
Texas ICE shooting suspects tied to secretive far-left anarchist group formed during violent 2020 BLM protests
An ex-US Marine Corps reservist and 10 others were nabbed after the group, who were clad in black military-style clothing, opened fire outside the Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado back on July 4 — leaving one cop shot in the neck.
In the wake of the attack, it has since emerged that several of the suspects have apparent ties to left-wing extremist group operating out of Dallas, the Washington Post reported.
5 Benjamin Song was captured in Dallas, Texas.
5 Evidence from the Texas ICE ambush released by authorities.
United States District Court Northern District of Texas
Some of them were allegedly trained by Benjamin Hanil Song — the former reservist charged with attempted murder in connection with the attack.
Song would allegedly host weekly sessions to train people for 'close quarters combat and large-scale gunfights.'
5 The Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado, Texas.
AP
'The people that were showing up to learn from him — a lot were very young, naïve leftists,' said Corey Lyon, a libertarian who attended some of the sessions but later cut ties with Song.
'They were scared. And Ben was offering them a solution for their fear.'
The group, which includes some transgender activists, is believed to have met during the Black Lives Matter protests in the summer of 2020.
5 Court documents show evidence from the Texas ICE ambush.
United States District Court Northern District of Texas
They initially focused on social justice demonstrations but have since turned their focus to ICE enforcement.
It wasn't immediately clear exactly how many of the alleged ICE attackers were involved with the anti-fascist group.
Song, who was arrested after a weeklong search, has been charged with three counts of attempted murder of federal agents and three counts of discharging a firearm in relation to a crime of violence.
He's accused, too, of purchasing four of the guns linked to the attack.
5 Benjamin Song was arrested in connection with the ambush on the Texas ICE facility.
Two of the other 10 arrested — Autumn Hill and Meagan Morris — are transgender.
They were all slapped with a slew of charges, including attempted murder of a federal officer, discharging a firearm in relation to a crime of violence and obstruction of justice for concealing evidence.

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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500 slip as Wall Street seeks clarity on Fed rate-cut path, Ukraine talks
US stocks closed the session little changed on Monday as investors turned their focus to a high-stakes US-Ukraine meeting, kicking off a week dominated by a Federal Reserve speech that could define the outlook for interest rates. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell just below flatline, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) declined nearly 0.1%, coming off a second straight winning week for the major gauges. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) eked out slight gains. Geopolitics were front of mind on Monday as Volodymyr Zelensky and European allies spoke with President Trump in Washington, D.C., with the Ukrainian president facing US pressure to accept a peace deal that favors Russia. The meeting follows Trump's encounter with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, at their Alaska summit. But markets are also looking ahead to the main event this week, Jerome Powell's comments at the Jackson Hole symposium on Friday. His speech — likely to be Powell's last as Fed chair — will be closely followed for clues to the path of monetary policy, after inflation and retail data prompted Wall Street to temper rate cut hopes last week. The annual gathering of central bankers often brings signals of key shifts in Fed thinking, and its policymakers are facing a dilemma over what action to take. The release of minutes from the Fed's July meeting on Wednesday will set the stage for Jackson Hole in a week light on economic data. Meanwhile, second quarter earnings season is winding down, with Palo Alto Networks (PANW) and Blink Charging (BLNK) reports on Monday's docket. With most of the reports in, the results have been mostly positive. Highly anticipated earnings from Walmart (WMT), Target (TGT), Home Depot (HD), and Lowe's (LOW) are due later in the week, likely to provide insights into consumer spending. Shares of Intel (INTC) fell after Bloomberg reported the Trump administration was contemplating a 10% stake in the chipmaker. Last week, shares jumped after reports that Trump was considering using funds from the CHIPS Act to invest in the company. Stocks little changed with Fed rate cut path, retail earnings in focus US stocks closed little changed on Monday as investors turned their focus on retail earnings due out this week and this Friday's upcoming talk from Fed Chair Jerome Powell in Jackson Hole, Wyo, for clues about the central bank's rate policy. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell less than one point, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) declined slightly, coming off a second straight winning week for the major gauges. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) rose less than 0.1%. Investors now turn their focus to a slew of retailers that will report earnings this week, giving Wall Street a glimpse of consumer health and how tariffs are impacting corporate bottom lines. Home Depot to report Q2 earnings as Wall Street eyes third straight quarter of US sales growth Yahoo Finance's Brooke DiPalma reports: Read more here. Oil edges higher following Ukraine-US meeting Oil edged higher on Monday following a meeting between President Trump and his counterpart from Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky. West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) gained more than 1% to hover near $63.54, while Brent crude (BZ=F) also edged higher to above $66 per barrel. President Trump has said he wants Russia and Ukraine to end the war. Since meeting with Russia's Vladimir Putin last Friday in Alaska, Trump has not called for any "secondary tariffs" on China for purchasing Russian oil. Following the meetings, traders do not see the prospect of a quick ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia, a measure that would likely increase supply into the market. Yes, 'nepo babies' make more money — but not necessarily in the fields you'd expect Yahoo Finance's Emma Ockerman reports: Read more here. Bitcoin, ethereum slip as crypto markets pull back after hitting 2025 highs Bitcoin (BTC-USD) extended declines on Monday following last week's record highs as investors took profits from the latest crypto rally. The world's largest cryptocurrency sank as much as 2% to hover near $116,000 after surging past $123,500 last Thursday. Expectations of Fed rate cuts, coupled with heavy purchases from corporate treasuries, have driven the price of bitcoin up 23% year to date. Ether (ETH-USD), the second-largest crypto by market cap, also declined 3% to hover near $4,350 per token following a surge last week to its highest level of the year and approaching its record high just below $4,900. "The sharp pullback in cryptocurrencies comes as the market is getting deleveraged following the peaks recorded last week," said Samer Hasn, senior market analyst at foreign exchange trading platform pointing to "an erosion of bullish momentum." Hasn pointed out that since last Thursday, more than $1.7 billion in long crypto futures positions have been liquidated, according to CoinGlass data. Read more here. Intel drops to session lows after report Trump administration wants 10% stake in chipmaker Intel (INTC) shares dropped nearly 4% to session lows on Monday after Bloomberg reported the White House is eyeing a 10% stake in the chipmaker. Last week, the stock popped after a report indicated President Trump's intent to invest in the company after meeting with CEO Lip-Bu Tan, who has been at the job since March. Trump had previously publicly called for Lip-Bu Tan to resign, calling him "highly conflicted." Intel is undergoing a turnaround plan after years of lagging its peers in the chip and AI space. Goldman Sachs economics team: More job report weakness is coming Yahoo Finance's Francisco Velasquez reports: Read more here. Mega caps' stock market dominance 'may be done' The stock market has been all about large market capitalization companies for over a decade. Dating back to 2015, Bank of America Securities Head of US equity and Quantitive Strategy Savita Subramanian found that the largest 50 stocks in the S&P 500 (^GSPC) have outperformed the benchmark index by 73 percentage points. Subramanian points out the last notable run of similar outperformance for the 50 largest stocks in the index came in the late 1990s leading into the bursting of the dot-com bubble. Subramanian thinks a similar tide shift might be coming to markets now. "History would suggest there is more to go in cap-weighted dominance," Subramanian wrote in a note to clients. "But if the Fed's next move is a rate cut, and if the Regime indicator is shifting to a Recovery, we think the run may be closer to done." BofA's "regime indicator," which includes a variety of factors such as corporate earnings revisions, inflation data and economic growth projections, has started to point to the recovery phase. This combined with a Federal Reserve that markets believe will cut interest rates by at least half a percentage point before the end of year, is a positive setup for value stocks, Subramanian argues. And the largest stocks in the market right now are "anti value." "[Federal Reserve] easing has been accompanied by Mega caps lagging more than leading, and higher inflation should support a broadening of the S&P 500 beyond defensives/secular growth," Subramanian wrote. Private club operator Soho House going private in $2.7 billion deal Shares of Soho House (SHCO) jumped as much as 16% on Monday after news that the private members club operator is set to go private, Yahoo Finance's Jake Conley reports. Conley writes: Read the full story here. TeraWulf stock jumps as Google ups stake in bitcoin miner to 14% Bitcoin miner and data center operator TeraWulf (WULF) saw its stock jump nearly 11% after announcing that Google is taking a 14% stake in the company. In return for the equity stake, Google is providing a backstop as TeraWulf uses debt financing to expand a Lake Mariner data center campus in western New York, making it one of the largest campuses in the US. In connection with the project, TeraWulf announced a $400 million debt offering on Monday. The new data center capacity will be leased by AI cloud provider Fluidstack. The deal was first unveiled when the company released its second quarter earnings results last week. TeraWulf initially said Google would provide a $1.8 billion backstop in exchange for an 8% stake in the company during its earnings call, but that figure was upped to $3.2 billion on Monday. CEO Paul Prager said its Lake Mariner campus will be one of the "cornerstone assets for the future of AI infrastructure." TeraWulf is one of many bitcoin miners transitioning to provide AI infrastructure. Novo Nordisk gains after the bell as company offers discounted Ozempic Danish pharma giant Novo Nordisk (NVO) saw its US-listed shares gain more than 5% Monday after the open as the company said it would offer patients its diabetes drug Ozempic for less than half the price if they pay cash. The move makes the medication