Author: Press Room

Department Of Morphological And Functional Imaging, at The Pitie Salpetriere Hospital In Paris, … [+] France. On The Left, Normal Brain. On The Right, Probable Alzheimer’s Disease. (Photo By BSIP/UIG Via Getty Images)Universal Images Group via Getty Images The National Institutes of Health’s Institute of Aging has dropped its sponsorship with the Alzheimer’s Association of a controversial project to revise clinical research standards, which it calls criteria, for determining who has Alzheimer’s disease. The relationship was unusual. NIH rarely sponsors projects to develop such standards, and almost never partners with advocacy groups. Typically, such guidance is written by expert panels…

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Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.The US is to remove preferential trading access under the African Growth and Opportunity Act from Uganda, the Central African Republic, Gabon and Niger for human rights violations and for failure to make democratic progress. President Joe Biden said Uganda, which this year passed punitive anti-gay laws including the death penalty for people engaging in certain same-sex acts, had committed “gross violations of internationally recognised human rights”. Niger and Gabon, whose governments were overthrown in coups this year, fell foul of Agoa…

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The Canadian economy has shown signs of stagnation in the recent quarter, potentially entering a technical recession due to previous aggressive rate increases by the Bank of Canada. Preliminary estimates suggest that the economy stalled at the industry level in September, marking a potential annual contraction of around 0.1%. This would be the second consecutive quarterly decline in Gross Domestic Product (GDP), falling short of the central bank’s forecast. The GDP by industry displayed minimal change from the previous month, with real GDP essentially unchanged in September. The Bank of Canada predicts weak economic growth for the next year, after…

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© Reuters Investing.com — U.S. stocks are wobbling on Tuesday, ahead of the start of the latest two-day policy meeting of the Federal Reserve and as investors look toward Apple (NASDAQ:)’s earnings and the October jobs report. Here are some of the biggest U.S. stock movers today: Pfizer (NYSE:) stock fell 1.4% after the drugmaker reported its first quarterly loss since 2019, as it recorded charges largely related to its COVID products, co-developed with BioNTech (NASDAQ:). Pinterest (NYSE:) stock soared 17.1% after the image sharing platform reported third quarter results that topped expectations as efforts to improve monetization of its…

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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A diesel fuel nozzle with new European labels to standardise gasoline pumps in the EU zone is seen at a petrol station in Nice, France, October 12, 2018. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard/File Photo By Arathy Somasekhar HOUSTON (Reuters) – Oil prices edged higher on Tuesday as a drop in euro zone inflation buoyed hopes that the European Central Bank has almost certainly finished raising interest rates, and offset higher OPEC output. futures for December delivery, were 32 cents, or 0.4% higher at $87.77 a barrel by 11:42 a.m. ET (1542 GMT) ahead of their expiry later on Tuesday.…

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The US Dollar to Canadian Dollar () exchange rate has reached a one-year high, following an underwhelming performance of Canada’s economy in the third quarter of 2023. The flat Q3 GDP comes on the heels of a slight dip in Q2, falling short of the Bank of Canada’s growth projection of +0.8%. Goods-producing industries, predominantly agriculture, have been on a downward trend for five consecutive months due to drought conditions in Western Canada. This downturn was further exacerbated by early quarter disruptions from fire and strikes, a decline in retail sales, and a stall in the post-pandemic recovery of food…

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Getty Images TL;DR Lawsuits and regulatory issues can come out of left field, but make a big impact on stock prices This week has seen a raft of these rear their head, from Burger King facing allegations of false advertising, Elon Musk planning to sue the ADL and Amazon going up against the FTC again With GDP growth in places like the US and Europe slowing to a crawl, investors are looking to markets like India for opportunities over the next decade Top weekly and monthly trades Subscribe to the Forbes AI newsletter to stay in the loop and get…

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Receive free Sovereign bonds updatesWe’ll send you a myFT Daily Digest email rounding up the latest Sovereign bonds news every morning. European countries are increasingly going directly to their own citizens to fund their ballooning borrowing needs, in a retail push partly designed to press high street banks into raising the interest rates they pay to depositors.Italy, Belgium and Portugal have issued about €60bn worth of bonds directly to households so far this year, up from €26bn last year, as savers flock to the higher yields offered by governments.Italy is returning to the market in October with a second sale…

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