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In a world of conflict, the spoils are rich from gold and guns

In a world of conflict, the spoils are rich from gold and guns

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) estimated that global military expenditure hit a record $US2.7 trillion ($4.1 trillion) in 2024, an increase of 9.4 per cent in real terms from the previous year, and the steepest annual jump since the Cold War ended.
'If 5 per cent [of GDP] becomes baseline, defence stocks stop being cyclical – they become structural. And that changes everything.'
Stephen Innes, SPI Asset Management
SIPRI highlighted the 'guns or butter' cost to social programs from the rising spending on weaponry.
'As governments increasingly prioritise military security, often at the expense of other budget areas, the economic and social trade-offs could have significant effects on societies for years to come,' warned SIPRI researcher Xiao Liang.
The big beneficiaries from this war trade are traditionally US defence giants, such as Northrop Grumman – maker of the B-2 stealth bombers and intercontinental ballistic missiles – which is now trading near multi-year highs. Virginia-based RTX, which makes the Javelin and Stinger missiles that were used heavily in the Ukraine war, has also hit record highs.
But the changing nature of warfare, where computer-guided drones and new technology such as AI are coming to the fire, has thrown up some new winners.
Shares of US tech group Palantir have soared more than 400 per cent in a year as the company cements its place in the US industrial military complex.
And investors are also noticing the impact in Europe, where Germany's new government signalled a seismic shift in March, with plans to lift strict spending controls to create a €500 billion ($896 billion) fund for defence and security.
It has had a massive impact on European stocks. Italy-based aerospace, defence and security firm Leonardo, German sensor technology company Hensoldt, and British aerospace and defence company Babcock International have seen their share prices more than double over the last year.
Korea's Hanwha Aerospace is another EU beneficiary, and its share price has soared 200 per cent over the same period.
Even Australia benefits, as shown by Hanwha recently acquiring a 9.9 per cent stake in local shipbuilder Austal, with plans to double its investment. Austal shares have tripled since last September, thanks to its contracts with the US Navy.
ASX-listed DroneShield – a maker of anti-drone technology – has tripled since February. And right on cue, it announced a $61 million European military order on Wednesday for handheld detection and counter-drone systems. This one deal exceeds its entire revenue for 2024.
Three ASX-listed defence ETFs (exchange-traded funds, which invest in defence stocks globally) from VanEck, Betashares and Global X are all up 50 per cent this year.
'Global defence has been one of the few equity segments that have outperformed the market this year. Flows into ASX-listed global defence ETFs have shot up since March,' VanEck's Jamie Hannah said.
The surge in the performance of defence stocks has posed a conundrum for some ethical funds and investment mandates, which have generally precluded any military assets.
But investors appear to be coming to the conclusion that Citi reached in 2022: 'Defence is likely to be increasingly seen as a necessity that facilitates ESG as an enterprise as well as maintaining peace, stability and other social goods.'
In April, UBS Asset Management – which oversees $US1.8 trillion in investments – scrapped prohibitions that prevented its sustainable funds from investing in conventional military weapons manufacturers. Exclusions still apply to more controversial weaponry such as cluster munitions.
Hannah says VanEck already screens out these more controversial manufacturers from its ETF.
'It's very much an area where you need to consider what you're investing in,' Hannah said.
Meanwhile, the only controversy over the ultimate defensive asset, gold, is whether it has peaked after a spectacular run over the past year to a record high of $US3500 an ounce in April.
This month, a European Central Bank report confirmed that its soaring price, along with bullion buying by central banks, means gold is currently the second-biggest reserve holding by central banks behind the US dollar.
Citi highlighted the extraordinary rush to gold with a report saying 0.5 per cent of global GDP was being spent on gold – the most in 50 years of data.
And central banks have not been the only buyers. This month, VanEck noted that Australia's most recent export figures included $11 billion in 'non-monetary' gold exports to the US – which is gold acquired by private buyers, not reserve banks, for their foreign exchange reserves.
'This volume of gold exports for the quarter is more than the total non-monetary gold we have shipped to the USA in the last four years, and we think this could reflect a massive increase in demand from investors due to a loss of faith in [the US dollar] and US Treasuries,' VanEck's Cameron McCormack said.
While some are getting squeamish after this year's 27 per cent gain for the precious metal, others are expecting its golden run to continue.
Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs predicts gold will climb to $US3700 a troy ounce by the end of the year, from about $US3330 currently, as central banks keep buying tonnes of it every month.
It could rise even further if investors use bullion as a safe space ahead of interest rate cuts and amid rising recession concerns. 'In the event of a recession, Goldman Sachs Research forecasts that gold could rise to as much as $US3880 a troy ounce,' the investment bank says.
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ASX Tech June Winners: Defence tech stocks dominate record-breaking month
ASX Tech June Winners: Defence tech stocks dominate record-breaking month

