Tag: throws

  • Bank collapse throws a chill over clean energy industry

    Bank collapse throws a chill over clean energy industry

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    The bank’s collapse “is a major blow to early-stage and even late-stage tech startups looking to get financing,” Daniel Ives, a technology sector analyst at Wedbush Securities, said in an interview.

    SVB “was the bank that would always pick up the phone when other large money center banks wouldn’t,” Ives said, adding that the bank’s failure would “haircut valuations and put much tighter financial conditions for banks around startups.”

    The scramble to limit fallout from SVB comes at an already difficult time for U.S. companies seeking to scale up technologies that can produce power without carbon dioxide emissions or remove CO2 that’s already been dumped into the atmosphere. Their success is widely seen as key to meeting national and international climate commitments.

    Among the challenges renewable energy and climate tech startups face are persistently high inflation and rising interest rates — which boost costs for companies of all stripes. They’ve also had to contend with backlash from Republican officials, who increasingly have targeted companies that they say put social and environmental issues ahead of profits.

    “These things start to add up,” said Dan Firger, a sustainable finance expert and managing director of Great Circle Capital Advisors. “How many additional headwinds can early-stage climate tech founders sail upwind against?”

    Rising interest rates played a role

    The bank began to unravel Wednesday. But the root cause of its collapse dates back years.

    SVB, like many other banks, in recent years has dumped its customers’ deposits into government bonds, which are considered safe investments but are vulnerable to interest rate hikes.

    Then last year, the Federal Reserve started hiking rates in an aggressive bid to tamp down record-high inflation. That in turn tanked the value of SVB’s bond portfolio.

    At the same time, higher borrowing costs and waning venture capital funding left tech startups hungry for cash to keep operating. That pushed those companies to turn to their bank, SVB, to withdraw money.

    SVB couldn’t meet the demand and on Wednesday announced a plan to raise $2.25 billion in capital. The lender also disclosed that it had recently taken a $1.8 billion loss after it sold a major chunk of its bond portfolio in an effort to raise cash to pay depositors.

    The moves triggered panic among customers, many of whom had deposited far more money into the bank than the federal government will cover in the case of emergency: $250,000. Customers began pulling their deposits out of SVB and by Thursday had tanked the company’s stock 60 percent.

    “When you think about the value of a bank, its net worth is assets less liabilities,” explained Richard Berner, the co-director of the Volatility and Risk Institute at New York University. SVB’s “assets went down a lot, its liabilities didn’t go down, and the net worth of the bank could be negative. In other words, the bank could be insolvent — and that’s what happened.”

    Financial regulators rushed to address the situation and quell panic about the stability of the banking sector.

    The Bay Area-based bank was officially shut down Friday by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. then took control of the bank’s assets Friday — nearly $175 billion in customer deposits — and created a “bridge bank” that as of Monday morning granted depositors access to their money, guaranteeing all depositors would be made whole.

    The FDIC likewise intervened this weekend after depositors fled another troubled firm — Signature Bank, a New York-based lender that is known for catering to the cryptocurrency industry.

    The Federal Reserve, for its part, announced Sunday it would make available additional funding for eligible banks to ensure other banks have the ability to meet the needs of their depositors. The funding will be available through a new program that will offer loans to banks that are capable of exchanging other assets as collateral. The Fed said it does not expect to need to draw on those funds.

    The moves by the regulators have two key goals: to ensure all the banks’ customers can access their money and to prevent bank runs from happening at other lenders by convincing depositors their dollars are in good hands.

    President Joe Biden touted those efforts Monday.

    “Your deposits will be there when you need them,” Biden said in a statement. “Small businesses across the country that deposit accounts in these banks can breathe easier knowing they can pay their workers and pay their bills. And their hard working employees can breathe easier as well.”

    Why it matters to green startups

    The measures received a mixed verdict from the markets. The value of the tech-heavy Nasdaq index rose, while the Dow and S&P 500 both dropped. Regional banks were particularly hard hit, with San Francisco’s First Republic Bank shedding nearly 62 percent of its market capitalization and Western Alliance Bancorp of Phoenix dropping more than 47 percent.

    The struggles of regional banks could pose a threat to environmental startups, particularly ones that don’t have established business models.

    “Big banks generally want to do deals where it’s significant enough for them,” said Kiran Bhatraju, the founder and CEO of Arcadia, a community solar management company. “Smaller banks were able to work on niche sectors, smaller markets.”

