Category: Business

  • MIL-OSI: Sydbank share buyback programme: transactions in week 12

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Company Announcement No 12/2025

    Peberlyk 4
    6200 Aabenraa
    Denmark

    Tel +45 74 37 37 37
    Fax +45 74 37 35 36

    Sydbank A/S
    CVR No DK 12626509, Aabenraa
    sydbank.dk

    24 March 2025  

    Dear Sirs

    Sydbank share buyback programme: transactions in week 12
    On 26 February 2025 Sydbank announced a share buyback programme of DKK 1,350m. The share buyback programme commenced on 3 March 2025 and will be completed by 31 January 2026.

    The purpose of the share buyback programme is to reduce the share capital of Sydbank and the programme is executed in compliance with the provisions of Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 April 2014 and Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2016/1052 of 8 March 2016, collectively referred to as the Safe Harbour rules.

    The following transactions have been made under the share buyback programme:

      Number of shares VWAP Gross value (DKK)
    Accumulated, most recent
    Announcement

    119,000

     

    52,669,390.00

    17 March 2025
    18 March 2025
    19 March 2025
    20 March 2025
    21 March 2025
    8,000
    8,000
    7,000
    7,000
    19,000
    449.74
    450.85
    451.93
    449.01
    425.47
    3,597,920.00
    3,606,800.00
    3,163,510.00
    3,143,070.00
    8,083,930.00
    Total over week 12 49,000   21,595,230.00
    Total accumulated during the
    share buyback programme

    168,000

     

    74,264,620.00

    All transactions were made under ISIN DK 0010311471 and effected by Danske Bank A/S on behalf of Sydbank A/S.

    Further information about the transactions, cf Article 5 of Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council on market abuse and Commission delegated regulation, is available in the attachment.

    Following the above transactions, Sydbank holds a total of 3,552,669 own shares, equal to 6.50% of the Bank’s share capital.

    Yours sincerely
            
    Mark Luscombe        Jørn Adam Møller
    CEO        Deputy Group Chief Executive

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Minutes from the Annual General Meeting of Jyske Realkredit A/S

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NASDAQ Copenhagen A/S                                                                              24 March 2025
                                                                                     Announcement no. 27/2025

    Minutes from the Annual General Meeting of Jyske Realkredit A/S

    The Annual General Meeting of Jyske Realkredit A/S was held on 24 March 2025. The directors’ report was taken as read, the annual report for the year ended 31 December 2024 was adopted, and a resolution for the distribution of the net profit for the year was passed.

    The General Meeting unanimously re-elected Niels Erik Jakobsen, Lars Waalen Sandberg, Peter Schleidt and Morten Lykke to the Supervisory Board.

    EY was reelected as auditors of the company.

    At the subsequent meeting of the Supervisory Board, Niels Erik Jakobsen was appointed as Chairman and Lars Waalen Sandberg as Deputy Chairman.

    Yours faithfully
    Jyske Realkredit A/S

    On behalf of the Chairman

    Carsten Tirsbæk Madsen
    CEO

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI China: Mass rollout set to begin of smart car technology

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    Smart driving is now a must for new vehicles in China, as major carmakers roll out the feature for mass-market models.

    One day last week saw three companies — Chery, GAC and Geely’s premium arm Zeekr — announce ambitious plans for the technology that was reserved for premium vehicles.

    Chery, Chinese partner of Jaguar Land Rover, unveiled its Falcon smart driving system on Tuesday, saying it will be available across all its brands.

    Li Xueyong, Chery’s executive vice-president, said more than 30 models of different powertrains will be equipped with the Falcon system by the end of 2025.

    The most affordable of them will be the Chery Ant, a mini electric car. With a pre-order price of 65,900 yuan ($9,116), it boasts 23 smart driving functions including automatic parking and Navigate on Autopilot on expressways.

    There are three Falcon solutions: the Falcon 500, 700 and 900, with the last one boasting Level 3 capabilities.

    Autonomous driving is rated at six levels, from zero to five, according to the Society of Automotive Engineers. A Level 2 vehicle can steer, brake and accelerate itself in certain situations, but the drivers must be ready to step in at any time.

    Level 3 cars, in certain areas and under certain conditions, will steer, brake and accelerate by themselves, allowing the drivers to take their hands off the wheel and their eyes off the road. Chery said its high-level smart driving models will hit the European market in 2026.

    GAC Group unveiled its intelligent driving strategy on Tuesday as well. Feng Xingya, chairman and president of GAC Group, said intelligent driving capabilities will become a critical standard for evaluating automotive products in the future.

    He said GAC will launch China’s first mass-produced Level 3 model by the end of 2025, and it will offer Level 4 vehicles to private car buyers from 2027.

    Earlier this year, Xpeng said it is to launch quasi-L3 software in mid-2025, and full L3 capabilities are to be revealed at the end of the year.

    Changan said it aims to achieve full-scenario L3 driving in 2026, with aspirations to reach L4 capabilities by 2028.

    In terms of Level 2 features, China’s largest electric vehicle manufacturer, BYD, fired the first salvo in February, equipping its entire lineup with advanced intelligent driving systems. Among other things, it enables vehicles to drive on expressways and park automatically.

    The most affordable of its models with the feature on the market is the Seagull, priced at 69,800 yuan. The carmaker said its move aims to offer volume car owners access to intelligent driving features to increase safety.

    It said 21 percent of traffic accidents in China are due to fatigued drivers, which can be prevented by automatic emergency braking or steering.

    “We believe that intelligent driving should not be a luxury but a standard feature for all consumers,” said Wang Chuanfu, chairman and president of BYD. “By making high-level driver assistance available across our range, we are accelerating the transition toward smarter, safer mobility,” said Wang.

    Traditionally, advanced features such as lane-keeping assistance, adaptive cruise control and automatic emergency braking have been reserved for premium vehicles.

    Models with such functions were usually priced from 150,000 yuan, according to consulting firm McKinsey.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s finance minister vows more proactive fiscal policy

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    China will implement a more proactive fiscal policy this year and ensure its sustained strength and effectiveness, said Finance Minister Lan Fo’an at the ongoing China Development Forum 2025.

    Addressing current economic difficulties and challenges, Lan emphasized that China’s economic and fiscal strengths have grown significantly, and the country has accumulated richer experience in macroeconomic management and fiscal governance.

    He said the confidence in China’s economic development stems from its solid fundamentals, numerous advantages, strong resilience, and vast potential that underpin its long-term growth.

    The confidence also comes from a sober understanding of potential risks and the foresight to prepare accordingly, leaving ample fiscal room to respond to possible shocks and challenges, Lan added.

    The primary task of this year’s fiscal policy, Lan said, is to significantly boost consumption and enhance investment efficiency in an effort to expand domestic demand.

    “China has the world’s most promising super-sized market, with immense potential for consumption growth,” said Lan, adding that the central government is introducing measures on both the supply and demand sides to stimulate consumption.

    As part of these efforts, China is scheduled to issue a total of 1.3 trillion yuan (about 181 billion U.S. dollars) of ultra-long special treasury bonds in 2025, up 300 billion yuan from last year, official data showed.

    The government funding for the national consumer goods trade-in program will increase from 150 billion yuan last year to 300 billion yuan in 2025.

    To support the expansion of effective investment, Lan said a significant amount of fiscal funds has been arranged this year, with different funding channels coordinated to target specific areas.

    Accelerating the development of new quality productive forces is another fiscal priority, Lan added. The central government will ramp up support for education, science and technology, and talent development, promoting the deep integration of technological and industrial innovation.

    Speaking to global business leaders attending the forum, Lan also emphasized that China’s fiscal policy will support high-standard opening up. China will ensure equal treatment for all types of business entities and continue to improve the business environment.

    The China Development Forum 2025 is scheduled from March 23 to 24, with the theme “Unleashing Development Momentum for Stable Growth of Global Economy.”

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-Evening Report: 4 key changes you may have missed in the new school funding agreement

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rachel Wilson, Professor of Social Impact, University of Technology Sydney

    Queensland and the federal government have reached an agreement on school funding. This means all Australian states and territories are now signed up to new arrangements, which officially began at the start of 2025.

    The agreement follows more than a year of negotiations between the federal and state governments.

    The agreements mean government schools will receive 25% of funding from the federal government, up from 20%. Cash-strapped state and territory governments now only have to find 75% (down from 80%).

    In some good news for schools, it also means there is now a firm plan to “fully fund” public schools by 2034. This means they will get 100% of the funding recommended by the schooling resource standard (or school funding mechanism) – albeit more than a decade after it was first recommended by the Gonski review in 2011.

    Much of the debate about the agreements has understandably focused on the funding split between federal and state governments.

    But the agreements also tie vital funding for schools to specific targets and reforms for the next ten years. There is plenty of fine print.

    Here are four major changes we can expect to see in schools and classrooms around Australia.




    Read more:
    Underfunded? Overfunded? How school funding works in Australia


    1. A ‘unique’ identifier for all students

    The new agreement will see all students receive a “unique student identifier” as part of a national system.

    This is a number all students will have from the time they start school. It would follow them through school to tertiary education or any other further study or training.

    The idea was first agreed to by the former Council of Australian Governments in 2009 and is already in place for university and vocational education students.

    A long time in the planning, it was included in the last school funding agreement, which expired at the end of 2024, despite little progress.

    At the moment, education systems can easily lose track of students. For example, pre-COVID an estimated 50,000 children and young people were not officially tracked by education authorities.

    The identifier number means governments will be able to track students across school systems. For example, if they move from the public system to the private system. Or if they move states or begin homeschooling.

    The identifier will also provide a greater understanding of the pathways taken by young people after school and potentially make it easier to link senior high schooling with TAFE and other vocational studies.

    Introducing a bill to set up architecture for the indentifier last year, federal Education Minister Jason Clare said it would have “robust privacy measures”, including protection under the Privacy Act.




    Read more:
    NSW has finally struck a school funding deal. What does this mean for schools and students?


    2. A new numeracy check

    Along with rolling out a well-publicised national phonics check for Year 1 (which some states are already doing), the new agreements include a numeracy check for young students.

    While numeracy is checked as part of NAPLAN in Year 3, the test was not designed to provide diagnostic data on individual students.

    The new checks will be used to identify students and schools in need of extra support.

    So far, we have few details on the design or time frames. The checks may also need significant research and development to work effectively. But existing programs (such as in South Australia) show screening checks have the potential to provide better monitoring and resourcing for student needs.

    3. A review of how school funding is calculated

    The new agreement also flags two more significant reviews.

    One will be on the way school funding is calculated – the first review since the current system was devised in 2011.

    The schooling resource standard is an estimate of how much total public funding a school needs to meet its students’ educational needs.

    In 2025, the base rates are A$13,977 for primary students and $17,565 for high school students. On top of these, there are six loadings to provide extra funding for students and schools with additional needs. This includes students with disability, Indigenous students and students in remote areas.

    But as a 2023 Productivity Commission review noted, some individual students qualify under multiple categories, and “the effects can be compounding”. This means this level of disadvantage needs more understanding and policy adjustment.

    The review will examine the methodology behind the base rate and loadings. As part of this, it will hopefully look at transparency around school funding arrangements. The Australian National Audit Office identified this as an issue as far back as 2017.

    4. A review of how schools are measured

    There will also be a review of the national Measurement Framework for Schooling in Australia. This details key performance measures for schooling, such as attendance, NAPLAN results and school completion.

    This framework usually has just minor adjustments about every couple of years. But a more significant overhaul is now in the works, with states agreeing a review will look at “possible new and updated measures”.

    These could include indicators for students’ engagement and learning growth, as well as outcomes for students with disability and the teaching workforce.

    An improved national data set holds enormous potential for addressing educational challenges, like declining participation rates, school refusal and teacher shortages.

    Elsewhere in the new agreement, states and territories also agreed to “better understand” how socioeconomic diversity and school attendance are impacting student learning. This can be seen as high-level acknowledgement the current reporting mechanisms and data on students need to improve.

    Now we need to see progress

    The new schools agreement contains some promising new measures to improve outcomes for students and teachers. But we now need to see them implemented.

    As the Productivity Commission and National Audit Office have previously noted, just because something is included in a school funding agreement, does not necessarily mean it will happen on time or as planned.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. 4 key changes you may have missed in the new school funding agreement – https://theconversation.com/4-key-changes-you-may-have-missed-in-the-new-school-funding-agreement-252291

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Secretary-General of ASEAN receives Vice Governor of Anhui Province of China

    Source: ASEAN

    Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, today received a courtesy call by Vice Governor of Anhui Province, China, Mr. Sun Yong. They discussed potential activities to strengthen cooperation between ASEAN and China, particularly with the Anhui Province, taking the benefits of ASEAN-China Free Trade Agreement (ACFTA) and Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) Agreement. They also exchanged views on the opportunities to bring business to business network between ASEAN and China closer to the peoples of both sides.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN receives Vice Governor of Anhui Province of China appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI: KALLELSE TILL ÅRSSTÄMMA I SERSTECH AB

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Aktieägarna i Serstech AB (publ) kallas till årsstämma onsdagen den 23 april 2025 klockan 13.00 på bolagets kontor, Åldermansgatan 13 i Lund.

    Anmälan
    Aktieägare som önskar delta i stämman ska dels vara införd i den av Euroclear Sweden AB förda aktieboken avseende förhållandena fredagen den 11 april 2025, dels anmäla sitt deltagande till bolaget senast tisdagen den 15 april 2025.

    Aktieägare som låtit förvaltarregistrera sina aktier måste, förutom att anmäla sig till stämman, genom förvaltarens försorg låta inregistrera sina aktier i eget namn för att ha rätt att delta i årsstämman, så att aktieägaren blir upptagen i framställningen av aktieboken per fredagen den 11 april 2025. Sådan registrering kan vara tillfällig (s.k. rösträttsregistrering) och begärs hos förvaltaren enligt förvaltarens rutiner i sådan tid i förväg som förvaltaren bestämmer. Rösträttsregistrering som har gjorts senast tisdagen den 15 april 2025 kommer att beaktas vid framställningen av aktieboken.

    Anmälan om deltagande i stämman kan ske skriftligen till Serstech AB (publ), att: Thomas Pileby, Åldermansgatan 13, 227 64 Lund, via e-post till tp@serstech.com eller per telefon 0702-072643. Vid anmälan ska anges namn, person- eller organisationsnummer, adress och telefonnummer, antal aktier samt, i förekommande fall, det antal biträden (högst två) som avses medföras vid stämman.

    För aktieägare som företräds av ombud ska fullmakt översändas tillsammans med anmälan. Fullmakt ska vara skriftlig, daterad och underskriven. Fullmakt i original ska medtas till årsstämman. Den som företräder juridisk person ska även bifoga kopia av registreringsbevis eller motsvarande behörighetshandlingar som utvisar behöriga firmatecknare. Fullmaktsformulär finns tillgängligt på www.serstech.com och kan även beställas från bolaget.

    FÖRESLAGEN DAGORDNING

    1. Stämmans öppnande
    2. Val av ordförande vid stämman
    3. Upprättande och godkännande av röstlängd
    4. Godkännande av dagordning
    5. Val av en eller två protokolljusterare
    6. Prövning av om stämman blivit behörigen sammankallad
    7. Framläggande av årsredovisning och revisionsberättelse
    8. Beslut om

    a)    fastställande av resultaträkning och balansräkning
    b)    dispositioner beträffande resultatet enligt den fastställda balansräkningen
    c)    ansvarsfrihet åt styrelseledamöter och verkställande direktör

    1. Fastställande av antalet styrelseledamöter och revisorer
    2. Fastställande av styrelse- och revisorsarvoden
    3. Val av styrelseledamöter och revisorer
    4. Styrelsens förslag till beslut om införande av nytt långsiktigt incitamentsprogram
    5. Stämmans avslutande

    BESLUTSFÖRSLAG

    Resultatdisposition (punkt 8b)

    Styrelsen föreslår att ingen utdelning lämnas samt att bolagets ansamlade medel överförs i ny räkning.