News.com.au

time3 hours ago

  • News.com.au

ASX Tech June Winners: Defence tech stocks dominate record-breaking month

S&P500 and Nasdaq hit new highs on Big Tech run
 ASX energy leads, but tech holds strong in June
 Defence stocks dominate as DroneShield, Elsight, archTIS surge Wall Street wrapped up the quarter on a strong note, with both the S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq setting fresh record highs. The S&P500 is now up 25% since April's panic lows, a comeback so sharp it feels like the market went from 'brace for impact' to 'bring out the champagne' in under 90 days. And leading the charge was none other than Big Tech. The Nasdaq, flush with mega-cap firepower, hit fresh highs as investors kept pouring into names they now treat like digital infrastructure: Nvidia, Oracle, Meta, Apple. During the month, Oracle broke records on news of a single US$30 billion-a-year cloud deal, and Nvidia became the world's most valuable company at nearly US$4 trillion. Global X now reckons that Nasdaq could finish the year somewhere between 21,000 and 24,000 (from the current 20,400 level). This, it said, will be fuelled by profit upgrades and the broader shift in investor psychology: that AI and semiconductors aren't just themes, they're foundational to the next economic cycle. And while Wall Street partied, the ASX didn't just sit in the corner holding a warm beer. Energy stocks absolutely belted it in June, up 9% for the month, easily the strongest sector. Blame Middle East supply fears and a tight physical market keeping oil prices jumpy. Monthly return for ASX Sectors But the quiet achiever in June was tech, up 0.73% for the month and moving in rhythm with the global tune. Names like NextDC (ASX:NXT) got some love after recent pullbacks. And Goodman Group (ASX:GMG), with its data-centre exposure, continues to look like a long-term compounder. Local investors are waking up to the fact that some of our home-grown names are quietly building the digital infrastructure of the future. BlackRock is flagging defence tech as the next trend to watch. And global fund managers have picked their lane, too. They're overweight tech, underweight hesitation. ASX tech winners in June Code Name Price Month % Change Market Cap ICE Icetana Limited 0.056 300% $29,782,251 AR9 Archtis Limited 0.230 229% $66,232,445 IFG Infocus Group 0.016 167% $4,415,389 ELS Elsight Ltd 1.775 131% $322,590,650 DXN DXN Limited 0.072 100% $21,506,662 DRO Droneshield Limited 2.280 73% $1,994,130,987 VR1 Vection Technologies 0.037 68% $65,394,610 SIS Simble Solutions 0.005 67% $5,411,652 HCL Highcom Ltd 0.310 55% $31,831,628 EOS Electro Optic Sys. 2.850 54% $549,913,482 OPL Opyl Limited 0.029 53% $6,814,081 YOJ Yojee Limited 0.395 46% $128,918,944 BDT Birddog 0.068 45% $10,981,050 1CG One Click Group Ltd 0.009 29% $10,640,575 FCT Firstwave Cloud Tech 0.016 23% $27,416,299 DUG DUG Tech 1.360 21% $183,134,337 FBR FBR Ltd 0.006 20% $34,136,713 QOR Qoria Limited 0.495 19% $652,328,462 JCS Jcurve Solutions 0.039 18% $12,883,394 SLX Silex Systems 4.220 17% $1,004,806,155 PHX Pharmx Technologies 0.093 16% $55,661,131 XF1 Xref Limited 0.155 15% $34,113,913 ASB Austal Limited 6.280 14% $2,645,010,676 DUB Dubber Corp Ltd 0.018 13% $47,220,614 CDA Codan Limited 20.110 12% $3,651,389,633 ESK Etherstack PLC 0.490 11% $64,764,281 SMP Smartpay Holdings 1.040 11% $251,621,203 NXT Nextdc Limited 14.500 11% $9,286,033,305 SKO Serko 2.930 8% $365,078,440 DCC Digitalx Limited 0.075 7% $90,271,791 MP1 Megaport Limited 14.440 7% $2,323,992,834 XYZ Block Inc 102.650 6% $4,849,418,810 8CO 8Common Limited 0.017 6% $3,809,613 BEO Beonic Ltd 0.210 5% $14,880,812 OEC Orbital Corp Limited 0.095 4% $15,654,073 BCC Beam Communications 0.125 4% $10,802,740 JAN Janison Edu Group 0.145 4% $37,683,797 XRG Xreality Group Ltd 0.031 3% $20,569,973 PPK PPK Group Limited 0.325 3% $29,514,062 EML EML Payments Ltd 1.165 3% $445,146,763 DTL Data#3 