Category: Business

  • MIL-OSI: New AvidXchange Report Shows Finance Teams More Prepared Than in 2020—But Still Investing to Weather Uncertainty

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CHARLOTTE, N.C., July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — AvidXchange, Inc. a leading provider in accounts payable (AP) automation software and payment solutions for mid-market businesses and their suppliers, today announced the results of its 2025 Economic Sentiment Survey, conducted via Pollfish.

    The survey of 709 finance professionals reveals a key shift: 67% feel more prepared to handle today’s economic uncertainty than they did in 2020, crediting increased technology investment and hard-earned experience. Many are continuing to double down on digital tools to stay agile amid inflation, supply chain disruptions, and ongoing market volatility.

    Economic Concerns Still Weigh Heavily

    While confidence is growing, post-Covid hangover remains. 86% of finance professionals express concern about the current state of the economy, with nearly half taking actions like cutting discretionary spending. Additionally, 50% say they are “very concerned” about the likelihood of a recession, and 22% expect one to hit within the next 12 months.

    Tariffs and inflation are also reshaping financial planning:

    • 83% report supplier cost increases due to inflation
    • 52% say tariffs have led to moderate forecast adjustments
    • Nearly 1 in 3 organizations are sharing those costs with customers

    These findings reflect a market still in flux—and the pressure on finance leaders to respond swiftly and strategically.

    Technology Fuels Financial Readiness

    Despite uncertainty, tech investments are enabling confidence. Seven in 10 finance professionals say technology is critical to their ability to respond to changing conditions, and 72% say tools implemented early in the pandemic are paying off today.

    In fact, 49% say they are more likely to invest in AI and automation specifically because of ongoing economic uncertainty. Top areas of focus include:

    • AI and machine learning (48%)
    • Data security and compliance tools (44%)
    • Collaboration and workflow tools (36%)

    Finance teams are embracing technology not just to cut costs—but to enable smarter, faster decisions.

    Finance Professionals Emerge as Strategic Partners

    The survey findings point to a fundamental shift in how finance is viewed: from operational support to strategic leadership.

    Nearly 30% of teams are conducting scenario planning and financial modeling, while 27% are focused on strengthening supplier relationships—clear signals of a proactive, future-focused mindset.

    With better tools and a broader mandate, finance leaders are stepping into roles that directly shape business direction, resilience, and growth.

    Momentum in a Shifting Economy

    Though 52% of respondents expect volatility to continue into 2026, the overall tone is one of momentum. Finance professionals are moving from reactive to proactive, leaning into their role as stewards of strategy, stability, and innovation.

    “Finance teams aren’t just adapting—they’re planning smarter, automating faster, and driving strategic decisions across the business,” said Dan Drees, President at AvidXchange. “This research reinforces what we’re seeing in the market—technology is a critical enabler for companies looking to drive efficiency and fuel growth.”

    To read the full report visit https://www.avidxchange.com/resources/finance-teams-economic-volatility/.

    About AvidXchange®
    AvidXchange (Nasdaq: AVDX) is a leading provider in accounts payable (AP) automation, offering intelligent AP software and payment solutions specifically designed for mid-market businesses and their suppliers. With 25 years of industry experience, AvidXchange modernizes the way businesses manage their expenses and payments by offering AI-enhanced software coupled with support from experts. Empowering over 8,500 growth-driven businesses, AvidXchange increases efficiency, control, and visibility in financial operations and has securely processed payments to more than 1.3 million suppliers through its proprietary payment network over the past five years. For more information, visit avidxchange.com.  

    Media Contact:
    Alexis Riddick
    Public Relations Manager
    pr@avidxchange.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: New AvidXchange Report Shows Finance Teams More Prepared Than in 2020—But Still Investing to Weather Uncertainty

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CHARLOTTE, N.C., July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — AvidXchange, Inc. a leading provider in accounts payable (AP) automation software and payment solutions for mid-market businesses and their suppliers, today announced the results of its 2025 Economic Sentiment Survey, conducted via Pollfish.

    The survey of 709 finance professionals reveals a key shift: 67% feel more prepared to handle today’s economic uncertainty than they did in 2020, crediting increased technology investment and hard-earned experience. Many are continuing to double down on digital tools to stay agile amid inflation, supply chain disruptions, and ongoing market volatility.

    Economic Concerns Still Weigh Heavily

    While confidence is growing, post-Covid hangover remains. 86% of finance professionals express concern about the current state of the economy, with nearly half taking actions like cutting discretionary spending. Additionally, 50% say they are “very concerned” about the likelihood of a recession, and 22% expect one to hit within the next 12 months.

    Tariffs and inflation are also reshaping financial planning:

    • 83% report supplier cost increases due to inflation
    • 52% say tariffs have led to moderate forecast adjustments
    • Nearly 1 in 3 organizations are sharing those costs with customers

    These findings reflect a market still in flux—and the pressure on finance leaders to respond swiftly and strategically.

    Technology Fuels Financial Readiness

    Despite uncertainty, tech investments are enabling confidence. Seven in 10 finance professionals say technology is critical to their ability to respond to changing conditions, and 72% say tools implemented early in the pandemic are paying off today.

    In fact, 49% say they are more likely to invest in AI and automation specifically because of ongoing economic uncertainty. Top areas of focus include:

    • AI and machine learning (48%)
    • Data security and compliance tools (44%)
    • Collaboration and workflow tools (36%)

    Finance teams are embracing technology not just to cut costs—but to enable smarter, faster decisions.

    Finance Professionals Emerge as Strategic Partners

    The survey findings point to a fundamental shift in how finance is viewed: from operational support to strategic leadership.

    Nearly 30% of teams are conducting scenario planning and financial modeling, while 27% are focused on strengthening supplier relationships—clear signals of a proactive, future-focused mindset.

    With better tools and a broader mandate, finance leaders are stepping into roles that directly shape business direction, resilience, and growth.

    Momentum in a Shifting Economy

    Though 52% of respondents expect volatility to continue into 2026, the overall tone is one of momentum. Finance professionals are moving from reactive to proactive, leaning into their role as stewards of strategy, stability, and innovation.

    “Finance teams aren’t just adapting—they’re planning smarter, automating faster, and driving strategic decisions across the business,” said Dan Drees, President at AvidXchange. “This research reinforces what we’re seeing in the market—technology is a critical enabler for companies looking to drive efficiency and fuel growth.”

    To read the full report visit https://www.avidxchange.com/resources/finance-teams-economic-volatility/.

    About AvidXchange®
    AvidXchange (Nasdaq: AVDX) is a leading provider in accounts payable (AP) automation, offering intelligent AP software and payment solutions specifically designed for mid-market businesses and their suppliers. With 25 years of industry experience, AvidXchange modernizes the way businesses manage their expenses and payments by offering AI-enhanced software coupled with support from experts. Empowering over 8,500 growth-driven businesses, AvidXchange increases efficiency, control, and visibility in financial operations and has securely processed payments to more than 1.3 million suppliers through its proprietary payment network over the past five years. For more information, visit avidxchange.com.  

    Media Contact:
    Alexis Riddick
    Public Relations Manager
    pr@avidxchange.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Best Egg Accelerates Release Cycles and Test Coverage with LambdaTest

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    San Francisco, CA, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — LambdaTest, a GenAI-powered quality engineering platform, has announced that Best Egg, a fintech platform providing flexible solutions for people with limited access to credit, has significantly improved its release velocity and test reliability using LambdaTest’s cloud infrastructure.

    With a growing product portfolio and increasing user demand, Best Egg’s QA team needed a more scalable, efficient way to maintain test coverage across multiple browsers and devices. Switching to LambdaTest’s cloud-based testing platform enabled the company to transition from manual and local device testing to a fully automated, CI/CD-integrated pipeline.

    The results have been transformative: test execution times have dropped by 75%, from a full hour to approximately 15 minutes, enabling the faster execution of hundreds of tests daily, smoother releases, and improved product experiences for customers. Best Egg now has run over 2.7 million automation tests on 128k+ real devices, volumes previously unthinkable, helping ensure flawless performance across a wide range of customer devices.

    “LambdaTest helps us meet the demands of the changing environment as a fintech company, giving us the assurance and confidence to deliver best-in-class experiences,” said Tenny Agustin, Engineering Operations Lead, Best Egg. “The change in our approach to testing and quality was about honoring the trust customers place in us. Making sure that the core of the product is stable and healthy, and reliable is a huge part of our brand.”

    With LambdaTest, Best Egg’s engineers experience less context switching, and they can focus on writing tests and building features rather than troubleshooting infrastructure. This shift has helped their technical talent drive innovation within the organization more efficiently.

    The improved speed and scale of testing have translated into 100% release confidence. With broader coverage and earlier detection of issues, Best Egg can release faster, with greater assurance in the quality of every build and instilling trust in customers making critical financial decisions.

    LambdaTest’s real device cloud and parallel execution capabilities enabled Best Egg’s QA engineers to identify and fix issues earlier in the development cycle. Best Egg also enhanced visibility across their test environments and eliminated bottlenecks that previously slowed down their agile workflows.

    “Our goal is to make sure every release is robust, fast, and user-centric,” said Mohit Juneja, VP of Strategic Sales and Partnerships at LambdaTest. “Best Egg’s success story shows how the right testing infrastructure can help high-growth fintech companies scale QA without compromise. We’re proud to support their mission to make financial confidence more accessible.”

    As Best Egg continues to expand its offerings, LambdaTest remains a key partner, helping the team deliver digital experiences that are secure, reliable, and friction-free for end users.

    About LambdaTest
    LambdaTest is a GenAI-powered Quality Engineering Platform that empowers teams to test intelligently, smarter, and ship faster. Built for scale, it offers a full-stack testing cloud with 10K+ real devices and 3,000+ browsers.

    With AI-native test management, MCP servers, and agent-based automation, LambdaTest supports Selenium, Appium, Playwright, and all major frameworks. AI Agents like HyperExecute and KaneAI bring the power of AI and cloud into your software testing workflow, enabling seamless automation testing with 120+ integrations.

    LambdaTest Agents accelerate your testing throughout the entire SDLC, from test planning and authoring to automation, infrastructure, execution, RCA, and reporting.

    For more information, please visit https://lambdatest.com 

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: What Higher Rates Haven’t Changed: The Role of Smart Credit – and Smarter Relationships

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CHICAGO, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — In a high-rate environment, business lending has become more selective, but not impossible. For banks and borrowers who focus on fundamentals, communication, and long- term planning, financing is still getting done. To help make sense of what’s changing (and what still works), we spoke with Brian R. Monson, Senior Vice President and Deputy Chief Credit Officer at First American Bank.

    With more than two decades of experience in commercial credit and underwriting, Brian offers timely insights into borrower behavior, what banks are really looking for right now, and why strong relationships still make the biggest difference.

    Q: How has the rise in interest rates changed the lending landscape?

    Brian: When rates spiked, many business owners did what you’d expect: they paused and reassessed. Loan payments were suddenly much higher. Deals that made sense a year ago didn’t pencil out the same way. So, sponsors started bringing in more equity, valuations came down, and people got more cautious.

    We saw a slowdown in loan demand across the board. Businesses crave certainty, and when that’s in short supply, they tend to wait.

    Q: Are you still seeing strong lending activity in certain cases?

    Brian: Absolutely. While the volume of deals has slowed, the fundamentals haven’t changed. We’re still making loans every day to companies that are well-managed, financially sound, and planning ahead. What’s different now is that credit decisions require more context. Numbers matter, but the story behind those numbers matters more.

    Q: What kind of factors do you look at beyond the financials?

    Brian: We take a holistic view. Are receivables being collected on time? Are vendors getting paid within terms? Is the business managing liquidity effectively? These are the kinds of operational details that tell us how a company is run. And in a tighter environment, they’re more important than ever.

    Some sectors, like logistics, are under more pressure. It’s a capital-intensive industry, and with softer freight volumes and equipment devaluations, many operators are struggling. But being in a high-risk industry doesn’t automatically make a borrower risky. It just means we have to structure the deal the right way and really understand what’s going on behind the scenes.

    Q: What kinds of financing does First American Bank typically provide?

    Brian: We finance two things: capital goods and time gaps. That means if you’re buying long-term assets like equipment, or if you need working capital to bridge the gap between inventory purchases and customer payments – we can help.

    What we don’t finance are losses, non-operating activities, or distributions that lack reasonably foreseeable resolution. That’s something we’re upfront about. Being clear on how the financing will be used protects both the bank and the borrower.

    Q: What support do you offer for businesses that don’t have deep internal finance teams?

    Brian: A lot of our clients are owner-led or family-run businesses. They might not have a CFO or a formal advisory team. So, they rely on us for guidance, not just capital. That’s where we really differentiate ourselves. Our bankers know their industries. They’ve seen similar situations before, and they can help clients navigate decisions beyond just the loan itself.

    We don’t make 30,000-foot credit decisions. And we don’t walk away from borrowers just because they don’t fit a rigid profile.

    Q: Can you give an example of how a relationship made a difference for a client?

    Brian: I worked with a company in the automotive manufacturing space who was doing great: profitable, growing, well-run. But their national bank cut ties with them overnight because they didn’t like the sector. No conversation. Just a blanket exit strategy.

    We took the time to understand their business. We saw their long-term performance. We stepped in. That client is still with us today.

    Those are the moments where a real banking relationship matters. And it becomes even more important when something goes wrong, whether that’s a lost customer, a delayed receivable, or a temporary cash crunch. We want to be the first call our clients make, not the last.

    Q: What does risk-based lending look like in practice right now?

    Brian: It’s about being thoughtful and intentional. We ask the right questions, get clarity on the borrower’s business model, and structure loans to support long-term health. It’s not just about getting to “yes” or “no,” it’s about understanding how the credit will perform over time and making sure we’re aligned with the client’s goals.

    Interest rates will continue to fluctuate. The economy will shift. But strong fundamentals, transparent conversations, and long-term thinking – that’s what always works.

    Looking for a banking partner who understands your business?

    Our relationship-first approach to lending is built for long-term growth. Connect with a business banker to learn more today.

    Disclaimers: This information is for educational purposes only. It is not legal or tax advice. For legal or tax advice, you should consult your own legal, tax, and investment advisors.   

    First American Bank is a Member FDIC.

    About First American Bank
    First American Bank is the largest privately held bank in Illinois, with over $7 billion in assets and 61 locations across Illinois, Wisconsin, and Florida. Family-owned and operated since the 1960s, the bank offers a full range of financial services, including personal banking, business lending, and trust and wealth management. Known for combining community bank service with large-scale capabilities, First American Bank is committed to long-term relationships, financial stability, and delivering tailored solutions that help customers thrive.

    Media Contact: 
    Teresa Lee 
    305-631-6400 
    tlee@firstambank.com 

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Bitcoin Mining Just Got Better: VNBTC Rolls Out Bitcoin Cloud Mining Plans Enabling Stable Bitcoin Earnings

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LONDON, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — VNBTC, the top cloud mining platform, has unveiled its latest AI-powered Bitcoin cloud mining plans designed to provide a stable daily income.It offers automated mining directly from a user’s phone or PC. With millions of users jumping aboard as crypto interest peaks, VNBTC’s new platform adjustments offer simplicity and stable income for anyone looking to turn Bitcoin’s rally into consistent passive earnings.

    How VNBTC Cloud Mining Works

    1. Choose a contract plan or start mining with a Free $79 Trial Bonus
      On signing up, the platform offers a $79 Dogecoin starter bonus, a risk-free way to experience cloud mining. Here are some of the mining plans to choose from.
    2. From the various contract plans offered, choose a suitable Mining Contract
      VNBTC offers a range of transparent contract plans for Bitcoin and other coins. The plans clearly show your investment, earning rate, and contract duration, so miners can clearly see their selection before making a choice. 
    3. Receive Daily Earnings
      VNBTC offers a fixed daily ROI, for example, 1.2% from the starter plan. This is credited to the user’s account every 24 hours and is directly viewable in the user’s dashboard. 
    4. Track your earnings, withdraw earnings, or reinvest in other mining plans.
      Use the VNBTC cloud mining app’s live dashboard for real-time tracking of earnings, hashrate, and energy use. Withdraw your crypto or reinvest anytime you meet the minimum withdrawal amount .
    5. Boost earnings with Referral Bonuses and Bounty programs
      Invite friends to earn 3% commission on direct referrals and 1.8% on indirect referrals. Also, participate in the platform’s bounty campaigns to enhance your passive income .

    What Real Users Are Saying About VNBTC

    VNBTC holds an impressive rating on Trustpilot. This makes the platform one of the top mining platforms. Users frequently praise its reliability, daily payouts, and user-friendliness.

    This is what some of the users say about the top cloud mining platform.

    “VNBTC offers Straight payouts, one of the most promising cloud mining services.”

    “VNBTC offers a clean and simple mining experience, with no hidden fees or surprises.”

    Whether you’re new to crypto or looking to scale your portfolio, VNBTC offers a smoother, smarter path to stable Bitcoin earnings. Start today and mine with no stress, just great results.

    Media Contact:

    James Carter

    Marketing Specialist, VNBTC

    James.Carter@vnbtc.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/5dc5b4c1-635e-4de9-86df-dec59ed93f30

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: National Fuel Schedules Third Quarter Fiscal 2025 Earnings Conference Call

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    WILLIAMSVILLE, N.Y., July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — National Fuel Gas Company (NYSE: NFG) today announced it will release its third quarter fiscal 2025 earnings results on Wednesday, July 30, 2025 after market close.

    A conference call to discuss the results will be held on Thursday, July 31, 2025 beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET. Prepared remarks from the executive team are planned for approximately 20 minutes followed by a question and answer session.

    All participants must pre-register to join this conference using the Participant Registration link.

    A webcast link to the conference call will be provided under the Events Calendar on the NFG Investor Relations website at investor.nationalfuelgas.com.

    A replay will be available following the call through the end of the day, Thursday, August 7, 2025. To access the replay, dial 1-866-813-9403 and provide Access Code 592578.

    National Fuel is a diversified energy company headquartered in Western New York that operates an integrated collection of natural gas assets across four business segments: Exploration & Production, Pipeline & Storage, Gathering, and Utility. Additional information about National Fuel is available at www.nationalfuel.com.

    For additional information, contact:

    Natalie Fischer, Director of Investor Relations (716) 857-7315
    Kathryn Nikisch-Hoffman, Equity Plan Administrator (716) 857-7340
    Karen Merkel, Media Contact (716) 857-7654
    Email: nfg_investor_relations@natfuel.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Remittix Adds XRP as Default On-Ramp Option in Crypto-to-Fiat Payment System

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    KOŠICE, Slovakia, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Remittix, a blockchain-powered remittance solution, today announced the integration of XRP as a default on-ramp option within its crypto-to-fiat transfer system. The move supports Remittix’s mission to increase efficiency, reduce fees, and streamline global transactions across emerging markets and remote work economies.

    This integration comes ahead of the company’s highly anticipated Q3 2025 wallet release, which will enable users to send supported cryptocurrencies—including XRP, BTC, and ETH—directly to bank accounts in over 30 countries.

    “Adding XRP as a default on-ramp is a strategic step in supporting our goal to make real-time global settlements more accessible,” said a Remittix spokesperson. “XRP’s transaction speed and low costs make it a natural fit for the kind of utility-first experience we aim to deliver.”

    Why XRP Matters to Remittix Users

    The XRP integration is designed to benefit:

    • Freelancers and gig workers seeking affordable conversion options
    • Merchants in underserved regions requiring faster fund disbursements
    • Remitters and families who rely on low-cost, near-instant transfers

    With the wallet’s upcoming release, users will be able to leverage Remittix’s cross-chain infrastructure to seamlessly convert digital assets into fiat currencies and perform bank withdrawals with minimal friction.

    Key Highlights:

    • XRP Now Supported as a default funding method within Remittix’s transfer system
    • 30+ Countries Supported for crypto-to-bank transfers
    • 40+ Cryptocurrencies and 30+ Fiat Currencies integrated into the payment bridge
    • CertiK-Audited Smart Contracts for enhanced security
    • $250,000 Community Giveaway underway to reward early adopters

    Since the start of its presale, Remittix has raised over $16 million and distributed more than 553 million RTX tokens, with a 50% token bonus currently available for new participants. The platform is built to serve the rapidly growing demand for decentralized financial tools that enable real-world payments, particularly across borders.

