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  • US retailers are running out of pennies

    US retailers are running out of pennies

    US businesses are literally going penniless.

    Since the Trump administration ended minting the one-cent coins earlier this year, those still in circulation are becoming harder to find. Many stores are now rounding their cash sales down to the nearest five cents, saying there are no federal guidelines on how to proceed.

    “That adds up really quickly,” said Dylan Jeon, senior director of government relations with the National Retail Federation

    In February, President Donald Trump said producing the coin was wasteful and too expensive and called on social media to “rip the waste out of our great nation’s budget, even if it’s a penny at a time”.

    The US Mint officially stopped making pennies in May. The Treasury Department estimated shortages would start in early 2026, but they actually came much sooner. Banks can’t get pennies from the federal government, so businesses can’t get them from the banks.

    “We first heard about the issue in late August, early September,” Mr Jeon said. “It’s really impacting any business that deals with cash payments.”

    Now store clerks don’t know what to do when their tills are bare and someone needs change in pennies from a cash purchase.

    The temporary solution for many, Mr Jeon said, is rounding the price of the sale up or down to the nearest five cents so the customer can use a nickel, the next lowest tender in the US.

    But some cities, including New York, require retailers to give exact change and others don’t allow cash payments to differ from card payments for the same item, Mr Jeon said.

    To avoid lawsuits and customer complaints, many retailers have chosen to just round down.

    “You’re talking about losing up to four cents for every cash transaction across multiple stores across the country,” he said. “It’s unsustainable.”

    Many stores are now urging customers to pay in exact change. Others are hosting promotions for customers to bring in extra pennies they have at home.

    Convenience stores are some of the hardest hit by the shortage, said Jeff Lenard, a spokesperson for the National Association of Convenience Stores.

    Convenience giant Kwik Trip has announced it is rounding down to the nickel, which it says will cost it up to $3m (£2.3m) this year.

    American coins have been discontinued before, including the half-cent, three-cent and 20-cent pieces that were retired in the 1800s, Mr Lenard said. It’s been many years, though, since a staple like the penny – which entered ciruclation in 1793 – has ceased production.

    “People don’t want the penny until they can’t get it back in change,” he said.

    It costs nearly four cents to make a penny.

    But keeping the zinc and copper coins in circulation will help lower-income Americans who primarily pay in cash, said Mark Weller, executive director of Americans for Common Cents.

    “These are people that don’t have the access to checking accounts and charge cards and banking services,” he said. “You hurting lower-income groups when you start rounding transactions.”

    He also thinks the government savings from not producing pennies will be offset by the need for more nickels, which are worth five cents but cost nearly 14 cents to make.

    People watching the penny world believe there needs to be federal guidance for both businesses and shoppers on rounding, how to carry out transactions during the shortage, and generally what to do with the coins.

    “There will always be pennies out there, it’s just such a low-utilisation coin,” said Mr Jeon. “People forget about them in their pockets, they lose them in their couch, they’re sitting in jars. Those are coins that aren’t making it into circulation.”

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  • Pfizer sues Metsera, Novo Nordisk over rival obesity drug bid

    Pfizer sues Metsera, Novo Nordisk over rival obesity drug bid

    Thomas Fuller | SOPA Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

    Pfizer said on Friday it had filed a lawsuit against Metsera and Novo Nordisk saying Metsera breached its merger agreement obligations in declaring the Danish drugmaker’s $8.5 billion bid for the U.S. obesity drug developer to be a superior offer.

    Pfizer asked the Delaware court where it filed the lawsuit to issue a temporary restraining order to block Metsera from terminating the agreement. The lawsuit was not immediately available in the court’s electronic filing system.

    Metsera has given Pfizer until Tuesday to raise its offer.

    Pfizer said its suit says that Novo’s bid is an illegal attempt by a dominant company in the market to bypass antitrust scrutiny and carries significant regulatory risks.

    The legal action comes as Pfizer received early antitrust clearance for its proposed $7.3 billion acquisition of Metsera from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. It granted early termination of the waiting period under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act, more than a week ahead of the November 7 deadline.