    Community solar projects, where homeowners buy or lease a portion of large off-site photovoltaic installations, have boomed thanks to the support of midsize banks. SVB was a major player in the space, participating in more than 60 percent of community solar financing deals.

    “Years ago, [community solar] was maybe hard to understand and harder to finance as a result. Today it’s one of the best infrastructure assets in the U.S., in terms of returns,” said Bhatraju, whose company had an account with SVB. “But it probably took a smaller quote unquote regional bank to get that off the ground.”

    Climate tech companies are now waiting to see if the financial industry responds to the collapse of SVB by further tightening lending standards for startups.

    “What we experienced was the failure of a badly managed company: Silicon Valley Bank,” said Ethan Cohen-Cole, a former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston who now leads the direct air capture startup Capture6. “If the reaction in the industry is instead that this is a systemic problem, that’s going to have a much larger, much more pernicious impact on climate tech.”

    Capture6 only relied on SVB to hold its cash. Other corporate customers were more deeply integrated, with lines of credit from the bank that they could draw on to bridge fundraising rounds or as a form of insurance.

    “I’ve had over a dozen founders reach out to me and say, hey, is this something that you guys can help with as well, because now we need to find a new source for this,” said Dimitry Gershenson, the CEO of Enduring Planet, a lender to climate startups that doesn’t currently offer credit lines to companies.

    Sunrun Inc., the nation’s biggest residential solar company, had a $1.8 billion lending deal with SVB. The company hadn’t tapped $710 million of that sum.

    “Sunrun has long-standing banking relationships with a large number of financial institutions, and we remain confident in our ability to replace SVB’s undrawn commitments,” CEO Mary Powell said in a statement. “Sunrun has always believed in strength through diversification.”

    A version of this report first ran in E&E News’ Climatewire. Get access to more comprehensive and in-depth reporting on the energy transition, natural resources, climate change and more in E&E News.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Karnataka: Modi throws flower petals back at crowd at road-show in Mandya

    Karnataka: Modi throws flower petals back at crowd at road-show in Mandya

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    Mandya: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday threw flower petals back at the crowd, at several places as he was given a rousing welcome during a massive roadshow in this district headquarters city.

    Modi enthusiastically waved at a large cheering crowd, who had lined up on both sides of the route, as the ruling BJP appeared focused on winning a good number of seats in the Old Mysuru region, where it is traditionally weak. Assembly elections are due in May in Karnataka.

    The Prime Minister picked up the shower petals which got piled up on the bonnet of his car and was seen hurling them back at the crowd.
    He also got out of his car and greeted folk artists who staged a performance in his welcome.

    Modi is in the district to dedicate the Bengaluru-Mysuru Expressway to the nation. The project involves a 6-lining of the Bengaluru-Nidaghatta-Mysuru section of NH-275.

    The 118 Km long project has been developed at a total cost of around Rs 8,480 crores and will reduce the travel time between Bengaluru and Mysuru from around 3 hours to about 75 minutes.

    Modi Mandya
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi greeted with flower petals during a roadshow in Mandya district, Karnataka on Sunday

    The 1.8-km-long road show route in the city was decked up with saffron hues, as BJP flags, posters, and banners were installed all along.

    Standing on the ‘running board’ of his moving car, Modi greeted by waving at the crowd gathered on the sides of the roads and on nearby buildings, many of whom were seen chanting ‘Modi, Modi’ slogans and shouting loud cheers.

    Mandya in Old Mysuru region is a Vokkaliga community-dominated district, largely seen as a bastion of JD(S), where the Congress to is strong, and the BJP is trying to make inroads.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Kejriwal throws open Ashram flyover extension, commuters heave sigh of relief

    Kejriwal throws open Ashram flyover extension, commuters heave sigh of relief

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    New Delhi: The much-awaited Ashram flyover extension will help commuters bypass three traffic lights and commute ‘signal free’ between Noida and AIIMS, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said on Monday.

    Kejriwal inaugurated the key flyover extension on Monday, bringing relief to commuters waiting for it to open for over two months.

    The chief minister said the extension will also bring relief from long traffic jams in the area, particularly during office-going hours.

    “People will be able to reach Noida from AIIMS quickly since they will be able to bypass three traffic signals between Ashram and DND,” he said.

    The AAP national convener added that only a few minor tasks are left to be completed before the flyover can become fully operational.