more affordable for patients who don't have insurance coverage, though the reduced price still amounts to $499, keeping it out of reach for many Americans. Also on Monday, GoodRx announced it will begin selling both of Novo Nordisk's GLP-1 drugs for $499 a month. Shares had climbed premarket Monday after the company said Friday it received approval from the FDA for its liver disease MASH. Also boosting shares, Novo Nordisk reportedly will not charge more for pill versions of its weight-loss injections, which are expected to launch in 2026. This would be a departure from drugmakers' typical practice of charging more for new medications. The moves come after President Trump has ramped up pressure on drugmakers to lower prices, though his tariffs could raise prices. Read more here. Stocks muted at the open US stocks stalled at the market open as investors awaited a high-stakes US-Ukraine meeting, kickstarting a week leading up to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's most important policy speech of the year in Jackson Hole on Friday. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell just below the flat line, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) was also roughly flat, coming off a second straight winning week for the major gauges. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) added nearly 0.1%. Trump wants to take Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac public. The plan has some problems. Yahoo Finance's David Hollerith reports: Read more here. Solar stocks rally as Trump administration releases new guidance on tax credits Solar stocks continued rallying in premarket trading on Monday after the Trump administration clarified new eligibility requirements for tax credits that weren't as burdensome as feared. Shares of residential solar company Sunrun (RUN) have gained 38% since Friday. SolarEdge shares rose 19%, and First Solar (FSLR) and Enphase Energy (ENPH) stocks are both up more than 10%. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Good morning. Here's what's happening today. Economic data: NAHB homebuilder sentiment (August) Earnings: Palo Alto Networks (PANW), Blink Charging (BLNK) Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed over the weekend and early this morning: Powell's dilemma heading into his final Jackson Hole speech Trump eyes Fannie and Freddie IPO, but the plan faces hurdles What to watch this week: Powell at Jackson Hole. Walmart earnings China's $11 trillion stock market is a headache for both Xi and Trump US warns that India is 'cozying up' to Russia Tesla almost halves UK lease fee as sales slump: Report Goldman: S&P 500 earnings have blown past forecasts Bond market's rate-cut bets hit decisive stretch with Powell Novo Nordisk stock rises after Wegovy gets new US approval US-listed shares in Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk (NVO) are gaining before the bell, as investors welcome a US boost for its flagship Wegovy. Novo is also reportedly planning to hold off from charging more at next year's launch of pill versions of its weight-loss injections, a departure from usual practice as President Trump puts pressure on pharma companies to cut US prices. Reuters reports: Shares in Novo Nordisk rose on Monday, after the Danish drugmaker got US approval for its weight-loss drug Wegovy to treat a serious liver condition. That was positive news for Novo which has lost more than one-third of its market value in recent weeks. ... Three weeks ago, investors wiped $70 billion off its market value, after Novo — which became Europe's most valuable listed company following the launch of Wegovy in 2021 — issued a profit warning and named a company veteran as new CEO. On Friday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approval for Wegovy to treat metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis, or MASH, making it the first GLP-1 class therapy cleared for the progressive liver condition that affects around 5% of adults in the United States. Read more here. Powell at Jackson Hole, Walmart earnings: What to watch this week The investing world is gearing up for Jerome Powell's comments at Jackson Hole — the most important Fed monetary policy speech of the year, says Yahoo Finance's Myles Udland. The Fed chair's appearance dominates the week's calendar for markets, which also brings a clutch of retail giant earnings. Myles reports: Read more here. Goldman team likely to stay in Trump's crosshairs President Trump has recently offered a few choice words on the work from Goldman Sachs' economics team, led by long-time economist Jan Hatzius. The team is unlikely to garner some praise from Trump today. Here's what Hatzius and his team served up in a new note on Monday morning: "After the recent downward revisions to payrolls, our estimate of trend job growth is now clearly below even that . And while the picture could change again for better or worse, future revisions to job growth are more likely to be because the birth-death model is likely a bit too generous, changes in trend payroll growth can initially be partially misattributed to changes in seasonal factors, revisions to the raw payrolls data tended to be negative in past slowdowns, data from ADP raise doubts about officially reported payroll growth in healthcare, and the household survey is now overstating immigration and employment gains. Like the slowdown in activity growth this year, the slowdown in job growth appears to have arisen from more than just the direct effects of trade and immigration policy changes. We are particularly worried that 'catch-up hiring' in a few industries now appears over and job growth outside those industries has fallen to around zero. And while job openings remain at a decent level, they started to decline again earlier this year." Stocks little changed with Fed rate cut path, retail earnings in focus US stocks closed little changed on Monday as investors turned their focus on retail earnings due out this week and this Friday's upcoming talk from Fed Chair Jerome Powell in Jackson Hole, Wyo, for clues about the central bank's rate policy. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell less than one point, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) declined slightly, coming off a second straight winning week for the major gauges. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) rose less than 0.1%. Investors now turn their focus to a slew of retailers that will report earnings this week, giving Wall Street a glimpse of consumer health and how tariffs are impacting corporate bottom lines. US stocks closed little changed on Monday as investors turned their focus on retail earnings due out this week and this Friday's upcoming talk from Fed Chair Jerome Powell in Jackson Hole, Wyo, for clues about the central bank's rate policy. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell less than one point, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) declined slightly, coming off a second straight winning week for the major gauges. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) rose less than 0.1%. Investors now turn their focus to a slew of retailers that will report earnings this week, giving Wall Street a glimpse of consumer health and how tariffs are impacting corporate bottom lines. Home Depot to report Q2 earnings as Wall Street eyes third straight quarter of US sales growth Yahoo Finance's Brooke DiPalma reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Brooke DiPalma reports: Read more here. Oil edges higher following Ukraine-US meeting Oil edged higher on Monday following a meeting between President Trump and his counterpart from Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky. West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) gained more than 1% to hover near $63.54, while Brent crude (BZ=F) also edged higher to above $66 per barrel. President Trump has said he wants Russia and Ukraine to end the war. Since meeting with Russia's Vladimir Putin last Friday in Alaska, Trump has not called for any "secondary tariffs" on China for purchasing Russian oil. Following the meetings, traders do not see the prospect of a quick ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia, a measure that would likely increase supply into the market. Oil edged higher on Monday following a meeting between President Trump and his counterpart from Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky. West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) gained more than 1% to hover near $63.54, while Brent crude (BZ=F) also edged higher to above $66 per barrel. President Trump has said he wants Russia and Ukraine to end the war. Since meeting with Russia's Vladimir Putin last Friday in Alaska, Trump has not called for any "secondary tariffs" on China for purchasing Russian oil. Following the meetings, traders do not see the prospect of a quick ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia, a measure that would likely increase supply into the market. Yes, 'nepo babies' make more money — but not necessarily in the fields you'd expect Yahoo Finance's Emma Ockerman reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Emma Ockerman reports: Read more here. Bitcoin, ethereum slip as crypto markets pull back after hitting 2025 highs Bitcoin (BTC-USD) extended declines on Monday following last week's record highs as investors took profits from the latest crypto rally. The world's largest cryptocurrency sank as much as 2% to hover near $116,000 after surging past $123,500 last Thursday. Expectations of Fed rate cuts, coupled with heavy purchases from corporate treasuries, have driven the price of bitcoin up 23% year to date. Ether (ETH-USD), the second-largest crypto by market cap, also declined 3% to hover near $4,350 per token following a surge last week to its highest level of the year and approaching its record high just below $4,900. "The sharp pullback in cryptocurrencies comes as the market is getting deleveraged following the peaks recorded last week," said Samer Hasn, senior market analyst at foreign exchange trading platform pointing to "an erosion of bullish momentum." Hasn pointed out that since last Thursday, more than $1.7 billion in long crypto futures positions have been liquidated, according to CoinGlass data. Read more here. Bitcoin (BTC-USD) extended declines on Monday following last week's record highs as investors took profits from the latest crypto rally. The world's largest cryptocurrency sank as much as 2% to hover near $116,000 after surging past $123,500 last Thursday. Expectations of Fed rate cuts, coupled with heavy purchases from corporate treasuries, have driven the price of bitcoin up 23% year to date. Ether (ETH-USD), the second-largest crypto by market cap, also declined 3% to hover near $4,350 per token following a surge last week to its highest level of the year and approaching its record high just below $4,900. "The sharp pullback in cryptocurrencies comes as the market is getting deleveraged following the peaks recorded last week," said Samer Hasn, senior market analyst at foreign exchange trading platform pointing to "an erosion of bullish momentum." Hasn pointed out that since last Thursday, more than $1.7 billion in long crypto futures positions have been liquidated, according to CoinGlass data. Read more here. Intel drops to session lows after report Trump administration wants 10% stake in chipmaker Intel (INTC) shares dropped nearly 4% to session lows on Monday after Bloomberg reported the White House is eyeing a 10% stake in the