Miscellaneous News

FriedButter

Brigadier
Registered Member

You can have your full confidence that the plastic chair of the SEC enforcement director will be conducting the investigation. The human already left 7 days ago.

Exclusive: US SEC's top cop resigns after just six months on the job​

NEW YORK, March 16 (Reuters) - The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's enforcement director has resigned just over six months after she started on the job, the SEC said on Monday, a sudden departure for an ‌agency that has changed dramatically under Republican leaders.

Former military judge Margaret Ryan has led the SEC's enforcement unit since joining the agency in early September. She has resigned from the agency effective immediately, the SEC said in a statement, confirming Reuters' earlier reporting.

Ryan, a former Marine who had clerked for well-known conservative judges, had been seen as an unusual pick ⁠to lead the 1,400-person enforcement given she had little experience specific to securities law. She was tapped by Republican Paul Atkins, who became SEC chairman last April and took several months to get top leaders into their roles.

"We have achieved things over the past six months and I know that this critical work will continue," Ryan said in an email to staff reviewed by Reuters.

The SEC said in its statement that Ryan oversaw a "critical course correction within the division". The agency's Republican leadership has sought to focus on cases involving outright fraud and market manipulation and to move away ‌from ⁠some of the compliance-oriented cases seen under prior leadership.

Ryan's tenure coincided with what some lawyers described as relatively spotty or slow enforcement activity at the SEC, a government shutdown and continued attrition from an agency that has seen an exodus of staff under the Trump administration.

SEC enforcement has slowed during the first ⁠year under Republican leadership, according to public records and criminal defense attorneys. While a slowdown is typical during transition years, the agency has also dismissed a number of crypto cases the SEC was considered to ⁠be winning, and ended litigation against individuals who had received presidential clemency on corresponding criminal cases.

While largely unknown to SEC officials prior to her appointment, Ryan was generally seen as ⁠supportive of staff in enforcement matters, according to three sources familiar with the matter.

The SEC is expected to announce a permanent successor in the coming weeks, the agency said in its statement.
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horse

Brigadier
Registered Member

This is very significant news. Just watched Pepe Escobar on the Glenn Diesen show, and Pepe reminded everyone that he was one of the old school foreign war journalist.

After 23 years, the Americans and NATO have left Iraq.

Let that sink in. They fled because there is no protection left against Iranian missile or drone attacks. No one said this out loud, but people are not stupid. Sure, we are stupid, just not that stupid.

So they are gone. After toppling Saddam Hussein, they fled in retreat two decades later, due to another war they started. Iran will move to fill that power vacuum.

In other Youtube news, Scott Ritter says a F-15 was shot down, Larry Johnson said a US carrier was hit previously suffered minor damage so not big news.

:oops:
 

supersnoop

Colonel
Registered Member
Refinery explosion in Russia? Middle East? Nope. Texas, USA. Seems a bit too much of a coincidence to simply be an accident. The initial blast also sounds too loud to just be oil combusting.
Don’t worry, Trump and Co. have a plan:
Replace Wind investment with more refineries

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Thecore

Junior Member
Registered Member
View attachment 172216


JMSDF are changing group names from "Escort force" to "Combat force". Also reorganized the command chain for better combat awareness and efficiency, said Ministry of Defense.
Oooooo so scary! :eek:

At the end of the day, it just makes it easier for China's global public relations when these ships get blown out of the water eventually. I mean what sounds better? "China destroyed Japanese Escort force" or "China destroyed Japanese Combat force". Also, switching from a dispersed to concentrated force? Thanks for the nice big kill zone target.

Yeah, good luck with that.
 
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Randomuser

Major
Registered Member
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Japanese investment in Indian finance hits record as business ties tighten

Tokyo drawn to vast market where Chinese competition is limited by geopolitical tensions.

Record Japanese investment in India’s financial sector is highlighting the tightening business links between the world’s fourth and fifth-largest economies.

Japan’s largest bank, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, closed a $4.4bn deal to acquire part of an Indian shadow bank at the end of last year, the largest ever foreign investment in India’s financial sector.

MUFG’s purchase of a fifth of Shriram Finance’s shares was part of a record $8.8bn spent by Japanese companies on stakes in Indian businesses in 2025, according to Dealogic data.

Closer business and investment links between Japan and India are being driven by the opportunities presented by the south Asian nation’s vast market, geopolitical tensions and an urgent need to compete with ascendant Chinese companies.

India, which had restricted investment from China until recently after clashes on their Himalayan frontier in 2020, sees Japan as an important source of funds, especially for capital-short banks, and of technology and technical expertise for its manufacturing sector.

Sourav Mallik, deputy chief executive of Kotak Investment Bank, which has been involved in some of the deals with Japanese companies, said a lack of growth in their domestic economy was making
their investors push them to “go global.

