state study that found that the amount of plastic shopping bags trashed per person grew from 8 pounds (3.6 kilograms) per year in 2004 to 11 pounds (5 kilograms) per year in 2021.

    Blakespear, a Democrat from Encinitas, said the previous bag ban passed a decade ago didn’t reduce the overall use of plastic.

    “We are literally choking our planet with plastic waste,” she said in February.

    The environmental nonprofit Oceana applauded Newsom for signing the bill and “safeguarding California’s coastline, marine life, and communities from single-use plastic grocery bags.”

    Christy Leavitt, Oceana’s plastics campaign director, said Sunday that the new ban on single-use plastic bags at grocery store checkouts “solidifies California as a leader in tackling the global plastic pollution crisis.”

    Twelve states, including California, already have some type of statewide plastic bag ban in place, according to the environmental advocacy group Environment America Research & Policy Center. Hundreds of cities across 28 states also have their own plastic bag bans in place.

    The California Legislature passed its statewide ban on plastic bags in 2014. The law was later affirmed by voters in a 2016 referendum.

    The California Public Interest Research Group said Sunday that the new law finally meets the intent of the original bag ban.

    “Plastic bags create pollution in our environment and break into microplastics that contaminate our drinking water and threaten our health,” said the group’s director Jenn Engstrom. “Californians voted to ban plastic grocery bags in our state almost a decade ago, but the law clearly needed a redo. With the Governor’s signature, California has finally banned plastic bags in grocery checkout lanes once and for all.”

    As San Francisco’s mayor in 2007, Newsom signed the nation’s first plastic bag ban.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • FBI finds violent crime dropped nationwide last year

    FBI finds violent crime dropped nationwide last year

    [ad_1]

    Violent crime in the U.S. dropped in 2023, according to FBI statistics that show a continued trend downward after a coronavirus pandemic-era crime spike.

    Overall violent crime declined an estimated 3% in 2023 from the year before, according to the FBI report Monday. Murders and non-negligent manslaughter dropped nearly 12%.


    What You Need To Know

    • Violent crime in the US dropped again in 2023, according to FBI statistics that show a continued trend downward after a coronavirus pandemic-era crime spike
    • The report released Monday shows overall violent crime ticked down an estimated 3% in 2023 from the year before
    • Murders and non-negligent manslaughter dropped nearly 12%
    • Violent crime has become a talking point on the campaign trail


    Violent crime has become a focal point in the 2024 presidential race, with former President Donald Trump recently claiming that crime is “through the roof” under President Joe Biden’s administration. Even with the 2020 pandemic surge, violent crime is down dramatically from the 1990s.

    Here’s what to know about the FBI’s report and the state of crime in the U.S.:

    The numbers

    Crime surged during the coronavirus pandemic, with homicides increasing nearly 30% in 2020 over the previous year — the largest one-year jump since the FBI began keeping records. The rise defied easy explanation, though experts said possible contributors included the massive disruption of the pandemic, gun violence, worries about the economy and intense stress.

    Violent crime across the U.S. dipped to near pre-pandemic levels in 2022, according to the FBI’s data. It continued to tick down last year, with the rate falling from about 377 violent crimes per 100,000 people to in 2022 to about 364 per 100,000 people in 2023. That’s just slightly higher than the 2019 rate, according to Deputy Assistant Director Brian Griffith of the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services Division.

    “Are we looking at crime rates at a return to pre-pandemic levels? I think a reasonable person would look at that and say, ‘Yes, that’s what has happened,’” Griffith said in an interview with The Associated Press.

    Law enforcement agencies in the biggest municipalities in the U.S. — communities with at least 1,000,000 people — showed the biggest drop in violent crime last year — nearly 7%. Agencies in communities between 250,000 and 499,999 people reported a slight increase — 0.3%— between 2022 and 2023.

    Rapes decreased more than 9% while aggravated assault decreased nearly 3%. Overall property crime decreased more than 2%, but motor vehicle theft shot up nearly 13%. The motor vehicle theft rate — nearly 319 per 100,000 people — was the highest last year since 2007.

    The limitations of the FBI’s data

    The FBI collects data through its Uniform Crime Reporting Program, and not all law enforcement agencies in the U.S. participate. The 2023 report is based on data from more than 16,000 agencies, or more than 85 percent of those agencies in the FBI’s program. The agencies included in the report protect nearly 316 million people across the U.S. And every agency with at least 1 million people in its jurisdiction provided a full year of data to the FBI, according to the report.

    “What you’re not seeing in that number are a lot of very small agencies,” Griffith said.

    Other crime reports

    The FBI’s report is in line with the findings of the nonpartisan Council on Criminal Justice, which earlier this year analyzed crimes rates across 39 U.S cities, and found that most violent crimes are at or below 2019 levels. That group found there were 13 percent fewer homicides across 29 cities that provided data during the first half of 2024 compared the same period the year before.

    On the campaign trail, Trump has cited another recent Justice Department survey to suggest the crime is out of control under the Biden administration.

    The National Crime Victimization Survey, released earlier this month, shows that the violent crime victimization rate rose from about 16 per 1,000 people in 2020 to 22.5 in 2023. But the report notes that the rate last year was not statistically different from the rate in 2019 — when Trump was president. And the rate has declined dramatically overall since the 1990s.

    The FBI’s report and the National Crime Victimization Survey use different methodologies and capture different things.

    The victimization survey is conducted every year through interviews with about 240,000 people to determine whether they were victims of crimes. While the FBI’s data only includes crimes reported to police, the victimization survey also aims to capture crimes that were not.

    Because it’s done through interviews with victims, the victimization survey doesn’t include data on murders. And it only captures crimes against people ages 12 and over.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Target plans to hire 100,000 seasonal holiday workers

    Target plans to hire 100,000 seasonal holiday workers

    [ad_1]

    In anticipation of this year’s holiday shopping season, Target announced Monday it plans to hire 100,000 seasonal workers this year. It’s roughly the same number the Minneapolis-based retail giant has hired for the holidays for the past three years, even as many companies brace themselves for an uncertain shopping season with price-wary customers.


    What You Need To Know

    • In anticipation of this year’s holiday shopping season, Target announced Monday it plans to hire 100,000 seasonal workers this year
    • It’s roughly the same number of seasonal workers the Minneapolis-based retail giant has hired for the holidays for the past three years
    • Slightly less than 47% of shoppers in a Salesforce Shopping Index analysis say they plan to buy about the same amount this year as they did in 2023; 40% say they plan to buy less
    • Salesforce anticipates sales this November and December to increase 2% compared with 2023, when shoppers increased their holiday spending 3% over the previous year


    Slightly less than 47% of shoppers in a Salesforce Shopping Index analysis say they plan to buy about the same amount this year as they did in 2023; 40% say they plan to buy less. 

    Salesforce anticipates sales this November and December to increase 2% compared with 2023, when shoppers increased their holiday spending 3% over the previous year. 

    According to the 2024 Snagajob Holiday Hiring Report, most seasonal workers are looking to put in 30 to 39 hours weekly as a way to supplement their incomes as households continue to struggle with inflation. 

    Since February 2020, just prior to the COVID pandemic, consumer prices have risen 21.2%, according to a Bankrate analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data. 

    With many consumers feeling the pinch of inflation, they are seeking seasonal work to help make ends meet. In 2024, the majority of seasonal work job seekers (54%) are looking for a holiday job for the first time this year, according to Snagajob.

    September is when holiday hiring hits its peak, in anticipation of holiday shopping kicking into high gear over the Thanksgiving holiday. About 40% of seasonal workers will be members of Generation Z, the oldest of whom are 27; 25% will be Generation X, who are currently between the ages of 44 and 59.

