Annual Report 2019/20
The Roblon Group realises revenue and earnings in line with latest guidance
The English-language edition of the Annual Report will be published i January 2021 at www.roblon.com
President Biden speaks about his administration’s plans for the COVID-19 pandemic.
Electric passenger aircraft developer Joby Aero Inc is exploring a deal to go public through a merger with a blank-check acquisition firm at a valuation of around $5 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. Joby has hired investment banks to solicit interest from so-called special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) about a potential deal, the sources said. Joby did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Interior Design Software Market will grow by USD 188.77 mn during 2020-2024
Unified ID 2.0, the next generation identity solution, is formally being submitted today to the Partnership for Responsible Addressable Media (PRAM). Earlier this month, PRAM called for contributions of addressability code for collaborative development. Unified ID 2.0 is built on an open-source digital framework, and it is the result of broad collaboration among a range of companies across the industry.
CLSK CLASS ACTION NOTICE: The Law Offices of Frank R. Cruz Files Securities Fraud Lawsuit Against CleanSpark, Inc.
Phillips 66 (NYSE: PSX) today announced it has received a $3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to advance the development of high-performance reversible solid oxide fuel cells.
(Bloomberg) -- Investors clamored for bonds backed by U.S. commercial aircraft leases this week in the first such offering in almost a year.Castlelake LP, an investment firm whose businesses include buying and leasing out commercial planes, sold $595 million of bonds backed by aircraft on Wednesday, reaching money managers that are hopeful the pandemic-battered industry is nearing a recovery, and are hungrier for yield. More aircraft lease deals could be coming in part because airlines have raised so much money, giving them resources to make lease payments.The biggest portion of the Castlelake deal priced with a yield of 3.5%, a high level relative to other asset-backed securities for sale now. For example, a separate bond, with a slightly lower rating and a 3.4 year average life and backed by subprime car loans, yielded just 1.16% this week.The yield on the Castlelake transaction was high enough to draw ten times as many orders as there were bonds for sale, according to Jason Callan, head of structured assets at Columbia Threadneedle Investments.“The assets backing these bonds are super volatile, but there is a lack of yield in the current environment,” Callan said.Proceeds from the Castlelake asset-backed securities are being used to buy 27 aircraft and their related leases to airlines, according to Kroll Bond Rating Agency, which is one of the firms rating the debt. Investors get paid as airlines make their lease payments, which is still a risk for investors as the companies struggle to recover. The asset-backeds were designed to offer more protections against further downturns in the travel industry than typical aircraft bonds.For example, if lease collections fall below a certain level, investors in the least-risky securities start to get paid back sooner, according Kroll and Moody’s Investors Service. Nearly a quarter of the leases are to Delta Air Lines Inc., and more than 15% are to state-owned Qatar Airways, which are relatively strong airlines. The leases are longer term, with most expiring after 2024, which also reduces risk, according to Moody’s.The Covid-19 pandemic has roiled air travel and depressed demand for flights, putting the airline industry through the wringer in 2020 and into this year with heavy losses. Vaccines will likely help lift demand for air travel again, but putting inoculations into arms is proving to be logistically difficult in many parts of the world. It’s not clear how long it will take for air traffic to return to prior levels.Concerns about the strength of the travel industry depressed sales of airline lease asset-backeds in the U.S. after years of steady growth. The last commercial lease aircraft ABS was sold in February 2020, by Willis Lease and Sculptor Capital. There was an offering backed by business jet leases in October, as well. Aircraft ABS issuance was about $2.6 billion in 2020, after 2019’s $9.7 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.But with the Federal Reserve having lowered interest rates to support the economy during the pandemic, investors are clamoring for yield. Money managers are looking at more esoteric assets than they may otherwise. And airlines themselves have been able to borrow more to pay their leases, said Keith Allman, head of non-flow ABS at Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, which helped lead the Castlelake offering.Read more: Conning’s Norris Likes Relative Value in Timeshare, Aircraft ABS“The vaccine news seemed to put a goalpost in investors’ minds, and they realized they could start tracking the distribution of the vaccine and compare it to the liquidity positions of these airlines,” Allman said. “It was clear some airlines could extend liquidity for 24 months or more at sustained levels.”Recovering PricesAircraft ABS prices got pummeled in the secondary market last March as lockdowns kept people at home, with the biggest portions of deals, typically rated A, falling to about 70 cents on the dollar from 100 cents, according to data from MUFG.Prices began to stabilize in June and some senior portions of deals returned nearly to par by December. The spigot is likely now open for sales to continue their upward trajectory in 2021.“You’ll see higher-grade lessors who have the ability to show how they managed through the pandemic return to the market this year,” Allman said. “Multiple issuers are expected out of the gate.”Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Credit Suisse Group AG, Deutsche Bank AG and MUFG led the transaction.(Updates with detail on leases in seventh paragraph. An earlier version of this story corrected the size of offering in the second paragraph.)For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2021 Bloomberg L.P.
A member of the public filmed the incident at Hartford station in Cheshire on Wednesday, as heavy rainfall caused widespread disruption to the county.
Boris Johnson suggested Barack Obama’s removal of statue was ‘snub to Britain’
When the senator's inauguration outfit went viral, social media users wasted no time Photoshopping the pic into scenes with celebrities, iconic movies, even in a New York City subway car
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) says house prices could fall 47.9 per cent peak-to-trough and with an unemployment rate of 25 per cent in its worst case scenario. The scenario is a W-shaped recovery, which is a partial recovery followed by a resurgence of COVID-19 leading to a prolonged recession and a loss of confidence. There would be no government assistance, stocks and oil would fall, plus the failure of 4 mid-size financial institutions and one private mortgage insurer.
