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Reuters

  • Rachel Platten tops British singles chart for first time

    Fight Song climbed 67 places since last week and has proven a big hit across the globe, entering the Top 10 in the United States, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Belgium.

    Platten’s first Top 40 hit ended the week narrowly ahead of Felix Jaehn’s “Ain’t Nobody (Loves Me Better),” with last week’s Number 1, Glynne’s “Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself” falling to Number 3.

    Calvin Harris & Disciples’ “How Deep Is Your Love” at Number 4 took the title of the most streamed track for a third week running, racking up 2.4 million listens in the last seven days.

    Glynne’s first album, which includes her five Number 1 singles, had sales of just under 60,000, giving her the second-biggest opening week of any debut record in 2015.

    Last week’s Number 1 “The Very Best of Cilla Black” slipped into second place, and Bon Jovi’s 13th album “Burning Bridges” entered the charts at Number 3.

    The highest climber of the week was English singer Ella Eyre whose new single “Good Times” climbed 143 places to the 37th spot.

  • Swansea end Manchester United’s unbeaten start in Premier League

    After an entertaining first half ended goalless Manchester United’s Juan Mata fired Luke Shaw’s teasing cross into the roof of the net in the 48th minute before Swansea took control.

    Andre Ayew restored parity with a headed effort 13 minutes later before Bafetimbi Gomis maintained his superb form with a low shot five minutes later as the Welsh side registered their third successive 2-1 league victory over United.

    “It was a very difficult game,” Swansea captain Ashley Williams told Sky Sports. “We had to dig deep.

    “Any time you can beat one of the top teams shows our improvement. We keep working every day and every week. We want to be a consistently good side.”

    Earlier, Dusan Tadic’s brace and a goal from Graziano Pelle gave Southampton’s stuttering league campaign lift-off with a comfortable 3-0 victory over promoted Norwich City at St Mary’s .

    Norwich defender Steven Whittaker was sent off having received two yellow cards within four first-half minutes for professional fouls as the south-coast club registered their first victory of the season.

    United’s solid yet unspectacular start to the season had been built on a steely defence which had yet to concede and had restricted opponents to just five shots on target in three matches this season.

    Swansea, however, achieved a Premier League double over United last season and had started the season unbeaten, including an impressive opening-day draw at champions Chelsea.

    United started brightly, though, with Memphis Depay and Mata sending early warnings of United’s attacking threat.

    Swansea began to grow into the game having weathered United’s early attacking raids with Gylfi Sigurdsson firing agonisingly wide before Bafetimbi Gomis curled an effort against the post.

    Wayne Rooney netted a midweek Champions League hat-trick but continued his underwhelming domestic form, squandering a host of inviting chances and having fewer first-half touches than every other United player.

    After the break Mata fired in before the hosts turned the game on its head.

    Ayew headed home Sigurdsson’s cross before the Ghanaian’s stunning pass created space for Gomis to slide home his ninth goal in his last 10 Premier League matches.

    SOUTHAMPTON CANTER

    The surprise packages of last season having finished seventh, Southampton had been out-of-sorts, taking just two points from three games and failing to score since the opening day.

    Sunday’s first half was a microcosm of their season, plenty of possession and chances but a lack of killer instinct in front of goal.

    James Ward-Prowse, Fonte, Pelle and the impressive Sadio Mane all went close in a dominant yet fruitless opening 20 minutes before Whittaker was dismissed.

    After Pelle stabbed home in the 45th minute Tadic fired home Mane’s cross for a superb second then applied the finishing touch after Pelle’s header was parried into his path two minutes later.

    Jay Rodriguez, still making his way back from a long-term knee injury, was brought on after the break and was lively throughout, forcing John Ruddy into a number of saves.

    “We haven’t had the start we wanted in the league,” Saints captain Jose Fonte told Sky Sports. “But the most important thing today was getting back to winning games.

    “We have massive responsibility now we are seen as a good team so we need to win and that’s the mentality we have to implant in every game.”

    Swansea, who have eight points from four games, leapfrogged United, with seven, into fourth. Southampton moved up to 10th with five points while Norwich sit one point adrift in 14th.

