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WASHINGTON — Given the overall environment in the industry, it’s likely for some smaller banks to consolidate, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Wednesday morning.
“There is motivation to see some consolidation and it wouldn’t surprise me to see some of that going forward,” Yellen said in an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”
Yellen said she wouldn’t want to see the diverse banking system threatened by further consolidation, but it would be understandable given the pressure on earnings some banks are experiencing,
Janet Yellen, US Treasury secretary, speaks during the Independent Community Bankers Of America (ICBA) Capital Summit in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, May 16, 2023.
Nathan Howard | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The Treasury secretary also said she expects there to “be issues” in the commercial real estate sector given the changing approach to work.
“We’ve seen such a big change in attitudes and behaviors toward remote work,” Yellen said. “And especially in an environment of higher interest rates. I think banks are broadly preparing for some restructuring and difficulties going ahead.”
Yellen added that stress tests of the largest banks showed they have enough funds to handle any upsets.
“My overall read is that the level of capital and liquidity in the banking system is strong and while there will be some pain associated with this, the banks should be able to handle the strain.”

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U.S. President Joe Biden addresses the nation on averting default and the Bipartisan Budget Agreement, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., June 2, 2023.
Pool | Via Reuters
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Friday evening gave his first address from the Oval Office to discuss a bill to lift the debt ceiling while capping federal spending, calling it a “critical” agreement. He plans to sign the bill Saturday.
“No one got everything they wanted but the American people got what they needed. We averted an economic crisis and an economic collapse,” Biden said.
The compromise debt ceiling bill passed the Senate by a 63-36 margin Thursday evening, winning enough support from both parties to overcome the chamber’s 60-vote threshold to avoid a filibuster. On Wednesday, it moved through the House after about 72 hours, passing 314-117.
The agreement comes with little time to spare: The Treasury Department estimated the federal government would run out of money on June 5 had the debt ceiling not been lifted.
“This is vital,” Biden said. “Essential to all the progress we’ve made in the last few years is keeping the full faith and credit of the United States and passing a budget that continues to grow our economy and reflects our values as a nation.”
Without the agreement, federal obligations such as Social Security, Medicare and military paychecks would have gone unsent. And failure to lift the debt ceiling would have roiled global financial markets and sparked job losses in the U.S.
The bill comes after weeks of intense negotiations between Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and the White House. The final deal handed conservatives several ideological policy victories in exchange for their votes to raise the debt ceiling beyond next year’s presidential election and into 2025.
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People wearing face masks crossing a street at Hong Kong’s Wan Chai district on Feb. 16, 2021.
Zhang Wei | China News Service | Getty Images
Hong Kong’s benchmark index entered bear market territory Wednesday on an intraday basis, erasing the rebound gains from China’s reopening.
The Hang Seng index hit a session low of 18,105.78. That’s 20.2% below its 52-week closing high of 22,688.9 reached on Jan. 27. A technical bear market is defined as when prices fall 20% below recent highs.
Hong Kong technology stocks were among the leading decliners for the overall index, including internet company NetEase and e-commerce platforms Meituan and JD.com. Alibaba shed nearly 3%, Baidu fell more than 4%, and Bilibili plunged by 6%.
The Hang Seng Tech index has already fallen by more than 25% from its January peak. That’s a stark contrast to the reopening optimism that had once driven Asia-Pacific’s benchmark MSCI Asia Pacific index to a bull market.
The Hang Seng China Enterprises index, which measures the performance of the 50 largest and most liquid mainland Chinese companies listed in Hong Kong, has also retreated by more than 21% from its January peak.
Analysts had initially expected China’s economy to recover faster and earlier than expected, but that view quickly faded after the country continued to deliver disappointing economic data.
The latest factory activity reading for China came in at 48.8, below the 50-mark that separates growth from contraction — and missing the 49.4 estimate from a Reuters poll.

Morgan Stanley analysts said in a May 17 report that a weak reading in that manufacturing measure “has been a solid precursor to policy easing.” Economists told CNBC that a disappointing rebound could lead to more government stimulus ahead.
“If growth does not accelerate sufficiently to narrow the output gap, social stability risk may rise and eventually trigger more meaningful stimulus,” Morgan Stanley analysts wrote in the note.
The National Bureau of Statistics noted the purchasing managers’ index for large manufacturers came in at 50, while that of smaller manufacturers was lower. The index for services activity remained in expansionary territory at 54.5, but marked a second-straight month of decline.
Citi economists wrote in a Wednesday note that the latest economic data missing expectations by a large margin is seen as “signs of fatigue with the initial reopening impulse peaking.”
“Insufficient demand could be the major concern now, and there are both cyclical and structural causes for it,” they wrote, adding the “initial boost to the services sector from reopening could be fading.”
Citi economists also expect the People’s Bank of China to cut its medium-term lending facility rates by 20 basis points and its reserve requirement ratio by 50 basis points by the end of the year.
“We reckon that the Chinese economy could be on the verge of a self-fulfilling confidence trap and believe decisive policy actions are needed,” they wrote.
“There could be limited room for fiscal easing from the budget and we expect structural easing efforts with more efforts from the central government and quasi-fiscal tools via policy banks,” they wrote.
– CNBC’s Evelyn Cheng contributed to this report
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WASHINGTON — The compromise bill to raise the debt ceiling faced its first major test Tuesday in the House Rules Committee, where two of the panel’s nine Republicans said they would oppose bringing it to the House floor for a vote.
But a key swing vote Republican on the committee, Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, signaled late Tuesday afternoon that he was inclined to support the rule that would send the bill to the floor.
“I anticipate voting for this rule,” Massie said about two hours into a marathon committee meeting, noting that this would be contingent on reading the final rule at the end of the meeting.