    Pfizer, which does not currently sell a weight-loss drug, is trying to enter the fast-growing obesity market projected to reach $150 billion by the early 2030s.

    The company has faced setbacks in developing its own treatments and is looking to offset falling COVID-related revenue and looming patent expirations.

    Novo Nordisk, maker of Wegovy and Ozempic, is seeking to regain ground lost to Eli Lilly, whose drugs Zepbound and Mounjaro have shown stronger clinical results.

    Metsera’s pipeline includes experimental GLP-1 and amylin-based therapies that analysts say could generate $5 billion in peak sales.

    Metsera and Novo did not immediately reply to Reuters’ requests for comment.

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  • SpaceX launches 100th successful Starlink mission of 2025

    SpaceX launches 100th successful Starlink mission of 2025

    Oct. 31 (UPI) — A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carried a payload of 28 Starlink satellites into space before decoupling and returning to Earth following a successful launch on Friday afternoon.

    The launch occurred at 1:41 p.m. PDT from the…

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  • COVID in Pregnancy Linked to Kids' Risk of Neurodevelopmental Disorders – MedPage Today

    1. COVID in Pregnancy Linked to Kids’ Risk of Neurodevelopmental Disorders  MedPage Today
    2. Covid in pregnancy tied to autism, developmental issues, study says  The Washington Post
    3. COVID-19 Infection in Pregnancy Raises Risk of Preterm Birth  European…

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  • Technical Assistance Report-Report on the Physical Energy Flow and Air Emissions Accounts Mission (February 3–7, 2025)

    Technical Assistance Report-Report on the Physical Energy Flow and Air Emissions Accounts Mission (February 3–7, 2025)


    Summary



    A technical assistance mission visited the Instituto Nacional de Estadística e Informática (INEI) of Peru during February 3–7, 2025. The objective of the mission was to review, assess, analyze, and validate the results of the Physical Energy Flow Accounts (PEFA) and Air Emissions Accounts (AEA) for 2019 and discuss dissemination strategies, and guidelines for preparing metadata and data releases of these accounts. The Covid-19 Pandemic affected the availability and timeliness of the source data for compiling the accounts. The accounts for 2019 are being developed as a learning exercise and will be published as experimental accounts in May 2025. The time series up to 2023 will be compiled as soon as the new data is available. This mission was conducted with support from the Switzerland State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) under a two-year “Environmental and Climate Change Statistics Capacity Development Program” to assist countries in designing and implementing programs for developing timely and internationally comparable statistics that can help in formulating policies to address the environmental, financial, economic, and social implications of climate change. This mission also provided recommendations for improvement as needed, in particular, on the adjustments for residence principle. The mission provided hands-on assistance to make residence adjustments on land, water and air transport operated, both on PEFA and AEA, using national accounts data on transport as well as the data on air transport from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Most of the adjustments were incorporated to the accounts on site. The mission also discussed guidelines for preparing the publication of the results of the accounts and their respective metadata. The objective is that by May 2025, the country would release the first set of experimental indicators that can be used for broader stakeholder engagement and for setting up a mechanism for regular production of the accounts. To accomplish this, additional human resources need to be allocated to the compilation of the PEFA and the AEA. The present mission reaffirmed the need to enhance communication, collaboration and coordination among data producing agencies and implement data sharing. To support progress in the above work areas, the mission recommended the following priority recommendations to compile PEFA and AEA: Use the data from the supply and use table of the national accounts and the balance of payments to finalize the adjustments of transport services; publish the results and metadata of the PEFA and the AEA for 2019; and update the AEA for 2019 and compile the accounts for 2020 and 2021 when the inventory data are available in March 2025. Compile the PEFA 2020–2022, as energy balances for those years are already available.



