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("Alarum" or the "Company") (NASDAQ:ALAR) and reminds investors of the April 15, 2025 deadline to seek the role of lead plaintiff in a federal securities class action that has been filed against the Company.Faruqi & Faruqi is a leading national securities law firm with offices in New York, Pennsylvania, California and Georgia. The firm has recovered hundreds of millions of dollars for investors since its founding in 1995. See www.faruqilaw.com.As detailed below, the complaint alleges that the Company ...Full story available on Benzinga.com12:T1af7,Trump's Reconfiguration Of Global Conflict: What It Means For Asia And Europe Authored by Joseph Yizheng Lian via The Epoch Times,Two months into his second term, President Donald Trump was accused by some politicians in the West of abandoning Washington’s longstanding allies as a result of his stance on the war in Ukraine. But one doesn’t have to look very far back in history to note that a similar act of “unfriending” had occurred from continental Europe and wasn’t unjustified.In 1988, the late British Prime Minister Lady Margaret Thatcher, speaking at the College of Europe in Bruges, Belgium, advised her audience thus:“We must strive to maintain the United States’ commitment to Europe’s defence. And that means recognising the burden on their resources of the world role they undertake and their point that their allies should bear the full part of the defence of freedom, particularly as Europe grows wealthier.”Unfortunately, those mild words of the Iron Lady fell on deaf ears.Eleven years later, her tone had changed into one of disdain and spite, when in a Conservative Party conference in Blackpool she shockingly declared, “In my lifetime all the problems have come from mainland Europe, and all the solutions have come from the English-speaking nations across the world.”Between Bruges and Blackpool, Thatcher morphed from a 30-year supporter of European integration into a fierce opponent. She decried the “British malaise”—a term used by Conservative politician and historian Sir Ian Gilmour in his 1969 book “The Body Politic”—to characterize the economic stagnation, the social decline, and the sense of futility and hopelessness that seemed to pervade British society.Thatcher abhorred the European welfare state, criticized intransigent unionism, and loathed the power wielded by unelected Brussels bureaucrats, who had virtually forgotten NATO by the mid-1990s, even though Europe had grown rich. She won her battle posthumously, in 2020 (BREXIT).U.S. President Ronald Reagan and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher pose for photographers on the patio outside the Oval Office in Washington on July 17, 1987. Mike Sargent/AFP via Getty ImagesSince then, primarily by default, Britain has gone out of Europe and built partnerships in the Indo–Pacific, a region that it is historically familiar with, signed bilateral free trade agreements Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and is in talks for new ones with the United States and India. The UK has recently gained membership in the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, or CPTPP. The new Labour government has not tried to bend back the arc.The United States is on a similar trajectory. Trump also spurns Big Government and bureaucratic multinational agencies. Like Thatcher almost 40 years ago—but much more vehemently—he has criticized other NATO countries for spending far too little on defense—a constant gripe of U.S. presidents, especially Dwight Eisenhower and Ronald Reagan.Trump’s associates readily criticized certain European countries for abandoning basic Western values, such as adopting free speech, abolishing secure national borders, and letting in gangsters and fanatical Jihadis who unleash terrorist attacks on innocent citizens. Trump also thinks all these are happening in the United States.The Russia–Ukraine war has caused rifts between Trump and other NATO members. He wants the war to end so that Washington can “pivot” to the Indo–Pacific to squarely face the “pacing threat” of communist China, which he, since his first term, has rightly regarded as America’s major adversary.So, almost simultaneously, the two major English-speaking countries, the United States and the UK, are extricating themselves from entanglements in Europe and reaching out to Asia. Their “leaving Europe to enter Asia” is going full circle from the time when Japan’s most famous 19th century reformist, Fukuzawa Yukichi, advocated the opposite, “leaving Asia to enter Europe” (1885), under very different circumstances.If U.S. Commodore Matthew Perry’s arrival in Tokugawa Japan in 1853 and World War II marked the first and second historic coming of America to Asia, respectively, then the “Trump pivot” may well be the third. It could add enormously to the prosperity in Indo–Pacific Ex-China, for two reasons. First, as the U.S.–China decoupling continues, much American money leaving China will go into other Indo–Pacific economies. Second, when greater American military might, coupled with increased defense spending and capabilities in East Asian countries, is realized under Trump’s pressures, it will be deployed to contain the Chinese regime and achieve greater regional stability, and new investment money will arrive with more confidence.But then what about Europe, which the United States and perhaps Britain are leaving behind? It will do fine, but in a previously unexpected way.This will be the scenario: Trump 2.0 will continue to goad Europe to pony up for its own defense, necessarily at the expense of its welfare state, climate policy, and open borders, and damage the transatlantic relationship if it must. Trump will be much maligned in the process.For example, a recent BBC article accused the U.S. president of “blow[ing] up the world order.” But that is sheer Eurocentrism, because Trump is merely resetting Washington’s relationship with Europe and Europe is not the whole world.In fact, there are good signs that Europe is reacting to Trump in a healthy way; for example, the newly elected German leader has decided that Germany must spend huge amounts in upgrading its military, notwithstanding that it necessarily will have to cut welfare spending and retune its growth model.Expectedly, when Europe is strong and wholesome again, Trump will be gone from the stage and his successors will be able to mend fences with all obstacles removed. At that point, the world will still be essentially bipolar: the open society camp versus the authoritarian-or-worse camp.There will be two main theaters where the conflict between the two camps will be played out. First is Asia, in which the United States—rid of its European baggage and in some kind of alliance with Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, and Australia—will face off against the Chinese regime. The mightiest power on Earth will try to roll back and contain the most dangerous. Next is Europe, where a reformed and repowered European Union will take on Russia. A second-rate power will try to keep a third-rate one in check. It will be a much more rational conflict configuration and manageable division of labor for the West than it is now.Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge. Tyler DurdenWed, 04/02/2025 - 22:3513:T139e,Psychologist Carl Jung believed in the “collective unconscious,” a universal mind all humanity is tapped into. In the context of the financial world, the stock market — as something ostensibly based on concrete numbers, but most of the time driven by instinctive hopes and fears — kind of works like that.It is, in other words, essentially a tracker of sentiment. Nowhere is this function clearer than in the discrepancy between stocks’ moves during regular trading hours (modest climbs), prior to U.S. President Donald Trump’s triumphant unveiling of his tariff plan, and extended trading (precipitous plunges), when investors had time to digest — and suffer indigestion from — the sheer weight of the White House’s heavy tariffs on countries across the globe.Trump teased leniency on tariffs days before revealing his cards. That quality of mercy was nowhere to be seen — the tariffs appear sweeping and severe. To call Trump’s tariff plan a seismic shift in the economic and financial world order might be an understatement. It could take time for price changes to filter into the economy. But the stock market, as the collective unconscious of investors, could register this shock in the coming days.What you need to know todayTariffs for allU.S. President Donald Trump announced Wednesday sweeping tariffs on more than 180 countries and territories. The plan imposes a 20% levy on the European Union, 46% on Vietnam, 32% on Taiwan and 34% on China — which comes on top of the 20% already existing — making the total tariff on Beijing 54%. There will also be a 10% baseline tariff on all U.S. imports. Get updates on ongoing tariff developments on CNBC’s live blog.China and EU reactChina’s Ministry of Commerce urged the U.S. to “immediately cancel” its unilateral tariff measures and vowed to take “resolute counter-measures” to safeguard its own rights and interests, according to a CNBC translation of a statement released Thursday. Likewise, the European Union is preparing more countermeasures against U.S. tariffs if negotiations fail, according to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. Stock everywhere sinkU.S. stock futures plunged in extended trading Wednesday after Trump unveiled extensive tariffs. As of publication time, futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 2%, S&P 500 futures tumbled 2.7% and Nasdaq-100 futures slumped 3.52%. During regular trading, all three major indexes closed higher. Asia-Pacific markets followed Wall Street lower Thursday. Japan’s Nikkei 225 plummeted more than 3% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index lost around 1.7%. Prices of gold, a safe haven asset, hit a fresh high.Tech stocks slumpApple shares sank 7% in late trading Wednesday and led a broader decline in tech stocks after Trump’s tariff announcement. Apple manufactures most devices in China. Nvidia, which produces new chips in Taiwan, fell 5.7%. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Wednesday the sell-off in the stock market is due more to a sharp pullback in the biggest technology stocks instead of White House trade policies.Tesla disappoints on deliveries, Chinese competitors sustain salesTesla on Wednesday reported 336,681 vehicle deliveries in the first quarter of 2025. That’s a 13% decline from a year ago, and is below the 360,000 and 370,000 deliveries expected by investors, according to StreetAccount. In China, electric carmakers Xiaomi, Xpeng and Leapmotor each delivered nearly 30,000 or more cars in March, roughly two times that of their fellow startup competitors. BYD remains the market leader in China by far.[PRO] ‘Worse than the worst case scenario’Trump’s extensive tariffs rollout on Wednesday was “worse than the worst case scenario,” Dan Ives, global head of technology research at Wedbush Securities, wrote in a Wednesday note following the White House announcement. Here are the stocks that Ives will be keeping an eye on because of heavy import levies.And finally...Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesThe Exchange Square Complex, which houses the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, on Feb. 26, 2025.DeepSeek AI excitement spills over to Hong Kong’s IPO marketChinese companies are raring to go public in Hong Kong as global investors start to return to the region, following the news of DeepSeek’s artificial intelligence breakthrough in late January. It’s a level of excitement that has not been felt for more than three years, despite the overhang of U.S. trade tensions.Six initial public offerings in Hong Kong raised more than 1 billion Hong Kong dollars ($130 million) in the first quarter — a jump from just one listing of that size in the year-ago period — according to KPMG.Chinese bubble tea giant Mixue went public on March 3 in a highly oversubscribed Hong Kong listing. And in a sign of more to come, Chinese battery giant Contemporary Amperex Technology (CATL) filed in February for what could be Hong Kong’s largest IPO since 2021, when short-video company Kuaishou listed.14:T1c03,“Currency trader positioning is turning bearish on the dollar,” Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM U.S., said on Monday. Bank of America’s Athanasios Vamvakidis said the greenback is likely to rally in the near term, but this will “most likely be an opportunity to sell.” Market watchers told CNBC they see potential upside for the euro, the British pound and Australia and New Zealand’s currencies. The rollout of U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs regime is dampening sentiment toward the dollar and prompting investors to look elsewhere for their foreign exchange (FX) trades, strategists told CNBC. The dollar index, which measures the value of the greenback against a basket of major rivals, was little changed on Wednesday morning. The U.S. currency began a steady rise in late 2024 that peaked in mid-January — however, the dollar index has steadily pared some of those gains in recent weeks.The dollar has historically been widely seen as a safe haven asset for investors, given its status as the world’s reserve currency and dominance in international borrowing, payments and trades. When the dollar strengthens, U.S. exports become more expensive, while imports become cheaper. The greenback’s value can also impact global monetary policy, capital flows and corporate earnings.“Currency trader positioning is turning bearish on the dollar and becoming more bullish on the currencies of major U.S. trading partners as the United States prepares to launch a multinational trade war,” said Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM U.S., in a research note published Monday.Euro expected to riseBrusuelas pointed to trades in the euro as a signal of “erosion of confidence in the dollar.”“From late October until the first week of March, the majority of euro positioning was long the dollar,” he said in Monday’s note. “But for three weeks now, net positioning is long the euro.”Jordan Rochester, head of FICC strategy and executive director at Mizuho Bank’s EMEA arm, told CNBC he held “a down then up view” on the euro against the dollar. He sees the euro falling to somewhere between $1.06 and $1.07 before climbing to $1.12 or higher by the end of the year.“I expect this market to price in ‘maximum pain’ once we know the details of the tariffs,” he said in an email, arguing that this presented an “opportunity to take the other side.”“Tariffs [are] unlikely to get worse once fully priced in and [the] EU and others [are likely] to respond with ... retaliatory tariffs of their own which will lead to a recovery later on,” he said. Athanasios Vamvakidis, global head and managing director of G10 FX strategy at Bank of America, told CNBC he saw downside ahead for the dollar, despite expecting tariffs to have an immediate positive impact on the greenback.“For the dollar we have been and we are still bearish for the year as a whole,” he said on a call. “We believe the market is already pricing selective tariffs, but it will get tariffs across the board.”He told CNBC that the dollar could rally this week in the immediate aftermath of tariffs coming into effect, but noted that this “most likely will be an opportunity to sell.”“Beyond the very short term, there are two channels that should lead to dollar weakness,” Vamvakidis explained. “First, when you have the U.S. against the rest of the world in a trade war scenario, then the U.S. eventually will suffer more because ... when you compare it with the rest of the world, the rest of the world is larger. Second, tariffs suggest stagflationary risks — and right now, the market is very concerned about such risks.”Like Brusuelas and Rochester, he predicted that the euro would eventually be boosted by Trump’s trade war. While the U.S. contends with a policy mix that will likely be negative for its currency, Europe is focusing on “growth friendly policies,” Vamvakidis said.“Germany announcing a massive fiscal stimulus, Europe announcing massive spending on defense, plans for structural reforms to focus on growth and competitiveness,” he said. “So far these are plans, but we didn’t even [have] such plans before, and coming from Germany, the economy with the weakest growth in the euro zone and the largest economy in the euro zone and the tightest fiscal policy in the euro zone, this is really a game changer.”Vamvakidis said his team sees the euro reaching $1.15 this year and $1.20 in 2026.Sterling bullsBank of America’s Vamvakidis also argued the British pound has the potential to rise as Trump’s tariffs regime comes into play, noting that the U.S. President has aimed tariff threats at the EU while hinting that Britain could be spared.“Also, there is positive seasonality for sterling in April,” he said. “So in the short term, we should see sterling doing relatively well. For the year as a whole, we also like sterling against the dollar. Against the euro it depends on the implementation of EU reforms.”In a note at the end of March, analysts at Maybank upwardly revised their forecasts for the British pound, saying they now see sterling hitting $1.26 by the end of the year before rising to $1.31 in early 2026. On Wednesday morning, the British currency was trading at around $1.29 against the U.S. dollar.“We ... turn more bullish on the GBP with its plans to increase defence spending, maintain fiscal discipline and easing stagflation risks,” they said. “We maintain our belief that the GBP will be more resilient on the basis that the UK as a services-oriented economy is less likely to be influenced by Trump trade policies. As a close ally of the US, it will probably also be spared from significant actions by the Trump administration. This is in spite of an external environment that remains highly uncertain and challenging.”Australia, New Zealand currencies could be boostedThe Maybank analysts also predicted upside for the New Zealand dollar, giving the currency a target of $0.58 against the greenback by the end of 2024 — a 2.1% rise from current levels.“A rounding bottom has formed for the NZDUSD which portends further recovery,” Maybank’s analysts said, adding that the outlook for the currency remained positive as New Zealand’s economy recovered and the pace of monetary easing was likely to slow.“Both Australia and New Zealand also have stronger balance sheets than most other Western countries — in particular much lower debt to GDP ratios,” Alex King, a former FX trader and founder of personal finance platform Generation Money, said via email.“This means they have much more headroom for potential stimulus measures of their own and [it’s] another factor making them both attractive places for investors, which helps strengthen their currencies.”He added that both countries’ economies were “much less connected to the trade war narrative.”“To combat the effect of tariffs, China is looking at stimulus measures to boost its own economy and this is seen as a positive for the economies of both Australia and New Zealand, both of which tend to run trade surpluses with China,” King told CNBC.15:T83c,Russian Arctic LNG 2 Project Resumes Gas Processing By Charles Kennedy of Oilprice.comArctic LNG 2, the processing and export facility that was billed as Russia’s flagship LNG project, has gradually resumed gas processing after months of hiatus, Reuters reported on Tuesday, citing industry sources and satellite images.Arctic LNG 2 has been under U.S. and EU sanctions since last year, and the project hasn’t been able to sell any cargo because of the sanctions.The first production train at the plant was shut in early October over the project developers’ inability to secure buyers amid the Western sanctions on Arctic LNG 2, according to one of Reuters’ sources.The plant continues has now slowly resumed gas processing and keeps it at low rates as Russia expects what the Trump Administration would do with the sanctions.Russian LNG developer and exporter Novatek, the majority owner of Arctic LNG 2, is looking to rebuild relations with the U.S. with the help of lobbyists, sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters in December.Hit heavily by sanctions, Arctic LNG 2 was put on ice last year and Novatek has struggled to sell any cargo to a buyer.Located in the Gydan Peninsula, Arctic LNG 2 was considered key to Russia’s efforts to boost its global LNG market share from 8% to 20% by 2030-2035.But the project has come under intensifying sanctions from the United States, which have put off any buyers that were previously considering buying cargoes from Arctic LNG 2.The project has seen months of delays after the initial U.S. sanctions in November 2023 upended the company’s plans for production start-up and export timelines.In August 2024, the U.S. State Department intensified efforts to derail Arctic LNG 2 exports by targeting companies involved in the development of the project and vessels found to have loaded LNG from the facility.The U.S. designated multiple companies related to Arctic LNG 2 to further disrupt the project’s ability to produce and export LNG, as well as the project’s ability to procure critical LNG carriers. Tyler DurdenTue, 04/01/2025 - 22:3516:T1006,The dread of something bad happening is usually more severe than the event itself.This could well be the case for U.S. President Donald Trump’s wide-ranging tariff plan. Even though Trump initially described it as “reciprocal tariffs,” implying that the U.S. would match other countries’ import levies, the White House is reportedly considering a 20% charge on most goods and services. The figure sounds high, but is dramatically lower than, for instance, India’s tariff on auto imports — which can go up to 70%, according to Times of India.Investors’ worries were slightly assuaged by the news, pushing up stocks. It is, however, too early to let down your guard. Concrete details of Trump’s plans are still unclear. Uncertainty is a bargaining chip for Trump; he could unleash a much more brutal tariff regime than expected.Other times, experiencing something bad could be worse than dreading it.What you need to know todayT-1 to tariffsU.S. President Donald Trump’s “reciprocal tariffs” will be announced Wednesday and “be effective immediately,” press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Tuesday. Details of Trump’s plans are still unclear, but The Washington Post reported Tuesday that the White House is considering tariffs of around 20% on most imports. Trump’s plan to reshape global trade comes at a time when the U.S. economy is looking increasingly shaky.Volatile tradingU.S. markets mostly rose in a choppy trading session Tuesday. The S&P 500 closed 0.38% up, the Nasdaq Composite added 0.87%, but the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell a fractional 0.03%. Asia-Pacific stocks were mixed Wednesday. Japan’s Nikkei 225 inched up roughly 0.1%, while South Korea’s Kospi index declined around 0.6% amid annual inflation reaccelerating to 2.1% in March, higher than the 2% in February and expected by a Reuters poll.Freshly listed stocks jumpCoreWeave’s stock popped nearly 42% on Tuesday to close at $52.57, bringing the company to a nearly $25 billion market capitalization. The artificial intelligence cloud company listed Friday in the biggest venture-backed tech IPO for a U.S. company since 2021. Separately, shares of conservative cable channel Newsmax soared nearly 180% Tuesday, a day after the stock spiked more than 700% during its debut on the New York Stock Exchange.Meta’s head of AI research departsMeta’s vice president of AI research, Joelle Pineau, announced in a LinkedIn post Tuesday her departure from the company. Her last day at the social media company will be May 30. Pineau has led the company’s fundamental AI research unit, or FAIR, since 2023. Pineau helped oversee Meta’s open-source Llama family of AI models and other technologies like the PyTorch software for AI developers.