    Valberedningens förslag till styrelse m.m. (punkt 2 och 9 – 11)

    Valberedningen, som består av Bengt Myhrman (ordförande) samt ledamöterna Mathis Nimlin och Jens Munch föreslår följande:

    Antal styrelseledamöter och suppleanter: Sex styrelseledamöter utan suppleanter.
    Antal revisorer och revisorssuppleanter: En revisor utan suppleanter.
    Styrelsearvode: 1.117.200 kronor för tiden intill slutet av nästa årsstämma, med följande fördelning: 4 prisbasbelopp (ett prisbasbleopp för 2025 motsvarar 58.800 kronor) till styrelseordföranden och 3 prisbasbelopp vardera till övriga styrelseledamöter.
    Revisorsarvode: Enligt godkänd räkning inom ramen för offert.
    Styrelse m.m.: Omval av Thomas Pileby (ordförande), Sverker Göranson, Märta Lewander Xu, Arve Nilsson och Christer Kjellkvist, samt nyval av Emelie Agnedal för tiden intill slutet av nästa årsstämma.
    Revisor: Omval av revisionsbolaget Öhrlings PricewaterhouseCoopers AB, med huvudansvarig revisor Cecilia Andrén Dorselius.

    Emelie Agnedal, född 1983, bosatt i Sverige och svensk medborgare, har en Master of Science i Engineering Physics från Uppsala universitet. Emelie är sedan 2024 Global Director of Business Development (affärsutvecklingschef) på MilDef Group AB med fokus på strategiska samarbeten och M&A. Till tidigare roller på MilDef hör Director of Business Development Nordics och Head of Sales på MilDef Sweden (2022 – 2024). Innan MilDef arbetade Emelie under åtta års tid på Försvarets Materielverk (FMV) där hon ledde stora projekt innefattandes upphandling av försvarssystem samt deltagande i internationella arbetsgrupper inom NATO och andra försvarssamarbeten. Innan FMV arbetade Emelie under sex års tid på AFRY som teknisk konsult med analysuppdrag för olika myndigheter såsom FMV, Myndigheten för samhällsskydd och beredskap samt Post- och telestyrelsen. Emelie Agnedal äger inga aktier i Serstech.

    Information om de till omval föreslagna styrelseledamöterna finns i bolagets årsredovisning och på bolagets hemsida, www.serstech.com.

    Styrelsens förslag till beslut om införande av nytt långsiktigt incitamentsprogram (punkt 12)

    Styrelsen föreslår att årsstämman beslutar om införande av ett nytt långsiktigt incitamentsprogram för anställda i koncernen genom utgivande av teckningsoptioner samt godkännande av vidareöverlåtelse därav (”Programmet”) i enlighet med nedan. Besluten under den här punkten är villkorade av varandra och föreslås därför antas som ett beslut.

    Utgivande av teckningsoptioner (punkt 12 (a))
    Styrelsen föreslår att årsstämman, med avvikelse från aktieägarnas företrädesrätt, beslutar om utgivande av högst 3.000.000 teckningsoptioner av serie 2025/2028, till följd varav bolagets aktiekapital kan komma att öka med högst cirka 87.083 kronor.

    Rätt att teckna teckningsoptionerna ska, med avvikelse från aktieägarnas företrädesrätt, endast tillkomma bolagets helägda dotterbolag Serstech Förvaltning AB, för vidareöverlåtelse enligt nedan. Teckning av teckningsoptioner ska ske på teckningslista senast den 29 april 2025. Teckningsoptionerna ska ges ut vederlagsfritt till dotterbolaget.

    Varje teckningsoption ger rätt att under perioden 1 – 10 juni 2028 teckna en ny aktie i bolaget till en teckningskurs som ska fastställas till 160 % av den volymvägda genomsnittliga betalkursen för aktier i Serstech AB på Nasdaq First North Growth Market under tiden från och med den 2 maj 2025 till och med den 15 maj 2025, dock lägst kvotvärdet. Den sålunda framräknade teckningskursen ska avrundas till närmaste helt öre, varvid 0,5 öre skall avrundas nedåt. De nya aktierna ska ge rätt till vinstutdelning första gången på den avstämningsdag för utdelning som infaller närmast efter det att de nya aktierna införts i bolagets aktiebok.

    Godkännande om överlåtelse av teckningsoptioner (punkt 12 (b))
    För att möjliggöra bolagets leverans av teckningsoptioner enligt Programmet föreslår styrelsen att årsstämman beslutar att godkänna att teckningsoptionerna som ges ut i enlighet med punkt 12(a) ovan, direkt eller indirekt, får överlåtas av Serstech Förvaltning AB, i enlighet med styrelsens instruktioner, till anställda i koncernen. Sådan överlåtelse ska i Sverige ske mot betalning motsvarande teckningsoptionernas teoretiska marknadsvärde vid överlåtelsetillfället, beräknat enligt Black & Scholes värderingsmodell för optioner, och vid eventuell överlåtelse i utlandet i enlighet med sedvanliga villkor för optionserbjudande till mottagare i respektive land.

    Förtydligande om tilldelning
    Programmet omfattar högst cirka 25 personer. Teckningsoptionerna ska tilldelas enligt nedanstående principer.

    Kategori Maximalt antal optioner per person/kategori
    Verkställande direktör (1 person) 500.000
    Nyckelpersoner A (3 personer) 300.000 / 900.000
    Nyckelpersoner B (3 personer) 200.000 / 600.000
    Övriga anställda (19 personer) 100.000 / 1.000.000
    Totalt 3.000.000

    För det fall anställda önskar förvärva ett större antal teckningsoptioner än det antal som anges ovan, ska tilldelning av teckningsoptioner, som inte förvärvats av annan inom ramen för emissionens högsta belopp, göras i förhållande till antalet teckningsoptioner som relevanta deltagare önskar förvärva.

    Teckningsoptioner som inte överlåts vid det inledande erbjudandet eller som därefter återköps får överlåtas till framtida anställda eller anställda som har befordrats, varvid ovan angivna riktlinjer för tilldelning ska tillämpas. Vid sådan tilldelning ska ny beräkning av teckningsoptionernas marknadsvärde, som ska erläggas av deltagare, ske.

    Beredning av och motiv för förslaget mm.
    Programmet har utarbetats av bolagets styrelse i samråd med externa rådgivare och baseras på de incitamentsprogram i bolaget som tidigare har antagits. Motiven för förslaget och skälen till avvikelsen från aktieägarnas företrädesrätt är att bolaget bedömer att det är positivt för bolagets långsiktiga utveckling att nyanställda i koncernen erbjuds möjlighet till delägande genom ett incitamentsprogram. Styrelsen anser att det ligger i samtliga aktieägares intresse att bolagets anställda har ett långsiktigt intresse av en god värdeutveckling på aktien i bolaget.

    Styrelsen för Serstech ansvarar för den närmare utformningen av villkoren för Programmet, inom ramen för de ovan angivna villkoren. I samband därmed ska styrelsen ha rätt att göra anpassningar för att uppfylla särskilda regler eller marknadsförutsättningar utomlands, inklusive att besluta om kontant- eller annan avräkning för det fall det anses fördelaktigt för bolaget och deltagaren baserat på utländska skatteregler.

    Utspädning
    Vid fullt utnyttjande av teckningsoptionerna på vid beslutstillfället gällande villkor kan antalet aktier och röster i bolaget öka med högst 3.000.000, vilket motsvarar cirka 1,17 procent av antalet aktier och röster i bolaget. Utspädningseffekten har beräknats som antalet tillkommande aktier och röster vid fullt utnyttjande i förhållande till antalet aktier och röster efter fullt utnyttjande. Det finns idag 8.000.000 teckningsoptioner av serie 2023/2026 som löper till 1 – 10 juli 2026. För det fall teckningsoptioner av serie 2023/2026 inluderas i beräkningen uppgår den motsvarande maximala utspädningen till cirka 4,15 procent av antalet aktier och röster.

    Påverkan på nyckeltal och kostnader för bolaget m.m.
    Eftersom Programmet baseras på teckningsoptioner, vilka vid utnyttjandet medför en utspädning av aktiekapitalet, innebär Programmet inte några kostnader för bolaget utöver för eget arbete och externa rådgivare i samband med genomförandet. För det fall styrelsen gör anpassningar av programmet för utländska deltagare, såsom att besluta om kontantavräkning, kommer programmets utfall att påverka bolagets resultat i form av ökade personalkostnader.

    S.k. optionsavtal ska träffas enligt vilka varje optionsinnehavare, under vissa förutsättningar, ska vara förpliktad att erbjuda bolaget eller Serstech Förvaltning AB att förvärva teckningsoptionerna, eller viss del av dessa.

    Enligt en preliminär värdering motsvarar teckningsoptionernas marknadsvärde cirka 0,25 öre per teckningsoption, beräknat enligt Black & Scholes värderingsmodell för optioner.

    Majoritetskrav
    Beslut i enlighet med styrelsens förslag, innefattande även godkännande av Serstech Förvaltning AB:s vidareöverlåtelse av teckningsoptioner till anställda i koncernen enligt ovan, är giltigt endast om det biträds av aktieägare med minst nio tiondelar av såväl de avgivna rösterna som de aktier som är företrädda vid bolagsstämman.

    Övriga incitamentsprogram
    För en beskrivning av Serstechs övriga aktierelaterade incitamentsprogram hänvisas till Serstechs hemsida, www.serstech.com.

    __________________

    Årsredovisning och fullständigt beslutsunderlag kommer att hållas tillgängliga hos bolaget och på bolagets hemsida, www.serstech.com, senast tre veckor före stämman och sänds med post till aktieägare som så begär och uppger sin postadress. Kopior kommer även att delas ut vid stämman.

    Aktieägarna erinras om sin rätt att begära upplysningar enligt 7 kap 32 § aktiebolagslagen.

    Behandling av personuppgifter
    För information om hur dina personuppgifter behandlas hänvisas till den integritetspolicy som finns tillgänglig på Euroclears hemsida www.euroclear.com/dam/ESw/Legal/Integritetspolicy-bolagsstammor-svenska.pdf. Om du har frågor avseende vår personuppgiftsbehandling kan du vända dig till oss via e-post på info@serstech.com. Serstech AB (publ) har organisationsnummer 556713-9893 och säte i Lund.

    Lund i mars 2025
    Styrelsen för Serstech AB (publ)

    För mer information:
    Stefan Sandor, VD Serstech AB
    Telefon: 0739-60 60 67
    E-post: ss@serstech.com
    eller
    Thomas Pileby, Styrelseordförande Serstech AB
    Telefon: 0702-07 26 43
    E-post: tp@serstech.com
    eller besök: www.serstech.com
    Certified advisor åt Serstech är Svensk Kapitalmarknadsgranskning AB (SKMG).
    Om Serstech
    Serstech utvecklare och säljer utrustning för identifiering av farliga kemikalier, såsom narkotika, bomber och kemiska stridsmedel. Bolagets kunder är huvudsakligen rättsvårdande myndigheter och inkluderar FN, Världstullorganisationen (WCO) och tull- och polismyndigheter över hela världen. Serstech har återförsäljare i 63 länder. Bolaget har huvudkontor i Lund och all tillverkning sker i Sverige.
    Serstech är listat på Nasdaq First North Growth Market. Mer information finns på www.serstech.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: TRESU Investment Holding A/S – Settlement of interest payment by issuance of interest bonds

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TRESU INVESTMENT HOLDING A/S
    ANNOUNCEMENT NO. 02.2025

    24.03.2025

    TRESU Investment Holding A/S – Settlement of interest payment by issuance of interest bonds

    Capitalised terms used but not defined are used with the meanings given to them in the Terms and Conditions (as defined below).

    TRESU Investment Holding A/S gives notice to the holders of its Senior Secured Floating Rate Bonds 2017/2027 with ISIN no. DK0030404967 (the “Bonds”) issued pursuant to the terms and conditions originally dated 22 September 2017 as last amended and restated on 22 December 2023 (the “Terms and Conditions“) that the Interest Payment Test has not been met in respect of the Interest Payment Date on 31 March 2025 and that it will settle the payment of Interest that should have been made on 31 March 2025 by issuance of Interest Bonds in accordance with Clause 8(b) of the Terms and Conditions.

    Any questions can be directed to:

    Torben Børsting
    Chief Financial Officer, TRESU
    Phone: +45 5130 2780

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Share buyback programme – week 12

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Nasdaq Copenhagen
    London Stock Exchange
    Euronext Dublin
    Danish Financial Supervisory Authority
    Other stakeholders

    Date        24 March 2025

    Share buyback programme week 12

    The share buyback programme runs in the period 28 January 2025 up to and including 28 May 2025, see company announcement of 28 January 2025.

    During the period the bank will thus buy back its own shares for a total of up to DKK 500 million under the programme, but to a maximum of 800,000 shares.

    The programme is implemented in compliance with EU Commission Regulation No. 596/2014 of 16 April 2014 and EU Commission Delegated Regulation No. 2016/1052 of 8 March 2016, which together constitute the “Safe Harbour” regulation.

    The following transactions have been made under the programme:

    Date Number of shares Average purchase price (DKK) Total purchased under the programme (DKK)
    Total in accordance with the last announcement 185,000 1,169.28 216,317,376
    17 March 2025 4,000 1,227.95 4,911,800
    18 March 2025 4,000 1,236.27 4,945,080
    19 March 2025 4,000 1,238.74 4,954,960
    20 March 2025 4,000 1,242.75 4,971,000
    21 March 2025 4,000 1,243.21 4,972,840
    Total under the share buyback programme 205,000 1,175.97 241,073,056

    With the transactions stated above, Ringkjøbing Landbobank now owns the following numbers of own shares, excluding the bank’s trading portfolio and investments made on behalf of customers:

    • 1,520,042 shares under the completed and present share buyback programme(-s) corresponding to 5.7 % of the company’s share capital.

    In accordance with the above regulation etc., the transactions related to the share buyback programme on the stated reporting days are attached to this corporate announcement in detailed form.

