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Claire's skips rent payments, moving closer to bankruptcy filing

Claire's skips rent payments, moving closer to bankruptcy filing

[NEW YORK] Claire's Stores is inching closer to filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy as the teen accessory chain elected to miss June and July rent payments on some stores, according to sources familiar with the matter.
The firm may seek protection as soon as this week, but doing so could take longer as the retailer finalises details of the filing, said the sources, who asked not to be identified discussing a private matter.
Claire's has been exploring restructuring options, including a possible sale, amid weakened cash flow and a heavy debt burden. Earlier this year, it chose to conserve cash by deferring debt interest payments, Bloomberg reported at the time.
The retailer has struggled since a 2018 bankruptcy handed control to creditors including Elliott Management and Monarch Alternative Capital.
Representatives for Claire's and Monarch did not respond to requests seeking comment. Elliott and Claire's adviser Houlihan Lokey declined to comment.
Uncertainty about US tariff policy has raised questions about Claire's ability to address a nearly $500 million loan due in December 2026. The market value of that loan has plunged to 37 US cents from 76 US cents in June, according to Bloomberg-compiled data. BLOOMBERG
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Hacked Columbia University data includes bank numbers, GPAs
Hacked Columbia University data includes bank numbers, GPAs

Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Hacked Columbia University data includes bank numbers, GPAs

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox In June 2025, Columbia University began investigating a potential cyberattack following an IT outage at the school. The financial information and academic performance of Columbia University students and alumni were stolen in a recent breach, according to a Bloomberg News review of some of the pilfered data. The data includes bank account and routing numbers, student loan and scholarship disbursements, standardised test scores, grade-point averages (GPAs), class schedules, home addresses and other contact information, a Bloomberg review of 53.6GB of the stolen files shows. Nine current and former students who began attending Columbia undergraduate and graduate programmes as early as the 1990s confirmed the accuracy of their data in the files. Bloomberg could not verify the entire cache. The new details about the hacked data, which have not been previously reported, provide another headache for a university that is trying to regain its footing following a bruising battle with the Trump administration over claims that it fostered antisemitism and discriminated on the basis of race and national origin. In response to questions from Bloomberg, a Columbia University spokesperson said the investigation into the cyberattack – including the specifics of the information exposed – was ongoing. Columbia will begin notifications this week to individuals believed to be affected by the attack, the spokesperson said, adding that the school encouraged 'all members of the university community' to remain vigilant against scams and regularly monitor accounts for suspicious activity. 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In its statement, Columbia University said it would begin notifying individuals by mail on Aug 7 whose personal information might have been affected. The university said it would offer those individuals two years of credit monitoring, fraud consultation and identity theft services through a vendor. In June 2025, Columbia began investigating a potential cyberattack following an IT outage at the school. A university official described the perpetrator of the breach as a 'hacktivist,' meaning the attacker was politically motivated as opposed to seeking financial gain. Bloomberg reported in June that personal information from applications to Columbia dating back decades – including whether applicants were accepted or rejected by the school – had been stolen, after reviewing 1.6GB of data provided by a person who claimed responsibility for the cyberattack. A separate 53.6GB cache of data reviewed by Bloomberg was made available by Dr Jordan Lasker, who runs a blog that has promoted views about race and IQ that have been criticised as offensive and scientifically flawed. Dr Lasker said he obtained the 53.6GB cache of data from the alleged hacker. The hacker, who communicated with Bloomberg via X, confirmed that they provided the data to Dr Lasker. The person's X account, which includes a racist handle and racist remarks, declined to identify themselves saying they feared self-incrimination. Bloomberg has not independently confirmed this person hacked the university's records. It is not clear who else might have access to the stolen data. Even if it is not immediately exploited, the hacked data could ultimately be used for malicious purposes including theft, identity fraud and stalking, according to security experts. 'Regardless of the criminal's motive, anytime an individual is involved in a data breach, there is cause for concern,' said Ms Rachel Tobac, chief executive officer of SocialProof Security. 'It is important to freeze your credit and be on the lookout for tailored phishing lures across all contact methods.' In July 2025, Columbia reached a deal with the Trump administration to restore federal funding for research that included paying a US$200 million (S$29.8 million) penalty over three years to resolve multiple civil rights investigations, in addition to a series of reforms to bolster campus safety and oversight of international students. The university has been at the centre of controversy since protests roiled its New York City campus over the war in Gaza following the Oct 7, 2023, attack on Israel. BLOOMBERG

Indonesian stocks near record high, unfazed by foreign selling
Indonesian stocks near record high, unfazed by foreign selling

Business Times

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Indonesian stocks near record high, unfazed by foreign selling

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