Раніше в інтервʼю телеканалу Fox News губернатор штату Флорида Рон ДеСантіс назвав війну в Україні «територіальною суперечкою» і применшив потребу в допомозі США Києву
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Facebook-parent Meta Platforms said on Tuesday it would cut 10,000 jobs, just four months after it let go 11,000 employees, the first Big Tech company to announce a second round of mass layoffs.
“We expect to reduce our team size by around 10,000 people and to close around 5,000 additional open roles that we haven’t yet hired,” Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said in a message to staff.
The layoffs are part of a wider restructuring at Meta that will see the company flatten its organizational structure, cancel lower priority projects and reduce its hiring rates as part of the move. The news sent Meta’s shares up 2% in premarket trading.
The move underscores Zuckerberg’s push to turn 2023 into the “Year of Efficiency” with promised cost cuts of $5 billion in expenses to between $89 billion and $95 billion.
A deteriorating economy has brought about a series of mass job cuts across corporate America: from Wall Street banks such as Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to Big Tech firms including Amazon.com and Microsoft.
The tech industry has laid off more than 280,000 workers since the start of 2022, with about 40% of them coming this year, according to layoffs tracking site layoffs.fyi.
Meta, which is pouring billions of dollars to build the futuristic metaverse, has struggled with a post-pandemic slump in advertising spending from companies facing high inflation and rising interest rates.
Meta’s move in November to slash headcount by 13% marked the first mass layoffs in its 18-year history. Its headcount stood at 86,482 at 2022-end, up 20% from a year ago.
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Федеральний адміністративний суд Німеччини відхилив позов компанії «Роснефть» до уряду країни – російська держкорпорація намагалася оскаржити запровадження зовнішнього управління двома її німецькими «дочками».
У вересні Rosneft Deutschland та RN Refining & Marketing перейшли під контроль держави та були передані на баланс Федерального мережевого агентства ФРН.
Підприємствам належав контрольний пакет акцій важливого для Німеччини нафтопереробного заводу PCK, розташованого у Шведті на сході країни.
Завод, що виробляє 12 відсотків усіх нафтопродуктів, що виготовляються у ФРН, забезпечує бензином і дизелем міста східної Німеччини, у тому числі столицю Берлін. Опікунське управління було призначено через загрозу припинення постачання нафти внаслідок повномасштабної війни, яку Росія розпочала в Україні.
Суд в Лейпцигу чотири дні розглядав позов «Роснафти», заслухавши свідчення численних свідків про стан справ усередині дочірніх підприємств російського концерну в 2022 році.
Міністерство економіки ФРН обґрунтувало своє рішення тим, що німецькі дочірні підприємства «Роснафти» могли зіткнутися з проблемами через санкції Євросоюзу щодо Росії. Банки та страхові компанії могли б припинити співпрацю з ними. Підприємствам загрожує банкрутство.
Зовнішнє управління на нафтопереробному заводі мало закінчитися 15 березня. Але відхилення позову «Роснафти» означає його продовження.
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Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse rattled the technology industry that had been the bank’s backbone, leaving shell-shocked entrepreneurs thankful for the government reprieve that saved their money while they mourned the loss of a place that served as a chummy club of innovation.
“They were the gold standard, it almost seemed weird if you were in tech and didn’t have a Silicon Valley Bank account,” Stefan Kalb, CEO of Seattle startup Shelf Engine, said during a Monday interview as he started the process of transferring millions of dollars to other banks.
The Biden administration’s move guaranteeing all Silicon Valley Bank’s deposits above the insured limit of $250,000 per account resulted in a “palpable sigh of relief” in Israel, where its booming tech sector is “connected with an umbilical cord to Silicon Valley,” said Jon Medved, founder of the Israeli venture capital crowdfunding platform OurCrowd.
But the gratitude for the deposit guarantees that will allow thousands of tech startups to continue to pay their workers and other bills was mixed with moments of reflection among entrepreneurs and venture capital partners rattled by Silicon Valley Bank’s downfall.
The crisis “has forced every company to reassess their banking arrangements and the companies that they work with,” said Rajeeb Dey, CEO of London-based startup Learnerbly, a platform for workplace learning.
Entrepreneurs who had deposited all their startups’ money in Silicon Valley Bank are now realizing it makes more sense to spread their funds across several institutions, with the biggest banks considered safer harbors.
Kalb started off Monday by opening an account at the largest in the U.S., JP Morgan Chase, which has about $2.4 trillion in deposits. That’s 13 times more than the deposits at Silicon Valley Bank, the 16th largest in the U.S.
Bank of America is getting some of the money that Electric Era had deposited at Silicon Valley Bank, and the Seattle startup’s CEO, Quincy Lee, expects having no difficulty finding other candidates to keep the rest of his company’s money as part of its diversification plan.
“Any bank is happy to take a startup’s money,” Lee said.