    Retail tops the list of industries for seasonal work this year, followed by restaurants, hotels, call centers and entertainment. Cashier is the top role employers are hoping to fill, followed by customer service, catering, curbside pickup and event staff. 

    Target’s seasonal hires will help with order pickups and stocking products and will also work at its supply chain facilities.

    Holiday hiring season is kicking into gear just as various new reports show U.S. job growth is slowing. In August, nonfarm payment employment increased by 142,000. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.2%, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    [ad_2]

    Susan Carpenter

    Source link

  • Falling mortgage rates, more inventory shift housing market to buyers

    Falling mortgage rates, more inventory shift housing market to buyers

    [ad_1]

    The home-buying season is extending into the fall, as mortgage rates fall and sellers cut prices, according to a new analysis from the real estate website Zillow. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The home-buying season is extending into the fall, as mortgage rates fall and sellers cut prices, according to a new analysis from the real estate website Zillow
    • The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate is currently 6.11% — down 0.11% from a day earlier and the lowest rate since February 2023
    • Zillow said mortgage rate declines have decreased monthly payments by more than $100 nationwide
    • About 1.18 million homes are currently on the market — more than any month since September 2020


    “Late summer may be an opportunity for buyers who have been waiting in the wings for a monthly mortgage payment they can qualify for,” Zillow Chief Economist Skylar Olsen said in a statement. 

    She said home buyers have more options because lower mortgage rates are making it easier for them to qualify for loans. More inventory is also becoming available, improving their negotiating power.

    The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate is currently 6.11% — down 0.11% from a day earlier and the lowest rate since February 2023. The average 15-year mortgage rate is currently 5.62%.

    Mortgage rates had been climbing since the Federal Reserve began increasing its benchmark rate in March 2022. It peaked last October at 7.79% for a fixed 30-year.

    Zillow said the mortgage rate declines have decreased monthly payments by more than $100 nationwide.

    Other factors are also shifting the housing market toward buyers, after two years favoring sellers.

    Zillow said homes took longer to sell in August than in July but are still selling faster than before the pandemic. About 1.18 million homes are currently on the market — more than any month since September 2020.

    With the Federal Reserve expected to cut rates next week, Zillow anticipates competition among homebuyers increasing this fall.

    [ad_2]

    Susan Carpenter

    Source link

  • Americans’ inflation-adjusted incomes rebounded to pre-pandemic levels last year

    Americans’ inflation-adjusted incomes rebounded to pre-pandemic levels last year

    [ad_1]

    The inflation-adjusted median income of U.S. households rebounded last year to roughly its 2019 level, overcoming the biggest price spike in four decades to restore most Americans’ purchasing power.


    What You Need To Know

    • The inflation-adjusted median income of U.S. households rebounded last year to roughly its 2019 level, overcoming the biggest price spike in four decades to restore most Americans’ purchasing power
    • The proportion of Americans living in poverty also fell slightly last year, to 11.1%, from 11.5% in 2022
    • And the ratio of women’s median earnings to men’s widened for the first time in more than two decades as men’s income rose more than women’s in 2023
    • The latest data came Tuesday in an annual report from the Census Bureau, which said the median household income, adjusted for inflation, rose 4% to $80,610 in 2023, up from $77,450 in 2022


    The proportion of Americans living in poverty also fell slightly last year, to 11.1%, from 11.5% in 2022. But the ratio of women’s median earnings to men’s widened for the first time in more than two decades as men’s income rose more than women’s in 2023.

    The latest data came Tuesday in an annual report from the Census Bureau, which said the median household income, adjusted for inflation, rose 4% to $80,610 in 2023, up from $77,450 in 2022. It was the first increase since 2019, and is essentially unchanged from that year’s figure of $81,210, officials said. (The median income figure is the point at which half the population is above and half below and is less distorted by extreme incomes than the average.)

    “We are back to that pre-COVID peak that we experienced,” said Liana Fox, assistant division chief in the Social, Economic and Housing Statistics Division at the Census Bureau.

    The figures could become a talking point in the presidential campaign if Vice President Kamala Harris were to point to them as evidence that Americans’ financial health has largely recovered after inflation peaked at 9.1% in 2022. Former President Donald Trump might counter that household income grew faster in his first three years in office than in the first three years of the Biden-Harris administration, though income fell during his administration after the pandemic struck in 2020.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Study: Most states lag in EV charger infrastructure

    Study: Most states lag in EV charger infrastructure

    [ad_1]

    Electric vehicle adoption has long been a chicken-and-egg problem. Buyers say they’re concerned about finding places to recharge, while local, state and federal governments are investing millions to build out charging networks. Still, the number of chargers remains largely insufficient.

    Only a handful of states have the ideal ratio of chargers to EVs, according to a new study from the location data firm HERE Technologies and the global auto research firm SBD Automotive.


    What You Need To Know

    • Only a handful of states have the ideal ratio of chargers to EVs, according to a new study from the location data firm HERE Technologies and the global auto research firm SBD Automotive
    • The report found that eight to 12 EVs per public charging point is the ideal ratio for most areas to make charging easy and seamless
    • Only Washington, D.C.; Connecticut; and Vermont have the ideal EV-to-charger ratio
    • California, which has almost 1 million registered EVs and one of the most developed charging networks in the country with more than  46,000 chargers, ranks 10th among the states, having nearly 20 EVs for every one charger


    For its index, researchers looked at how far a person must drive to find a charger and how quickly the charge happens once there. It also looked at the ratio of EVs on the road compared with gas-powered vehicles, as well as the likelihood of finding an EV charger that is available when it’s needed.

    The report found that eight to 12 EVs per public charging point is the ideal ratio for most areas to make charging easy and seamless. By those criteria, only Washington, D.C.; Connecticut; and Vermont have enough charging infrastructure.

    California, which has nearly 1 million registered EVs and one of the most developed charging networks in the country with more than 46,000 chargers, ranks 10th among the states, having nearly 20 EVs for every one charger.

    Alaska ranks last, followed by Arkansas, Idaho, Tennessee, Nebraska and Texas.

    “While the maturity of charging infrastructure in each state generally follows population density and wealth, the index clearly demonstrates that external factors such as government incentives help equip lower-density areas with much-needed charging capacity,” SBD Automotive EV Principal Robert Fisher said in a statement.

    “Charge point operators and regulators must continue to monitor the ratio of EVs to charging stations and power availability to the size of the EV fleet in communities and along corridors to ensure a seamless ownership experience as EVs go mainstream,” he continued.

    EVs currently make up 8% of auto sales, according to Kelley Blue Book. The Biden-Harris administration has set a goal to make half of all new vehicle sales in the U.S. zero emissions by 2030 and to build 500,000 chargers to make EVs accessible.

    According to the U.S. Department of Energy, the number of electric vehicle charging ports in the country almost doubled over the past three years to 192,000. The agency said about 1,000 new chargers are being built every week.

    The Pew Research Center says 60% of urban Americans live within a mile of a public charging station, compared with 41% of people who live in the suburbs and 17% of people who live in rural areas. 

    [ad_2]

    Susan Carpenter

    Source link

  • Circle K offers 40 cents off per gallon of gas on Thursday

    Circle K offers 40 cents off per gallon of gas on Thursday

    [ad_1]

    Heading into the Labor Day weekend, Circle K will offer up to 40 cents off each gallon of gas at participating locations.

    The deal is available at more than 200 locations in California, Oregon and Washington from 4 to 7 p.m. local time on Thursday.