Massie’s likely support cleared the way for the bill to be approved by seven of the nine Republicans on the committee, enough to send it to the House floor for an expected vote within 24 hours. The panel’s makeup is heavily skewed toward the party in the majority, 9-4, a setup meant to ensure that legislation does not get held up by a few dissenters siding with the minority.
The floor vote on the Fiscal Responsibility Act is planned for around 8:30 p.m. ET Wednesday, according to a tentative House voting schedule.
The legislation is the product of a deal hammered out by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and President Joe Biden to cap federal baseline spending for two years in exchange for Republican votes to raise the debt ceiling beyond next year’s elections and into 2025.
The bill needs to pass the GOP-majority House and the Democratic-controlled Senate before June 5, when the Treasury Department projects the United States would be unlikely to have enough money to meet its debt obligations.
On Tuesday, a bloc of least 20 conservative Republicans announced they would oppose the compromise deal. They accused McCarthy of caving in to the White House in exchange for “cosmetic” policy tweaks, and not the transformative change they were promised.
A hardline subset of this group railed against the deal on social media and at a press conference outside the Capitol.
“It’s not just that every Republican should vote against it. It’s a little bit more than that. This is a career-defining vote for every Republican,” said GOP Rep. Dan Bishop, N.C.
Several prominent conservative groups also announced opposition to the bill Tuesday, and said they would measure or “score” GOP lawmakers by how they voted on it. The libertarian-leaning FreedomWorks group, the anti-tax Club for Growth and the conservative Heritage Foundation all panned the deal.
Over the course of the day, opposition to the bill evolved into a more pointed critique by some in the party of McCarthy’s leadership.
Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, speaks during the House Freedom Caucus news conference to oppose the debt limit deal outside of the US Capitol on Monday, May 30, 2023.
Bill Clark | CQ-Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images
“Speaker McCarthy should pull this bad bill down. We should stop taking this bill up right now,” GOP Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, a member of the Rules Committee, said at a news conference. “And no matter what happens, there’s going to be a reckoning about what just occurred.”
Bishop told reporters that “no one in the Republican conference could have done a worse job” negotiating the agreement than McCarthy did.
Roy and Bishop weren’t the only far-right conservatives who implicitly threatened to unseat McCarthy as House speaker if the debt limit bill passed. But whether they follow through on the threats remains to be seen. Under new rules this year, a single Republican lawmaker can bring a no-confidence vote on McCarthy to the floor.
Some Democrats were also leery of the bill, which contains new work requirements for food stamps, as well as reforms that make it easier to secure energy permits, and cuts to discretionary spending. But progressive leaders in the House stopped short of urging their like-minded members to oppose the bill.
“The Republicans did not win any major concessions on spending,” Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., chair of the 100-member Congressional Progressive Caucus, said on a call with reporters Tuesday. “There is no meaningful debt reduction here…what [Republicans] do get is some of their extreme ideological priorities.”
Jayapal acknowledged that the bill’s spending caps would require Congress to scale back funding for some domestic programs. “When it comes time to write these appropriations bills, there will be some very, very difficult choices to make,” she said.
As of Tuesday, the CPC was still deciding whether to “take an official position” on the bill, she said.
The message from the White House was similarly low-key, with an emphasis on all the GOP asks that were excluded from the bill, not which Democratic priorities were included.
“It’s usually a sign of a good compromise if there’s some folks who are a little bit unhappy on each side,” National Economic Council Deputy Director Bharat Ramamurti told CNBC.
“I think the macro economic impact of this deal is likely to be fairly minimal,” he said, adding that the deal was about as good as Biden could have hoped for in a bill that could pass the GOP-controlled House.
The Office of Management and Budget also released a formal statement of policy Tuesday urging House members to support the bill, saying it “reflects a bipartisan compromise to avoid a first-ever default.”
But before the bill could receive a vote in the full House, it needs approval by a majority of the Rules Committee. Ahead of Tuesday’s committee meeting, two Republican members, Roy and Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina said they planned to block the bill.
“I’m on Rules Committee,” Norman said Tuesday outside the Capitol. “If we can stop [the bill] there, I will stop it.”
That approach was precisely what Massie, the swing vote, said he objected to. “When people want to express their ideology, the floor of the House on the actual final passage of the bill is the place to do that,” he said, not the committee room.
If the Fiscal Responsibility Act were to stall in the Rules Committee, it would resurrect the imminent threat of a debt default, with less than a week before the deadline.
This is a developing story, please check back for updates.
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WASHINGTON (AP) — With days to spare before a potential first-ever government default, President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy reached final agreement Sunday on a deal to raise the nation’s debt ceiling and worked to ensure enough support in Congress to pass the measure in the coming week.
The Democratic president and Republican speaker spoke late in the day as negotiators rushed to draft and post the bill text for review, with compromises that neither the hard-right or left flank is likely to support. Instead, the leaders are working to gather backing from the political middle as Congress hurries toward votes before a June 5 deadline to avert a damaging federal default.
“Good news,” Biden declared Sunday evening at the White House.
“The agreement prevents the worst possible crisis, a default, for the first time in our nation’s history,” he said. “Takes the threat of a catastrophic default off the table.”
The president urged both parties in Congress to come together for swift passage. “The speaker and I made clear from the start that the only way forward was a bipartisan agreement,” he said.
The final product includes spending cuts but risks angering some lawmakers as they take a closer look at the concessions. Biden told reporters at the White House upon his return from Delaware that he was confident the plan will make it to his desk.
McCarthy, too, was confident in remarks at the Capitol: “At the end of the day, people can look together to be able to pass this.”
The days ahead will determine whether Washington is again able to narrowly avoid a default on U.S. debt, as it has done many times before, or whether the global economy enters a potential crisis.