    About Remittix

    Remittix is a decentralized payment and remittance platform that connects crypto users with real-world banking systems. Its blockchain-based wallet enables users to convert, transfer, and withdraw crypto in fiat currencies—bridging traditional finance and decentralized technology.

    For more information or to participate in the ongoing presale:
    Website: https://remittix.io
    Linktree: https://linktr.ee/remittix
    Giveaway: https://gleam.io/competitions/nz84L-250000-remittix-giveaway

    Contact:
    Andy Černý
    andy@remittix.io

    Disclaimer: This content is provided by Remittix. The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this content are solely those of the content provider and do not necessarily reflect the views of this media platform or its publisher. We do not endorse, verify, or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information presented. We do not guarantee any claims, statements, or promises made in this article. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice.Investing in crypto and mining-related opportunities involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. It is possible to lose all your capital. These products may not be suitable for everyone, and you should ensure that you understand the risks involved. Seek independent advice if necessary. Speculate only with funds that you can afford to lose. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. However, due to the inherently speculative nature of the blockchain sector—including cryptocurrency, NFTs, and mining—complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed.Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release. In the event of any legal claims or charges against this article, we accept no liability or responsibility.Globenewswire does not endorse any content on this page.

    Legal Disclaimer: This media platform provides the content of this article on an “as-is” basis, without any warranties or representations of any kind, express or implied. We assume no responsibility for any inaccuracies, errors, or omissions. We do not assume any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information presented herein. Any concerns, complaints, or copyright issues related to this article should be directed to the content provider mentioned above.

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/7b45e712-259a-4ded-95c9-be34c796d850

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/33f87e3b-8512-4125-8426-403febe4316f

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/50254fc1-8b14-46ff-9e17-b847685e83b8

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0cd36569-ce35-4f96-9cda-434dd100d6d7

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Remittix Adds XRP as Default On-Ramp Option in Crypto-to-Fiat Payment System

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    KOŠICE, Slovakia, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Remittix, a blockchain-powered remittance solution, today announced the integration of XRP as a default on-ramp option within its crypto-to-fiat transfer system. The move supports Remittix’s mission to increase efficiency, reduce fees, and streamline global transactions across emerging markets and remote work economies.

    This integration comes ahead of the company’s highly anticipated Q3 2025 wallet release, which will enable users to send supported cryptocurrencies—including XRP, BTC, and ETH—directly to bank accounts in over 30 countries.

    “Adding XRP as a default on-ramp is a strategic step in supporting our goal to make real-time global settlements more accessible,” said a Remittix spokesperson. “XRP’s transaction speed and low costs make it a natural fit for the kind of utility-first experience we aim to deliver.”

    Why XRP Matters to Remittix Users

    The XRP integration is designed to benefit:

    • Freelancers and gig workers seeking affordable conversion options
    • Merchants in underserved regions requiring faster fund disbursements
    • Remitters and families who rely on low-cost, near-instant transfers

    With the wallet’s upcoming release, users will be able to leverage Remittix’s cross-chain infrastructure to seamlessly convert digital assets into fiat currencies and perform bank withdrawals with minimal friction.

    Key Highlights:

    • XRP Now Supported as a default funding method within Remittix’s transfer system
    • 30+ Countries Supported for crypto-to-bank transfers
    • 40+ Cryptocurrencies and 30+ Fiat Currencies integrated into the payment bridge
    • CertiK-Audited Smart Contracts for enhanced security
    • $250,000 Community Giveaway underway to reward early adopters

    Since the start of its presale, Remittix has raised over $16 million and distributed more than 553 million RTX tokens, with a 50% token bonus currently available for new participants. The platform is built to serve the rapidly growing demand for decentralized financial tools that enable real-world payments, particularly across borders.

    About Remittix

    Remittix is a decentralized payment and remittance platform that connects crypto users with real-world banking systems. Its blockchain-based wallet enables users to convert, transfer, and withdraw crypto in fiat currencies—bridging traditional finance and decentralized technology.

    For more information or to participate in the ongoing presale:
    Website: https://remittix.io
    Linktree: https://linktr.ee/remittix
    Giveaway: https://gleam.io/competitions/nz84L-250000-remittix-giveaway

    Contact:
    Andy Černý
    andy@remittix.io

    Disclaimer: This content is provided by Remittix. The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this content are solely those of the content provider and do not necessarily reflect the views of this media platform or its publisher. We do not endorse, verify, or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information presented. We do not guarantee any claims, statements, or promises made in this article. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice.Investing in crypto and mining-related opportunities involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. It is possible to lose all your capital. These products may not be suitable for everyone, and you should ensure that you understand the risks involved. Seek independent advice if necessary. Speculate only with funds that you can afford to lose. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. However, due to the inherently speculative nature of the blockchain sector—including cryptocurrency, NFTs, and mining—complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed.Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release. In the event of any legal claims or charges against this article, we accept no liability or responsibility.Globenewswire does not endorse any content on this page.

    Legal Disclaimer: This media platform provides the content of this article on an “as-is” basis, without any warranties or representations of any kind, express or implied. We assume no responsibility for any inaccuracies, errors, or omissions. We do not assume any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information presented herein. Any concerns, complaints, or copyright issues related to this article should be directed to the content provider mentioned above.

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/7b45e712-259a-4ded-95c9-be34c796d850

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/33f87e3b-8512-4125-8426-403febe4316f

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/50254fc1-8b14-46ff-9e17-b847685e83b8

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0cd36569-ce35-4f96-9cda-434dd100d6d7

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Westamerica Bancorporation Reports Second Quarter 2025 Financial Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN RAFAEL, Calif., July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Westamerica Bancorporation (Nasdaq: WABC), parent company of Westamerica Bank, generated net income for the second quarter 2025 of $29.1 million and diluted earnings per common share (“EPS”) of $1.12. Second quarter 2025 results compare to first quarter 2025 net income of $31.0 million and EPS of $1.16.

    “Westamerica’s second quarter 2025 results benefited from the Company’s low-cost operating principles. The annualized cost of funding interest-earning loans, bonds and cash was 0.22 percent for the second quarter 2025. The Company recognized no provision for credit losses in the second quarter 2025. At June 30, 2025, nonperforming assets were $5.0 million and the allowance for credit losses on loans was $13.8 million. Westamerica operated efficiently, spending 39 percent of its revenue on operating costs in the second quarter 2025”, said Chairman, President and CEO David Payne. “Second quarter 2025 results generated an annualized 11.2 percent return on average common equity. Westamerica paid a $0.46 per common share dividend during the second quarter 2025, and retired 773 thousand common shares using its share repurchase plan. Westamerica’s capital ratios remain at historically high levels exceeding the highest regulatory guidelines,” concluded Payne.

    Net interest income on a fully-taxable equivalent (FTE) basis was $54.6 million for the second quarter 2025, compared to $56.4 million for the first quarter 2025. The annualized yield earned on loans, bonds and cash for the second quarter 2025 was 4.07 percent, compared to 4.14 percent for the first quarter 2025. The annualized cost of funding interest-earning loans, bonds and cash was 0.22 percent for the second quarter 2025, compared to 0.24 percent for the first quarter 2025.

    The Company provided no provision for credit losses in the second quarter 2025 compared to a $550 thousand reversal of provision for credit losses in the first quarter of 2025. The allowance for credit losses on loans was $13.8 million at June 30, 2025 compared to $13.9 million at March 31, 2025.

    Noninterest income for the second quarter 2025 totaled $10.3 million compared to $10.3 million for the first quarter 2025.

    Noninterest expenses were $25.5 million for the second quarter 2025 and $25.1 million for the first quarter 2025. The increase in noninterest expense is primarily due to higher salaries and benefits expense due to more business days in the second quarter 2025 compared to the first quarter 2025 and higher occupancy and equipment expense.

    The income tax provision (FTE) for the second quarter 2025 was $10.3 million compared to $11.1 million for the first quarter 2025.

    Westamerica Bancorporation’s wholly owned subsidiary Westamerica Bank, operates commercial banking and trust offices throughout Northern and Central California.

    Westamerica Bancorporation Web Address: www.westamerica.com

    For additional information contact:
    Westamerica Bancorporation
    1108 Fifth Avenue, San Rafael, CA 94901
    Robert A. Thorson – Investor Relations Contact
    707-863-6090
    investments@westamerica.com 

    FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION:

    The following appears in accordance with the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995:

    This press release may contain forward-looking statements about the Company, including descriptions of plans or objectives of its management for future operations, products or services, and forecasts of its revenues, earnings or other measures of economic performance. Forward-looking statements can be identified by the fact that they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts. They often include the words “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “estimate,” or words of similar meaning, or future or conditional verbs such as “will,” “would,” “should,” “could,” or “may.”

    Forward-looking statements, by their nature, are subject to risks and uncertainties. A number of factors — many of which are beyond the Company’s control — could cause actual conditions, events or results to differ significantly from those described in the forward-looking statements. The Company’s most recent reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the annual report for the year ended December 31, 2024 filed on Form 10-K and quarterly report for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 filed on Form 10-Q, describe some of these factors, including certain credit, interest rate, operational, liquidity and market risks associated with the Company’s business and operations. Other factors described in these reports include changes in business and economic conditions, competition, fiscal and monetary policies, disintermediation, cyber security risks, legislation including the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999, and mergers and acquisitions.

    Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made. The Company does not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect circumstances or events that occur after the date forward looking statements are made.

        Public Information July 17, 2025  
    WESTAMERICA BANCORPORATION        
    FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS        
    June 30, 2025        
               
    1. Net Income Summary.        
        (in thousands except per-share amounts)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
      Net Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 54,562   $ 64,100   -14.9 % $ 56,390  
      Reversal of Provision        
      for Credit Losses         n/m   (550 )
      Noninterest Income   10,315     10,500   -1.8 %   10,321  
      Noninterest Expense   25,529     26,130   -2.3 %   25,127  
      Income Before Taxes (FTE)   39,348     48,470   -18.8 %   42,134  
      Income Tax Provision (FTE)   10,282     13,008   -21.0 %   11,097  
      Net Income $ 29,066   $ 35,462   -18.0 % $ 31,037  
               
      Average Common Shares        
      Outstanding   25,889     26,680   -3.0 %   26,642  
      Diluted Average Common        
      Shares Outstanding   25,889     26,681   -3.0 %   26,642  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Basic Earnings Per Common        
      Share $ 1.12   $ 1.33   -15.8 % $ 1.16  
      Diluted Earnings Per        
      Common Share   1.12     1.33   -15.8 %   1.16  
      Return On Assets (a)   1.93 %   2.18 %     2.03 %
      Return On Common        
      Equity (a)   11.2 %   14.4 %     11.9 %
      Net Interest Margin (FTE) (a)   3.85 %   4.15 %     3.90 %
      Efficiency Ratio (FTE)   39.3 %   35.0 %     37.7 %
               
      Dividends Paid Per Common        
      Share $ 0.46   $ 0.44   4.5 % $ 0.44  
      Common Dividend Payout        
      Ratio   41 %   33 %     38 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
      Net Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 110,952   $ 130,194   -14.8 %  
      (Reversal of) Provision        
      for Credit Losses   (550 )   300   n/m  
      Noninterest Income   20,636     20,597   0.2 %  
      Noninterest Expense   50,656     52,229   -3.0 %  
      Income Before Taxes (FTE)   81,482     98,262   -17.1 %  
      Income Tax Provision (FTE)   21,379     26,383   -19.0 %  
      Net Income $ 60,103   $ 71,879   -16.4 %  
               
      Average Common Shares        
      Outstanding   26,263     26,677   -1.6 %  
      Diluted Average Common        
      Shares Outstanding   26,263     26,678   -1.6 %  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Basic Earnings Per Common        
      Share $ 2.29   $ 2.69   -14.9 %  
      Diluted Earnings Per        
      Common Share   2.29     2.69   -14.9 %  
      Return On Assets (a)   1.98 %   2.21 %    
      Return On Common        
      Equity (a)   11.6 %   14.8 %    
      Net Interest Margin (FTE) (a)   3.87 %   4.23 %    
      Efficiency Ratio (FTE)   38.5 %   34.6 %    
               
      Dividends Paid Per Common        
      Share $ 0.90   $ 0.88   2.3 %  
      Common Dividend Payout        
      Ratio   39 %   33 %    
               
    2. Net Interest Income.        
        (dollars in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
      Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 57,751   $ 69,407   -16.8 % $ 59,786  
      Interest Expense   3,189     5,307   -39.9 %   3,396  
      Net Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 54,562   $ 64,100   -14.9 % $ 56,390  
               
      Average Earning Assets $ 5,652,443   $ 6,145,626   -8.0 % $ 5,794,836  
      Average Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities   2,693,505     3,001,786   -10.3 %   2,770,099  
               
      Yield on Earning Assets        
      (FTE) (a)   4.07 %   4.50 %     4.14 %
      Cost of Funds (a)   0.22 %   0.35 %     0.24 %
      Net Interest Margin (FTE) (a)   3.85 %   4.15 %     3.90 %
      Interest Expense /        
      Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities (a)   0.48 %   0.71 %     0.50 %
      Net Interest Spread (FTE) (a)   3.59 %   3.79 %     3.64 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
      Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 117,537   $ 138,502   -15.1 %  
      Interest Expense   6,585     8,308   -20.7 %  
      Net Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 110,952   $ 130,194   -14.8 %  
               
      Average Earning Assets $ 5,723,246   $ 6,132,497   -6.7 %  
      Average Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities   2,731,590     2,978,676   -8.3 %  
               
      Yield on Earning Assets        
      (FTE) (a)   4.11 %   4.50 %    
      Cost of Funds (a)   0.24 %   0.27 %    
      Net Interest Margin (FTE) (a)   3.87 %   4.23 %    
      Interest Expense /        
      Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities (a)   0.49 %   0.56 %    
      Net Interest Spread (FTE) (a)   3.62 %   3.94 %    
               
    3. Loans & Other Earning Assets.        
        (average volume, dollars in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
               
      Total Assets $ 6,042,100   $ 6,549,203   -7.7 % $ 6,187,321  
      Total Earning Assets   5,652,443     6,145,626   -8.0 %   5,794,836  
      Total Loans   762,216     838,016   -9.0 %   789,935  
      Commercial Loans   115,943     133,605   -13.2 %   120,189  
      Commercial Real Estate        
      Loans   488,960     487,209   0.4 %   497,379  
      Consumer Loans   157,313     217,202   -27.6 %   172,367  
      Total Investment Securities   4,236,303     4,944,191   -14.3 %   4,395,565  
      Debt Securities Available for        
      Sale   3,400,199     4,079,896   -16.7 %   3,553,755  
      Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity   836,104     864,295   -3.3 %   841,810  
      Total Interest-Bearing Cash   653,924     363,419   79.9 %   609,336  
               
      Loans / Deposits   15.7 %   16.1 %     15.9 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
               
      Total Assets $ 6,114,310   $ 6,537,562   -6.5 %  
      Total Earning Assets   5,723,246     6,132,497   -6.7 %  
      Total Loans   775,999     845,785   -8.3 %  
      Commercial Loans   118,054     133,514   -11.6 %  
      Commercial Real Estate        
      Loans   493,146     488,099   1.0 %  
      Consumer Loans   164,799     224,172   -26.5 %  
      Total Investment Securities   4,315,494     5,021,365   -14.1 %  
      Debt Securities Available for        
      Sale   3,476,553     4,152,185   -16.3 %  
      Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity   838,941     869,180   -3.5 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing Cash   631,753     265,347   138.1 %  
               
      Loans / Deposits   15.8 %   16.0 %    
               
    4. Deposits, Other Interest-Bearing Liabilities & Equity.    
        (average volume, dollars in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
               
      Total Deposits $ 4,841,803   $ 5,202,620   -6.9 % $ 4,958,554  
      Noninterest Demand   2,245,077     2,485,023   -9.7 %   2,293,059  
      Interest-Bearing Transaction   908,367     981,703   -7.5 %   935,054  
      Savings   1,611,845     1,642,806   -1.9 %   1,649,631  
      Time greater than $100K   27,306     34,721   -21.4 %   29,460  
      Time less than $100K   49,208     58,367   -15.7 %   51,350  
      Total Short-Term Borrowings   96,779     284,189   -65.9 %   104,604  
      Bank Term Funding Program        
      Borrowings       200,000   n/m    
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   96,779     84,189   15.0 %   104,604  
      Shareholders’ Equity   1,037,185     990,927   4.7 %   1,055,925  
               
      Demand Deposits /        
      Total Deposits   46.4 %   47.8 %     46.2 %
      Transaction & Savings        
      Deposits / Total Deposits   98.4 %   98.2 %     98.4 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
               
      Total Deposits $ 4,899,856   $ 5,290,840   -7.4 %  
      Noninterest Demand   2,268,936     2,508,702   -9.6 %  
      Interest-Bearing Transaction   921,637     1,019,998   -9.6 %  
      Savings   1,630,633     1,667,261   -2.2 %  
      Time greater than $100K   28,377     35,427   -19.9 %  
      Time less than $100K   50,273     59,452   -15.4 %  
      Total Short-Term Borrowings   100,670     196,538   -48.8 %  
      Bank Term Funding Program        
      Borrowings       131,291   n/m  
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   100,670     65,247   54.3 %  
      Shareholders’ Equity   1,046,504     978,384   7.0 %  
               
      Demand Deposits /        
      Total Deposits   46.3 %   47.4 %    
      Transaction & Savings        
      Deposits / Total Deposits   98.4 %   98.2 %    
               
    5. Interest Yields Earned & Rates Paid.        
        (dollars in thousands)  
        Q2’2025  
        Average Income/ Yield (a) /  
        Volume Expense Rate (a)  
               
      Interest & Loan Fee Income Earned:        
      Total Earning Assets (FTE) $ 5,652,443   $ 57,751   4.07 %  
      Total Loans (FTE)   762,216     10,591   5.57 %  
      Commercial Loans (FTE)   115,943     1,833   6.34 %  
      Commercial Real Estate        
      Loans   488,960     6,452   5.29 %  
      Consumer Loans   157,313     2,306   5.88 %  
      Total Investments (FTE)   4,236,303     39,887   3.75 %  
      Total Debt Securities        
      Available for Sale (FTE)   3,400,199     31,354   3.67 %  
      Corporate Securities   1,945,959     12,898   2.65 %  
      Collateralized Loan        
      Obligations   792,914     12,405   6.19 %  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   273,083     2,334   3.42 %  
      Securities of U.S.        
      Government Sponsored        
      Entities   311,923     2,777   3.56 %  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions        
      (FTE)   62,093     506   3.26 %  
      Other Debt Securities        
      Available for Sale (FTE)   14,227     434   12.21 %  
      Total Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity (FTE)   836,104     8,533   4.08 %  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   51,839     304   2.35 %  
      Corporate Securities   737,787     7,816   4.24 %  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions        
      (FTE)   46,478     413   3.56 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing Cash   653,924     7,273   4.40 %  
               
      Interest Expense Paid:        
      Total Earning Assets   5,652,443     3,189   0.22 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities   2,693,505     3,189   0.48 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing        
      Deposits   2,596,726     3,045   0.47 %  
      Interest-Bearing Transaction   908,367     44   0.02 %  
      Savings   1,611,845     2,950   0.73 %  
      Time less than $100K   49,208     37   0.30 %  
      Time greater than $100K   27,306     14   0.21 %  
      Total Short-Term Borrowings   96,779     144   0.60 %  
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   96,779     144   0.60 %  
               
      Net Interest Income and        
      Margin (FTE)   $ 54,562   3.85 %  
               
        Q2’2024  
        Average Income/ Yield (a) /  
        Volume Expense Rate (a)  
      Interest & Loan Fee Income Earned:        
      Total Earning Assets (FTE) $ 6,145,626   $ 69,407   4.50 %  
      Total Loans (FTE)   838,016     11,441   5.49 %  
      Commercial Loans (FTE)   133,605     2,418   7.28 %  
      Commercial Real Estate        
      Loans   487,209     6,014   4.96 %  
      Consumer Loans   217,202     3,009   5.57 %  
      Total Investments (FTE)   4,944,191     53,005   4.27 %  
      Total Debt Securities        
      Available for Sale (FTE)   4,079,896     44,236   4.31 %  
      Corporate Securities   2,090,829     14,366   2.75 %  
      Collateralized Loan        
      Obligations   1,347,475     24,620   7.23 %  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   241,391     1,465   2.43 %  
      Securities of U.S.        
      Government sponsored        
      entities   309,395     2,777   3.59 %  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions        
      (FTE)   72,319     543   3.01 %  
      U.S. Treasury Securities   4,260     54   5.08 %  
      Other Debt Securities        
      Available for Sale (FTE)   14,227     411   11.55 %  
      Total Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity (FTE)   864,295     8,769   4.06 %  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   70,804     401   2.27 %  
      Corporate Securities   730,978     7,815   4.28 %  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions        
      (FTE)   62,513     553   3.54 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing Cash   363,419     4,961   5.40 %  
               
