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  • US to take 10% equity stake in Intel

    US to take 10% equity stake in Intel

    President Donald Trump said on Friday the US would take a 10% stake in Intel under a deal with the struggling chipmaker that converts government grants into an equity share, the latest extraordinary intervention by the White House in corporate America.

    The deal puts Trump on better terms with Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan, after the president recently said the CEO should step down due to conflicts of interest. It will ensure that the chipmaker will receive about $10 billion in funds for building or expanding factories in the US.

    Under the agreement, the US will purchase a 9.9% stake in Intel for $8.9 billion, or $20.47 per share, which represents a discount of about $4 from Intel’s closing share price of $24.80 on Friday.

    The purchase of the 433.3 million Intel shares will be made with funding from the $5.7 billion in unpaid grants from the Biden-era CHIPS Act and $3.2 billion awarded to Intel for the Secure Enclave program, also awarded under Trump’s predecessor, Democratic President Joe Biden.

    Intel stock rose roughly 1% in the extended session on Friday after closing up 5.5% during regular trading.

    Trump met with Tan on Friday, a White House official said. That followed Trump’s August 11 meeting with the Intel CEO after Trump demanded that Tan resign over his ties to Chinese firms.

    “He walked in wanting to keep his job and he ended up giving us $10 billion for the United States. So we picked up $10 billion,” Trump said on Friday.

    Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on X that Tan had struck a deal “that’s fair to Intel and fair to the American People.”

    PLAYING CATCH UP

    The Intel investment marks the latest unusual deal with US companies, including a US government agreement allowing AI chip giant Nvidia NVDA.O to sell its H20 chips to China in exchange for receiving 15% of those sales.

    Read more: Intel gets $2 billion lifeline

    Other recent deals include an agreement for the Pentagon to become the largest shareholder in a small mining company, MP Materials, to boost output of rare earth magnets and the US government’s winning a “golden share” with certain veto rights as part of a deal to allow Japan’s Nippon Steel to buy US Steel.

    The federal government’s broad intervention in corporate matters has worried critics, who say Trump’s actions create new categories of corporate risk.

    Ahead of the US deal with Intel, Japan’s SoftBank agreed to take a $2 billion stake in the chip maker on Monday.

    Some industry observers still question Intel’s ability to surmount its problems.
    Daniel Morgan, senior portfolio manager at Synovus Trust, said Intel’s problems are beyond a cash infusion from SoftBank or equity interest from the government, singling out Intel’s contract chip manufacturing business, known as its foundry unit.

    “Without government support or another financially stronger partner, it will be difficult for the Intel foundry unit to raise enough capital to continue to build out more Fabs at a reasonable rate,” he said. Intel “needs to catch up with TSMC from a technological perspective to attract business,” he added.

    The government’s stake is to be passive ownership and does not include a board seat, Intel said. The government will be required to vote with Intel’s board when shareholder approval is necessary, with “limited exceptions.” Intel did not specify the exceptions.

    The equity stake also includes a five-year warrant at $20 a share for an additional 5% of Intel stock, which the US can use if Intel loses control of the foundry business.

    Federal backing could give Intel more breathing room to revive its loss-making foundry business, analysts said, but it ceded the AI market to Nvidia and has lost market share to Advanced Micro Devices in its central processor business for several years. It has also faced challenges in attracting customers to its new factories.

    Tan, who became CEO in March, has been tasked to turn around the American chipmaking icon, which recorded an annual loss of $18.8 billion in 2024 – its first such loss since 1986. The company’s last fiscal year of positive adjusted free cash flow was 2021.

  • North Korea leader Kim oversees firing of new air defence missiles, KCNA says

    North Korea leader Kim oversees firing of new air defence missiles, KCNA says

    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un supervised the firing of new air defence missiles to test their combat capability, state media KCNA reported on Sunday.

    The report came ahead of the summit on Monday between U.S. President Donald Trump and South Korea President Lee Jae Myung.