Even so, there are fears it will be more difficult to finance the inherently risky ideas underlying tech startups that became a specialty of Silicon Valley Bank since its founding over a poker game in 1983, just as the advent of the personal computer and faster microprocessors unleashed more innovation.
Silicon Valley quickly established itself as the “go-to” spot for venture capitalists looking for financial partners more open to unconventional business proposals than its bigger, more established peers who still didn’t have a good grasp of technology.
“They understood startups, they understood venture capital,” said Leah Ellis, CEO and co-founder of Sublime Systems, a company in Somerville, Massachusetts, commercializing a process to make low-carbon cement. “They were woven into the fabric of the startup community that I’m part of, so banking with SVB was a no brainer.”
Venture capitalists set up their accounts at Silicon Valley Bank just as the tech industry started its boom and then advised the entrepreneurs that they funded to do the same.
That cozy relationship came to an end when the bank disclosed a $1.8 billion loss on low-yielding bonds that were purchased before interest rates began to spike last year, raising alarms among its financially savvy customer base who used the fruits of technology to spread warnings that turned into a calamitous run on deposits.
Bob Ackerman, founder and managing director of venture funder AllegisCyber Capital, likened last week’s flood of withdrawal demands from Silicon Valley Bank to a self-inflicted wound by “a circular firing squad” intent on “shooting your best friend.”
Many of Silicon Valley Bank’s roughly 8,500 employees now find themselves hanging in limbo, too, even though government regulators now overseeing the operations have told them they will be offered jobs at 1.5 times their salaries for 45 days, said Rob McMillan, who had worked there for 32 years.
“We don’t know who’s going to pay us when,” McMillan said. “I think we all missed a paycheck. We don’t know if we have benefits.”
Even though all of Silicon Valley Bank’s depositors are being made whole, its demise is expected to leave a void in the technology sector that may be difficult to fill. In an essay that he posted on his LinkedIn page, prominent venture capitalist Michael Moritz compared Silicon Valley Bank to a “cherished local market where people behind the counters know the names of their customers, have a ready smile but still charge the going price when they sell a cut of meat.”
Silicon Valley Bank is fading away at a time when startups were already having a tougher go at raising money, with a downturn in technology stock values and a steady ride in interest rates caused venture capitalists to retrench. The bank often helped fill the financial gaps with one of its specialties — loans known as “venture debt” because it was woven into the funding provided by its venture capitalist customers.
“There’s going to be a lot of great ideas, a lot of great teams that don’t get funding because the barriers to entry are too high or because there are not enough people who are willing to invest,” said William Lin, co-founder of cybersecurity startup Symmetry Systems and a partner at the venture capital firm ForgePoint.
With Silicon Valley Bank gone and venture capitalists pulling in their reins, Lin expects there will be fewer startups getting money to pursue ideas in the same fields of technology. If that happens, he foresees a winnowing of competition that will eventually make the biggest tech companies even stronger than they already are.
“There’s a real day of reckoning coming in the startup world,” predicted Amit Yoran, CEO of the cybersecurity firm Tenable.
That may be true, but entrepreneurs like Lee and Kalb already feel like they had been through an emotional wringer after spending the weekend worrying that all their hard work would go down a drain if they couldn’t get their money out of Silicon Valley Bank.
“It was like being stuck inside a doomsday loop,” Lee said.
Even as he focuses on growing Shelf Engine’s business of helping grocers managing their food orders, he vowed not to forget “a very hard lesson.”
“I obviously now know banks aren’t as safe as I used to think they were,” he said.
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Молдова зараз не стикається з «безпосередньою військовою небезпекою», але є об’єктом «гібридної війни, створеної Росією» у спробі «повалити державну владу», заявив AFP міністр оборони країни Анатолій Носатий.
«Безпосередньої військової небезпеки Молдови зараз немає, але існують інші типи небезпек, які впливають на безпеку країни, – гібридна війна», – сказав Носатий після останньої серії антиурядових протестів, що відбулися 12 березня в Кишиневі.
За його словами, генеруючи «дезінформацію, напругу в нашому суспільстві», Росія намагалася «змінити політичний порядок, дестабілізувати та повалити державну владу».
12 березня поліція Молдови заявила про запобігання змові підтримуваних Росією груп людей, які були спеціально навчені, щоб викликати масові заворушення під час протесту в Кишиневі проти нового прозахідного уряду країни. Голова поліції Молдови Віорел Чернаутяну заявив, що агент під прикриттям проник у групи «диверсантів», деяких громадян Росії, яким пообіцяли 10 000 доларів США за організацію «масових заворушень».
Днями розвідувальне співтовариство США заявило, що особи, пов’язані з російською розвідкою, планують організувати протести в Молдові з метою повалення чинної влади.
Новий прозахідний уряд на чолі з колишнім міністром внутрішніх справ Доріном Речаном обійняв свою посаду в середині лютого в одній із найбідніших країн Європи. Попередня адміністрація була змушена піти з посади після тривалих заворушень і труднощів із сплатою високих цін за російський газ.
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