[PRO] ‘Avoid the tariff tantrum’The U.S., as the world’s biggest economy, drives the finances of many international companies. Trump’s tariffs are expected to slam the brakes, at least temporarily, on revenue growth of those firms. But there are three stocks that can “avoid the tariff tantrum,” according to one investor.And finally...Ole Berg-rusten | Afp | Getty ImagesNicolai Tangen, CEO of Norges Bank Investment Management, addresses a press conference on his company’s annual results for 2024 at Norges Bank in Oslo, Norway, on January 29, 2025.Norway urged to scrap ban on $1.8 trillion wealth fund investing in weapons makersNorway’s Government Pension Fund Global, the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund, has been prevented from taking stakes in companies that produce critical components for nuclear weapons since the early 2000s.Under ethical guidelines, the fund has also been barred from investing in firms that are involved in the production of cluster munitions, anti-personnel landmines and tobacco, among other things.The country’s center-right Conservative party said the time has come for the government to lift the ban on taking stakes in certain defense companies, citing Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine and the “significant rearming” of countries such as China in recent years.17:T430,U.S. stocks closed higher on Tuesday, with the Nasdaq Composite climbing 0.9% to 17,449.89. The S&P 500 added nearly 0.4%, finishing at 5,633.07, while the Dow edged down 0.03% to 41,989.96. Market optimism was supported by a 0.7% rise in U.S. construction spending for February. Even so, uncertainty persists as President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” moves put pressure on tech stocks.These are the top stocks that gained the attention of retail traders and investors throughout the day:Newsmax Inc. (NYSE:NMAX)Newsmax shares soared by a whopping 179.01%, closing at $233. The stock’s intraday high was $265, with a low of $114.22. This comes after the conservative cable news network went public at $10 per share and quickly surged over 500% on its first day of trading. The stock’s 52-week high and low stand at $265 and $14, respectively. The stock slipped more than 18% in after-hours trading.Newsmax’s public debut highlights its rapid growth as the fourth-largest cable news channel, with CEO Christopher Ruddy ...Full story available on Benzinga.com18:T506,Deep-pocketed investors have adopted a bearish approach towards Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), and it's something market players shouldn't ignore. Our tracking of public options records at Benzinga unveiled this significant move today. The identity of these investors remains unknown, but such a substantial move in TSLA usually suggests something big is about to happen.We gleaned this information from our observations today when Benzinga's options scanner highlighted 576 extraordinary options activities for Tesla. This level of activity is out of the ordinary.The general mood among these heavyweight investors is divided, with 42% leaning bullish and 43% bearish. Among these notable options, 181 are puts, totaling $11,215,866, and 395 are calls, amounting to $28,983,249.What's The Price Target?Taking into account the Volume and Open Interest on these contracts, it appears that whales have been targeting a price range from $5.0 to $340.0 for Tesla over the last 3 months. Volume & Open Interest DevelopmentIn today's trading context, the average open interest for options of Tesla stands at 5774.41, with a total volume reaching 4,290,680.00. The accompanying chart delineates the progression of both call and put option volume and open interest ...Full story available on Benzinga.com19:T47c,Investors with a lot of money to spend have taken a bullish stance on Walmart (NYSE:WMT).And retail traders should know.We noticed this today when the trades showed up on publicly available options history that we track here at Benzinga.Whether these are institutions or just wealthy individuals, we don't know. But when something this big happens with WMT, it often means somebody knows something is about to happen.So how do we know what these investors just did? Today, Benzinga's options scanner spotted 18 uncommon options trades for Walmart.This isn't normal.The overall sentiment of these big-money traders is split between 44% bullish and 44%, bearish.Out of all of the special options we uncovered, 11 are puts, for a total amount of $976,756, and 7 are calls, for a total amount of $635,955.Projected Price TargetsAfter evaluating the trading volumes and Open Interest, it's evident that the major market movers are focusing on a price band between $86.0 and $95.0 for Walmart, spanning the last three months.Insights into Volume & Open InterestLooking at the volume and open interest is a powerful ...Full story available on Benzinga.com1a:T417,Whales with a lot of money to spend have taken a noticeably bearish stance on Apple.Looking at options history for Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) we detected 25 trades.If we consider the specifics of each trade, it is accurate to state that 32% of the investors opened trades with bullish expectations and 64% with bearish.From the overall spotted trades, 9 are puts, for a total amount of $321,991 and 16, calls, for a total amount of $671,728.What's The Price Target?Based on the trading activity, it appears that the significant investors are aiming for a price territory stretching from $95.0 to $280.0 for Apple over the recent three months. Volume & Open Interest TrendsIn terms of liquidity and interest, the mean open interest for Apple options trades today is 10187.38 with a total volume of 137,005.00.In the following chart, we are able to follow the development of volume and open interest of call and put options for Apple's big money trades within a strike price range of $95.0 to $280.0 over the last 30 ...Full story available on Benzinga.com1b:T607,Chris Chung, CEO and co-founder of DEX aggregator Titan, has called for the crypto industry to establish ethical norms through social consensus, particularly in response to controversies involving political fundraising via meme coins and token launches.What Happened: In an interview with Benzinga, Chung emphasized the importance of community-driven standards to maintain integrity in the rapidly evolving sector, while also sharing insights on the future of decentralized exchanges, stablecoin legislation and the role of blockchain in financial markets.Addressing the ethical challenges facing the industry, Chung pointed to the backlash following the Libra fiasco as evidence of the crypto community's ability to self-regulate."I think ethical considerations are social ones—if people react strongly against a certain thing, everybody really understands what the line is," he said, highlighting the need for a collective understanding of acceptable practices in token launches and marketing. He cautioned against relying solely on formal laws, noting, "Crypto enforcement is basically social enforcement—you actually need a government for physical enforcement of laws if you want to codify something more."Chung's comments come amid a decline in retail investor confidence, driven by significant losses in meme coins like Trump (CRYPTO: TRUMP) and Melania (CRYPTO: MELANIA), which have contributed to a broader drop in trading volumes, as noted by research firms like Standard Chartered.However, ...Full story available on Benzinga.com1c:T7e6,FORT WAYNE, Ind., April 1, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Indiana Michigan Power (I&M), an American Electric Power (NASDAQ:AEP) company, recently submitted its 2024 Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) to the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC). I&M's plan outlines the transformation the company is undergoing to meet the evolving energy needs of customers while maintaining reliable and consistent power.The Future Ready Plan supports a resilient grid using a diverse portfolio of generation resources, energy efficiency and demand response programs to provide reliable, affordable energy for I&M customers today and into the future.The plan, which is specific to the state of Indiana, provides a detailed breakdown of future energy needs and how the company will meet customer demand through the 2044 IRP planning period.I&M is required to submit this 20-year IRP every three years to the IURC. I&M will conduct a similar process next year for the company's Michigan service area. The foundation of this plan is based on the evolving energy needs of existing customers. It also takes into account how I&M will serve future customers in a reliable, cost-effective manner. Additional input was considered throughout the IRP process through a Public Advisory Process, which provided opportunities for stakeholders to engage in the process through a series of five workshops. These workshops began in June 2024 and concluded in March 2025. "I&M has an opportunity to make a significant impact on the communities we serve by adapting to meet customers' evolving energy needs now and into the future," said Steve Baker, I&M president and chief operating officer. "By diversifying our generation mix with a portfolio of resources that can be available around the clock, our customers can trust that we are Future Ready to serve their homes, businesses and factories 24/7."Enhancing Generation Diversity I&M currently supports a diverse mix of generation resources to power customers' homes and ...Full story available on Benzinga.com1d:T1c9e,ANCHORAGE, Alaska, March 31, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- In a release issued under the same headline on February 19, 2025, by First National Bank Alaska (OTCQX:FBAK), please note that in the third paragraph, the value of nonperforming loans as of Dec. 31, 2023 should be $4.6 million, rather than $4.7 million as originally issued. In turn, this resulted in changes to several values in the "Total Interest And Loan Fee Income" and "Total Interest Expense" rows, and the "Nonperforming Loans and OREO" and "Nonperforming Loans and OREO/Tier 1 Capital" rows, of the included financial table. The corrected release follows:First National Bank Alaska announces unaudited results for fourth quarter and full year 2024First National Bank Alaska's (OTCQX:FBAK) net income for the fourth quarter of 2024 was $19.9 million, or $6.29 per share. This compares to a net income of $16.6 million, or $5.24 per share, for the same period in 2023."Fourth quarter results concluded another year of strong financial performance in 2024," said First National Board Chair and CEO/President Betsy Lawer. "Growth in both