    “Initially, only light vehicles will be permitted to use it for a brief period because of a high-tension wire that still needs to be removed. Once this is done, other vehicles will also be allowed. The total length of the flyover, including the ramp, is 1,425 metres,” he said.

    The chief minister congratulated the people of Delhi and acknowledged that although the flyover extension’s construction caused some traffic-related inconvenience, it was necessary to bring positive change.

    He also apologised for any trouble caused during the construction period but emphasised that the project’s completion will bring new opportunities.

    Kejriwal recognised the hard work of Public Works department (PWD) engineers and congratulated them on completing the project ahead of schedule despite initial doubts about the plan to finish it between 45 and 60 days.

    Anant Kumar, the Public Works department’s engineer-in-chief, said light vehicles will be allowed on the extended flyover for a month. Heavy vehicles will be allowed following completion of the remaining work, likely by March-end.

    The Ashram flyover was closed for traffic from January 1.

    The mega project received clearance from the Unified Traffic and Transportation Infrastructure (Planning and Engineering) Centre in 2017 and administrative approval of Rs 129 crore was granted in 2019, Kumar said.

    While construction began in 2020, the project was halted due to the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown for eight to 10 months.

    The final cost of the project came to Rs 164 crore.

    “Some work on the project was also supposed to be done by the National Highways Authority of India but the PWD took over from them due to the slow progress,” Kumar said.

    The senior PWD official said they have also developed a subway at the Maharani Bagh Ring Road stretch to help pedestrians.

    According to commuters and local residents, reopening of the flyover will not only ease traffic congestion in the area but also help people reach markets and hospitals in less time.

    Pradeep Anand, president of Sunlight Colony Residents’ Welfare Association, said people residing near the flyover and other areas had been facing a harrowing time for the past two months.

    “Since the traffic signal was closed, we had no other option but to take a U-turn from Sarai Kale Khan but it would take us nearly 30 minutes as the U-turn stretch was long and there would be heavy traffic congestion,” he said.

    The traffic signal connecting Sunlight Colony with New Friends Colony where Holy Family Hospital is situated was also shut, compounding their woes.

    “The nearest hospital for us is Holy Family Hospital in the New Friends Colony area. During emergencies, it would take us nearly an hour to reach the hospital after taking the U-turn from Sarai Kale Khan,” Anand said.

    Sushil Singh, a trader from Lajpat Nagar, said people would not be able to reach markets from Noida quickly when the flyover was shut.

    “When this (flyover) was closed, people would hate travelling by road from Noida to Lajpat Nagar. We also saw a decline in business. But now people will return to our market,” he hoped.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • House GOP’s top tax man throws K Street in a tizzy

    House GOP’s top tax man throws K Street in a tizzy

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    “These huge companies that get big tax advantages and have very good trade policies that have allowed them to invest billions in China and overlook Americans while they reap all these tax benefits — that’s something we’re going to be looking into.”

    All of that is throwing K Street into a tizzy.

    Corporate tax lobbyists are not used to taking heat from Republicans, and many don’t know what to make of Smith.

    They didn’t know him well before his surprise win last month for the committee gavel over two more traditional, business-friendly Republicans.

    And they’re not sure if this is merely a shift in rhetoric, without much actual change in policy, or if it signifies something deeper. Donald Trump struck a similarly populist note during his 2016 presidential campaign, when he railed against “carried interest.” But, once in office, he made only modest changes to tax policy as part of a largely traditional Republican tax package.

    It adds up to a much more ambiguous situation for K Streeters than when Democrats were in charge of the House, pushing a slate of tax hikes on businesses and the rich that left little doubt where they stood.

    “People are wondering how best to approach him with corporate issues,” said one former Republican tax aide. “People have spun themselves into a frenzy — but he’s still a Republican.”

    The uncertainly comes at a bad time for the business community.

    It’s not that there were great expectations that a deeply divided Congress would be able to make big tax changes. But big corporations still want some things addressed, and there will be must-pass legislation this year — dealing with the debt limit, the FAA, aid to farmers — that could also be used to change tax provisions.

    Many corporate leaders can’t believe Congress has allowed a series of time-delayed tax increases included in Republicans’ 2017 tax cuts to actually take effect and are still hoping lawmakers will reconsider provisions now making it harder to deduct research, interest and capital expenses.

    On top of that, there’s Democrats’ new “book income” minimum tax on big companies, an especially complicated levy that is giving corporate tax departments fits.

