Press "Enter" to skip to content

Category: international

President Trump Hosts a Rose Garden Lunch with Senate Republicans – 12:00pm ET Livestream

Today, President Donald Trump hosts a Rose Garden Club lunch with Senate Republicans at the White House in Washington, D. C. The anticipated start time is 12: 00pm ET with Livestream Links Below. Posted in President Trump, Press Secretary Trump The post President Trump Hosts a Rose Garden Lunch with Senate Republicans 12: 00pm ET Livestream appeared first on The Last Refuge.

$2B Set to Flow into BlackRock’s UK Bitcoin ETF After FCA Shift

TLDR BlackRock launched its iShares Bitcoin Trust in the UK on October 20, offering regulated access to Bitcoin ETFs. The fund opens UK access to Bitcoin exposure at around $11 per share through traditional brokerage platforms. BlackRock’s move follows the Financial Conduct Authority’s reversal of its ban on crypto-based exchange-traded products. Analysts expect the UK […]
The post $2B Set to Flow into BlackRock’s UK Bitcoin ETF After FCA Shift appeared first on CoinCentral.

Baptist Zionist group says ‘no need for another Palestinian state’, calls for Israeli sovereignty over Judea, Samaria

The Baptist Zionist Public Affairs Committee (BZPAC) criticized U. S. President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace agreement, saying it “risks repeating the failures of the past” in a statement issued earlier this month.

ASE and Analog Devices Announce Strategic Collaboration

PENANG, Malaysia & WILMINGTON, Mass.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–ASE Technology Holding Co., Ltd. (NYSE: ASX, TAIEX: 3711), and Analog Devices, Inc. (NASDAQ: ADI), today announced strategic joint efforts in Penang, Malaysia with the signing of a binding Memorandum of Understanding. Subject to the execution of the definitive transaction documents, ASE intends to purchase 100% of the equity of Analog Devices Sdn. Bhd. and consequently its manufacturing facility in Penang. In addition, ADI and ASE intend to

The UK Shouldn’t Be Conducting Foreign Policy in the Shadows

In a rare interview more than 20 years ago, Jonathan Powell, who’s currently Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s national security adviser, admitted, “My job is best done in the shadows.” The collapse of the state’s prosecution of Christopher Cash and Christopher Berry, two Britons accused of spying for China, has thrust this reclusive civil servant into an unwelcome spotlight.