Limited 7.610 2% $1,178,852,414 SPZ Smart Parking Ltd 0.885 2% $362,985,326 CCR Credit Clear 0.235 2% $99,792,431 WTC Wisetech Global Ltd 109.030 2% $36,483,944,164 EOL Energy One Limited 14.940 1% $468,075,922 GTK Gentrack Group Ltd 11.530 1% $1,242,033,461 Making news for the right reasons or just hitting milestones, here were some of the month's notable gainers… iCetana (ASX:ICE) icetana AI surged in June after signing a $3.6 million strategic partnership with global tech heavyweight SoftBank Robotics. The deal includes a $1.87 million equity investment from SoftBank Robotics Singapore, giving it a 17.6% stake in icetana AI. SoftBank Robotics Corp. was also appointed exclusive distributor in Japan, with a guaranteed minimum of around $693k in annual recurring revenue. On top of that, it agreed to a three-year, $1.08 million joint development program to integrate icetana AI's video analytics with its own robotics and security platforms. The deal is icetana AI's biggest to date and sets it up for deeper expansion into Japan's market, building on its long-standing relationship with local partner Macnica. archTIS (ASX:AR9) archTIS rose in June off the back of two major defence wins that put it firmly on the radar. The first was a breakthrough deal with the US Department of Defense, where a prime contractor signed on for 1,000 licences of NC Protect, worth $38,500. While the initial value is modest, the deal is seen as the gateway to a much bigger rollout, potentially onboarding 150,000 users across the DoD's warfighter network over the next year. Just days earlier, it landed another win, this time in the UK, signing a three-year, $263k contract with the local arm of a global aerospace and defence giant. The deal covers an initial 400 users as part of the client's Microsoft 365 cloud migration. The timing couldn't be better. With NATO recently agreeing to lift collective defence spending targets from 2% to 5% of GDP, and cybersecurity sitting high on the agenda, archTIS could be well placed here. Elsight (ASX:ELS) Elsight is another defence tech stock that lit up in June. The company locked in a fresh US$5.1 million order from its European defence OEM customer for more of its Halo connectivity units. That takes total orders from this one client to US$14.7 million for 2025 alone, a sixfold jump on what it booked for all of last year. Not bad for a company that was flying under the radar not long ago. The new contract comes off the back of that OEM securing a bunch of downstream defence clients who have now standardised on Halo as the go-to comms backbone for unmanned systems. Despite the regional conflict back home in Israel, Elsight said its production lines didn't miss a beat. DXN (ASX:DXN) DXN surged in June after landing two key contracts worth a combined $6.2 million. The big one was a $4.6 million deal with Globalstar to design and deliver three high-spec modular data centres for deployment in Hawaii by the end of 2025. The win came after a tough global tender, with DXN chosen for its strong customisation track record in defence, satellite and telco builds. Days later, it locked in a $1.6 million deal with Ventia to roll out its new indoor StructCore solution for a major Aussie telco, marking DXN's entry into the brownfield data centre retrofit market. Both contracts back the company's FY25 revenue guidance of $15.7-16 million, up at least 45% from last year. The market's now watching as DXN scales up across both satellite and telco infrastructure plays. DroneShield (ASX:DRO) Yet another defence stock on a tear. DroneShield locked in a record $61.6 million contract in June with a European military via its local reseller, marking the biggest deal in its history and larger than all of its 2024 revenue. The deal is for handheld and mobile counterdrone kits, with delivery and payment locked in for Q3 and Q4 next year. Just days later, it added a $9.7 million contract out of Latin