loans and customer deposits along with repositioning efforts in the securities portfolio enhanced the balance sheet. Growth in noninterest income along with outstanding expense management resulted in record-high net income. As we build on the momentum generated in 2024, I'm excited about where our recently expanded leadership team will take us to further help Alaskans shape a brighter tomorrow."Loans totaled $2.5 billion as of Dec. 31, 2024, an increase of $24.3 million during fourth quarter 2024, and an increase of $196.6 million compared to the same period in 2023. Fourth quarter loan quality was strong with nonperforming loans of $4.3 million, 0.17% of outstanding loans compared to $4.6 million and 0.20% as of Dec. 31, 2023. The provision for credit losses totaled $0.7 million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2024, compared to a $0.9 million benefit for year ended Dec. 31, 2023. The allowance for credit losses as of Dec. 31, 2024 totaled $18.0 million, or 0.73% of total loans.Fourth quarter total interest and loan fee income was $63.4 million, a 6.2% increase from $59.8 million for the quarter ended Dec. 31, 2023. The yield on loans increased to 6.67% compared to 6.25% on Dec. 31, 2023. Interest and fees on loans and interest and dividends on investment securities increased in the fourth quarter on rate and volume improvements.Assets totaled $5.0 billion as of Dec. 31, 2024, decreasing by $559.5 million due to the repayments during the fourth quarter of the December 2023 advance under the Federal Reserve Bank Term Funding Program and the July 2024 Federal Home Loan Bank borrowing. Return on assets on Dec. 31, 2024, was 1.22%, fifteen basis points higher compared to 2023.Deposits and repurchase agreements totaled $4.4 billion as of Dec. 31, 2024, an increase of $47.1 million during the fourth quarter, and an increase of $13.1 million since Dec. 31, 2023. Seasonal outflow was offset by new customer deposits during the fourth quarter of 2024.Interest expense for the quarter decreased by $0.2 million compared to the quarter ended Dec. 31, 2023, due to repayments of borrowed funds offset by mix changes in interest-bearing deposits. Net interest margin through Dec. 31, 2024, was 3.12% compared to 2.82% for the year ended Dec. 31, 2023.Noninterest income for fourth quarter 2024 was $7.0 million, an increase of 7.5% compared to fourth quarter 2023. Quarterly income improvement occurred within fiduciary activities and mortgage loan servicing. Noninterest expenses for the fourth quarter of 2024 increased 12.4% compared to the same period in 2023, primarily due to an increase in salaries and benefits driven by the competitive labor market and health care costs. The efficiency ratio for Dec. 31, 2024, was 53.51% and remains better than First National's peer groups, both in Alaska and across the nation.Provision for income taxes was reduced $2.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 as compared to the fourth quarter of 2023, reflecting certain state income tax benefits achieved in the securities portfolio.Shareholders' equity was $516.6 million as of Dec. 31, 2024, compared to $464.8 million as of Dec. 31, 2023. This $51.8 million increase resulted from a decrease in the net unrealized loss position of the securities portfolio and net income retained in excess of dividends paid. Return on equity as of Dec. 31, 2024, was 13.60% compared to 13.97% as of Dec. 31, 2023. Book value per share as increased to $163.11, compared to $146.77 as of Dec. 31, 2023. The bank's Dec. 31, 2024, Tier 1 leverage capital ratio of 10.54% remains above well-capitalized standards.ABOUT FIRST NATIONAL BANK ALASKAFirst National Bank Alaska files a quarterly financial report with the Federal Financial Institution Examination Council. The bank's latest Consolidated Report of Condition and Income (Call Report) is filed by the 30th of the month following quarter-end and is subsequently posted at FNBAlaska.com and OTCMarkets.com.Alaska's community bank since 1922, First National proudly meets the financial needs of Alaskans with ATMs and 28 locations in 19 communities throughout the state, and by providing banking services to meet their needs across the nation and around the world.In 2025, Forbes selected First National as the sixth bank in the country on their America's Best Banks list. In 2024, Alaska Business readers voted First National "Best of Alaska Business" in the Best Place to Work category for the ninth year in a row, Best Bank/Credit Union for the fourth time running, and Best Customer Service. The bank was also voted "Best of Alaska" in 2024 in the Anchorage Daily News awards, ranking as one of the top three in the Bank/Financial category for the sixth year in a row. American Banker again recognized First National as a "Best Bank to Work For" in 2024, for the seventh consecutive year.For more than a century, the bank has been committed to supporting the communities it serves. In 2024, for the eighth consecutive reporting period, over a span of twenty-four years, First National Bank Alaska received an Outstanding Community Reinvestment Act performance rating from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency Our dedicated team strives to provide exceptional customer service to meet the banking needs of our neighbors and fellow Alaskans across the state to help shape a brighter tomorrow.First National Bank Alaska is a Member FDIC, Equal Housing Lender, and recognized as a Minority Depository Institution by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, as it is majority-owned by women.CONTACT: Corporate Communications, 907-777-3409 Financial Overview (Unaudited) ($ in thousands, except per common share amounts) Three months ended Year ended Dec. 31, Sep. 30, Dec. 31, December 31, 2024 2024 2023 2024 2023Income Statement Total Interest And Loan Fee Income$63,439 $64,615 $59,761 $244,320 $214,518 Total Interest Expense$18,591 $21,319 $18,803 $77,599 $60,039 Provision for Credit Losses$(118) $(432) $(344) $721 $(930)Total Noninterest Income$7,011 $7,293 $6,522 $28,233 $25,426 Total Noninterest Expense$27,696 $25,928 $24,651 $104,346 $98,168 Provision for Income Taxes$4,350 $7,099 $6,593 $22,839 $22,657 Net Income$Full story available on Benzinga.com1e:T4909,The S&P 500 clawed back earlier losses on Monday to trade slightly higher, as traders nervously looked ahead to President Donald Trump’s tariff plans.The broad market index was last up 0.07% after falling as much as 1.7%, while the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.7%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 295 points, or 0.7%. Earlier in the day, the S&P 500 traded 10% below its record.Tech giants Nvidia and Meta Platforms fell 3% and 1%, respectively. Tesla also lost 3%. Tech stocks have struggled to recapture their meteoric rise from last year that was spurred by rising artificial intelligence sentiment. AI darling Nvidia, for example, is now more than 30% off of its 52-week high. Investors seeking safety were pushing some Dow components like Coca-Cola and Walmart higher.Trump said Sunday that his plan for “reciprocal tariffs” — expected to be unveiled Wednesday — will target “all countries,” rejecting the notion that the upcoming levies will be narrower and more targeted. In fact, The Wall Street Journal reported the president had in recent days pushed his advisors to get more aggressive when it comes to tariffs.“We continue to trade with the backdrop of tariff uncertainty and a shroud of secrecy about what may come next,” said Jay Woods, chief global strategist at Freedom Capital Markets. “As a result, investors sell first and wait. It has all the makings of a panic sell-off where a snap back rally on the horizon.”Trump’s rhetoric as “liberation day” approaches has culminated in a renewed sense of worry that the tariffs will significantly slow the economy, and could perhaps even be a catalyst for a recession. Economists polled in the CNBC Rapid Update survey points to first-quarter economic expansion of just 0.3%, well below the 2.3% growth seen in the fourth quarter. “[I]t’s time for reciprocity, and it’s time for a president to take historic change to do what’s right for the American people, and that’s going to take place on Wednesday,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Monday. The broad market index is more than 9% below a record set in February. It also hit its lowest level since September on Monday. The tech-heavy Nasdaq also reached levels not seen since September and is 15% below its all-time high set in December.Monday marks the final day of what has been a tumultuous month and quarter for Wall Street. The S&P 500 dipped into correction territory in March after hitting a record in February.The S&P 500 is down 6.3% for the month, on pace for its biggest one-month slide since September 2022, when it dropped 9.3%. The Nasdaq has lost 8% in March, while the Dow has fallen 5%.For the quarter, the S&P 500 was down 5%. That puts it on pace to snap a five-quarter winning streak. The Nasdaq has lost 10.9% this quarter, which would mark its biggest quarterly pullback since a 22.4% plunge in the second quarter of 2022. The Dow has shed 1.6% in the first three months of 2025.More market choppiness ahead, warns Truist’s LernerThere may be some near-term relief for markets this week, but Keith Lerner of Truist doesn’t think it will last. “While it’s possible markets may get some relief as investors gain some clarity on the ‘rules of engagement’ around tariffs and ‘retest the recent low,’ our view is the near term is set to remain choppy and markets are unlikely to return to new highs over the near term,” the firm’s co-chief investment officer wrote. The S&P 500 touched its lowest level since September on Monday before rebounding.— Fred ImbertBarclays downgrades Canada GooseBarclays says a challenging macro backdrop and intensifying competition will pressure Canada Goose.The firm lowered its rating on the winter apparel stock to underweight from equal weight in a research note on Monday. It also slashed its price target to $8 per share from $10, implying 2.9% downside potential from Friday’s close.The company’s high exposure to production in Canada makes it particularly vulnerable to tariff risks, according to analyst Adrienne Yih.“While the recent pullback in valuation and share price suggests that GOOS’s stock may already reflect these concerns, we see GOOS trading within a range in the near term with potential risk to estimates should competitive pressures remain high and tariff risks intensify,” wrote Yih.Shares fell more than 6% Monday, pulling the stock down nearly 23% in 2025.— Hakyung KimNewsmax stock spikes 500% in first-ever trading dayBrendan McDermid | ReutersScreens display the trading information for Newsmax Inc. during the company’s IPO on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange on March 31, 2025.Conservative cable news network Newsmax soared more than 500% in its first day of trading, after going public on the New York Stock Exchange on Monday.The stock was last trading around $66 per share. Newsmax opened at $14 per share after pricing at $10 per share.Newsmax first announced its plans for an initial public offering last September, with its IPO coming at a time of increasing uncertainty for the traditional cable news industry. On the other hand, Newsmax has consistently seen its ratings rise after President Trump was voted back into office for his second term.“I think there was a demand for more competition against Fox,” Newsmax CEO and founder Christopher Ruddy told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Monday. “I think it’s a pretty big achievement for a 10-year-old, new cable company.”