    Yours sincerely,

    Ringkjøbing Landbobank

    John Fisker
    CEO

    Detailed summary of the transactions on the above reporting days

    Volume Price Venue Time CET
    8 1208 XCSE 20250317 9:00:15.030000
    5 1218 XCSE 20250317 9:05:08.551000
    4 1218 XCSE 20250317 9:05:08.551000
    9 1224 XCSE 20250317 9:06:02.469000
    52 1225 XCSE 20250317 9:06:15.591000
    8 1225 XCSE 20250317 9:06:15.591000
    4 1222 XCSE 20250317 9:13:02.057000
    12 1222 XCSE 20250317 9:13:02.057000
    9 1222 XCSE 20250317 9:15:24.552000
    9 1222 XCSE 20250317 9:17:07.552000
    9 1222 XCSE 20250317 9:18:23.553000
    65 1221 XCSE 20250317 9:18:48.008000
    9 1221 XCSE 20250317 9:18:48.025000
    9 1221 XCSE 20250317 9:21:31.106000
    25 1221 XCSE 20250317 9:26:17.216000
    9 1220 XCSE 20250317 9:26:23.786000
    9 1219 XCSE 20250317 9:28:10.256000
    9 1220 XCSE 20250317 9:30:49.414000
    9 1220 XCSE 20250317 9:30:49.414000
    9 1220 XCSE 20250317 9:33:32.664000
    9 1219 XCSE 20250317 9:35:22.060000
    8 1219 XCSE 20250317 9:35:22.060000
    17 1220 XCSE 20250317 9:39:31.276000
    33 1228 XCSE 20250317 9:49:18.888000
    27 1228 XCSE 20250317 9:49:19.747000
    8 1229 XCSE 20250317 9:56:00.443000
    34 1229 XCSE 20250317 9:56:00.443000
    11 1228 XCSE 20250317 9:58:31.553000
    6 1228 XCSE 20250317 9:58:31.553000
    9 1228 XCSE 20250317 9:58:31.553000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 9:58:31.553000
    4 1227 XCSE 20250317 10:00:36.101000
    5 1227 XCSE 20250317 10:00:36.101000
    8 1227 XCSE 20250317 10:00:36.101000
    4 1227 XCSE 20250317 10:01:31.529000
    9 1227 XCSE 20250317 10:03:56.262000
    8 1227 XCSE 20250317 10:03:56.262000
    9 1226 XCSE 20250317 10:10:12.634000
    8 1226 XCSE 20250317 10:10:12.634000
    8 1226 XCSE 20250317 10:10:12.634000
    9 1223 XCSE 20250317 10:12:03.776000
    8 1223 XCSE 20250317 10:12:03.776000
    17 1224 XCSE 20250317 10:19:07.405000
    25 1223 XCSE 20250317 10:25:03.247000
    9 1223 XCSE 20250317 10:25:03.247000
    33 1224 XCSE 20250317 10:26:35.498000
    34 1223 XCSE 20250317 10:35:34.768000
    2 1224 XCSE 20250317 10:37:46.194000
    20 1226 XCSE 20250317 10:42:12.239000
    21 1226 XCSE 20250317 10:42:17.746000
    12 1226 XCSE 20250317 10:42:17.746000
    35 1228 XCSE 20250317 10:48:53.476000
    34 1227 XCSE 20250317 10:52:30.693000
    26 1226 XCSE 20250317 11:03:31.978000
    8 1226 XCSE 20250317 11:03:31.978000
    8 1226 XCSE 20250317 11:03:31.978000
    25 1225 XCSE 20250317 11:06:23.855000
    33 1228 XCSE 20250317 11:17:40.141000
    25 1227 XCSE 20250317 11:18:46.828000
    8 1227 XCSE 20250317 11:18:46.828000
    8 1227 XCSE 20250317 11:18:46.828000
    4 1228 XCSE 20250317 11:34:03.263000
    29 1228 XCSE 20250317 11:34:03.263000
    33 1229 XCSE 20250317 11:43:01.449000
    8 1229 XCSE 20250317 11:43:01.449000
    8 1229 XCSE 20250317 11:43:01.449000
    25 1228 XCSE 20250317 11:46:11.712000
    117 1231 XCSE 20250317 12:03:01.223000
    17 1230 XCSE 20250317 12:08:29.106000
    8 1230 XCSE 20250317 12:08:29.106000
    8 1230 XCSE 20250317 12:08:29.106000
    42 1228 XCSE 20250317 12:19:20.607000
    25 1228 XCSE 20250317 12:39:57.870000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 12:39:57.870000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 12:39:57.870000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 12:39:57.870000
    25 1228 XCSE 20250317 12:57:34.318000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 12:57:34.318000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 12:57:34.318000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 12:57:34.318000
    57 1230 XCSE 20250317 13:06:30.010000
    8 1230 XCSE 20250317 13:06:30.010000
    8 1230 XCSE 20250317 13:06:30.010000
    17 1229 XCSE 20250317 13:17:53.538000
    25 1226 XCSE 20250317 13:31:45.563000
    50 1226 XCSE 20250317 13:49:12.564000
    74 1226 XCSE 20250317 14:17:54.077000
    52 1226 XCSE 20250317 14:25:18.598000
    7 1230 XCSE 20250317 14:35:52.679000
    7 1230 XCSE 20250317 14:35:52.679000
    15 1230 XCSE 20250317 14:35:52.679000
    5 1230 XCSE 20250317 14:35:52.679000
    60 1229 XCSE 20250317 14:38:03.526000
    14 1232 XCSE 20250317 14:48:18.078000
    66 1230 XCSE 20250317 14:48:52.936000
    33 1230 XCSE 20250317 14:48:52.936000
    16 1230 XCSE 20250317 14:48:52.936000
    25 1229 XCSE 20250317 15:02:41.118000
    8 1229 XCSE 20250317 15:02:41.118000
    25 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:08:59.447000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:08:59.447000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:08:59.447000
    53 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:26:07.853000
    35 1230 XCSE 20250317 15:32:28.493000
    26 1230 XCSE 20250317 15:37:00.142000
    33 1229 XCSE 20250317 15:43:16.803000
    35 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:50:57.593000
    9 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:50:57.593000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:50:57.593000
    9 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:50:57.593000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:50:57.593000
    1 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:50:57.593000
    8 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:50:57.593000
    9 1228 XCSE 20250317 15:50:57.593000
    26 1227 XCSE 20250317 15:52:34.420000
    1 1227 XCSE 20250317 15:52:34.420000
    67 1227 XCSE 20250317 15:52:34.420000
    14 1227 XCSE 20250317 15:54:34.441000
    116 1227 XCSE 20250317 15:55:27.005000
    56 1226 XCSE 20250317 15:57:57.562000
    7 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.801000
    7 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.801000
    7 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.801000
    7 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.802000
    6 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.802000
    6 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.802000
    7 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.813000
    7 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.813000
    6 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.817000
    7 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.823000
    6 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:12.830000
    10 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:13.897000
    7 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:00:21.220000
    24 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:01:36.761000
    78 1228 XCSE 20250317 16:04:30.836000
    9 1228 XCSE 20250317 16:04:30.836000
    22 1228 XCSE 20250317 16:04:30.844000
    7 1228 XCSE 20250317 16:04:30.844000
    67 1228 XCSE 20250317 16:04:30.844000
    70 1227 XCSE 20250317 16:08:00.048000
    3 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:14:37.311000
    7 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:14:37.311000
    14 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:14:37.311000
    11 1229 XCSE 20250317 16:14:37.311000
    170 1230 XCSE 20250317 16:19:26.879884
    443 1230 XCSE 20250317 16:19:26.879905
    300 1230 XCSE 20250317 16:19:26.879918
    86 1230 XCSE 20250317 16:19:26.879920
    185 1230 XCSE 20250317 16:19:26.879923
    16 1238 XCSE 20250318 9:01:04.114000
    26 1235 XCSE 20250318 9:06:31.635000
    18 1233 XCSE 20250318 9:10:04.096000
    25 1233 XCSE 20250318 9:15:15.038000
    25 1232 XCSE 20250318 9:15:15.071000
    25 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:18:23.063000
    8 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:18:23.063000
    8 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:18:23.063000
    8 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:18:23.063000
    9 1231 XCSE 20250318 9:26:19.905000
    27 1233 XCSE 20250318 9:34:31.100000
    9 1233 XCSE 20250318 9:34:31.100000
    33 1232 XCSE 20250318 9:35:13.314000
    7 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:43:42.569000
    10 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:50:10.214000
    8 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:50:10.214000
    9 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:50:10.214000
    7 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:50:10.214000
    7 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:52:39.785000
    2 1230 XCSE 20250318 9:52:39.785000
    7 1231 XCSE 20250318 9:59:54.204000
    7 1231 XCSE 20250318 9:59:54.214000
    6 1233 XCSE 20250318 10:05:19.201000
    6 1233 XCSE 20250318 10:05:19.201000
    7 1233 XCSE 20250318 10:05:21.779000
    15 1233 XCSE 20250318 10:05:21.779000
    6 1233 XCSE 20250318 10:05:21.779000
    6 1233 XCSE 20250318 10:05:33.704000
    7 1233 XCSE 20250318 10:05:48.704000
    25 1234 XCSE 20250318 10:10:25.414000
    26 1234 XCSE 20250318 10:12:51.322000
    3 1235 XCSE 20250318 10:22:50.387000
    1 1235 XCSE 20250318 10:22:50.407000
    7 1237 XCSE 20250318 10:23:54.916000
    7 1237 XCSE 20250318 10:23:54.916000
    6 1237 XCSE 20250318 10:24:01.047000
    33 1236 XCSE 20250318 10:28:11.095000
    17 1235 XCSE 20250318 10:32:50.064000
    9 1235 XCSE 20250318 10:32:50.072000
    1 1237 XCSE 20250318 10:41:39.085000
    7 1237 XCSE 20250318 10:41:39.085000
    13 1238 XCSE 20250318 10:47:28.546000
    1 1238 XCSE 20250318 10:47:28.546000
    7 1238 XCSE 20250318 10:47:28.554000
    7 1238 XCSE 20250318 10:47:28.554000
    17 1237 XCSE 20250318 10:47:52.941000
    137 1239 XCSE 20250318 10:53:51.125000
    47 1239 XCSE 20250318 10:53:51.125000
    9 1239 XCSE 20250318 10:53:51.125000
    68 1240 XCSE 20250318 10:53:51.125000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250318 10:58:25.462000
    8 1238 XCSE 20250318 10:58:25.462000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250318 10:58:25.484000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:13:52.680000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:13:52.680000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:13:52.680000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:13:52.680000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:13:52.680000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:13:52.680000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:13:52.680000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:13:52.680000
    1 1236 XCSE 20250318 11:13:53.512000
    8 1236 XCSE 20250318 11:13:53.516000
    1 1236 XCSE 20250318 11:13:53.516000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250318 11:15:22.972000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:31:55.511000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:31:55.511000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250318 11:31:55.511000
    12 1236 XCSE 20250318 11:46:34.997000
    5 1236 XCSE 20250318 11:46:40.248000
    9 1236 XCSE 20250318 11:46:40.248000
    12 1236 XCSE 20250318 11:46:40.248000
    18 1238 XCSE 20250318 11:58:46.105000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250318 11:58:46.105000
    8 1238 XCSE 20250318 11:58:46.105000
    47 1238 XCSE 20250318 11:58:46.105000
    41 1238 XCSE 20250318 12:03:09.197000
    8 1238 XCSE 20250318 12:03:09.197000
    8 1238 XCSE 20250318 12:03:09.197000
    8 1238 XCSE 20250318 12:03:09.197000
    6 1242 XCSE 20250318 12:11:35.136000
    68 1242 XCSE 20250318 12:11:35.136000
    9 1241 XCSE 20250318 12:12:08.989000
    8 1241 XCSE 20250318 12:12:08.989000
    8 1241 XCSE 20250318 12:12:08.989000
    8 1241 XCSE 20250318 12:12:08.989000
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    9 1239 XCSE 20250318 12:23:06.638000
    9 1239 XCSE 20250318 12:23:06.638000
    9 1239 XCSE 20250318 12:23:06.638000
    26 1240 XCSE 20250318 12:23:37.952000
    18 1239 XCSE 20250318 12:27:40.207000
    17 1239 XCSE 20250318 12:27:40.215000
    17 1240 XCSE 20250318 12:33:53.013000
    9 1239 XCSE 20250318 12:40:07.284000
    9 1239 XCSE 20250318 12:40:07.302000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250318 12:42:57.127000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250318 13:02:26.966000
    8 1238 XCSE 20250318 13:02:26.966000
    8 1238 XCSE 20250318 13:02:26.966000
    27 1237 XCSE 20250318 13:06:44.919000
    1 1236 XCSE 20250318 13:07:08.515000
    17 1236 XCSE 20250318 13:07:08.515000
    9 1235 XCSE 20250318 13:10:16.320000
    9 1234 XCSE 20250318 13:21:59.685000
    2 1235 XCSE 20250318 13:29:57.942000
    7 1235 XCSE 20250318 13:29:57.942000
    17 1235 XCSE 20250318 13:49:45.952000
    18 1235 XCSE 20250318 13:49:45.967000
    18 1234 XCSE 20250318 14:00:46.714000
    5 1234 XCSE 20250318 14:00:46.714000
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    1 1234 XCSE 20250318 14:17:48.870000
    5 1237 XCSE 20250318 14:24:28.267000
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    24 1237 XCSE 20250318 14:24:56.061000
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    2 1236 XCSE 20250318 14:27:28.380000
    1 1236 XCSE 20250318 14:30:51.409000
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    25 1237 XCSE 20250318 14:52:14.791000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250318 14:56:05.869000
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    8 1237 XCSE 20250318 14:56:05.869000
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    9 1238 XCSE 20250318 15:03:02.787000
    38 1239 XCSE 20250318 15:07:49.658000
    4 1239 XCSE 20250318 15:07:49.658000
    9 1239 XCSE 20250318 15:08:58.788000
    3 1239 XCSE 20250318 15:10:13.785000
    6 1239 XCSE 20250318 15:10:13.785000
    6 1239 XCSE 20250318 15:11:12.785000
    3 1239 XCSE 20250318 15:11:12.785000
    9 1239 XCSE 20250318 15:11:55.785000
    44 1237 XCSE 20250318 15:12:20.022000
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    5 1236 XCSE 20250318 15:20:02.603000
    4 1236 XCSE 20250318 15:20:02.603000
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    50 1236 XCSE 20250318 15:20:20.441693
    450 1236 XCSE 20250318 15:20:20.441693
    50 1236 XCSE 20250318 15:20:28.638985
    150 1236 XCSE 20250318 15:20:28.638985
    7 1239 XCSE 20250318 15:21:25.907000
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    6 1239 XCSE 20250318 15:21:48.787000
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    4 1238 XCSE 20250318 15:23:46.788000
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    50 1238 XCSE 20250318 15:36:32.034000
    25 1238 XCSE 20250318 15:51:42.027000
    5 1240 XCSE 20250318 15:55:06.762000
    65 1240 XCSE 20250318 16:00:36.308000
    65 1239 XCSE 20250318 16:00:40.430000
    14 1239 XCSE 20250318 16:00:40.439000
    4 1239 XCSE 20250318 16:00:40.439000
    4 1238 XCSE 20250318 16:00:43.874000
    7 1238 XCSE 20250318 16:00:43.874000
    56 1238 XCSE 20250318 16:00:43.874000
    70 1237 XCSE 20250318 16:02:11.207000
    50 1236 XCSE 20250318 16:06:07.830000
    7 1238 XCSE 20250318 16:11:16.368000
    7 1238 XCSE 20250318 16:11:16.368000
    61 1237 XCSE 20250318 16:11:16.400000
    50 1236 XCSE 20250318 16:12:06.564000
    51 1235 XCSE 20250318 16:12:39.866000
    35 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:14:37.162000
    41 1233 XCSE 20250318 16:16:49.082000
    5 1235 XCSE 20250318 16:20:26.568000
    6 1235 XCSE 20250318 16:20:26.568000
    7 1235 XCSE 20250318 16:20:26.577000
    6 1235 XCSE 20250318 16:20:26.577000
    33 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:21:04.140000
    33 1233 XCSE 20250318 16:24:05.833000
    35 1233 XCSE 20250318 16:24:05.848000
    35 1233 XCSE 20250318 16:24:05.850000
    27 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:25:34.830000
    3 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:30:46.274000
    15 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:01.245000
    7 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:01.245000
    7 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:01.245000
    15 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:01.246000
    15 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:01.284000
    2 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:01.315000
    4 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:01.341000
    1 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:04.726000
    3 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:05.455000
    2 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:11.655000
    15 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:31:39.177000
    15 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:32:19.624000
    15 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:32:19.630000
    15 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:32:19.630000
    6 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:32:19.643000
    11 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:32:19.663000
    7 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:32:38.077301
    6 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:32:38.077301
    250 1234 XCSE 20250318 16:32:38.077337
    8 1234 XCSE 20250319 9:00:33.665000
    17 1235 XCSE 20250319 9:03:57.406000
    8 1235 XCSE 20250319 9:03:57.406000
    8 1235 XCSE 20250319 9:03:57.406000
    34 1235 XCSE 20250319 9:19:02.531000
    9 1235 XCSE 20250319 9:19:02.531000
    43 1237 XCSE 20250319 9:25:17.997000
    13 1237 XCSE 20250319 9:25:18.014000
    10 1239 XCSE 20250319 9:30:46.239000
    10 1239 XCSE 20250319 9:30:50.517000
    36 1240 XCSE 20250319 9:38:02.362000
    34 1239 XCSE 20250319 9:38:02.379000
    34 1238 XCSE 20250319 9:38:48.100000
    25 1237 XCSE 20250319 9:38:48.117000
    3 1241 XCSE 20250319 9:52:35.755000
    9 1241 XCSE 20250319 9:52:35.765000
    2 1241 XCSE 20250319 9:52:35.765000
    1 1241 XCSE 20250319 9:55:00.634000
    18 1241 XCSE 20250319 9:55:00.634000
    8 1241 XCSE 20250319 9:56:46.261000
    1 1241 XCSE 20250319 9:56:46.261000
    6 1241 XCSE 20250319 9:58:53.358000
    3 1241 XCSE 20250319 9:58:53.358000
    26 1240 XCSE 20250319 10:00:00.172000
    26 1239 XCSE 20250319 10:12:15.664000
    12 1239 XCSE 20250319 10:12:15.680000
    26 1240 XCSE 20250319 10:29:06.248000
    25 1240 XCSE 20250319 10:29:06.287000
    9 1240 XCSE 20250319 10:36:14.237000
    25 1240 XCSE 20250319 10:51:28.260000
    8 1240 XCSE 20250319 10:51:28.260000
    33 1240 XCSE 20250319 10:51:28.391000
    86 1240 XCSE 20250319 10:51:28.524000
    5 1242 XCSE 20250319 10:53:28.980000
    121 1244 XCSE 20250319 11:00:00.734000
    35 1243 XCSE 20250319 11:05:34.091000
    8 1243 XCSE 20250319 11:05:34.091000
    25 1242 XCSE 20250319 11:06:55.046000
    33 1242 XCSE 20250319 11:19:07.293000
    24 1242 XCSE 20250319 11:19:32.641000
    1 1242 XCSE 20250319 11:25:23.919000
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    27 1242 XCSE 20250319 11:25:23.927000
    7 1247 XCSE 20250319 11:37:21.258000
    2 1247 XCSE 20250319 11:37:21.258000
    5 1247 XCSE 20250319 11:38:30.257000
    4 1247 XCSE 20250319 11:38:30.257000
    9 1245 XCSE 20250319 11:39:43.421000
    9 1245 XCSE 20250319 11:39:43.421000
    17 1244 XCSE 20250319 11:42:47.954000
    18 1244 XCSE 20250319 11:42:47.970000
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    16 1243 XCSE 20250319 11:49:55.710000
    10 1243 XCSE 20250319 11:56:08.454000
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    34 1243 XCSE 20250319 11:56:08.478000
    1 1243 XCSE 20250319 12:16:42.343000
    32 1243 XCSE 20250319 12:16:42.343000
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    33 1243 XCSE 20250319 12:18:14.487000
    17 1242 XCSE 20250319 12:24:06.358000
    5 1242 XCSE 20250319 12:25:59.257000
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    8 1242 XCSE 20250319 12:27:36.258000
    1 1242 XCSE 20250319 12:27:36.258000
    13 1242 XCSE 20250319 12:34:17.714000
    7 1242 XCSE 20250319 12:34:47.258000
    2 1242 XCSE 20250319 12:34:47.258000
    2 1240 XCSE 20250319 12:36:21.462000
    15 1240 XCSE 20250319 12:36:56.857000
    2 1240 XCSE 20250319 12:36:56.857000
    1 1240 XCSE 20250319 12:49:12.767000
    17 1240 XCSE 20250319 12:49:12.767000
    9 1240 XCSE 20250319 12:49:12.767000
    26 1239 XCSE 20250319 12:51:19.540000
    26 1238 XCSE 20250319 12:56:12.786000
    26 1238 XCSE 20250319 12:56:18.742000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:07:49.558000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:07:49.558000
    17 1237 XCSE 20250319 13:09:43.691000
    1 1236 XCSE 20250319 13:10:49.165000
    9 1236 XCSE 20250319 13:19:25.332000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:43:52.053000
    7 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:43:52.053000
    8 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:43:52.057000
    4 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:43:52.057000
    5 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:44:23.258000
    4 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:44:23.258000
    3 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:46:00.260000
    6 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:46:00.260000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250319 13:50:02.259000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250319 13:52:05.688000
    35 1237 XCSE 20250319 14:01:58.651000
    26 1237 XCSE 20250319 14:01:58.665000
    26 1236 XCSE 20250319 14:04:39.093000
    10 1235 XCSE 20250319 14:18:29.437000
    42 1237 XCSE 20250319 14:40:09.658000
    35 1237 XCSE 20250319 14:52:31.639000
    2 1236 XCSE 20250319 14:53:11.103000
    33 1236 XCSE 20250319 14:53:11.103000
    17 1236 XCSE 20250319 15:01:16.728000
    16 1236 XCSE 20250319 15:04:30.158000
    9 1236 XCSE 20250319 15:04:30.158000
    5 1237 XCSE 20250319 15:26:22.774000
    28 1237 XCSE 20250319 15:27:16.966000
    5 1237 XCSE 20250319 15:27:16.966000
    17 1237 XCSE 20250319 15:43:39.578000
    3 1240 XCSE 20250319 15:56:50.688000
    9 1240 XCSE 20250319 15:56:50.689000
    7 1240 XCSE 20250319 15:56:50.689000
    8 1240 XCSE 20250319 15:56:50.696000
    8 1240 XCSE 20250319 15:56:50.696000
    8 1240 XCSE 20250319 15:56:50.722000
    1 1239 XCSE 20250319 15:56:51.298000
    1 1239 XCSE 20250319 15:56:51.298000
    33 1239 XCSE 20250319 15:56:51.648000
    35 1238 XCSE 20250319 15:57:09.134000
    33 1236 XCSE 20250319 15:59:59.584000
    43 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:02:16.049000
    1 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:02:40.096000
    7 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:02:40.096000
    7 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:02:40.096000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:02:40.117000
    7 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:02:40.117000
    6 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:02:40.117000
    41 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:16.113000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:30.144000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:30.144000
    7 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:35.793000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:35.793000
    7 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:41.882000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:41.882000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:46.882000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:46.882000
    2 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:55.289000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:08:55.289000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:09:52.708000
    15 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:10:22.261000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:10:22.261000
    15 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:10:22.267000
    15 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:10:22.300000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:10:22.300000
    7 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:10:22.300000
    15 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:10:22.300000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:10:22.306000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:10:22.306000
    33 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.050000
    15 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.095000
    8 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.095000
    7 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.095000
    7 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.114000
    8 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.114000
    15 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.114000
    3 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.114000
    15 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.116000
    7 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.134000
    26 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:10:36.134000
    7 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:14:00.099000
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    9 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:14:00.104000
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    18 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:14:16.509000
    4 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:14:20.094000
    11 1236 XCSE 20250319 16:16:12.148000
    58 1235 XCSE 20250319 16:24:56.050000
    9 1235 XCSE 20250319 16:25:39.099000
    8 1235 XCSE 20250319 16:25:39.099000
    7 1235 XCSE 20250319 16:25:39.099000
    8 1235 XCSE 20250319 16:25:39.119000
    7 1235 XCSE 20250319 16:25:39.119000
    50 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.543172
    50 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.543174
    50 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.543231
    2 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.543271
    48 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.543287
    50 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.558405
    9 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.560556
    41 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.574908
    9 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.574908
    20 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.609437
    30 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.609491
    2 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.627288
    48 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.630260
    2 1237 XCSE 20250319 16:35:29.630260
    50 1238 XCSE 20250319 16:36:40.515824
    50 1238 XCSE 20250319 16:36:40.515900
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.724498
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.724501
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.724547
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.724559
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.724568
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.739875
    44 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.747614
    6 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.747638
    16 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.747678
    8 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.747694
    26 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:19.747716
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:21.879042
    8 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:21.879042
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:21.890084
    5 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:21.899685
    45 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:21.909659
    19 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:21.929730
    31 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:21.929750
    31 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:21.929782
    19 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:21.929800
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:21.949920
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:23.050536
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:23.050843
    50 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:23.065826
    40 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:23.067565
    10 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:23.116899
    12 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:23.116899
    4 1239 XCSE 20250319 16:40:23.551358
    8 1242 XCSE 20250320 9:07:14.971000
    34 1242 XCSE 20250320 9:12:00.149000
    11 1242 XCSE 20250320 9:12:00.155000
    5 1240 XCSE 20250320 9:14:17.945000
    11 1244 XCSE 20250320 9:18:57.384000
    7 1244 XCSE 20250320 9:18:57.384000
    6 1244 XCSE 20250320 9:18:57.384000
    16 1244 XCSE 20250320 9:18:57.418000
    42 1245 XCSE 20250320 9:23:26.104000
    33 1245 XCSE 20250320 9:27:03.342000
    42 1245 XCSE 20250320 9:33:17.109000
    6 1248 XCSE 20250320 9:37:10.398000
    6 1248 XCSE 20250320 9:37:10.398000
    6 1248 XCSE 20250320 9:37:10.398000
    12 1248 XCSE 20250320 9:40:01.581000
    7 1248 XCSE 20250320 9:40:01.581000
    7 1248 XCSE 20250320 9:40:01.581000
    6 1248 XCSE 20250320 9:40:01.601000
    9 1249 XCSE 20250320 9:44:47.292000
    17 1249 XCSE 20250320 9:44:47.292000
    5 1249 XCSE 20250320 9:44:47.292000
    33 1247 XCSE 20250320 9:44:49.782000
    26 1247 XCSE 20250320 9:45:57.953000
    35 1248 XCSE 20250320 9:46:55.533000
    9 1248 XCSE 20250320 9:46:55.533000
    9 1248 XCSE 20250320 9:46:55.533000
    9 1247 XCSE 20250320 9:47:16.035000
    9 1246 XCSE 20250320 9:56:15.643000
    8 1246 XCSE 20250320 9:56:15.643000
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    9 1245 XCSE 20250320 9:56:52.583000
    9 1245 XCSE 20250320 9:59:06.056000
    9 1245 XCSE 20250320 9:59:06.056000
    9 1244 XCSE 20250320 9:59:52.140000
    9 1243 XCSE 20250320 10:01:30.490000
    9 1242 XCSE 20250320 10:02:48.532000
    9 1245 XCSE 20250320 10:06:46.353000
    9 1245 XCSE 20250320 10:06:46.356000
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    9 1244 XCSE 20250320 10:06:46.541000
    9 1244 XCSE 20250320 10:06:46.561000
    17 1242 XCSE 20250320 10:12:17.548000
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    9 1242 XCSE 20250320 10:12:17.569000
    17 1242 XCSE 20250320 10:18:39.585000
    17 1241 XCSE 20250320 10:19:28.166000
    9 1241 XCSE 20250320 10:19:28.188000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250320 10:26:02.223000
    17 1238 XCSE 20250320 10:33:57.755000
    8 1238 XCSE 20250320 10:34:27.113000
    9 1238 XCSE 20250320 10:34:27.113000
    17 1237 XCSE 20250320 10:36:05.929000
    8 1237 XCSE 20250320 10:36:05.929000
    27 1236 XCSE 20250320 10:36:11.193000
    17 1236 XCSE 20250320 10:44:51.590000
    17 1234 XCSE 20250320 10:53:02.841000
    9 1234 XCSE 20250320 10:53:02.841000
    8 1234 XCSE 20250320 10:53:02.841000
    25 1236 XCSE 20250320 11:00:02.675000
    18 1236 XCSE 20250320 11:09:33.247000
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    8 1236 XCSE 20250320 11:09:33.247000
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    41 1235 XCSE 20250320 11:09:45.888000
    9 1234 XCSE 20250320 11:12:05.173000
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    9 1234 XCSE 20250320 11:12:05.173000
    17 1233 XCSE 20250320 11:23:50.436000
    17 1233 XCSE 20250320 11:28:54.070000
    9 1233 XCSE 20250320 11:28:54.070000
    14 1233 XCSE 20250320 11:30:33.118000
    11 1233 XCSE 20250320 11:39:33.712000
    14 1233 XCSE 20250320 11:39:33.712000
    25 1238 XCSE 20250320 11:59:12.484000
    26 1238 XCSE 20250320 11:59:12.485000
    26 1238 XCSE 20250320 11:59:12.584000
    6 1238 XCSE 20250320 12:17:52.238000
    2 1238 XCSE 20250320 12:17:52.238000
    5 1238 XCSE 20250320 12:20:42.238000
    33 1237 XCSE 20250320 12:23:09.133000
    9 1237 XCSE 20250320 12:23:09.133000
    6 1239 XCSE 20250320 12:33:13.730000
    5 1239 XCSE 20250320 12:33:13.730000
    9 1239 XCSE 20250320 12:35:47.942000
    15 1238 XCSE 20250320 12:36:55.103000
    35 1238 XCSE 20250320 12:36:55.106000
    7 1238 XCSE 20250320 12:36:55.107000
    15 1238 XCSE 20250320 12:36:55.107000
    15 1239 XCSE 20250320 12:50:15.832000
    21 1239 XCSE 20250320 12:58:08.107000
    12 1239 XCSE 20250320 12:58:08.107000
    33 1239 XCSE 20250320 12:58:08.124000
    33 1239 XCSE 20250320 12:58:09.283000
    17 1238 XCSE 20250320 13:14:39.240000
    8 1238 XCSE 20250320 13:14:39.240000
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    21 1236 XCSE 20250320 13:55:13.926000
    7 1238 XCSE 20250320 13:56:50.658000
    1 1238 XCSE 20250320 13:56:50.658000
    41 1237 XCSE 20250320 14:00:09.768000
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    28 1237 XCSE 20250320 14:00:09.776000
    9 1239 XCSE 20250320 14:00:14.512000
    76 1239 XCSE 20250320 14:02:32.407000
    17 1241 XCSE 20250320 14:05:44.044000
    18 1241 XCSE 20250320 14:06:49.670000
    44 1239 XCSE 20250320 14:08:31.151000
    17 1239 XCSE 20250320 14:08:31.151000
    25 1238 XCSE 20250320 14:16:28.328000
    5 1238 XCSE 20250320 14:32:33.351000
    37 1238 XCSE 20250320 14:34:34.075000
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    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Bringing fiber to the next billion homes: Nokia automates fiber deployments with Broadband Easy