chipmaker. Last week, the stock popped after a report indicated President Trump's intent to invest in the company after meeting with CEO Lip-Bu Tan, who has been at the job since March. Trump had previously publicly called for Lip-Bu Tan to resign, calling him "highly conflicted." Intel is undergoing a turnaround plan after years of lagging its peers in the chip and AI space. Intel (INTC) shares dropped nearly 4% to session lows on Monday after Bloomberg reported the White House is eyeing a 10% stake in the chipmaker. Last week, the stock popped after a report indicated President Trump's intent to invest in the company after meeting with CEO Lip-Bu Tan, who has been at the job since March. Trump had previously publicly called for Lip-Bu Tan to resign, calling him "highly conflicted." Intel is undergoing a turnaround plan after years of lagging its peers in the chip and AI space. Goldman Sachs economics team: More job report weakness is coming Yahoo Finance's Francisco Velasquez reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Francisco Velasquez reports: Read more here. Mega caps' stock market dominance 'may be done' The stock market has been all about large market capitalization companies for over a decade. Dating back to 2015, Bank of America Securities Head of US equity and Quantitive Strategy Savita Subramanian found that the largest 50 stocks in the S&P 500 (^GSPC) have outperformed the benchmark index by 73 percentage points. Subramanian points out the last notable run of similar outperformance for the 50 largest stocks in the index came in the late 1990s leading into the bursting of the dot-com bubble. Subramanian thinks a similar tide shift might be coming to markets now. "History would suggest there is more to go in cap-weighted dominance," Subramanian wrote in a note to clients. "But if the Fed's next move is a rate cut, and if the Regime indicator is shifting to a Recovery, we think the run may be closer to done." BofA's "regime indicator," which includes a variety of factors such as corporate earnings revisions, inflation data and economic growth projections, has started to point to the recovery phase. This combined with a Federal Reserve that markets believe will cut interest rates by at least half a percentage point before the end of year, is a positive setup for value stocks, Subramanian argues. And the largest stocks in the market right now are "anti value." "[Federal Reserve] easing has been accompanied by Mega caps lagging more than leading, and higher inflation should support a broadening of the S&P 500 beyond defensives/secular growth," Subramanian wrote. The stock market has been all about large market capitalization companies for over a decade. Dating back to 2015, Bank of America Securities Head of US equity and Quantitive Strategy Savita Subramanian found that the largest 50 stocks in the S&P 500 (^GSPC) have outperformed the benchmark index by 73 percentage points. Subramanian points out the last notable run of similar outperformance for the 50 largest stocks in the index came in the late 1990s leading into the bursting of the dot-com bubble. Subramanian thinks a similar tide shift might be coming to markets now. "History would suggest there is more to go in cap-weighted dominance," Subramanian wrote in a note to clients. "But if the Fed's next move is a rate cut, and if the Regime indicator is shifting to a Recovery, we think the run may be closer to done." BofA's "regime indicator," which includes a variety of factors such as corporate earnings revisions, inflation data and economic growth projections, has started to point to the recovery phase. This combined with a Federal Reserve that markets believe will cut interest rates by at least half a percentage point before the end of year, is a positive setup for value stocks, Subramanian argues. And the largest stocks in the market right now are "anti value." "[Federal Reserve] easing has been accompanied by Mega caps lagging more than leading, and higher inflation should support a broadening of the S&P 500 beyond defensives/secular growth," Subramanian wrote. Private club operator Soho House going private in $2.7 billion deal Shares of Soho House (SHCO) jumped as much as 16% on Monday after news that the private members club operator is set to go private, Yahoo Finance's Jake Conley reports. Conley writes: Read the full story here. Shares of Soho House (SHCO) jumped as much as 16% on Monday after news that the private members club operator is set to go private, Yahoo Finance's Jake Conley reports. Conley writes: Read the full story here. TeraWulf stock jumps as Google ups stake in bitcoin miner to 14% Bitcoin miner and data center operator TeraWulf (WULF) saw its stock jump nearly 11% after announcing that Google is taking a 14% stake in the company. In return for the equity stake, Google is providing a backstop as TeraWulf uses debt financing to expand a Lake Mariner data center campus in western New York, making it one of the largest campuses in the US. In connection with the project, TeraWulf announced a $400 million debt offering on Monday. The new data center capacity will be leased by AI cloud provider Fluidstack. The deal was first unveiled when the company released its second quarter earnings results last week. TeraWulf initially said Google would provide a $1.8 billion backstop in exchange for an 8% stake in the company during its earnings call, but that figure was upped to $3.2 billion on Monday. CEO Paul Prager said its Lake Mariner campus will be one of the "cornerstone assets for the future of AI infrastructure." TeraWulf is one of many bitcoin miners transitioning to provide AI infrastructure. Bitcoin miner and data center operator TeraWulf (WULF) saw its stock jump nearly 11% after announcing that Google is taking a 14% stake in the