Thyssenkrupp Writes Down Steel Unit as Energy Crisis Weighs
Thyssenkrupp AG wrote down the value of its steel business by a further €1.8 billion ($1.96 billion), the
2023-11-22 16:19
Philippines, US Resume Joint Patrols Amid China Tensions
The Philippines and the US resumed joint patrols in the South China Sea on Tuesday, years after they
2023-11-22 16:17
Australian Bank’s Return-to-Work Warning Sparks Union Rebuke
ANZ Group Holdings Ltd.’s recent warning to staff that their compensation may take a hit if they aren’t
2023-11-22 15:58
Record Fosun Asset Sales Can’t Halt Stock Drop to Decade Low
Even after a record stretch of asset sales that total at least $6.6 billion in just two years,
2023-11-22 15:52
Altman Returns as OpenAI’s CEO With Summers on Board
OpenAI will bring back Sam Altman and overhaul its board to bring on new directors including Larry Summers,
2023-11-22 15:20
Korea Takes Short-Term LNG Path While Rivals Embrace Long Deals
South Korea is avoiding the global trend toward long-term agreements on liquefied natural gas due to high prices,
2023-11-22 15:19
New Binance CEO Teng’s First Job Is to Avert Customer Exodus
Mollify 150 million potentially jittery users, placate belligerent US regulators and keep high-profile founder Changpeng Zhao onside. These
2023-11-22 14:57
Ships Across the World Face Hefty $3.6 Billion Climate Bill
Ships sailing to European ports face a combined carbon emissions bill of $3.6 billion next year, the start
2023-11-22 14:19
On This Day in 2017 – Everton’s Oumar Niasse hit with retrospective diving ban
Everton striker Oumar Niasse became the first Premier League player to be hit with a retrospective suspension for diving on this day in 2017. The Senegal international was handed a two-match ban by the Football Association after winning a controversial penalty, under pressure from Scott Dann, in a 2-2 draw with Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park. Niasse’s punishment came six months after the FA voted in favour of introducing new laws in an attempt to clamp down on players diving or feigning injury. Everton caretaker boss David Unsworth felt a “dangerous precedent” could be set by the sanction. “I think these people (the FA) will be very busy,” he said. “He (Niasse) was shocked and I was shocked (by the charge). “It’s a dangerous precedent that could be set if decisions are given against you which are debatable.” Niasse denied he had “committed an act of simulation” which led to a spot-kick being awarded in the fifth minute of the game in south London. But he was found guilty by the FA’s Independent Regulatory Commission, which includes former players. Leighton Baines converted the contentious penalty to cancel out James McArthur’s early opener before Niasse earned Everton a point by equalising following a goal from Eagles forward Wilfried Zaha. Palace boss Roy Hodgson said: “My only satisfaction is that the FA and the people who make those decisions have sided with me rather than the player.” Read More Performing under pressure – remembering England’s dramatic 2003 World Cup win Jason Robinson has yet to watch a rerun of England’s World Cup success Rob Page draws on play-off experience after Wales miss out on Euro qualification
2023-11-22 14:16
Fewest Japanese Firms on Record Planning to Expand in China
Japanese companies planning to expand their business in China have fallen to a record low, as geopolitical tensions
2023-11-22 14:16
Modi Hosts G-20 Leaders in Video Meet, But Xi and Biden to Skip
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will host a virtual meeting of leaders of the Group of 20 Wednesday,
2023-11-22 13:57
North Korea Claims Satellite Win After Two Failures This Year
North Korea claimed it successfully put a spy satellite into orbit after two attempts earlier this year ended
2023-11-22 13:51