Author: AsiaNews.it
Today’s news: China is considering selling the US operations of TikTok to Elon Musk; The number of casualties among Tibetan monks after last week’s earthquake is unknown; Nawaf Salam, president of the International Court of Justice in The Hague, is the new prime minister of Lebanon; More anti-government protests in Georgia, joined by the march of descendants of victims of Stalinist repressions.Read More
Growth in the Asia-Pacific region is expected to help drive global airline revenue over $1 trillion for the first time in 2025, according to a paper published by Avolon.Read More
The EU accused China on Tuesday of discriminating against European medical device producers in public contracts and warned of “decisive action” unless the issue can be resolved through dialogue with Beijing.Read More
Britain’s competition watchdog said Tuesday that it’s opening a formal antitrust investigation into Google’s search and search advertising business.Read More
Chester Griffiths says the ferocity of the flames demonstrates the need for residents to be prepared.Read More
Trump is accused of inspiring Jan 6 violence but prosecutors thought an incitement charge would be too risky.Read More
ABS-CBN expands international distribution following record-breaking success of ‘Hello, Love, Again,’ with new theatrical releases planned for 2025.Read More
All net global commissions on January 16 for equities and fixed income trading will be donated.Read More
The E-mini Nasdaq 100 futures contract was trading higher early Tuesday, a sign that tech stocks are expected to tick higher at the open after Monday’s pullback. Contracts for the Nasdaq-100 are up nearly 0.8%. Nvidia shares were up more than 2% premarket after shedding 2% on Monday. Apple shares wRead More
STORY: The European Commission is reevaluating its probes into U.S. tech giants, including Apple, Meta and Alphabet’s Google.That’s according to Britain’s Financial Times on Tuesday (Jan 14).The companies have urged U.S. President-elect Trump to challenge the EU’s regulatory scrutiny against them.One source told the FT the implications of Trump’s presidency were a factor in the review.Although they clarified his victory had not triggered it.The report said the EU’s review could lead to Brussels reducing or changing the range of the probes.It will cover all cases launched since March 2024 under the European Union’s landmark Digital Markets Act – or DMA.That…