    Earlier this month, Kim condemned the U.S.-South Korea joint military drills as their intent to remain “most hostile and confrontational” to his country, pledging to speed up nuclear build-up.

    The new anti-air weapon systems showed “fast response” to aerial targets such as attack drones and cruise missiles, KCNA said.

    The last border confrontation between the arch-rivals was in early April when South Korea’s military fired warning shots after around 10 North Korean soldiers briefly crossed the frontier.

    Read more: Seoul says fired warning shots after North Korean troops crossed border

    North Korea’s military announced last October that it was moving to totally shut off the southern border, saying it had sent a message to US forces to “prevent any misjudgment and accidental conflict”.

    Shortly after, it blew up sections of the unused but deeply symbolic roads and railroad tracks that connect the North to the South. Ko warned that North Korea’s army would retaliate against any interference with its efforts to seal the border permanently.

    “If the act of restraining or obstructing the project unrelated to the military character persists, our army will regard it as deliberate military provocation and take corresponding countermeasures,” he said.

  • Arsenal vs Leeds United: Timber, Gyokeres score Braces as Gunners win 5–0

    Arsenal vs Leeds United: Timber, Gyokeres score Braces as Gunners win 5–0

    LONDON: Arsenal striker Viktor Gyokeres netted his first two Premier League goals and defender Jurrien Timber scored twice in a 5-0 thrashing of Leeds United at the Emirates Stadium on Saturday.

    However, the loss of captain Martin Odegaard and winger Bukayo Saka to injury took some of the shine off Arsenal’s second win of the new season.

    After beating Everton 1-0 in their opener a week ago, Leeds started brightly but began to crumble when Timber gave Arsenal the lead in the 34th minute with a superb glancing header from Declan Rice’s corner.

    He then played in Saka for the England international to score in first-half stoppage time to send the home side into the break 2-0 up.

    By then Odegaard had trudged off the field after picking up an injury, but the midfielder was barely missed as his side hit their stride and their new big-money striker took centre-stage.

    Having joined Arsenal from Sporting Lisbon in July for an initial 55 million pounds ($74 million) according to British media, Sweden international Gyokeres got the goal he so desperately desired with a cool finish three minutes after the break.

    He picked the ball up on the left and cut inside before firing a low shot in at the near post.

    The 53rd minute loss of Saka, who had taken the captain’s armband from Odegaard, was quickly forgotten as Timber added the fourth goal, scuffing the ball home after Leeds failed to clear another corner.

    The Yorkshire side battled bravely but came up short in almost every department as Arsenal easily played through their attempts to press.

    With the points all but wrapped up, 15-year-old Max Dowman was handed a debut by Mikel Arteta: the second youngest in Premier League history after Ethan Nwaneri, also with Arsenal.

    Dowman repaid his manager’s faith by winning a penalty that Gyokeres fired home to make it 5-0.

    An early snatched finish in the first half hinted at the pressure Gyokeres was feeling, but once he got his goal in the second half he settled down and began looking like a proven Premier League goal-poacher.

    Read More: Fc St. Pauli vs Dortmund: Bundesliga opener ends in draw

    “I think there’s always pressure, but I know I’ll take my chances sooner or later, and today I took two of them and we won 5-0, so it was a great day,” the 27-year-old said before sending a warning to the rest of the league.

    “We have so many amazing players going forward, and I think for me, it’s just important to be in the right place … I think we will get a lot of chances during the season.”

  • Fc St. Pauli vs Dortmund: Bundesliga opener ends in draw

    Fc St. Pauli vs Dortmund: Bundesliga opener ends in draw

    HAMBURG: Borussia Dortmund conceded goals in the last four minutes to waste a 3-1 lead and settle for a 3-3 at St Pauli in their Bundesliga opener on Saturday.

    The hosts scored with an 86th minute Danel Sinani penalty before captain Eric Smith rifled in an equaliser three minutes later to snatch a surprise draw for the Hamburg club.