    Manchester City top the standings going into the international break with a maximum 12 points from four games, three ahead of Crystal Palace.

  • Investors still in the dark as cyber threat grows

    Banks have led the way in developing cyber defenses and some top fund managers have ramped up pressure on companies to do more, but the broader picture is less encouraging.

    “I don’t see any visible stand asset managers are taking, like they do on other social responsibility items,” said Malcolm Harkins, information security chief at U.S. cyber security start-up Cylance Inc.

    The soft underbelly of companies outside the banking sector was exposed again this month when hackers leaked details of nearly 37 million clients of Ashley Madison. The infidelity website had to postpone its stock market listing and now faces a $750 million lawsuit.

    More than half the value of companies worldwide is in intangible assets, such as intellectual property, much of which is stored on computers and could therefore be vulnerable to hackers.

    That figure could be as high as $37.5 trillion of the $71 trillion in enterprise value of 58,000 companies, according to Brand Finance, a consultancy specializing in valuation of intangible assets. The World Economic Forum said that robust protection against cyber risk could add as much as $22 trillion to the global economy by 2020.

    The global financial cost of attacks is rising fast — up more than 10 percent last year, a report by specialist researcher Ponemon Institute said.

    Though some might argue that investors can sell out of businesses they consider to be performing badly on cyber safety, the reality is less straightforward. Passive funds that track a specific index or sector have no leeway, while pension funds tend to demand a longer-term view from asset managers.

    But even those keen to evaluate cyber risk face an uphill struggle, hampered by a lack of resources, poor data and weak disclosure from companies.

    Sacha Sadan, corporate governance head at the fund arm of insurer Legal & General, told Reuters that cyber risk is one of his team’s top priorities for corporate engagement but described the approach of some rivals as “hit and miss”.

    “We would rather a company, when they come to talk to us, had a slide that said ‘this is what we’re doing’. At the moment, it’s us asking them and they say, ‘well, most other shareholders don’t ask’.”

    MIXED PRIORITIES

    A Reuters survey of fund firms with a combined $16 trillion in assets showed pressure on company boards is far from uniform.

    Only four of 12 governance chiefs at British, French, German and U.S. fund houses interviewed by telephone and email said they considered cyber risk a “top priority” across all of their investments. The remainder said they either discussed the issue case by case or that there was too little information for proper risk-assessment.

    BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager, is among those that have engaged with companies, though it declined to provide further detail on examples in its quarterly governance report.

    In its latest report BlackRock said it had spoken to a large insurer and “shared perspectives” gained from speaking to cyber experts and other companies.

    As for the types of business meriting closer examination, Jessica Ground, global head of stewardship at Schroders, said that less-obvious targets such as travel agents need to do more. Another chief named online gaming as a sector laggard.

    Most fund managers do have dedicated teams supervising governance. But these often number fewer than 10 people to analyze and speak to thousands of companies on a broad range of topics, with matters such as executive pay regularly given higher priority than cyber security.

    On the other side of the fence, the companies themselves are far from united in their approach.

    “There is significant divergence across companies as to how prepared they are,” said Antony Marsden at Henderson Global Investors.

    Though attitude to cyber risk is inherently difficult to quantify, analysis of the most recent annual reports of the 10 biggest companies in Europe and the United States showed variable communication on the issue.

    Only three of the Europeans — Novo Nordisk, HSBC and Royal Dutch Shell — had a separate section on cyber risk or information security. Across all 10 reports there were a mere 14 mentions of keywords “cyber”, “information security”, “hack” or “hacking”.

    That compares with five of the U.S. companies — Apple, Wells Fargo, Facebook, General Electric and JPMorgan  —  and 63 keyword references, partly influenced by more banks featuring in the list.

    WHEN, NOT IF

    “You can look at an annual report and see some companies talk a lot about what would happen if the euro were to fail … But just as important is what happens if you get hacked,” L&G’s Sadan said. “You will get hacked. So what’s your contingency planning?”

    Several smaller U.S. investment firms with a mandate for socially responsible investment are already pressing companies publicly over data security matters, including the filing of proxy resolutions at shareholder meetings.