— Lillian Rizzo, Lisa Kailai HanStocks making the biggest moves midday MondayBrendan McDermid | ReutersA screen displays the company logo for CoreWeave, Inc., Nvidia-backed cloud services provider, during the company’s IPO at the Nasdaq Market in New York City on March 28, 2025.Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading:CoreWeave — Shares of the cloud provider tumbled more than 9% in its second trading session since going public. CoreWeave, which rents out access to Nvidia graphics processing units to other large tech companies, suffered a disappointing debut last week. Nvidia also saw its shares drop more than 4% on Monday.Canada Goose — The Canadian outerwear firm saw shares sliding more than 6% to hit a new 52-week low after Barclays downgraded the stock to underweight from equal weight. The Wall Street firm cited global macro pressure, increasing competition and the potential effects of tariff exposure as reasons for the downgrade.Moderna — The biotechnology company tumbled 8% following the resignation of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s top vaccine regulator Peter Marks. His departure, which he said was based on “misinformation and lies” around immunization, has caused concerns over whether the Trump administration will swiftly approve and promote critical vaccines. The full list can be found here.— Hakyung Kim10 sectors out of 11 pacing for a negative MarchAs of Monday, 10 of the 11 GICS sectors were negative on the month.The losses were led by the consumer discretionary and information technology sectors, both down 11%. Communication services stocks followed with a 10% decline.The energy sector, on the other hand, was the only exception. The sector was led higher by shares of EQT, Hess, Coterra, Exxon and Chevron, which all gained more than 5% in March. Specifically, shares of EQT have gained nearly 11% on the month and are on pace for their fourth positive month in five.— Gina Francolla, Lisa Kailai HanGoldman lowers S&P 500 forecast againGoldman Sachs chief U.S. equity strategist David Kostin has cut the firm’s year-end target for the S&P 500 to 5,700 from 6,200. That is the second target cut for Kostin this month. The new projection is the lowest among major Wall Street strategists, according to the CNBC Market Strategist Survey.Read more about the call on CNBC Pro.— Jesse PoundBTIG upgrades Progyny, sees more than 25% upsideBTIG believes demand is coming back for fertility benefits provider Progyny, upgrading the stock to buy from neutral Monday.The firm’s recent survey of 15 health plans showed an increase in plans that expect to use Progyny, analyst David Larson wrote in a note to clients. He also likes the company’s balance sheet and cash flow and said valuation is reasonable.“We believe that consumption of services will continue to stabilize and improve, the Trump Administration favors IVF, and election-related economic uncertainty is now behind us,” Larson wrote. “We believe that macro factors such as the labor market and inflation, are important drivers of the use of PGNY, and we believe that trends are improving.”His $28 price target implies 28% upside from Friday’s close. Shares were up 3.5% in midday trading.— Michelle FoxS&P 500 returns to correction territoryThe S&P 500‘s Monday slide pushed the broad index back into correction territory, which is defined as a drop of at least 10% from a recent high.The index slid around 1% around 10 a.m. ET. With that decline, the S&P 500 was now down about 10.3% from its record high close set in February.The S&P 500 has traded in the correction zone at multiple points during its current rout. With Monday’s move, the index has tumbled around 6% on the year.— Alex HarringU.S. Steel’s share price nearing full fundamental value, says BMO Capital Markets Jeff Swensen | Getty ImagesA general view of the exterior of the U.S. Steel Tower, headquarters of USX Steel, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on March 20, 2024.BMO Capital Markets downgraded U.S. Steel to market perform from outperform as the company’s deal with Nippon Steel remains in the air.U.S. Steel shares are up 26.5% this year, rallying after President Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said in February that Nippon Steel’s $14.9 billion bid for U.S. Steel would take the form of an investment rather than a purchase. Former U.S. President Joe Biden had blocked Nippon’s bid for U.S. Steel in early January, citing national security concerns.Still, BMO analyst Katja Jancic believes the stock’s valuation is running high and the uncertainty tied to the deal is “too great at this point to maintain an outperform recommendation.”“The current share price is nearing fair fundamental value,” Jancic said in a note to clients. “We recognize that Nippon/US Steel transaction remains a possibility given ongoing conversation with the government, but in our view significant uncertainty remains as President Trump has been supportive of Nippon investing in US Steel but has spoken against full ownership.”— Pia SinghGoldman sees Trump tariffs driving inflation higherBrandon Bell | Getty ImagesA customer shops for produce at an H-E-B grocery store in Austin, Texas, on Feb. 12, 2025.Goldman Sachs thinks tariffs from President Trump could put even more upward pressure on prices, making for an even gloomier economic outlook. The bank sees its preferred core inflation measure reaching 3.5% in 2025. That is 0.5 percentage points higher than a prior forecast and well above the Fed’s 2% goal.— Fred ImbertStocks open lowerU.S. stocks opened lower on Monday, with investors remaining on edge ahead of President Trump’s tariff plans on Wednesday.The S&P 500 pulled back 1.3%, while the Nasdaq Composite fell 2.3%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average pulled back 273 points, or 0.6%.— Brian EvansTrump family launches bitcoin mining venture with Hut 8Shares of the bitcoin miner Hut 8 jumped 7% in premarket trading after it announced a new majority owned subsidiary called American Bitcoin.The new company, which will focus on industrial-scale bitcoin mining and strategic bitcoin reserve development, is the result of a merger with American Data Centers – a company formed by a group of investors including Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. – which has been renamed and relaunched as American Bitcoin.As part of the deal, Miami-based Hut 8 is shifting “substantially all” of its bitcoin mining machines to the new subsidiary in exchange for an 80% stake, it said in a press release. The Trump brothers will retain a 20% stake in it.American Bitcoin executives have said plans to mine and accumulate bitcoin for their own reserve are unrelated to the U.S. strategic bitcoin reserve that President Trump established this year in an executive order, the Wall Street Journal reported.— Tanaya MacheelAutomakers extend losses Monday morningGeneral Motors and Ford slipped 2.5% and 1.5%, respectively, while Stellantis fell nearly 3% Monday before the bell. The carmakers continued their losses from last week ahead of President Donald Trump’s new tariffs on imported cars, which are slated to take effect on April 3. Over the weekend, Trump stated in an interview with NBC News over the weekend that he “couldn’t care less” if automakers increased prices as a result of the tariffs. — Hakyung KimTesla, Nvidia among the stocks making moves before the bellSelcuk Acar | Anadolu | Getty ImagesDemonstrators gather outside a Tesla showroom for a protest dubbed ‘Tesla Takedown’ against the company’s CEO, Elon Musk (not seen), in New York, United States on March 13, 2025. Some stocks are making big moves in premarket trading Monday:Tesla – The electric vehicle maker tumbled more than 6% after Stifel cut its price target on the stock. The firm said that a slower-than-expected rollout of Telsa’s new Model Y and recent protests could weigh on sales in the near term.Auto stocks – Shares of automakers pulled back as President Donald Trump’s tariffs on imported cars are set to take effect this week. The president said in an interview with NBC News over the weekend that he “couldn’t care less” if automakers increased prices as a result of the tariffs. On Monday, shares of Stellantis shed more than 3%, while General Motors and Ford slid more than 2% and 1%, respectively.CoreWeave – Shares of the Nvidia-backed cloud provider fell nearly 5% after closing flat in its Nasdaq debut on Friday. Nvidia shares also dropped more than 4% after CoreWeave’s disappointing debut. The artificial intelligence chip darling has fallen more than 18% in 2025. Read the full list here.— Sean ConlonMr. Cooper shares soar 25% after Rocket Companies’ takeover dealMortgage firm Mr. Cooper saw shares soaring 25% in premarket trading after fintech platform Rocket Companies announced a definitive agreement to acquire Mr. Cooper in an all-stock transaction for $9.4 billion in equity value.Famed investor Leon Cooperman’s family office Omega Advisors owned 4.5% of Mr. Cooper, or 2.9 million shares, at the end of 2024.— Yun LiReciprocal tariffs will target all countries, Trump saysBrendan Smialowski | Afp | Getty ImagesU.S. President Donald Trump speaks to members of the press while returning to Washington, D.C., on Air Force One on March 30, 2025.President Trump said on Sunday that his reciprocal tariff plan will target all countries, as opposed to the group of 10 to 15 nations that have the largest U.S. trade deficit.“You’d start with all countries,” Trump said. “Essentially all of the countries that we’re talking about.”— Brian EvansWith light corporate news on deck, Wall Street readies for heavy macro weekInvestors will be keenly focused on a wide array of macroeconomic data points this week to better assess the health of the U.S. economy.Outside of Wednesday’s so-called Liberation Day, where President Trump will present his reciprocal tariff plan, here is what else is happening on the data front this week:U.S. manufacturing PMI and JOLTS job openings data on TuesdayADP private payrolls report for March on WednesdayInitial jobless claims, ISM services and ISM services PMI, as well as data on the U.S. trade deficit on ThursdayNonfarm payrolls report for March on Friday A slew of commentary from central bank officials will also be spread out across the week.— Brian EvansJapan’s Nikkei slumps over 4% to enter correction territory as Trump tariffs keep investors on edgeAsia-Pacific markets plunged Monday ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump’s fresh round of tariffs expected later in the week, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 entering correction territory.The Nikkei 225 index plunged 4.05% to end the day at 35,617.56, losing nearly 12% from its December high. The broader Topix index lost 3.57% to 2,658.73.Over in South Korea, the Kospi index closed 3% lower at 2,481.12, while the small-cap Kosdaq declined 3.01% to 672.85, with the markets regulator allowing short selling Monday after the longest ban on the activity in the country’s history.Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 ended the day 1.74% lower at 7,843.30, ahead of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s policy meeting Tuesday. The central bank is widely expected to stand pat on interest rates at 4.1% as the country heads to the polls on May 3.Mainland China’s CSI 300 lost 0.71% to close at 3,887.31, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index was down 1.02% as of its final hour of trade.Indian markets were closed for a public holiday.