    Niko Kovac’ Dortmund had taken a 34th minute lead when forward Serhou Guirassy, at the far post, headed in a pin-point Marcel Sabitzer cross, to take his tally to 65 league goals from 102 matches. Οnly five players in Bundesliga history needed fewer matches to reach that mark.

    The Guinea international could have bagged another five minutes later but St Pauli keeper Nikola Vasilj did well to save the striker’s penalty.

    The Bosnian keeper came to the rescue once more two minutes after the restart, spectacularly tipping a powerful Julian Brandt shot over the bar before the hosts drew level in the 50th courtesy of Andreas Hountondji’s well-timed glancing header after Dortmund’s Daniel Svensson lost possession near the box.

    Dortmund gradually found more space and restored their lead with a quick four-pass combination in the box and Walter Anton curling a slightly deflected shot past Vasilj in the 67th.

    Brandt thought he had settled any lingering nerves seven minutes later, superbly controlling a 30-metre cross from Pascal Gross with one touch and drilling in for their third goal. But St Pauli cut the deficit with

    Sinani’s late penalty that also saw Dortmund’s Filippo Mane sent off with a straight red card, to inject some late drama in their season opener.

    Read More: Brentford beat Aston Villa 1-0 at home thanks to Ouattara

    Their two-goal comeback was complete three minutes later when Smith powered in the equaliser from the edge of the box.

    Champions Bayern Munich opened the Bundesliga season on Friday with a of RB Leipzig while last season’s runners-up Bayer Leverkusen slumped to a 2-1 home defeat to Hoffenheim on Saturday.

     

     

  • Anil Ambani faces criminal case in India

    Anil Ambani faces criminal case in India

    MUMBAI: India’s federal investigating agency said on Saturday it had opened a criminal case against industrialist Anil Ambani and his company Reliance Communications Ltd (RLCM.NS), opens new tab following a complaint by India’s largest bank about alleged fraud.

    State Bank of India alleged that Anil Ambani, the younger brother of billionaire Mukesh Ambani, and Reliance Communications defrauded the bank, causing 30 billion Indian rupees ($344 million) of losses.

    India’s Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) conducted search operations in Mumbai at Anil Ambani’s house and the offices of the now insolvent Reliance Communications, the agency said in a press statement.

    A spokesperson for Ambani told Reuters that the searches at his residence concluded early this afternoon. “Mr. Ambani strongly denies all allegations and charges, and will duly defend himself,” the spokesperson said.

    The agency said Anil Ambani and his company misused and diverted bank funds for purposes other than what was agreed.

    An email query to SBI was not answered immediately.

    Read More: India says US trade negotiations are still going on as fresh tariffs loom

    Last month, India’s Enforcement Directorate also searched 35 locations linked to Reliance Group as part of an investigation into alleged money laundering and siphoning of public funds, a government source told Reuters.

    Reliance Group did not respond to a request for comment at the time, but a source at the group denied the allegations.

     

     

     

  • Brentford beat Aston Villa 1-0 at home thanks to Ouattara

    Brentford beat Aston Villa 1-0 at home thanks to Ouattara

    LONDON: Record signing Dango Ouattara scored on his debut as Brentford beat Aston Villa 1-0 at home to take their first points of the Premier League season on Saturday.

    Read More Football Stories Here

    The 23-year-old, who joined the West Londoners a week ago for a reported 42 million pounds ($56.8 million), opened his account in the 12th minute after a toe-poke at goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez rebounded back for him to tuck away.

    The victory continued Brentford’s proud record of never having lost their first home game of a top-flight season in 10 campaigns.

    It was also a first win for new Brentford manager Keith Andrews who replaced Thomas Frank, now in charge at Tottenham Hotspur, in June. Brentford lost their opening game 3-1 at Nottingham Forest.

    Brentford, who sold their top scorer Bryan Mbeumo to Manchester United over the summer, lost their opening game 3-1 at Nottingham Forest.