    Arjuna Capital, for example, had American Express shareholders vote on whether it should report annually on how its board oversees privacy and data security. Amex opposed the idea, saying its board receives regular updates, and the proposal won only 22 percent of the vote at the annual meeting.

    Highlighting the lack of a consistent approach from asset managers, a number of large fund firms opposed the resolution.

    It is little wonder, then, that some have yet to address a skills gap that leaves them ill-equipped for proper risk-assessment.

    “The frameworks for dealing with cyber risk, about what it means for our business and what can we do about it, are only now being put in place,” said Sandra Carlisle at Newton Asset Management.

    Rules in the United States requiring companies to report data privacy breaches are likely to be replicated in Europe in the near future, which will aid funds’ understanding of the risks.

    In the meantime, investors are very much in the dark.

    “What you get is assurance that people are looking at these things,” said Iain Richards at Anglo-U.S. fund firm Columbia Threadneedle. “There’s a scarcity of meaningful disclosure.” – Reuters

  • Egyptian court sentences three Al Jazeera journalists to prison

    The verdict, in a retrial, was issued against Mohamed Fahmy, a naturalised Canadian who has given up his Egyptian citizenship, Baher Mohamed, an Egyptian, and Peter Greste, an Australian who was deported in February.

    Rights advocates say their arrest was part of a crackdown on free speech waged since the army overthrew President Mohamed Mursi, a senior Muslim Brotherhood figure, in July 2013 following mass unrest over his rule.

    Judge Hassan Farid said the defendants, dubbed the “Marriott Cell” by the local press because they worked out of a hotel belonging to that chain, “are not journalists and not members of the press syndicate” and broadcast with unlicensed equipment.

    Baher received an additional six months in prison. The state news agency MENA said that extra time was handed down because he was in possession of a bullet at the time of his arrest.

    The three men were originally sentenced to seven to 10 years in prison on charges that included spreading lies to help a terrorist organisation, a reference to the Muslim Brotherhood, which the military toppled from power two years ago.

    The three defendants denied all charges, calling them absurd. Three other Egyptians, all students, also received three-year sentences for the same charges.

    Speaking on Al Jazeera in reaction to Saturday’s verdict, Greste said he was shocked at the scale of the sentence. “Words really don’t do justice,” he said. “To be given three-year sentences is outrageous. It is just devastating for me.”

    Fahmy and Mohamed, who were released on bail in February after over a year in jail, were taken back into custody after the verdict, according to Fahmy’s wife, Marwa Omara. She was in tears after the sentences were read out.

    APPEAL PLANNED

    “We will appeal this verdict and hope it will be reversed. We are now going to be holding a series of meetings with government officials where we will be asking for Mr. Fahmy’s immediate deportation to Canada,” said Fahmy’s lawyer, Amal Clooney.

    “His colleague Peter Greste was sent back to Australia; there is no reason why the same thing shouldn’t happen in Mr. Fahmy’s case.”

    Western governments have voiced concern for freedom of expression in Egypt since Mursi was ousted but have not taken concrete steps to promote democracy in Egypt, an important strategic ally in the Middle East.

    “Mohamed has been sentenced and all I can ask for now is for all his colleagues to stand by him and to keep calling for his release, but this is extremely unfair,” said Fahmy’s wife.

    “I ask the Canadian government to extract him from here as he is a Canadian citizen and to deport him back to Canada. All what I am asking (for) is justice and fairness, for what happened with Peter to be applied to Mohamed.”

    Canada called for Fahmy’s “full and immediate release,” after the verdict. “Senior Canadian officials in Canada and in Cairo are pressing Egyptian authorities on Mr. Fahmy’s case. This includes advocating for the same treatment of Mr. Fahmy as other foreign nationals have received,” Canadian Minister of State Lynne Yelich said in a statement.

    The U.S. State Department said in a statement it was “deeply disappointed” by the verdict, which “undermines the very freedom of expression necessary for stability and development.”

    Al Jazeera condemned the court’s decision in a statement read by the channel’s general director, Mostefa Souag.

    “This judgement is a new attack on the freedom of the press, and it’s a black day in the history of the Egyptian judiciary.”

    “There is no evidence our colleagues in any way fabricated news. This was comprehensively debunked by the court’s own technical committee,” Al Jazeera English Acting Managing Director Giles Trendle told a news conference in Doha.