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Press Release
    Bringing fiber to the next billion homes: Nokia automates fiber deployments with Broadband Easy

    • Nokia Broadband Easy digital platform and services accelerate fiber rollouts by 20%.
    • Advanced automation and AI models make fiber buildouts better and more efficient.
    • Lower total cost of ownership (TCO) of fiber deployments enables broadband providers to extend coverage to unconnected and underserved communities.

    24 March 2025
    Amsterdam, Netherlands – Nokia today announced the launch of Broadband Easy, a digital platform and set of services that help operators streamline and accelerate the process of deploying fiber. The digital platform gives operators full visibility and control of the entire fiber rollout process, while advanced automation and AI models help ensure design, installations, and budget of the project are optimized.   
      
    The challenge for many operators will be rolling out fiber to the next billion homes in rural or underserved areas. Those that can digitalize the fiber rollout process are more likely to see a better return, and according to McKinsey can achieve 10 to 25 percent savings through efficiencies in the process, automation and AI technologies1.  

    Nokia’s Broadband Easy allows operators to digitalize the fiber deployment process, providing a modular platform that easily integrates into the existing IT stack. Operators can use Broadband Easy to centrally manage the fiber deployment process, control the subcontractors and mitigate risks. Additional automation features help to optimize design and field activities by real time data exchange, certifying the fiber plant, and generating accurate inventory data. Broadband Easy also uses AI models to increase the quality of field installations, using AI to verify and accept the installation of components, to control ports allocated to subscribers, and provide on-site training and guidance to field technicians

    Nokia design and rollout management services can help those operators that want to further offload their fiber roll out process. Broadband Easy supports the operators preferred outside plant vendors or subcontractors and comes pre-integrated with Nokia Altiplano Access Controller and Nokia Design Center.

    “The Nokia Broadband Easy platform leverages advanced AI to help operators tackle key FTTH deployment challenges, especially subcontractor management and fiber network certification. This tool will help to accelerate FTTH rollouts, with 74 million homes still to be connected across Europe,” said Roland Montagne, Principal Analyst, IDATE.

    “With Broadband Easy, we’re making fiber deployment easier, faster, and more cost-effective for operators. By combining our deep expertise in fiber network design and deployment with cutting-edge automation and AI, we’re helping operators significantly cut costs and rollout times—making high-speed internet access a reality for more communities, sooner,” said Sandy Motley, President of Fixed Networks at Nokia.

    Multimedia, technical information and related news 
    Product Page: Broadband Easy

    About Nokia
    At Nokia, we create technology that helps the world act together. 

    As a B2B technology innovation leader, we are pioneering networks that sense, think and act by leveraging our work across mobile, fixed and cloud networks. In addition, we create value with intellectual property and long-term research, led by the award-winning Nokia Bell Labs, which is celebrating 100 years of innovation. 

    With truly open architectures that seamlessly integrate into any ecosystem, our high-performance networks create new opportunities for monetization and scale. Service providers, enterprises and partners worldwide trust Nokia to deliver secure, reliable and sustainable networks today – and work with us to create the digital services and applications of the future.

    Media inquiries
    Nokia Press Office
    Email: Press.Services@nokia.com

    Follow us on social media
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    1. McKinsey & Company: “The keys to deploying fiber networks faster and cheaper,” February 2024.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Asian Development Blog: Building Healthy Supply Chains While Cutting Carbon

    Source: Asia Development Bank

    Decarbonizing healthcare supply chains is essential to reducing emissions, minimizing waste, and strengthening the resilience of health systems, particularly in vulnerable regions.