In the United States, a default could cause financial markets to freeze up and spark an international financial crisis. Analysts say millions of jobs would vanish, borrowing and unemployment rates would jump, and a stock-market plunge could erase trillions of dollars in household wealth. It would all but shatter the $24 trillion market for Treasury debt.
Anxious retirees and others were already making contingency plans for missed checks, with the next Social Security payments due soon as the world watches American leadership at stake.
McCarthy and his negotiators portrayed the deal as delivering for Republicans though it fell well short of the sweeping spending cuts they sought. Top White House officials were briefing Democratic lawmakers and phoning some directly to try to shore up support.
One surprise was a provision important to influential Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., giving congressional backing for the controversial Mountain Valley Pipeline, a natural gas project, that is certain to raise questions.
Negotiators also agreed to some Republican demands for increased work requirements for food stamps recipients that Democrats had called a nonstarter.
McCarthy told reporters at the Capitol on Sunday that the agreement “doesn’t get everything everybody wanted,” but that was to be expected in a divided government. Privately, he told lawmakers on a conference call that Democrats “got nothing.”
Weeks of negotiations came together when Biden and McCarthy spoke by phone Saturday evening and agreed in principle to the deal, finishing it up Sunday with the 99-page legislative text made public.
Support from both parties will be needed to win congressional approval before the projected June 5 government default on U.S. debts. Lawmakers are expected to return Tuesday from the Memorial Day weekend, and McCarthy has promised lawmakers he will abide by the rule to post any bill for 72 hours before voting in the House, as soon as Wednesday.
The package would next go to the Senate, where Republican leader Mitch McConnell said senators “must act swiftly and pass this agreement without unnecessary delay.”
Central to the compromise is a two-year budget deal that would essentially hold spending flat for 2024, while boosting it for defense and veterans, and capping increases at 1% for 2025. That’s alongside raising the debt limit for two years, pushing the volatile political issue past the next presidential election.
Driving hard to impose tougher work requirements on government aid recipients, Republicans achieved some of what they wanted. It ensures people ages 49 to 54 with food stamp aid would have to meet work requirements if they are able-bodied and without dependents. Biden was able to secure waivers for veterans and homeless people.
The deal puts in place changes in the landmark National Environmental Policy Act designating “a single lead agency” to develop environmental reviews, in hopes of streamlining the process.
It halts some funds to hire new Internal Revenue Service agents as Republicans demanded, and rescinds some $30 billion for coronavirus relief, keeping $5 billion for developing the next generation of COVID-19 vaccines.
The deal would suspend the debt limit until January 2025. It came together after Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told Congress that the United States could default on its debt obligations by June 5 — four days later than previously estimated. Lifting the nation’s debt limit, now at $31 trillion, allows more borrowing to pay bills already incurred.
McCarthy commands only a slim Republican majority in the House, where hard-right conservatives may resist any deal as insufficient as they try to slash spending. By compromising with Democrats, he risks angering his own members, setting up a career-challenging moment for the new speaker.
“I think you’re going to get a majority of Republicans voting for this bill,” McCarthy said on “Fox News Sunday,” adding that because Biden backed it, “I think there’s going to be a lot of Democrats that will vote for it, too.”
House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York said on CBS’ “Face the Nation” that he expected there will be Democratic support but he declined to provide a number. Asked whether he could guarantee there would not be a default, he said, “Yes.”
A 100-strong group of moderates in the New Democratic Coalition gave a crucial nod of support Sunday, saying in a statement it was confident that Biden and his team “delivered a viable, bipartisan solution to end this crisis.”
The coalition could provide enough support for McCarthy to make up for members in the right flank of his party who have expressed opposition before the bill’s wording was even released.
It also takes pressure off Biden, facing criticism from progressives for giving into what they call hostage-taking by Republicans.
Democratic Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington state, who leads the Congressional Progressive Caucus, told CBS that the White House and Jeffries should worry about whether caucus members will support the agreement.
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Price reported from New York. Associated Press writers Seung Min Kim and Stephen Groves contributed to this report.
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WASHINGTON — House Republicans reached a tentative deal with the White House on Saturday night to address the nation’s borrowing limit and avoid a catastrophic default on U.S. sovereign debt, Speaker Kevin McCarthy confirmed.
“We have come to an agreement in principle,” McCarthy said Saturday in the Capitol. “We still have a lot of work to do, but I believe this is an agreement in principle that’s worthy of the American people.”
McCarthy said he spoke to President Joe Biden twice on Saturday about the plan. “I expect to finish the writing of the bill, checking with the White House and speaking to the president again tomorrow afternoon,” said the California Republican, “Then posting the text of it tomorrow, and then be voting on it on Wednesday.”
The deal “has historic reductions in spending, consequential reforms that will lift people out of poverty and into the workforce, and rein in government overreach,” McCarthy said. “There are no new taxes and no new government programs.”
Democrats did not immediately confirm or deny McCarthy’s description of the agreement, which comes after more than a week of urgent talks between negotiators for the White House and House Republicans.
The announcement marked the start of a lobbying blitz by House and Senate leaders in both parties to convince their members to vote for the package, which will need to win enough votes in the GOP-controlled House and Democratic-held Senate to raise the U.S. debt ceiling in time to meet a June 5 deadline.
At least one senator, Utah Republican Mike Lee, has already threatened to use procedural maneuvers in the Senate to hold up a debt ceiling bill for as long as possible if he doesn’t like what it contains.
In the House, a group of 35 ultraconservative members publicly pressured McCarthy to demand even more concessions from Democrats and to “hold the line.” They, too, indicated they would not support a deal that they thought gave too much away.
The final push on the deal took place Saturday, in spite of updated guidance from the Treasury Department on Friday afternoon which identified June 5 as the debt default deadline.
