logo
I have a picture for you! 06 July-11 July 2025

I have a picture for you! 06 July-11 July 2025

Daily Maverick11-07-2025
Want to send us your photos? You need to be a First Thing Subscriber. When you're subscribed and ready, there'll be a link to submit your own pics in the Picture of the Day section.
Guidelines: we try to be as inclusive as possible when publishing your fantastic photos. However, if you can, please try orient your camera horizontally ('landscape' format) and please, please, try send us as high resolution a photo as possible.
NOTE: We limit our weekly entries to maximum 20. If your picture's not published, please keep sending them in!
First Thing's John Stupart is very much a dog person, but we encourage all pictures.
Are you an amateur or professional photographer? While we don't have money for your pics, if you have a portfolio link or options for prints, let us know when you submit your pic and we'll do our best to include it.
Note: By submitting a photo you acknowledge that you have given us permission to publish them on this site and in this format. You still hold all rights to your work. If you would like to re-use, print, or otherwise use our subscribers' photos, contact us and we'll put you in touch with the original photographers.
Caracal at Urikaruus. Photographer: Boshoff Steenekamp
Landing gear down and ready to land – a yellow-billed stork. Photographer: Con Fauconnier
Mouille Point mid-winter. Photographer: Rens Rezelman
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Azets acquisition of KPMG Sweden's audit and advisory services
Azets acquisition of KPMG Sweden's audit and advisory services

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Azets acquisition of KPMG Sweden's audit and advisory services

Azets Sweden has completed the acquisition of KPMG Sweden's audit, advisory, and tax services aimed at small businesses. The agreement, which was first disclosed in February 2025, includes certain services for mid-sized enterprises, as well as audit and advisory offerings for municipalities and regional authorities. KPMG Sweden partner and CEO Mathias Arvidsson said: 'We are focusing our presence in Sweden on 12 locations to build a stronger KPMG. 'This will give us the strength to accelerate our offering and continue creating value for customers, employees, and society. The transaction, in collaboration with Azets, has been carried out with great professionalism and expertise. 'We wish Azets Sweden, along with the employees and clients who are now joining their operations, all the best and look forward to continued successful cooperation.' As a result of this acquisition, Azets has integrated 300 new employees, including 14 partners, enhancing its operational reach to over 30 cities in Sweden and raising its annual revenue in the country to Skr1bn ($104.9m). This development represents Azets' first entry into the audit services market within the Nordic region and aligns with the group's strategic objective of establishing a £1bn business by 2027. The acquired services will be organised into a new division within Azets Sweden, focusing specifically on audit and advisory functions, the company said. With operations in Norway, Denmark, and Finland, Azets aims to leverage this acquisition to further its expansion in the Nordic audit and advisory landscape, thereby enhancing its offerings for SMEs and public sector entities in the region. Azets Group CEO Chris Horne said: 'This is a significant and symbolic step forward for Azets, as we lay the foundations for long-term growth across the Nordics. 'Sweden is our launchpad – but our sights are firmly set on building a leading audit, tax and advisory capability across the region, combining deep local knowledge with the scale and strength of our Group. 'The Nordic market is a key pillar of our Group strategy. We're committed to investing in talent, expanding our services, and supporting clients with the trusted, technology-enabled expertise they need to move forward with confidence.' "Azets acquisition of KPMG Sweden's audit and advisory services" was originally created and published by International Accounting Bulletin, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. 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

Oil Slips as Trump Ramps Up Diplomatic Push to End Ukraine War
Oil Slips as Trump Ramps Up Diplomatic Push to End Ukraine War

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Oil Slips as Trump Ramps Up Diplomatic Push to End Ukraine War

(Bloomberg) -- Oil slid as traders weighed the outlook for a ceasefire in Ukraine, with President Donald Trump pushing for a summit between Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelenskiy after a series of high-level talks. A Photographer's Pipe Dream: Capturing New York's Vast Water System Chicago Schools Seeks $1 Billion of Short-Term Debt as Cash Gone A London Apartment Tower With Echoes of Victorian Rail and Ancient Rome Festivals and Parades Are Canceled Amid US Immigration Anxiety Princeton Plans New Budget Cuts as Pressure From Trump Builds Brent dropped below $66 a barrel, remaining within the narrow range in which prices have been stuck for the last two weeks. Any eventual peace deal could pave the way for fewer restrictions on Russian crude exports, though Moscow has largely kept its oil flowing since the conflict began. Trump called the Russian president and urged him to start making plans for a one-on-one meeting with Zelenskiy after discussions with the Ukrainian leader on Monday at the White House. The talks between Trump and Zelenskiy appeared to represent a reversal of fortune for Kyiv just days after the US president met Putin in Alaska and said the onus to end the conflict rested with Ukraine. Oil is more than 10% lower this year due to concerns about the fallout from US trade policies and the outlook for oversupply as OPEC+ brings back barrels. Any impact from the talks on the Ukraine war is still uncertain. 'Crude may be in for a holding pattern,' said Vandana Hari, the founder of oil market analysis firm Vanda Insights in Singapore. 'The path to resolving the conflict has opened up but could be a long one.' Despite the diplomacy, attacks from both sides continue. Ukraine said it carried out a fresh strike on Russia's Druzhba oil pipeline system on Monday, halting a conduit that's important for crude supply to parts of central Europe. Ukraine said Russia hit a domestic oil refinery in the country overnight. While crude prices have been largely sandwiched in a range as a result of thinner summer trading volumes and ongoing efforts to end the war, other market gauges have had a busier August. On the US Gulf Coast, crude barrels are fetching some of their biggest premiums in months, in a sign that more supplies could be heading for export over the next few weeks. At the same time, the US benchmark is trading at its biggest discount relative to Brent since April, another factor that could boost overseas shipments. --With assistance from Charlie Zhu and Sarah Chen. Foreigners Are Buying US Homes Again While Americans Get Sidelined What Declining Cardboard Box Sales Tell Us About the US Economy Women's Earnings Never Really Recover After They Have Children Americans Are Getting Priced Out of Homeownership at Record Rates Yosemite Employee Fired After Flying Trans Pride Flag ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Sign in to access your portfolio