    More than 70% of healthcare emissions are generated in the supply chain. This includes the production, procurement, transport, and disposal of health goods and services, such as pharmaceuticals, vaccines, medical devices, hospital equipment, food, and other items.

    Advancing low-carbon, resilient supply chains will be essential for achieving universal health coverage and equitable healthcare access in vulnerable hotspots in Asia, the Pacific, and globally.

    With momentum growing to decarbonize health care, lowering supply chain emissions will reduce the sector’s overall environmental impact. As demography and urbanization shifts evolve and environmental challenges intensify, the burden of communicable and non-communicable diseases will further strain the region’s health systems.

    Without supply chain decarbonization efforts in place, the risks of disruptions due to inflated prices, commodity shortages, or external shocks like disasters could wreak havoc on health systems. The consequences would be particularly dire for the poorest and most vulnerable populations, putting millions of lives at risk.

    The following four actions are recommended to help countries integrate decarbonization across the supply chain:

    Develop eco-designed medical supplies and products. Single-use plastic supplies, such as syringes, IV bags, surgical gloves, and face masks, significantly reduce infection risks in healthcare settings but their production and disposal contribute substantially to carbon emissions and generate large amounts of waste.

    Applying an environmentally-conscious approach to product design and incorporating circular economy principles, such as reducing material use, reusing components where feasible, and enhancing recyclability, can help mitigate environmental impacts.

    Sustainable alternatives to petroleum-based plastics include plant-based polymers, natural rubber, and other biodegradable or compostable materials, which can lower emissions, reduce waste, and improve resilience across the product lifecycle.

    Innovative materials—such as plant starches with plasticizers for flexible or rigid pharmaceutical packaging, plant-based cellulose derivatives like cellulose acetate for lab and pharmaceutical use, and sustainable insulating options like recyclable plastics or cardboard-based alternatives—are transforming the sector by enabling controlled lifespans, improving insulation efficiency, and reducing reliance on energy-intensive refrigeration.

    Decarbonize and build sustainability into manufacturing processes. As the healthcare market grows, medical supply and equipment manufacturers will continue to generate more emissions and waste during production.

    Building green practices into these processes is imperative for sustainable development and can lower operational costs over the long term. Key strategies include responsibly sourcing local and sustainable raw materials. Reduced waste is also needed in production processes such as reusing materials, repurposing products, and recycling.

    Replacing product packaging with biodegradable, reusable, or multi-use materials is also needed.

    Decarbonizing healthcare supply chains is not just an environmental imperative—it’s essential to building resilient, equitable health systems, especially in vulnerable regions.

    Invest in low-carbon transportation and logistics. Medical supply chains are highly complex, requiring a reliable and efficient flow of medicines, medical supplies, and medical devices from manufacturers to in-country distributors and healthcare providers.

    Ensuring the integrity of these essential products while promoting inclusive and sustainable growth necessitates a transition to resilient, low-carbon transportation and logistics systems.

    Key strategies for decarbonizing medical supply chains include optimizing transportation routes, adopting electric vehicles, and reducing supply-demand distances through localized sourcing and production.

    For instance, shifting away from air freight, approximately 40 times more emissions-intensive than sea, road, or rail transport, offers significant carbon savings. Leading pharmaceutical companies have made substantial progress in this regard—AstraZeneca increased its use of sea freight from 5% in 2012 to 65% in 2022, while Merck reduced its reliance on air transport from 65% in 2018 to just 10% in 2021.

    The electrification of short-distance transportation is another crucial step. Battery-powered electric vehicles are well-suited for most journeys under 400 kilometers, reducing emissions associated with fossil fuel-based trucking. Investing in bio-based or synthetic fuels for long-distance travel can help decarbonize air, sea, and heavy-road transport.

    Successful initiatives highlight the potential for transformation. Adopting compressed natural gas for transportation fleets in India has significantly reduced emissions. Similarly, drone technology has played a vital role in enhancing healthcare supply chains, particularly in remote areas. In the Pacific Islands, drones carrying up to three kilograms (6.6 pounds) have improved last-mile medical delivery while reducing the carbon footprint, traveling up to 130 kilometers (81 miles) per flight.

    Implement sustainable healthcare waste management. Millions of tonnes of waste are generated by healthcare activities each year, due largely to the use of single-use plastics and poor waste management practices.

    The pandemic led to a dramatic increase in the volume of healthcare waste globally, while many health facilities across Asia and the Pacific have limited waste management services. The use of chemical disinfectants and incineration to treat waste can result in the release of pollutants into the environment, causing respiratory and other diseases.

    Replacing carbon-intensive incineration with alternative waste treatment technologies like steam-based disinfection and adopting the principles of circularity to increase the reuse and recycling of healthcare products and materials can ease the burden of waste on health systems, reduce unnecessary emissions and human health, and save costs.

    Ensuring a robust regulatory framework to define, monitor, and enforce health safety standards is also a critical step toward resilient health systems.

    Decarbonizing healthcare supply chains is not just an environmental imperative—it’s essential to building resilient, equitable health systems, especially in vulnerable regions.

    Nansu Isadahl and Avdesh Gupta contributed to this blog post.
     

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Development Asia: From Cash to Digital: Advancing Financial Inclusion in Pakistan

    Source: Asia Development Bank

    The role of mobile money in financial inclusion

    Mobile money offers huge potential to improve lives by enabling low-cost, fast, safe, and easy transactions. It addresses access barriers by eliminating the need to go to physical bank branches. In 2022, Pakistan had only 10.8 commercial bank branches per 100,000 adults—one of the lowest ratios in the region.

    Pakistan’s evolving financial landscape

    Over the past 15 years, financial services in Pakistan have evolved rapidly. Financial institution accounts grew by about 127% between FY19 and FY24. Of Pakistan’s 241 million people, 60% are adults. With 91 million unique financial institution accounts, two-fifths of the adult population still lack access to formal financial services. Deregulation in the sector led to new branchless banking regulations. This enabled kiryana convenience stores across the country to offer financial services. The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic shifted consumer behavior and further accelerated mobile and cashless banking adoption. Mobile and online transactions rose from 17% in early 2020 to 75% by September 2024, per the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP).

    Raast, the country’s first instant payment system launched in 2021, has also simplified person-to-person (P2P) and person-to-merchant (P2M) transactions. This system offers instant, reliable, and free digital payments for individuals and businesses within Pakistan. Users can send or receive money using their mobile numbers and bank accounts. This has extended financial services to the poor and the unbanked. Adoption has surged, with Raast processing over 102 million P2P payments in 2023, up from 7.9 million in 2022. By the end of September, daily transactions had reached 3 million, and there were 39.5 million registered Raast IDs, according to public data from the State Bank of Pakistan.

    Raast also revolutionized businesses, especially small and medium enterprises and the retail sector, with P2M transactions introduced in February 2022. This reduced fees and settlement times, enhancing efficiency and boosting economic activity.

    Lessons from India and PRC

    Lessons from regional giants like India and the People’s Republic of China (PRC) highlight the transformative potential of digital payment systems. India’s Unified Payments Interface (UPI), introduced in 2016, processed 117.6 billion transactions in 2023, making it the world’s most popular alternative payment method. While P2P transactions initially drove its adoption, the widespread acceptance of P2M payments accelerated its growth. Similarly, PRC’s tech giant Alipay began with P2P transfers in 2004, followed by WeChat Pay in 2013. Exponential growth and near-universal adoption came after the introduction of P2M capabilities.

    The retail sector’s untapped potential

    Pakistan’s robust retail sector, which makes up almost 18% of GDP and is spread across a network of an estimated 2.5 million retail and wholesale outlets, offers an immense opportunity for growth. Traditionally, this sector has remained largely untaxed, contributing an estimated 4% of tax revenue. But recent pressure from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has renewed the government’s drive to get the retail sector to pay more through taxation. To that end, several measures have already been taken, including the implementation of point-of-sale registers and the Tajir Dost scheme, where retailers are subject to a fixed monthly tax. The tax assessment is based on the market value and regular turnover of the enterprise. In 2024, the scheme was extended to 42 cities in Pakistan from the original six. Under the scheme, businesses can declare their assets and income and potentially receive benefits like reduced tax rates and simplified tax compliance procedures.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Somalia joins Afreximbank as it seeks to boost Intra-African trade and economic growth

    Source: Africa Press Organisation – English (2) – Report:

    CAIRO, Egypt, March 24, 2025/APO Group/ —

    Somalia has formally acceded to the Establishment Agreement of African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) (www.Afreximbank.com), becoming the 53rd African member state of the African multilateral financial institution and bringing the Bank closer to its goal of broadening its product offerings to all parts of the continent.  

    In the instrument of accession signed by Hon. Hirsi Jama Gani, State Minister, Office of the Prime Minister, Somalia notified Afreximbank that Somalia “accepts, and hereby accedes, to the Agreement for the Establishment of the Bank” and pledged to undertake all necessary steps to expedite ratification of the Agreement. 

    Somalia’s membership of Afreximbank is a significant milestone that places the country on a path of sustainable economic transformation, upgrading of the country’s trade and industrial infrastructure, and most importantly joins the rest of the continent in the push towards continental integration and self-reliance through the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). 

    Expressing deep satisfaction at Somalia’s decision to accede to the Agreement, Prof. Benedict Oramah, President and Chairman of the Board of Directors of Afreximbank, emphasised the mutual benefits to both parties. 

    “We are delighted to welcome Somalia into the Afreximbank family. This is a significant milestone as it widens the opportunity for the Somali public and private sectors to access financing and other related interventions that addresses their real needs. By joining the Bank, Somalia embarks on a new journey of pursuing its developmental aspirations on its own terms, backed by unwavering support from Afreximbank, a bank with proven track record of supporting its Participating States in good and bad times. Today, we begin a collective journey to enable the Somali economy to realise the maximum value from its natural resources while hastening its integration into the African Continental Free Trade Area.” 

    Hon. Hirsi Jama Ganni, Somalia’s State Minister of the Office of the Prime Minister expressed gratitude to Afreximbank for Somalia’s membership: “On behalf of the Government of Somalia and its people, I sincerely thank Afreximbank for its efforts that led our country to become a member state of the Bank. This milestone agreement signals our commitment to becoming a key player in regional and continental development, especially through trade, under the framework of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). This partnership is significant to Somalia’s ongoing reconstruction and economic diversification efforts, opening doors for financial and technical support.” 

    Hon. Ganni added: “We urge Afreximbank to accelerate the implementation of its programs and initiatives in Somalia, aligning them with Somalia’s National Development Plan and helping it meet its ambitious development goals. This is a critical step in realising the full potential of our country and for Somalia to regain its position as a strategic trade hub within East Africa .”  

    This accession follows proactive engagements between Afreximbank and the Somalia government, aimed at identifying and exploring opportunities to support the country’s development agenda. A collaborative roadmap has been established to guide these efforts. Additionally, Afreximbank has initiated discussions with Somalia’s corporate and financial sectors, recognizing their vital role in delivering the Bank’s developmental programs and fostering economic growth within the country.  

    In the meeting with the Afreximbank team, Hon. Abdirahman Abdullahi, Governor of the Central Bank of Somalia said: “Afreximbank’s visit to Mogadishu was timely as it came just after Somalia joined the East African Community regional trade bloc in 2024, and successfully completed the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) debt relief process. The Somali people are renowned for their trade and entrepreneurial spirit, and I urge the business community in Somalia to fully leverage the opportunities offered by Afreximbank under its financing programs, to expand their reach, drive sustainable growth, and contribute to a more connected and competitive economy.” 

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: AI INFRINGEMENT ALERT – NZ Authors books scraped in LibGEN dataset

    Source: New Zealand Society of Authors Te Puni Kaituhi o Aotearoa (PEN NZ)

    NZ Authors books scraped in LibGEN dataset – NZSA condemns authors intellectual property theft
     
    March 24, 2025 – Over the weekend, The Atlantic published a search tool that allows authors around the world to check if their works have been used in LibGen, an illegal pirate site Artificial Intelligence (AI) companies copied for their AI systems.

    This is a similar tool to the one that journalist Alex Reisner made available for the Books3 AI training dataset last year, but this new list has more than 7.5 million books copied by Meta, Open AI and other AI companies for their AI systems. It is not clear whether Meta Downloaded and used every book in LibGen.

    Thousands of books by NZ writers are included in this latest theft of intellectual property by Big Tech. NZ authors average incomes from their writing is circa $16k per year (Horizon Writers Survey, 2021) and our writers should not be the ones deprived of lost revenue in the development of this new technology. Big Tech can afford to pay licence fees to legally use the content they need to train their AI language models.

    Meta and other AI companies know exactly what they are doing

    AI companies need books for their quality writing, style, expression, long-form narration and content and use this to train their AI models. It appears those companies would rather steal that content than ask and pay for the use of it, as they do all other necessary components, costs and compliance required to run their businesses, such as electricity, wages, government health and safety requirements, and programming.

    Pirate Sites Are Illegal Sources of Books for AI Training 

    Author societies around the world are collaborating with each other, publishers and governments to combat major piracy websites that cost authors millions in lost sales and licence fees.

    In the US, collective action took down Z-Library and its 250 mirror sites and successfully sued Kiss Library, and assisted publishers in actions against LibGen, resulting in blocked domains In the US and multi-million-dollar fines. These sites remain challenging to permanently eliminate as they operate from Russia or Ukraine, and quickly migrate to new domains when blocked. New Zealand currently does not have legislation that allows site blocking to protect intellectual property and our creative industries.
     
    Around the globe Copyright Law is being reviewed and updated to tackle AI development and intellectual property rights. In NZ, The Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) is the Ministry responsible for the Copyright Act review. MBIE is planning to progress formal consultation in 2025 with the creative industries and the public on Copyright legislation including AI.This is demonstrably urgent.

    NZSA is collating a list of all NZ books from NZSA members and other writers affected by this latest instance of mass piracy.

    The New Zealand Society of Authors Te Puni Kaituhi o Aotearoa (PEN NZ) strongly condemns the appropriation of New Zealand Aotearoa authors intellectual property. This unauthorised use is intellectual property theft by Big Tech that infringes existing legislation. The imbalance of power between individual authors defending their property rights versus Big Tech money and might is alarming. The unsanctioned use of work is legally indefensible, and amoral. For the creative industries of Aotearoa to thrive we need robust copyright law, protections and enforcement mechanisms, and appropriate penalties for infringement.

    Article for reference:

    How the Emerging Market for AI Training Data is Eroding Big Tech’s ‘Fair Use’ US Law Copyright Defense: https://authors.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=905a5275ec5c023659502ec21&id=badb3ee21e&e=466373ae7c
    CLNZ/NZSA position statement on AI HERE: https://authors.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=905a5275ec5c023659502ec21&id=bbcb427614&e=466373ae7c

    About NZSA
    The NZSA represents over 1,800 writers in New Zealand. We offer support through advocacy and representation, professional development, information and guidance on publishing and the literary arts, administer prizes and awards and contract/business advice. We work to protect authors incomes and offer memberships for writers at all stages of their careers, including students. Our many assessment and mentorship programmes supported by Creative New Zealand. NZSA is affiliated to International PEN, a voice that upholds freedom of speech and protests against writers falsely silenced and imprisoned around the world. NZSA collaborates across the book sector with other organisations to make NZ books and NZ writers more visible. The NZSA is a not for profit incorporated society and a registered charity in Aotearoa.
    www.authors.org.nz

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Piero Cipollone: Interview with Expansión

    Source: European Central Bank

    Interview with Piero Cipollone, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB, conducted by Andrés Stumpf

    24 March 2025

    The last ECB Governing Council meeting left the door open for a pause in interest rate cuts, or even stopping them all together. Would you be OK with rates remaining at their current level of 2.5%?

    At the time of our March meeting, markets were pricing in a reduction in interest rates over the coming months, including going below 2%, with rates stabilising around that level. To produce our macroeconomic projections we take as given the rate path being priced in by markets and, despite rates being on a downward trajectory, the projections showed inflation converging towards our target at the beginning of 2026, with slightly weaker growth.

    Since then, not only has this narrative been confirmed, but key issues have arisen that have strengthened the arguments in favour of continuing to lower rates. First, energy prices have fallen significantly. The upward revision to projected inflation for this year was based on increased energy costs, but the pressure has eased as this trend reverses. Second, the euro has appreciated and real rates have increased, which contributes to lower inflation.