That is five days later the previous Treasury guidance of June 1, and the update was taken by some members of Congress as meaning there would be additional time for negotiations.
In announcing the June 5 date, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen explained that the agency was “scheduled to make an estimated $130 billion of payments and transfers” during the first two days of June. This would “leave Treasury with an extremely low level of resources.”
The week of June 5, Treasury will owe “an estimated $92 billion of payments and transfers,” Yellen wrote in a public letter to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy.
Unless the debt limit were raised in time and the government was allowed to borrow more, “Our projected resources would be inadequate to satisfy all of these obligations.”
A vote to raise the debt limit does not authorize additional government spending. It merely permits the Treasury to meet obligations that were already approved by Congress in the past, some of them, decades ago.
Nonetheless, many Republicans have come to view the biennial vote to raise the debt limit as an opportunity to extract concessions from Democrats in exchange for their votes to avoid a debt default.
This time around was no different. Republicans demanded that the White House agree to a bill that contained, at a minimum, baseline government spending cuts, new work requirements for public assistance, energy permitting reform and the rescinding of unspent Covid emergency funds.
The White House initially balked at many of these, and negotiators spent the past two weeks trying to come up with a compromise that could garner enough support to pass in the House and Senate.
“It’s not over. We’re not done. But we’re within the window of being able to perform this and we have to come to some really tough terms in these closing hours,” GOP negotiator Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina told reporters late Friday afternoon.
McHenry said he appreciated the additional guidance from Yellen, calling the Treasury secretary “a woman of principle” who had been “very respectful” of Republicans throughout the months long debt ceiling standoff.
“In many respects, it’s an answer to what House Republicans were questioning about the X date. Now we know, and this puts additional pressure on us.”
This is a breaking news story. Please check ack for updates.
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WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Friday that the United States will likely have enough reserves to push off a potential debt default until June 5.
“We now estimate that Treasury will have insufficient resources to satisfy the government’s obligations if Congress has not raised or suspended the debt limit by June 5,” Yellen wrote in a letter to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy.
The new date Friday provided some much needed breathing room for negotiations between the White House and congressional Republicans that appeared to be closing in on a compromise agreement Friday to raise the debt ceiling for two years.
The last time the so-called “X date” was updated was on May 1, when Yellen told Congress the United States had enough cash available to meet its obligations until “early June, and potentially as early as June 1.”
Friday’s letter marked the first time since Yellen began sending regular updates to Congress in January that the secretary did not caveat the date with a phrase like “as early as.”
Instead, Yellen explained that Treasury would make more than “$130 billion of scheduled payments in the first two days of June,” leaving the agency with “an extremely low level of resources.”
“During the week of June 5, Treasury is scheduled to make an estimated $92 billion of payments and transfers,” Yellen continued, and “our projected resources would be inadequate to satisfy all of these obligations.”
To underscore just how low Treasury’s reserves had fallen, Yellen said the agency was forced to deploy an obscure measure on Thursday to move $2 billion from a civil service retirement fund over to the government’s main borrowing institution, the Federal Financing Bank.
The move was necessary because “the extremely low level of remaining resources demands that I exhaust all available extraordinary measures to avoid being unable to meet all of the government’s commitments,” Yellen wrote.
Markets closed higher Friday, buoyed in part by optimism that there would be a deal passed by the House and Senate and signed by the president by June 1.
But as talks dragged on this week with little more than vague claims of “progress” by those involved, optimism faded that deal would be reached by the end of Friday.
Officials said Friday was widely seen as the last possible day to reach a deal and still have enough time to craft it into legislation, pass it in the House and then pass it in the Senate before the previous “X-date” of June 1.
Yellen’s new date came amid growing concerns around the world about the U.S. credit rating.
On Wednesday, the Fitch credit rating agency announced it had placed the United States’ triple-A status on “rating watch negative.”
On Friday, in a preliminary International Monetary Fund annual assessment of the United States, officials wrote that “brinkmanship over the federal debt ceiling could create a further, entirely avoidable systemic risk to both the U.S. and the global economy.”
Should the United States technically default, even for just a few days, it could drive up interest rates and undermine confidence in the U.S. dollar. Economists note that America’s adversaries, and in particular Russia and China, are watching the current debt limit standoff with delight, secure in the knowledge that an erosion of trust in the U.S. dollar would accrue to their benefit.
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Last Updated: 25/05/23 10:23pm
The Pittsburgh Steelers made a welcome return to Croke Park. Pictured is Steelers director of business development & strategy Daniel Rooney
The Pittsburgh Steelers have long-term plans to play a regular season NFL game in Ireland, the team said Thursday during a visit to celebrate its long-standing ties with the Emerald Isle.
The Steelers touched down in Dublin days after the NFL awarded the team marketing rights for Ireland and Northern Ireland, all part of the league’s push to expand its audience internationally.
“Our aspirations long term are to play a game in Ireland,” said Daniel Rooney, the team’s director of business development and strategy. “As we move through the process, we’ll be evaluating all options.”
Ireland has never hosted a regular season NFL game, but the Steelers beat the Chicago Bears 30-17 in a preseason matchup at Croke Park in 1997.
Croke Park, home of the Gaelic Athletic Association, holds 82,300 and would almost certainly be the site of any future Steelers game.
GAA president Larry McCarthy joined Rooney at a news conference at Croke Park and said the organisation is “delighted to be associated with [the Rooneys] and such a famous name and brand in the Steelers.”
Brett Gosper, NFL head of UK and Europe, was also on hand and called the Steelers and Ireland a “perfect fit.”
“There are so many connections, obviously the family’s heritage [and] the Steelers organising that first and only game – so far – in Ireland,” he said.
The late Daniel M. Rooney was U.S. ambassador to Ireland from 2009-12.