      Interest Expense Paid:        
      Total Earning Assets   6,145,626     5,307   0.35 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities   3,001,786     5,307   0.71 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing        
      Deposits   2,717,597     2,460   0.36 %  
      Interest-Bearing Transaction   981,703     69   0.03 %  
      Savings   1,642,806     2,322   0.57 %  
      Time less than $100K   58,367     49   0.34 %  
      Time greater than $100K   34,721     20   0.23 %  
      Total Short-Term Borrowings   284,189     2,847   4.02 %  
      Bank Term Funding Program        
      Borrowings   200,000     2,692   5.40 %  
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   84,189     155   0.74 %  
               
      Net Interest Income and        
      Margin (FTE)   $ 64,100   4.15 %  
               
    6. Noninterest Income.        
        (dollars in thousands except per-share amounts)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
      Service Charges on Deposit        
      Accounts $ 3,368   $ 3,469   -2.9 % $ 3,381  
      Merchant Processing        
      Services   2,687     2,733   -1.7 %   2,733  
      Debit Card Fees   1,664     1,706   -2.5 %   1,581  
      Trust Fees   867     811   6.9 %   899  
      ATM Processing Fees   482     540   -10.7 %   463  
      Other Service Fees   450     450   0.0 %   429  
      Life Insurance Gains   106       n/m   102  
      Other Noninterest Income   691     791   -12.6 %   733  
      Total Noninterest Income $ 10,315   $ 10,500   -1.8 % $ 10,321  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Total Revenue (FTE) $ 64,877   $ 74,600   -13.0 % $ 66,711  
      Noninterest Income /        
      Revenue (FTE)   15.9 %   14.1 %     15.5 %
      Service Charges /        
      Avg. Deposits (a)   0.28 %   0.27 %     0.28 %
      Total Revenue (FTE) Per        
      Avg. Common Share (a) $ 10.05   $ 11.25   -10.6 % $ 10.16  
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
      Service Charges on Deposit        
      Accounts $ 6,749   $ 6,939   -2.7 %  
      Merchant Processing        
      Services   5,420     5,240   3.4 %  
      Debit Card Fees   3,245     3,249   -0.1 %  
      Trust Fees   1,766     1,605   10.0 %  
      ATM Processing Fees   945     1,131   -16.4 %  
      Other Service Fees   879     888   -1.0 %  
      Life Insurance Gains   208       n/m  
      Other Noninterest Income   1,424     1,545   -7.8 %  
      Total Noninterest Income $ 20,636   $ 20,597   0.2 %  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Total Revenue (FTE) $ 131,588   $ 150,791   -12.7 %  
      Noninterest Income /        
      Revenue (FTE)   15.7 %   13.7 %    
      Service Charges /        
      Avg. Deposits (a)   0.28 %   0.26 %    
      Total Revenue (FTE) Per        
      Avg. Common Share (a) $ 10.10   $ 11.37   -11.1 %  
               
    7. Noninterest Expense.        
        (dollars in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
               
      Salaries and Related Benefits $ 12,303   $ 12,483   -1.4 % $ 12,126  
      Occupancy and Equipment   5,154     5,158   -0.1 %   5,038  
      Outsourced Data Processing   2,709     2,511   7.9 %   2,697  
      Limited Partnership        
      Operating Losses   915     1,440   -36.5 %   915  
      Professional Fees   386     362   6.6 %   395  
      Courier Service   687     686   0.1 %   688  
      Other Noninterest Expense   3,375     3,490   -3.3 %   3,268  
      Total Noninterest Expense $ 25,529   $ 26,130   -2.3 % $ 25,127  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Noninterest Expense /        
      Avg. Earning Assets (a)   1.81 %   1.71 %     1.76 %
      Noninterest Expense /        
      Revenues (FTE)   39.3 %   35.0 %     37.7 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
               
      Salaries and Related Benefits $ 24,429   $ 25,069   -2.6 %  
      Occupancy and Equipment   10,192     10,198   -0.1 %  
      Outsourced Data Processing   5,406     5,047   7.1 %  
      Limited Partnership        
      Operating Losses   1,830     2,880   -36.5 %  
      Professional Fees   781     764   2.2 %  
      Courier Service   1,375     1,335   3.0 %  
      Other Noninterest Expense   6,643     6,936   -4.2 %  
      Total Noninterest Expense $ 50,656   $ 52,229   -3.0 %  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Noninterest Expense /        
      Avg. Earning Assets (a)   1.78 %   1.71 %    
      Noninterest Expense /        
      Revenues (FTE)   38.5 %   34.6 %    
               
    8. Allowance for Credit Losses.        
        (dollars in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
               
      Average Total Loans $ 762,216   $ 838,016   -9.0 % $ 789,935  
               
      Beginning of Period        
      Allowance for Credit        
      Losses on Loans (ACLL) $ 13,914   $ 15,879   -12.4 % $ 14,780  
      Reversal of Provision for        
      Credit Losses         n/m   (550 )
      Net ACLL (Losses)        
      Recoveries   (127 )   73   n/m   (316 )
      End of Period ACLL $ 13,787   $ 15,952   -13.6 % $ 13,914  
               
      Gross ACLL Recoveries /        
      Gross ACLL Losses   87 %   105 %     82 %
      Net ACLL (Losses)        
      Recoveries/        
      Avg. Total Loans (a)   -0.07 %   0.04 %     -0.16 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
               
      Average Total Loans $ 775,999   $ 845,785   -8.3 %  
               
      Beginning of Period ACLL $ 14,780   $ 16,867   -12.4 %  
      (Reversal of) Provision for        
      Credit Losses   (550 )   300   n/m  
      Net ACLL Losses   (443 )   (1,215 ) -63.5 %  
      End of Period ACLL $ 13,787   $ 15,952   -13.6 %  
               
      Gross ACLL Recoveries /        
      Gross ACLL Losses   83 %   66 %    
      Net ACLL Losses /        
      Avg. Total Loans (a)   -0.12 %   -0.29 %    
               
        (dollars in thousands)
            %  
        6/30/25 6/30/24 Change 3/31/25
      Allowance for Credit Losses        
      on Loans $ 13,787   $ 15,952   -13.6 % $ 13,914  
      Allowance for Credit Losses        
      on Held to Maturity        
      Securities   1     1   0.0 %   1  
      Total Allowance for Credit        
      Losses $ 13,788   $ 15,953   -13.6 % $ 13,915  
               
      Allowance for Unfunded        
      Credit Commitments $ 201   $ 201   0.0 % $ 201  
               
    9. Credit Quality.        
        (dollars in thousands)
            %  
        6/30/25 6/30/24 Change 3/31/25
      Nonperforming Loans:        
      Nonperforming Nonaccrual        
      Loans $   $ 971   n/m $  
      Performing Nonaccrual        
      Loans   4,553       n/m    
      Total Nonaccrual Loans   4,553     971   368.9 %    
      Accruing Loans 90+ Days        
      Past Due   411     580   -29.1 %   277  
      Total Nonperforming Loans $ 4,964   $ 1,551   220.1 % $ 277  
               
      Total Loans Outstanding $ 748,264   $ 831,842   -10.0 % $ 771,030  
               
      Total Assets   5,825,069     6,312,145   -7.7 %   5,966,624  
               
      Loans:        
      Allowance for Credit Losses        
      on Loans $ 13,787   $ 15,952   -13.6 % $ 13,914  
      Allowance for Credit Losses        
      on Loans / Loans   1.84 %   1.92 %     1.80 %
      Nonperforming Loans /        
      Total Loans   0.66 %   0.19 %     0.04 %
               
    10. Liquidity.        
               
      At June 30, 2025, the Company had $626,437 thousand in cash balances. During the twelve months ending June 30, 2026, the Company expects to receive $288,000 thousand in principal payments from its debt securities. If additional operational liquidity is required, the Company can pledge debt securities as collateral for borrowing purposes; at June 30, 2025, the Company’s debt securities which qualify as collateral for borrowing totaled $3,522,823 thousand. In the ordinary course of business, the Company pledges debt securities as collateral for certain depository customers; at June 30, 2025, the Company had pledged $715,788 thousand in debt securities for depository customers. In the ordinary course of business, the Company pledges debt securities as collateral for borrowing from the Federal Reserve Bank; at June 30, 2025, the Company had pledged $703,398 thousand in debt securities at the Federal Reserve Bank. During the six months ended June 30, 2025, the Company’s average borrowings from the Federal Reserve Bank and correspondent banks were $-0- thousand and $-0- thousand, respectively, and at June 30, 2025, the Company had no borrowings from the Federal Reserve Bank or other correspondent banks. At June 30, 2025, the Company had access to borrowing from the Federal Reserve up to $703,398 thousand based on collateral pledged at June 30, 2025. At June 30, 2025, the Company’s estimated unpledged collateral qualifying debt securities totaled $1,683,788 thousand. Debt securities eligible as collateral are shown at market value.
               
              (in thousands)
              6/30/25
      Debt Securities Eligible as        
      Collateral:        
      Corporate Securities       $ 2,517,133  
      Collateralized Loan        
      Obligations rated AAA         257,649  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions         106,428  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities         339,710  
      Securities of U.S. Government        
      Sponsored Entities         301,903  
      Total Debt Securities Eligible        
      as Collateral       $ 3,522,823  
               
      Debt Securities Pledged        
      as Collateral:        
      Debt Securities Pledged        
      at the Federal Reserve Bank       ($ 703,398 )
      Deposits by Public Entities         (715,788 )
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements         (412,956 )
      Other         (6,893 )
      Total Debt Securities Pledged        
      as Collateral       ($ 1,839,035 )
               
      Estimated Debt Securities        
      Available to Pledge       $ 1,683,788  
               
    11. Capital.        
        (in thousands, except per-share amounts)
            %  
        6/30/25 6/30/24 Change 3/31/25
               
      Shareholders’ Equity $ 921,783   $ 815,600   13.0 % $ 923,138  
      Total Assets   5,825,069     6,312,145   -7.7 %   5,966,624  
      Shareholders’ Equity/        
      Total Assets   15.82 %   12.92 %     15.47 %
      Shareholders’ Equity/        
      Total Loans   123.19 %   98.05 %     119.73 %
      Tangible Common Equity        
      Ratio   14.03 %   11.21 %     13.71 %
      Common Shares Outstanding   25,587     26,683   -4.1 %   26,360  
      Common Equity Per Share $ 36.03   $ 30.57   17.9 % $ 35.02  
      Market Value Per Common        
      Share   48.44     48.53   -0.2 %   50.63  
               
        (shares in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
      Share Retirements (Issuances):        
      Total Shares Retired   773       n/m   361  
      Average Retirement Price $ 49.61   $   n/m $ 50.96  
      Net Shares Retired (Issued)   773     (5 ) n/m   348  
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
               
      Total Shares Retired   1,134     4   n/m  
      Average Retirement Price $ 49.88   $ 45.58   n/m  
      Net Shares Retired (Issued)   1,121     (12 ) n/m  
             
    12. Period-End Balance Sheets.        
        (unaudited, dollars in thousands)
            %  
        6/30/25 6/30/24 Change 3/31/25
      Assets:        
      Cash and Due from Banks $ 626,437   $ 486,124   28.9 % $ 727,336  
               
      Debt Securities Available for        
      Sale:        
      Corporate Securities   1,792,021     1,855,618   -3.4 %   1,802,791  
      Collateralized Loan        
      Obligations   780,147     1,255,110   -37.8 %   822,111  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   291,543     222,806   30.9 %   250,844  
      Securities of U.S.        
      Government Sponsored        
      Entities   301,903     291,206   3.7 %   299,722  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions   60,835     69,758   -12.8 %   60,581  
      U.S. Treasury Securities       4,820   n/m    
      Total Debt Securities        
      Available for Sale   3,226,449     3,699,318   -12.8 %   3,236,049  
               
      Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity:        
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   49,878     67,777   -26.4 %   53,528  
      Corporate Securities   738,846     732,049   0.9 %   737,146  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions (1)   45,715     61,042   -25.1 %   48,674  
      Total Debt Securities        
      Held to Maturity (1)   834,439     860,868   -3.1 %   839,348  
               
      Loans   748,264     831,842   -10.0 %   771,030  
      Allowance For Credit Losses        
      on Loans   (13,787 )   (15,952 ) -13.6 %   (13,914 )
      Total Loans, net   734,477     815,890   -10.0 %   757,116  
               
      Premises and Equipment, net   25,850     26,275   -1.6 %   25,722  
      Identifiable Intangibles, net   19     234   -91.9 %   72  
      Goodwill   121,673     121,673   0.0 %   121,673  
      Other Assets   255,725     301,763   -15.3 %   259,308  
               
      Total Assets $ 5,825,069   $ 6,312,145   -7.7 % $ 5,966,624  
               
      Liabilities and Shareholders’        
      Equity:        
      Deposits:        
      Noninterest-Bearing $ 2,175,841   $ 2,459,467   -11.5 % $ 2,241,802  
      Interest-Bearing Transaction   894,774     936,186   -4.4 %   920,461  
      Savings   1,603,974     1,646,781   -2.6 %   1,633,445  
      Time   72,946     89,006   -18.0 %   78,387  
      Total Deposits   4,747,535     5,131,440   -7.5 %   4,874,095  
               
      Bank Term Funding        
      Program Borrowings       200,000   n/m    
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   101,210     100,167   1.0 %   113,219  
      Total Short-Term        
      Borrowed Funds   101,210     300,167   -66.3 %   113,219  
               
      Other Liabilities   54,541     64,938   -16.0 %   56,172  
      Total Liabilities   4,903,286     5,496,545   -10.8 %   5,043,486  
               
      Shareholders’ Equity:        
      Common Equity:        
      Paid-In Capital   456,964     474,618   -3.7 %   470,844  
      Accumulated Other        
      Comprehensive Loss   (116,747 )   (197,300 ) -40.8 %   (136,768 )
      Retained Earnings   581,566     538,282   8.0 %   589,062  
      Total Shareholders’ Equity   921,783     815,600   13.0 %   923,138  
               
      Total Liabilities and        
      Shareholders’ Equity $ 5,825,069   $ 6,312,145   -7.7 % $ 5,966,624  
               
    13. Income Statements.        
        (unaudited, in thousands except per-share amounts)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
      Interest and Loan Fee Income:        
      Loans $ 10,523   $ 11,354   -7.3 % $ 10,669  
      Equity Securities   195     175   11.4 %   195  
      Debt Securities Available        
      for Sale   31,028     43,927   -29.4 %   33,430  
      Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity   8,448     8,655   -2.4 %   8,494  
      Interest-Bearing Cash   7,273     4,961   46.6 %   6,703  
      Total Interest and Loan        
      Fee Income   57,467     69,072   -16.8 %   59,491  
               
      Interest Expense:        
      Transaction Deposits   44     69   -36.2 %   46  
      Savings Deposits   2,950     2,322   27.0 %   3,128  
      Time Deposits   51     69   -26.1 %   55  
      Bank Term Funding Program        
      Borrowings       2,692   n/m    
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   144     155   -6.7 %   167  
      Total Interest Expense   3,189     5,307   -39.9 %   3,396  
               
      Net Interest and Loan        
      Fee Income   54,278     63,765   -14.9 %   56,095  
               
      Reversal of Provision for        
      Credit Losses         n/m   (550 )
               
      Noninterest Income:        
      Service Charges on Deposit        
      Accounts   3,368     3,469   -2.9 %   3,381  
      Merchant Processing        
      Services   2,687     2,733   -1.7 %   2,733  
      Debit Card Fees   1,664     1,706   -2.5 %   1,581  
      Trust Fees   867     811   6.9 %   899  
      ATM Processing Fees   482     540   -10.7 %   463  
      Other Service Fees   450     450   0.0 %   429  
      Life Insurance Gains   106       n/m   102  
      Other Noninterest Income   691     791   -12.6 %   733  
      Total Noninterest Income   10,315     10,500   -1.8 %   10,321  
               
      Noninterest Expense:        
      Salaries and Related Benefits   12,303     12,483   -1.4 %   12,126  
      Occupancy and Equipment   5,154     5,158   -0.1 %   5,038  
      Outsourced Data Processing   2,709     2,511   7.9 %   2,697  
      Limited Partnership        
      Operating Losses   915     1,440   -36.5 %   915  
      Professional Fees   386     362   6.6 %   395  
      Courier Service   687     686   0.1 %   688  
      Other Noninterest Expense   3,375     3,490   -3.3 %   3,268  
      Total Noninterest Expense   25,529     26,130   -2.3 %   25,127  
               
      Income Before Income Taxes   39,064     48,135   -18.8 %   41,839  
      Income Tax Provision   9,998     12,673   -21.1 %   10,802  
      Net Income $ 29,066   $ 35,462   -18.0 % $ 31,037  
               
      Average Common Shares        
      Outstanding   25,889     26,680   -3.0 %   26,642  
      Diluted Average Common        
      Shares Outstanding   25,889     26,681   -3.0 %   26,642  
               
      Per Common Share Data:        
      Basic Earnings $ 1.12   $ 1.33   -15.8 % $ 1.16  
      Diluted Earnings   1.12     1.33   -15.8 %   1.16  
      Dividends Paid   0.46     0.44   4.5 %   0.44  
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
      Interest and Loan Fee Income:        
      Loans $ 21,192   $ 22,678   -6.6 %  
      Equity Securities   390     349   11.7 %  
      Debt Securities Available        
      for Sale   64,458     90,170   -28.5 %  
      Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity   16,942     17,377   -2.5 %  
      Interest-Bearing Cash   13,976     7,244   92.9 %  
      Total Interest and Loan        
      Fee Income   116,958     137,818   -15.1 %  
               
      Interest Expense:        
      Transaction Deposits   90     188   -52.1 %  
      Savings Deposits   6,078     4,239   43.4 %  
      Time Deposits   106     139   -23.7 %  
      Bank Term Funding Program        
      Borrowings       3,535   n/m  
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   311     207   50.2 %  
      Total Interest Expense   6,585     8,308   -20.7 %  
               
      Net Interest and Loan        
      Fee Income   110,373     129,510   -14.8 %  
               
      (Reversal of) Provision        
      for Credit Losses   (550 )   300   n/m  
               
      Noninterest Income:        
      Service Charges on Deposit   6,749     6,939   -2.7 %  
      Accounts        
      Merchant Processing        
      Services   5,420     5,240   3.4 %  
      Debit Card Fees   3,245     3,249   -0.1 %  
      Trust Fees   1,766     1,605   10.0 %  
      ATM Processing Fees   945     1,131   -16.4 %  
      Other Service Fees   879     888   -1.0 %  
      Life Insurance Gains   208       n/m  
      Other Noninterest Income   1,424     1,545   -7.8 %  
      Total Noninterest Income   20,636     20,597   0.2 %  
               
      Noninterest Expense:        
      Salaries and Related Benefits   24,429     25,069   -2.6 %  
      Occupancy and Equipment   10,192     10,198   -0.1 %  
      Outsourced Data Processing   5,406     5,047   7.1 %  
      Limited Partnership        
      Operating Losses   1,830     2,880   -36.5 %  
      Professional Fees   781     764   2.2 %  
      Courier Service   1,375     1,335   3.0 %  
      Other Noninterest Expense   6,643     6,936   -4.2 %  
      Total Noninterest Expense   50,656     52,229   -3.0 %  
               
      Income Before Income Taxes   80,903     97,578   -17.1 %  
      Income Tax Provision   20,800     25,699   -19.1 %  
      Net Income $ 60,103   $ 71,879   -16.4 %  
               
      Average Common Shares        
      Outstanding   26,263     26,677   -1.6 %  
      Diluted Average Common        
      Shares Outstanding   26,263     26,678   -1.6 %  
               
      Per Common Share Data:        
      Basic Earnings $ 2.29   $ 2.69   -14.9 %  
      Diluted Earnings   2.29     2.69   -14.9 %  
      Dividends Paid   0.90     0.88   2.3 %  
               
      Footnotes and Abbreviations:        
      (1) Debt Securities Held To Maturity and Obligations of States and Political Subdivisions are net of related reserve for expected credit losses of $1 thousand at June 30, 2025, March 31, 2025 and June 30, 2024.
               