    Human rights groups have accused Egyptian authorities of rolling back freedoms won in the 2011 popular uprising that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

    In June, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists said Egypt was holding at least 18 journalists behind bars, the highest number since record-keeping began in 1990. They were being held on the pretext of national security to crack down on media freedoms, it said.

    Egypt says it has launched a security crackdown to eradicate Islamist militant “terrorists” and deliver stability.

    Speaking after the verdict, the British ambassador to Egypt, John Casson, said the country’s stability should not be built on a “shaky foundation which deprives people of their rights and undermines the freedom of the press and freedom of expression.”

    Amnesty International called Saturday’s verdict “farcical.”

    “The fact that two of these journalists are now facing time in jail following two grossly unfair trials makes a mockery of justice in Egypt,” said Philip Luther, Amnesty’s director for the Middle East and North Africa.

  • Focus turns to U.S. data as China slowdown looms

    The economic figures will culminate in Friday’s jobs report that should reveal more about the strength of the U.S. economy. Car sales, construction spending, the Federal Reserve’s “beige book” and jobs growth may show the economy is strong enough to withstand the first rate hike in nearly a decade from the Federal Reserve, despite worries about a hard landing for China’s economy.

    Global stock markets were stung by severe swings in recent weeks, stoked by concerns that a slowdown in China’s economy may be more harsh than anticipated.

    But after confirming a move into correction territory, the S&P 500 rebounded to score its best two-day percentage gain in over six years this week, as comments from Fed officials led some investors to believe the market turmoil and global growth concerns had diminished the possibility of a rate hike at the central bank’s September meeting.

    A September rate increase hasn’t been ruled out, however. Fed Vice President Stanley Fischer told CNBC during the Fed’s annual conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, that the committee was “heading in the direction” of higher rates. Traders in futures markets that bet on rate increases boosted September’s odds after his words.

    “There is a narrative out there that Yellen’s Fed is looking for a reason to delay the rate hike; I don’t think that is necessarily the case,” said Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonwealth Financial in Waltham, Massachusetts.

    “If we continue this run of strong data and if the market keeps coming back or at least doesn’t keep dropping, that makes September more likely.”

    After a stronger-than-expected revision to second quarter gross domestic product and solid durable goods figures, another run of strong data next week could bolster the case for a rate increase next month. As of early August, most U.S. primary dealers polled expected a September rate increase.

    But traders also are also mindful of the fact that the Chinese slowdown could hit U.S. companies and their shares disproportionately in the second half of the year, with luxury goods companies and industrials among the groups paying a price.

    Thomson Reuters data shows third-quarter earnings expectations have dropped 6.4 percent for the industrial sector and 8.8 percent for the materials sector since July 1.

    Should analysts continue to downgrade their expectations for third- and fourth-quarter earnings in those sectors or more broadly, that could make stocks more expensive, even after the recent selloff.

    “It is more important to the U.S. whether or not GM and Ford can sell cars there,” said Kim Forrest, senior equity research analyst, Fort Pitt Capital Group in Pittsburgh.

    “That is probably what a softening of the Chinese economy could affect and it factors into the earnings of these companies.”

    Should next week’s data show the U.S. economy continues to slowly improve, market volatility is likely to remain as investors grapple with the possibility of a September hike and its ramifications for risk assets.

    “Markets and investors were nervous anyway about this normalization anyway after years without a raise,” said Peter Kenny, chief market strategist at Clearpool Group in New York.

    “If we were not in a position where markets are as jittery as they are as a result of the China deceleration story, it would be fair to say a rate move of 25 basis points would be able to be managed by the world’s largest economy.”

  • Thai police say suspect in Bangkok bombing arrested

    Police raided an apartment in a northern suburb of the capital on Saturday afternoon and discovered possible bomb-making materials that could have been used in the evening attack in Bangkok’s bustling commercial heart.

    The bomb tore through the crowded Erawan Shrine, one of the country’s top tourist attractions and close to high-end hotels and malls, killing 20 people and wounding scores more.

    Among the dead were 14 foreigners, including seven from mainland China and Hong Kong.