    What You Need To Know

    • Circle K is offering up to 40 cents off per gallon of gas on Thursday from 4 to 7 p.m. local time
    • The deal is good at more than 200 participating locations
    • The participating stations are in California, Oregon and Washington 
    • The price on the pump reflects the discounted price during that time


    “With summer coming to an end, we want to help our customers squeeze every last drop of adventure with a Fuel Day Pop-Up Event just in time for Labor Day weekend,” Circle K West Coast Vice President of Operations George Wilkins said in a statement.

    The American Automobile Association expects domestic travel this week to be up 9% compared with last year. Nationally, gas prices are averaging about $3.50 per gallon. The current average in California is $4.61.

    [ad_2]

    Susan Carpenter

    Source link

  • Walmart recalls Great Value apple juice for arsenic

    Walmart recalls Great Value apple juice for arsenic

    [ad_1]

    Walmart is recalling more than 9,500 cases of apple juice for elevated levels of inorganic arsenic, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 

    The FDA said the affected product could cause some health effects, but it’s unlikely to cause serious illness. Short-term exposure to inorganic arsenic can cause some symptoms, such as nausea, vomiting, bruising and numbness or burning sensations in the hands and feet, according to the FDA. Arsenic is present in places where food can be grown, so the FDA monitors arsenic levels in case they are above the normal standard. 

    The recall is for the Great Value brand 8-ounce, six-pack apple juice, which is packaged in PET plastic bottles with UPC 0-78742-29655-5.

    The affected packages of apple juice were sold in several states, including Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Maryland, Maine, Michigan, Mississippi, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Vermont, West Virginia and Washington, D.C.

    It was also sold in Puerto Rico, the FDA said. 

     

    [ad_2]

    Lydia Taylor

    Source link

  • A bird flu outbreak is spreading among cows

    A bird flu outbreak is spreading among cows

    [ad_1]

    AMES, Iowa (AP) — At first glance, it looks like an unassuming farm. Cows are scattered across fenced-in fields. A milking barn sits in the distance with a tractor parked alongside.

    But the people who work there are not farmers, and other buildings look more like what you’d find at a modern university than in a cow pasture.


    What You Need To Know

    •  The National Animal Disease Center in Ames, Iowa is working to develop a bird flu vaccine for cows
    •  The center became involved after bird flu was detected in cows last spring
    •  Scientists are working to understand the cause of the illness


    Welcome to the National Animal Disease Center, a government research facility in Iowa where 43 scientists work with pigs, cows and other animals, pushing to solve the bird flu outbreak currently spreading through U.S. animals — and develop ways to stop it.

    Particularly important is the testing of a cow vaccine designed to stop the continued spread of the virus — thereby, hopefully, reducing the risk that it will someday become a widespread disease in people.

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture facility opened in 1961 in Ames, a college town about 45 minutes north of Des Moines. The center is located on a pastoral, 523-acre (212-hectare) site a couple of miles east of Ames’ low-slung downtown.

    It’s a quiet place with a rich history. Through the years, researchers there developed vaccines against various diseases that endanger pigs and cattle, including hog cholera and brucellosis. And work there during the H1N1 flu pandemic in 2009 — known at the time as “swine flu” — proved the virus was confined to the respiratory tract of pigs and that pork was safe to eat.

    The center has the unusual resources and experience to do that kind of work, said Richard Webby, a prominent flu researcher at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis.

    “That’s not a capacity that many places in the U.S. have,” said Webby, who has been collaborating with the Ames facility on the cow vaccine work.

    The campus has 93 buildings, including a high-containment laboratory building whose exterior is reminiscent of a modern mega-church but inside features a series of compartmentalized corridors and rooms, some containing infected animals. That’s where scientists work with more dangerous germs, including the H5N1 bird flu. There’s also a building with three floors of offices that houses animal disease researchers as well as a testing center that is a “for animals” version of the CDC labs in Atlanta that identify rare (and sometimes scary) new human infections.

    About 660 people work at the campus — roughly a third of them assigned to the animal disease center, which has a $38 million annual budget. They were already busy with a wide range of projects but grew even busier this year after the H5N1 bird flu unexpectedly jumped into U.S. dairy cows.

    “It’s just amazing how people just dig down and make it work,” said Mark Ackermann, the center’s director.

    The virus was first identified in 1959 and grew into a widespread and highly lethal menace to migratory birds and domesticated poultry. Meanwhile, the virus evolved, and in the past few years has been detected in a growing number of animals ranging from dogs and cats to sea lions and polar bears.

    Despite the spread in different animals, scientists were still surprised this year when infections were suddenly detected in cows — specifically, in the udders and milk of dairy cows. It’s not unusual for bacteria to cause udder infections, but a flu virus?

    “Typically we think of influenza as being a respiratory disease,” said Kaitlyn Sarlo Davila, a researcher at the Ames facility.

    Much of the research on the disease has been conducted at a USDA poultry research center in Athens, Georgia, but the appearance of the virus in cows pulled the Ames center into the mix.

    Amy Baker, a researcher who has won awards for her research on flu in pigs, is now testing a vaccine for cows. Preliminary results are expected soon, she said.

    USDA spokesperson Shilo Weir called the work promising but early in development. There is not yet an approved bird flu vaccine being used at U.S. poultry farms, and Weir said that while poultry vaccines are being pursued, any such strategy would be challenging and would not be guaranteed to eliminate the virus.

    Baker and other researchers also have been working on studies in which they try to see how the virus spreads between cows. That work is going on in the high-containment building, where scientists and animal caretakers don specialized respirators and other protective equipment.

    The research exposed four yearling heifers to a virus-carrying mist and then squirted the virus into the teats and udders of two lactating cows. The first four cows got infected but had few symptoms. The second two got sicker — suffering diminished appetite, a drop in milk production and producing thick, yellowish milk.

    The conclusion that the virus mainly spread through exposure to milk containing high levels of the virus — which could then spread through shared milking equipment or other means — was consistent with what health investigators understood to be going on. But it was important to do the work because it has sometimes been difficult to get complete information from dairy farms, Webby said.

    “At best, we had some good hunches about how the virus was circulating, but we didn’t really know,” he added.

    USDA scientists are doing additional work, checking the blood of calves that drank raw milk for signs of infection.

    A study conducted by the Iowa center and several universities concluded that the virus was likely circulating for months before it was officially reported in Texas in March.

    The study also noted a new and rare combination of genes in the bird flu virus that spilled over into the cows, and researchers are sorting out whether that enabled it to spread to cows, or among cows, said Tavis Anderson, who helped lead the work.

    Either way, the researchers in Ames expect to be busy for years.

    “Do they (cows) have their own unique influenzas? Can it go from a cow back into wild birds? Can it go from a cow into a human? Cow into a pig?” Anderson added. “Understanding those dynamics, I think, is the outstanding research question — or one of them.”

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Bulked-up Big Ten and SEC set to dominate college football on and off the field

    Bulked-up Big Ten and SEC set to dominate college football on and off the field

    [ad_1]

    Faced with the prospect of dealing a potentially fatal blow to a conference it helped start more than 100 years ago, Oregon decided to leave the Pac-12 to join the Big Ten even though that meant taking half the annual revenue payout established members receive for several years.

    The Ducks really had no choice.

    In the new era of college football, there are three categories: Those who are in the Big Ten or the Southeastern Conference; those pondering how to get into the Big Ten or SEC; and those wondering if they are in danger of being left behind by the Big Ten and SEC.