The Jacksonville Jaguars, who play in London every year, were also awarded marketing rights to Ireland.
The programme was designed to help individual teams build their brands abroad through commercial activity and fan engagement similar to what they do in their home markets. Rights are granted by the league for at least a five-year term.
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While enrollment is down at the nation’s public colleges, state funding for higher ed is up — and students have been footing less of the bill for their education over the last four years.
State and local support for higher ed increased nearly 5 percent in the 2022 fiscal year, according to the latest State Higher Education Finance report, published on Thursday by the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association. States allocated more money for higher education both in the form of financial aid, which increased 2 percent, and general public operations, which increased 7 percent. (The report adjusted those proportions for inflation.)
The SHEF report, released annually since 2003, is a data set detailing state and local funding for both two- and four-year higher-education institutions, as well as tuition revenue and enrollment. The association measures state support and net tuition revenue per student by considering enrollment on the basis of full-time-equivalent students, or FTE.
The growth in higher-ed funding since the pandemic-related economic downturn of 2020 bucks a historical trend, according to the report. Recessions traditionally lead to lower state support for public higher education, which prompts colleges to raise tuition and other costs for students.
In the 2022 fiscal year, the “student share” — which the association defines as the percentage of total revenue that comes from tuition for each full-time student — decreased in 32 states and Washington, D.C. In Connecticut, Kansas, Louisiana, and New Jersey, the student share has fallen below 50 percent of total revenue in each of the last five years.
The report’s authors, Kelsey Kunkle and Sophia Laderman, attributed that trend to three factors: the national enrollment decline, increasing commitments at the state-government level to higher-education funding, and some federal stimulus money given to states for higher education during the pandemic.
Still, Kunkle told The Chronicle, students’ tuition and fees continue to make up far more of public colleges’ revenue — nearly 42 percent — than in 1980, when that share was just 21 percent.
Robert Kelchen, a professor in the department of educational leadership and policy studies at University of Tennessee at Knoxville who studies higher-education finance with a focus on state funding, said the report is significant because states and colleges often use it as a barometer with which to compare one another.
“There have been states and universities that use this to try to advocate for more funding,” he said. “And then there are some states that try to match their peers.”
Here are three other key takeaways from this year’s report.
Some states are reinvesting in higher ed, but others are still cutting.
States’ higher-ed funding over all has recovered to levels not seen since before the 2008 recession. In 28 states, however, the funding remains lower than it was before 2008. From 2008 to 2018, public-college funding dropped 9.1 percent.
Finances have generally begun to recover from pandemic pressures, Kunkle said. “State budgets were hurting in 2021, but they’ve gotten a bit better,” she said.
State financial aid, which accounted for nearly 10 percent of all higher-ed appropriations, was at a high of $990 per full-time student in 2022.
The state with the largest funding increase was Nevada, with a 27-percent jump — in part due to money in the federal appropriations bill that passed Congress in March 2022. It contained $22 million for Nevada public colleges.
The largest decrease, at more than 28 percent, was in Wyoming, whose Legislature cut $31.3 million in June 2021 from the University of Wyoming, the largest higher-ed institution in the state and the only public four-year college.
Nationally, public-college revenue per full-time student — from both state appropriations and net tuition revenue — totaled $17,393, another record high. But the trend doesn’t hold in most of the country; only 11 states hit record highs.
Federal pandemic relief provided one last windfall.
State and local funding for higher education totaled $120.7 billion in the 2022 fiscal year, with $2.5 billion — or about 2 percent — coming from federal stimulus money. In the future, colleges won’t be able to count on that support: Pandemic-relief funding has nearly run out.
Thirty-nine states used some stimulus funding for higher education in 2022, according to the report.
The money both covered general state costs from the pandemic, preventing higher education from taking a hit from spending in other budget areas, and raised operating appropriations for higher education.
Some states … are already feeling a fiscal cliff now that federal stimulus is waning.
In Vermont, more than 42 percent of state appropriations for higher education came from federal stimulus money. In the previous year, both Vermont and Colorado used federal stimulus dollars for around half of their higher-education appropriations, but this year Colorado returned to regular state funding.
“We’re really trying to hit home that it’s really important for states to prioritize and continue committing to funding higher education,” Kunkle said. “Because right now we do have some states that are already feeling a fiscal cliff now that federal stimulus is waning.”
Enrollment challenges will be a long-term problem for public higher ed.
From 2021 to 2022, public-college enrollment declined 2.5 percent, the second-largest decrease since 1980. The year before, public higher ed experienced a 3-percent drop.
The report emphasizes that the bleeding is worse at community colleges. Net tuition revenue declined 7 percent at two-year institutions, compared with a fraction of 1 percent at four-year institutions in the last year.
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Helen Huiskes
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A major activist investor is betting stalled return-to-office plans will stir up more trouble in commercial real estate.
Land and Buildings’ Jonathan Litt has been shorting REITs with high office space exposure for three years, and he has no plans to shift gears.
“If you have no rent growth and your vacancies are going up and you have giant operating expenses to run an office building, you’re going backwards fast,” the firm’s chief investment officer told CNBC’s “Fast Money” on Tuesday.
Litt first warned Wall Street an “existential hurricane” was about to hit the sector in May 2020. Now, he’s saying the “hurricane has landed.”
He’s doubling down on the call — citing spiking interest rates and high inflation. Litt calls them two factors he didn’t anticipate when he first started shorting these companies in May 2020.
DC-based JBG Smith Properties is one of Litt’s major shorts. It’s down 58% since the World Health Organization declared Covid-19 as a pandemic on March 11, 2020. So far this year, JBG Smith is off 20%.
“Washington, DC is one of the toughest markets in the country today,” noted Litt. “They have a substantial office portfolio.”