    The suspect “looks like the one we are looking for”, said national police spokesman Prawut Thavornsiri.

    “They also found a lot of materials which can be used to make bombs.”

    The prime suspect in the attack is a young man with shaggy dark hair dressed in a yellow shirt seen on grainy closed-circuit television footage dropping off a backpack and casually leaving the scene before the bomb went off.

    Police and military personnel cordoned off the four-storey budget apartment on Saturday from scores of media and onlookers, and the arrested man could not be seen, a Reuters photographer said.

    Thai television showed a photograph of a handcuffed man who appeared to be foreign, in his 20s, with a beard and hair shaven short. Reuters could not immediately verify the authenticity of the image.

    Police had made little progress in the investigation into what the military government said was an attack aimed at hurting Thailand’s troubled economy.

    Thai authorities had offered a $85,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the main suspect.

    Officials have had different theories about the identity of the man, saying he could be foreign, or a Thai man pretending to be foreign.

    Police have been criticized for providing contradictory information, and Reuters reporters on Friday found the authorities had not checked some CCTV footage taken minutes after the blast, which featured a man dressed like the chief suspect.

  • Pentagon teams with Apple, Boeing to develop wearable technology

    Carter said funding for the Obama administration’s newest manufacturing institute would go to the FlexTech Alliance, a consortium of 162 companies, universities and other groups, from Boeing, Apple and Harvard, to Advantest Akron Polymer Systems and Kalamazoo Valley Community College.

    The group will work to advance the development and manufacture of so-called flexible hybrid electronics, which can be embedded with sensors and stretched, twisted and bent to fit aircraft or other platform where they will be used.

    “This is an emerging technology that takes advanced flexible materials for circuits, communications, sensors and power and combines them with thinned silicon chips to ultimately produce the next generation of electronic products,” Carter said.

    He was speaking at NASA’s Ames Research Center in the heart of Silicon Valley.

    The consortium, which will be managed by the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory, will add $90 million to the federal money. Local governments will chip in more, boosting the group’s total five-year funding level to $171 million.

    Defense officials say the rapid development of new technologies around the globe is forcing the Pentagon to seek partnerships with the private sector rather than developing most of its technology itself, as it once did.

    “I’ve been pushing the Pentagon to think outside our five-sided box and invest in innovation here in Silicon Valley and in tech communities across the country,” Carter said.

    The Flexible Hybrid Electronics Manufacturing Innovation Hub, which will be based in San Jose, is the seventh of nine such institutes planned by the Obama administration in an effort to revitalize the U.S. manufacturing base.

    The Pentagon established its first institute in 2012 to help advance the development of 3-D printing.

    The institute funded on Friday aims to use high-end printing technology to create specialized, stretchable electronics that could be embedded with sensors and worn by soldiers.

    The technology also could ultimately be used to integrate sensors directly onto the surfaces of ships or warplanes, allowing real-time monitoring of their structural integrity.

    Carter also met on Friday with the Defense Science Board for a briefing on its latest study on how autonomous military drones and robots should be in the future.

    The department has become increasingly dependent upon drones and other robots of varying degrees of autonomy, using them for everything from surveillance and reconnaissance to delivery of supplies and carrying loads for ground troops.

  • Protesters gather to pile more pressure on Malaysia’s PM

    The Malaysian leader has weathered weeks of attacks since it was reported that investigators probing the management of debt-laden state fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) had discovered the unexplained transfer of more than $600 million.

    Protesters hope to spark a people’s power movement forcing Najib out, but political analysts doubt he will be toppled.

    Security was tight as the rally got under way and access to a square where the protesters plan to converge was blocked.

    The Malaysiakini news portal said 10,000 people had gathered by early afternoon but police estimated the crowd at half that number. Some members of the crowd had started to walk towards the square, Reuters witnesses said.

    Protesters carrying “Out, Najib, Out” placards sang the national anthem, honked plastic horns and shouted “bersih!”, a Malay word for “clean”. Bersih is also the name of the pro-democracy organisation behind the rally in Kuala Lumpur and the two main cities on Malaysia’s side of Borneo.

    “We the Malaysians want to clean up this country, we reject dirty politics,” said Tinagar Veranogan, a demonstrator in a crowd of predominantly young people as a helicopter buzzed overhead.