America, again through a repeat reseller. Both wins reflect growing global demand as militaries move from testing to full-scale rollouts of counterdrone tech. With NATO ramping budgets and drone warfare heating up, DroneShield looks well-placed and well-armed for what's next. ASX tech losers in June Code Name Price Month % Change Market Cap 4DS 4Ds Memory Limited 0.025 -58% $51,522,468 ID8 Identitii Limited 0.005 -44% $3,890,068 IS3 I Synergy Group Ltd 0.001 -42% $1,502,190 CT1 Constellation Tech 0.001 -33% $1,474,734 AI1 Adisyn Ltd 0.044 -33% $31,861,526 DWG Dataworks Group 0.087 -33% $8,893,492 OLL Openlearning 0.012 -29% $5,792,096 DTI DTI Group Ltd 0.005 -29% $4,485,514 AXE Archer Materials 0.215 -28% $54,792,108 ZMM Zimi Ltd 0.008 -27% $3,420,351 RCL Readcloud 0.100 -26% $15,361,976 PIL Peppermint Inv Ltd 0.002 -20% $4,602,180 BLG Bluglass Limited 0.009 -18% $21,718,791 EXT Excite Technology 0.009 -18% $18,653,777 ODA Orcoda Limited 0.065 -18% $12,188,424 RWL Rubicon Water 0.175 -17% $42,121,642 X2M X2M Connect Limited 0.016 -16% $6,960,909 AT1 Atomo Diagnostics 0.014 -15% $10,319,613 SEN Senetas Corporation 0.017 -15% $28,152,324 NVQ Noviqtech Limited 0.023 -15% $5,785,341 COS Cosol Limited 0.670 -15% $121,932,493 NVU Nanoveu Limited 0.041 -15% $36,185,867 WHK Whitehawk Limited 0.012 -14% $8,896,157 CYB Aucyber Limited 0.069 -14% $14,448,372 NOV Novatti Group Ltd 0.019 -14% $10,346,775 BVS Bravura Solution Ltd 2.220 -13% $995,345,884 TAL Talius Group Limited 0.061 -13% $17,491,677 MX1 Micro-X Limited 0.049 -13% $32,692,910 AJX Alexium Int Group 0.007 -13% $11,105,001 W2V Way2Vatltd 0.007 -13% $11,896,288 PPS Praemium Limited 0.640 -12% $305,737,711 FLX Felix Group 0.185 -12% $37,832,447 SPA Spacetalk Ltd 0.150 -12% $10,936,902 NXL Nuix Limited 2.190 -12% $724,305,995 VNL Vinyl Group Ltd 0.115 -12% $154,855,021 PFM Platformo Ltd 0.080 -11% $7,592,664 OAK Oakridge 0.064 -11% $1,727,866 WBT Weebit Nano Ltd 1.625 -11% $338,676,722 DTZ Dotz Nano Ltd 0.043 -10% $25,458,764 EIQ Echoiq Ltd 0.220 -10% $141,941,296 XPN Xpon Technologies 0.009 -10% $3,728,279 NVX Novonix Limited 0.380 -10% $241,730,298 3DP Pointerra Limited 0.050 -9% $40,253,840 IKE Ikegps Group Ltd 0.840 -9% $135,455,037 TZL TZ Limited 0.054 -8% $15,153,162 LVE Love Group Global 0.115 -8% $4,661,429 ROC Rocketboots 0.081 -8% $13,876,382 SP3 Specturltd 0.012 -8% $3,697,801 IRE IRESS Limited 8.000 -8% $1,494,315,792 FND Findi Limited 4.250 -8% $262,655,189 HYD Hydrix Limited 0.013 -7% $3,545,995 ATA Atturralimited 0.800 -7% $305,163,887 ERD Eroad Limited 1.295 -7% $242,773,462 SNS Sensen Networks Ltd 0.029 -6% $22,998,087 VGL Vista Group Int Ltd 3.250 -6% $776,211,738 VIG Victor Group Hldgs 0.077 -6% $50,221,454 GTI Gratifii 0.093 -6% $35,320,595 AD8 Audinate Group Ltd 7.480 -6% $623,555,105 IRI Integrated Research 0.415 -6% $73,601,374 RUL Rpmglobal Hldgs Ltd 2.910 -5% $642,292,211 BRN Brainchip Ltd 0.195 -5% $395,019,638 AVA AVA Risk Group Ltd 0.100 -5% $29,047,203 CGO CPT Global Limited 0.060 -5% $2,513,842 LIS Lisenergylimited 0.105 -5% $67,221,024 CF1 Complii Fintech Ltd 0.024 -4% $13,713,447 IOD Iodm Limited 0.120 -4% $73,987,702 CXZ Connexion Mobility 0.025 -4% $20,275,987 FL1 First Lithium Ltd 0.075 -4% $5,974,020 CML Connected Minerals 0.125 -4% $5,169,777 SMN Structural Monitor. 0.415 -3% $64,078,095 360 Life360 Inc. 32.180 -3% $5,397,996,932 RDY Readytech Holdings 2.300 -3% $284,197,446 AMO Ambertech Limited 0.155 -3% $14,787,741 RKN Reckon Limited 0.475 -3% $53,815,045 ASV Assetvisonco 0.038 -3% $28,285,739 XRO Xero Ltd 179.800 -2% $29,598,429,674 HSN Hansen Technologies 4.980 -2% $1,015,083,943 IFM Infomedia Ltd 1.185 -2% $448,427,333 ACE Acusensus Limited 0.950 -2% $133,205,069 DDR Dicker Data Limited 8.070 -2% $1,458,184,303 SOR Strategic Elements 0.032 -2% $15,164,770 EVS Envirosuite Ltd 0.083 -1% $120,251,195 CPU Computershare Ltd 39.890 -1% $23,167,306,780 TYR Tyro Payments 0.880 -1% $464,945,862