    Tax payments by big companies are projected to jump this year by 12 percent “largely” because of those increases, budget forecasters said last week.

    Smith’s ascent also comes amid a slow-motion break-up between Republicans and big business.

    The last time they were running the House, Republicans pushed through the biggest cut in the corporate tax rate in decades.

    Since then, they’ve had a major falling out with big business over everything from Trump to state voting restrictions to the 2021 Capitol riots to the rise of socially conscious investing.

    For Smith, he says, it’s a question of emphasis.

    He’s not anti-business and he’s unlikely to want to raise anyone’s taxes — no one would confuse him with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). Asked what part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act shouldn’t be extended, Smith doesn’t point to any tax cuts that he thinks ought to lapse — but to Opportunity Zones, which he says should be rewritten to better benefit rural areas.

    It’s more that he wants to focus on other things.

    Smith, 42, is part of a contingent of younger Republican lawmakers who think it’s better politics for the party to focus on blue-collar workers — something that also happens to fit Smith’s district, a poor area covering the southeast corner of Missouri. The nonpartisan Cook Political Report calls it the sixth-most conservative district in the country. Trump won there last time with 75 percent of the vote.

    And Smith emphasizes he’s not a stereotypical Republican.

    “I grew up in a working-class family. My mother was a factory worker and my dad was an auto mechanic and a preacher, and I lived in a single-wide trailer for most of my life,” he said. “My background is what drives me and the policies I’m pushing.”

    Things like the new corporate minimum tax are the “last” thing he’s focused on, Smith has said.

    He’s trying to underscore that by taking the Ways and Means Committee on the road, to the districts of his colleagues. After the first trip, to West Virginia, where lawmakers heard from local small business owners, Smith is planning another hearing next month in Oklahoma City.

    “They don’t have lobbyists in Washington, D.C.,” he said.

    Yet, he’s not completely ignoring things corporate America would happily support.

    Smith said his top priority on taxes is using the code to shore up businesses’ supply chains — something that got a lot of attention during the pandemic and which many Democrats want as well.

    “We have to use our tax and trade mechanisms to make sure we help our strategic supply chains,” he said. “We saw over the past couple years that we have a lot of gaps.”

    And he says he still supports undoing new restrictions on research and capital expenses. “Some of those issues like accelerated depreciation, R&D — they help a lot of small businesses and they help a lot of American workers.”

    Smith also sad he can work with Democrats on the Child Tax Credit — which at least raises the prospect of reviving a deal Democrats proposed last year trading an expansion of that credit for beefed-up business breaks.

    Like other Republicans, he is not willing to end work requirements long associated with the credit, as Democrats did temporarily during the pandemic. But “when it comes to looking at a number of increasing it — that’s very negotiable. I want to deliver for working-class families — the tax credit is something that delivers for them.”

    He has previously proposed allowing pregnant women to claim the credit, something that many Democrats will not support because of its links to the abortion debate.

    Even as he sounds a conciliatory note on the child credit, Smith scorches Democrats on other issues, raising questions about how much bipartisanship might actually be in the offing.

    He’s accused the administration of “colluding” with the OECD against the United States with its push for a global minimum tax, for example, and is threatening what would surely be a hugely partisan investigation into Hunter Biden’s taxes.

    As for K Street, many say they are now strategizing over how to win over the committee.

    One longtime lobbyist is focusing on other Republican members of the panel — 40 percent of whom joined Ways and Means just last month. The idea is that they will be more receptive, and Smith will have a harder time saying no to them.

    “You’re going to have to work other members of Congress even harder,” the lobbyist said, speaking on condition on anonymity.

    “He’s not going to ignore members of the committee who come to him and say, ‘We really think you need to do this.’”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Watch Video: Amir Throws The Ball In Anger After Babar Azam Hits Him For Fours In PSL – Kashmir News

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    Pakistan captain Babar Azam will lead Peshawar Zalmi in their first match of the season against Imad Wasim-led Karachi Kings. The 2020 Pakistan Super League winners, Karachi have only reached the final once.

    Playing against his former side, Babar lost the toss and was put into bat at the National Stadium in Karachi. He found himself facing up against Amir in the opening over of the contest.

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    Ahead of the clash, Amir had made headlines after speaking to local media, stating: “My job is to take wickets and win matches for my team, so for me, facing Babar or a tailender batting at number 10 will be the same.”