    What You Need To Know

    • The days of the Power Five are over; now, it’s a Super Two
    • Three years of tumultuous and destructive conference realignment spawned the superconference era and there are none more powerful than the Big Ten and SEC — on the field and off
    • The 18-team Big Ten now stretches from coast to coast, with the additions of USC, UCLA, Oregon and Washington, and features four of the top 10 teams in the preseason Associated Press Top 25 college football poll, including defending national champion and No. 9 Michigan
    • The SEC welcomes former Big 12 powers Texas and Oklahoma, adding two schools with a combined 11 football national championships to a conference that has won 13 titles since 2006

    The days of the Power Five are over. Now, it’s a Super Two.

    Whether this is good for the overall health of major college athletics is uncertain. But for now, at a time when college sports has never been more volatile, the Big Ten and SEC are wealthy bastions of stability.

    “An incredibly strong conference, amazing TV deals, incredible partner, certainly exciting times to be part of the Big Ten,” Oregon athletic director Rob Mullens said recently on the Navigating Sports Business podcast. “So lots of excitement from our student-athletes, our coaches. Our fans are thrilled.”

    Superconferences

    Three years of tumultuous and destructive conference realignment spawned the superconference era, and there are none more powerful than the Big Ten and SEC — on the field and off.

    The 18-team Big Ten now stretches from coast to coast, with the additions of USC, UCLA, Oregon and Washington, and features four of the top 10 teams in the preseason Associated Press Top 25 college football poll, including defending national champion and No. 9 Michigan.

    The SEC welcomes former Big 12 powers Texas and Oklahoma, adding two schools with a combined 11 football national championships to a conference that has won 13 titles since 2006. Four of the top six teams in the country right now are in the SEC, including No. 1 Georgia, one of nine SEC teams overall in the Top 25.

    The consolidation of more of college football’s biggest brands and traditional powers took the Pac-12 out of the picture and trimmed the Power Five to four.

    “I’m not sure that that’s what’s best for the health of college football nationally,” said former Fox Sports executive Bob Thompson. “Now, as a TV guy, if I’m going to pay increasing dollars, I’m going to want better match ups.”

    TV dollars

    As new mega media-rights deals kick in this season for the Big Ten and SEC, the revenue gap between the ACC and Big 12 will continue to grow. Those conferences have all but conceded that the competition — at least when it comes to comparing bank accounts — is for No. 3.

    On the field, the SEC is unmatched. At the bank, the Big Ten actually has a slight edge. According to tax filings released in May, the Big Ten reported revenue of $879.9 million compared with $852.6 million for the SEC.

    The ACC was a distant third even though it jumped from $617 million in 2021-22 to $707 million in 2022-23.

    The Pac-12, which saw 10 of its 12 members disperse to other conferences this summer, generated $603.9 million. The Big 12 was fifth at $510.7 million.

    The Super Two also threw their weight around in the latest negotiations for the newly expanded College Football Playoff. In the previous deal, the Power Five conferences took home about the same share of revenue from the CFP deal with ESPN.

    The new CFP contract with ESPN is worth $7.8 billion through the 2031 season and the Big Ten and SEC will split close to 60% of the revenue yearly — about $21 million per school while Big 12 and ACC schools take home $12 million to $13 million per year.

    SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey and Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti also created an advisory committee earlier this year where two conferences can work together — and without the ACC and Big 12 — on issues facing college sports. Only the Big Ten is truly in position to push back on the SEC — and vice versa — when it comes to shaping the future of college sports.

    “There’s going to be checks and balances between those two because they need each other,” former Big 12 Commissioner Dan Beebe said.

    Unrest

    As the separation grows, it creates instability in the other conferences.

    Florida State and Clemson have sued the ACC with an eye toward an affordable exit. FSU officials have cited the prospect of trying to keep up with Big Ten and SEC competitors with conference revenues that put the school at a $40 million per year disadvantage.

    There appears to be peace and alignment in the Big 12, which adds Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado and Utah this year, but for how long?

    “If Utah had a chance to go to the Big Ten tomorrow they would take it,” Beebe said. “And probably every other school in conferences that are making half as much money because it’s become about money — and they’re going to have payments to make to players.”

    As part of a $2.8 billion settlement of antitrusts lawsuits facing the NCAA and power conferences, the leagues have agreed to a revenue-sharing plan that would allow schools to direct about $21 million per year to athletes. The plan could be implemented as soon as next year if the settlement is approved quickly enough by a judge.

    What’s next?

    Tensions that caused unrest in the Big 12 for years, that led to the Pac-12’s break up and are currently creating angst in the ACC seem likely to find their way to the the Big Ten and SEC.

    “Those that have all the gold make all the rules, right? So if I was a member of the Big Ten or SEC, I’d start looking over my shoulder and wondering: When is the day going to come when the top of the SEC is not going to want the bottom of the SEC?” Iowa State athletic director Jamie Pollard told reporters in May.

    Thompson said he could see that day coming when the this round of TV contracts comes to an end in the early 2030s.

    Instead of more expansion, think Super League, where the upper crust of the SEC and Big Ten — Ohio State, Michigan, Penn State, Alabama, Georgia, LSU, etc. — are lured away from those conferences into a new entity that delivers nothing but the most desirable made-for-TV matchups.

    “Unless you could somehow find a way to invent more days of the week, you don’t need any more Big Ten or SEC games. You need better Big Ten and SEC games,” Thompson said.

    For now, though, welcome to Year 1 of the Super Two.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Powell: ‘The time has come’ for the Fed to cut interest rates

    Powell: ‘The time has come’ for the Fed to cut interest rates

    [ad_1]

    Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell said in a highly anticipated speech on Friday that “the time has come” for the central bank to cut interest rates amid a cooling job market and dramatically lowered inflation.


    What You Need To Know

    • Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell said in a highly anticipated speech on Friday that “the time has come” for the central bank to cut interest rates
    • He did not give a timeline for when cuts would begin
    • Experts expect at least a quarter-point cut to be announced at the Fed’s mid-September meeting
    • Importantly, his comments signaled that he believes that the inflation that has ravaged American families over the last four years is largely under control and continuing to fall



    “The time has come for policy to adjust,” Powell said at the Federal Reserve’s annual economic conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. “The direction of travel is clear, and the timing and pace of rate cuts will depend on incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks.”

    “The labor market is no longer overheated, and conditions are now less tight than those that prevailed before the pandemic,” Powell said.

    He did not give a timeline for when cuts would begin. Experts expect at least a quarter-point cut to be announced at the Fed’s mid-September meeting.

    But importantly, his comments signaled that he believes that the inflation that has ravaged American families over the last four years is largely under control and continuing to fall.

    “My confidence has grown that inflation is on a sustainable path back to 2%,” he added. “

    The Fed chair also said that rate cuts should maintain the economy’s growth and sustain hiring, which slowed last month. Continued growth could boost Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign, even as most Americans say they are dissatisfied with the Biden-Harris administration’s economic record, largely because average prices remain far above where they were before the pandemic.

    “We will do everything we can,” Powell said, “to support a strong labor market as we make further progress toward price stability.”

    By cutting rates, he said, “there is good reason to think that the economy will get back to 2% inflation while maintaining a strong labor market.”

    In what amounted to a claim of victory, Powell noted in his speech Friday that the Fed had succeeded in conquering high inflation without causing a recession or a sharp rise in the unemployment rate, which many economists had long predicted.

    The Fed chair attributed that outcome to the unraveling of the pandemic’s disruptions to supply chains and labor markets, and a reduction in job vacancies, which allowed wage growth to cool.

    After the government reported this month that hiring in July was much less than expected and that the jobless rate reached 4.3%, the highest in three years, stock prices plunged for two days on fears that the U.S. might fall into a recession. Some economists began speculating about a half-point Fed rate cut in September and perhaps another identical cut in November.