Biocurious: Dimerix could be riding big and beautiful kidney drug success earlier than expected
Biocurious: Dimerix could be riding big and beautiful kidney drug success earlier than expected

News.com.au

time3 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Biocurious: Dimerix could be riding big and beautiful kidney drug success earlier than expected

With the FDA's blessing, Dimerix will use phase III trial endpoints that could lead to accelerated approval for its kidney disease drug Dimerix is confident of phase III success because an expert 'peek' at the blinded data shows it's on the right track The company is well cashed up, courtesy of four global distribution deals When it comes to clinical trials, the choice of primary endpoints can mean the difference between a trial failing and a billion-dollar blockbuster drug emerging. Plenty of drug candidates have looked successful at mid stage, but then floundered because a later stage trial has failed to meet strictly defined goals. This appears to be the case with Opthea (ASX:OPT) and the recent failure of its two phase III eye disease trials. In other cases, strictly enforced endpoints mean that a trial is too long and too expensive. But regulatory attitudes are changing. In the case of Dimerix (ASX:DXB), the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA) has delivered the kidney disease drug developer a concession on endpoints for its ongoing phase III trial. The FDA's stance not only means that the endpoints are more likely to be achieved, reducing risk. It also means the company could win accelerated FDA marketing approval before the study has completed. 'That sparked a lot of interest in the sector because suddenly the trials are more manageable,' says Dimerix chief Dr Nina Webster. The 286-patient study is testing Dimerix's candidate DMX-200 for the regressive focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). A rare – but not ultra rare – disease, FSGS usually results in end-stage kidney failure. Endpoints have delayed the endgame Previously, the FDA had set an endpoint of how well a drug preserves kidney function. But this meant a trial had to track the patient to kidney failure or death, which could take years. This makes a trial too long and too costly. 'In rare diseases, no-one is going to do these studies,' Webster says. About five years ago the FDA became more amenable to the use of 'surrogate' endpoints These are measures that substitute a true clinical endpoint to expedite drug development. The FDA allowed the use of the kidney function biomarker, called estimated global filtration rate (eGFR). Under the dainty banner of 'Parasol' – and, no it's not an umbrella group – experts advised the use of proteinuria as a further alternative endpoint for FSGS. Proteinuria is kidney proteins seeping into the urine, while eGFR is the rate at which the spuds can cleanse blood. If proteinuria is present and the eGFR is not up to scratch, they are sure signs the kidneys are not working as they should. Conversely, if a drug reduces proteinuria or the eGFR 'slope rate' – the rate of decline – it is accepted as being effective. Parasol promises faster Action Dubbed Action 3, the Dimerix trial involves two years' treatment, as measured against placebo. The study is due to complete in 2027 when the last patients have been treated. But Dimerix now is working with Parasol to establish the exact surrogate endpoints required to front the FDA for accelerated marketing approval. Expedited approval is as allowed for some orphan drugs, such as DMX-200. 'The full study is for two years and that doesn't change,' Webster says. 'Th question is whether we can get interim approval and go to market earlier.' One possibility is that proteinuria alone could be the accepted endpoint, given proteinuria and eGFR appear to point to the same thing. That is: deteriorating kidneys. Dr Webster says an accelerated endpoint must reasonably predict the outcome of the trial. 