company. In return for the equity stake, Google is providing a backstop as TeraWulf uses debt financing to expand a Lake Mariner data center campus in western New York, making it one of the largest campuses in the US. In connection with the project, TeraWulf announced a $400 million debt offering on Monday. The new data center capacity will be leased by AI cloud provider Fluidstack. The deal was first unveiled when the company released its second quarter earnings results last week. TeraWulf initially said Google would provide a $1.8 billion backstop in exchange for an 8% stake in the company during its earnings call, but that figure was upped to $3.2 billion on Monday. CEO Paul Prager said its Lake Mariner campus will be one of the "cornerstone assets for the future of AI infrastructure." TeraWulf is one of many bitcoin miners transitioning to provide AI infrastructure. Novo Nordisk gains after the bell as company offers discounted Ozempic Danish pharma giant Novo Nordisk (NVO) saw its US-listed shares gain more than 5% Monday after the open as the company said it would offer patients its diabetes drug Ozempic for less than half the price if they pay cash. The move makes the medication more affordable for patients who don't have insurance coverage, though the reduced price still amounts to $499, keeping it out of reach for many Americans. Also on Monday, GoodRx announced it will begin selling both of Novo Nordisk's GLP-1 drugs for $499 a month. Shares had climbed premarket Monday after the company said Friday it received approval from the FDA for its liver disease MASH. Also boosting shares, Novo Nordisk reportedly will not charge more for pill versions of its weight-loss injections, which are expected to launch in 2026. This would be a departure from drugmakers' typical practice of charging more for new medications. The moves come after President Trump has ramped up pressure on drugmakers to lower prices, though his tariffs could raise prices. Read more here. Danish pharma giant Novo Nordisk (NVO) saw its US-listed shares gain more than 5% Monday after the open as the company said it would offer patients its diabetes drug Ozempic for less than half the price if they pay cash. The move makes the medication more affordable for patients who don't have insurance coverage, though the reduced price still amounts to $499, keeping it out of reach for many Americans. Also on Monday, GoodRx announced it will begin selling both of Novo Nordisk's GLP-1 drugs for $499 a month. Shares had climbed premarket Monday after the company said Friday it received approval from the FDA for its liver disease MASH. Also boosting shares, Novo Nordisk reportedly will not charge more for pill versions of its weight-loss injections, which are expected to launch in 2026. This would be a departure from drugmakers' typical practice of charging more for new medications. The moves come after President Trump has ramped up pressure on drugmakers to lower prices, though his tariffs could raise prices. Read more here. Stocks muted at the open US stocks stalled at the market open as investors awaited a high-stakes US-Ukraine meeting, kickstarting a week leading up to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's most important policy speech of the year in Jackson Hole on Friday. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell just below the flat line, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) was also roughly flat, coming off a second straight winning week for the major gauges. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) added nearly 0.1%. US stocks stalled at the market open as investors awaited a high-stakes US-Ukraine meeting, kickstarting a week leading up to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's most important policy speech of the year in Jackson Hole on Friday. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell just below the flat line, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) was also roughly flat, coming off a second straight winning week for the major gauges. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) added nearly 0.1%. Trump wants to take Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac public. The plan has some problems. Yahoo Finance's David Hollerith reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's David Hollerith reports: Read more here. Solar stocks rally as Trump administration releases new guidance on tax credits Solar stocks continued rallying in premarket trading on Monday after the Trump administration clarified new eligibility requirements for tax credits that weren't as burdensome as feared. Shares of residential solar company Sunrun (RUN) have gained 38% since Friday. SolarEdge shares rose 19%, and First Solar (FSLR) and Enphase Energy (ENPH) stocks are both up more than 10%. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Solar stocks continued rallying in premarket trading on Monday after the Trump administration clarified new eligibility requirements for tax credits that weren't as burdensome as feared. Shares of residential solar company Sunrun (RUN) have gained 38% since Friday. SolarEdge shares rose 19%, and First Solar (FSLR) and Enphase Energy (ENPH) stocks are both up more than 10%. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Good morning. Here's what's happening today. Economic data: NAHB homebuilder sentiment (August) Earnings: Palo Alto Networks (PANW), Blink Charging (BLNK) Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed over the weekend and early this morning: Powell's dilemma heading into his final Jackson Hole speech Trump eyes Fannie and Freddie IPO, but the plan faces hurdles What to watch this week: Powell at Jackson Hole. Walmart earnings China's $11 trillion stock market is a headache for both Xi and Trump US warns that India is 'cozying up' to Russia Tesla almost halves UK lease fee as sales slump: Report Goldman: S&P 500 earnings have blown past forecasts Bond market's rate-cut bets hit decisive stretch with Powell Economic data: NAHB homebuilder sentiment (August) Earnings: Palo Alto Networks (PANW), Blink Charging (BLNK) Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed over the weekend and early this morning: Powell's dilemma heading into his final Jackson Hole speech Trump eyes Fannie and Freddie IPO, but the plan faces hurdles What to watch this week: Powell at Jackson Hole. Walmart earnings China's $11 trillion stock market is a headache for both Xi and Trump US warns that India is 'cozying up' to Russia Tesla almost halves UK lease fee as sales slump: Report Goldman: S&P 500 earnings have blown past forecasts Bond market's rate-cut bets hit decisive stretch with Powell Novo Nordisk stock rises after Wegovy gets new US approval US-listed shares in Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk (NVO) are gaining before the bell, as investors welcome a US boost for its flagship Wegovy. Novo is also reportedly planning to hold off from charging more at next year's launch of pill versions of its weight-loss injections, a departure from usual practice as President Trump puts pressure on pharma companies to cut US prices. Reuters reports: Shares in Novo Nordisk rose on Monday, after the Danish drugmaker got US approval for its weight-loss drug Wegovy to treat a serious liver condition. That was positive news for Novo which has lost more than one-third of its market value in recent weeks. ... Three weeks ago, investors wiped $70 billion off its market value, after Novo — which became Europe's most valuable listed company following the launch of Wegovy in 2021 — issued a profit warning and named a company veteran as new CEO. On Friday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approval for Wegovy to treat metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis, or MASH, making it the first GLP-1 class therapy cleared for the progressive liver condition that affects around 5% of adults in the United States. Read more here. US-listed shares in Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk (NVO) are gaining before the bell, as investors welcome a US boost for its flagship Wegovy. Novo is also reportedly planning to hold off from charging more at next year's launch of pill versions of its weight-loss injections, a departure from usual practice as President Trump puts pressure on pharma companies to cut US prices. Reuters reports: Shares in Novo Nordisk rose on Monday, after the Danish drugmaker got US approval for its weight-loss drug Wegovy to treat a serious liver condition. That was positive news for Novo which has lost more than one-third of its market value in recent weeks. ... Three weeks ago, investors wiped $70 billion off its market value, after Novo — which became Europe's most valuable listed company following the launch of Wegovy in 2021 — issued a profit warning and named a company veteran as new CEO. On Friday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approval for Wegovy to treat metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis, or MASH, making it the first GLP-1 class therapy cleared for the progressive liver condition that affects around 5% of adults in the United States. Read more here. Powell at Jackson Hole, Walmart earnings: What to watch this week The investing world is gearing up for Jerome Powell's comments at Jackson Hole — the most important Fed monetary policy speech of the year, says Yahoo Finance's Myles Udland. The Fed chair's appearance dominates the week's calendar for markets, which also brings a clutch of retail giant earnings. Myles reports: Read more here. The investing world is gearing up for Jerome Powell's comments at Jackson Hole — the most important Fed monetary policy speech of the year, says Yahoo Finance's Myles Udland. The Fed chair's appearance dominates the week's calendar for markets, which also brings a clutch of retail giant earnings. Myles reports: Read more here. Goldman team likely to stay in Trump's crosshairs President Trump has recently offered a few choice words on the work from Goldman Sachs' economics team, led by long-time economist Jan Hatzius. The team is unlikely to garner some praise from Trump today. Here's what Hatzius and his team served up in a new note on Monday morning: "After the recent downward revisions to payrolls, our estimate of trend job growth is now clearly below even that . And while the picture could change again for better or worse, future revisions to job growth are more likely to be because the birth-death model is likely a bit too generous, changes in trend payroll growth can initially be partially misattributed to changes in seasonal factors, revisions to the raw payrolls data tended to be negative in past slowdowns, data from ADP raise doubts about officially reported payroll growth in healthcare, and the household survey is now overstating immigration and employment gains. Like the slowdown in activity growth this year, the slowdown in job growth appears to have arisen from more than just the direct effects of trade and immigration policy changes. We are particularly worried that 'catch-up hiring' in a few industries now appears over and job growth outside those industries has fallen to around zero. And while job openings remain at a decent level, they started to decline again earlier this year." President Trump has recently offered a few choice words on the work from Goldman Sachs' economics team, led by long-time economist Jan Hatzius. The team is unlikely to garner some praise from Trump today. Here's what Hatzius and his team served up in a new note on Monday morning: "After