      (FTE) Fully Taxable Equivalent. The Company presents its net interest margin and net interest income on a FTE basis using the current statutory federal tax rate. Management believes the FTE basis is valuable to the reader because the Company’s loan and investment securities portfolios contain a portion of municipal loans and securities that are federally tax exempt. The Company’s tax exempt loans and securities composition may not be similar to that of other banks, therefore in order to reflect the impact of the federally tax exempt loans and securities on the net interest margin and net interest income for comparability with other banks, the Company presents its net interest margin and net interest income on a FTE basis.
               
      (a) Annualized        
               

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Mauritius: African Development Bank Urges Bold Reforms to Unlock Capital and Accelerate Sustainable Growth in 2025 Report

    Source: APO

    The African Development Bank (www.AfDB.org) has urged Mauritius to accelerate structural reforms to unlock its vast capital potential and advance long-term, sustainable growth. The Bank made the call during the launch of its 2025 Country Focus Report for Mauritius, titled “Making Mauritius’ Capital Work Better for its Development.”

    The report notes that while Mauritius continues to post strong economic performance—recording real GDP growth of 4.9% in 2024, slightly down from 5% in 2023—structural constraints and external shocks continue to undermine the country’s growth trajectory. Key growth drivers in 2024 included construction, financial services, trade, and tourism, with arrivals reaching 1.38 million, representing 97% of pre-pandemic levels. On the demand side, consumption and investment were the primary drivers of growth.

    Despite the persistent challenges, the report underscores Mauritius’ significant untapped potential. In 2020, the island nation’s total national wealth was estimated at over $96 billion—more than six times its GDP—comprising human, financial, natural, and produced capital. In addition, Mauritius’ vast ocean economy resources, within its 2.3 million km² Exclusive Economic Zone, offer immense opportunities for developing a sustainable blue economy.

    Speaking at the launch event, Mahess Rawoteea, Deputy Financial Secretary at the Ministry of Finance, welcomed the recommendations in the report. “We are confident that the structural reforms outlined in the 2025–2026 Budget Speech will unlock significant investments, particularly in renewable energy, and contribute to higher GDP growth,” he said.

    Rawoteea emphasized the central role of human capital in Mauritius’ development, while acknowledging persistent challenges such as education quality, skills mismatches, low female labor participation, demographic shifts, and youth emigration. He announced the establishment of a Climate Finance Unit within the Ministry of Finance to help bridge the country’s climate financing gap.

    “Mauritius is undertaking institutional reforms to better mobilize domestic and foreign capital and promote sustainable development,” he added. “We are streamlining processes, enhancing transparency, and improving the ease of doing business. Environmental protection, including addressing beach erosion, is also a key priority.”

    Rawoteea expressed appreciation for the African Development Bank’s support, particularly in mobilizing investments in renewable energy and the ocean economy—two sectors identified as future growth pillars.

    In his keynote remarks, Prof. Kevin Urama, the Bank Group’s Chief Economist and Vice President for Economic Governance and Knowledge Management, emphasized Africa’s broader potential for transformation. “If Africa commits to investing in its own development and managing its assets efficiently, it can reduce external dependency and harness its enormous capital for transformative growth,” he said.

    Urama cited weak tax administration and inefficiencies in revenue collection as major constraints to development, urging a fundamental rethink of public financial management across the continent.

    Wolassa Kumo, the Bank’s Principal Country Economist for Mauritius presented an overview of the report. The launch event attracted senior government officials, development partners, private sector leaders, and civil society representatives.

    Among those in attendance were Hervé Lohoues, the Bank’s Division Manager for the Country Economics Department covering Nigeria, East Africa and Southern Africa, and Nontle Kabanyane, the Bank’s Principal Country Programme Officer, who moderated a panel discussion.

    The panel explored strategies for mobilizing domestic capital more effectively by strengthening institutions, improving regulatory frameworks, increasing transparency and accountability, and deepening regional trade integration. Panelists included:

    • Dr. Zyaad Boodoo, Ministry of Environment, Solid Waste Management and Climate Change (natural capital), Mauritius?
    • Mr. Sanjev Bhonoo, Principal Statistician, Statistics Mauritius (natural capital)
    • Mr. Ricaud M. Auckbur, Chief Technical Officer, Ministry of Education and Human Resources (human capital), Mauritius?
    • Ms. Zaahira Ebramjee, Head of National Economic Collaboration, Business Mauritius (business capital)
    • Mr. Vikram Ramful, Head of Listing, Stock Exchange of Mauritius (financial capital)

    Click here (https://apo-opa.co/46KmHkM) to download the report.

    Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Development Bank Group (AfDB).

    Media Contact:
    Emeka Anuforo
    Communication and External Relations Department
    media@afdb.org

    About the African Development Bank Group:
    The African Development Bank Group is Africa’s leading development finance institution. It comprises three distinct entities: the African Development Bank (AfDB), the African Development Fund (ADF) and the Nigeria Trust Fund (NTF). Represented in 41 African countries, with an external office in Japan, the Bank contributes to the economic development and social progress of its 54 regional member countries. For more information: www.AfDB.org

    Media files

    .

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM remarks at press conference with Chancellor Merz: 17 July 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Prime Minister’s Office 10 Downing Street

    Speech

    PM remarks at press conference with Chancellor Merz: 17 July 2025

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s remarks at a press conference with Chancellor Merz.

    Good afternoon.

    It’s a real pleasure to welcome Chancellor Merz. 

    And it’s great to be here at Airbus today. I’m always amazed at this place when I come to visit, it’s not my first visit. 

    Thank you for showing us the amazing work you do here. 

    This is one the most cutting-edge facilities in Europe.

    Home to the Exo-Mars Rover, designed with German expertise and built right here in Stevenage.

    You are driving innovation in defence and space technology, making us all safer – leading us into the future.

    And this is at the heart of what brings Friedrich and I together.

    We see the scale of the challenges our continent faces today and we intend meet them head on. But we also see the scale of the opportunities. So, we have a shared resolve to shape this new era with new leadership.

    The UK and Germany side by side, delivering growth and security and delivering for working people.

    And that’s why, earlier today we did something genuinely unprecedented. Building on our new agreement with the EU, together, we signed the Kensington Treaty, the first ever major bilateral treaty between the United Kingdom and Germany. 

    Two great, modern European nations. It is an expression of our shared aims and values.

    But more than that – it is a practical workplan, setting out 17 major projects where we will come together to deliver real results which will improve people’s lives.

    So a historic treaty and statement of intent and ambition. And we intend to do, amongst other things, as leading NATO powers in Europe, committing not only to our mutual defence but also to maximise the benefits of our defence spending, in the shape of more jobs, more growth and more security.

    Under this treaty we will bring our industries together to boost defence exports by billions of pounds and we’ll speed up our collaboration on high tech weapons and equipment, strengthening NATO – and keeping our people safe. 

    Our economic links already support half a million British jobs.

    So under this treaty we’ll go further, with eGate access for frequent business travellers. I know that’s something very popular here. 

    A direct rail link, and a new UK-Germany Business Forum to boost investment, starting today with new investments into the UK worth over £200 million. 

    We’re also deepening collaboration on science and innovation, supporting great jobs, like those here at Airbus. 

    And we’re delivering new infrastructure projects, including in the North Sea Energy to produce power that is cheaper, greener and more secure.

    Crucially – we’re also working together on illegal migration. I want to thank Friedrich for his leadership on this.

    Pledging decisive action to strengthen German law this year so that small boats being stored or transported in Germany can be seized, disrupting the route to the UK and it’s a clear sign that we mean business. We are coming after the criminal gangs in every way we can. 

    We also discussed the appalling situation in Gaza. We are both working to support efforts towards a ceasefire and also to demand the immediate, unconditional release of the remaining hostages and the immediate, unconditional humanitarian access that is so desperately needed to deliver aid at volume and at speed.

    Finally, we discussed the situation Ukraine. Just a few days after Friedrich took office in May earlier this year we were both in Kyiv shoulder-to-shoulder with President Zelenskyy during one of the toughest moments in this horrendous war.

    Now we’re leading the work to get the best kit to Ukraine as fast as possible. We’ll keep pushing this forward – together with the US and other allies because ultimately our security starts in Ukraine. 

    So this is a partnership with a purpose. And I think it illustrates what our work on the international stage is all about. It’s about building the foundations of stability across our continent that make us safer, boost our economy and deliver change across for our people. It’s about delivering results and that’s what we’re working towards.  

    And, in a dangerous world, we do this together. 

    So thank you Friedrich –  for your partnership and your friendship.

    Now, over to you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: HS2 6-monthly report to Parliament: July 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Written statement to Parliament

    HS2 6-monthly report to Parliament: July 2025

    Review of High Speed Two (HS2) including programme governance, delivery update, benefits, community impacts, land and property.

    Overview

    Today (17 July 2025) I am publishing this government’s second update to Parliament on the progress of High Speed Two (HS2).

    In my previous report, I set out the difficult position that we inherited. HS2 has suffered from repeated cost increases and delays for too long. Although there have been external factors outside of the programme’s control, it has also been mismanaged. It is now clear that cost estimates were overly optimistic and the programme moved to construction too quickly when designs were still immature. Delivery of the programme has not been sufficiently controlled, with a poorly performing supply chain that was insufficiently incentivised. There have been repeated changes in policy, scope and funding and excessive costs incurred in achieving environmental and planning compliance. This means delayed benefits and cost increases incurred on HS2 have diverted billions of pounds from other vital transport priorities.

    This is unacceptable, the cycle of cost increases and delays must be broken and I am determined to achieve this. The project is now under new leadership, and I have tasked HS2 Ltd’s new CEO, Mark Wild, with leading a comprehensive reset of the programme. He is making progress, but this is a huge task, and we need to ensure he has a robust plan for delivering the programme to completion in a controlled way and at the lowest reasonable cost. To this end, the department will work with him and HS2 Ltd over the coming months to advise me on the decisions needed to reset HS2, with the aim of providing an updated delivery baseline and funding envelope in 2026. Until this work is completed, this government is not in a position to say with confidence how much HS2 will cost or when it will be delivered. That is a deeply unsatisfactory position, but it is necessary to complete the hard work we have embarked upon.

    Effective ministerial oversight will be at the heart of this reset. The Rail Minister and I meet regularly with Mark Wild to assess progress and in March, I chaired a meeting of the Ministerial Task Force with the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, focusing on completing the programme in a controlled way. In June, I appointed Mike Brown as the new Chair of the HS2 Ltd Board to help us drive effective oversight and accountability on the programme. Both Mark Wild and Mike Brown have experience in major project recovery from Crossrail, which will be invaluable to this task. Mike’s immediate priorities will include supporting Mark and strengthening the challenge that the Board provides to HS2 Ltd, to complement ministerial oversight.

    The reset needs to be guided by the lessons learned from HS2’s delivery to date. In June, I published the major transport projects governance and assurance review, led by James Stewart. This report set out recommendations and actions that we are taking to avoid repeating the mistakes of the past, helping to bring HS2 under control and to improve the delivery of future infrastructure projects.

    The government’s determination to now see this programme delivered as efficiently as possible is underpinned by the allocation of £25.3 billion (nominal prices) of funding over 4 years in the Spending Review, as set out in the financial annex.

    Despite the evident challenges, HS2 Ltd, its suppliers and over 33,000 workers have maintained steady progress on construction, achieving major delivery milestones since my last report.

    HS2 will foster economic growth in support of this government’s mission. Research commissioned by HS2 Ltd has found that the prospective arrival of HS2 is already leading to redevelopment around new HS2 stations, demonstrating the early potential of this scheme to act as a catalyst for investment in businesses, new jobs and homes. The research estimates that the programme will deliver economic uplifts of £10 billion in the West Midlands and £10 billion around Old Oak Common station in west London over the next 10 years. 

    Delivering an HS2 station at Euston remains a priority to realise the programme’s benefits. Following our commitment to funding the tunnelling required to bring HS2 to central London, we continue to work with key partners to develop affordable, integrated plans for the Euston station campus alongside significant levels of local development, including housing and life sciences institutions. In parallel, we recently announced that a Euston Delivery Company will be established to oversee the development of the whole Euston campus, which will comprise the new HS2 station, an upgraded Network Rail station and enhancements to the London Underground station and local transport facilities, along with a significant level of development. We welcome the joint venture that The Crown Estate has announced with Lendlease, our development partner at Euston. As set out in the 10-Year Infrastructure Strategy, we are exploring the use of private capital to design, build, finance and maintain the HS2 station.

    Finally, beyond individual rail schemes, the rail network must be viewed as a whole. HS2 will play a key part in our ambition to improve rail for passengers, with its services and benefits extending far beyond London and Birmingham, including the capacity it releases for other regional and London services.

    Delivery update

    Schedule and cost

    As I set out in the House of Commons on 18 June, based on Mark Wild’s initial advice, I see no route by which trains can be running by 2033 as previously planned. Mark has committed to establishing and delivering to a new baseline in 2026. Once this work is complete, we will have an agreed estimate of how much the project will cost and when it will be delivered.

    Whilst the reset is ongoing, the department is managing HS2 Ltd through strengthened in-year controls, including challenging targets and metrics to deliver within annual budgets. To drive in-year delivery performance, an enhanced level of governance and assurance has also been implemented, reflecting the recommendations of James Stewart’s review.

    This year, HS2 Ltd has rescheduled some work to ensure it operates within its annual financial settlement.

    Expenditure

    To the end of April 2025, £40.5 billion (nominal prices) had been spent on the HS2 programme. This is provided in more detail in the financial annex, based on data provided by HS2 Ltd.

    Spend to date information covers the period up to the end of April 2025. Unless stated otherwise, all figures are presented in nominal prices.

    Following the recent conclusion of the Spending Review, the department has reached a settlement with HM Treasury to fund the delivery of HS2, with £25.3 billion (nominal prices) covering financial years 2026 to 2027 to 2029 to 2030.

    This funding will enable the reset of the HS2 programme under the leadership of Mark Wild, addressing longstanding delivery challenges. It will enable HS2 to move forward with a more secure delivery plan and will support progress at the lowest reasonable cost.

    This settlement will support the continued delivery of Phase 1, providing funding for works from Old Oak Common to Birmingham Curzon Street and Handsacre Junction, Euston Tunnels and Approaches and Euston Station enabling works.

    The HS2 programme is currently in a period of high spend, with much of it in active construction. The department expects HS2 Ltd’s expenditure to become noticeably lower over the next Spending Review period as delivery of the programme progresses.

    The department has updated its reporting of historic programme expenditure from 2019 prices to nominal prices. Once the programme reset is complete and a new baseline agreed, HS2 Ltd will also uplift the price base for programme reporting and for the revised cost estimate. The department will consider how often the price base should be uplifted until the end of the programme.

    Construction progress

    Over 70% of HS2’s 32 miles of bored and mined tunnels between London and Birmingham have now been completed.

    Construction is progressing across the route, with active works underway on 44 viaducts, 126 bridges, 75 embankments and 60 cuttings.

    The Northolt Tunnels, which will link Old Oak Common Station to West Ruislip, were recently completed. Constructed in 2 phases – East and West – the tunnels were excavated using 4 tunnel boring machines (TBMs). TBMs Sushila and Caroline completed mining the western section in April 2025, while mining on the eastern section, led by TBMs Emily and Anne, was completed at the end of June 2025.

    In May, the first Bromford Tunnel broke through, connecting Warwickshire to Birmingham, marking the completion of the first section of the 3.5-mile tunnel.

    In April, a 14,500-tonne box structure that will carry the high-speed line was successfully installed under the A46. The installation utilised innovative civil and structural engineering techniques, which involved constructing the box on land before pushing it across a guiding raft over 64 metres into place.

    Over 8.5 million cubic metres of soil have been excavated, representing 73% of the total planned earthworks.

    In February, the first viaduct in the Delta Junction in North Warwickshire was completed, marking both a significant milestone in the construction of HS2 in the region and the first use of an innovative giant cantilever system in the UK.

    At Interchange Station in Solihull, enabling works have commenced on site, including surveys and ground investigations to inform the detailed design.

    The ‘systems and service’ tender was launched in February 2025 for the Automated People Mover (APM), which will provide connectivity between Interchange Station, the National Exhibition Centre, Birmingham International Station and Birmingham Airport.

    At Curzon Street Station in central Birmingham, piling works continue to progress with only the western section remaining. For this financial year, the focus will be on completing the design before construction starts next year. The updated Schedule 17 planning consents for the revised station designs were approved by Birmingham City Council on 8 May 2025. Schedule 17 of the High Speed Rail (London – West Midlands) Act 2017 establishes a process for the approval of matters related to the design and construction of the railway. It requires HS2 Ltd to seek approval from the appropriate planning authority, in this case, Birmingham City Council. This approval shall allow HS2 Ltd to construct the station with improvements to the visuals of the station and refinements to the long-term maintenance requirements. 

    At Old Oak Common Station in west London, the tunnel boring machines are being assembled with preparations currently underway to enable their launch towards Euston in spring 2026.

    In November 2024, we reached a key milestone with the award of the rail systems contracts worth around £3 billion in current prices. The contracts commenced in February 2025, but work on site will not start until main works civils are largely complete. Procurement of the Washwood Heath Depot and the National Integrated Control Centre continues.

    Lessons from the contracting failures of HS2’s main works programme have been firmly embedded in the systems contracts. The design of rail systems is more advanced at this stage than it was for main works civils, giving better cost certainty. HS2 Ltd has established an alliance with stronger incentives to ensure suppliers share risk, allowing us to manage costs better and drive performance. The contracts require fewer consents to be granted as well.

    Mobilisation on the rail systems contract has started and timelines are being developed in line with the wider programme challenges noted elsewhere in this report. There will be a formal review at the end of the design stage to make sure all parties are ready to start work on site, again learning from main works civils.

    Euston

    The department continues to work with key partners to develop affordable, integrated plans for the Euston station campus. In parallel, enabling works are continuing to ready the HS2 station site for the main construction programme.

    In terms of the delivery model, the government announced in its 10-Year Infrastructure Strategy that a Euston Delivery Company will be established to oversee the development of the whole Euston campus. The new delivery model will involve a changed role for HS2 Ltd but will go much broader than that to address historical challenges at the site. HS2 Ltd will remain a key partner, continuing to carry out important work at Euston.

    The department also continues to work with partners to examine available delivery and private finance options that will realise the great regeneration potential of the Euston area alongside the improvement of transport links.

    Specifically, the department is exploring options for various elements of the programme to be funded through a combination of private finance, development receipts, and potential local contributions such as tax increment financing, with a degree of residual public funding. The department has been engaging closely with HM Treasury and the National Infrastructure and Service Transformation Authority as it continues to develop its plans, and has appointed specialist advisors to ensure it has access to expert support.

    As we progress our plans to reinitiate delivery, we are embedding the recommendations of James Stewart’s review through the new delivery model and working closely with partners to manage risks sensibly and collectively. We will continue to work with key partners with the aim of restarting design later this year. No final decisions have been made regarding the preferred mechanisms to securing funding and finance, including private finance options; further details will be shared in due course.

    The delivery of HS2 has continued during this period to be the subject of both legal and planning challenges, which have added significant cost, uncertainty and potential for delay. It is right that there are checks and balances embedded in our legal and planning systems to ensure local interests are considered when national projects are implemented. There is, however, the risk that these rights are used to frustrate the delivery of consented projects, with legal challenges and planning powers used in a way that drives up costs to both local and national taxpayers, rather than protecting local interests. 