'The question is, what do we need to see at point X to prove the end at point Y? Parasol is working with us on that. 'We're collecting all of our data on eGFR and proteinuria anyway, so it gives us a lot of flexibility in the program.' (Other geographies such as Japan and Europe still require an eGFR endpoint). Surrogate change spurs others … The FDA's stance on surrogate endpoints could be a double-edged sword for Dimerix, as it also provides succour to potential rivals. In this vein, a drug called sparsentan (brand name Filspari ) won FDA approval for a kidney condition called IgA nephropathy. The drug failed its Phase III endpoint for eGFR. But now its owner Travere Therapeutics is having a crack at FDA marketing approval for FSGS using a proteinuria endpoint. The data from the supportive trial was unblinded, which means the study custodians can't change the endpoints retrospectively. 'But the FDA is in a hard spot with this one because is an area of such high unmet need,' Webster says. 'These patients currently have limited treatment options and Filspari looks like it is doing something for them. 'We are waiting with bated breath in the hope that Filspari is approved and gives hope to these patients.' Travere has licensed the European and local sparsentan rights to our own CSL (ASX:CSL). … but we're friends, not rivals Webster says rather than rivalling DMX-200, sparsentan could be used in unison. An angiotensin receptor, sparsentan targets high blood pressure – a key cause of kidney disease in the first place. (High blood pressure causes inflammation which causes scarring and cell death). Thus, sparsentan needs to be better than the current blood pressure medication. But DMX-200 works on the secondary inflammatory pathway, with the patients already on blood pressure meds. 'It's not apples for apples with study design, which is why we are compared against the placebo and not a comparator,' Webster says. In effect, DMX-200 faces a lower comparative hurdle. 'Our drug is complementary, not competitive,' Webster says. Data 'peek' hints at trial success While a trial result is never certain, Dimerix is confident it won't meet the fate of Opthea or Percheron Therapeutics (ASX:PER). (The latter's neurological disease trial also failed to meet primary endpoints). One reason is that the Action 3 trial already has been subject to a blinded interim analysis by an arm's length expert committee, which peeked at the data. 'Blinded' means that Dimerix, the trial investigators and the patients don't know the results. In March last year the 72-patient analysis reported that DMX-200 worked better than placebo. As per protocol, the experts did not disclose the extent of this efficacy. But it was enough for the company to know that it's on the right track. 'We just know at that point in time, we were doing better and that if we carry on that trajectory, we have a shot at the endpoint,' Webster says. 'That was a big moment for us, because we wanted to confirm something similar to our smaller phase II study in a larger cohort of patients.' FDA approval could come sooner rather than later Dimerix has received over $65 million of cash, courtesy of four distribution deals that may deliver up to $1.4 billion of milestone payments plus royalties. While a further capital raising is a case of 'never say never', it's unlikely. Naturally, most of the milestones are back ended to achievements such as phase III success and FDA approval. But with accelerated approval possible after the interim analysis, the latter might be sooner than investors think. Many drug developers view the Trump Ascendancy Mark Two with trepidation. In contrast, Webster notes Trump nominated kidney disease as a key health priority in his first stab at POTUS. The financial motive alone is compelling, in that dialysis costs the US health system around US$125 billion annually. 'We are in the sweet spot of being a rare disease (with pricing benefits) and having the potential to reduce US healthcare costs,' Webster says.