    Brentford might have been 2-0 up at the break but a 43rd minute effort by Mikkel Damsgaard, bouncing in off the crossbar, was ruled out by referee Tony Harrington for a foul by captain Nathan Collins on Martinez.

    The VAR review agreed Collins had “carelessly challenged the goalkeeper”.

    Aston Villa, now with one point from two games after an opening 0-0 draw at home to Newcastle United, had far more chances than a week ago but could not break down Brentford’s stubborn defence.

    A Youri Tielemans effort cannoned off Kevin Schade’s head in the 30th while goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher, who had a generally quiet game, saved Villa’s first shot on target two minutes later.

    Villa’s England international forward Ollie Watkins had a misfiring afternoon at his former club, who had never previously recorded a clean sheet in eight Premier League games against their opponents.

    Former Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson made his first start for Brentford since he joined last month but was replaced, to an ovation from the crowd at the Gtech Community Stadium, in the 69th by Frank Onyeka as Villa threatened to grab an equaliser.

    Ouattara followed him off in the 85th as Brentford battened down the hatches defensively.

    Brentford striker Yoane Wissa was unavailable for selection as he seeks a move away, with Andrews explaining before the game that the team was the priority and it would not be right to involve him.

  • France summons Italian ambassador over challenge to Macron on Ukraine

    France summons Italian ambassador over challenge to Macron on Ukraine

    PARIS: France summoned the Italian ambassador after Italy’s deputy prime minister challenged the French president for suggesting that European soldiers be deployed in Ukraine in a post-war settlement, a French diplomatic source said on Saturday.

    Asked earlier this week to comment on French President Emmanuel Macron’s appeals to deploy European soldiers in Ukraine after any settlement with Russia, Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini used a Milanese dialect phrase loosely translatable as “get lost”.

    “You go there if you want. Put your helmet on, your jacket, your rifle and you go to Ukraine,” he told reporters, referring to Macron.

    Salvini, the populist leader of the right-wing League party and also Italy’s transport minister in the nationalist, conservative government led by Giorgia Meloni, has repeatedly criticized Macron, especially over Ukraine.

    The Italian ambassador was summoned on Friday, the diplomatic source said, marking the latest in a series of diplomatic clashes between Paris and Rome before and after Meloni took power in 2022.

    Read More: Trump and Putin end summit without Ukraine deal

    “The ambassador was reminded that these remarks ran counter to the climate of trust and the historical relationship between our two countries, as well as to recent bilateral developments, which have highlighted strong convergences between the two countries, particularly with regard to unwavering support for Ukraine,” the source said.

     

  • Turkish first lady urges Melania Trump to speak out on Gaza

    Turkish first lady urges Melania Trump to speak out on Gaza

    Turkish First Lady Emine Erdogan has written to U.S. President Donald Trump’s wife, Melania Trump, and urged her to contact Israel’s prime minister and raise the plight of children in Gaza, authorities in Ankara said on Saturday.

    Emine Erdogan wrote that she had been inspired by the letter Melania Trump sent to Russian President Vladimir Putin earlier this month about children in Ukraine and Russia.

    “I have faith that the important sensitivity you have shown for the 648 Ukrainian children … will be extended to Gaza as well,” Emine Erdogan wrote in the letter dated Friday that was published by the Turkish presidency.

    The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    “These days, when the world is experiencing a collective awakening and the recognition of Palestine has become a global will. I believe that your call on behalf of Gaza would fulfil a historic responsibility toward the Palestinian people,” Emine Erdogan’s letter added.

    A global hunger monitor determined on Friday that Gaza City and surrounding areas are officially suffering from famine, and it will likely spread, escalating pressure on Israel to allow more aid into the Palestinian territory.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dismissed that report as an “outright lie”, and said Israel had a policy of preventing not causing starvation.