    The HS2 planning and environmental regime set out in the High Speed Rail (London – West Midlands) Act 2017 has been subject to multiple attempts at legal challenge from other public bodies, most recently in relation to the extension of the Bromford tunnel in North Warwickshire – with a judgment delivered in the project’s favour.  Since Royal Assent for the act, there have been 9 legal challenges brought by other public bodies. In almost all of these cases, the courts have ultimately found in the project’s favour, but not in time to avoid significant uncertainty, costly delays, or additional legal costs for both parties – the majority of which has unfortunately had to be borne by local taxpayers.

    In the same time period, there have also been 25 costly and time-consuming appeals relating to the HS2 planning regime. Almost all of these appeals have ultimately been determined in HS2’s favour. The government continues to monitor this issue closely and will consider further interventions where appropriate, alongside its wider work on planning reform.

    Fraud investigation

    We are aware of the claims made in relation to a labour supplier on part of the route. The allegations concern inflated invoices and improper PAYE charges, potentially defrauding taxpayers. HS2 Ltd treats all whistleblower allegations seriously and an investigation was launched earlier this year into these allegations. Furthermore, HS2 Ltd has formally reported the allegations to HMRC and HS2 Ltd’s contractor Balfour Beatty VINCI has implemented additional monitoring and controls.

    Benefits

    Housing

    Despite all the challenges, HS2 represents a significant plank of the government’s Plan for Change, our growth and housing missions, and our ambition to deliver infrastructure that works for the whole country. 

    HS2 provides an unparalleled opportunity to build new homes, create jobs and attract investment. The redevelopment of land around the new HS2 stations will enable the ideal conditions for business, new jobs and homes and will act as a catalyst for further investment and wider growth.

    In the West Midlands, HS2 is estimated to support directly 4,000 new homes around Curzon Street Station and 3,000 new homes around Interchange Station as part of the Arden Cross development in Solihull. Additionally, research from a February 2024 report suggests that HS2 will add £10 billion to the West Midlands economy over the next 10 years and help generate over 41,000 additional homes.

    In west London, local partners estimate that HS2 will, in the long term, support the delivery of up to 25,500 new homes around Old Oak Common station, including 9,000 new homes as part of the first phase of development at Old Oak West. Separate research from March 2025 estimates that HS2 will add £10 billion to the west London economy over the next 10 years and support 22,000 additional homes. Around Euston in central London, HS2 will support the delivery of thousands of new homes and the development of a new ‘knowledge quarter’.

    There could also be new housing opportunities along the West Coast Mainline between London and the West Midlands, at places that gain improved local services as a result of network capacity released by HS2. Decisions have not yet been made by the government on where these additional services will run.

    Jobs and skills

    In addition to long-term ambitions, HS2 is contributing to economic growth now. The programme is currently supporting over 33,000 jobs and over 3,400 UK businesses in the supply chain across the country, including over 2,500 small and medium-sized enterprises.

    HS2 is also helping to break down barriers to opportunity and training a skilled workforce for the UK’s wider rail and construction industries. The programme is attracting new and diverse people to the industry. Having created over 1,800 apprenticeships and supported over 5,000 previously unemployed people back into work on the project since 2017, the programme is helping to bridge the skills gap and tackle unemployment along the HS2 construction corridor. By drawing on and developing world-class skills, HS2 will leave a positive skills legacy that will develop and strengthen the country’s construction workforce for the years to come.

    Environment

    Updated designs for ecological mitigation over the past six months have seen further progress made on the target to achieve ‘no net loss’ to biodiversity by the end of the construction programme. At the end of 2024 to 2025, the position for area-based habitats has improved while designs for hedgerows and watercourse habitats remained on track to deliver a net gain in biodiversity.

    HS2 Ltd is also seeking to reduce the whole-life carbon emissions associated with construction of HS2 by 50%, aiming to maximise productivity and cost-saving measures to achieve this goal. At the end of 2024 to 2025, the programme had so far achieved a 33.8% reduction in carbon against that 50% target.

    Community impacts, land and property

    Appointment of a new independent commissioner

    I am pleased to announce the appointment of Robert Herga as the independent High Speed Rail Residents’ and Construction Commissioner, following an open competition.

    The commissioner is responsible for holding HS2 Ltd and the government accountable to their commitments to treat those people directly affected by the HS2 scheme with sensitivity and respect. The commissioner also makes themselves available to intervene in unresolved land and property disputes, as an objective and independent voice, focussing on timely settlement to save costs on both sides. This new role combines the previous roles of HS2 Construction Commissioner and HS2 Residents’ Commissioner.

    Community engagement performance

    HS2 Ltd received 1209 complaints during 2024 to 2025, an increase of 102 when compared to the previous year. At this stage of the programme, the vast majority of complaints are construction-related, with over half about traffic and transport impacts and about one-third related to noise and vibration impacts. Where communities have complaints, HS2 Ltd seeks to resolve issues quickly. Over the last financial year, HS2 Ltd resolved 100% of urgent complaints within 2 working days and resolved 96% of all other complaints within 20 working days or less.

    Local funds

    The HS2 project is mitigating some of the impacts of construction on local places through the Community and Environment Fund and the Business and Local Economy Fund.

    As at June 2025, over £19 million has been channelled through these funds towards 353 local community projects.

    Land and property on the former Phase 2b Eastern Leg

    I am today formally lifting the safeguarding directions for the former Phase 2b Eastern Leg (between the West Midlands and Leeds), removing the uncertainty that has affected many people along the former route. Safeguarding along the former Phase 2b Western Leg (between Crewe and Manchester) is not being changed as part of this, and an update on future plans for safeguarding on this section will be provided in due course alongside broader plans for Northern Powerhouse Rail.

    One small area to the south of the existing station in central Leeds, previously required for the new HS2 station, will remain safeguarded to allow for potential enhancements to the existing station, including for onward travel.

    I have also today closed the Rural Support Zone, Express Purchase, Rent Back, and the Need to Sell property schemes along the former Phase 2b Eastern Leg. Existing applications will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.

    Removing safeguarding along the majority of the former HS2 Phase 2b Eastern Leg means we are now able to initiate a programme to dispose of over 550 properties on the former Eastern Leg that are no longer required. We expect disposals on the open market to begin in 2026. Before then, former owners whose property was acquired under statutory blight will have the opportunity to reacquire their former property at the current market value.

    We will dispose of land and property in a sensible and sensitive way, ensuring value for money for the taxpayer and avoiding disruption to local property markets.

    I have deposited the safeguarding directions and relevant documents in the House libraries.

    Programme governance

    Programme reset

    Following Mark Wild’s arrival as the new HS2 Ltd CEO in December 2024, I commissioned him to set out a plan to deliver the remaining HS2 infrastructure in a safe, controlled and efficient manner and bring the new railway into operational use, for the lowest reasonable cost to the taxpayer. Mark gave me his initial diagnosis at the end of March and I expect him to advise me further over the coming months.

    His initial assessment summarises the currently uncontrolled state of the programme and the significant challenge of achieving a programme reset that minimises delays and stops further cost increases. He also confirmed his view that, based on the current scope and delivery strategy, it is not possible to deliver HS2’s opening stage between Old Oak Common and Birmingham Curzon Street within the stated range of 2029 to 2033, and that the funding envelope set by the previous government will not be sufficient. If interventions are not enacted, costs will rise and delivery will be further delayed.

    As such, it is now the work of Mark and his team to put in place measures to bring the railway into service as quickly and cost effectively as possible, with government support and constructive challenge. As part of his work, Mark will advise me on updated estimates to give the government and taxpayers certainty over HS2’s costs and schedule – breaking the cycle of cost increases and overruns.

    The HS2 reset will involve:

    • setting a new realistic cost and schedule baseline within which we can complete the programme
    • resetting the commercial relationship with HS2’s principal civil works suppliers to drive increased productivity and control cost
    • making sure HS2 Ltd has the right skills and capabilities to deliver the remaining work, including improvements to setup, operating model, leadership, culture, effectiveness and capabilities
    • improving how the department and wider government sponsors the delivery of HS2, drawing on the findings and recommendations from James Stewart’s independent review and the department’s own work on lessons

    The scale and complexity of resetting the programme is a major challenge. Mark Wild carried out a similar process as the CEO of Crossrail, putting the project back on track and delivering a successful opening of the Elizabeth line in 2022. It is important we take this opportunity to get it right, which is why the reset will take time and involve close working between HS2 Ltd, DfT and the rest of the government. The ambition is for an updated and assured full baseline to measure performance in 2026.

    In parallel, the department plans to publish an updated programme business case in 2026, once agreed cost and schedule estimates are available.

    Oversight

    On 18 March 2025, I chaired a meeting of the reconvened Ministerial Task Force for HS2. I was joined by the Rail Minister, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Mark Wild and other senior leaders from HS2 Ltd and across the government to scrutinise initial plans on resetting the programme and delivering HS2 at the lowest reasonable cost.

    On 31 March 2025, Sir Jon Thompson stepped down as HS2 Ltd Chair. On 18 June, I was pleased to announce Mike Brown as the new Chair of HS2 Ltd. Mike Brown brings decades of experience in delivering major transport projects as former TfL Commissioner, and member of the team that turned Crossrail into the Elizabeth Line. He will lead the Board and work with Mark Wild on the urgent priority to reset the project.

    It is clear from Mark Wild’s assessment that HS2 Ltd currently falls far short of having the capability and culture needed to deliver the programme effectively. Mike Brown has been tasked with strengthening the HS2 Ltd Board to more effectively support and challenge Mark Wild in conducting the reset of HS2 and the safe delivery of Phase 1 at the lowest reasonable cost. To support strengthened board oversight, a recruitment exercise has been launched to appoint new non-executive directors to bolster board capability and capacity.

    I would like to thank Elaine Holt for leading the Board in her capacity as Deputy Chair over the period from 1 April to 13 July.

    We have also enacted temporary arrangements which establish additional control measures and monitoring to ensure the programme is managed properly. This will bridge the period leading to the formal reset of the programme.

    Capturing, applying and sharing lessons

    Following my last report, the major transport projects governance and assurance review, led by James Stewart, has concluded. It has provided important lessons that can be applied to HS2, the department’s other capital projects and infrastructure schemes across the government.

    Most major programmes experience difficulties in their delivery. However, the failures seen on HS2 are extreme, with costs increasing continuously over many years and very rapidly since the start of construction. There is no single explanation for these failings – they span across its lifecycle from conception through to delivery and from governmental sponsorship, through planning and consenting, to how the government has orchestrated its delivery between HS2 Ltd and the construction supply chain.  

    We have worked closely with HM Treasury and the National Infrastructure and Service Transformation Authority (NISTA) to identify lessons from the HS2 programme.

    The department is applying the lessons from James Stewart’s and other reviews, including embedding the lessons into the HS2 programme reset plan and in developing and delivering other transport and wider infrastructure projects.

    High ambition at inception

    Early decisions resulted in an exceptionally high-specification and high-speed railway, which drove higher costs and meant that tried and tested approaches could not be relied upon. In future programmes, opportunities for reducing cost based on the minimum acceptable design should be explored and use of bespoke or cutting-edge specifications should be avoided unless absolutely necessary.

    Scope changes

    Since HS2’s inception, the scope of the programme has been progressively reduced. Scope reductions have been in part a result of cost increases, but have added to delivery challenges and left the residual scheme over-specified in relation to the benefits it will deliver. 

    To address both of these lessons, the department has contributed to the Office for Value for Money’s study into the governance and budgeting arrangements for ‘mega projects’ to make sure that lessons from HS2 are applied to the wider government’s approach to infrastructure delivery.

    Governance

    Governance has evolved through the lifetime of the project and in the light of pressures; however, it has not been sufficiently effective in identifying and managing the scale of challenges, including in relation to cost management and capability. We have implemented a series of changes in the governance of the programme to respond to James Stewart’s recommendations. We held the first shareholder board on 28 May, which provided strategic-level oversight of the programme from the Permanent Secretary, Mark Wild, HS2 Ltd special directors, the senior responsible officer, interim HS2 Ltd chair and senior DfT and HMT Officials. A renewed programme and performance board now meets monthly to focus on the effective delivery of Phase 1 (including Euston) against agreed schedule, cost and scope.

    Cost estimation

    Since the inception of the project, internal and external experts have comprehensively scrutinised cost estimates. However, despite this, estimates have consistently proven to be wrong.

    Last year, HS2 Ltd and departmental officials jointly concluded a comprehensive external review of the current approach to cost estimation and programme control. HS2 Ltd has been implementing an action plan to strengthen these vital areas of project control. A priority of the HS2 reset is setting a new, realistic and assured baseline of cost and schedule within which we can complete the programme. In addition, our progress to date means that evidence based on past experience, rather than forecast estimates, can be utilised to inform current and future delivery of the programme, including ongoing progress on civils delivery and the recent letting of the systems contracts.

    To validate this new estimate, there is also work underway to verify the civil work delivered to date and its cost. This will allow the programme to validate true delivery costs against the original estimates. This information, combined with continued investment in collating benchmarking data from international comparators, will give us a more reliable ‘should cost’ model for the remainder of the programme. This ‘should cost’ model will enable a more accurate assessment of the reasonableness of assumptions in the cost estimate.

    We have learnt that realistic ranges, rather than single target costs, should be set at the early stage of projects. Ranges should only narrow when there is sufficient certainty from external data, such as contract prices. We will adopt an approach that uses robustly verified or benchmarked cost data, with ranges and sensitivity analysis, when taking future programme investment decisions. HS2 will lead the way in ensuring that cost analysis is rigorously incorporated into the design of later procurements and decisions. In parallel, the government has made significant improvements in the analysis of investment benefits in recent years.

    Challenges of building large-scale infrastructure

    Meeting environmental standards and planning requirements has presented a significant challenge to the delivery of the project and has added to cost. It is now clear that the early stages of HS2 scheme development underestimated the planning and regulatory challenges of designing and building a new high-speed railway whilst meeting the expectations of local planning and highway authorities, and complying with the latest safety, security and environmental standards. The granting of consents has been subject to routine challenge, and the need for expensive mitigations to meet legal obligations (such as the bat mitigation structure at Sheephouse Wood in Buckinghamshire) has increased the cost of delivering the railway. 

    The government is already implementing far-reaching reforms to ensure economic infrastructure can be delivered more efficiently. To strike a better balance between avoiding costs and delays on agreed schemes whilst allowing local scrutiny, Ministers will be able to intervene more actively in the process within the existing planning framework, utilising the reforms in the Planning and Infrastructure Bill once enacted, as well as considering whether further alterations to the HS2 planning framework could bring benefits for efficient infrastructure delivery and to taxpayers more generally.

    Capability challenges

    Costs have increased in part due to insufficient capability in HS2 Ltd and the supply chain in delivering a project of this scale. There has been insufficient focus on the client relationship, too many of HS2’s resources were allocated to the wrong place and contract management and project control were not effective. This led to uncontrolled costs and extremely poor productivity and performance from the supply chain. We will be working with Mark Wild and the Board of HS2 Ltd to address the areas where challenges have been identified, such as the need for Mark Wild to put in place a high-calibre and enduring leadership team and to reshape the organisation to deliver efficiently. This will be a priority in the programme reset.

    Ineffective incentives

    HS2 Ltd’s current commercial contracting strategy has not proved effective at controlling costs and fairly attributing responsibility for risks. The contract incentives have focused on providing positive incentives against target costs; however, as costs escalated and changes arose, the incentivised cost targets were exceeded, leading to no positive incentive to deliver at lower cost. Some risks which should have been borne by suppliers have also been transferred to taxpayers. In the future we need incentives and risk allocation that deliver for taxpayers as well as supplier shareholders. This work is being embedded through our engagement across the government, to ensure major infrastructure projects are based on effective commercial contracts and incentives going forward.

    Financial annex

    The information on HS2’s overall spend to date and budget is now being provided in nominal (cash) terms following a commitment made by the department to the Public Accounts Committee to express the costs of the programme in a more up-to-date price base and better capture the inflation incurred since 2019. The government will provide further details on the 2025 to 2026 position in cash terms as part of the standard main estimates report to Parliament.

    Historic and forecast expenditure

    Nominal prices, including land and property.

    Phase Overall spend to date (£ billion) 2025 to 2026 budget (£ billion) 2025 to 2026 forecast (£ billion) 2025 to 2026 variance (£ billion)
    Phase 1 total 37.9 7.1 7.1 0.0
    Civils 26.4 5.4 5.4 0.0
    Stations 2.3 0.6 0.6 0.0
    Systems 2.0 0.3 0.3 0.0
    Phase 1 indirects 3.5 0.4 0.4 0.0
    Land and property Phase 1 3.6 0.3 0.3 0.0
    Former Phase 2 2.6 0.1 0.1 0.0
    Overall total 40.5 7.2 7.2 0.0

    Notes for the table:

    [1] The figures set out in the table have been rounded to aid legibility. Due to this, they do not always tally.

    [2] Spend to date for Phase 1 includes a £0.6 billion liability (provision) representing the department’s obligation to purchase land and property.

    [3] To enable comparison with the figures presented in the December 2024 Parliamentary Report which were in 2019 prices, the equivalent total overall spends to date on Phase 1 and on Former Phase 2 in 2019 prices are £33.11 billion and £2.5 billion respectively and the 2025 to 2026 budgets for Phase 1 and for Former Phase 2 in 2019 prices are £5.4 billion and £0.1 billion respectively.

    HS2 spending review settlement

    Settlement for total spending review period (2026 to 2030): £25.3 billion (nominal prices).

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: Former Iowa Nurse Sentenced to Federal Prison for Drug Diversion, Illegal Firearms Possession, and Bank Fraud

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    A former Iowa nurse from western Iowa, who stole pain medication from nursing home residents, burglarized multiple residences, possessed a firearm as a felon, and committed a bank fraud, was sentenced on July 16, 2025, to more than three years in federal prison.  Sarah Ann Haptonstall, age 47, from Onawa, Iowa, received the prison term after she pled guilty on February 24, 2025, to one count of acquiring and attempting to acquire a controlled substance by misrepresentation, fraud, deception, or subterfuge, one count of possession of a firearm by a felon, and one count of bank fraud.

    In a plea agreement, and at her plea and sentencing hearings, Haptonstall admitted that, in March 2023, she burglarized an Onawa couple’s home on multiple occasions in order to steal narcotic pain medication.  One the residents needed the medication for constant nerve pain.  Haptonstall knew this, because when she was a nurse in 2021, she had delivered narcotics to the Onawa couple’s residence.  When law enforcement officers arrested Haptonstall on March 10, 2023, after she re-burglarized the Onawa couple’s residence a final time, Haptonstall possessed a 9mm Luger pistol in her truck.  Haptonstall was a felon and drug user at the time, and so it was illegal for her to possess firearms.  Haptonstall had purchased two 9mm Luger pistols in February 2020, after falsely stating that she was not an unlawful user of, or addicted to, a controlled substance.

    The burglaries of the Onawa couple’s home were but one part of a larger drug diversion scheme that Haptonstall was perpetrating in western Iowa.  In February and March 2023, Haptonstall was entering multiple apartments in Onawa and stealing the residents’ pain medications.  Further, between April and October 2022, while working as a licensed Iowa nurse, defendant stole hydrocodone pills from four elderly residents of an Onawa nursing home and a Sergeant Bluff nursing home.  One of the victims was over 90 years old.  Haptonstall removed the narcotics from pill cards and replaced them with Tylenol.  One of the nursing home residents suffered from severe pain as she died because defendant had swapped out the victim’s narcotic pills for Tylenol and made a false entry in her medical record.  Another resident was in hospice when defendant stole her narcotics.  Haptonstall was first licensed as a nurse in 2006, and her license was renewed at least five times (in 2009, 2012, 2015, 2018, and 2021).  Haptonstall ultimately surrendered her nursing license.

    Haptonstall also admitted that, in early 2023, she committed a bank fraud against a small family-owned business in Onawa.  Haptonstall was the business’s bookkeeper and abused her position of trust to embezzle over $8,000 from the company.  Specifically, Haptonstall created fraudulent checks payable to herself, drawn on the small business’s account, and bearing one of its proprietor’s signatures.  Haptonstall disguised the fraudulent checks by making false and fictitious entries in the small business’s electronic bookkeeping system.