    And if the United States were to impose tariffs on European exports, that would have a negative impact on demand, which would further strengthen the downward trend in inflation. In the same vein, trade tensions between China and the United States could lead to China redirecting its products to the European market, increasing the downward pressure on prices.

    So will you continue cutting rates?

    We will go into each meeting with an open mind, assessing the available data and taking decisions on a meeting-by-meeting basis. Each adjustment will depend on how the economy evolves and how the uncertainties are resolved, but current conditions make it conceivable that monetary policy will be less restrictive as, at the moment, the outlook remains consistent with our March projections.

    In fact, according to the data we have available, we are likely to reach our inflation objective sooner than our latest projections indicate.

    The ECB’s latest statement signalled that monetary policy is now “meaningfully less restrictive”. Does this solely refer to the rate cuts that have already happened, or might it give us some hints about your next moves?

    That phrase alludes to the fact that we have already come a long way. It doesn’t say anything about the future, and we will go into the next meeting with new data that we will have to assess. If the path and our narrative are confirmed, from my perspective there is room to relax our monetary policy further.

    Would additional rate cuts get us to the famous, much-debated “neutral rate”, which is neither expansionary nor contractionary?

    It’s an interesting theoretical concept, but not particularly useful for conducting monetary policy. At the ECB we have sophisticated models and economists who analyse projections and risks. Their work provides crucial information that enables the Governing Council to take decisions on the basis of sound evidence. The neutral rate sparks an engaging debate, but the range [from 1.75% to 2.25%] is so wide that, depending on where you fall within this apparent neutral range, you could be conducting a totally different monetary policy.

    Europe currently needs substantial investment to tackle the climate transition and the loss of competitiveness, and now also for defence. Can the ECB help to mitigate this challenge?

    The ECB will contribute by providing a stable environment. For us, price stability and the expectation of price stability are essential elements because they encourage long-term planning. Families and businesses can plan, invest and take decisions accordingly.

    We are considering climate change, competitiveness and security challenges and the associated financing needs from that angle, analysing their economic and financial impact from the perspective of price stability. Aside from that, we’re getting into areas that aren’t within the ECB’s mandate.

    In any case, it’s important to avoid monetary policy keeping GDP growth below potential if that isn’t necessary to control inflation. If we are continually growing below potential we will end up undermining that potential. Investment is essential for supporting and growing the economy, and unnecessarily reducing investment can hamper long-term growth and make the economy more vulnerable to shocks.

    So, in this sense, our main contribution will be maintaining price stability, securing a stable economic environment and avoiding unnecessary restrictions on GDP growth.

    Recently you have signalled that the ECB shrinking its balance sheet could make monetary policy more restrictive and demand larger rate cuts.

    It’s more complicated than that. The large asset purchases we carried out in the past lowered long-term sovereign bond yields by as much as 175 basis points. Now, because of the reduction in the size of our balance sheet, this figure is 75 basis points and falling.

    But there’s another important factor. It’s not just about the size of central bank reserves, it’s also about their composition. ECB research shows that the composition of these reserves is very important for banks’ lending ability. The research estimates that debt portfolio holdings (under the ECB’s asset purchase programme (APP) and pandemic emergency purchase programme (PEPP)) will decrease by around €500 billion in 2025. This is associated with a possible €75 billion decline in credit supply. To put this into perspective, it is roughly equivalent to the amount of loans that banks granted to non-financial corporations in 2024.

    Therefore, we should bear in mind that, if nothing else happens, the reduction of the central bank balance sheet is putting pressure on banks’ lending capacity. So we need to monitor this effect and take it into consideration when calibrating our monetary policy stance.

    Growth in Spain is stronger and inflation is somewhat higher. Is the country at risk from the interest rate cuts?

    Inflation in Spain is currently slightly higher due to energy prices, and the stronger growth is in part also driven by supply factors, such as the impact of migration on the labour market. I think Spain’s growth is healthy.

    In any case, there have always been differences between euro area economies, and between regions in individual countries. The important thing is that there is convergence in economic and financial conditions, and we are actually seeing that in many respects. For example, despite all the volatility, risk premia have remained relatively contained.

    What is the current status of the digital euro?

    We are progressing as planned with our preparation phase, which will come to an end in October this year. We have been working on selecting providers. We’ve carried out the procurement process with potential suppliers and are about to finalise it. We are also developing the rulebook, and we’re working on ways to engage more with users.

    In the meantime, we are waiting for the legislative process to be completed. That is a key component.

    Are you optimistic?

    We know that progress has been made and we hope that the process will be concluded within a reasonable amount of time.

    One factor is important: there is a growing sense of urgency. The situation outside the euro area is a source of pressure and demands greater consideration of the risks we face in payments as a result of our fragility and our extreme dependence on foreign providers. I have the impression that this increased sense of urgency has now reached the legislators.

    At the European Parliament, President Lagarde argued that the digital euro is a tool of sovereignty. Would you agree with that?

    I fully agree with that statement. The digital euro is a structural necessity for the European payments market, irrespective of recent developments in other countries. However, recent events further underline the urgent need to make progress in this direction.

    The digital euro is key to reducing our foreign dependence as regards Europeans’ everyday payments. In addition, having more solutions across Europe will make us more competitive, which will lead to lower prices, better services and greater innovation.

    At a time of tensions between the EU and the United States, don’t you think that a public initiative designed to compete with US payment systems could cause further friction?

    I don’t think so, because it’s logical to think that each jurisdiction should have its own infrastructure that it can rely on. Payments are like water or electricity – essential services that every economy needs to ensure are available. In developing a digital euro, we are not seeking a confrontation with anyone. Implementing a digital euro is something that we should have done irrespective of the circumstances. It is about ensuring the resilience of our economy and that we are the master of our own destiny.

    The United States has abandoned plans for a digital dollar and other countries have also put their projects on hold. Why do you think the digital euro should go ahead?

    Every country and every region has its particular characteristics. In Europe we are facing specific challenges, like a fragmented payments market and a dependence on foreign solutions. Other countries and regions do not have the same problems and so may not see the same need.

    In any case, in the United States, there is a proposal that would allow stablecoins to hold their reserves with the Federal Reserve. This could be marketed as a form of hybrid digital dollar. In fact, some stablecoins present themselves as the world’s digital dollar.

    When will people be able to pay with digital euro?

    It very much depends on when the legislative process is finalised. The technical preparations and developments will take time, both on our side and for banks and the market. This could take some two or two-and-a-half years from the moment the decision to issue a digital euro is taken, once the legislation is in place.

    Do you have an estimate of the cost of the project?

    As the legislation is still pending and the procurement phase has not yet been finalised, it is difficult to say what the final cost of the project will be. In the procurement documentation we gave an initial estimate for the elements that will be sourced externally. This was based on market research we had carried out previously. These costs are estimated to be €432 million, including both the infrastructure and the operation of the system for 10-15 years. On top of that there will also be internal development costs, especially for the ledger. The ECB would bear these costs in the same way as it does for the production and issuance of banknotes. And like for banknotes, these costs would be covered by the seigniorage income generated by the digital euro.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: Share repurchase programme: Transactions of week 12 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    The share repurchase programme runs as from 26 February 2025 and up to and including 30 January 2026 at the latest. In this period, Jyske Bank will acquire shares with a value of up to DKK 2.25 billion, cf. Corporate Announcement No. 3/2025 of 26 February 2025. The share repurchase programme is initiated and structured in compliance with the EU Commission Regulation No. 596/2014 of 16 April 2014, the so-called “Market Abuse Regulation”, and the Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2016/1052 of 8 March 2016 (together with the Market Abuse Regulation, the “Safe Harbour Rules”).

    The following transactions have been made under the program:

      Number of
    shares
    Average purchase
    price (DKK)
    Transaction
    value (DKK)
    Accumulated, previous announcement 51,716 579.97 29,993,819
    17 March 2025 4,000 584.62 2,338,474
    18 March 2025 4,000 590.67 2,362,698
    19 March 2025 4,000 588.93 2,355,736
    20 March 2025 4,000 579.93 2,319,712
    21 March 2025 4,000 583.72 2,334,872
    Accumulated under the programme 71,716 581.53 41,705,310

    Following settlement of the transactions stated above, Jyske Bank will own a total of 2,836,834 of treasury shares, excluding investments made on behalf of customers and shares held for trading purposes, corresponding to 4.41% of the share capital.

    Attached to this corporate announcement, aggregated details on the transactions related to the share repurchase programme are shown by venue.
                                                             
    Yours faithfully,
    Jyske Bank

    Contact: Birger Krøgh Nielsen, CFO, tel. +45 89 89 64 44.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Financial Stability Authority’s updated decision on setting the minimum amount of Oma Savings Bank Plc’s own funds and eligible liabilities

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    OMA SAVINGS BANK PLC, STOCK EXCHANGE RELEASE 24 MARCH 2025 AT 9.30 A.M. EET, INSIDE INFORMATION

    Financial Stability Authority’s updated decision on setting the minimum amount of Oma Savings Bank Plc’s own funds and eligible liabilities

    The Financial Stability Authority has set an updated level for Oma Savings Bank Plc (OmaSp) for the minimum amount of own funds and eligible liabilities (MREL requirement) for Oma Savings Bank Plc (OmaSp) on 21 March 2025 and revokes the decision issued on 17 April 2024.

    The updated MREL requirement (Minimum Requirement for own funds and Eligible Liabilities) enters into force one year earlier and must be fulfilled at the latest 17 April 2026 (previously 17 April 2027). The updated MREL consists of a total risk-based requirement of 20.88% (previously 20.88%) and a requirement based on the total amount of exposures used in the calculation of the leverage ratio, which is 7.89 percent (previously 7.82 percent).

    CEO Sarianna Liiri:
    ” The updated decision of the Financial Stability Authority does not significantly change the situation from the previous one. The measures are ongoing, and we will complete the future MREL requirement well in advance of its entry into force in accordance with OmaSp’s financing plan.”

    Oma Savings Bank Plc

    Additional information:
    Sarianna Liiri, CEO, tel. +358 40 835 6712, sarianna.liiri@omasp.fi
    Minna Sillanpää, CCO, tel. +358 50 66592, minna.sillanpaa@omasp.fi

    DISTRIBUTION
    Nasdaq Helsinki Ltd
    Major media
    www.omasp.fi

    OmaSp is a solvent and profitable Finnish bank. About 500 professionals provide nationwide services through OmaSp’s 48 branch offices and digital service channels to over 200,000 private and corporate customers. OmaSp focuses primarily on retail banking operations and provides its clients with a broad range of banking services both through its own balance sheet as well as by acting as an intermediary for its partners’ products. The intermediated products include credit, investment and loan insurance products. OmaSp is also engaged in mortgage banking operations.

    OmaSp core idea is to provide personal service and to be local and close to its customers, both in digital and traditional channels. OmaSp strives to offer premium level customer experience through personal service and easy accessibility. In addition, the development of the operations and services is customer-oriented. The personnel is committed and OmaSp seeks to support their career development with versatile tasks and continuous development. A substantial part of the personnel also own shares in OmaSp.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Tryg A/S – Q1 2025 pre-silent newsletter

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Tryg A/S – Q1 2025 pre-silent newsletter

    Tryg will conduct pre-close analyst calls and meetings during the week commencing on March 24, ahead of the Q1 2025 results, which will be released on April 11. This newsletter aims to inform capital market participants of the key factors influencing the company’s recent financial performance.

    Insurance revenue growth

    Tryg maintains a balanced distribution of insurance revenue across the Scandinavian countries, with approximately 50% of revenue generated in Denmark, 30% in Sweden, and 20% in Norway. In Q1 2024, Tryg reported insurance revenue of DKK 9,531m.

    From 2025 Q1 and onwards the commercial and corporate segments will be reported together in the segment named ‘Commercial’. The commercial segment will experience a smaller spillover effect into 2025 of the derisking of the corporate portfolio carried out in 2024. In general, the group revenue development remains in line with recent development.

    When converting earnings from local currencies to DKK, Tryg’s reporting currency, the expected average value of SEK 100 is DKK 65.6 (66.6 Q1 2024), and NOK 100 is DKK 63.4 (65.6 Q1 2024).

    Claims environment

    Underlying claims development
    Tryg operates a stable business and recent trends in underlying performance should thus be considered reliable indicators for short-term trends. The Group’s underlying claims ratio was 72.3% in Q1 2024. At the capital markets day (CMD) on 4 December 2024, Tryg mentioned that it expects a broadly stable to slightly improving underlying performance in the new strategy period towards 2027.

    Weather claims
    For Q1, normalised weather claims amount to 40% of the annual DKK 800m guidance, equating to DKK 320m. As a reminder, the annual expectation for weather claims is split as follows (in percentages terms): 40% in Q1, 10% in Q2, 20% in Q3 and 30% in Q4.

    In general, a milder than average winter with warmer temperatures has been recorded in Scandinavia. A couple of smaller storms have hit the region (Floriane and  Éowyn). It is important to remember that freezing temperatures always cause bursting pipe claims and more car accidents are reported during the winter due to more difficult weather conditions.

    Large claims
    On an annual basis, Tryg provides guidance for large claims amounting to DKK 800m, evenly distributed across quarters. Occasionally, information about large claims may be available in mass media or local press.

    Interest rates development
    For Q1, we expect an approximate discount rate of 2.3% at the time of writing. The discounting percentage was reported at 2.1% in Q4 2024.

    Run-off expectations towards 2027
    At the 2024 CMD, Tryg stated a long-term run-off expectation of ~2% towards 2027.

    Investment activities

    Tryg has divided its investment activities into a match portfolio (approx. DKK 44bn at Q4 2024) and a free portfolio (approx. DKK 17bn as per Q4 2024). As announced at the 2024 CMD, the free portfolio was derisked during Q4 2024 and is now mainly made up by Scandinavian covered bonds and government bonds (approx. DKK 13bn) and the real estate portfolio (approx. DKK 3bn). As a rule of thumb, the return on bonds can be modelled as 50% NYKRCMB2 and 50% NYKRCMG2 (Bloomberg tickers). For the real estate portfolio, a normalised annual return of 6.5% is assumed. The current buyback program of DKK 2bn started in December will impact the size of the free portfolio accordingly.

    The return of the match portfolio mainly consists of the return on premium provisions, which is expected at DKK 75m per quarter with the current level of interest rates.

    Additionally, the line ‘Other financial income and expenses’ is guided at DKK -90m per quarter and mainly consists of costs related to currency hedges, general balance sheet items and costs related to running the investment operation. As described in the newsletter on inflation hedging dated 17 March 2025, this line now also includes the net result of the inflation hedge. In the medium term, this is expected to average zero, but mismatches may occur in the short term.

    Other income and cost

    Other income and cost are expected between DKK -350m and DKK -370m on a quarterly basis. This is primarily driven by amortisation of intangibles related to the RSA Scandinavia acquisition.

    Number of shares

    At year-end 2024, Tryg reported 613,165k outstanding shares. Tryg announced a DKK 2bn share buyback at the CMD in December 2024, and as at 14 March 2025, 6,010,787 shares have been acquired in the quarter to date. The status of the buyback is announced each Monday at noon CET.

    Outlook statement from annual report 2024

    Tryg reported an insurance service result, adjusted for the more favorable-than-normal large and weather claims outcome, of around DKK 7.2bn in 2024 and it is now targeting its highest ever insurance service result of between DKK 8.0-8.4bn in 2027. The insurance service result is expected to increase gradually throughout the strategy period.

    Tryg will publish the Group’s Q1 results for 2025 on 11 April 2025 at around 7:30 CET.

    Conference call

    Tryg will host a conference call on the day of the release at 10:00 CET. CEO Johan Kirstein Brammer, CFO Allan Kragh Thaysen, CTO Mikael Kärrsten and Head of Financial Reporting Gianandrea Roberti, SVP  will present the results in brief, followed by a Q&A session.

    The conference call will be held in English.

    Date 11 April 2025
    Time 10:00 CET
     

    Dial-in numbers

     Pin code

    +45 (DK) 78 76 84 90

    +44 (UK) 203 769 6819

    +1 (US) 646 787 0157

    560768

    You can sign up for an e-mail reminder on tryg.com. The conference call will also be broadcast on this site. An on-demand version will be available shortly after the conference call has ended.