Putin, Macron hold call as Ukrainian drone hits Russia
Putin, Macron hold call as Ukrainian drone hits Russia

The Advertiser

time3 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Putin, Macron hold call as Ukrainian drone hits Russia

Russian President Vladimir Putin has had a "substantial" phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron on the Iran-Israel conflict and Ukraine, the Kremlin says in the first such exchange between the two leaders since September 2022. In Paris, Macron's office said the call lasted two hours and that the French leader had called for a ceasefire in Ukraine and the start of negotiations on ending the conflict. A French diplomatic source said Macron had talked to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy before and after his call with Putin to brief him on the talks. Macron also talked to US President Donald Trump about the exchange. According to the Kremlin press service, Putin reiterated his position to Macron that the war in Ukraine was "a direct consequence of the West's policy," which he said had "ignored Russia's security interests" over the past few years. Any possible peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine should have a "comprehensive and long-term character" and be based on "new territorial realities," the Kremlin quoted Putin as saying. Putin has previously said Ukraine must accept Russia's annexation of swaths of its territory as part of any peace deal. In addition to Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, Russia demands at least the four eastern Ukrainian provinces of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhia. Macron has said Ukraine alone should decide on whether or not to accept territorial concessions. During Tuesday's call, Macron's office said, "the president emphasised France's unwavering support for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity". Macron and Putin held regular discussions around the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which was criticised by some European allies, with Macron also visiting Putin in Russia shortly before the invasion in February 2022. A Ukrainian drone hit an industrial plant in Izhevsk, about 1000km east of Moscow, killing three people and injuring 35, local officials said. Alexander Brechalov, head of the Udmurtia region, said the plant's workers were moved away. The drone struck the Kupol Electromechanical Plant, which produces air defence systems and drones for the Russian military, according to an official with Ukraine's Security Service, the SBU. At least two direct hits were recorded on the plant's buildings, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak publicly. Ukraine has for months been using domestically produced long-range drones to strike plants, storage sites and logistical hubs deep inside Russian territory. with DPA and AP Russian President Vladimir Putin has had a "substantial" phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron on the Iran-Israel conflict and Ukraine, the Kremlin says in the first such exchange between the two leaders since September 2022. In Paris, Macron's office said the call lasted two hours and that the French leader had called for a ceasefire in Ukraine and the start of negotiations on ending the conflict. A French diplomatic source said Macron had talked to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy before and after his call with Putin to brief him on the talks. Macron also talked to US President Donald Trump about the exchange. According to the Kremlin press service, Putin reiterated his position to Macron that the war in Ukraine was "a direct consequence of the West's policy," which he said had "ignored Russia's security interests" over the past few years. Any possible peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine should have a "comprehensive and long-term character" and be based on "new territorial realities," the Kremlin quoted Putin as saying. Putin has previously said Ukraine must accept Russia's annexation of swaths of its territory as part of any peace deal. In addition to Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, Russia demands at least the four eastern Ukrainian provinces of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhia. Macron has said Ukraine alone should decide on whether or not to accept territorial concessions. During Tuesday's call, Macron's office said, "the president emphasised France's unwavering support for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity". Macron and Putin held regular discussions around the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which was criticised by some European allies, with Macron also visiting Putin in Russia shortly before the invasion in February 2022. A Ukrainian drone hit an industrial plant in Izhevsk, about 1000km east of Moscow, killing three people and injuring 35, local officials said. Alexander Brechalov, head of the Udmurtia region, said the plant's workers were moved away. The drone struck the Kupol Electromechanical Plant, which produces air defence systems and drones for the Russian military, according to an official with Ukraine's Security Service, the SBU. At least two direct hits were recorded on the plant's buildings, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak publicly. Ukraine has for months been using domestically produced long-range drones to