    Haptonstall has an extensive criminal history, beginning with six theft convictions in the late 1990s and 2000s.  Between 1997 and 2013, a state court dismissed more than 30 additional theft charges against Haptonstall after she agreed to pay restitution to the victims in those cases.  Haptonstall’s felony record started in 2006, when she pled guilty to forgery after she forged signatures on checks.  In 2014, Haptonstall was convicted of a felony controlled substance violation after making a material misrepresentation to obtain hydrocodone from a grocery store.  In February 2023, while she was committing bank fraud, and about a month before burglarizing residences in Onawa, Haptonstall received a ten-year, fully suspended prison sentence in state court for felony drug diversion after she admitted she had swapped patients’ hydrocodone for Tylenol pills while working as a delivery driver for a local pharmacy. 

    Haptonstall was sentenced in Sioux City by United States District Court Judge Leonard T. Strand.  Haptonstall was sentenced to 42 months’ imprisonment.  She was also ordered to make over $8,000 in restitution to her former employer and to repay $5,000 in court-appointed attorney fees.  Haptonstall must also serve a three-year term of supervised release after the prison term.  There is no parole in the federal system.

    Haptonstall was released on the bond previously set and is to surrender to the Bureau of Prisons on a date yet to be set.  The case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Timothy L. Vavricek and investigated by the Iowa Medicaid Fraud Control Unit and the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General.  The Federal Bureau of Investigation, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, and Monona County Sheriff’s Office assisted the investigation.

    Court file information at https://ecf.iand.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/login.pl.

    The case file numbers are 24-CR-4016 and 25-CR-4007.  

    Follow us on X @USAO_NDIA.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Essex County Man Pleads Guilty to Multiple Firearms Offenses

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    NEWARK, N.J. – An Essex County, New Jersey, man pled guilty on July 15, 2025, to multiple firearms offenses, U.S. Attorney Alina Habba announced.

    Kaiyir Green, 22, of Newark, New Jersey, pled guilty before U.S. District Judge Georgette Castner in Trenton federal court to a four-count indictment charging him with two counts of possession of a firearm and/or ammunition by a convicted felon, one count of illegal possession of a machine gun, and one count of possession of an unregistered firearm.

    According to documents filed in these cases and statements made in Court:

    On March 1, 2023, law enforcement officers responded to a report of a stolen vehicle and observed Green attempting to enter the stolen vehicle.  When law enforcement approached, Green fled and led law enforcement on an extended foot chase.  Law enforcement eventually apprehended Green and they recovered from him a privately manufactured firearm (commonly referred to as a “ghost gun”) loaded with five rounds of ammunition.  After Green was arrested, he made several phone calls from a recorded line at the detention center in which he directed others to go to his home and remove “everything” including a “black bag.”  Law enforcement later observed an individual remove a black bag from Green’s home.  A search of that bag revealed a firearm that had been modified with a switch rendering the firearm fully automatic. The fully automatic firearm was also loaded with one round of 9mm ammunition in a large capacity magazine. Law enforcement also recovered a 50-round capacity drum magazine.

    U.S. Attorney Habba credited law enforcement members with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Newark Field Division, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge L.C. Cheeks, Jr.; the New Jersey State Police, under the direction of Col. Patrick J. Callahan, and Elizabeth Police Department, under the direction of Chief Giacomo Sacca, with the investigation leading to the charges.

    The charges of being a felon in possession of firearms and/or ammunition each carry a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. The charge of possession of a firearm carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. The charge of possession of an unregistered firearm carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a fine up to $10,000.

    Green’s sentencing is scheduled for November 25, 2025.

    The government is represented by Assistant United States Attorney Rachelle M. Navarro of the Bank Integrity, Money Laundering, and Recovery Unit in Newark.

                                                                ###

    Defense counsel for Green: Claressa Lowe, Esq.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: Sparrow expands coverage to five U.S. states, making it easier than ever for Americans to claim missing money

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Sparrow, the secure platform that helps Americans claim missing money in minutes, has officially expanded to five states — with Pennsylvania the newest addition. The company’s fully automated service now supports residents in California, Texas, Wisconsin, Nebraska, and Pennsylvania, with additional support for Georgia and Florida coming soon.

    With over $80 billion in unclaimed funds sitting idle — and 1 in 7 Americans estimated to have missing money — Sparrow offers a fast, safe, and frustration-free way to recover what’s rightfully yours.

    Using cutting-edge technology and real-time financial data, Sparrow verifies your identity, retrieves the necessary documents on your behalf, and prepares your claim with minimal effort required. What used to take days — and often involved printing, mailing, or even visiting a notary — now takes most users under five minutes.

    “We built Sparrow because the process of claiming lost money felt unnecessarily hard for everyday people,” said Will Nemirovsky, CEO. “I ran into it myself in 2024, trying to claim a small refund — and it took hours of paperwork and frustration. We knew we could make it effortless and secure using modern technology and automation. Expanding to Pennsylvania is especially meaningful for me —it’s where I met my Co-Founder, Jack Goettle.”

    Sparrow is fully licensed, offers risk-free pricing, and is committed to bank-grade encryption and secure data handling. Claims are processed through streamlined workflows that minimize human error and eliminate guesswork. Behind the scenes is a team of fintech veterans working to modernize a system that has failed everyday consumers for decades.

    To date, Sparrow has already helped users reclaim millions of dollars — and they’re just getting started.

    Sparrow offers a success-based model: if your claim isn’t paid, you don’t pay.

    Check if you’re owed money — it only takes a few minutes. Visit www.sparrowclaim.com to get started.

    media@sparrowclaim.com

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at:
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/351dc0b1-58c9-4f0c-9caf-1a595a933ef1
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/547d40f3-d403-4330-8975-b0634e7fa18f

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Durbin Questions Witnesses In Senate Judiciary Subcommittee Hearing On The Way AI Interacts With Copyrights

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Illinois Dick Durbin

    July 16, 2025

    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, today questioned witnesses during a Senate Judiciary Subcommittee hearing entitled “Too Big to Prosecute?: Examining the AI Industry’s Mass Ingestion of Copyrighted Works for AI Training.” Today’s hearing examined the way AI interacts with intellectual property rights, particularly copyrights.

    Durbin asked Edward Lee, a Law Professor at the Santa Clara University School of Law, about Section 230 in relation to AI.

    “You’re suggesting this is the age of innovation—deep learning deserves special treatment. We’ve been through this argument in Congress before—Section 230—[which] is a good illustration of that. We decided this fledgling industry called the internet just may not have a future [and] we better be careful, so we exempted them from liability. Is that what you’re suggesting?” Durbin asked.

    Professor Lee responded, “not at all,” and continued to highlight the existing Supreme Court precedent on “fair use.” AI companies argue that training their models on copyrighted works does not constitute infringement because that activity falls under the doctrine of “fair use,” which allows limited use of copyrighted works without the permission of the author for purposes such as commentary, parody, teaching, research, and news reporting. Courts determine whether use of a work is fair use on a case-by-case basis. He continued to say there is a fair balance between protecting copyrighted works, authors, and innovation.

    “It looks to me like you’re shifting the burden to the author of the creative work when there’s an assertion of ‘fair use’ here. So, Meta or others can virtually steal this creative product of Mr. Baldacci [an author witness at the hearing] and others, and then he has the responsibility of proving there’s been an economic loss to him as a result?” Durbin asked.

    Professor Lee responded that the initial burden of “fair use” is on the defendant.

    “Why do we have AI? Why are we interested in AI? Clearly it is for a commercial purpose, is it not?” Durbin asked.

    Professor Lee responded, “entirely, for the AI companies.”

    “So, the companies are ultimately the winners in the approach you are taking. Assume we’re in the world of new innovation here and there is a use of someone else’s creative work—the burden is on them to prove they lost money because of that piracy… they can use Mr. Baldacci’s product and make money off of it,” said Durbin.

    Professor Lee responded that if using copyrighted works like Mr. Baldacci’s is considered “fair use,” the direct benefit would be to the AI companies. He continued to say that the United States has a priority in AI development and if we are in an arms race with China, winning the AI race is important.

    “And Mr. Baldacci should be prepared to pay the price for that?” Durbin asked.

    Professor Lee responded, “I would suggest that if it is so easy to generate copies of Mr. Baldacci novels, that should go in the complaint in these lawsuits… we should not throw out the window the established Supreme Court precedent on how to apply ‘fair use.’”

    Video of Durbin’s first round of questions in Committee is available here.

    Audio of Durbin’s first round of questions in Committee is available here.

    Footage of Durbin’s first round of questions in Committee is available here for TV Stations.

    Durbin then asked Maxwell Pritt, a Partner at Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, who represents plaintiffs in Kadrey v. Meta Platforms. In this case, authors, including Richard Kadrey and Sarah Silverman, sued Meta, alleging copyright infringement related to the training of Meta’s LLaMA AI model using copyrighted books. Durbin asked Mr. Pritt about Meta’s use of pirated databases to obtain copyrighted works to train its GenAI model. 

    “Did Meta compensate any of the copyright owners for the use of their works?” Durbin asked.

    Mr. Pritt responded, “No, but Meta did spend money on contributing its processing power to pirate from illicit websites and also to pay Amazon to host pirated data.”

    “How does the downloading and uploading of pirated copyrighted material impact the analysis of whether a copyright infringement could meet the mens rea requirement of willfulness necessary for criminal infringement?” Durbin asked.

    Mr. Pritt responded, “As to willfulness in the civil copyright context, the documents Senator Hawley showed—I think the answer is clear the piracy committed by Meta was knowing and intentional.”

    Video of Durbin’s second round of questions in Committee is available here.

    Audio of Durbin’s second round of questions in Committee is available here.

    Footage of Durbin’s second round of questions in Committee is available here for TV Stations.

    -30-

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Durbin Questions Witnesses In Senate Judiciary Subcommittee Hearing On The Way AI Interacts With Copyrights

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Illinois Dick Durbin

    July 16, 2025

    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, today questioned witnesses during a Senate Judiciary Subcommittee hearing entitled “Too Big to Prosecute?: Examining the AI Industry’s Mass Ingestion of Copyrighted Works for AI Training.” Today’s hearing examined the way AI interacts with intellectual property rights, particularly copyrights.

    Durbin asked Edward Lee, a Law Professor at the Santa Clara University School of Law, about Section 230 in relation to AI.

    “You’re suggesting this is the age of innovation—deep learning deserves special treatment. We’ve been through this argument in Congress before—Section 230—[which] is a good illustration of that. We decided this fledgling industry called the internet just may not have a future [and] we better be careful, so we exempted them from liability. Is that what you’re suggesting?” Durbin asked.

    Professor Lee responded, “not at all,” and continued to highlight the existing Supreme Court precedent on “fair use.” AI companies argue that training their models on copyrighted works does not constitute infringement because that activity falls under the doctrine of “fair use,” which allows limited use of copyrighted works without the permission of the author for purposes such as commentary, parody, teaching, research, and news reporting. Courts determine whether use of a work is fair use on a case-by-case basis. He continued to say there is a fair balance between protecting copyrighted works, authors, and innovation.

    “It looks to me like you’re shifting the burden to the author of the creative work when there’s an assertion of ‘fair use’ here. So, Meta or others can virtually steal this creative product of Mr. Baldacci [an author witness at the hearing] and others, and then he has the responsibility of proving there’s been an economic loss to him as a result?” Durbin asked.

    Professor Lee responded that the initial burden of “fair use” is on the defendant.

    “Why do we have AI? Why are we interested in AI? Clearly it is for a commercial purpose, is it not?” Durbin asked.

    Professor Lee responded, “entirely, for the AI companies.”

    “So, the companies are ultimately the winners in the approach you are taking. Assume we’re in the world of new innovation here and there is a use of someone else’s creative work—the burden is on them to prove they lost money because of that piracy… they can use Mr. Baldacci’s product and make money off of it,” said Durbin.

    Professor Lee responded that if using copyrighted works like Mr. Baldacci’s is considered “fair use,” the direct benefit would be to the AI companies. He continued to say that the United States has a priority in AI development and if we are in an arms race with China, winning the AI race is important.

    “And Mr. Baldacci should be prepared to pay the price for that?” Durbin asked.

    Professor Lee responded, “I would suggest that if it is so easy to generate copies of Mr. Baldacci novels, that should go in the complaint in these lawsuits… we should not throw out the window the established Supreme Court precedent on how to apply ‘fair use.’”

    Video of Durbin’s first round of questions in Committee is available here.

    Audio of Durbin’s first round of questions in Committee is available here.

    Footage of Durbin’s first round of questions in Committee is available here for TV Stations.

    Durbin then asked Maxwell Pritt, a Partner at Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, who represents plaintiffs in Kadrey v. Meta Platforms. In this case, authors, including Richard Kadrey and Sarah Silverman, sued Meta, alleging copyright infringement related to the training of Meta’s LLaMA AI model using copyrighted books. Durbin asked Mr. Pritt about Meta’s use of pirated databases to obtain copyrighted works to train its GenAI model. 

    “Did Meta compensate any of the copyright owners for the use of their works?” Durbin asked.

    Mr. Pritt responded, “No, but Meta did spend money on contributing its processing power to pirate from illicit websites and also to pay Amazon to host pirated data.”

    “How does the downloading and uploading of pirated copyrighted material impact the analysis of whether a copyright infringement could meet the mens rea requirement of willfulness necessary for criminal infringement?” Durbin asked.

    Mr. Pritt responded, “As to willfulness in the civil copyright context, the documents Senator Hawley showed—I think the answer is clear the piracy committed by Meta was knowing and intentional.”

    Video of Durbin’s second round of questions in Committee is available here.

    Audio of Durbin’s second round of questions in Committee is available here.

    Footage of Durbin’s second round of questions in Committee is available here for TV Stations.

    -30-

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Marjorie Ngwenya reappointed to the Prudential Regulation Committee

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Press release

    Marjorie Ngwenya reappointed to the Prudential Regulation Committee

    The Economic Secretary to the Treasury has today confirmed the reappointment of Marjorie Ngwenya as an External Member of the Prudential Regulation Committee (PRC).

    Marjorie will serve a further three-year term, from 5 September 2025 to 4 September 2028.

    The Economic Secretary to the Treasury, Emma Reynolds, said:

    I am pleased to confirm the reappointment of Marjorie Ngwenya to the Prudential Regulation Committee. During her first term, Marjorie made significant contributions to the Committee’s work, and her continued service will help to ensure that the committee retains the benefit of her extensive industry experience and expertise, so it can deliver on the government’s mission to regulate for growth.

    Further information

    • Marjorie is a former chairperson of the Canon Collins Trust (UK) and a trustee of the Legal Resources Centre (South Africa).
    • Marjorie is a past President of the Institute and Faculty of Actuaries (IFoA) and served on the IFoA’s governing council for eight years. In her executive career, she was a member of the Group Executive Committee of Liberty Group in South Africa, serving as Chief Strategist. Prior to that, she was Chief Risk Officer for Old Mutual’s African Operations.
    • Marjorie has not engaged in any political activity in the last five years.

    About the Prudential Regulation Committee

    The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) supervises banks, insurers and major investment firms. The PRA’s most important decisions are taken by the Prudential Regulation Committee, chaired by the Governor of the Bank of England.  The Committee comprises the Governor of the Bank of England; Deputy Governors for Financial Stability, Markets and Banking, and Prudential Regulation; the Chief Executive of the Financial Conduct Authority; a member appointed by the Governor with the approval of the Chancellor; and six other external members appointed by the Chancellor.

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Apple Arcade launches special crossover events featuring SpongeBob SquarePants

    Source: Apple

    Headline: Apple Arcade launches special crossover events featuring SpongeBob SquarePants

    UPDATE July 17, 2025

    This month, players can dive into special crossover events featuring SpongeBob SquarePants in Snake.io+ and Crossy Road Castle, available exclusively on Apple Arcade. Characters and locations from the iconic series arrive in limited-time events in the two popular games on the service. Fans of the absorbent and yellow and porous pal can also check out a brand-new endless mode in SpongeBob: Patty Pursuit, where they’ll test their skills in increasingly difficult levels to top the leaderboard.

    Apple Arcade brings together more than 200 games and offers exclusive events created in collaboration with some of the industry’s top developers. Iconic characters and fan-favorite games come to life in new ways on the service, bringing a whole new level of fun to players that’s free from ads and in-app purchases.

    Snake.io+ by Kooapps
    In Snake.io+, the hit battle royale game, players can slither their way underwater as they complete a series of missions to unlock four unique skins inspired by SpongeBob, Patrick, Sandy, and Plankton. This limited-time event is available now and ends August 25.

    Snake.io+ by Kooapps.

    Crossy Road Castle by Hipster Whale
    Crossy Road Castle, the popular co-op platforming party game, is launching a fun update that will have players racing through 40 Bikini Bottom-themed levels as SpongeBob, Patrick, Squidward, or Sandy — collecting Krabby Patties and avoiding jellyfish. The Krabby Patty Kollectathon event kicks off July 21, followed by the Jellyfish Jam that runs August 4 through August 17.

    Crossy Road Castle by Hipster Whale.

    SpongeBob: Patty Pursuit by Nickelodeon
    Launching today, players can dive into a brand-new endless mode in SpongeBob: Patty Pursuit, a side-scrolling action game where SpongeBob jumps, bounces, slides, and fly-kicks through colorful and dynamic levels. The update will have players test their skills in increasingly difficult levels with no checkpoints and no extra lives to see who can top the leaderboard.

    SpongeBob: Patty Pursuit by Nickelodeon.

    These fun crossover events follow the special appearances of global sensation Bluey in Fruit Ninja Classic+ and Paddington in Crayola Create and Play+ this summer, only on Apple Arcade.
    • Fruit Ninja Classic+ by Halfbrick Studios: The exclusive collaboration with Bluey runs until September 19, bringing four fun-filled events that transform Fruit Ninja Classic+ with Bluey-themed wands, wand powers, dojos, and Easter eggs for fans of all ages to enjoy.
    • Crayola Create and Play+ by Red Games Co.: Paddington brings a suitcase full of creativity to Crayola Create and Play+ through August 26. Explore a British-inspired world designed just for his visit: Whether decorating a suitcase or enjoying a scoop of marmalade ice cream by the sea, this magical summer holiday promises creativity, curiosity, and countless moments of joy.

    Pricing and Availability

    • Apple Arcade is available for $6.99 (U.S.) per month with a one-month free trial. Customers who purchase a new iPhone, iPad, Mac, or Apple TV receive three months of Apple Arcade for free.1
    • Apple Arcade is part of Apple One’s Individual ($19.95 U.S.), Family ($25.95 U.S.), and Premier ($37.95 U.S.) monthly plans, with a one-month free trial.2
    • Arcade Originals are playable across iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, and Apple Vision Pro. App Store Greats are available on iPhone, iPad, and Apple Vision Pro.
    • An Apple Arcade subscription gives a family of up to six unlimited access to all the games in its catalog.
    • Availability for the 200+ games across devices varies based on hardware and software compatibility. Some content may not be available in all areas.

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    1. This offer is available to new subscribers only. One subscription covers one Family Sharing group. The offer is good for three months after eligible device activation. The plan automatically renews until cancelled. Restrictions and other terms apply.
    2. The Apple One free trial includes only services that are not currently used through a free trial or a subscription. The plan automatically renews after the trial until cancelled. Restrictions and other terms apply.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI USA: Representatives Ciscomani, Titus and Cohen Introduce Bipartisan Wild Horse and Burro Protection Act of 2025

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Juan Ciscomani (Arizona)

    WASHINGTON – U.S. Rep. Juan Ciscomani and two congressional colleagues are leading a bipartisan effort aimed at establishing humane policies to care for and manage two iconic animals of the American West, wild horses and burros.

    Ciscomani and Rep. Dina Titus of Nevada, co-chairs of the Congressional Wild Horse Caucus, were joined last week by Rep. Steve Cohen of Tennessee in the introduction of  H.R. 4356, the Wild Horse and Burro Protection Act of 2025. The bill would eliminate the use of helicopters in rounding up wild horses and burros, and require a study into alternative methods for humanely gathering the animals, including workforce opportunities for traditional cowboys.

    “For too long, wild horses and burros have been subjected to dangerous, cruel and costly roundups that often result in the death of the animal,” Ciscomani said. “As an Arizonan and co-chair of the Congressional Wild Horse Caucus, I’m proud to support this common sense, bipartisan legislation that would eliminate the use of helicopters during Bureau of Land Management roundups and encourage more humane and cost-effective alternatives to manage these iconic animals.”