He adds the crackdown on lending is compounding the problems.
“This isn’t a work from home story anymore. This is a financing story. It’s kind of like them mall business went from the mall problem to the financing problem,” Litt said. “Now, it’s a financing problem. And as these debts come due, there’s really nowhere to go because lenders aren’t lending to the space.”
JBG Smith did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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Last Updated: 22/05/23 11:30pm
Super Bowl 50 was held at Levi’s Stadium in 2016, with the event to return to the venue in 2026
Super Bowl LX will head to the San Francisco Bay Area with Levi’s Stadium confirmed as the host venue in 2026.
The stadium, home of the San Franciso 49ers, last held the showpiece match in 2016 when Denver Broncos beat Carolina Panthers 24-10 in Super Bowl 50.
The Bay Area will stage its third Super Bowl, with the game also taking place at Stanford Stadium in 1985.
On that occasion, the 49ers beat the Miami Dolphins in Super Bowl XIX.
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement on Monday: “The Bay Area was an incredible host for Super Bowl 50, and we are thrilled to bring the Super Bowl back.
“We look forward to working with the 49ers and the Bay Area Host Committee to create an impactful Super Bowl LX in 2026 that showcases all the great things the region has to offer.”
49ers president Al Guido said: “We are honored to host the Super Bowl at Levi’s Stadium once again, and to be stewards of one of the biggest sporting events in the world.
“Since hosting Super Bowl 50 in 2016, Levi’s Stadium has cemented its reputation as a world-class venue. I’m confident Super Bowl LX will be a terrific event that benefits the entire community.”
Super Bowl LVIII will be held at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on February 11 2024, with the Ceasars Superdome in New Orleans to stage Super Bowl LIX on February 9 2025.
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WASHINGTON — High-stakes talks over raising the debit limit resumed in the Capitol on Friday evening, hours after they were paused at midday when Republican negotiators walked out of the room, blaming the White House for holding up discussions.
“We’ll be back in the room tonight,” said House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Fox Business, moments before negotiators were spotted returning to the room where talks have taken place.
“But it is very frustrating if they want to come into the room and think we’re going to spend more money next year than we did this year. That’s not right. And that’s not going to happen,” said McCarthy.
The talks lasted about two hours, breaking up for the evening around 8 p.m. ET.
One of the toughest sticking points in the talks has been the question of spending caps, a key GOP demand but a red line for a significant bloc of Democrats.
As the White House presses for a debt limit hike that would push the next deadline past the 2024 presidential election, Republicans are insisting on a spending cap for next year that goes beyond a freeze on the current top-line number and actually rolls back government spending to 2022 levels.
“Let’s spend less, let’s pull back the Covid money that we haven’t spent … work requirements … let’s do some permitting reform … I think we could probably find a pretty good agreement to be able to move forward,” said McCarthy, laying out the GOP’s demands, in addition to the spending caps.
Holding their respective caucuses together has become more difficult this week for party leaders — not less — as opposition to any compromise has grown among blocs of conservative Republicans and progressive Democrats
Any deal to raise or suspend the debt limit will need to pass in both the GOP-led House and the Democratic-controlled Senate, and key lawmakers in both parties have acknowledged that the eventual compromise bill could be unacceptable to hardliners.
“There are real differences between the parties on budget issues and talks will be difficult,” a White House spokesperson told NBC News after the negotiations broke up. “The president’s team is working hard towards a reasonable bipartisan solution that can pass the House and the Senate.”
The break in talks came just a day after McCarthy said he was optimistic that congressional negotiators could reach a deal in time to hold a House vote next week.
“I see the path that we can come to an agreement,” the California Republican told reporters on Thursday.
President Joe Biden is in Japan this weekend for a Group of Seven summit, but he cut short his trip in order to return home on Sunday and continue negotiations.
The House and Senate both kept their original plans to leave for the weekend on Thursday. The Senate is not scheduled to be back in session until the last few days of May.
But Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., advised members to be ready to return to the Capitol with 24 hours notice.
Investors have been watching Washington closely this week for any signs of progress in the monthslong debt ceiling standoff. Earlier this month, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen pegged June 1 as the earliest date on which the United States could run out of money to pay debts the government has already incurred.
The date was earlier than either the White House or Wall Street had anticipated, and injected fresh urgency into talks that had been effectively stalled since February.
Following a meeting at the White House on Tuesday with congressional leaders, Biden tapped two of his closest aides to take over the talks, which had made little progress to that point.
McCarthy praised Biden’s choice of presidential counselor Steve Ricchetti and Office of Management and Budget Director Shalanda Young, calling the pair “exceptionally smart.”
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Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., greets Martin Gruenberg, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, during the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing in Dirksen Building on Tuesday, March 28, 2023.
Tom Williams | Cq-roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images
WASHINGTON — Sen. Elizabeth Warren is asking federal financial regulators for answers over what she called a “deeply troubling” deal that saw JPMorgan Chase take over First Republic Bank.
In a letter to regulators ahead of a Senate hearing on the matter, Warren highlighted that the deal, which is expected to produce a $2.6 billion gain for JPMorgan, resulted in a $13 billion loss to the FDIC’s Deposit Insurance Fund.
Warren’s letter, dated Wednesday, is addressed to Martin Gruenberg, chairman of the Federal Deposit Investment Corp., and Michael Hsu, acting comptroller of the currency, an independent division of the Treasury Department.
Both Gruenberg and Hsu will testify before the Senate Banking committee on Thursday. A spokesperson for the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said the agency does not comment on congressional correspondence. A representative for the FDIC told CNBC that it will respond directly to Warren.