    But healthier economic reports last week, including another decline in inflation and a robust gain in retail sales, partly dispelled those concerns. Wall Street traders now expect the Fed to cut its benchmark rate by a quarter-point in both September and November and by a half-point in December. Mortgage rates have already started to decline in anticipation of rate reductions.

    A half-point Fed rate cut in September would become more likely if there were signs of a further slowdown in hiring, some officials have said.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Spectrum News Staff

    Source link

  • Children and adolescents experience long COVID differently than adults

    Children and adolescents experience long COVID differently than adults

    [ad_1]

    Children and adolescents with long COVID experience different effects than adults, according to new research from the National Institutes of Health released Thursday.

    School-age children from 6 to 11 years old who had prolonged symptoms after an initial COVID infection were more likely to experience headaches, while adolescents reported more feelings of daytime sleepiness.


    What You Need To Know

    • School-age children from 6 to 11 years old who had prolonged symptoms after an initial COVID infection were more likely to experience headaches
    • Adolescents with long COVID reported more feelings of daytime sleepiness, according to new research from the National Institutes of Health
    • Long COVID, or persistent health problems after an initial infection, manifest in multiple ways and can last for weeks, months or years
    • The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Household Pulse Survey found that 6.7% of U.S. adults were experiencing long COVID as of March


    “Most research characterizing long COVID symptoms is focused on adults, which can lead to the misperception that long COVID in children is rare or that their symptoms are like those of adults,” NIH National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Division Director David Goff said in a statement. “Because the symptoms can vary from child to child or present in different patterns, without a proper characterization of symptoms across the life span, it’s difficult to know how to optimize care for affected children and adolescents.”

    Long COVID, or persistent health problems after an initial infection, manifest in multiple ways and can last for weeks, months or years. Affecting people of all ages from children to older adults, as well as people from different races and ethnicities, sexes and genders and with different health statuses, it is a “complex, multisystem disorder that affects nearly every organ system, including the cardiovascular system, the nervous system, the endocrine system, the immune system, the reproductive system and the gastrointestinal system,” according to the World Health Organization.

    The NIH study found that children aged 6 to 11 with long COVID were most likely to experience headaches (57%), trouble with memory or focusing (44%), trouble sleeping (44%) and stomach pain (43%). In adolescents, the most common symptoms were daytime tiredness/sleepiness or low energy (80%); body, muscle or joint pain (60%); headaches (55%) and trouble with memory or focusing (47%). 

    For its study, the NIH surveyed 3,860 children and adolescents infected with COVID between March 2022 and December 2023 and compared them with 1,516 children and adolescents who did not have a history of COVID infection. All participants were surveyved about symptoms they experienced for at least a month 90 days after getting COVID.

    In adults, the most common types of long COVID are brain fog, fatigue, tachycadia and post-exertional malaise, according to research published in Nature Medicine earlier this month. That study found the risk of long COVID varies by variant. Omicron, first detected in November 2021, had less long COVID risk than the Delta and pre-Delta variants that were most prevalent globally between June and November 2021. 

    People who were vaccinated before becoming infected or who took antivirals while they were infected had a lower risk of long COVID, according to the Nature Medicine study. People who were reinfected with COVID, however, were more at risk. Cumulatively, two infections created a higher risk of long COVID than one infection and three infections created a higher risk than two infections. Reinfections can make existing long COVID symptoms worse.

    About 400 million people globally have had long COVID, the World Health Organization said earlier this month. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Household Pulse Survey found that 6.7% of U.S. adults were experiencing long COVID as of March.

    [ad_2]

    Susan Carpenter

    Source link

  • U.S. created 818,000 fewer jobs than initially reported

    U.S. created 818,000 fewer jobs than initially reported

    [ad_1]

    The U.S. economy made fewer job gains than initially reported between March 2023 and 2024. On Wednesday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ annual revision said 818,000 fewer jobs had been created over the previous year — a 0.5% decrease from what the Labor Department had initially reported.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Bureau of Labor Statistics’ annual revision said 818,000 fewer jobs had been created between March 2023 and March 2024
    • The revision marks a 0.5% decrease
    • The downward revision comes as Vice President Kamala Harris makes job creation a central tenet of her campaign
    • On Monday, President Biden said his administration had created 16 million jobs


    The revision comes two days before Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell is expected to give a speech signaling the Fed’s inclination to reduce interest rates at its September meeting. The bank began raising rates from almost zero in March 2022 to 5.5% in March 2023, where they have remained at a 23-year high.

    Many economists expect the Federal Reserve to begin cutting its benchmark interest rate next month.

    The downward revision in jobs numbers comes as Vice President Kamala Harris makes job creation one of the central tenets of her presidential campaign. On the opening night of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago this week, President Biden said he and Harris had created 16 million new jobs since taking office.

    Former President Donald Trump mentioned the downwardly revised job numbers at his speech in Michigan yesterday.

    “Nobody’s ever seen 600,000 to 1 million jobs less,” he said. “That’s a terrible insult to our economy because we were seeing numbers that were OK, not great, but when adjusted, they’re a disaster.”

    And Trump’s surrogates at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago agreed.

    “This is not a unique occurrence,” Brian Hughes, senior communications adviser to the Trump campaign, at a press conference on Wednesday, adding: “There have been frequent large-scale downard adjustments to the statistics touted by Harris and [President Joe] Biden as evidence of some sort of economic recovery or new job growth.”

    “It’s time to hold them accountable,” he added, accusing the administration of “inflating” the number and then “quietly” revising it downward.

    But Biden administration official Jared Bernstein, the chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, sought to emphasize that it’s unrelated to the nation’s jobs recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

    “The *preliminary* (it will change before it’s official) payroll benchmark revision doesn’t change the fact that this has been and remains a strong jobs recovery, powering real wage gains, solid consumer spending, and record small biz creation,” he wrote on social media.

    “Important: neither the preliminary nor final revision directly affect estimates of job growth in recent months – important to keep in mind when assessing today’s labor market,” Bernstein added.

    [ad_2]

    Susan Carpenter

    Source link

  • Pre-diabetes medication dramatically reduces risk of type 2 diabetes, study says

    Pre-diabetes medication dramatically reduces risk of type 2 diabetes, study says

    [ad_1]

    A new drug shows promising signs of reducing the risk of type 2 diabetes. Tirzepatide, better known by the brand names Zepbound and Mounjaro, reduced diabetes risk by 94% in adults who are overweight, obese or who have pre-diabetes, the pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly and Company said Tuesday.


    What You Need To Know

    • Tirzepatide, better known by the brand names Zepbound and Mounjaro, reduced diabetes risk by 94% in adults who are overweight, obese or who have pre-diabetes, the pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly and Company said Tuesday
    • A three year-study of patients who took the injectable medication once a week found patients who took a 15-milligram dose also lost an average of 22.9% of their body weight throughout the treatment period
    • Obesity is a chronic disease that puts nearly 900 million adults worldwide at an increased risk of other complications such as type 2 diabetes
    • A type of GLP-1 Agonist, tirzepatide is one of a growing class of drugs that improve blood sugar control and help reduce weight


    A three year-study of patients who took the injectable medication once a week found patients who took a 15-milligram dose also lost an average of 22.9% of their body weight throughout the treatment period.

    “Obesity is a chronic disease that puts nearly 900 million adults worldwide at an increased risk of other complications such as type 2 diabetes,” Lilly Senior Vice President of Product Development Jeff Emmick said in a statement.

    Tirzepatide works by regulating appetites and caloric intake. It also stimulates the secretion of insulin. A type of GLP-1 Agonist, tirzepatide is one of a growing class of drugs that improve blood sugar control and help reduce weight.