    The Star daily said on Thursday the army could intervene if the protest gets out of hand and a state of emergency is declared. A military spokesman declined to comment.

    Kuala Lumpur authorities rejected an application by Bersih for a protest permit, raising fears of a repeat of a rally in 2012 when police used water cannon and teargas to disperse protesters. Reuters journalists saw several anti-riot trucks and a water cannon parked near the Merdeka Square on Saturday.

    The government has blocked access to Bersih’s website and banned wearing of its signature yellow T-shirts under an order prohibiting material prejudicial to public order and security.

    The anti-graft movement Transparency International called on the Malaysian government to respect the right of citizens to demonstrate peacefully without fear of reprisal.

    The government “should listen to the concerns of its people”, organisation chief Jose Ugaz said.

    NAJIB HAS TIGHTENED GRIP

    Analysts say the Bersih movement is unlikely to inspire broad public support because it lacks strong leadership.

    “The rally will register as a big protest. But in terms of actual change, I don’t think anything will happen immediately,” said Wan Saiful Wan Jan, chief executive of the Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs.

    Ibrahim Suffian, director of independent pollster Merdeka Center, said discontent with Najib, who took office in 2009, is concentrated in urban areas and a national survey this month by his group showed a slight majority opposed the rally.

    Malaysia’s anti-graft agency has said the funds paid into Najib’s account were a donation from the Middle East, which came just before a 2013 election, but the identity of the donor has not been revealed.

    Najib, 62, has denied wrongdoing and says he did not take any money for personal gain but has tightened his grip on power through a series of steps to sideline would-be dissenters.

    He sacked his deputy and other ministers who had publicly questioned him, and the attorney-general who was investigating 1MDB was replaced. Authorities suspended two newspapers and blocked access to a website that had reported on 1MDB.

    Najib retains significant support from the long-ruling Barisan Nasional coalition and from within his party, the United Malays National Organisation.

    The coalition, in power since 1957, lost the popular vote for the first time in 2013 to an opposition alliance that split this year.

  • Segway knocks Usain Bolt off his stride at the Bird’s Nest

    Bolt was taking the plaudits of the crowd after winning his fourth straight 200 metres world crown when the wheel of the cameraman’s Segway caught a trackside rail and flipped over, sending man and machine into the barefooted sprinter.

    The 29-year-old Olympic champion, who had his back to the man, was knocked to the ground and sustained a few minor cuts.

    He was not about to let the accident ruin his celebrations after beating American rival Justin Gatlin to a sprint title for the second time in five days, however.

    “I did not hit a cameraman. He took me out,” said Bolt, who held on to his track spikes with his right hand as he did a backward roll to get back onto his feet.

    “The rumour I am trying to start right now is Justin Gatlin paid him.”

    Silver medallist Gatlin, sat next to Bolt at the post-race news conference, quipped ruefully: “I want my money back.”

    Bolt, who is hoping to run for a third gold in the 4x100m relay at the weekend, joked that he might have to consider taking out insurance after the incident.

    “I probably should have my legs insured. It was pretty scary when it happened,” he added.

    “Accidents happen. I have a few cuts but it is nothing that I have never done to myself in training. I will be alright.”

  • England’s Ian Bell bids farewell to one-day cricket

    Ian Bell, who has scored an England record 5,416 runs in 161 one-dayers, was left out of the squad for the five-match series against Australia starting next week.

    He helped his team win this year’s Ashes, a record-equalling fifth test series victory for him over the Australians, but averaged only 26.87 with the bat.

    “Deep down I probably knew I wasn’t ready to call time on my test career,” Bell wrote in the Metro newspaper.

    Bell has scored 7,569 runs in 115 tests at an average of 43, including 22 centuries.

    “I’ve a huge amount still to give in the test arena and still have so many ambitions left to achieve, both from a personal and a team perspective,” he said.

    “I would love nothing more than to go to Australia in two years’ time and right the wrongs of our last Ashes tour there,” the right-hander added in reference to the 5-0 whitewash last year.

    “I’m not afraid of being dropped. I’m looking forward to challenging myself and putting myself into difficult situations against the best players in the world.”