“Without a complete regulatory review, and at a cost of $13 billion to the Federal Deposit Insurance Fund, the nation’s biggest bank — already too big to fail — got a bargain deal on a failing bank that made it even bigger,” wrote Warren, D-Mass.
JPMorgan, the largest U.S. bank, acquired First Republic’s deposits and the bulk of its assets May 1 after regulators seized the bank — resulting in the biggest bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis. First Republic was seen as the weakest link in the banking system following the failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in March.
“Our government invited us and others to step up, and we did,” JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said in a press release May 1. “Our financial strength, capabilities and business model allowed us to develop a bid to execute the transaction in a way to minimize costs to the Deposit Insurance Fund.”
The FDIC allowed JPMorgan to take over the total package of First Republic’s assets for less than they were worth, according to Warren, a longtime critic of Wall Street. Meanwhile, the agency will bear 80% of the credit losses on the bank’s mortgages and commercial loans, she said.
She also asked questions about the process through which JPMorgan was selected from a pool of bidders.
The Massachusetts Democrat is seeking answers from Gruenberg and Hsu about whether the agency indeed resolved the bank failure at the lowest cost to the federal insurance fund, as is required by law.
The FDIC declared a systemic risk exception to avoid taking a least-cost route toward guaranteeing uninsured deposits after SVB and Signature failed, but this method was not applied to First Republic. Instead, the insurance fund was allowed to take a multibillion-dollar loss after billions of dollars worth of the bank’s uninsured deposits were rescued during the deal, Warren said.
“The FDIC appeared to prioritize First Republic’s uninsured deposits at the bank before the Insurance Fund,” she said.
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U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Ukraine Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal speak to the press after holding a bilateral meeting at the U.S. Treasury Department Building in Washington, D.C., U.S. April 13, 2023.
Ken Cedeno | Reuters
WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen reaffirmed to Congress on Monday that the United States could default on its debt as early as June 1.
“With additional information now available, I am writing to note that we still estimate that Treasury will likely no longer be able to satisfy all of the government’s obligations if Congress has not acted to raise or suspend the debt limit by early June, and potentially as early as June 1,” she wrote.
The guidance came as the White House and congressional leaders prepared to meet Tuesday to continue negotiations over potential spending cuts in exchange for House passage of a debt ceiling hike. The Democratic majority Senate is expected to back whatever the White House negotiates with the GOP controlled House.
In recent days, conflicting reports have emerged about whether negotiators are making progress.
President Joe Biden sounded optimistic this past weekend about reaching a deal with Republicans to raise or suspend the debt limit in time to avoid economic fallout from even a potential U.S. debt default.
“I really think there’s a desire on their part, as well as ours, to reach an agreement, and I think we’ll be able to do it,” Biden told reporters Sunday in Delaware. He added, “I remain optimistic because I’m a congenital optimist.”
But that optimism wasn’t matched on the other side of the table.
“I still think we’re far apart,” McCarthy told NBC News on Monday outside the Capitol, adding, “It doesn’t seem to me yet that they want a deal.”
As she has in prior letters to Congress, Yellen underscored the urgency of the situation.
“Waiting until the last minute to suspend or increase the debt limit can cause serious harm to business and consumer confidence, raise short-term borrowing costs for taxpayers, and negatively impact the credit rating of the United States,” she wrote.
“In fact, we have already seen Treasury’s borrowing costs increase substantially for securities maturing in early June,” said Yellen.
The Tuesday meeting between Biden, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky was initially scheduled for Friday, but postponed until Tuesday to give aides more time to talk.
The new letter also came just days after guidance from the Congressional Budget Office that said tax revenues and emergency measures after June 15 “will probably allow the government to continue financing operations through at least the end of July.”
“If the debt limit remains unchanged, there is significant risk that at some point in the first two weeks of June, the government will no longer be able to pay all of its obligations,” said the CBO report.
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People walk and ride bicycles past the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on May 11, 2023.
Jim Watson | AFP | Getty Images
WASHINGTON — The Congressional Budget Office on Friday said tax revenues and emergency measures after June 15 “will probably allow the government to continue financing operations through at least the end of July.”
The updated guidance otherwise reiterated the CBO’s earlier uncertainty about the debt ceiling during the first few weeks of June. Even though mid-June tax revenues could ease pressure on the Treasury through July, there’s still the risk of default in the first few weeks of June, the key government forecaster said.
“If the debt limit remains unchanged, there is significant risk that at some point in the first two weeks of June, the government will no longer be able to pay all of its obligations,” said the CBO report.
The new report came as the White House and congressional leaders postponed a scheduled Friday meeting to continue negotiations, citing little progress so far over any deal to cut spending and pair that with a debt limit hike.
Read more: Confused about the debt ceiling? Here’s what you need to know
“The extent to which the Treasury will be able to fund the government’s ongoing operations will remain uncertain throughout May, even if the Treasury ultimately runs out of funds in early June. That uncertainty exists because the timing and amount of revenue collections and outlays over the intervening weeks could differ from CBO’s projections,” said the latest report.
The CBO also issued an updated projection of the federal budget deficit for 2023, raising it to $1.5 trillion.
The office warned that there was still “a great deal of uncertainty” around the deficit figure, in part due to an expected Supreme Court ruling on President Joe Biden‘s student loan forgiveness plan.
Legal experts told CNBC the nation’s highest court is likely to strike down the $400 billion debt forgiveness plan, given the court’s conservative majority.
If that happens, the administration would likely record the money it set aside for the loan forgiveness last year as a reduction in outlays this year, the CBO reported.
The CBO is a nonpartisan federal agency that provides objective budget and economic data to Congress, typically to inform legislation.
The debt ceiling talks were postponed less than a day before Biden was set to sit down with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y.
That meeting was to be the second this week, after a Tuesday huddle failed to produce any significant developments.