    All Q1 2025 material can be downloaded on tryg.com shortly after the time of release.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Mitsubishi Corporation & Alt Carbon sign agreement to scale carbon removal in South Asia

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    • Partnership agreement to scale carbon removal through a breakthrough Enhanced Rock Weathering tech process.
    • Alt Carbon to generate high-quality, durable Carbon Removal (CDR) credits.

    LONDON, March 24, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Mitsubishi Corporation (MC), and Alt Carbon, a Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) company, announced a partnership agreement to scale the removal of carbon dioxide in South Asia. The agreement between the two parties will generate high quality, durable, carbon removal tons that have been created through a breakthrough Enhanced Rock Weathering (ERW) tech process.

    “Removal of carbon dioxide is critical to meet net-zero emissions by 2050. With Alt Carbon, we have a formidable partner with highly innovative technology in a breakthrough Enhanced Rock Weathering process that locks carbon in the ocean sink. From removing carbon, helping local farmers, and stringent testing measures to generate CDR credits, Alt Carbon is uniquely positioned to capture the ERW market. MC’s commitment to decarbonization is unwavering and reflects our dedication to a sustainable future, as we scale the CDR industry through our collaboration with Alt Carbon in ERW,” said Tadashi Sawamura, GM, Carbon Management Dept., Mitsubishi Corporation.

    Alt Carbon deploys a process called ERW that takes crushed basalt rock and spreads it on large swathes of agricultural land. The rock’s natural reaction with rainwater pulls the CO2 from the air & stores it in the soil, thereby improving crop yields. This dissolved inorganic carbon ultimately reaches the ocean via river networks and remains locked in the ocean for 10,000+ years. 

    ERW is one of the novel techniques for Carbon Removal (CDR) that has been advocated by the The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) as a critical tool for reaching Net Zero by 2050. Alt Carbon is tapping into the increased demand for high quality, durable, traceable, carbon removal projects – and it’s operating in a growing market. Alt Carbon’s in-house MRV, team of scientists from the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, and the Darjeeling-Climate Action Lab (D-CAL) make it one of the leading carbon removal companies in the Global South, ideally placed to remove CO2 at a gigaton scale.

    “Having an institution like Mitsubishi Corporation recognise and support our efforts entrenches our belief in the science and technology behind ERW for carbon removal. In 15 months, we have rigorously tested and modelled our operations and technology in the single pursuit of removing carbon dioxide. This is just the first step, but it feels like a giant leap as MC partners with us to make India a hub for carbon removal,” said Co-founder & CEO Shrey Agarwal, Alt Carbon

    Alt Carbon is the first Indian headquartered company to receive a prepurchase agreement from Frontier, an Advance Market Commitment to purchase $1+ billion of permanent carbon removal by 2030. As part of this agreement, Alt Carbon received $500,000 for the purchase of high quality, durable carbon removal tons that have been generated through the Enhanced Rock Weathering process. The participating buyers included Stripe, Shopify, Alphabet, Meta and Watershed (on behalf of Match). Alt Carbon also became the first ERW company globally to receive an offtake agreement from the South Pole & Mitsubishi-led NextGen buyer’s coalition.   

    In order to meaningfully undertake climate action, we require gigaton level projects — i.e. projects that have a shot at removing 1 billion tons of CO2 every year. Alt Carbon is targeting reaching up to 500,000 hectares of land in North East India’s tea belt by 2030, as part of the Darjeeling Revival Project, removing upwards of 5 million tonnes of CO2 every year. Beyond that, the company aims to scale up its operations in South Asia to further work towards its goal of removing 1 billion tons of CO2, each and every year. 

    Notes to the editor
    Media images can be found here. For further information please contact the Alt Carbon press office: Adithya Venkatesan on adithya@alt-carbon.com or +91 94811 74420

    About Alt Carbon
    Alt Carbon is a co2 Removal (cdr) company based out of India transforming Darjeeling’s struggling tea industry from being at-risk from the effects of climate change, to becoming pioneers for climate action. Alt Carbon is on a mission to capture vast amounts of CO2 from the atmosphere. Its ambitious goal is to remove 5M MT of CO2 by 2030, with the ultimate aim of reaching a billion tons – for good. For more information please visit https://www.alt-carbon.com/ or follow via LinkedIn

    Media Contact:

    Name: Adithya Venkatesan

    Company Name: Alt Carbon

    Designation: Head of Brand

    Email Address: adithya@alt-carbon.com

    Website Link: https://www.alt-carbon.com/

    Disclaimer: This press release is provided by the Alt Carbon. 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. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice. Investing involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. 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.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d8f7c1b5-2498-42d7-9535-fd8d0fce67fd

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Andrius Načajus will become the CEO of INVL Asset Management

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    The new CEO of INVL Asset Management, the leading alternative asset manager in the Baltics, as of 1 April will be Andrius Načajus, a finance executive with many years of experience. He is replacing interim CEO Audrius Matikiūnas, the company’s Head of Business Development.  

    Andrius Načajus will also be a member of the board of INVL Financial Advisors, the financial brokerage company operating under the brand name INVL Family Office. The Bank of Lithuania’s permission for him to serve in both roles has been obtained. In the near future, subject to approval by Latvia’s supervisory authority, he should become a member of the supervisory board of INVL Asset Management in Latvia as well. 

    “We value Andrius’s managerial experience, multifaceted financial market competence and openness to innovation. We believe that he will contribute actively to rapid business growth, operational efficiency and outstanding results for our investors,” says Darius Šulnis, the CEO of Invalda INVL and Chairman of the Board of INVL Asset Management. 

    “It is a great honour to join the private equity market leader with the strongest team of investment professionals in the Baltics. INVL Asset Management demonstrates an exceptional ability to select assets with growth potential and generate superior returns for its clients. I believe those skills are particularly relevant in these times of extraordinary change,” Andrius Načajus remarks.  

    The new CEO has more than 20 years of management experience in the financial sector in the Baltic countries. Prior to joining INVL Asset Management, he was the chief financial officer at Achema Group. Before that, he worked for 6 years at Luminor Bank, where he was a member of the group management board, head of corporate banking in the Baltics, and country head for Lithuania. He had previously led the corporate banking, markets and investment banking units at DNB Bank in Lithuania.  

    A. Načajus graduated from the Stockholm School of Economics and Business in Riga and Stockholm, where he obtained a master’s degree in international business. 

    INVL Asset Management is a part of Invalda INVL, the leading Baltic asset management group, which currently employs more than 150 employees. The Invalda INVL group manage or have under supervision more than EUR 1.6 billion of assets across multiple asset classes including private equity, forests and agricultural land, renewable energy, real estate as well as private debt. The group’s scope of activities also includes family office services in Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, management of pension funds in Latvia, and investments in global third-party funds. 

    Additional information:
    Darius Šulnis
    darius.sulnis@invl.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI China: S. Korea’s court holds 2nd preparatory hearing of President Yoon’s criminal trial

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    South Korea’s court on Monday held the second preparatory hearing of the impeached President Yoon Suk-yeol’s criminal trial.

    The second preliminary hearing was held at a courtroom of the Seoul Central District Court around 10:00 a.m. local time (0100 GMT) to clarify the main disputes and evidence.

    Yoon was absent from the hearing after attending the first one on Feb. 20. The first formal hearing was scheduled for April 14.

    Finance and foreign ministers will be questioned during the first formal hearing, as witnesses at the request of the prosecution.

    Yoon was released on March 8 as the prosecution decided not to appeal against a court’s release approval.

    The Seoul Central District Court approved the release of the arrested president, accepting Yoon’s request to cancel his detention that was made by his legal team on Feb. 4.

    Yoon was apprehended in the presidential office on Jan. 15 and was indicted under detention on Jan. 26 as a suspected ringleader of insurrection, becoming the country’s first sitting president to be arrested and prosecuted.

    Yoon declared an emergency martial law on the night of Dec. 3 last year, but it was revoked by the opposition-led National Assembly hours later.

    A motion to impeach Yoon was passed in the National Assembly on Dec. 14, and since then the constitutional court has held 11 hearings on Yoon’s impeachment. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Rubber-tapping robots designed to alleviate labor shortage

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    In a bid to tackle the chronic labor shortages plaguing its natural rubber industry, China has unveiled a mobile rubber-tapping robot, marking a leap forward in agricultural automation.

    Developed jointly by the Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences (CATAS) and Beijing-based tech firm Automotive Walking Technology, the self-navigating robot is set to undergo trials in rubber plantations in south China’s Hainan Province during the upcoming tapping season in April.

    In a demonstration video, the robot can be seen approaching a rubber tree, before halting with pinpoint accuracy and then extending its robotic arm to execute a precise cutting motion on the trunk. Within seconds after this cutting motion, the video reveals milky-white latex flowing steadily from the incision made by the robot.

    China’s natural rubber sector, vital for tire manufacturing and as a source of industrial supplies, is currently facing a significant workforce deficit due to its grueling working conditions, nocturnal shifts and high incidence of occupational diseases.

    “The rubber-tapping robots have been developed to address the exodus of rubber tappers, which is the industry’s critical pain point,” said Cao Jianhua, deputy director of the CATAS rubber research institute.

    The robot, equipped with a multi-degree-of-freedom robotic arm and caterpillar-track mobility, leverages AI-driven technologies to adapt to complex terrain and perform precision cuts.

    Its navigation system combines laser radar and multi-sensor fusion algorithms, enabling high-precision positioning in dense plantations. Also, visual tech determines tree bark depth and cutting angles, achieving 80 percent manual harvesting efficiency with matching latex quality.

    The rubber-tapping robot can harvest 100 to 120 trees per hour, powered by lithium batteries that provide over 8 hours of continuous operation. Notably, its 20-second rapid battery swap capability ensures uninterrupted workflow in large plantations.

    Once in the mass-production phase, the cost of the rubber-tapping robot will drop below 100,000 yuan (13,820 U.S. dollars), and for a 50-mu (3.33 hectares) rubber garden, robot-based tapping will recoup the purchase cost within about 18 months, Sun Yao, co-founder of Automotive Walking Technology, told Xinhua.

    “We’ve been in discussions with several multinational tire companies and rubber growers throughout Southeast Asia, including in Indonesia and Thailand, and they’re showing strong interest in our product,” said Cao.

    Cao’s team is continuing to refine its technology. Soon, users will be able to monitor the robots directly from their smartphones, get a clear picture of the rubber garden’s status, and use more big data and AI technologies for fully automated management.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Jinhua launches global initiative to expand trade

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    A major manufacturing city in east China’s Zhejiang Province has kicked off its 2025 global trade promotion initiative in a bid to boost exports, amid rising trade protectionism and weakening demand in key global markets.

    As the first step of this endeavor, a delegation of 55 companies from the city of Jinhua, home to some 2 million market entities, participated in the National Hardware Show in Las Vegas in the United States from March 18 to 20.

    “Participating in exhibitions can help us win new customers and also strengthen relationships with old customers. It also allows us to better understand customer demands and experience,” said Li Xing, general manager of Jinhua Bangte Electric Co., Ltd.

    Li’s company took over 10 types of hardware and electrical accessories to the exhibition to further tap the U.S. market. Ahead of the trade show, he visited clients in Chicago, Los Angeles and New York to gain deeper market insights and explore potential partnerships.

    “As long as we step out overseas, there will be rewards,” said Li. His company, which mainly exports to the United States and Canada, has achieved annual exports of more than 100 million yuan (about 13.93 million U.S. dollars) on average over the past three years.

    Amid rising tariffs on Chinese goods, Li acknowledged the challenges posed by increased costs. He revealed that his company was negotiating with clients to share the burden. He is also working on establishing a U.S.-based trading company to build overseas warehouses to reduce logistics and warehousing costs.

    Zhejiang Seacoast Industrial Co., Ltd., another exhibitor, received positive feedback at the Las Vegas expo regarding its new balcony and courtyard tables and chairs.

    “The United States is an important export destination for China’s hardware and garden products,” said Gao Junting, general manager of Seacoast Industrial. “Through this exhibition, we aim to expand our offline customer base and enter major U.S. supermarkets.”

    Gao noted that rising living costs in the United States are driving consumers to seek affordable yet high-quality products. “This presents an opportunity for us.”

    Beyond the United States, Seacoast Industrial has made significant progress in expanding into Europe, Australia, South America and Asia.

    Currently, about 15 percent of its exports, approximately 5 million U.S. dollars annually, are achieved via online platforms like Amazon in the United States, while over 80 percent goes to clients in Europe, Australia, South America and Asia.

    The city of Jinhua is intensifying its global trade efforts. In 2025, the city plans to organize delegations of exporters to participate in seven more trade exhibitions in Russia, Thailand, Indonesia, South Africa, Britain, Morocco and Türkiye.

    These exhibitions will showcase a wide range of products such as hardware tools, gardening products, kitchen and bathroom products, and lighting equipment.

    With the help of new trade models, including cross-border e-commerce, Jinhua reported strong trade growth in 2024, with total exports rising 16.4 percent year on year to 771.9 billion yuan. The number of local companies engaged in international trade surpassed 17,000 in 2024, a year-on-year increase of 10.3 percent. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: ABC Adelaide, interview

    Source: Australian Attorney General’s Agencies

    This transcript has been redacted in accordance with Digital Transformation Agency guidelines.


    Rory McClaren: In a time of growing global uncertainty, my next guest is currently charged with trying to navigate Australia’s international trade relationships. Federal Minister for Trade and Tourism and South Australian Senator Don Farrell. Good morning to you.

    Trade Minister: Good morning, Rory.

    Rory McClaren: Minister, ABC News is reporting today that a lobby group representing the big tech sector in the US Is encouraging the Trump administration to try and put pressure on Australia to change its policies. And the group has attacked the way that social media, streaming services, and artificial intelligence is being regulated. How do you respond to that criticism?

    Trade Minister: Well, every day, Rory, you get reports of things happening in the United States. I don’t panic about them and try and work through all of these issues, in a calm and consistent way. On this particular topic, of course, we are not singling out United States companies. We treat all companies from all countries equally, and that’s how it should be, and that’s how we’ll proceed to deal with these issues. We have been working to try and improve online safety for all Australians and of course, ensure that we’ve got a diverse and sustainable news media sector. So, that’s our objective out of all of this. And we’ll keep working in the interest of Australians on that online safety and that diversification of the media sector.

    Rory McClaren: But is this intervention from this lobby group just another example of how volatile this trade relationship is becoming with the United States?

    Trade Minister: Look, again, I don’t think we should be overreacting to everything that comes out from the United States. We’ve had a very long standing and good relationship with the United States. Sure, things have started to change in the last few weeks and the last few months. But the goodwill that we have towards the Americans and that they have towards us is still on display. I spoke with my counterpart, the United States Trade Representative, on Tuesday morning. We had a very good discussion. He got to explain what their objectives are. And I explained to them just how important we think we are to the American economy. We have an interesting trade relationship with America. We roughly have $100 billion worth of trade. We buy $70 billion worth of product off them and we sell them $30 billion worth of product. So, we say to them, look, why would you impose a tariff on a country where you have a trade surplus? He pointed out to me that there are only a few other countries in the world where the United States has a trade surplus. One is Hong Kong and the other one is the Netherlands. So, as best we can, we are trying to explain to the highest levels of the United States government just how our trading relationship works. And we’ll continue to do that over the days and the weeks ahead. Obviously, there’s going to be some developments next week. The American government is going to announce what it’s going to do across the board on tariffs on that.

    Rory McClaren: Have you received any reassurances from the Trump administration about Australia and how Australia will be impacted?

    Trade Minister: We’re continuing to talk with them, Rory. I think that’s the most appropriate thing I can say at this stage. We want to engage with the Americans. We want to understand what it is that they want out there, out of the relationship. We’ve had 20 years of our free trade agreement. We think it’s been beneficial to both countries. We want that relationship to continue. Obviously, we have a very important relationship, particularly in South Australia with the AUKUS arrangement. We continue to talk to them about that and we have good, strong, friendly relationships with the United States and we want to keep it that way.

    Rory McClaren: Just on that, we’ve had a text with a question for you, Senator Don Farrell. Do we have a free trade agreement with the U.S. and if so, have they broken it? Do these free trade agreements really mean anything?