As a fastest-growing large economy, “India naturally pops up”, said Mallik, while Japan’s “very long-term patient capital . . . ties in very nicely with Indian companies and entrepreneurs who want to retain a certain degree of control”.

Yoshinobu Agu, head of Citigroup Global Markets Japan’s mergers and acquisitions unit, said Japanese investors had tended to “prefer strategic minority positions” because of the difficulty of acquiring full control of Indian companies and also their high valuations.

Masahiro Kihara, chief executive of Mizuho, Japan’s third-biggest bank by assets, has described India as requiring a “very long-term” view.

Mizuho announced in December it would take a majority stake in Indian financial services provider Avendus Capital, and Kihara said then that his ambitions went beyond serving Japanese industrials in the country.

“I would say that European companies, US companies, also will have interest”, and Mizuho saw its purpose as connecting the commercial relationships it had around the world with India, he said.

Tokyo and New Delhi share a desire for closer geopolitical alignment as a bulwark against an increasingly powerful and assertive China.

“Investment in India is on an expanding trend, surpassing investment in China for the second consecutive year in 2024 and maintaining a high level” at $5.34bn, the Japan External Trade Organisation said in a global trade and investment report last year.

By contrast, Japanese foreign direct investment in China fell for a third consecutive year to $3.39bn, its lowest level since 2014, Jetro said.




Teruhide Sato, founder of Beenext, a venture capital firm that has invested in more than 120 Indian start-ups, said Japan Inc was drawn to India by the size of its market, geopolitical tailwinds and a need to source talent for digital and AI transformations.

“There’s going to be a ripple effect. It starts from the megabanks to the insurers to the asset managers,” he said. “These are big economic entities that symbolise the Japanese economy that are not just setting up regional branches, but investing and potentially buying more businesses.”

Kenji Sugino, secretary-general of the Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry in India, said Japanese foreign direct investment in India was second only to the US.

While much more FDI was recorded as coming from Singapore, Mauritius and the Netherlands than the $7.5bn from Japan in the three fiscal years to last March, most of that capital originally came from elsewhere, he said.

The chamber of commerce said despite India’s lack of legal transparency, under-developed infrastructure and complicated tax system, smaller Japanese companies had also felt the country’s lure in recent years.

Japanese companies with a capital base of about $30mn or lower now account for 62 per cent of the chamber’s membership, up from less than 40 per cent in 2021. The proportion of service sector members has also grown to match that of manufacturing at just above 40 per cent.

Alongside the growing investment in India’s companies, Japanese manufacturers are also pouring funds into the country in the hope of gaining economies of scale that will allow them to compete with lower-cost Chinese rivals in the Indian market and elsewhere.

New Delhi’s restrictions on Chinese companies investing and operating in India — and barriers to some goods imports from China — add to its attractiveness for Japanese manufacturers. “Japanese companies are essentially in a market without China, they’ve been able to enjoy the upside of that,” said Kazuya Nakajo, executive adviser at Jetro.

Daikin, the world’s biggest air conditioner supplier, plans to increase its annual production in India of residential units to 5mn by 2030 from 3mn now, supplying the country’s middle class and creating a supply hub for the global south.

Daikin president Naofumi Takenaka said the company hoped to use “digitised factories” to eventually raise production in India to 10mn units a year, at least five times its capacity in any other country.

“Behind this is the world’s most rapidly growing market,” he said. “Chinese manufacturers have already realised this scale [but] this will be the first for Daikin.”
 
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MortyandRick

Senior Member
Registered Member
View attachment 172216


JMSDF are changing group names from "Escort force" to "Combat force". Also reorganized the command chain for better combat awareness and efficiency, said Ministry of Defense.
I don't see any reason to get angry that Japan is doing this.

China has very little influence in Japan, who only listens to the US.

Let them spend money on rearming, mostly by buying expensive US weapons.

Let them spend money giving trump 550$ billions dollar protection money.

The more they waste in those areas the less they have to invest in other areas and the more they lose competitiveness.

I find they they are happy they make these public changes which can irritate Chinese people. I suspect the Chinese leadership is more sanguine. They will mention how Japan is going back to their fascist past but otherwise will just continue along.
 

pmc

Colonel
Registered Member
These malls, skyscrappers and tourst resorts are part of Soft Power. Saudi is visited by millions of people. and that include European, Turkish, Indian and South East Asian muslims. so they have to provide modern infrastructure. This is for effective management of muslims in 21st century.
I wont write impolite stuff but people who does not have modern scientific history or know anything about Islamic civilization write such thing.
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Saudi Arabia in the 21st Century. ‘The Revolution of the 30-Year-Olds’, or the Tsunami of Modernization.” Moscow: Nedra Publishing House, 2023, 216 p.

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