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Long road to recovery begins as Hill Country volunteers continue flood search and healing efforts
Long road to recovery begins as Hill Country volunteers continue flood search and healing efforts

CBS News

time16-07-2025

  • General
  • CBS News

Long road to recovery begins as Hill Country volunteers continue flood search and healing efforts

After 12 days, the initial adrenaline to jump into action is starting to wear off for some volunteers. Crews are starting to settle into what will become a long and complex process of bringing everyone home. Jodi Carpenter and her daughter Abigail love the Guadalupe River. The park where Abigail Carpenter grew up playing is now covered in crosses to remember those swept away by the floodwaters. "I'm talking to God and my, you know, my head going, 'what does this look like for the long haul?' God, you know, how do we plug into healing for the long haul? Because it's going to be different moving forward," said Jodi Carpenter. Twelve miles downstream, search efforts continue. "The last several days have been, they've been difficult," said Daniel Murray. "This whole situation is emotionally heavy. But the reason we're out here is because we know the community needs support." Murray is part of a volunteer crew that's been clearing piles of debris. His crew marks each pile with an orange "X" to let other teams know it's clear. "What happened here is, it's hard to wrap your head around until you're on the ground looking at it," said Murray. Murray's group is one of many working out of the Center Point Volunteer Fire Department's command post. "Concerned citizens are posting just right outside of our fire department. And they are coordinating and going on search groups as well," said Razor Dobbs with Center Point FD. For crews like Daniels' and the emergency responders, this is the start of the long, hard work to account for every person lost. "The goal is to bring everybody home. And there is no plan B," said Dobbs. For Jodi Carpenter, her daughter, and everyone else in the Hill Country, they're starting the long, hard work of healing. "We're going to have to figure out how to get in the water again. Not right now, but. Like we're going to have to get back there," said Jodi Carpenter.

Leprechaun economics? Irish economy grows by 13% as exporters tried to outpace Trump tariffs
Leprechaun economics? Irish economy grows by 13% as exporters tried to outpace Trump tariffs

Business Post

time29-04-2025

  • Business
  • Business Post

Leprechaun economics? Irish economy grows by 13% as exporters tried to outpace Trump tariffs

Economy Leprechaun economics? Irish economy grows by 13% as exporters tried to outpace Trump tariffs The early GDP data is consistent with large spikes in goods exports in January and February Daniel Murray 14:15 The large preliminary annual growth figure for Q1 is contrasted with a more modest but still strong growth of 3.1 per cent when compared with Q4 of 2024. Picture: Sasko Lazarov/

Early data suggests Irish economy surged in first quarter as exporters tried to outpace tariffs
Early data suggests Irish economy surged in first quarter as exporters tried to outpace tariffs

Business Post

time29-04-2025

  • Business
  • Business Post

Early data suggests Irish economy surged in first quarter as exporters tried to outpace tariffs

Economy Early data suggests Irish economy surged in first quarter as exporters tried to outpace tariffs The early GDP data is consistent with large spikes in goods exports in January and February Daniel Murray 14:15 The large preliminary annual growth figure for Q1 is contrasted with a more modest but still strong growth of 3.1 per cent when compared with Q4 of 2024. Picture: Sasko Lazarov/

Chipmakers in line for subsidies under new strategy to support ‘critical' industry
Chipmakers in line for subsidies under new strategy to support ‘critical' industry

Business Post

time29-04-2025

  • Business
  • Business Post

Chipmakers in line for subsidies under new strategy to support ‘critical' industry

Tech Chipmakers in line for subsidies under new strategy to support 'critical' industry Burke will tell government that the strategy is a clear signal of support for a sector that is economically and strategically vital Daniel Murray 05:00 An Intel factory employee holds a wafer with 3D stacked Foveros technology at an Intel fab in Hillsboro, Oregon, in December 2023. Picture: Orla Murray Coalesce Business Post subscribers can read: • What is contained in the government's semiconductor strategy • Why this is such a critical time for the sector • How subsidies could be decided on by the government News Tech News Connected Tech semiconductor Tech Peter Burke LATEST NEWS 11:26 Live News: Spotify forecasts second-quarter profit below estimates; Blackstone-Backed Rover group buys Dublin dog-sitting platform Gudog 11:19 Tirlán reports €2.66 billion revenue despite market challenges 09:54 HSBC faces $1.6 billion charge as China recapitalises BoCom 08:59 Penneys owner AB Foods shares down nearly 9% amid dwindling profits and revenue 08:49 Markets Update: Iseq opens red as EU markets gain and FTSE reacts to financial results 08:38 Avolon reports record lease revenues and 36% surge in profits for Q1 2025

Equity Bulls Risk Sleepwalking Into German Election-Fueled Drop
Equity Bulls Risk Sleepwalking Into German Election-Fueled Drop

Yahoo

time16-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Equity Bulls Risk Sleepwalking Into German Election-Fueled Drop