    Drugs including Trulicity, Ozempic and Rybelsus used to treat type 2 diabetes may also lead to weight loss.

    For its study, Lilly evaluated 1,032 adults with prediabetes or who were obese or overweight for 176 weeks of treatment. 

    During a 17-week follow-up period after treatment, patients who stopped using tirzepatide began to regain weight and had a slight increase in their progression to type 2 diabetes, the study found.

    [ad_2]

    Susan Carpenter

    Source link

  • U.S. consumer sentiment rises on Democratic optimism over Harris

    U.S. consumer sentiment rises on Democratic optimism over Harris

    [ad_1]

    A surge in optimism by Democrats over the prospects of Vice President Kamala Harris lifted U.S. consumer sentiment slightly this month.

    The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index edged up to 67.8 after coming in at 66.4 in July. Americans’ expectations for the future rose, while their assessment of current economic conditions sank slightly.


    What You Need To Know

    • A surge in optimism by Democrats over the prospects of Vice President Kamala Harris lifted U.S. consumer sentiment slightly this month
    • The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index edged up to 67.8 after coming in at 66.4 in July
    • Americans’ expectations for the future rose, while their assessment of current economic conditions sank slightly
    • Democrats’ sentiment rose, and Republicans’ fell


    The spirits of Democrats and political independents rose. Republicans’ sentiment fell. The survey found that 41% of consumers considered Harris the better candidate for the economy, versus the 38% who chose Republican nominee Donald Trump. Before President Joe Biden dropped out of the presidential race and gave way to Harris, Trump held an advantage on the issue.

    Joanne Hsu, the university’s director of consumer surveys, said she expects the index to bounce with changing poll results as the election nears. Consumers on both sides of the partisan divide say their economic outlook “depends on who’s going to win the election,” she said.

    The Michigan index has rebounded after bottoming out at 50 in June 2022 when inflation hit a four-decade high. But it remains well below healthy levels. Before COVID-19 hit the economy in early 2020 — causing a recession followed by an unexpectedly strong recovery that unleashed inflation — the Michigan index regularly registered in the 90s and occasionally crossed 100.

    “Consumers are still pretty glum overall by historical standards, but sentiment is on an improving trend,” said Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics.

    Economists watch measures of Americans’ spirits to gauge whether they’re in the mood to shop, important because their spending accounts for about 70% of U.S. economic activity.

    Since inflation struck more than three years ago, Americans have been feeling grumpy. As the November presidential election approaches, many blamed President Biden for higher prices.

    Despite their sour mood, American consumers have kept spending anyway. Largely because of that, the economy grew at a healthy 2.8% annual pace from April through June. Their spending has continued into the current quarter: The Commerce Department reported Thursday that retail sales climbed 1% from June to July, biggest jump since January 2023 on strong sales at electronics shops, supermarkets and auto dealerships.

    The Federal Reserve responded to inflation’s resurgence by raising its benchmark interest rate 11 times in 2022 and 2023, lifting it to a 23-year high. Inflation has cooled markedly since peaking at 9.1% in June 2022. By last month, it was down to 2.9%, edging closer to the Fed’s 2% target.

    The central bank is now widely expected to begin cutting rates at its next meeting in September.

    The Michigan survey shows that consumers’ expectations for future inflation have come down — though Americans remain frustrated that prices are still nearly 20% higher than they were when inflation picked up in early 2021. For the second straight month, consumers said in August that they expect prices to be 2.9% higher in one year. In mid-2022, as inflation roared, they expected prices to climb 5.3% over the next 12 months.

    Their expectations are important because they can drive behavior. If you think something is going to be a lot more expensive in the future, you are more likely to buy it now, and that spending can drive prices higher. “If inflation expectations are high, that can be a self-fulfilling prophesy,” Hsu said. ”Policymakers do not want to see that.” So the Fed’s inflation fighters welcome signs that consumers foresee more modest price increases going forward.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Looking to buy a home? You may now need to factor in agent’s commission cost

    Looking to buy a home? You may now need to factor in agent’s commission cost

    [ad_1]

    Thinking of buying a home with the help of a real estate agent? You can no longer take it for granted that a seller will cover the cost of your agent’s commission.

    Home sellers have traditionally offered a blanket commission to a buyer’s agent when they listed their home on the market. But that will no longer be allowed as of this weekend, when various changes to U.S. real estate industry practices are set to take effect.


    What You Need To Know

    • Home buyers can no longer take it for granted that a seller will cover the cost of their agent’s commission
    • Home sellers have traditionally offered a blanket commission to a buyer’s agent when they listed their home on the market
    • But that will no longer be allowed as of this weekend, when various changes to U.S. real estate industry practices are set to take effect
    • A homebuyer may still try to negotiate such an offer from the seller, but if they decline, that would leave the homebuyer on the hook for paying for their agent’s services


    A homebuyer may still try to negotiate such an offer from the seller. But if they decline, that would leave the homebuyer on the hook for paying for their agent’s services.

    The National Association of Realtors is behind the policy changes, which stem from its $418 million settlement earlier this year of federal class-action lawsuits that claimed U.S. homeowners were forced to pay artificially inflated real estate agent commissions when they sold their home.

    Companies behind several major real estate brokerage brands, including Keller Williams, Anywhere Real Estate, HomeServices of America, Re/Max and Redfin, also agreed to pay millions and make policy changes to make home seller lawsuits go away.

    The new rules, which go into effect nationally on Saturday, apply to brokers and agents representing clients looking to buy or sell a home advertised on a multiple listing service, or MLS, affiliated with the NAR.

    They boil down to two significant changes: Blanket offers of compensation on behalf of sellers to buyers’ agents will no longer be included in listings posted on the MLS, though they can still be made through other means. And homebuyers will be required to sign detailed representation agreements when they hire an agent.

    It remains to be seen whether the policy overhaul will lead to lower agent commissions or fewer sellers opting not to offer to cover the buyer’s agent fees.

    But the changes are likely to have the biggest impact on home shoppers — especially first-time buyers already facing elevated mortgage rates, a shortage of properties on the market and record-high home prices. They will now have to factor in the cost of hiring an agent if a seller isn’t willing to cover it.

    “This will have a negative impact on a buyer’s ability to purchase a home, and so there are going to be quite a few large scale changes in the buyer’s process,” said Bret Weinstein, CEO of Guide Real Estate, a brokerage in Denver.

    Homebuyer representation agreements

    Home shoppers who want to work with an agent will have to sign an agreement upfront that details the services that agent will provide and how much they will be paid, including whether it’s through a commission split with a seller’s agent.

    Generally, an agent who represents a buyer typically receives around 2.5%-3% commission based on the purchase price of the home. Agents then share part of their commission with their brokerage.

    Similar buyer representation agreements are already required in roughly 20 states. However, the new rules require that buyer agreements be completed before an agent begins working on a client’s behalf. That includes before the agent takes a buyer to tour a home, whether in person or virtually. A buyer can still go to an open house without signing a representation agreement.

    “The big change now is that we are required to ask the buyer to commit to us early and hire us early in the process,” said Andrea Ratcliff, a Redfin agent in Indianapolis, where the policy changes were rolled out July 1.

    One home shopper she spoke with was put off by the changes and the prospect of covering an agent’s fees, she said.

    “They definitely weren’t ready to commit to me — weren’t ready commit to any agent, because they weren’t prepared to take on that cost,” Ratcliff said.

    Removing buyer-agent compensation offers from home listings

    Traditionally, a buyer’s agent’s commission has been paid by the seller. Agents who work with homeowners to market and sell their home would list the property on an MLS and include how much their client was offering to pay a buyer’s agent, a practice known as an offer of “cooperative compensation.” That’s when a seller agrees in advance to offer a commission on the sale of their home to be split between their agent and the buyer’s representative, typically around 2.5%-3% each.

    The home sellers behind the lawsuits against the NAR and others argued sellers have had little choice but to offer to cover the buyer’s agent’s compensation in order to ensure their listing was shown to as many prospective buyers as possible.

    To address this, homes listed on an MLS will no longer include a seller’s offer to cover the cost of a buyer’s agent’s services. However, they will still be allowed to advertise them practically anywhere else, including the agent’s own website, a display at an open house, or when communicating directly with an agent representing a prospective homebuyer.

    Sellers may still elect to pay for a buyer’s agent’s compensation, but without the pressure of making a public, blanket offer on the MLS. Some may opt to pocket the savings and only cover their own agent’s commission.

    “If there’s not a clear offer of cooperative compensation from the seller through their broker to the buyer’s broker, then yeah, it’s going to be part of (the) negotiation,” said Kevin Sears, president of the National Association of Realtors. “I think that will be something that we see changing in the marketplace.”

    Where does this leave buyers and sellers?

    Much of how the industry policy changes play out for buyers and sellers will depend largely on the state of the local housing market.

    In a sluggish housing market where homes are taking longer to move and sellers are having to lower prices, it’s more likely that a buyer will be able to negotiate for the seller to cover their agent’s commission. In a hotter market, where properties are selling fast and receiving multiple offers, sellers will have the leverage to accept an offer from a buyer who isn’t asking for them to cover their agent’s fees.

    While sales of previously occupied U.S. homes have been in a slump since 2022, years of underbuilding and other factors have kept the inventory of homes for sale at near all-time lows. That’s pushed up prices and fueled multiple offers for many homes, giving a clear edge to sellers in most markets.

    Still, real estate agents say sellers should keep offering to cover the buyer’s agent commission.

    “We’ve advised that it would be wise for sellers to continue to be open to covering some or all of the buyer’s costs, because the last thing you want to do when you are selling something is to make it complicated for someone to buy it or to limit the number of people who can buy it,” said Alex McEwen, associate broker with Selling Utah in Orem, Utah.

    As for homebuyers, they will have to budget for the possibility that a seller won’t cover their agent’s fees. Those who can’t afford to do so may have to come to an arrangement with their agent to only pursue listings where the seller is offering buyer’s agent compensation.

    Will commissions come down?

    It’s unclear whether the policy changes will spur sellers or buyers to negotiate lower broker commissions, and whether they’ll succeed if they do.

    Buyer-agent commissions have eased somewhat this year: The average buyer’s agent commission fell nationally from 2.62% at the beginning of the year to 2.55% through July 14, according to an analysis by Redfin. However, because home prices have kept rising this year, the average commission paid to a buyer’s agent in dollar terms has risen about 1.7% since January to $15,377.

    Stephen Brobeck, senior fellow at Consumer Federation of America, expects that more sellers will be encouraged to negotiate with their agent lower their commission by at least half a percentage point.

    “That represents, over the course of a year in the housing market, a very large sum of money,” he said.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • U.S. announces $125 million military aid package for Ukraine

    U.S. announces $125 million military aid package for Ukraine

    [ad_1]

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. is sending Ukraine an additional $125 million in weapons to assist in its military operations against Russia, including much-needed air defense capabilities, radars to detect and counter enemy artillery and anti-tank weapons, the White House announced Friday.


    What You Need To Know

    • The latest package, an addidtional $125 miilion in weapons, comes as Ukraine has launched its largest ground offensive on Russian soil since the war began in February 2022
    • National security spokesman John Kirby said Ukraine’s use of U.S.-provided weapons in the offensive was in line with administration policies
    • The weapons in this latest aid package will be drawn from existing U.S. stocks and will include Stinger missiles, 155mm and 105mm artillery ammunition, High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) ammunition and vehicles
    • It brings the total amount of U.S. aid to Ukraine since 2022 to $55.6 billion

    The latest package comes as Ukraine has launched its largest ground offensive on Russian soil since the war began in February 2022. The offensive in the Kursk region has prompted Moscow to declare an emergency and send reinforcements there.

    National security spokesman John Kirby said Ukraine’s use of U.S.-provided weapons in the offensive was in line with administration policies. The Biden administration has approved their use in cross-border counterstrikes against Russia but not against targets deeper inside Russia, although the specific distances are not clear.

    The weapons in this latest aid package will be drawn from existing U.S. stocks and will include Stinger missiles, 155mm and 105mm artillery ammunition, High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) ammunition and vehicles. It brings the total amount of U.S. aid to Ukraine since 2022 to $55.6 billion.

    July saw the heaviest civilian casualties in Ukraine since October 2022, the U.N. Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine said Friday. Conflict-related violence killed at least 219 civilians and injured 1,018 in July, the mission said.

    On Friday, a Russian missile strike on a shopping mall in Kostiantynivka, in the eastern Donetsk region, killing at least 14 people and wounding 44 others.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Dow drops 900 after weak jobs report

    Dow drops 900 after weak jobs report

    [ad_1]

    Stocks are tumbling Friday on worries the U.S. economy could be cracking under the weight of high interest rates meant to whip inflation.

    The S&P 500 was sinking by 2.5% in midday trading, potentially on pace for its worst day since 2022, and on track for its first back-to-back loss of more than 1% since April. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 954 points, or 2.4%, as of 11:30 a.m. Eastern time, and the Nasdaq composite was 2.9% lower as a sell-off for stocks whipped all the way around the world back to Wall Street.


    What You Need To Know

    • Stocks are tumbling Friday on worries the U.S. economy could be cracking under the weight of high interest rates meant to whip inflation
    • The S&P 500 fell 2.5% Friday
    • The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 954 points, and the Nasdaq composite fell 2.9%
    • A report showing hiring by U.S. employers slowed last month by much more than expected sent fear through markets


    A report showing hiring by U.S. employers slowed last month by much more than economists expected sent fear through markets, with both stocks and bond yields dropping sharply. It followed a batch of weaker-than-expected reports on the economy from a day earlier, including a worsening for U.S. manufacturing activity, which has been one of the areas hurt most by high rates.

    It was just a couple days ago that U.S. stock indexes jumped to their best day in months after Fed Chair Jerome Powell gave the clearest indication yet that inflation has slowed enough for cuts to rates to begin in September.

    Now, worries are rising the Fed may have kept its main interest rate at a two-decade high for too long. A rate cut would make it easier for U.S. households and companies to borrow money and boost the economy, but it could take months to a year for the full effects to filter through.

    “The Fed is seizing defeat from the jaws of victory,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management. “Economic momentum has slowed so much that a rate cut in September will be too little and too late. They’ll have to do something bigger than” the traditional cut of a quarter of a percentage point ”to avert a recession.”

    Traders are now betting on a better than three-in-four chance that the Fed will cut its main interest rate by half a percentage point in September, according to data from CME Group. That’s even though Powell said Wednesday that such a deep reduction is “not something we’re thinking about right now.”

    U.S. stocks had already appeared to be headed for losses before the disappointing jobs report thudded onto Wall Street.

    Several big technology companies turned in underwhelming profit reports, which continued a mostly dispiriting run that began last week with results from Tesla and Alphabet.

    Amazon fell 9.9% after reporting weaker revenue for the latest quarter than expected. The retail and tech giant also gave a forecast for operating profit for the summer that fell short of analysts’ expectations.