    In efforts to control equine populations, the Bureau of Land Management is currently directed to “humanely capture” wild free-roaming horses and burros and set them up for adoption. To assist in the capture, the BLM contracts with private helicopter companies to pursue the horses and burros over long distances, which can be frightening and even deadly to the animals.

    Between 2020 and 2024, these roundup practices have cost taxpayers at least $36.7 million, including over $6 million paid to helicopter roundup contractors in fiscal year 2022 alone. Scientific research has shown that more humane and cost-effective alternatives, like fertility control, are equally effective in controlling equine populations. The BLM currently spends less than four percent of its budget on these methods.

    “Nevada is home to more wild horses than any other state in our country. Tragically, these animals are subjected to taxpayer-funded helicopter roundups and removals that are all too often costly, ineffective, and inhumane,” said Rep. Titus (D-NV). “My legislation would eliminate the use of helicopters in BLM wild horse gathers and require a report to explore the benefits of alternative methods for humanely gathering horses and the workforce opportunities for traditional cowboys. I am proud to introduce this bipartisan proposal that would protect these icons of the American West which remain a source of pride for Nevada residents.”

    Rep. Cohen(D-TN) stated. “As one of the founding co-Chairs of the Wild Horse and Burro Caucus, I’m pleased to co-lead the Wild Horse and Burro Protection Act to improve accountability and transparency of how these icons of the West are managed by the Bureau of Land Management.”

    “The Bureau of Land Management is charged with humanely managing our nation’s federally protected wild horses, yet every year we see horrific fatalities during helicopter roundups — from wild mustangs running for their lives on broken legs to foals dying from exhaustion,” said Joanna Grossman, Ph.D., equine program director for the Animal Welfare Institute.“Taxpayer dollars should not be funding this abject cruelty. We are grateful to Reps. Titus, Cohen, and Ciscomani for their leadership on this critical bill that would end the use of helicopter roundups and prioritize a more sustainable, humane path forward.”

    “We commend Representative Dina Titus for her leadership in introducing the Wild Horse and Burro Protection Act of 2025. This bill is a critical step toward ending the cruel and unnecessary use of helicopters in wild horse roundups and bringing long-overdue transparency to the Bureau of Land Management’s operations through immediate implementation of onboard cameras,” said Suzanne Roy, executive director of American Wild Horse Conservation. “The American public overwhelmingly supports humane, accountable management of our iconic wild herds, and this legislation delivers just that.”

    “Having spent years documenting wild horses across the vast American West—these are icons of our nation that deserve to be cherished and protected,” said Ashley Avis, founder of The Wild Beauty Foundation and director of the Oscar-contending documentary WILD BEAUTY: Mustang Spirit of the West. “I have also witnessed the harrowing reality of helicopter roundups, where these highly intelligent animals are stampeded for miles. There is nothing ethical about the way this is conducted. I applaud Representative Titus, Representative Cohen, and Representative Ciscomani for continuing to fight for these fast-disappearing symbols of freedom—so that every generation of Americans has the chance to see them, wild and free.”

    The Wild Horse and Burro Protection Act of 2025 has been endorsed by the Animal Welfare Institute, the American Wild Horse Conservation, and Wild Beauty Foundation.

    To read the full bill text of H.R. 4356, the Wild Horse and Burro Protection Act of 2025, click here.

    Congressman Juan Ciscomani is proud to have launched the bipartisan Congressional Wild Horse Caucus earlier this year alongside Reps. David Schweikert (AZ-01), Dina Titus (NV-03), and Steve Cohen (TN-09) to champion the protection of one of America’s most iconic species. The caucus is committed to advancing humane and responsible policies to ensure the long-term care and management of wild horses and burros. Congressman Ciscomani has been a tireless advocate for these majestic animals and remains deeply committed to preserving their place on our public lands for generations to come.

    Read more about the launch of the caucus here.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Seven year legal battle sees illegal shisha cafe forced to pay back nearly £400k

    Source: City of Manchester

    A cafe under investigation since 2018 for numerous breaches of planning law has been ordered to pay back nearly £400,000 following a failed appeal. 

    In September of 2018, Manchester City Council’s planning team issued an enforcement notice against 360 Cafe, in Wilmslow Road, under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. 

    This was because the Council believed that the premises had illegally changed its use to operate as a shisha lounge, contrary to its original planning permission. The enforcement notice stated that changes to revert the business back to its original purpose had to be completed by December 1 of 2018. 

    Over the intervening two years, between July 2019 and October 2021 the Council attempted on numerous occasions to resolve the issues with the building’s Owners – Cameolord Limited – however, on two occasions the Council, working with officers from HMRC and GMP visited the premises to seize shisha pipes, tobacco and other smoking paraphernalia. 

    In spite of frequent attempts to resolve this issue the Council was forced to take legal action. Working alongside financial investigators at Salford Council, the result was Cameolord being found guilty in absentia at a hearing held at Manchester Magistrates’ Court on March 9, 2023, for failing to comply with the enforcement notice. However, an appeal was lodged against this conviction in September of 2023. 

    But at an appeal hearing the original conviction was upheld and a date was set for sentencing and confiscation hearings, these proceedings concluded on Wednesday, July 16, 2025. 

    Sitting at Manchester Crown Court, His Honour Judge Peter Horgan found the actions of the business to have been “persistent and brazen” as it had continued to access their regular rental payments over the course of the offence period, amounting to £321,433.62. 

    Taking into account the change in the value of money over the period of offending, he concluded that the overall benefit figure from the criminal activity was £383,316.40 and ordered a Confiscation Order in that amount under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002. 

    The company was also ordered to pay a fine of £35,000 for the offences and prosecution costs of £23,500 were also awarded. The Defendant was given the maximum period of 3 months to pay these sums.  

    Previously, Mohammad Bashir, 68, of Upper Park Road, Manchester and a Director of the company Cameolord Ltd, pled guilty to an offence under the Town and Planning Act 1990 in March 2023, relating to his failure to resolve the breach; he was ordered to pay a £10,000 fine as well as £1,000 in costs and a £170 victims’ surcharge. 

    Councillor Gavin White, Executive Member for Housing and Development, said: “Nearly seven years after the Council first began proceedings against this business we can finally close the book on this long-running saga. 

    “What could have been a straightforward decision to obey the law and comply with the Council’s reasonable request to comply has now cost this business dearly, with hundreds of thousands of pounds being forfeit, as well as a hefty financial penalty for the director. 

    “Planning law is in place for very good reasons. It protects our community from illegal developments and ensures that businesses cannot chop and change based on a mere whim. I would like to place on record my thanks to our planning and legal team for their hard work and determination to see justice carried out.”  

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman David Scott Leads Georgia Delegation Demanding Trump Admin Reverse Termination of Digital Equity Grants

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman David Scott (GA-13)

    WASHINGTON D.C. – Today, Congressman David Scott (GA-13) led members of the Georgia Delegation in sending a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Acting Administrator of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), Adam Cassady, opposing the abrupt and illegal termination of State Digital Equity Capacity Grants and Digital Equity Competitive Grants. The letter also demands the immediate disbursement of grant awards and approval of all pending grant applications.

    “The decision to unilaterally terminate funding for broadband services is both illegal and morally wrong,” said Congressman David Scott. “Communities across Georgia count on the Digital Equity Grant Program to gain affordable internet, gain access basic digital tools for telehealth services, education, and job opportunities. Characterization of this vital lifeline as a “woke handout based on race” only proves that the administration has failed to comprehend the goal of the programs or who benefits from its funding. In reality, termination of this grant program will disproportionately harm working-class families, veterans, the elderly, and rural Georgians. The Trump Administration has no right to ignore the law by recklessly and indiscriminately canceling funding opportunities for our communities.”

    Digital equity grants were originally included in the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA). The law allocated $2.75 billion to help underserved communities access affordable high-speed internet. The funding was designed to close the digital divide for veterans, seniors, rural communities, low-income families, incarcerated individuals, people with disabilities, and others.

    Despite being funded by Congress, the Trump Admin unilaterally halted the program in May, falsely labeling it as “unconstitutional” and a “woke handout.” This is a continuation of President Trump’s repeated efforts to illegally terminate funding passed by Congress. It effectively froze already approved grants and ended the review of hundreds of competitive applications, including a $9.9 million application from Clayton County’s Department of Information Technology.

    In the letter, Rep. David Scott led Georgia’s Democratic House lawmakers in urging Secretary Lutnick and Acting Administrator Cassady:

    • Restore digital equity grant funding already awarded
    • Resume Reviewing applications for the Digital Equity Competitive Grant Program
    • Recognize the immense benefits these investments provide, including job readiness training, access to online healthcare, digital literacy programs, and educational resources.

    View a copy of the letter HERE.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: ASIA/CHINA – Rite of Admission: Deacons of Ningbo respond to the Lord’s call with faith and charity

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Ningbo (Agenzia Fides) – The liturgical rite of admission of candidates to the priesthood is not only a celebration of the diocese, but also an opportunity of witness to young people. Thus, the Diocese of Ningbo decided to celebrate two separate solemn liturgies for admission, both presided over by Bishop Francis Xavier Jin Yangke. The two liturgies were celebrated on Thursday, July 11th and Monday, July 14th. During the rite, four diocesan deacons responded to the Lord’s call to the priesthood with faith and charity before their bishop, receiving the faculty to exercise the ministries of acolyte and lector.In his homily, Bishop Jin emphasized that “the ministry of reading the Word consists not only in reciting the Word, but also in being witness to the Word. The acolyte invites seminarians to learn humility and fidelity in serving the altar and their brothers.” Furthermore, the Bishop encouraged the deacons to prepare themselves to exercise the diaconal and priestly ministry with pastoral care when they receive their diaconal and priestly ordination, according to the Lord’s will.”Vocation,” the Bishop of Ningbo insisted, “is not a journey one undertakes alone. There is always a need for dialogue between the soul of the person and the Lord.” The Bishop also invited each baptized person and the entire community to accompany and support the future deacons and priests on their journey, sharing with them their joys, responsibilities, and even difficulties.Many young people from the diocese also took part in the two liturgies. This was a comforting sign for the entire diocesan community, in the hope—as one parish priest emphasized—that even in these circumstances, the seed of new vocations may silently fall in the hearts of many. (NZ) (Agenzia Fides, 17/7/2025)
    Share:

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: Cielo Announces Execution and Closing of Amended Settlement Agreement

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CALGARY, Alberta, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Cielo Waste Solutions Corp. (TSXV: CMC; OTC PINK: CWSFF) (“Cielo” or the “Company”) is pleased to announce that it has executed an amended and restated settlement agreement (the “Amended Settlement Agreement”) with Expander Energy Inc. (“Expander”) and certain directors, shareholders and related parties of Expander (collectively and together with Expander, the “Settlement Parties”), and closed the Unwinding (as defined below). The Amended Settlement Agreement replaces a settlement agreement that was executed among Cielo and the Settlement Parties on April 29, 2025, as previously announced, which was initially expected to close on June 13, 2025.

    The Amended Settlement Agreement provides for the effective unwinding (the “Unwinding”), to the extent possible, of certain previously disclosed transactions (the “Transactions”) completed between Cielo and the applicable Settlement Parties, including Expander, pursuant to and in connection with an amended and restated asset purchase agreement dated November 8, 2023, as amended on September 16, 2024 (the “APA”). The Unwinding has closed with an effective date of July 16, 2025, subject to the approval of the TSX Venture Exchange (the “Exchange”) with respect to the Note (as defined below).  

    As part of the Amended Settlement Agreement:

    • Approximately 40 million shares of Cielo (“Common Shares” and such shares, the “Settlement Shares”) have been surrendered by the Settlement Parties to the Company for cancellation. The Settlement Parties may, but will not be obligated to, surrender an additional approximately 20 million Settlement Shares on or before December 31, 2025 for cancellation.
    • All agreements between Cielo and the applicable Settlement Parties, including Expander, including a license agreement (the “License Agreement”) dated November 9, 2023, between the Company and Expander and several service agreements (“Service Agreements”) between the Company and the applicable Settlement Parties, including Expander, have been terminated and the Company has relinquished its interest in those assets it had initially acquired under the APA.
    • Cielo has issued a promissory note and general security agreement in favour of certain of the Settlement Parties, including Expander, in an aggregate amount of C$748,208.79 (the “Payment”), in full and final satisfaction of all and any outstanding fees owing by the Company, the issuance and terms of which are subject to the approval of the Exchange.
    • The Settlement Parties, including Expander, will continue to be bound by a customary 18-month standstill related to, among other things, soliciting proxies and voting of securities of Cielo.
    • The applicable Settlement Parties, including Expander, have agreed to dismiss and/or discontinue all legal proceedings against Cielo.

    The foregoing description of the Amended Settlement Agreement does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirely by reference to the Amended Settlement Agreement, a copy of which will be available under Cielo’s profile on the SEDAR+ website at www.sedarplus.ca.

    ABOUT CIELO

    Cielo Waste Solutions Corp. is a publicly traded company focused on transforming waste materials into high-value renewable fuels. Cielo seeks to address global waste challenges while contributing to the circular economy and reducing carbon emissions. Cielo is fueling renewable change with a mission to be a leader in the wood by-product-to-fuels industry by using environmentally friendly, economically sustainable and market-ready technologies. Cielo is committed to helping society ‘change the fuel, not the vehicle’, which the Company believes will contribute to generating positive returns for shareholders. Cielo shares are listed on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol “CMC,” as well as on the OTC Pink Market under the symbol “CWSFF.”

    For further information please contact:

    Cielo Investor Relations

    Ryan C. Jackson, CEO
    Phone: (403) 348-2972
    Email: investors@cielows.com

    CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

    This news release contains certain forward-looking statements and forward-looking information (collectively referred to herein as “forward-looking statements”) within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities laws. All statements other than statements of present or historical fact are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are often, but not always, identified by the use of words such as “anticipate”, “achieve”, “could”, “believe”, “plan”, “intend”, “objective”, “continuous”, “ongoing”, “estimate”, “outlook”, “expect”, “may”, “will”, “project”, “should” or similar words, including negatives thereof, suggesting future outcomes.

    Forward-looking statements are subject to both known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors, many of which are beyond the control of Cielo, that may cause the actual results, level of activity, performance, or achievements of the Company to be materially different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements and information are based on plans, expectations and estimates of management at the date the information is provided and are subject to certain factors and assumptions. The Company is making forward-looking statements, including but not limited to, with respect to: the Amended Settlement Agreement and certain terms thereof, including but not limited to the Note, and the Company’s obligations thereunder.

    Investors should continue to review and consider information disseminated through news releases and filed by Cielo on SEDAR+. Although the Company has attempted to identify crucial factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in forward looking statements, there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended.

    Forward-looking statements are not a guarantee of future performance and involve a number of risks and uncertainties, some of which are described herein. Such forward-looking statements necessarily involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, which may cause Cielo’s actual performance and results to differ materially from any projections of future performance or results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statements are made as of the date hereof and, except as required by law, the Company assumes no obligation to publicly update or revise such statements to reflect new information, subsequent or otherwise.

    Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as such term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this news release.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Cielo Announces Execution and Closing of Amended Settlement Agreement

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CALGARY, Alberta, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Cielo Waste Solutions Corp. (TSXV: CMC; OTC PINK: CWSFF) (“Cielo” or the “Company”) is pleased to announce that it has executed an amended and restated settlement agreement (the “Amended Settlement Agreement”) with Expander Energy Inc. (“Expander”) and certain directors, shareholders and related parties of Expander (collectively and together with Expander, the “Settlement Parties”), and closed the Unwinding (as defined below). The Amended Settlement Agreement replaces a settlement agreement that was executed among Cielo and the Settlement Parties on April 29, 2025, as previously announced, which was initially expected to close on June 13, 2025.

    The Amended Settlement Agreement provides for the effective unwinding (the “Unwinding”), to the extent possible, of certain previously disclosed transactions (the “Transactions”) completed between Cielo and the applicable Settlement Parties, including Expander, pursuant to and in connection with an amended and restated asset purchase agreement dated November 8, 2023, as amended on September 16, 2024 (the “APA”). The Unwinding has closed with an effective date of July 16, 2025, subject to the approval of the TSX Venture Exchange (the “Exchange”) with respect to the Note (as defined below).  

    As part of the Amended Settlement Agreement:

    • Approximately 40 million shares of Cielo (“Common Shares” and such shares, the “Settlement Shares”) have been surrendered by the Settlement Parties to the Company for cancellation. The Settlement Parties may, but will not be obligated to, surrender an additional approximately 20 million Settlement Shares on or before December 31, 2025 for cancellation.
    • All agreements between Cielo and the applicable Settlement Parties, including Expander, including a license agreement (the “License Agreement”) dated November 9, 2023, between the Company and Expander and several service agreements (“Service Agreements”) between the Company and the applicable Settlement Parties, including Expander, have been terminated and the Company has relinquished its interest in those assets it had initially acquired under the APA.
    • Cielo has issued a promissory note and general security agreement in favour of certain of the Settlement Parties, including Expander, in an aggregate amount of C$748,208.79 (the “Payment”), in full and final satisfaction of all and any outstanding fees owing by the Company, the issuance and terms of which are subject to the approval of the Exchange.
    • The Settlement Parties, including Expander, will continue to be bound by a customary 18-month standstill related to, among other things, soliciting proxies and voting of securities of Cielo.
    • The applicable Settlement Parties, including Expander, have agreed to dismiss and/or discontinue all legal proceedings against Cielo.

    The foregoing description of the Amended Settlement Agreement does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirely by reference to the Amended Settlement Agreement, a copy of which will be available under Cielo’s profile on the SEDAR+ website at www.sedarplus.ca.

    ABOUT CIELO

    Cielo Waste Solutions Corp. is a publicly traded company focused on transforming waste materials into high-value renewable fuels. Cielo seeks to address global waste challenges while contributing to the circular economy and reducing carbon emissions. Cielo is fueling renewable change with a mission to be a leader in the wood by-product-to-fuels industry by using environmentally friendly, economically sustainable and market-ready technologies. Cielo is committed to helping society ‘change the fuel, not the vehicle’, which the Company believes will contribute to generating positive returns for shareholders. Cielo shares are listed on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol “CMC,” as well as on the OTC Pink Market under the symbol “CWSFF.”

    For further information please contact:

    Cielo Investor Relations

    Ryan C. Jackson, CEO
    Phone: (403) 348-2972
    Email: investors@cielows.com

    CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

    This news release contains certain forward-looking statements and forward-looking information (collectively referred to herein as “forward-looking statements”) within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities laws. All statements other than statements of present or historical fact are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are often, but not always, identified by the use of words such as “anticipate”, “achieve”, “could”, “believe”, “plan”, “intend”, “objective”, “continuous”, “ongoing”, “estimate”, “outlook”, “expect”, “may”, “will”, “project”, “should” or similar words, including negatives thereof, suggesting future outcomes.

    Forward-looking statements are subject to both known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors, many of which are beyond the control of Cielo, that may cause the actual results, level of activity, performance, or achievements of the Company to be materially different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements and information are based on plans, expectations and estimates of management at the date the information is provided and are subject to certain factors and assumptions. The Company is making forward-looking statements, including but not limited to, with respect to: the Amended Settlement Agreement and certain terms thereof, including but not limited to the Note, and the Company’s obligations thereunder.

    Investors should continue to review and consider information disseminated through news releases and filed by Cielo on SEDAR+. Although the Company has attempted to identify crucial factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in forward looking statements, there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended.

    Forward-looking statements are not a guarantee of future performance and involve a number of risks and uncertainties, some of which are described herein. Such forward-looking statements necessarily involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, which may cause Cielo’s actual performance and results to differ materially from any projections of future performance or results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statements are made as of the date hereof and, except as required by law, the Company assumes no obligation to publicly update or revise such statements to reflect new information, subsequent or otherwise.

    Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as such term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this news release.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) Market Set to Soar with 26.90% CAGR, Projected to Reach US$ 233.2 Billion by 2032 Amid Growing Demand for Scalable and Cost-Effective IT Solutions: AnalystView Market Insights

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    San Francisco, USA, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) market was valued at USD 34,680.33 million in 2024 and is projected to grow at a CAGR of 26.90% from 2025 to 2032. DaaS transforms the conventional IT ownership model by offering a subscription-based solution that integrates hardware, software, and managed services into a single, streamlined package.