    Trade Minister: Well, answering that final question, yes, yes, they are important. You might recall three years ago when I first came into this job, we had $20 billion worth of tariffs and impediments imposed on us by the Chinese government. Despite the fact that we had a free trade agreement with the Chinese. Over that three year period, we – one by one – managed to remove all of those tariffs and all of those trade impediments. The last of them, interestingly, was crayfish just before Christmas last year. And already in that first month we’ve sold $33 million worth of crayfish back into the Chinese market. A record amount. But what did we use? We used our free trade agreement to take issues to, for instance, the World Trade Organization. And we were able to, by combination of diplomacy and other remedies, we were able to resolve each and every one of those issues. So, yes, we do have a free trade agreement with the United States and yes, we are able to use those free trade agreements to progress issues if there is a dispute. Now, obviously first point is we’re trying to resolve issues with the United States by discussion. That’s the first starting point. What we might do subsequently to that. Well, let’s, let’s see what happens. But my ambition is to do what we did in the China situation, that is sit down, open the dialogue, start talking, try and understand what their issues are, but also explain to the Americans what our issues are.

    Rory McClaren: Minister, could that also see you travel to the United States ahead of that decision?

    Trade Minister: Well, I’ve been taking video conferences in the post Covid world. That’s a pretty good way to talk to people and to communicate with people. I don’t want to predict just how we’ll conduct those negotiations, but the listeners should be, should rest assured that we’re open to dialogue and we are having dialogue with the Americans as we speak. And we’ll continue to do that because I think that’s the way you resolve issues. That’s how you resolve issues. Between other people. And that’s how you resolve issues between countries. And that’s what I’d like to do.

    Rory McClaren: Don Farrell, Federal Trade Tourism Minister, thank you for your time.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI: 14/2025・Trifork Group: Weekly report on share buyback

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Company announcement no. 14 / 2025
    Schindellegi, Switzerland – 24 March 2025


    Trifork Group: Weekly report on share buyback

    On 28 February 2025, Trifork initiated a share buyback program in accordance with Regulation No. 596/2014 of the European Parliament and Council of 16 April 2014 (MAR) and Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2016/1052, (Safe Harbour regulation). The share buyback program runs from 4 March 2025 up to and including no later than 30 June 2025. The buyback program will not be active from 9 to 15 April 2025. For details, please see company announcement no. 7 of 28 February 2025.

    Under the share buyback program, Trifork will purchase shares for up to a total of DKK 14.92 million (approximately EUR 2 million).

    Prior to the launch of the share buyback, Trifork held 256,329 treasury shares, corresponding to 1.3% of the share capital.

    Under the program, the following transactions have been made:

    Date    Number of shares       Average purchase price (DKK)       Transaction value (DKK)
    Total beginning 19,188 80.74 1,549,334
    17 March 2025 2,000 84.74 169,480
    18 March 2025 2,000 87.22 174,440
    19 March 2025 2,200 90.81 199,782
    20 March 2025 2,100 94.39 198,219
    21 March 2025 1,900 94.01 178,619
    Accumulated 29,388 84.04 2,469,874

    Since the share buyback program was started on 4 March 2025, the total number of repurchased shares is 29,388 at a total amount of DKK 2,469,874.

    With the transactions stated above, Trifork holds a total of 285,717 treasury shares, corresponding to 1.4%. The total number of registered shares in Trifork is 19,744,899. Adjusted for treasury shares, the number of outstanding shares is 19,459,182.


    Investor and media contact

    Frederik Svanholm, Group Investment Director & Head of Investor Relations
    frsv@trifork.com, +41 79 357 73 17


    About Trifork

    Trifork is a pioneering global technology partner, empowering enterprise and public sector customers with innovative solutions. With 1,229 professionals across 73 business units in 16 countries, Trifork delivers expertise in inspiring, building, and running advanced software solutions across diverse sectors, including public administration, healthcare, manufacturing, logistics, energy, financial services, retail, and real estate. Trifork Labs, the Group’s R&D hub, drives innovation by investing in and developing synergistic and high-potential technology companies. Trifork Group AG is a publicly listed company on Nasdaq Copenhagen. Learn more at trifork.com.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: NB Private Equity Partners Announces Transaction in Own Shares

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    THE INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN IS NOT FOR RELEASE, PUBLICATION OR DISTRIBUTION IN OR INTO AUSTRALIA, CANADA, ITALY, DENMARK, JAPAN, THE UNITED STATES, OR TO ANY NATIONAL OF SUCH JURISDICTIONS

    St Peter Port, Guernsey   24 March 2025

    NB Private Equity Partners (“NBPE” or the “Company”) today announces details of Class A Shares bought back pursuant to general authority granted by shareholders of the Company on 12 June 2024 and the share buy-back agreement with Jefferies International Limited.

    Transaction on London Stock Exchange

    Date of purchase of Shares 21 March 2025
    Number of Shares purchased 12,594 Class A Shares
    Highest price/lowest price paid £15.36 / £15.14
    ISIN for the Shares GG00B1ZBD492

    All Class A Shares bought back will be cancelled. Following the cancellation, the number of outstanding Class A Shares is 45,839,264‬. The Company also has 3,150,408 Class A shares held in treasury. For reporting purposes under the FCA’s Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules the market should use the figure of 45,839,264 voting rights when determining if they are required to notify their interest in, or a change to their interest in the Company.

    For further information, please contact:

    NBPE Investor Relations        +44 20 3214 9002
    Luke Mason        NBPrivateMarketsIR@nb.com

    Kaso Legg Communications        +44 (0)20 3882 6644

    Charles Gorman        nbpe@kl-communications.com
    Luke Dampier
    Charlotte Francis

    About NB Private Equity Partners Limited
    NBPE invests in direct private equity investments alongside market leading private equity firms globally. NB Alternatives Advisers LLC (the “Investment Manager”), an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Neuberger Berman Group LLC, is responsible for sourcing, execution and management of NBPE. The vast majority of direct investments are made with no management fee / no carried interest payable to third-party GPs, offering greater fee efficiency than other listed private equity companies. NBPE seeks capital appreciation through growth in net asset value over time while paying a bi-annual dividend.

    LEI number: 213800UJH93NH8IOFQ77

    About Neuberger Berman

    Neuberger Berman is an employee-owned, private, independent investment manager founded in 1939 with 2,800+ employees in 26 countries. The firm manages $500+ billion of equities, fixed income, private equity, real estate and hedge fund portfolios for global institutions, advisors and individuals. Neuberger Berman’s investment philosophy is founded on active management, fundamental research and engaged ownership. UNPRI named the firm a Leader, a designation awarded to fewer than 1% of investment firms for excellence in environmental, social and governance practices. Neuberger Berman has been named by Pensions & Investments as the #1 or #2 Best Place to Work in Money Management for each of the last ten years (firms with more than 1,000 employees). Visit www.nb.com for more information. Data as of December 31, 2024, unless noted otherwise.

    This press release appears as a matter of record only and does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to purchase any security.

    NBPE is established as a closed-end investment company domiciled in Guernsey. NBPE has received the necessary consent of the Guernsey Financial Services Commission. The value of investments may fluctuate. Results achieved in the past are no guarantee of future results. This document is not intended to constitute legal, tax or accounting advice or investment recommendations. Prospective investors are advised to seek expert legal, financial, tax and other professional advice before making any investment decision. Statements contained in this document that are not historical facts are based on current expectations, estimates, projections, opinions and beliefs of NBPE’s investment manager. Such statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, and undue reliance should not be placed thereon. Additionally, this document contains “forward-looking statements.” Actual events or results or the actual performance of NBPE may differ materially from those reflected or contemplated in such targets or forward-looking statements.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: AB Šiaulių bankas information publication in Estonian

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    AB Šiaulių bankas started publishing important news in Estonian on Nasdaq. Interim financial results announcements and other information deemed to be of interest to investors in Estonia will be published in Estonian.

    “We appreciate the activity of Estonian investors and aim to maintain close contact with them. Around 70% are Estonian retail investors among Šiaulių bankas’ shareholders. We cooperate with financial intermediaries, analysts and other institutions in the Baltics, so we strive to make it easier for them to access our most important information.

    Šiaulių bankas is undergoing a transformation to become an Artea bank and striving to be closer to its clients and investors, and this initiative confirms it once again”, – says Tomas Varenbergas, Head of Investment Management Department of Šiaulių bankas.

    Additional information:
    Tomas Varenbergas
    Head of Investment Management Division
    tomas.varenbergas@sb.lt

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Displacement in northern West Bank takes a toll on Palestinians

    Source: Médecins Sans Frontières –

    • Thousands of people are without proper shelter, essential services and access to healthcare in northern parts of the West Bank, Palestine.
    • This follow Israel’s launch of the “Iron Wall” military operation, which is forcibly displacing thousands of Palestinians.
    • Israel must halt the forcible displacement of people in the West Bank, and the humanitarian response must be scaled up.

    JERUSALEM – Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warns that tens of thousands of displaced people in northern parts of the West Bank, Palestine, are without proper shelter, essential services, and access to healthcare. Following the January 2025 ceasefire in Gaza, Israel launched the “Iron Wall” military operation in the occupied West Bank, forcibly displacing thousands of people, and leaving them in an extremely precarious situation. Israel must immediately halt the forcible displacement of Palestinians in the West Bank, and the humanitarian response must be scaled up and reach those in need. 

    “This scale of forced displacement and destruction of the camps has not been seen for decades,” says Brice de la Vingne, MSF director of operations. “People are unable to return to their homes as Israeli forces have blocked access to the camps, destroying homes and infrastructure.”

    “Camps have become ruins and dust,” says de la Vingne. “Israel must stop this, and the humanitarian response needs to be scaled up.”

    MSF mobile clinic teams provide basic healthcare consultations to forcibly displaced Palestinian refugees in Jenin. They also provide mental health support to children in the form of recreational activities. Northern West Bank, Palestine, March 2025.
    Oday Alshobaki/MSF

    Since the war in Gaza broke out in October 2023, Israeli forces have increased the use of extreme physical violence against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, as MSF highlighted in our report “Inflicting harm and denying care”. In total, 930 Palestinians have been killed, including 187 children, since the war in Gaza began, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). 

    Access to healthcare has been severely hindered, as confirmed by MSF teams on the ground who have witnessed the systematic pattern of oppression by Israel on health workers and patients. The situation further deteriorated since the ceasefire in Gaza, and Israel’s “Iron Wall” operation which has effectively emptied the three main refugee camps of Jenin, Tulkarem and Nur Shams in the northern West Bank, forcibly displacing over 40,000 Palestinians, according to OCHA. 

    “The [Israeli] army raided our house and ordered us to evacuate,” says Issam, an MSF patient who was displaced from Nur Shams camp. “We weren’t allowed to take anything with us – not even our documents.”

    “All we received was the warning: ‘Get out’,” says Issam. “Displacement is suffering, a silent anguish, a deep pain in the heart for everyone. You see the tears in people’s eyes, but we hold them back.”

    The mental health situation is alarming, with many patients suffering from stress, anxiety, and depression due to the violent and unpredictable nature of incursions and displacement. 

    “People don’t know what has happened to their homes and have suffered immense losses, including their sense of purpose,” says Mohammad, an MSF community health educator.

    “Drones were flying over the houses, ordering the residents to get out,” says Abdel, a resident of Jenin camp. “They always destroy things, but nothing like this has ever happened before.”

    MSF previously offered support in the three camps but had to adapt activities given the security risks and people’s displacement. Our teams now operate daily mobile clinics in Tulkarem and Jenin to provide medical care to displaced people. Our teams are treating chronic conditions such as diabetes and hypertension which have worsened due to lack of access to medication; respiratory infections, and osteo-muscular disorders among others.

    An MSF doctor provides a consultation to a patient at the Jenin MSF clinic in the northern West Bank. Palestine, March 2025.
    Oday Alshobaki/MSF

    Our teams also distribute hygiene kits and food parcels to support those who were forced to leave their homes without resources or belongings. MSF is providing water to the Khalil Suleiman hospital, the main hospital in Jenin, to mitigate frequent supply shortages due to damage from the military operations.

    MSF continues to respond to the urgent needs, but the scale of displacement and the escalating humanitarian crisis, amid the inadequate international response, present an immense challenge and needs in the West Bank are only getting worse.

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Secretary-General of ASEAN tours the National Museum of Indonesia and meets with Minister of Culture of the Republic of Indonesia

    Source: ASEAN

    Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, Secretary-General of ASEAN, together with H.E. Dr. H. Fadli Zon, Minister of the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Indonesia, today toured the exhibitions that showcased the rich cultural heritage and history of Indonesia, at the National Museum of Indonesia in Jakarta. Following the tour, both sides took the opportunity to discuss and exchange views on cultural cooperation including heritage initiatives in ASEAN, and explored new opportunity to strengthen regional cultural cooperation towards advancing ASEAN’s cultural agenda.  

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN tours the National Museum of Indonesia and meets with Minister of Culture of the Republic of Indonesia appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Palestine Occupied Territories – Mass displacements in northern West Bank take a dramatic toll on Palestinians, warns MSF

    Source: Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF)

    JERUSALEM – Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) warns that tens of thousands of displaced people in the northern West Bank, Palestine, are without proper shelter, essential services, and access to healthcare. Following the January 2025 ceasefire in Gaza, Israel launched the “Iron Wall” military operation in the occupied West Bank, forcibly displacing thousands and leaving them in an extremely precarious situation. Israel must immediately halt the forcible displacement of Palestinians in the West Bank and the humanitarian response must be scaled up and reach those in need.

    “This scale of forced displacement and destruction of the camps has not been seen for decades. People are unable to return to their homes as Israeli forces have blocked access to the camps, destroying homes and infrastructure. Camps have become ruins and dust” explains Brice de la Vingne, MSF director of operations. “Israel must stop this, and the humanitarian response needs to be scaled up”.

    Since the war in Gaza broke out in October 2023, Israeli forces have increased the use of extreme physical violence against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, as MSF highlighted in its report “Inflicting harm and denying care”. In total, 930 Palestinians have been killed including 187 children according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Access to healthcare has been severely hindered as confirmed by MSF teams on the ground who have witnessed the systematic pattern of oppression by Israel on health workers and patients. The situation further deteriorated since the ceasefire in Gaza and Israel’s “Iron Wall” operation which has effectively emptied the three main refugee camps of Jenin, Tulkarem and Nur Shams in northern West Bank forcibly displacing over 40,000 Palestinians according to OCHA.

    “The [Israeli] army raided our house and ordered us to evacuate. We weren’t allowed to take anything with us – not even our documents. All we received was the warning: ‘Get out’,” explains Issam, 55, MSF patient who was displaced from Nur Shams camp. “Displacement is suffering, a silent anguish, a deep pain in the heart for everyone. You see the tears in people’s eyes, but we hold them back.”

    The mental health situation is alarming, with many patients suffering from stress, anxiety, and depression due to the violent and unpredictable nature of incursions and displacement. “People don’t know what has happened to their homes and have suffered immense losses, including their sense of purpose,” says Mohammad, 30, an MSF community health educator.

    “Drones were flying over the houses, ordering the residents to get out.  They always destroy things, but nothing like this has ever happened before” according to Abdel, resident of Jenin camp.

    MSF previously offered support in the three camps but had to adapt activities given the security risks and displacement of the populations. MSF teams now operate daily mobile clinics in Tulkarem and Jenin to provide medical care to displaced people. Our teams are treating chronic conditions such as diabetes and hypertension which have worsened due to lack of access to medication; respiratory infections, and osteo-muscular disorders among others. MSF teams also distribute hygiene kits and food parcels to support those who were forced to leave their homes without resources or belongings. MSF is providing water to the Khalil Suleiman hospital, the main hospital in Jenin, to mitigate frequent supply shortages due to damage from the military operations.

    MSF continues to respond to the urgent needs, but the scale of displacement and the escalating humanitarian crisis amid the inadequate international response present an immense challenge and needs in the West Bank are only getting worse.

    MSF is an international, medical, humanitarian organisation that delivers medical care to people in need, regardless of their origin, religion, or political affiliation. MSF has been working in Haiti for over 30 years, offering general healthcare, trauma care, burn wound care, maternity care, and care for survivors of sexual violence. MSF Australia was established in 1995 and is one of 24 international MSF sections committed to delivering medical humanitarian assistance to people in crisis. In 2022, more than 120 project staff from Australia and New Zealand worked with MSF on assignment overseas. MSF delivers medical care based on need alone and operates independently of government, religion or economic influence and irrespective of race, religion or gender. For more information visit msf.org.au  

    MIL OSI – Submitted News