    Subject:

    Climate change,
    Environment,
    Greenhouse gas emissions,
    National accounts,
    Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability (PEFA),
    Public financial management (PFM)



    Keywords:

    Air Emissions,
    Climate change,
    Climate policy,
    Climate.,
    Energy,
    Environment,
    Greenhouse gas emissions,
    Human capital,
    National accounts,
    Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability (PEFA)

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  • Have No Fear, Google Has Plans to Enshittify AI Search With Ads, Too

    Have No Fear, Google Has Plans to Enshittify AI Search With Ads, Too

    Google’s AI Overview has somehow successfully managed to get people to be less engaged with search results, clicking through less often, and less likely to fact-check the information presented to them. So you know what that means:…

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  • UN Security Council backs Moroccan plan for disputed Western Sahara – France 24

    1. UN Security Council backs Moroccan plan for disputed Western Sahara  France 24
    2. UN Security Council supports Morocco’s plan for Western Sahara  Al Jazeera
    3. Trump eyes Algeria-Morocco rift over Western Sahara in latest peace bid  AL-Monitor
    4. Eight…

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  • I’m slowly building up to it

    I’m slowly building up to it

    Ilia Malinin: “I feel very good”

    “Overall, I feel very good,” said Malinin, who had been home training in Virginia before traveling to Skate Canada.

    He said he won’t plan an extended training bloc with choreographer Shae-Lynn Bourne and jump…

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  • Canada launches C$6.4bn minerals push as race to counter China heats up

    Canada launches C$6.4bn minerals push as race to counter China heats up

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

    Canada has announced 25 critical minerals investments and partnerships with allies as it races to develop C$6.4bn (US$4.6bn) worth of projects to counter China’s dominance of the global trade.

    The government on Friday announced the investments and offtake agreements, which would underpin the projects, following two days of talks in Toronto with other G7 countries.

    Canada’s energy minister Tim Hodgson said Ottawa would use the country’s Defence Production Act to stockpile critical minerals. The move echoes the US’s use of national security legislation to strengthen its domestic supplies.

    “This enables Canada to launch our own defence stockpiling regime, and to support multilateral stockpiling efforts,” Hodgson said.

    G7 nations met this week in Toronto to develop a so-called buyers club as part of a critical minerals production alliance that seeks to restore multilateralism at a time when countries such as Australia and Japan have negotiated rare earth deals with the US.

    The announcements come as Canada tries to position itself as a crucial supplier to western economies that have grown concerned about China’s stranglehold on rare earth and critical minerals supplies.

    US President Donald Trump and China’s leader Xi Jinping struck a deal earlier this week to settle a dispute over Beijing’s restrictions on exports of rare earths, minerals critical to global manufacturers, in particular defence. But the agreement is for one year only and leaves China as the dominant supplier.

    The White House has stepped up its buying of critical minerals, which are vital for smartphones, electric vehicles and fighter jets.

    The EU is also racing to develop stockpiling strategies as anxieties remain about China’s control of supply chains.

    Dan Jørgensen, the European commissioner for energy and housing, said fostering international co-operation on critical raw materials among G7 countries was an important development.

    “Responsible and secure supply chains are a shared strategic asset, not a competitive zero-sum game,” he said on Friday.

    Canada’s critical minerals investments come as part of its increased Nato defence spending commitments, which Trump has criticised as too low.

    According to the announcement, Norway’s Vianode would build a multibillion-dollar synthetic graphite plant in Ontario to supply anode materials for EV batteries while Rio Tinto’s scandium plant in Sorel-Tracy, Quebec, also secured multilateral support.

    As part of the deal Canada will guarantee to buy the producers’ output at a pre-determined price, helping to guarantee a return on upstream investment.

    Nouveau Monde Graphite has acquired offtake arrangements with Japan’s Panasonic and Luxembourg-based Traxys, as well as a pledge of investment from the Canadian and Japanese governments.

    Ottawa has also sought to spur more critical minerals mining in some of Canada’s deposits across the country.

    Earlier this month, Teck Resources said it was in talks with the US and Canada about supplying minerals used in defence.

    Hodgson told the G7 conference this week: “We’ve been working closely with Teck to expand capacity at their Trail smelter in British Columbia to produce niche minerals like germanium and gallium and antimony, where mechanisms like stockpiling or floor pricing will be necessary to proceed to a construction decision.”

    China dominates the supply chain for rare earths and imposed sweeping export controls this year that escalated tensions.

    Additional reporting from Camilla Hodgson in London

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