    DaaS model is transforming how businesses equip their workforce, especially in the era of hybrid and remote work. Rather than purchasing devices outright, companies lease them as part of a service contract that includes setup, maintenance, security, and replacement. This approach simplifies IT asset management, reduces upfront costs, and ensures that devices are consistently updated and secure. For instance, the General Services Administration (GSA) has adopted the DaaS model through its Federal Acquisition Service (FAS). The GSA offers IT hardware and managed services bundles under long-term contracts, helping federal agencies streamline procurement and reduce capital expenditures.

    Access Your Free Sample Report PDF Now @ https://www.analystviewmarketinsights.com/request_sample/AV3807

    Global Device-As-A-Service Market Key Players- Detailed Competitive Insights

    • Accenture PLC
    • Amazon Web Services
    • Apple Inc.
    • Box Inc.
    • Cisco Systems, Inc.
    • Dell Technologies
    • Fujitsu Limited
    • Google LLC
    • HP Inc.
    • IBM Corporation
    • Lenovo Group
    • Microsoft Corporation
    • Oracle Corporation
    • Panasonic Corporation
    • Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
    • Xerox Corporation
    • Others

    DaaS Market Insights:

    By 2023, a growing number of medium to large organizations across North America had embraced the Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) model to enhance device provisioning and minimize operational downtime. Government initiatives such as the U.S. GSA’s managed IT services contracts and the UK Crown Commercial Service’s tech leasing frameworks have played a key role in accelerating DaaS adoption. With the ability to scale device fleets rapidly and maintain centralized monitoring and lifecycle management, DaaS is increasingly favored across sectors like finance, education, healthcare, and public administration. 

    In addition to cost and operational benefits, sustainability is becoming a key motivator behind DaaS adoption. Companies increasingly seek ways to reduce electronic waste and improve environmental accountability. DaaS aligns with Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) goals by promoting device reuse, refurbishment, and proper recycling. Global tech leaders, such as HP, report that a significant number of Fortune 100 companies are exploring DaaS to meet both IT needs and environmental targets.

    Government agencies are also recognizing DaaS’s potential. A 2023 procurement update from the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) highlighted growing interest in DaaS as a strategic solution for federal departments to manage IT assets while meeting sustainability objectives.

    However, the shift to DaaS is not without its challenges. Businesses must evaluate concerns related to data privacy, dependency on vendors, service-level agreement (SLA) reliability, and compatibility with legacy systems. Despite these barriers, the model’s scalability, financial flexibility, and security features are encouraging widespread adoption, especially among small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in emerging markets that benefit from low upfront investment and simplified IT operations.

    North America DaaS Market:
    North America dominated the Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) market in 2024, accounting for over 38% of global revenue. The region benefits from widespread hybrid work adoption and government-driven IT modernization programs. The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) actively promotes DaaS contracts across federal agencies, boosting efficiency and reducing upfront costs for public sector IT infrastructure.

    Asia Pacific DaaS Market:
    Asia Pacific is witnessing the fastest DaaS market growth, projected to expand at a CAGR exceeding 29% through 2032. Growth is fueled by rapid digital transformation across India, China, and Southeast Asia. Government programs like India’s Digital India initiative and Smart Cities Mission are increasingly leveraging DaaS for secure, cost-effective device deployment in education, public service, and local governance.

    TABLE OF CONTENT:

    1. Device-as-a-Service Market Overview
    1.1. Study Scope
    1.2. Market Estimation Years
    2. Executive Summary
    2.1. Market Snippet
    2.1.1. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by Device Type
    2.1.2. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by Service Model
    2.1.3. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by Deployment Mode
    2.1.4. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by End-User
    2.1.5. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by Country
    2.1.6. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by Region
    2.2. Competitive Insights
    3. Device-as-a-Service Key Market Trends
    3.1. Device-as-a-Service Market Drivers
    3.1.1. Impact Analysis of Market Drivers
    3.2. Device-as-a-Service Market Restraints
    3.2.1. Impact Analysis of Market Restraints
    3.3. Device-as-a-Service Market Opportunities
    3.4. Device-as-a-Service Market Future Trends
    4. Device-as-a-Service Industry Study
    4.1. PEST Analysis
    4.2. Porter’s Five Forces Analysis
    4.3. Growth Prospect Mapping
    4.4. Regulatory Framework Analysis…..

    DaaS Market Competitive Insights:

    The Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) market is highly competitive, driven by global players offering integrated hardware, software, and support services. Accenture PLC leads with strong consulting and managed service capabilities. Amazon Web Services supports cloud-based DaaS platforms. Apple Inc. leverages its hardware ecosystem for enterprise DaaS solutions. Box Inc. enhances DaaS with secure content management. Cisco Systems integrates networking and security features, while Dell Technologies offers comprehensive end-to-end DaaS packages. These companies focus on innovation, scalability, and strategic partnerships to maintain a strong market presence and cater to diverse enterprise and government needs in the evolving digital workplace landscape.

    Map the full market terrain with regional insights, segmented views, consumer intelligence, and competitor studies@

    https://www.analystviewmarketinsights.com/reports/report-highlight-device-as-a-service-market

    Market Segementaion:

    GLOBAL DEVICE-AS-A-SERVICE MARKET, BY DEVICE TYPE- MARKET ANALYSIS, 2019 – 2032

    • Smartphones
    • Laptops
    • Desktops
    • Tablets
    • Wearables

    GLOBAL DEVICE-AS-A-SERVICE MARKET, BY SERVICE MODEL- MARKET ANALYSIS, 2019 – 2032

    • Leasing
    • Subscription
    • Full-service

    GLOBAL DEVICE-AS-A-SERVICE MARKET, BY DEPLOYMENT MODE- MARKET ANALYSIS, 2019 – 2032

    • Cloud-based
    • On-premises

    GLOBAL DEVICE-AS-A-SERVICE MARKET, BY END-USER- MARKET ANALYSIS, 2019 – 2032

    • Enterprises
    • SMBs
    • Individual Consumers

    Reasons to Invest in the Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) Market:

    1. Rising Demand for Scalable IT Infrastructure
    Businesses increasingly require flexible IT solutions to support hybrid and remote work models. DaaS enables organizations to scale device fleets up or down on demand, reducing capital expenditures while maintaining operational agility.

    2. Government Push for Digital Transformation
    Public sector initiatives such as the U.S. GSA’s DaaS contracts and India’s Digital India program are accelerating adoption. These efforts create stable demand and long-term contract opportunities for vendors in the DaaS space.

    3. Built-in Security and Lifecycle Management
    DaaS integrates device provisioning, security updates, and end-of-life recycling into one service. This reduces IT burden and strengthens cybersecurity across enterprises, making it a preferred choice for regulated industries.

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  • MIL-OSI USA: Vermont Delegation Secures $22.7 Million Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Award for Winooski River Bridge  

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Peter Welch (D-Vermont)
    WINOOSKI, VT – The Vermont Congressional Delegation, Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Senator Peter Welch (D-Vt.), and Representative Becca Balint (VT-At-Large) today announced a $22.7 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) to help replace the Winooski River Bridge in Chittenden County. The federal funding, provided through DOT’s Better Utilizing Investments to Leverage Development (BUILD) Grant Program and made possible by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, will replace and upgrade travel lanes and incorporate shared-use paths to improve safety on the bridge for cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 
    “Bolstering Vermont’s infrastructure is crucial to ensuring the safety, security, and success of families, workers, and everyone traveling through the Green Mountain State. We’re proud to see this investment of more than $22 million that will make our roads and communities safer,” said the Vermont Congressional Delegation. “The replacement of the Winooski River Bridge will boost northern Vermont’s critical infrastructure, improve safety and accessibility, and make Winooski more resilient to extreme weather.” 
    “Maintaining safe and reliable public transportation infrastructure one of the most important responsibilities of any government,” said Vermont Governor Phil Scott. “I’m appreciative to our congressional delegation for bringing this much needed funding back home to Vermont.” 
    “This announcement is crucial toward the successful funding package necessary to deliver this complex bridge project,” said Vermont Transportation Secretary Joe Flynn. “The effort from Vermont’ congressional delegation is greatly appreciated.” 
    The Vermont Congressional Delegation nominated the project for $8 million in Congressionally Directed Spending (CDS) for Fiscal Year 2026 (FY26). 
    The existing Winooski River Bridge, built in 1929, is in poor condition and needs to be replaced. The improved bridge will use durable materials to upgrade the existing infrastructure and create a wider sidewalk for pedestrians to cross safely. The new bridge will also feature improved drainage systems to better withstand extreme weather events driven by climate change—including the flooding that has impacted Vermont for the last three years. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: NRS celebrates socio-economic investment

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    NRS celebrates socio-economic investment

    Almost £20 million funding was invested to help NRS communities grow and thrive in 2024/25.

    NRS has supported 149 projects to bring positive social change to benefit people living in communities across the UK – from Caithness to the tip of North Wales, down to the Bristol and English Channels.

    Every £1 of the £2,287,696 NRS has invested unlocked another £8.23 in match funding, elevating the community support to over £18.8m. The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority also directly supported four transformational projects with a share of over £900,000 – taking the total to almost £20m.

    David Calder, head of sustainability and socio-economics for NRS Dounreay, said:

    Our UK wide footprint enables us to play a key role in working in partnership with other public sector and increasingly private sector organisations with community benefit obligations in addressing a variety of social and economic challenges and opportunities.

    This partnership investment approach enables us to align with regional and national priorities while creating meaningful impact where it matters most – in our communities.

    Alan Krailing, head of sustainability for NRS Sites, added:

    Our mission goes beyond decommissioning and site restoration – we want to shape the future for generations to come.

    The first step to building a sustainable legacy is investing in our communities to create shared value and resilient and thriving economies that meet local needs. Our socio-economic programmes are bringing this legacy to life by creating a ripple effect of social impact across the UK.

    NRS funding helped 215 new or growing businesses, awarded 70 start-up grants and created 142 jobs to develop thriving and resilient economies in remote, rural communities. Six graduates were placed or retained in employment, as well as projects supporting over 10,000 training opportunities, 15 apprenticeships, 900 employment opportunities and 160 work experience placements, improving access to sustainable incomes.

    With over 9,000 voluntary hours and more than 33,000 individual health and well-being interventions, people of all ages have been empowered to work toward long-term solutions to social challenges. These efforts have not only improved outcomes but also fostered stronger, more resilient communities.

    Some examples of the projects supported include:

    Caithness Business Fund: A £50,000 contribution to the £150,000 Future Skills apprenticeship grant scheme has tackled skills shortages and driven investment in new opportunities for SMEs and young people in the North Highlands – a region on the cusp of becoming a renewable powerhouse for the UK and beyond.

    During its first year in operation the scheme has supported seven apprentices and stimulated business growth.

    Prysor Angling Association: £65,000 funding has revitalised a café, community hub and created four jobs on the banks of Trawsfynydd Lake in the heart of Eryri National Park, North Wales. School children are learning about conservation and biodiversity in the lakeside classroom and gaining essential life skills whilst they cast off on the Fishing for Schools programme.

    A new bird hide and three accessible fishing platforms have improved the leisure offer to all. Three EV Chargers and a 50 KW solar array are generating income to offset running costs and help support the organisation becoming self-reliant, sustainable and carbon neutral.  

    Tumbledown Farm: £85,000 funding helped to create a carbon neutral forest school at a 27-acre former farm owned by Weymouth Town Council. The new building provides community led learning, employment and well-being opportunities for local schools, families and people with additional needs in an inclusive, nurturing greenspace.

    We are incredibly proud of being a good neighbour to the schools, clubs, community groups nearest NRS sites where funding has helped to meet the local needs of 82 grass roots organisations.

    Watch the video below to find out much more.

    NRS socio-economic impact 2024-2025

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Boost for British business as new partnership breaks down barriers to infrastructure delivery in South Africa

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Boost for British business as new partnership breaks down barriers to infrastructure delivery in South Africa

    Chancellor launches new Infrastructure Partnership with South Africa, opening up significant investment and export opportunities for UK firms.

    • Best-in-class British expertise will speed up delivery of major projects in the country, helping to deliver growth and good jobs as part of our Plan for Change.
    • Builds further on the first-of-its-kind UK Growth & Investment Partnership launched globally with the nation at the end of 2024.

    British businesses will have more opportunities to expand, invest and export to South Africa through a flagship partnership launched today, 17 July.

    At an event in Durban, Chancellor Rachel Reeves hailed the agreement as having the potential to be transformative for the best and brightest British firms doing business in the country who had long been looking for government support in unlocking commercial opportunities in areas like architectural design, engineering, and professional and business services.

    The UK is the biggest international investor in South Africa, but businesses have faced challenges such as project delays due to blockers on infrastructure delivery. British expertise will be brought in to unblock these barriers on building, speeding up a pipeline of projects which British firms are well-placed to win tenders for. This will help growth and development in South Africa, and also help Britain get better return on its investments in the country.

    This model of Government-to-Government (G2G) Infrastructure Partnership has previously delivered strong growth and jobs in countries such as Peru, with companies such as Arup and Turner & Townsend building a track-record of international delivery and bringing economic growth to the UK.

    The Chancellor saw first-hand how those two businesses have already been showcasing British expertise in designing, planning and building infrastructure in South Africa during her visit in February to the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town – a site expansion project which Arup and Turner & Townsend won the contracts for.

    Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves said:

    This is exactly what our Plan for Change is all about – backing British businesses who have been held back for too long to compete and win on the global stage.  By unlocking these opportunities, we’re opening doors for British expertise in engineering, design and project management, creating a pipeline of work in South Africa to support good jobs paying decent wages.

    When British businesses thrive abroad, it strengthens our economy at home – delivering security for working people and putting more money in their pockets. That’s the foundation of sustainable growth that our Plan for Change is designed to deliver.

    South Africa’s Minister of Public Works & Infrastructure, Dean Macpherson, said:

    This landmark partnership with the UK reflects our vision to ensure that public assets deliver real value for our people and to turn South Africa into a construction site which will help grow our economy and create jobs. By injecting technical expertise and delivery support into stalled projects within the Department of Public Works & Infrastructure, we are turning neglected buildings and land into opportunities for job creation, economic growth, and restored dignity.

    This agreement is about far more than bricks and mortar; it’s about ensuring every rand spent on public assets advances the public good, accelerates infrastructure delivery, and grows our economy.

    Funded with a mix of UK ODA and non-ODA, the G2G Partnership will formalise UK support via technical assistance for new initiatives to improve South Africa’s management of public assets, accelerate project delivery in selected local municipalities, and launch an initiative to bring in external consultants to drive major projects and override longstanding inefficiencies.

    The G2G Partnership enhances the thriving collaboration between the UK’s Department for Business and Trade, the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office and South Africa’s Department of Public Works & Infrastructure. It builds on the close business relationship between both countries and paves the way to unlocking new export opportunities for UK businesses, primarily in the professional and business services and infrastructure sectors, bringing economic growth to the UK.

    Today’s announcement also further builds on the UK’s Growth and Investment Partnership with South Africa, a first-of-its-kind collaboration initiated by Foreign Secretary David Lammy during his visit to Cape Town in November 2024. Projects announced to date through the Growth and Investment Partnership include initiatives around inclusive agriculture, export promotion, and rail reform delivered by Crossrail international.

    It comes as Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz signed the UK-Germany Treaty in London this afternoon. Included within this is a commitment for public financial institutions in the UK and Germany to work together in mobilising private capital into high-growth industries, opening up opportunities for innovative British businesses. Reeves will mark the agreement in a meeting with her counterpart Vice-Chancellor Lars Klingbeil, in Durban later this afternoon.

    Coupled with the launch of the UK-SA Infrastructure Partnership, the agreements recognise infrastructure as key to growth and that cooperating with international partners to invest in that infrastructure is a route to delivering the UK Government’s Industrial Strategy: with more good jobs and more money in the pockets of working people across our countries.

    Business and Trade Secretary, Jonathan Reynolds said:

    Our Modern Industrial Strategy, and Trade Strategy, are about playing to the UK’s strengths.

    Our businesses lead the way in engineering and major infrastructure projects, and partnerships like these help unlock new exports, investment and job-creating contracts. 

    This Government-to-Government Partnership builds on the UK’s thriving business relationship with South Africa and shows how our Plan for Change is paving the way for growth at home by unlocking new opportunities abroad.

    As the government unlocks infrastructure pipelines abroad, it has today published its pipeline of infrastructure projects at home through the National Infrastructure and Service Transformation Authority.

    The 10-Year Infrastructure Strategy includes investment of at least £725 billion into infrastructure over the next decade across eight growth-driving sectors where Britain holds a cutting-edge on the world stage, while the landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill will also speed up and streamline the delivery of new homes and critical infrastructure – cutting unnecessary red tape which stifles delivery. The measures in the Bill are expected to boost the UK economy by £7.5 billion over the next 10 years – with planning reforms having the largest positive growth effect from a single measure ever scored by the Office for Budget Responsibility.

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Deluzio and Colleagues Propose New Tools to Fight Price Gouging Amidst Trump’s Reckless Tariffs

    Source: US Congressman Chris Deluzio (PA)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Chris Deluzio (PA-17) along with Jan Schakowsky (IL-11) and U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) reintroduced the Price Gouging Prevention Act to fight back against the corporate power enabled by the Trump administration’s chaotic tariff policies. The bill would give the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and state attorneys general new tools to enforce a federal ban against grossly excessive price increases.

    Over the past five years, giant corporations have repeatedly taken advantage of inflation and supply chain disruptions to expand their profit margins by raising prices higher than necessary to cover cost increases. President Trump’s on-again, off-again tariffs have created yet another opportunity for corporate price gouging. The tariff-driven uncertainty gives companies the opportunity to raise prices on all goods—regardless of whether they are actually subject to new tariffs—higher and for longer than what is necessary to cover any cost increases. Now, dozens of companies have reported raising the prices of goods and services unaffected by Trump’s tariffs. 

    “Prices are still too high, and inflation is still pounding folks. Especially now, we need to rein in monopolists and other huge corporations with the power to price gouge the American people,” said Congressman Deluzio. “By upping FTC enforcement practices and boosting transparency, this bill will take some of the squeeze off American families and small businesses suffering under the thumb of out-of-control corporate power.”   

    Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), John Fetterman (D-Pa.), Andy Kim (D-N.J.), Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) joined as co-sponsors. 

    The Price Gouging Prevention Act of 2025 would help the federal government and state attorneys general fight corporate price gouging. The bill would:  

    • Prohibit price gouging at the federal level—anytime and anywhere. The bill would clarify that price gouging is an unfair and deceptive practice under the FTC Act. It would allow the FTC and state attorneys general to stop sellers from charging a grossly excessive price, regardless of where the price gouging occurs in a supply chain or distribution network;
    • Help enforcers establish when price gouging is occurring during a significant shift in trade policy. The bill lists a set of exceptional market shocks—including an “abrupt or significant shift in trade policy”—and outlines a standard for a presumptive violation of the price gouging prohibition during such a shock, such as when companies brag about increasing prices;
    • Create an affirmative defense for small businesses acting in good faith. Small and local businesses sometimes must raise prices in response to crisis-driven increases in their costs because they have little negotiating power with their price-gouging suppliers. This affirmative defense protects small businesses earning less than $100 million from frivolous litigation if they show legitimate cost increases;
    • Require public companies to clearly disclose costs and pricing strategies. During periods of exceptional market shock, the bill requires public companies to transparently disclose and explain changes in their cost of goods sold, gross margins, and pricing strategies in their quarterly SEC filings; and 
    • Provide $1 billion in additional funding to the FTC to carry out its work. 

    During Trump’s presidency, giant corporations have continued to take advantage of inflation and supply chain disruptions by raising prices far higher than necessary, ultimately ripping off American people. The Price Gouging Prevention Act is a huge step towards ending this practice by holding corporate price gougers accountable.

    Last week, Congressman Deluzio joined with Senator Warren and 15 other Democrats urged the FTC to investigate tariff-enabled corporate price gouging that is raising costs for American families and use its full authority to prevent it.  

    As a member of the House Armed Services Committee, Congressman Deluzio focuses on fighting price gouging in the defense sector, especially defense contracting. In the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that passed out of committee on July 17th, he was able to secure several important wins on this topic and for his community in Western Pennsylvania. He also previously introduced Stop Price Gouging the Military Act to close loopholes in current acquisition laws. 

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    MIL OSI USA News