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  • Taylor Swift fans flock to German museum to see Ophelia painting

    Taylor Swift fans flock to German museum to see Ophelia painting

    Taylor Swift fans are driving a surge in popularity of a German museum exhibiting a portrait of the Shakespeare character Ophelia, recently reimagined in a song and music video from Swift’s new album The Life of a Showgirl.

    The Hessische…

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  • Here’s the scoop on Big Tech’s multi-million dollar carbon removal climate bet

    Here’s the scoop on Big Tech’s multi-million dollar carbon removal climate bet

    Today, after [US pulp and paper] factories chip the softwood and digest it into pulp, the leftover lignin, spent chemicals, and remaining organic matter form a dark, syrupy by-product known as black liquor. It’s then concentrated into a…

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  • Britain’s landmark agricultural gene editing law kicks in next month. Here’s what to expect

    Britain’s landmark agricultural gene editing law kicks in next month. Here’s what to expect

    Over the next few years, we could see the arrival of not just genetically altered tomatoes, but also bananas and potatoes, with traits such as lasting longer, having higher nutrients, and they could (in theory) even be cheaper too.

    For…

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  • Ace Frehley, Kiss’s original guitarist, dies aged 74 | Ents & Arts News

    Ace Frehley, Kiss’s original guitarist, dies aged 74 | Ents & Arts News

    Kiss founding member Ace Frehley, the rock band’s original lead guitarist, has died aged 74.

    He passed away peacefully, surrounded by his family, in Morristown, New Jersey, his agent said.

    He had suffered a recent fall.

    A statement…

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  • Natural designer Zoe Chan on building a cleaner, greener life

    Natural designer Zoe Chan on building a cleaner, greener life

    My personal style signifier is sports- and swimwear – particularly my Youswim two-piece sets. I live in them; I have them in every single colour. It’s like Hunza G [in crinkle-stretch fabric] but I find the Youswim ones more elasticated….

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  • Saudi Arabia in talks with US for defence pact

    Saudi Arabia in talks with US for defence pact

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    Saudi Arabia is discussing a defence deal with the Trump administration similar to a US-Qatar pact last month…

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  • Swiss court ruling has left a big unknown over Credit Suisse AT1 saga

    Swiss court ruling has left a big unknown over Credit Suisse AT1 saga

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    The writer is a managing partner and head of research at Axiom Alternative Investments

    The AT1 bond market does not have many friends. When Swiss authorities controversially wiped out $17bn of the Additional Tier 1 bonds issued by Credit Suisse, many claimed that the market was dead. As the argument went: “Surely no one would be foolish enough to read the terms and conditions and still buy bonds that can be worth zero overnight?”

    Lots of people were, it turned out: since lows hit in the wake of the failure of Credit Suisse, a Bloomberg index of the price of the bonds is up 50 per cent. And 2024 still saw a near 60 per cent increase in issuance to €46bn, according to Barclays. This year issuance has reached €34bn.

    AT1s were introduced as a form of supplementary bank capital, designed to be wiped out in a crisis to cover losses. They are crucial to reduce banks cost of equity and increase their capacity to lend. The issue with the Credit Suisse AT1s is whether the bonds were wiped out fairly. The Swiss Federal Court ruled on Tuesday that the treatment of the bonds was unlawful — a decision my investment firm supports as we own some bonds affected and are taking separate legal action. Now we are hearing a similar argument to the one made at the time of the Credit Suisse failure, only in reverse: if you cannot wipe out AT1 capital when an entity is a “gone concern”, the asset class is dead.

    But the circumstances of the Credit Suisse saga are idiosyncratic. To simplify, Swiss regulator Finma argued that it had basically three grounds to wipe out the bonds: two contractual grounds based on the terms of the bonds, and one general legal right, as an authority overseeing the bank’s resolution. The court dismissed the contractual grounds with a reasoning that is strictly limited to the specifics of this case. The terms and conditions allowed the wipeout in two situations: i) a notification by Finma of the non-viability of the bank and request by it for the wipeout of both AT1 and Tier 2 bonds or ii) necessary state aid improving the capital of the bank. On the first point, the court noted that Finma issued no such notification and, incomprehensibly, did not wipe out Tier 2 bonds. It could have done so. On the second point, the court says that Credit Suisse only received liquidity, and liquidity does not improve capital.

    The last nail in the coffin? Finma argued that, as AT1 eligible bonds, the terms were maybe unclear but should have allowed the wipeout. The court answered that Finma should not have authorised the bonds if they did not meet AT1 requirements.

    The discussion on the “general legal right” is also very intriguing. There were many ways for the Swiss authorities to zero the bonds. Swiss banking law gives huge discretion to Finma as a resolution authority and the court points that it explicitly refused to declare a resolution event and wipe out the bonds, presumably to protect the shareholders who received $3.2bn from UBS in the takeover of Credit Suisse and would have been left with nothing in a resolution. Under the Swiss constitution, an infringement on property rights requires a law and emergency ordinances can only be used as a substitute if no law is readily available.

    None of this has direct implications for the rest of Europe. European authorities have already proved that swift and strict application of resolution laws can be done with little litigation risk. Sberbank Europe was wound down in 2022 and even the fall of Banco Popular in 2017 did not leave many pathways for AT1 bondholders to pursue redress in court.

    Where does this leave UBS? Our firm has an interest in the outcome as we own UBS bonds but hold short positions on the stock. It’s the big unknown, and the Swiss court was very careful to point out that it was not answering that question — yet. This is why it calls its own decision “partial”. But the full text of the ruling hints at three possibilities.

    Ruling that the ordinance wiping out the bonds is null could simply mean that the bonds are reinstated and reintroduced in UBS’s balance sheet. Whether UBS could receive indemnification from the Swiss government, in the middle of the current tense discussion on massive new capital requirements for the bank is another story. But the court could also rule that the AT1s remain void and that its decision only opens the right to seek indemnification from Finma or from the now combined Credit Suisse-UBS.

    Who pays what in that scenario remains highly speculative — not to mention that this complex decision is not final and Finma will appealed against it. The Credit Suisse AT1 saga is far from over.

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  • Silicon Valley takes stock of the AI bubble – Financial Times

    Silicon Valley takes stock of the AI bubble – Financial Times

    1. Silicon Valley takes stock of the AI bubble  Financial Times
    2. Stocks may be in an AI bubble. Is it time to horde cash?  USA Today
    3. ‘Absolutely’ a market bubble: Wall Street sounds the alarm on AI-driven boom as investors go all in  Yahoo Finance
    4. IMF’S GEORGIEVA SAYS AI INVESTMENT BOOM EXPECTED TO CONTRIBUTE BETWEEN 0.1% AND 0.8% TO GLOBAL GROWTH  NewsX
    5. Chance of AI market correction is ‘pretty high,’ says ex-Meta exec Nick Clegg as he pushes back on superintelligence  CNBC

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  • Blue plaque to be unveiled at home of Thomas the Tank Engine creator | Heritage

    Blue plaque to be unveiled at home of Thomas the Tank Engine creator | Heritage

    Eighty years since the first of a beloved fleet of trains was introduced to the world, a national blue plaque is being unveiled at the redbrick house in Gloucestershire where the Rev W Awdry worked on his railway stories.

    The blue plaque to be…

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  • Active Surfaces® purify the air at a Melbourne train station : DesignWanted

    Active Surfaces® purify the air at a Melbourne train station : DesignWanted

    Train stations in city centres are urban areas often associated with dirt and pollution. However, in the heart of Melbourne, a railway station is quietly cleaning the air around it. The Arden Station façade actively fights pollution, kills…

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