It was unclear Friday what impact, if any, the new report would have on talks currently underway at the staff level, between aides to the four congressional leaders and White House liaisons.
As both the House and Senate prepared to leave for the weekend on Thursday, McCarthy said he had not seen “a seriousness” from the White House regarding any potential deal. “It seems like they want to default more than they want a deal,” the California Republican told reporters in the Capitol.
Democrats appeared equally dug in, as Schumer indicated in a letter to his caucus Friday, in which he said staff level talks would continue in the coming days.
Yet even as aides worked to find common ground, Schumer said Democratic senators would keep “highlighting the devastating impact” of cuts to the federal budget that are part of a bill passed by House Republicans last month.
Central to the partisan impasse is the White House’s insistence that Congress vote to raise the debt limit without preconditions, and House Republicans’ demand that any debt limit hike be paired with sweeping cuts to federal spending and new work requirements for social safety net programs.
Failure to raise the debt ceiling before the U.S. runs out of available cash and emergency measures would cause an “economic catastrophe,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Monday.
“That is something that could produce financial chaos, it would drastically reduce the amount of spending and would mean that Social Security recipients and veterans and people counting on money from the government that they’re owed, contractors, we just would not have enough money to pay the bills,” Yellen told CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.”

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Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder has entered into an agreement to sell his franchise to a group led by Philadelphia 76ers owner Josh Harris, it was announced Friday.
The framework of the deal was first reported last month. According to CBS Sports, it is believed to be for $6.05 billion, the largest price ever paid for a North American sports franchise.
Along with Harris, the new ownership group includes billionaire Mitchell Rales and former Los Angeles Lakers legend Magic Johnson.
In a joint news release first obtained by NFL Insider Ian Rapaport, the two groups said that the “purchase and sale agreement” was still subject to approval from the NFL. The deal will require a yes vote from 24 of the 32 owners.
Following the announcement, Johnson tweeted that he was “so excited to get to work on executing our vision for the Commanders and our loyal fanbase!”
Snyder’s tenure as owner of the Commanders has been plagued with issues. Last year, the House Oversight and Reform Committee determined that Snyder had interfered into an NFL investigation of allegations of sexual harassment by team executives.
In 2021, the NFL fined the team $10 million after an independent investigation determined the franchise had a toxic workplace culture.
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More than 600,000 veterans in a handful of high-profile congressional battleground districts could be hurt by potential cuts to government programs if the House debt limit bill becomes law, according to the White House.
“If House Republicans have buyers’ remorse about the agonizing cuts they just endorsed for those that sacrificed for our freedom and security, the good news is there’s an obvious solution: stop holding our economy hostage and cleanly vote against causing a recession,” said Andrew Bates, a White House deputy press secretary, in a memo obtained by HuffPost on Saturday.
In the memo, the White House said that a total of 618,960 veterans live in 18 GOP-controlled House districts, or an average of about 34,387 each. While the memo does not explicitly note this, President Joe Biden won all 18 districts in the 2020 election. These districts are seen as the front line in efforts to decide who will control the chamber after 2024.
The memo shows the White House’s determination to push the issue of cuts to veterans’ benefits as it works to hang House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s debt reduction plan around the necks of the GOP, even as Republicans attempt to argue the attacks are unfair.
The districts include those represented by Reps. Don Bacon of Nebraska, George Santos of New York, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and David Schweikert of Arizona. Of the 18 districts, 11 are in either New York or California, reinforcing the central role that the two blue states will play in the battle for control of the House.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has warned that the U.S. faces the prospect of being unable to pay its bills as early June. Republicans have said they want spending cuts and as the price to increase the debt ceiling, passing a $4.8 trillion spending reduction and debt hike bill in April on a mostly party-line vote.
But the vast majority of those cuts would come from the annual funding that Congress gives to the Pentagon, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Environmental Protection Agency and other government agencies.
The bill doesn’t specify which departments would take cuts, nor does it include language protecting any agency, including the Defense Department or the Veterans Affairs Department. Because about half of that annual pool of money usually goes to defense, the White House calculates that everything else, including veterans programs, would suffer a 22% cut next year if defense were protected from any reductions.
“The Default on America Act would force extremely painful consequences on the Americans who have risked everything to keep us safe and protect our freedoms,” Bates wrote, jokingly summing up the GOP message thusly: “I will singlehandedly kill millions of jobs and send retirement accounts into a tailspin unless you let me gut the VA.”
Republicans have decried the estimates as fearmongering.
Rep. Kay Granger (R-Texas), the chair of the House Appropriations Committee that doles out annual spending, said in April, “We will provide for our national defense, take care of veterans, and secure our border – all while reducing overall spending.”
Rep. Mike Bost (R-Ill.), the chair of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee, said Democrats are engaging in “dangerous rhetoric.”
“Simply put, they are playing politics with our veterans,” Bost said. “Veterans are not political pawns to advance a political agenda.”
“Simply put, they are playing politics with our veterans. Veterans are not political pawns to advance a political agenda.”
– Rep. Mike Bost (R-Ill.), chair of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee
The heat over the potential cuts illustrates the political potency of the veterans issue. With only a five-seat Republican margin, Democrats are looking to retake control of the House after performing much better than expected in 2022.
The memo comes ahead of a high-profile meeting slated for Tuesday between Biden and the party leaders in each chamber of Congress. With the number of days that lawmakers will be in Washington before June dwindling, each side is hoping the other blinks, with some reason for optimism.
Axios reported Saturday that moderate House Republicans are “fretting” about being able to push through a compromise bill once the initial bargaining stage is over. And NBC News reported Friday that the White House is mulling offering a short-term debt limit extension to ease the time pressure and minimize the economic danger of default jitters in financial markets.
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