— Amala BalakrishnerWhere the major averages standHere’s where the major averages stand for the month ahead of March’s last trading day:The S&P 500 is down 6.27%.The Nasdaq Composite is down 8.09%.The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down 5.15%.The Russell 2000 is down 6.46%. Correction: This post has been updated to fix Nasdaq and Dow moves.— Lisa Kailai HanPresident Donald Trump has pushed advisors to be more aggressive on tariffs, The Wall Street Journal reportsPresident Donald Trump has pushed his team to be more aggressive when it comes to tariffs, The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday.The article followed comments made by the president on Saturday when he told NBC News that he “couldn’t care less” if foreign automakers raise their prices due to these new tariffs. Trump’s economic tariffs, including a 25% levy on “all cars that are not made in the United States,” will go into effect on April 2, a day the president has dubbed “Liberation Day.”— Lisa Kailai HanStocks suffered losses last weekWall Street is coming off a negative week for stocks.The S&P 500 fell 1.53% for its fifth negative week in six.The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 0.96% for its third negative week in four.The Nasdaq Composite tumbled 2.59%, also notching its fifth negative week in six.The Russell 2000 slipped 1.64% for its fifth negative week in six. — Lisa Kailai Han, Christopher HayesStock futures fallStock futures fell Sunday night.Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 236 points, or 0.6%, shortly after 6 p.m. ET. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures shed 0.5% and 0.7%, respectively.— Lisa Kailai Han1f:T42c,Deep-pocketed investors have adopted a bullish approach towards Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC), and it's something market players shouldn't ignore. Our tracking of public options records at Benzinga unveiled this significant move today. The identity of these investors remains unknown, but such a substantial move in WFC usually suggests something big is about to happen.We gleaned this information from our observations today when Benzinga's options scanner highlighted 9 extraordinary options activities for Wells Fargo. This level of activity is out of the ordinary.The general mood among these heavyweight investors is divided, with 66% leaning bullish and 33% bearish. Among these notable options, 5 are puts, totaling $441,375, and 4 are calls, amounting to $323,352.Predicted Price RangeAfter evaluating the trading volumes and Open Interest, it's evident that the major market movers are focusing on a price band between $62.5 and $80.0 for Wells Fargo, spanning the last three months.Insights into Volume & Open InterestLooking ...Full story available on Benzinga.com20:T47c,Investors with a lot of money to spend have taken a bullish stance on Airbnb (NASDAQ:ABNB).And retail traders should know.We noticed this today when the trades showed up on publicly available options history that we track here at Benzinga.Whether this is an institution or just a wealthy individual, we don't know. But when something this big happens with ABNB, it often means somebody knows something is about to happen.Today, Benzinga's options scanner spotted 9 options trades for Airbnb.This isn't normal.The overall sentiment of these big-money traders is split between 33% bullish and 33%, bearish.Out of all of the options we uncovered, 8 are puts, for a total amount of $259,817, and there was 1 call, for a total amount of $64,200.Predicted Price RangeAnalyzing the Volume and Open Interest in these contracts, it seems that the big players have been eyeing a price window from $80.0 to $145.0 for Airbnb during the past quarter. Analyzing Volume & Open InterestLooking at the volume and open interest is a powerful move while trading options. This data can help you track the liquidity and interest ...Full story available on Benzinga.com21:T526,Deep-pocketed investors have adopted a bearish approach towards Coinbase Global (NASDAQ:COIN), and it's something market players shouldn't ignore. Our tracking of public options records at Benzinga unveiled this significant move today. The identity of these investors remains unknown, but such a substantial move in COIN usually suggests something big is about to happen.We gleaned this information from our observations today when Benzinga's options scanner highlighted 42 extraordinary options activities for Coinbase Global. This level of activity is out of the ordinary.The general mood among these heavyweight investors is divided, with 23% leaning bullish and 50% bearish. Among these notable options, 22 are puts, totaling $2,213,841, and 20 are calls, amounting to $1,272,231.Expected Price MovementsTaking into account the Volume and Open Interest on these contracts, it appears that whales have been targeting a price range from $2.5 to $500.0 for Coinbase Global over the last 3 months. Volume & Open Interest DevelopmentLooking at the volume and open interest is an insightful way to conduct due diligence on a stock.This data can help you track the liquidity and interest for Coinbase Global's options for a given strike price.Below, we can observe the evolution of ...Full story available on Benzinga.com22:Taa1,President Donald Trump has managed, within a few short months, to force a number of traditionally powerful "elite institutions" to capitulate to his personal demands in a sort of "Great Grovel" — and it turns out there is a method to how Trump has accomplished all this, said Politico reporters in an analysis published on Monday.From getting tech billionaires that long criticized him to donate to his inaugural fund, to forcing law firms that represented anti-Trump clients to change their policies, to getting news networks to settle MAGA lawsuits experts dismissed as frivolous, to getting prestigious universities that hosted protests he didn't like to crack down on students, Trump has accomplished obedience from a number of groups that frustrated him in his last term.This obedience hasn't been universal — many of these institutions are fighting back and there is internal fury within the organizations that capitulated — but it's no accident Trump is having more luck this time around, Politico staff argued.ALSO READ: 'Scared and sick': Trump voters struggle to deal with tariff reality set to go into effectPart of it is that these institutions, being large and dependent on federal funding, have many vulnerabilities for Trump to exploit, and part of it is that their higher-ups, despite disagreement from the rank and file, hope that by buying off Trump's anger they can return to business as usual. But there's also a deeper reason why these organizations haven't been able to mount effective resistance: Trump is deliberately going after them one at a time."While Trump enjoys a wide array of support, his targets typically have found themselves alone and isolated," said the report. "There has been no effective effort so far by universities to work in concert to halt Trump’s actions at Columbia or other campuses. Kicking the Associated Press out of the White House pool prompted howls by other reporters, but most news organizations basically kept on with their ordinary business. Major law firms haven’t released a joint statement condemning Trump’s moves against their industry colleagues."The result, said one person who works at Disney, is “There’s a giant collective action problem because everybody’s looking out for number one.”And Mary Spooner, a former attorney with Paul Weiss, had a similar assessment: “If law firms and businesses and others within the private sector choose not to stand up and front a resistance to this power that [Trump] is claiming, but which the Constitution does not give him, then he will have that power. But it becomes much, much harder to resist when individual organizations and institutions and corporations are forced to resist alone.”23:Te9e,Traders Are Liberating Themselves From Their Stock Holdings By Bas van Geffen, CFA, Senior Macro Strategist at RabobankThe United States’ ‘Liberation Day’ is just around the corner, but President Trump’s trade advisers are still rushing to finalize the set of reciprocal tariffs that the US president is so keen to announce. Last week, Trump seemed to suggest that his reciprocal tariffs could be lower and less extensive than he had flagged before. However, perhaps that was everyone misinterpreting the president’s words.Over the weekend, Trump has reportedly complained to his staff that the tariffs should be higher and more extensive. Yesterday, Trump more or less confirmed this to the press, stating that his tariff announcement will include all countries, and not just the 10 or 15 with the biggest trade surplus versus the US. And so, a 20% universal tariff might be back on the table as one of the options.And if anyone still thought that the inflationary effects might rein Trump in, think again. Referring to the recent introduction of tariffs on cars and car parts, the president explicitly stated that “he couldn’t care less” if this causes car prices to go up – refuting earlier reports that Trump had convened carmakers to warn them against raising prices. In fact, he’d welcome it if this means that people will start buying more American-made cars again. So, as the Trump administration prepares to “liberate” the country, traders are looking to liberate themselves from their equity holdings. The Nikkei 225 started the trading week with a 4% loss, and European equity markets open lower as well.Trump intends to liberate the US, but his belligerence is also waking other leaders from their slumber. ECB President Lagarde said this morning that tariffs are a chance for Europe to show its own independence. That may require a vastly different Europe though. Guy Verhofstadt, former prime minister of Belgium and Member of the European Parliament, summarized it as follows: “To do this, 27 Commissioners, 27 Armies, 27 vetos, no single capital market, 3 Presidents, no single person to call in Europe... doesn’t make sense anymore! Europe must be reimagined.”He may have a point, but that is probably still a step too far for many Europeans. Although the European Commission senses the urgency of a joint approach in areas like defense, the execution is so far being left to the national governments. Even issues like joint EU borrowing are still a no-go for several member states. And that could be detrimental to the plans.Germany has been remarkably quick to embrace the need for higher defense spending. But that may thwart efforts elsewhere in Europe. The expected German issuance has not just pushed Bund yields higher; it has also increased the funding costs for other European nations. Countries with a high debt ratio, like Portugal, were already reluctant to spend more, because higher deficits may put their finances on an unsustainable path again. Higher interest rates only increase these concerns.And EU countermeasures to Trump’s Liberation Day may further complicate the continent’s efforts. Brussels has all the tools to respond to US tariffs. And the tone of EU trade officials has hardened. However, if the European Union ‘demonstrates its independence’ by retaliating against any US tariffs, rising costs will only make it more difficult to achieve actual independence from the US. If Europe still gets that time in such a situation: Trump has demonstrated he is willing to use political and military means if the economic ones don’t work. Is Europe willing to risk losing the US security umbrella before it can rebuild its own? Tyler DurdenMon, 03/31/2025 - 10:4524:Td26,Trump Says He Is 'Not Joking' About Running For 3rd Presidential Term Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),President Donald Trump on Sunday said that he is “not joking” about recent talk of him potentially seeking a third term in office, although such a move would likely face significant legal hurdles.The White House in Washington on March 11, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times“A lot of people want me to do it,” Trump told NBC News on Sunday morning. “But, I mean, I basically tell them we have a long way to go, you know, it’s very early in the administration.”When asked about whether he is serious or joking about the third term comments, Trump said, “I’m not joking.”