Trump Widens Metal Tariffs to Target Baby Gear and Motorcycles
Trump Widens Metal Tariffs to Target Baby Gear and Motorcycles

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Widens Metal Tariffs to Target Baby Gear and Motorcycles

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump stunned the logistics industry on Friday by widening his steel and aluminum tariffs to include more than 400 consumer items that contain the metals, such as motorcycles and tableware. Customs brokers and importers in the US were given little notice to account for the change, which went into effect Monday and did not exclude goods in transit. A Photographer's Pipe Dream: Capturing New York's Vast Water System Chicago Schools Seeks $1 Billion of Short-Term Debt as Cash Gone A London Apartment Tower With Echoes of Victorian Rail and Ancient Rome Festivals and Parades Are Canceled Amid US Immigration Anxiety Princeton Plans New Budget Cuts as Pressure From Trump Builds The new tariff inclusion list was posted by the Customs and Border Protection agency just as many were leaving for the weekend and appeared in the Federal Register on Tuesday, creating fresh headaches for trade professionals. Official guidance has been muddled, especially for goods already on their way to the US, and it's unclear whether the metals levies stack on top of country-by-country tariffs. Having weathered six months of Trump's trade war and a pandemic that triggered mass supply disruptions, it's hard to rattle the freight carriers, cargo owners and middlemen that keep cross-border commerce moving. But the scope and implementation speed of this latest notice took many by surprise. 'We've had a lot of these 11th-hour implementations throughout 2025, this one in particular impacts every single client I have to an enormous degree,' Michigan-based customs broker Shannon Bryant said in an interview. 'Earlier announcements at least had some in-transit exemptions so at least importers could make reasonable buying decisions,' said Bryant, president of trade compliance advisory service, Trade IQ. 'This one was unique in that way — it's very much a 'gotcha.'' The new list includes auto parts, chemicals, plastics and furniture components — demonstrating the reach of Trump's authority to use sectoral tariffs. That is separate from the executive power he invoked for his so-called reciprocal tariffs. 'Basically, if it's shiny, metallic, or remotely related to steel or aluminum, it's probably on the list,' Brian Baldwin, a vice president of customs in the US at logistics giant Kuehne + Nagel International AG, wrote in a post on LinkedIn. 'This isn't just another tariff — it's a strategic shift in how steel and aluminum derivatives are regulated.' Compliance Costs The difficulty with applying tariffs to derivative products lies in determining what percentage of an item is made from the targeted materials. Flexport, a digital freight forwarder, said in a blog post that 'for many brands, this means chasing suppliers for detailed data: aluminum weight, percentage of customs value, and country of cast/smelt.' The compliance burden, Flexport said, 'is significant.' This tranche of tariffs is also particularly expansive, including items such as motorcycles, cargo handling equipment, baby booster seats, tableware and personal care products that come in metal containers or packaging. Jason Miller, a professor of supply chain management at Michigan State University, conservatively estimates that the metals tariffs now cover about $328 billion worth of goods, based on 2024 import data. That's six times greater than in 2018 and a big jump from the $191 billion worth of goods covered prior to the change, he said in an email to Bloomberg News. Broker's Plea Bryant, whose clients include cosmetics and commercial cookware importers, sent a letter to her elected officials in Washington on Monday warning that the complexity of overlapping tariffs is becoming unworkable even for professionals. 'For small importers,' she wrote, 'it's impossible.' 'I'm trying to think of a client that's not impacted,' Bryant said. 'These are American companies that employ American people that are being ambushed by their own government.' Trump first imposed steel and aluminum tariffs in 2018 with the goal of boosting US output by making it more expensive for Americans to buy foreign material. But several major suppliers including Canada, Mexico and the European Union were ultimately exempted, and US industries have said they're still struggling to compete with imports. Big Steel Applauds In June, Trump fulfilled a campaign promise by doubling the levy on steel and aluminum to 50% and also sought feedback from industry on how to broaden it further. Lourenco Goncalves, chief executive officer of US steelmaker Cleveland-Cliffs Inc., applauded the expanded tariff list in a statement on Monday, thanking the Trump administration for 'taking decisive and concrete action that will deter tariff circumvention occurring in plain sight with stainless and electrical steel derivative products.' There's very likely more to come. At the end of July, the Trump administration imposed a 50% duty on semi-finished copper imports valued at more than $15 billion and ordered officials to come up with a plan to slap tariffs on an array of other copper-intensive goods. 'This isn't over,' said Pete Mento, DSV's global customs director, in a social media post on Monday. 'The next list will surely be for copper and I expect that to be equally as miserable.' Reference Shelf: Chaotic Tariff Rollout Leaves US Importers Short on Details (1) US INSIGHT: Importers Still Cover Most Tariffs Despite Revisions Why Trump Doubled Down on Steel and Aluminum Tariffs: QuickTake Foreigners Are Buying US Homes Again While Americans Get Sidelined What Declining Cardboard Box Sales Tell Us About the US Economy Women's Earnings Never Really Recover After They Have Children Americans Are Getting Priced Out of Homeownership at Record Rates Yosemite Employee Fired After Flying Trans Pride Flag ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store