    The Gaza war was triggered on October 7, 2023, when Hamas killed 1,200 people in southern Israel and took some 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies. Since then, Israel’s military campaign has killed more than 62,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities.

  • Pickup and trucks star in new ‘Romeo and Juliet’

    Pickup and trucks star in new ‘Romeo and Juliet’

    RUMMU, Estonia: A production of “Romeo and Juliet” in Estonia uses a cast of vehicles to tell Shakespeare’s story of star-crossed lovers, with a red Ford pickup taking on the role of Juliet, while her Romeo is a rally truck.

    “I must say I came into it expecting it to be really silly, but it was really good. I really liked it,” said Maia Maisate, a spectator, after the show.

    A disused limestone quarry in the Estonian countryside is the backdrop as more than a dozen vehicles, including city buses, fire engines, a lorry and a cement truck with hearts painted on it, drive around in front of makeshift viewer stands.

    Two excavators waved their mechanical arms at each other threateningly in a recreation of the fatal sword fight between Tybalt and Mercutio, and a car was thrown from a cliff.

    “I would still say that even though it was cars, it felt really sweet and cute. Like when you had the scene where the cars were, you would assume, kissing, the energy was captured really well. The sweetness and the love,” said Maia Pussim, another spectator.

    The production is without dialogue, although it is accompanied by fireworks and music, including the track “Lovefool” by Swedish group The Cardigans.

    Read More: Vanessa Kirby opens up on villainous inspiration of her ‘Fantastic Four’ character

    “It’s basically a big experiment about what it means to do Shakespeare today and whether we can find new ways to do it,” said co-director Paavo Piik of Kinoteater, which put on the play.

    “We wanted to be very gentle with these big machines. This contrast is interesting for us. Is it possible to deliver emotions like love (with big vehicles)?”

  • India says US trade negotiations are still going on as fresh tariffs loom

    India says US trade negotiations are still going on as fresh tariffs loom

    MUMBAI: India’s foreign minister said on Saturday that trade negotiations with Washington are continuing but there are lines that New Delhi needs to defend, just days before hefty additional U.S. tariffs are due to hit.

    Indian goods face additional U.S. tariffs of up to 50%, among the highest imposed by Washington, due to its increased purchases of Russian oil.

    A 25% tariff has already come into effect, while the remaining 25% is set to be enforced from August 27.

    A planned visit by U.S. trade negotiators to New Delhi from August 25-29 has been called off, dashing hopes that the levies may be lowered or postponed.

    “We have some redlines in the negotiations, to be maintained and defended,” Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said at an Economic Times forum event in New Delhi, singling out the interests of the country’s farmers and small producers.

    India-U.S. trade talks collapsed earlier this year due to India not agreeing to open its vast agricultural and dairy sectors. Bilateral trade between the world’s largest and fifth largest economy is worth over $190 billion.

    “It is our right to make decisions in our ‘national interest’,” Jaishankar said.

    Analysts at Capital Economics said on Friday that if the full U.S. tariffs come into force and stick, the hit to India’s economic growth would be 0.8 percentage points both this year and next.

    “The longer-term harm could be even greater as a high tariff could puncture India’s appeal as a global manufacturing hub.”

    The Indian minister described U.S. President Donald Trump’s policy announcements as “unusual”.

    “We have not had a U.S. president who conducts his foreign policy so publicly as the current one and (it) is a departure from the traditional way of conducting business with the world,” Jaishankar said.

    Read More: Trump’s 50 percent tariff on India: What does it mean for economy and Modi’s politics

    He also said Washington’s concern over India’s Russian oil purchases was not being applied to other major buyers such as China and European Union.

    “If the argument is oil, then there are (other) big buyers. If argument is who is trading more (with Russia), than there are bigger traders,” he said.

    Russia-European trade is bigger than India-Russia trade, he added.

    The minister also said India’s purchases of Russian oil had not been raised in earlier trade talks with the U.S. before the public announcement of tariffs.