“It is far too early to think about it,” he said, adding elsewhere in the interview that he is “focused on the current” term in office.Since taking office, Trump has, on multiple occasions, suggested that he wants to run for a third term, which could pose a legal challenge, because the 22nd Amendment of the U.S. Constitution states “no person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice.” That amendment was ratified in 1951 after President Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected four consecutive times. Roosevelt was the only president in U.S. history to be elected to either a third or fourth term.Days after Trump took office in January, Rep. Andy Ogles (R-Tenn.) proposed an amendment to the Constitution that could allow presidents to be elected for three terms. However, amending the Constitution would require two-thirds of Congress members to vote for its approval, which would then have to be ratified by three-fourths of state Legislatures.A reporter just asked President Trump about a third term.Trump: We’ve got a long way to go—almost four years—but despite that, so many people are saying, ‘You’ve got to run again.’ Most importantly, they love the job we’re doing. pic.twitter.com/afAXJiDABD— Grace Chong, MBI (@gc22gc) March 31, 2025Explaining why he would want to seek a third term, Trump said that, “You have to start by saying, I have the highest poll numbers of any Republican for the last 100 years.”“We’re in the high 70s in many polls, in the real polls, and you see that. And, and you know, we’re very popular,” Trump said.When asked about how he could be elected to a third term, Trump told NBC News there might be ways to do so.NBC’s Kristen Welker then provided him with a hypothetical situation: “Well, let me throw out one where President Vance would run for office and then would, basically ... if he won, at the top of the ticket, would then pass the baton to you.”In response, Trump said, “Well, that’s one. But there are others, too. There are others.”“Can you tell me another?” Welker asked Trump. “No,” he said.The 12th Amendment, which was ratified in 1804, says that “no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States.”Also in the interview, Trump was asked about why he wants to continue to be president, which Welker described is “the toughest job in the country.”“Well, I like working,” replied Trump, who would be 82 at the end of his current term.The Associated Press contributed to this report. Tyler DurdenSun, 03/30/2025 - 22:1025:T26bc,Trump's New World Order Authored by Nick Giambruno via InternationalMan.com,The US-led world order has undergone several distinct phases since the end of World War 2.From 1945 to 1991, it was defined by the Cold War—a global struggle between the US and the Soviet Union.After the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the post-WW2 world order experienced a massive shift, with the US emerging as the undisputed global superpower. This era, often called the “unipolar moment,” lasted from 1991 until Trump’s inauguration in 2025.Yuval Harari is a key advisor to Klaus Schwab, founder of the World Economic Forum (WEF). He recently stated that if Trump were to become president again, it “is likely to be the kind of death blow to what remains of the global order.”While I think it’s premature to declare the end of the post-WW2 world order, Trump’s return to the White House undoubtedly marks one of the most significant shifts in international relations since the Soviet Union’s fall.Marco Rubio serves as Trump’s Secretary of State, tasked with executing Trump’s vision for America’s role on the world stage.His statements—during his Senate confirmation hearings and in an interview with journalist Megyn Kelly—have made that vision unmistakably clear.Here’s what Rubio stated during his confirmation hearings (emphasis added):“Out of the triumphalism of the end of long Cold War emerged a bi-partisan consensus that we had reached ‘the end of history.’ That all the nations of Earth would become members of the democratic Western led community. That a foreign policy that served the national interest could now be replaced by one that served the ‘liberal world order.’ And that all mankind was now destined to abandon national identity, and we would become ‘one human family’ and ‘citizens of the world.’This wasn’t just a fantasy; it was a dangerous delusion.Here in America, and in many of the advanced economies across the world, an almost religious commitment to free and unfettered trade at the expense of our national economy, shrunk the middle class, left the working class in crisis, collapsed industrial capacity, and pushed critical supply chains into the hands of adversaries and rivals. An irrational zeal for maximum freedom of movement of people has resulted in a historic mass migration crisis here in America and around the world that threatens the stability of societies and governments.While America far too often continued to prioritize the ‘global order’ above our core national interests, other nations continued to act the way countries always have and always will, in what they perceive to be in their best interest.And instead of folding into the post-Cold War global order, they have manipulated it to serve their interest at the expense of ours. We welcomed the Chinese Communist Party into this global order. And they took advantage of all its benefits. But they ignored all its obligations and responsibilities. Instead, they have lied, cheated, hacked, and stolen their way to global superpower status, at our expense.The postwar global order is not just obsolete; it is now a weapon being used against us.And all this has led us to a moment in which we must now confront the single greatest risk of geopolitical instability and generational global crisis in the lifetime of anyone alive here today.Eight decades later, we are called to create a free world out of chaos once again. This will not be easy. And it will be impossible without a strong and confident America that engages in the world, putting our core national interests above all else once again.”Here are Rubio’s remarks to Megyn Kelly (emphasis added):Megyn Kelly: America First?Secretary Rubio: Well, and that’s the way the world has always worked. The way the world has always worked is that the Chinese will do what’s in the best interests of China, the Russians will do what’s in the best interest of Russia, the Chileans are going to do what’s in the best interest of Chile, and the United States needs to do what’s in the best interest of the United States.Where our interests align, that’s where you have partnerships and alliances; where our differences are not aligned, that is where the job of diplomacy is to prevent conflict while still furthering our national interests and understanding they’re going to further theirs. And that’s been lost.And I think that was lost at the end of the Cold War, because we were the only power in the world, and so we assumed this responsibility of sort of becoming the global government in many cases, trying to solve every problem.And there are terrible things happening in the world. There are. And then there are things that are terrible that impact our national interest directly, and we need to prioritize those again.So, it’s not normal for the world to simply have a unipolar power. That was an anomaly. It was a product of the end of the Cold War, but eventually you were going to reach back to a point where you had a multipolar world, multi-great powers in different parts of the planet.We face that now with China and to some extent Russia, and then you have rogue states like Iran and North Korea you have to deal with.So now more than ever we need to remember that foreign policy should always be about furthering the national interest of the United States and doing so, to the extent possible, avoiding war and armed conflict, which we have seen two times in the last century be very costly.They’re celebrating the 80th anniversary this year of the end of the Second World War. That – I think if you look at the scale and scope of destruction and loss of life that occurred, it would be far worse if we had a global conflict now. It may end life on the planet. And it sounds like hyperbole, but you have multiple countries now who have the capability to end life on Earth. And so we need to really work hard to avoid armed conflict as much as possible, but never at the expense of our national interest. So that’s the tricky balance. “Rubio’s words are a reflection of Trump’s vision and policy. Frankly, it’s a much-needed dose of realism and pragmatism.It’s worth emphasizing several key points from Rubio’s remarks:The idea that the US could uphold a unipolar world order indefinitely “wasn’t just a fantasy; it was a dangerous delusion.”“The postwar global order is not just obsolete; it is now a weapon being used against us.”“We must now confront the single greatest risk of geopolitical instability and generational global crisis in the lifetime of anyone alive here today.”“It’s not normal for the world to simply have a unipolar power. That was an anomaly.”“Eventually, you were going to reach back to a point where you had a multipolar world, multi-great powers in different parts of the planet.”Though it endured for 34 years, the notion that the US could maintain a unipolar world order indefinitely was never realistic.President Trump seems to recognize that maintaining it is not just unrealistic but unsustainable. He appears to have decided that it is in the US’s best interest to transition to a multipolar reality on its own terms rather than be forced into it by a chaotic collapse.We are now in a volatile adjustment period as the unipolar world order gives way to a multipolar one (click image below to enlarge).Does this mean World War 3 is over?I don’t think so. But it does mean we have entered a new phase of it.There is still much to be determined—most crucially, the boundaries of the US, Russia, and China’s spheres of influence in this emerging multipolar world.With the war in Ukraine all but lost and the prospect of victory in Taiwan shrinking by the day, the US government appears to have accepted that the complete subjugation of Russia and China under its unipolar dominance is no longer an achievable goal.The goalposts of World War 3 have shifted.Rather than total victory and preserving the unipolar world order, the US is now focused on maximizing its power within the new multipolar landscape—while limiting the influence of its most formidable rivals: Russia, China, and their allies, including Iran.While the US seems to be moving away from the unipolar model and begrudgingly acknowledging the existence of rival powers, it still seeks to be the dominant force in a multipolar world.The new global boundaries have yet to be defined, and the situation remains volatile and dangerous. Whether Trump can successfully guide the US—and the world—through this transition without descending into greater conflict remains an open