(Bloomberg) -- Europe's equity markets are priced for a near-perfect outcome from the high-stakes German federal election. For some investors, that raises the risk of a nasty surprise. Progressive Portland Plots a Comeback Why American Mobility Ground to a Halt How to Build a Neurodiverse City A Filmmaker's Surreal Journey Into His Own Private Winnipeg SpaceX Bid to Turn Texas Starbase Into City Is Set for Vote in May Germany's benchmark DAX Index as well as the pan-European Stoxx 600 have notched record after record this year, partly on optimism that Germany's new government would carry a robust voting majority in parliament, allowing it to push through much-needed reforms and kick-start the economy. But if history is any guide, betting on a sure-shot outcome from the Feb. 23 vote — or underestimating the risk of potential market turmoil — could prove to be shortsighted. In 2024, the European Parliament election unexpectedly led to the French government being toppled and triggered a selloff in domestic assets. 'There is a clear risk that the outcome isn't as market friendly as is currently expected,' said Daniel Murray, deputy chief investment officer at EFG Asset Management. 'If there's anything we've learned with regard to election outcomes, it's that they've become much less predictable.' For investors, the election has spurred optimism that the nation may loosen its strict borrowing rules — the so-called debt brake — that have long been championed by conservative politicians and fiscally hawkish economists. Friedrich Merz, the Christian Democrat chancellor candidate who leads in opinion polls, has signaled openness to tweaking the mechanism but cautioned Germany must first slash bureaucracy and expenses before discussing more debt. A coalition between his CDU/CSU alliance and Social Democrats or the Greens — who are also proponents of increased borrowing — is viewed as the most market-friendly outcome. The bullish narrative is complicated by the strong poll numbers for the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany party. A fair amount of inter-party collaboration will be needed to keep the far-right group isolated in parliament and prevent it from gaining influence on political decision-making. Given the convoluted process that might be needed to form a government — it took two months after the 2021 election — investors could wake up on Feb. 24 to the prospect of a long stretch of wrangling. And even once a government is in place, there may not be the necessary backing to change the Constitution and loosen the debt brake. While it takes only a simple majority of Bundestag seats to elect the government, a two-thirds majority is needed in both houses of parliament for constitutional change, said Aneeka Gupta, director of macro-economic research at Wisdomtree UK Ltd. 'It could be the big catalyst for stocks and it could hugely benefit the German economy,' she said, but a strong showing for the AfD 'could change that optimistic scenario.' A majority of institutional investors in a Morgan Stanley survey said they expect an overhaul of the country's strict borrowing limits, although about 46% warned of the possibility of a minority result that would prevent fiscal expansion. Polling also shows a majority of German voters support such a move. Scaling Peaks Germany's large-cap DAX Index has been an outperformer with a rally of 76% since its post-pandemic low in late 2022, driven by gains in software company SAP SE and a robust global economy that has boosted its export-oriented constituents. The gauge widened that lead after German Chancellor Olaf Scholz called the surprise election in November. A survey by Bank of America Corp. last month found Germany had become the most preferred equity market in Europe as investors counted on a boost from fiscal stimulus. Germany has long enjoyed the cheapest borrowing costs in the euro area, given its commitment to austerity and keeping a limit on the amount of debt it issues. For those reasons, investors say that — unlike many other developed nations — it has the capacity to issue more bonds to boost investment spending. There are signs that investors have already priced in some increase in bond issuance. German 10- and 30-year bunds are around the cheapest relative to same-maturity interest-rate swaps on record, a gauge known as the swap spread. The widespread optimism means any idiosyncratic shock could result in a selloff in stocks. The gains are already looking overheated by a standard measure of price momentum: The relative strength index shows the DAX in so-called overbought territory — a level considered by some investors as a precursor to a selloff. In mid-2024, France's CAC 40 Index sank more than 10% after President Emmanuel Macron called a snap election. It took the index eight months to finally claw back those declines, and it remains among the worst performers in Europe over the past year. The political turmoil also contributed to the Stoxx 600 suffering one of its worst years relative to the S&P 500. 'The risk in the market is very similar to what happened last year where everybody was underpricing that event and it actually literally paved the way for the European equity story in the second half of 2024,' Gupta said. Export Cushion Some market participants argue German stocks are more insulated from election risks. Max Kettner, chief multi-asset strategist at HSBC Holdings Plc, said the DAX has a large weighting in international and technology-related companies, and they 'have little to do with domestic fundamentals, nor with the political outlook for Germany. It's much more about the broadening artificial intelligence trade.' Some investors, though, said even a Merz-led victory may not spark further rallies in financial markets, as any fiscal reform is likely to be too timid to have much of an impact on growth. 'There's now quite a strong consensus around the Merz-led government and the DAX has done extremely well,' said Edward Cole, head of multi-strategy equities at Man Group. 'Even if Merz leads the next government, there could just be disappointment about how long it takes to do.' --With assistance from Alice Gledhill and Christoph Rauwald. The Undocumented Workers Who Helped Build Elon Musk's Texas Gigafactory The Unicorn Boom Is Over, and Startups Are Getting Desperate Japan Perfected 7-Eleven. Why Can't the US Get It Right? The NBA Has Fallen Into an Efficiency Trap How Silicon Valley Swung From Obama to Trump ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Sign in to access your portfolio

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