the recent downward revisions to payrolls, our estimate of trend job growth is now clearly below even that . And while the picture could change again for better or worse, future revisions to job growth are more likely to be because the birth-death model is likely a bit too generous, changes in trend payroll growth can initially be partially misattributed to changes in seasonal factors, revisions to the raw payrolls data tended to be negative in past slowdowns, data from ADP raise doubts about officially reported payroll growth in healthcare, and the household survey is now overstating immigration and employment gains. Like the slowdown in activity growth this year, the slowdown in job growth appears to have arisen from more than just the direct effects of trade and immigration policy changes. We are particularly worried that 'catch-up hiring' in a few industries now appears over and job growth outside those industries has fallen to around zero. And while job openings remain at a decent level, they started to decline again earlier this year." Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


San Francisco Chronicle
42 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Maine police officer arrested by ICE agrees to voluntarily leave the country
OLD ORCHARD BEACH, Maine (AP) — A Maine police officer arrested by immigration authorities has agreed to voluntarily leave the country, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said Monday. ICE arrested Old Orchard Beach Police Department reserve Officer Jon Luke Evans, of Jamaica, on July 25, as part of the agency's effort to step up immigration enforcement. Officials with the town and police department have said federal authorities previously told them Evans was legally authorized to work in the U.S. An ICE representative reached by telephone told The Associated Press on Monday that a judge has granted voluntary departure for Evans and that he could leave as soon as that day. The representative did not provide other details about Evans' case. Evans' arrest touched off a dispute between Old Orchard Beach officials and ICE. Police Chief Elise Chard has said the department was notified by federal officials that Evans was legally permitted to work in the country, and that the town submitted information via the Department of Homeland Security's E-Verify program prior to Evans' employment. Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin then accused the town of 'reckless reliance' on the department's E-Verify program. E-Verify is an online system that allows employers to check if potential employees can work legally in the U.S. The town is aware of reports that Evans plans to leave the country voluntarily, Chard said Monday. 'The town reiterates its ongoing commitment to meeting all state and federal laws regarding employment,' Chard said in a statement. 'We will continue to rely on the I-9 Employment Eligibility Verification form and the E-Verify database to confirm employment eligibility.' ICE's detainee lookup website said Monday that Evans was being held at the Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility in Central Falls, Rhode Island. However, a representative for Wyatt said Evans had been transferred to an ICE facility in Burlington, Massachusetts. ICE officials did not respond to requests for comment on the discrepancy. It was unclear if Evans was represented by an attorney, and a message left for him at the detention facility was not returned. ICE officials said in July that Evans overstayed his visa and unlawfully attempted to purchase a firearm. WMTW-TV reported Monday that Evans' agreement to a voluntary departure means he will be allowed to leave the U.S. at his own expense to avoid being deported.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Brooklyn pols call for act of war on the feds — a pathetic new low in NYC politics
Wacko Brooklyn politicians want New York to declare war on the US government by 'turning off the power' to 26 Federal Plaza: Assemblyman Robert Carroll and City Councilman Justin Brannan claim it's the only way to counter 'the soft launch of a fascist regime.' Carroll (D-Park Slope) and Brannan (D-Bay Ridge) are mad that ICE is detaining illegal migrants for deportation inside the Jacob Javits building, which houses the Social Security Administration, HUD and other agencies. Their solution: Have city government lay siege to force the feds to release the criminal aliens being held 'illegally.' Never mind that the first victims of this idiocy would be the detainees, who would lose light, A/C and probably drinking water. Time for everyone who called the Jan. 6 Capitol riot an 'insurrection' to check their dictionaries: Intentionally cutting off the power to interfere with federal law enforcement surely fits the bill, every bit as much as the Confederates firing on Ft. Sumter. This would be outright sedition — if the Brooklyn bozos were serious. Even if they're unfamiliar with the Supremacy Clause of the US Constitution, Brannan and Carroll have to know that neither the city nor state has any authority to disrupt the US government as it carries out the policies of the president: Fighting this out has to happen in the courts,or at the ballot box — period. But the rebel yells demonstrate their loyalty to the extremism that now defines the Democratic Party in New York, right up there with Zohran Mamdani's vow to be 'Trump's worst nightmare.' Heck, Brannan lost his bid for comptroller and is off the City Council come January, while Carroll's probably a decade from having enough seniority to do much in the Assembly: This call for open rebellion looks mostly like a bid for City Hall positions under a Mayor Mamdani. Local politics is in a sad state indeed when calling for insurrection is how pols apply for new jobs.