question.On a smaller scale, this mirrors how powerful criminal organizations—such as mafias and street gangs—operate within a city. Ideally, a gang or mafia would eliminate all rivals. However, when certain rivals prove too strong to destroy, the conflict shifts toward defining boundaries until a formal arrangement is reached that divides territories.The same dynamic is now unfolding on a global scale between the US, Russia, and China as World War 3 plays out.Each side is maneuvering to expand its power and influence until a new arrangement is reached that defines the balance of the multipolar world.The Global Order Is Changing—Are You Ready?The unipolar world is fading, and a volatile new multipolar reality is taking shape.The global power structure is shifting fast—and the consequences will be massive.Most people will be caught off guard—don’t be one of them.What does this mean for America? For the economy? For you?That’s why I’ve put together an urgent report revealing the hidden forces shaping this new era and how to prepare for the massive geopolitical and economic shifts ahead.This could be the most important dispatch you read all year.Don’t get caught unprepared.Click here to see it now. Tyler DurdenSun, 03/30/2025 - 10:3026:Ta36,"Damning Conduct": FBI Agents Stationed In Asia Paid For Sex From Prostitutes Over Several Years FBI agents stationed overseas engaged in sex with prostitutes in Cambodia, the Philippines, and Thailand—sometimes while colleagues attended anti-human trafficking training, the New York Times reported.The "damning conduct", which occurred between 2009 and 2018, involved agents paying for or accepting sex while socializing with each other and local police, revealing a culture where women were routinely exploited.The report, made public after a New York Times lawsuit, offers the most detailed account yet of a scandal kept largely under wraps since the early Trump years. It surfaces as new FBI Director Kash Patel vows to overhaul the agency.Prostitution is widespread but illegal in Cambodia, the Philippines, and Thailand—countries where FBI agents engaged in misconduct, despite the bureau’s ban on paying for sex and its stated focus on fighting human trafficking.“The F.B.I. took swift action once alerted to the behavior,” the agency said, adding that those involved were fired and overseas personnel training has since been updated.Some incidents occurred during official events. In 2017, agents in Bangkok twice visited bars to negotiate sex while accompanied by local police. That same year, the FBI co-hosted anti-trafficking training with Thai authorities. It's unclear if the misconduct occurred during that specific training.The Times wrote that in 2018, during another event in Manila, FBI employees accepted prostitutes reportedly paid for by a local law enforcement agency, according to the report.The Wall Street Journal first reported in 2018 that several FBI employees had been recalled from Asia amid an investigation into alleged contact with prostitutes and other misconduct.A 2021 inspector general summary confirmed five employees had solicited sex abroad, and one had given a colleague “a package containing approximately 100 white pills to deliver to a foreign law enforcement officer.”The full report, now released after a legal battle with The New York Times, details multiple violations involving groups of FBI employees. In one case, agents at a karaoke bar were handed room keys or numbered slips tied to hotel rooms—at least one was a supervisor. Two employees reportedly engaged in sex acts with prostitutes while sharing a room.The Justice Department under both Trump and Biden fought to keep the details sealed, citing privacy concerns. A federal judge ultimately ordered the release of the less-redacted version on Thursday. Tyler DurdenSat, 03/29/2025 - 22:4527:T19a6,China's Tech Triple Play Threatens US National Security Authored by Craig Singleton via RealClearWire,Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader Xi Jinping has defiantly declared that technological innovation is the “main battlefield” in China’s quest for global preeminence. But, Beijing’s bold bid to transform itself into a global science superpower is not merely an economic imperative—it is a means to strengthen China’s military might and cyber capabilities, with grave implications for the United States.At the center of Xi’s vision are what he calls China’s “new productive forces”—breakthroughs in advanced batteries, biotech, LiDAR, drones, and other emerging technologies that promise to redefine the next industrial revolution. By dominating these sectors, Beijing aims to ensure Chinese technology is deeply embedded within critical American supply chains—everything from power grids and ports to communications networks —thereby converting China’s commercial success into a powerful geopolitical tool of leverage.Here at home, Beijing’s strategy is unfolding in three interlocking phases—penetrating, prepositioning, and profiting—which together form an insidious framework that both erodes America’s technological edge and undermines homeland security.Recently exposed Chinese state-sponsored hacking campaigns—Salt, Volt, and Flax Typhoon—exemplify Beijing’s systematic approach to penetrating U.S. networks and critical infrastructure. The Salt campaign exploited vulnerabilities in telecommunications systems, allowing attackers to intercept voice and text communications and thereby compromise both civilian privacy and government operations. The Volt operation targeted industrial control systems, breaching energy and manufacturing networks to gain remote control over essential infrastructure. Meanwhile, Flax Typhoon focused on defense and government networks, exfiltrating sensitive data and installing persistent backdoors to facilitate future sabotage.Collectively, these campaigns reveal how Chinese hackers methodically exploit software and hardware weaknesses to harvest critical intelligence and maintain enduring access to sensitive U.S networks, often with next-to-no consequences. Yet infiltration is not an end in itself. Once inside, Beijing systematically prepositions latent capabilities throughout our physical and digital supply chains, setting the stage for future coercion.Today, Chinese-made LiDAR devices underpin smart city systems, autonomous vehicles, and certain aerial reconnaissance platforms. Similarly, Chinese-produced surveillance cameras and drones are integrated throughout our transportation network, including at major U.S. airports. Even critical infrastructure components like cranes in U.S. ports and batteries connected to our grids have morphed into strategic choke points, according to Congressional investigations.In a conflict—or even a severe diplomatic crisis—these systemic dependencies could confer a decisive advantage to China. By withholding critical parts or inflating prices at a pivotal moment, Beijing can exploit these supply chain choke points to hamper U.S. readiness.Prepositioned exploits could degrade or disable U.S. command-and-control systems, sabotage energy grids, or paralyze transportation networks—potentially stalling America’s response before a single shot is fired. Even if such disruptions remain hypothetical, the mere suspicion of sabotage can erode policymaker confidence and delay military mobilization efforts, effectively handing Beijing a silent veto over our crisis decision-making.The final phase of Beijing’s strategy is profiting from these dependencies, turning commercial dominance into a revenue stream that reinforces its military-civil fusion. Chinese high-tech exports, ranging from advanced sensors and biotech innovations to drones and surveillance cameras, generate billions in revenue every year for Beijing. These profits are not reinvested merely for commercial growth; they are often funneled directly into programs bolstering People’s Liberation Army’s R&D efforts.The stakes could hardly be higher. The House Homeland Security Committee, along with other congressional panels, has convened hearings spotlighting how Chinese hackers sit in vital infrastructure systems and how Beijing’s infiltration extends into our supply chains. The bipartisan consensus emerging from these discussions is clear: we must move swiftly from passive defense of American networks to proactive deterrence.Policymakers can begin by tightening outbound investment screening and export controls. That means scrutinizing U.S. capital and technology flows into Chinese firms linked to China’s military-industrial base, ensuring that American money and know-how no longer subsidize Beijing’s military modernization. Simultaneously, federal agencies should adopt “clean network” standards for software, hardware, and data, effectively establishing cyber quarantines for critical infrastructure. This would bar high-risk Chinese devices from power grids, ports, and telecommunications systems—treating them as inherently untrusted until proven otherwise.Equally important is imposing meaningful consequences on Beijing’s cyber intrusions. Diplomatic protests and token indictments of mid-level hackers have failed to alter China’s calculus. Instead, Washington should consider stronger penalties—including financial blacklisting of major Chinese firms or banks—to send an unmistakable message that continued infiltration carries real costs.Finally, we must commit to robust innovation at home. America can’t meet the Chinese challenge simply by playing defense. Expanding federal R&D, incentivizing private-sector breakthroughs, and aligning workforce development with future technology needs will ensure that the United States remains a leader in the very fields—biotech, AI, quantum computing, energy storage—where China seeks supremacy.Xi’s “main battlefield” is already upon us, and America can no longer afford complacency. China’s triple threat—penetrating, prepositioning, and profiting—targets the core of our national resilience. If we fail to respond decisively, we risk losing our technological edge and compromising our security. By fortifying our networks, enforcing meaningful consequences on malicious actors, and investing in American innovation, we can ensure Xi’s ambitions do not come at the expense of our prosperity and safety. Tyler DurdenSat, 03/29/2025 - 22:105:["$","div",null,{"children":[["$","h1",null,{"children":["Business"," News - Page ",11]}],["$","div",null,{"className":"articleGrid","children":[["$","article","2025-04/e811c4bfe25dc43a3252f26ca22c52d3.json",{"className":"ArticleCard_card__hzH2s","children":[["$","img",null,{"src":"https://cdn.benzinga.com/files/images/story/2025/04/02/Spike-Before-A-Crash.jpeg?auto=jpg&dpr=1&fit=crop&height=480&optimize=medium&width=720","alt":"Trump's 'Reciprocal Tariff' Plan Hits Market Confidence As Dow Futures Drops Over 830 Points","className":"ArticleCard_image__bZIZq","loading":"lazy"}],["$","div",null,{"className":"ArticleCard_content___0a8B","children":[["$","span",null,{"className":"ArticleCard_date__7QxPC","children":"2025-04-03"}],["$","h3",null,{"className":"ArticleCard_title__7hlpK","children":"Trump's 'Reciprocal Tariff' Plan Hits Market Confidence As Dow Futures Drops Over 830 Points"}],["$","p",null,{"className":"ArticleCard_description__llmXE","children":"U.S. stock futures plunged on Wednesday after President Donald Trump unveiled broad new tariffs on key trading partners, sparking fears of a global trade war that could further weaken the U.S. economy.What Happened: Futures on the S&P 500 plunged 2.7% to 5,557.75, while Nasdaq-100 futures tumbled 3.37% to 19,092.25 in after-hours trading. 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