    Intel dropped even more, 26.5%, after the chip company’s profit for the latest quarter fell well short of forecasts. It also suspended its dividend payment and said it expects to lose money in the third quarter, when analysts were expecting a profit.

    Apple was holding steadier, up 2%, after reporting better profit and revenue than expected.

    Apple and a handful of other Big Tech stocks known as the “Magnificent Seven” have been the main reasons the S&P 500 has set dozens of records this year, in part on a frenzy around artificial-intelligence technology. But their momentum turned last month on worries investors had taken their prices too high and expectations for future growth are too difficult to meet.

    Friday’s losses for tech stocks dragged the Nasdaq composite down by more than 10% from its record set in the middle of last month.

    Helpfully for Wall Street, other areas of the stock market beaten down by high interest rates had been rebounding at the same time tech stocks were regressing, particularly smaller companies. But they tumbled too Friday on worries that a fragile economy could undercut their profits.

    The Russell 2000 index of smaller stocks dropped 4.2%, more than the rest of the market.

    In the bond market, Treasury yields fell sharply as traders raised their expectations for how deeply the Federal Reserve would have to cut interest rates. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 3.81% from 3.98% late Thursday and from 4.70% in April.

    Amid all the fear, some voices on Wall Street were still advising caution.

    “While worries of a policy mistake are rising, one negative miss shouldn’t lead to overreaction,” according to Lara Castleton, U.S. head of portfolio construction and strategy at Janus Henderson Investors.

    She points out the U.S. economy is still growing, and inflation is still slowing. The S&P 500, meanwhile, isn’t far off its record set two weeks ago. “Equities selling off should be seen as a normal reaction, especially considering the high valuations in many pockets of the market. It’s a good reminder for investors to focus on the earnings of companies going forward.”

    In stock markets abroad, Japan’s Nikkei 225 dropped 5.8%. It’s been struggling since the Bank of Japan raised its benchmark interest rate on Wednesday. The hike pushed the value of the Japanese yen higher against the U.S. dollar, potentially hurting profits for exporters and deflating a boom in tourism.

    Chinese stocks fell week as investors registered disappointment with the government’s latest efforts to spur growth through various piecemeal measures, instead of hoped-for infusions of broader stimulus, while stock indexes dropped by more than 1% across much of Europe.

    Commodity prices have also had a rough ride this week. Oil prices surged after the killings of leaders of Hamas and Hezbollah that fueled fears that a widening conflict in the Middle East could disrupt the flow of crude.

    But prices fell back Thursday and Friday on worries that a weakening economy will burn less fuel. A barrel of benchmark U.S. crude tumbled 3.7% Friday to bring its loss for the week to 4.8%.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Blood tests for Alzheimer’s may be coming to your doctor’s office

    Blood tests for Alzheimer’s may be coming to your doctor’s office

    [ad_1]

    New blood tests could help doctors diagnose Alzheimer’s disease faster and more accurately, researchers reported Sunday – but some appear to work far better than others.


    What You Need To Know

    • New research suggests certain blood tests could help doctors diagnose Alzheimer’s disease faster and more accurately
    • Confirming if someone’s memory problems really are caused by Alzheimer’s requires a brain scan or spinal tap to spot one culprit, sticky amyloid protein
    • Labs are offering tests to find clues in blood instead but they’re not yet widely used because it’s hard for doctors to tell which ones really work
    • A Swedish study found a certain test helped improve diagnosis without more costly follow-up procedures
    • Sunday’s findings, presented at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference, mark a step toward more use of blood testing


    It’s tricky to tell if memory problems are caused by Alzheimer’s. That requires confirming one of the disease’s hallmark signs — buildup of a sticky protein called beta-amyloid — with a hard-to-get brain scan or uncomfortable spinal tap. Many patients instead are diagnosed based on symptoms and cognitive exams.

    Labs have begun offering a variety of tests that can detect certain signs of Alzheimer’s in blood. Scientists are excited by their potential but the tests aren’t widely used yet because there’s little data to guide doctors about which kind to order and when. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration hasn’t formally approved any of them and there’s little insurance coverage.

    “What tests can we trust?” asked Dr. Suzanne Schindler, a neurologist at Washington University in St. Louis who’s part of a research project examining that. While some are very accurate, “other tests are not much better than a flip of a coin.”

    Demand for earlier Alzheimer’s diagnosis is increasing

    More than 6 million people in the United States and millions more around the world have Alzheimer’s, the most common form of dementia. Its telltale “biomarkers” are brain-clogging amyloid plaques and abnormal tau protein that leads to neuron-killing tangles.

    New drugs, Leqembi and Kisunla, can modestly slow worsening symptoms by removing gunky amyloid from the brain. But they only work in the earliest stages of Alzheimer’s and proving patients qualify in time can be difficult. Measuring amyloid in spinal fluid is invasive. A special PET scan to spot plaques is costly and getting an appointment can take months.

    Even specialists can struggle to tell if Alzheimer’s or something else is to blame for a patient’s symptoms.

    “I have patients not infrequently who I am convinced have Alzheimer’s disease and I do testing and it’s negative,” Schindler said.

    New study suggests blood tests for Alzheimer’s can be simpler and faster

    Blood tests so far have been used mostly in carefully controlled research settings. But a new study of about 1,200 patients in Sweden shows they also can work in the real-world bustle of doctors’ offices — especially primary care doctors who see far more people with memory problems than specialists but have fewer tools to evaluate them.

    In the study, patients who visited either a primary care doctor or a specialist for memory complaints got an initial diagnosis using traditional exams, gave blood for testing and were sent for a confirmatory spinal tap or brain scan.

    Blood testing was far more accurate, Lund University researchers reported Sunday at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Philadelphia. The primary care doctors’ initial diagnosis was 61% accurate and the specialists’ 73% — but the blood test was 91% accurate, according to the findings, which also were published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

    Which blood tests for Alzheimer’s work best?

    There’s almost “a wild West” in the variety being offered, said Dr. John Hsiao of the National Institute on Aging. They measure different biomarkers, in different ways.

    Doctors and researchers should only use blood tests proven to have a greater than 90% accuracy rate, said Alzheimer’s Association chief science officer Maria Carrillo.

    Today’s tests most likely to meet that benchmark measure what’s called p-tau217, Carrillo and Hsiao agreed. Schindler helped lead an unusual direct comparison of several kinds of blood tests, funded by the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health, that came to the same conclusion.

    That type of test measures a form of tau that correlates with how much plaque buildup someone has, Schindler explained. A high level signals a strong likelihood the person has Alzheimer’s while a low level indicates that’s probably not the cause of memory loss.

    Several companies are developing p-tau217 tests including ALZpath Inc., Roche, Eli Lilly and C2N Diagnostics, which supplied the version used in the Swedish study.

    Who should use blood tests for Alzheimer’s?

    Only doctors can order them from labs. The Alzheimer’s Association is working on guidelines and several companies plan to seek FDA approval, which would clarify proper use.

    For now, Carrillo said doctors should use blood testing only in people with memory problems, after checking the accuracy of the type they order.

    Especially for primary care physicians, “it really has great potential to help them in sorting out who to give a reassuring message and who to send on to memory specialists,” said Dr. Sebastian Palmqvist of Lund University, who led the Swedish study with Lund’s Dr. Oskar Hansson.

    The tests aren’t yet for people who don’t have symptoms but worry about Alzheimer’s in the family — unless it’s part of enrollment in research studies, Schindler stressed.

    That’s partly because amyloid buildup can begin two decades before the first sign of memory problems, and so far there are no preventive steps other than basic advice to eat healthy, exercise and get enough sleep. But there are studies underway testing possible therapies for people at high risk of Alzheimer’s, and some include blood testing.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link