Outbreak affects nearly one-third of dairy site’s workforce
City Capital Ventures, LLC ("CCV"), a private investment partnership headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, is pleased to announce it has made a majority investment in Rackson Restaurants ("Rackson" or the "Company"). Rackson, headquartered in Bridgewater, New Jersey, is a 55+ unit QSR franchisee of Burger King and Popeyes restaurants with locations across six states in the Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic U.S. Rackson is led by co-owner and CEO, Chris Johnson, a 2nd generation QSR operator with an outstanding track record of developing talent and delivering superior operating results. CCV is excited to partner with Chris Johnson and shares his desire to build a large, multi-branded QSR platform across the attractive Northeastern U.S. marketplace.
People told to leave houses in Manchester, Merseyside and Wales as rain and snow bring fears of major flooding
UK travellers could be locked out of continent
More than 160 flood warnings remain in place across England.
America’s friends reacted positively to the inauguration of Joe Biden as the new President of the United States. But foes weren’t universally happy. What have China, Russia and Iran been saying about the new administration in the White House? Minutes after Joe Biden was officially inaugurated as the 46th President of the United States, China issued a series of sanctions against the US.In a statement, the Foreign Ministry in Beijing said that “over the past few years, some anti-China politicians in the United States, out of their selfish political interests and prejudice against China” have executed a series of initiatives that have undermined China’s interests. As a result, 28 people are being sanctioned.The list included high-profile names – all serving in the Trump administration – such as former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, whose latest action before leaving office was to accuse China of “genocide” in its policy towards the minority Muslim Uyghur population in Xinjiang Autonomous Regions.US National Trade Council director Peter Navarro, author of the book The Coming China Wars, has persistently propagated a hard line against China; Trump’s China advisor, former journalist, and fluent Mandarin speaker Matthew Pottinger deeply offended China by lecturing Beijing, speaking Chinese, in a hard-hitting speech on “The importance of being candid.”'Violating China's sovereignty'Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and Under Secretary for Economic Growth, Energy and Environment, Keith Krach, were high-level US officials who did the unthinkable by visiting Taiwan. Trump advisors John Bolton and Stephen Bannon went out of their way to push the former president’s anti-China agenda to the limits, with Bannon colluding with prominent millionaire-activist Guo Wengui in accusing China of having developed the Covid-19 virus in a laboratory.The 28 are accused of “seriously violated China’s sovereignty” and they, along with “immediate family members” are banned from visiting and doing business in China (including Hong Kong).All eyes are now on Biden. Will he change the hard-line policy that was initiated by Donald Trump and resulted in an increasingly nasty trade war, hostile rhetoric, sanctions and threats?The writing is on the wall since, for the first time ever, the US invited Taiwan’s top representative in Washington, Hsiao Bi-khim, to the inauguration of Biden, an invitation which did not go unnoticed in China.'Less confrontation'But the normally vitriolic Global Times did, for once, not go into all-out attack mode.“The US society's favorability toward China has declined in the past four years,” the paper says, going on to suggest that “the Biden administration does not need to believe that the continuation of the previous administration's China policy is by any means a form of political correctness,” adding that “the reality is that less confrontation and more cooperation represent deep parts of public opinion in all countries”.But the new US Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken, said during his Senate confirmation hearing on 19 January that President Donald Trump was right in taking a tougher approach to China - even if Blinken did not agree with all Trump's methods - and he endorsed the assessment that Beijing was committing genocide in Xinjiang.”It doesn’t look as if the growing gap between China and Washington will be bridged any time soon.Waiting gameRussian President Vladimir Putin congratulated Biden on 15 December, after the American had won the Electoral College state-by-state vote. Like his counterparts in China, Putin is playing a waiting game to see what Biden's first diplomatic steps will be. The US wants Russia to steer clear of Belarusian politics and support for Europe’s last dictator Alexander Lukashenko. Washington also wants Russia to accept the former Soviet state of Georgia as a possible NATO member.It is far from clear if Biden will walk away from Trump’s erratic love-hate relationship with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin.Biden’s appointment of Victoria Nuland as Deputy Secretary of State for Political Affairs spells doom for US-Russian relations: Nuland (notorious for her “f*** the EU” remark in a leaked telephone conversation in 2014) played a prominent role during the ouster of Ukranian president Victor Yanukovich, who had Moscow’s support and who was replaced, after weeks of popular protest, with Washington’s preferred candidate Artseniy Yatsenyuk.Nuland is married to Robert Kagan, co-founder and director of the now defunct neo-conservative think tank Project for a New American Century, which had Trump hawk John Bolton as former director and was supported by George W. Bush-era hardliners Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld.IranIran meahwhile never had much hope of good relations with the US. After Biden's inauguration in Washington, Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif tweeted that "Trump, Pompeo & Co. are relegated to the dustbin of history in disgrace.” But, the diplomat underlined that "'perhaps new folks in DC have learned' from the grave experiences of the former lame-duck president."Biden is under heavy pressure to cancel Trump's decision to walk away from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, which involved restrictions on Tehran's nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of sanctions. But he has not given an indication yet as to what course he will follow.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Thursday told reporters that the House and Senate are "ready" to proceed with former President Trump's second impeachment trial, but she said transmission of the articles is being held up by questions about how the trial would work. Pelosi dismissed Republicans' concerns that impeachment could divide lawmakers so soon after the inauguration. "It's not really unifying to say, let's just forget it, and move on," Pelosi said.
Notice is hereby given that a meeting of the Board of Directors of Inspire Charter Academy will be held at 3:30 p.m. on Monday, January 25, 2021 by video/teleconference.
Rosen Law Firm, a global investor rights law firm, announces it is investigating potential breaches of fiduciary duties by management of Acadia Healthcare Company, Inc. (NASDAQ: ACHC) resulting from allegations that management may have issued materially misleading business information to the investing public.