strike plants, storage sites and logistical hubs deep inside Russian territory. with DPA and AP Russian President Vladimir Putin has had a "substantial" phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron on the Iran-Israel conflict and Ukraine, the Kremlin says in the first such exchange between the two leaders since September 2022. In Paris, Macron's office said the call lasted two hours and that the French leader had called for a ceasefire in Ukraine and the start of negotiations on ending the conflict. A French diplomatic source said Macron had talked to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy before and after his call with Putin to brief him on the talks. Macron also talked to US President Donald Trump about the exchange. According to the Kremlin press service, Putin reiterated his position to Macron that the war in Ukraine was "a direct consequence of the West's policy," which he said had "ignored Russia's security interests" over the past few years. Any possible peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine should have a "comprehensive and long-term character" and be based on "new territorial realities," the Kremlin quoted Putin as saying. Putin has previously said Ukraine must accept Russia's annexation of swaths of its territory as part of any peace deal. In addition to Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, Russia demands at least the four eastern Ukrainian provinces of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhia. Macron has said Ukraine alone should decide on whether or not to accept territorial concessions. During Tuesday's call, Macron's office said, "the president emphasised France's unwavering support for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity". Macron and Putin held regular discussions around the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which was criticised by some European allies, with Macron also visiting Putin in Russia shortly before the invasion in February 2022. A Ukrainian drone hit an industrial plant in Izhevsk, about 1000km east of Moscow, killing three people and injuring 35, local officials said. Alexander Brechalov, head of the Udmurtia region, said the plant's workers were moved away. The drone struck the Kupol Electromechanical Plant, which produces air defence systems and drones for the Russian military, according to an official with Ukraine's Security Service, the SBU. At least two direct hits were recorded on the plant's buildings, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak publicly. Ukraine has for months been using domestically produced long-range drones to strike plants, storage sites and logistical hubs deep inside Russian territory. with DPA and AP Russian President Vladimir Putin has had a "substantial" phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron on the Iran-Israel conflict and Ukraine, the Kremlin says in the first such exchange between the two leaders since September 2022. In Paris, Macron's office said the call lasted two hours and that the French leader had called for a ceasefire in Ukraine and the start of negotiations on ending the conflict. A French diplomatic source said Macron had talked to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy before and after his call with Putin to brief him on the talks. Macron also talked to US President Donald Trump about the exchange. According to the Kremlin press service, Putin reiterated his position to Macron that the war in Ukraine was "a direct consequence of the West's policy," which he said had "ignored Russia's security interests" over the past few years. Any possible peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine should have a "comprehensive and long-term character" and be based on "new territorial realities," the Kremlin quoted Putin as saying. Putin has previously said Ukraine must accept Russia's annexation of swaths of its territory as part of any peace deal. In addition to Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, Russia demands at least the four eastern Ukrainian provinces of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhia. Macron has said Ukraine alone should decide on whether or not to accept territorial concessions. During Tuesday's call, Macron's office said, "the president emphasised France's unwavering support for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity". Macron and Putin held regular discussions around the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which was criticised by some European allies, with Macron also visiting Putin in Russia shortly before the invasion in February 2022. A Ukrainian drone hit an industrial plant in Izhevsk, about 1000km east of Moscow, killing three people and injuring 35, local officials said. Alexander Brechalov, head of the Udmurtia region, said the plant's workers were moved away. The drone struck the Kupol Electromechanical Plant, which produces air defence systems and drones for the Russian military, according to an official with Ukraine's Security Service, the SBU. At least two direct hits were recorded on the plant's buildings, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak publicly. Ukraine has for months been using domestically produced long-range drones to strike plants, storage sites and logistical hubs deep inside Russian territory. with DPA and AP

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