    With youngster Muhammad Haris smashing Mohammad Amir for a brilliant four to start the innings. Babar also smashed a solid cover drive against Amir in the first over. The two stars faced off again in the sixth over of the match where Amir drifted off his line, bowling a relatively easier delivery down the leg side. Babar simply flicked the ball away to the boundary, adding to Amir’s frustration.

    Watch: Babar’s flicked the ball away to the boundary, adding to Amir’s frustration.

    On the next delivery, Babar played out a defensive shot straight at Amir and the bowler, unable to contain his frustration, threw the ball in direction of the batter. It wasn’t aimed at Babar, though, as the wicketkeeper collected the ball.

    Watch: Amir throws the ball in anger after Babar Azam hits him for fours in PSL

    Babar continued to put on an impressive display, bringing up his fifty off 39-balls before smashing Andrew Tye for three consecutive boundaries. He was finally dismissed by Imran Tahir for 68 off 46 deliveries.

    Watch Babar Azam carves glorious cover drive off Mohammad Amir below

    Amir ended the innings with an expensive outing, conceding 42 runs in four overs without a wicket. Imad Wasim also conceded as many runs in an over less. For Peshawar, James Neesham was the pick of the bowlers as he registered figures of 2/26 in four overs.

    Wasim and veteran Shoaib Malik combined in a meticulous 131-run stand and raised the home team’s hopes, but the side eventually fell short in a dramatic run-chase.

    Babar Azam’s Peshawar Zalmi pulled off a thrilling two-run win over Karachi Kings in the second match of Pakistan Super League 2023 on Tuesday.

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  • ‘Bigg Boss 16’: Nimrit cries for help as Archana throws chilli, haldi water in eyes

    ‘Bigg Boss 16’: Nimrit cries for help as Archana throws chilli, haldi water in eyes

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    Mumbai: The prize money task seems to have taken an ugly turn as housemates go on a full revenge mode in the upcoming episode of the controversial reality show ‘Bigg Boss 16’.

    In the earlier episode, Team B featuring Archana Gautam, Shalin Bhanot and Priyanka Choudhary, won the task after suffering an hour of torture by the mandali – Shiv Thakare, Nimrit Kaur Ahluwalia and Mc Stan.

    In the upcoming episode, the roles will reverse and Team B will be seen torturing the Mandali. A promo shows that Archana will be throwing haldi and chilli mixed in water in Nimrit’s eyes retaliating to their move of putting powder in her face and eyes.

    Nimrit is seen crying in pain as she said that her face and eyes are burning.

    To which Archana says: “Haldi ka tilak toh lagane do. Humari bhi toh jal rahi thi.’

    Archana’s teammates Priyanka and Shalin are seen participating in the task. They are seen splashing cold water on Mandali as they hold on to their spots to win the Rs 50 lakh prize money.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Watch: Ranbir Kapoor throws fan’s phone after clicking selfie

    Watch: Ranbir Kapoor throws fan’s phone after clicking selfie

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    Mumbai: Often called Casanova or Saawariya boy of Bollywood, Ranbir Kapoor always keeps himself away from social media but unfortunately his one video is going viral on Instagram. In the viral clip, one of Ranbir’s fans tries to click a selfie with him. The actor is seen asking the fan to show him the picture which latter clicked. What happened after that has left the netizens shocked. Ranbir threw off his fan’s phone and everybody around there was surprised by his behaviour. 

    Some netizens are strongly condemning the reaction of Ranbir Kapoor and even asked Alia Bhatt to teach her husband manners while others claim that it was actually an ad shoot. Ranbir’s fans claim that the actor is very calm, humble and down to earth. They said that it was an ad shoot and paps are unnecessarily sharing videos to defame actors’ image. 

    Ranbir Kapoor fans also slammed Viralbhayani for sharing the video without a proper caption. They alleged that paps are sharing videos to garner views without thinking about anyone’s image and reputation.

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    On the professional front, Ranbir Kapoor will be seen along with Shraddha Kapoor in Luv Rajna’s ‘Tu Jhoothi Main Makkar’. The trailer of the film has been winning hearts and people are praising Ranbir’s acting skills. He will be also seen in ‘ANIMAL ‘helmed by Sandeep Vanga starring Rashmika Mandana as female lead.

    The actor is also gearing up for Brahmastra 2 with his wife Alia Bhatt and Deepika Padukone.



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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )