Category: Europe

  • MIL-OSI USA: Attorney General Alan Wilson co-leads 38-state coalition urging Congress to take action against rise in organized retail crimeRead More

    Source: US State of South Carolina

    (COLUMBIA, S.C.) – South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson co-led a bipartisan 38-state and territory coalition in urging Congress to take action to address the rise in organized retail crime across the country.  

    “Organized retail crime is not only resulting in higher prices and fewer choices for consumers, but these thugs are physically assaulting employees,” Attorney General Wilson said. “Stores have been forced to close because money is walking out the door and businesses are concerned about the safety and security of their patrons and employees.”

    Organized retail crime has contributed to financial losses totaling over $121 billion in the U.S., and 76 percent of retail asset protection managers report their employees have suffered from violence at the hands of an organized retail criminal. Cargo theft remains a primary component of organized retail crime nationwide – disrupting supply chains and acting as an inflationary pressure on the price of everything from baby formula to clothing.  

    During the 118th Congress, the House and Senate introduced H.R.895/S.140 – Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2023 and S. 139 – Organized Retail Crime Center Authorization Act of 2023. This legislation would provide the necessary resources at the state and federal levels to bring the organizations and individuals behind this nationwide problem to justice. Now, the coalition is urging the 119th Congress to re-introduce this bill to include increased federal penalties for supply chain thefts to act as a strong deterrent against the organized theft of goods in transit.

    Several attorneys general have formed task forces and created prosecution units to combat this growing problem. In their letter, the coalition notes that legislation proposed in the 118th Congress would expand upon and synchronize state and federal efforts with the creation of an Organized Retail Crime Coordination Center at the Department of Homeland Security, facilitating the information sharing necessary to address the complex cross-border nature of organized retail crime. 

    Joining Attorney General Wilson in co-leading this letter are the attorneys general of Connecticut, Georgia, and Illinois, along with the attorneys general of Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Hawaii, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, U.S. Virgin Islands, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia. 

    Find a copy of the letter here. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: ASM announces fourth quarter 2024 results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Almere, The Netherlands
    February 25, 2025, 6 p.m. CET

    Eighth consecutive year of double-digit full-year growth, outperforming WFE in 2024

    ASM International N.V. (Euronext Amsterdam: ASM) today reports its Q4 2024 results (unaudited).

    Financial highlights

    € million Q4 2023 Q3 2024 Q4 2024
    New orders 677.5 815.3 731.4
    yoy change % at constant currencies (14%) 30% 8%
           
    Revenue 632.9 778.6 809.0
    yoy change % at constant currencies (7%) 26% 27%
           
    Gross profit margin % 47.2  % 49.4 % 50.3  %
    Adjusted gross profit margin 1 47.9  % 49.4 % 50.3  %
           
    Operating result 131.5 215.2 222.3
    Operating result margin % 20.8  % 27.6  % 27.5  %
           
    Adjusted operating result 1 141.0 219.9 227.0
    Adjusted operating result margin 1 22.3  % 28.2  % 28.1  %
           
    Net earnings 90.9 127.9 225.8
    Adjusted net earnings 1 100.3 133.6 231.5

    1 Adjusted figures are non-IFRS performance measures. Refer to Annex 3 for a reconciliation of non-IFRS performance measures. 

    • New orders of €731 million in Q4 2024 increased YoY by 8% at constant currencies (also 8% as reported), with the increase again mainly driven by solid demand for gate-all-around (GAA) and high-bandwidth memory (HBM) DRAM.
    • Revenue of €809 million increased by 27% at constant currencies (increased by 28% as reported) from Q4 of last year and at the upper end of the guidance (€770-810 million).
    • YoY improvement in adjusted gross profit margin is due to strong mix.
    • Adjusted operating result margin increased to 28.1%, compared to 22.3% in Q4 2023 mainly due to higher gross margin and a moderation in SG&A, partially offset by higher investments in R&D.
    • Revenue for Q1 2025 is expected to be in the range of €810-850 million.

    Comment

    “ASM continued to deliver a solid performance in 2024. Sales increased by 12% at constant currencies, outperforming the wafer fab equipment (WFE) market which increased by a mid-single digit percentage in 2024. This marks our company’s eighth consecutive year of double-digit growth.” said Hichem M’Saad, CEO of ASM. “Revenue in Q4 2024 increased to €809 million, up 27% year-on-year at constant currencies and at the top end of our guidance of €770-810 million. The revenue increase in Q4 was driven by higher sales in leading-edge logic/foundry. Q4 bookings of €731 million increased, at constant currencies, by 8% from Q4 2023. Bookings were down from the level in Q3 2024, which was in part explained by order pull-ins from Q4 2024 to Q3 2024, as communicated last quarter. GAA-related orders increased strongly from Q3 to Q4, but this was offset by a drop in China demand. The gross margin came in at 50.3% in Q4 2024. Operating margin of 28.1% increased by nearly 6% points compared to Q4 2023.

    Growth in the WFE market was uneven in 2024: AI-related segments continued to increase strongly, but other parts of the market showed a mixed performance. For ASM, this meant strong momentum in our GAA-related applications. With the mix shifting from pilot-line to high-volume manufacturing, both quarterly GAA-related sales and orders increased strongly in the course of 2024.  We also saw a surge in demand for HBM-related, high-performance DRAM applications in 2024. This fueled a rebound in our total memory sales from a relatively low level of 11% in 2023 to a very strong level of 25% in 2024. Sales from the Chinese market remained strong in 2024, but dropped from the first half to the second half and also from Q3 to Q4, as expected. Sales in the power/analog/wafer market dropped by a significant double-digit percentage in 2024, reflecting the cyclical slowdown in the automotive and industrial end markets. Our SiC Epi increased by a mid-single digit percentage in 2024. While this was below our prior expectation of double-digit growth, we believe it was still a robust performance in view of significant weakening of the SiC market in 2024. 

    Financial results were again strong in 2024. Adjusted gross margin increased to 50.5% in 2024, supported by mix, a continued substantial contribution from the Chinese market, and improvements in our operations to reduce costs. In 2024, adjusted operating profit increased by 17%. We further stepped up adjusted net R&D spending (+20%) in view of our growing pipeline of opportunities, while the increase in adjusted SG&A expenses moderated (+3%), reflecting ongoing cost control. Free cash flow increased by 23% in 2024 to a record-high level of €548 million. 

    We remain on track towards our strategic targets and continue to invest in our people, in innovation and expansion, including in our planned new facilities in Hwaseong, Korea, and Scottsdale, Arizona.  We also made further strides in accelerating sustainability. We published our Climate Transition Plan last year, and, as a first milestone, we achieved our target of 100% renewable electricity in 2024, which contributed to a 52% drop in our combined Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions.”

    Outlook

    Market conditions continue to be mixed looking into 2025, with WFE spending expected to increase slightly. Leading-edge logic/foundry is expected to show the highest growth in 2025. There have been some further shifts in capex forecasts among customers in this segment, but overall our forecast for a substantial increase in GAA-related sales in 2025 is unchanged. In memory, we expect healthy sales in 2025, supported by continued solid demand for HBM-related DRAM, although it is too early to tell if memory sales will be at the same very strong level as in 2024. The power/analog/wafer segments are still in a cyclical correction with no signs of a recovery in the near term. In SiC Epi, the outlook further weakened. Taking into account the recently announced new U.S. export controls and as communicated in our press release of December 4, 2024, our China revenue is expected to decrease in 2025, with equipment sales from this market falling in a range of low-to-high 20s percentage of total ASM revenue.

    We confirm our target for revenue in a range of €3.2-3.6 billion in 2025, but it is too early to provide a more specific forecast due to market uncertainty and as visibility for the second half of the year is still limited.
    At constant currencies, we expect revenue for Q1 2025 to be in a range of €810-850 million, with a projected further increase in Q2 compared to Q1.

    Share buyback program

    ASM announces today that its Management Board authorized a new repurchase program of up to €150 million of the company’s common shares within the 2025/2026 time frame. This repurchase program is part of ASM’s commitment to use excess cash for the benefit of its shareholders.

    Dividend proposal

    ASM will propose to the forthcoming 2025 Annual General Meeting on May 12, 2025, to declare a regular dividend of €3.00 per common share over 2024, up from €2.75 per common share over 2023.

    Modification in spares & service revenue reporting definition

    Effective 2025, ASM will include installation and qualification revenue as part of spares & services revenue aligning with our business organization structure at ASM. Further details of the quarterly and full-year impact on 2024 revenue can be found in annex 4.

    About ASM

    ASM International N.V., headquartered in Almere, the Netherlands, and its subsidiaries design and manufacture equipment and process solutions to produce semiconductor devices for wafer processing, and have facilities in the United States, Europe, and Asia. ASM International’s common stock trades on the Euronext Amsterdam Stock Exchange (symbol: ASM). For more information, visit ASM’s website at www.asm.com.

    Cautionary note regarding forward-looking statements: All matters discussed in this press release, except for any historical data, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. These include, but are not limited to, economic conditions and trends in the semiconductor industry generally and the timing of the industry cycles specifically, currency fluctuations, corporate transactions, financing and liquidity matters, the success of restructurings, the timing of significant orders, market acceptance of new products, competitive factors, litigation involving intellectual property, shareholders or other issues, commercial and economic disruption due to natural disasters, terrorist activity, armed conflict or political instability, changes in import/export regulations, epidemics, pandemics and other risks indicated in the company’s reports and financial statements. The company assumes no obligation nor intends to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect future developments or circumstances.

    This press release contains inside information within the meaning of Article 7(1) of the EU Market Abuse Regulation.

    Quarterly earnings conference call details

    ASM will host the quarterly earnings conference call and webcast on Wednesday, February 26, 2025, at 3:00 p.m. CET.

    Conference-call participants should pre-register using this link to receive the dial-in numbers, passcode and a personal PIN, which are required to access the conference call.

    A simultaneous audio webcast and replay will be accessible at this link.

    Contacts  
    Investor and media relations Investor relations
    Victor Bareño Valentina Fantigrossi
    T: +31 88 100 8500 T: +31 88 100 8502
    E: investor.relations@asm.com E: investor.relations@asm.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Global: Understanding the cultural experience of keeping warm can help us embrace clean energy

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Becky Shaw, Professor in Fine Art, Birmingham City University

    The way we heat our homes is a major contributor to the greenhouse gases that are heating up the planet. So moving to more sustainable home heating is vital for decarbonisation and meeting emissions targets.

    Campaigns usually offer technological solutions as well as environmental and economic incentives. But they rarely recognise that the way we heat our homes is a way of life – connected to our identities, relationships, communities, culture, values and the “practice” of making a home.

    Changing something as fundamental as heating can bring up complex feelings. To understand how people are connected to the way they heat their homes, we – a group of academics at Sheffield Hallam University, Birmingham City University and universities in Finland, Sweden and Romania – embarked on a project that combined history, art, and social science research to find out how cultures and histories of heating can inform fair and effective change.


    Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.


    The Justheat research project explores the experience of eight communities in four nations that have had different heating transition journeys. These are: Sweden, which is at an advanced stage of energy transition; Finland, where a culture of burning wood is in conflict with decarbonisation; Romania, with a hesitant energy plan where experiences of heating poverty make change unpopular; and the UK which has a “lagging” uptake of low carbon heating sources.

    We gathered oral histories from selected communities to encourage personal reflection on the past through the perspective of the present. Oral histories encourage people to decide what is important to tell – not the researcher. We collected more than 300 accounts of changes in the way people heated their homes since 1940.

    Artists were appointed in each country to create artworks that highlighted various aspects of the oral histories. This included Finnish painter and textiles artist Henna Aho, Romanian photographer Denise Lobont and video artist Ram Krishna Ranjan, who lives in Sweden. I am both the project UK artist and co-ordinator of the other artists. All were selected because they had an existing interest in home heating and had experience of collaboration.

    When listening to people’s stories, the artists noted how detailed descriptions or emotional intensity stood out. These included reflections on how children found fires to be a source of play (one participant described “crashing” toy planes into the flames), a son’s guilt for not helping his mother with making the fire, and a woman’s memory of a friend becoming ill from severe cold. The artists were inspired by the creative ways people mixed past, present and future in their stories.

    Each nation and story is unique, but the tension between government (or other forms of authority) and communities was a common theme. For example, in Finland people value wood as a secure fuel that they can grow and control themselves – but this means some people move away from the efficient and sustainable networked heating solutions that are already in use there.

    In Sweden, oral histories showed a strong trust in government energy policy, but renters struggled with the ways that landlords can limit heating. In Romania, a severe lack of energy during the fall of Communism in 1989 and austerity measures to pay off national debt led to desperate households burning furniture to keep warm.

    In Romania and some other countries, descriptions of past distrust in the government often accompanies a negative reaction to current policies, fearing that they will reduce individual control and benefit.

    In the UK the last mining pits closed as recently as 2013, so the pain of losing livelihoods and communities is still felt. Some of our UK oral histories documented how coal provided people with a sense of security because they could control how long the fuel would last.

    Coal was described as a total way of life, linking home, family, work, community, love, food, safety and care. Despite the dirt and drudgery of coal home heating, the joy of getting warm by the fire was seared into people’s memory. While there were stories of feeling cold, they often described feeling joy in the contrast of being cold and then getting warm. This was seen as part of the intense joy of radiant heat.

    When gas central heating was rolled out in the 1970s and 1980s, our oral histories described it as “marvellous” in its speed and cleanliness, but some participants also felt that it lacked the comfort, cheer and invitation to gather together that a solid fuel fire offers.

    Despite Sweden’s successful electric heating network, the Swedish oral histories recorded an enduring joy in the use of wood-burning stoves to heat their summer houses. This did not counter their appreciation of electric networked heating, but the delight of an additional fire and its capacity to draw people together, persists.

    Combined, the oral histories and the artworks inspired by them let us understand how past changes to the way we heat our homes have affected us. We are currently sharing the artists’ work with communities and local energy leaders, and we are interested to see how artworks might encourage discussion.

    Current research and policy focuses on technological change to generate rapid decarbonisation. However, no change can be made without getting households on board. As part of this, we need to understand how past experiences influence communities’ response to energy change.

    Changing the way we heat our homes is likely to be attractive only if it offers a significant improvement in the experience of keeping warm, rather than merely appealing to us in economic terms, or for environmental reasons.

    Becky Shaw receives funding from Arts and Humanities Research Council and Birmingham City University.

    ref. Understanding the cultural experience of keeping warm can help us embrace clean energy – https://theconversation.com/understanding-the-cultural-experience-of-keeping-warm-can-help-us-embrace-clean-energy-244710

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Ukraine war: game theory reveals the complexities (and fragility) of a nuclear deterrent

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Renaud Foucart, Senior Lecturer in Economics, Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster University

    Since the cold war, deterrence has been a fundamental principle underpinning peace between global superpowers. The idea is that if two sides have nuclear weapons, the consequences of actually using them mean the button never gets pressed.

    But the strategy goes beyond the countries which own the weapons. In practice, for instance, most of Europe relies on the US for a nuclear “umbrella” of deterrence. And any country with nuclear weapons can offer guarantees of peace to others.

    This is what happened in 1994 when Russia, the UK and the US signed the Budapest memorandum in which Ukraine renounced its nuclear weapons from the Soviet era in exchange for a promise to “respect the independence and sovereignty and the existing borders of Ukraine”. This was widely seen as a good idea for Ukraine and the world, reducing the risk of a nuclear accident.

    But that memorandum has not served Ukraine well. As North Korea, India, Pakistan or Israel know, owning nuclear weapons – even against international agreements – ensures your protection. A piece of paper does not.

    And now, across the world, the ability to offer the equivalent of a Budapest memorandum to other countries has vanished. A key part of the theory behind a successful nuclear deterrent has fallen away.

    This is described in game theory – the mathematical study of strategic interactions – as the idea of a “credible commitment”. To deter a military invasion, the country offering protection must be ready to do something that hurts its own interests if it happens.

    In the case of Ukraine, this has so far involved allies sending costly military equipment, financial support and enduring the small risk of further escalation of the conflict. Being a trustworthy guarantor is a matter of international reputation: a country that delivers is considered credible. But no one will trust a guarantor that breaks its promises.




    Read more:
    Ukraine war: what is the Budapest Memorandum and why has Russia’s invasion torn it up?


    And while credible retaliation is important, so too is avoiding escalation. For it is also in everyone’s interest to reduce the probability of a catastrophic outcome.

    Over the years, the small number of countries with internationally accepted nuclear arsenals (the US, UK, France, Russia and China) have developed nuclear doctrines. These are sophisticated and often deliberately opaque rules for escalation and deescalation.

    The Nobel prize-winning economist, Thomas Schelling, argues that the uncertainty around these rules is what makes them so effective. It strengthens a system in which protection can be offered to other countries in exchange for them not developing their own nuclear capabilities.

    War games

    Game theory research has also shed light on the complexity of these rules of engagement (or non-engagement), such as the expectation (and necessity) of credible retaliation against an attack.

    Imagine, for example, that China launches a nuclear bomb that completely destroys Manchester. A rational British prime minister may prefer to end hostilities and accept the destruction of a major city rather than retaliate and risk the total destruction of human life.

    But for the deterrent to actually work, they must retaliate – or expect to see Birmingham and London disappear.

    Another difficulty comes in finding the appropriate response to varying levels of provocation. When Russian-affiliated soldiers were found guilty by Dutch courts of downing a Malaysian Airlines civilian flight with 298 people onboard, including 196 Dutch nationals, there was no talk of proportional retaliation. No one seriously contemplated shooting down a Russian plane or bombing a small Russian city.

    Nor was there any retaliation to Russian interventions in European elections, or to the sabotage of infrastructure in Baltic states, or to murders and attempted murders on European soil.

    And after the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the reaction of the west was consistent with principles designed to avoid escalation. Sanctions were imposed on Russia, military aid was sent to Ukraine.

    But to abandon Ukraine now, forcing it to cede territory after three years of fighting, death, and destruction, would be a significant shift. It would represent a clear and deliberate abandonment of the international guarantees Ukraine thought it had.

    Arsenals and agreements

    Game theory also suggests that the most likely consequence of abandoning those commitments is that no country will repeat Ukraine’s mistake of giving up its nuclear capabilities. And no country will want to place their trust in potentially unreliable allies.

    Europe for instance, will aim to develop its own nuclear umbrella, potentially combining French and British capabilities. It will also hasten to integrate the next likely targets of Moscow’s military ambitions.

    This will include the parts of Ukraine not annexed by Russia, but also Georgia, already invaded by Russia in 2008, and Moldova, partly occupied by Russia.

    The second consequence is that the west will no longer have a good reason to convince countries to abandon their nuclear ambitions. That means no credible deal for North Korea, no convincing offer for Iran, and even fewer prospects to end the nuclear programmes of Pakistan, India or Israel.

    Looking at the ruins of Mariupol or Gaza City, and comparing them to Pyongyang, Tel Aviv or Tehran, many countries will conclude that a nuclear weapon is a better way to ensure security than any piece of paper.

    So if the west does abandon Ukraine, game theory suggests that the world should expect a proliferation of nuclear powers. Each will need to learn, as Russia and the US have, to live on the threshold of diastrous confrontation. But research shows that establishing a situation of reduced risk takes time.

    And that could be a time filled with increased potential for events reminiscent of the Cuban missile crisis – and a growing belief that nuclear war is inevitable.

    Renaud Foucart does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Ukraine war: game theory reveals the complexities (and fragility) of a nuclear deterrent – https://theconversation.com/ukraine-war-game-theory-reveals-the-complexities-and-fragility-of-a-nuclear-deterrent-249995

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: IRC report represents another step into the moral bankruptcy

    Source: Traditional Unionist Voice – Northern Ireland

    Responding to the latest Independent Reporting Commission report Jim Allister said:

    “As it par for the course when it comes to this body, the most telling thing about the IRC report is what it does not say. While it does manage to mention the IRA it only does so in a context of noting the 30th anniversary of the ceasefires. No comment on the status of the IRA Army Council or the weapons or departments it retains. Such is to be expected from a body which is nothing more than a creature of the process.

    “The report does, however, make some dangerous recommendations. The most significant of these is when the IRC revisits its suggestion that illegal terrorist groups should go through a deproscription process which would see groups like the IRA, UVF and UDA become legal. This suggestion is no less offensive today than it was when it was first floated by the IRC. What a gross insult to the victims of terrorists if membership of the organisations which caused so much death and destruction was to become legal with all the open glorification of terror which would come with that!

    “An important step along that road which has clearly been flagged up before the launch of the report is on pages 4 and 5 where the ICR propose the appointment of an “Independent Person who would scope out and prepare the ground with various

    stakeholders for what a possible formal process of engagement and Group Transition might look like. We regard this as a vital step in the journey towards ending

    paramilitarism in Northern Ireland.”

    “This is clearly a fancy way of advocating direct dialogue with illegal terrorist groups which retain weapons and still instil fear in local communities about how they might become legal. Such a development would represent yet another step into the moral bankruptcy which has characterised the process.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council house improvements

    Source: Scotland – City of Dundee

    MORE THAN £2.4m of improvements to council houses in Dundee could be agreed by councillors next week.

    Tenders to carry out work in Dryburgh, Menzieshill and Midmill/West Kirkton will be considered by the neighbourhood regeneration, housing and estate management committee.

    Kevin Cordell, committee convener said: “It is important that we continue to make sure that we help to generate a strong sense of pride and satisfaction in our communities, and one of the best ways of doing that is to invest in our housing stock.

    “Council tenants and other people who live in these areas are able to see for themselves where a proportion of their rent money goes when projects like these are delivered.”

    Flat roofs at 34 houses in Dryburgh will be replaced if the tender is accepted. Costing a total of £1.25m, if the work is approved it will start in spring this year with a completion date in the first quarter of 2026.

    Windows in 72 properties in Menzieshill could be replaced at a total cost of £867,248. If agreed, work is expected to get underway in summer, and take around four months to finish.

    Around 31 houses in Midmill/West Kirkton will see upgrades to their heating systems including new radiators from May if councillors approve the tender. The work which is expected to be completed within three months will cost £315,773.

    If the neighbourhood regeneration, housing and estate management committee approves the tenders at its meeting on Monday (March 3), the work will be carried out by the council’s construction services division. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Everything revealed at latest ID@Xbox Showcase

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: Everything revealed at latest ID@Xbox Showcase

    From action-roguelikes, to card games, to cozy adventures, to game genres that don’t even have a name yet, this Showcase revealed how wild and wonderful the indie space can be – it’s a celebration of what’s next for gaming.

    Read on for every single bit of news you might have missed.

    33 Immortals – Launching March 18

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    We first saw 33 Immortals during 2023’s Xbox Game Showcase, and this long-awaited co-op action roguelike will arrive on March 18. Pitting up to 33 players against hordes of monsters and gigantic bosses, 33 Immortals captures the joy of MMO raids in a more ‘pick up and play’ context. The release date trailer showed us some of its dark cartoon looks, frenetic gameplay, and huge party sizes.

    Balatro – Out Today on Game Pass!

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    This award-winning roguelike poker sensation gets a surprise Game Pass release today, but that was far from the only announcement we got. Balatro is also headed to Windows PC, and we got the fourth Friends of Jimbo collaboration update, bringing themed cards based on (deep breath) Fallout, Assassin’s Creed, Civilization VII, Rust, Slay the Princess, Bugsnax, Dead By Daylight, and YouTube channel Critical Role.

    Blue Prince – Launching With Game Pass on April 10

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    A truly unique experience, Blue Prince combines exploration, puzzles, mapmaking, and card game systems to create a game we’ve truly never seen before. Solve the mysteries of Mount Holly manor by literally piecing its rooms together, and solving mysteries hidden throughout the house you build as a result. Discover its secrets when the game launches on April 10, coming to Xbox Series X|S, Windows PC, and launching day one with Game Pass.

    Buckshot Roulette – Coming to Xbox and Game Pass

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    This haunting experience makes “gambling with your life” a very literal concept, and has already captivated and horrified PC players. Transforming the (already unpleasant) game of Russian Roulette by introducing a shotgun and some dastardly extra rules, this is a true tabletop strategy game with a grim twist. In today’s show, we learned that Buckshot Roulette is on its way to Xbox and Game Pass – prepare yourself.

    Descenders Next – Launching April 9

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    This sequel to the downhill biking Game Pass sensation, Descenders Next broadens its scope to include multiple ways to go really, really fast down a mountain. Promising to be the ultimate extreme sports game, tackle multiple biomes on snowboards and mountainboards when it arrives on April 9 with Game Pass.

    Echo Weaver – Coming to Xbox and Game Pass

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    This beautifully rendered “Metroidbrainia” draws from classic adventure platformers and the likes of Outer Wilds to create a time looping world where knowledge is your greatest weapon. The trailer offered clues as to how, across multiple loops, you’ll piece together the story and shape of a collapsed utopia and escape the temporal prison you’re trapped within. Echo Weaver is coming to Xbox, with Game Pass.

    Herdling – Coming to Xbox and Windows PC

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    Developer Okomotive created two of the most exciting, mechanic-packed adventures of recent years in the form of Far: Lone Sails and Far: Changing Tides, so you can count us very excited for their first fully 3D outing, Herdling. In a new trailer, we saw much more of how you’ll guide a herd of curious cattle across a ruined world (and the dangers you’ll face along the way) – and learned that it’ll be coming to Xbox Series X|S and Windows PC when it launches this summer.

    Hotel Barcelona – Launching 2025

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    This long awaited collaboration between legendary designers Suda51 and Swery is almost upon us. This 2.5D action-platformer pits you against the horror-inspired denizens of the titular hotel, and the new trailer dives deeper into the Slasher Phantom, a brutal game mechanic that summons echoes of the player’s past runs to aid them in battle. We also saw some of the game’s arsenal of deadly weapons and abilities, each designed to turn the tide of battle in the most gruesome ways possible.

    Jump Ship – Coming to Xbox Game Preview

    Developed by Hazelight (It Takes Two) and Mojang (Minecraft) alumni, this 1-4 player FPS puts you in charge of a spaceship and asks you to take on on-foot combat sections, seamlessly transitioning between the two. The new trailer gives us a taste of how you’ll have to work together to survive, not to mention its tongue-in-cheek approach to bombastic action – plus we learned that it’ll be available in early access through  Xbox Game Preview this summer.

    Lies of P: Overture – New Story Trailer

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    We got a closer look at the newly announced DLC for acclaimed Soulslike, Lies of P. The Overture expansion will see Geppetto’s Puppet encounter a mysterious artifact that transports him back in time to the world of Krat in its final days of grandeur. The trailer gives us a melancholy look at Lea, the Legendary Stalker, on her relentless path of vengeance.

    The Lonesome Guild – World Premiere

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    We got a world-first look at the new game from Don’t Nod (Life Is Strange, Jusant), a whimsical action-RPG full of heart, battles, and bonds that change everything. Embark on a heroic adventure as Ghost, a spirit who wakes to find they hold no memories. Build your dream team, switch seamlessly between them to solve puzzles and fight your way through the collapsing world of Etere. The Lonesome Guild arrives for Xbox Series X|S this fall.

    Moonlighter 2: The Endless Vault – Coming to Game Pass

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    The sequel to the beloved action-RPG that answers the question, “where do RPG merchants get their stock”, Moonlighter 2 takes on a brand new full-3D, isometric look – offering new challenges and rewards as a result. The new trailer shows both your new hometown and shop, and the adventures in store as you adventure to keep your stock flowing. Moonlighter 2: The Endless Vault is coming to Xbox Series X|S, Windows PC and Game Pass in 2025.

    Outbound – Coming to Xbox in 2026

    This gorgeous open-world exploration game sets you off with an empty camper van and sees you turn it into the home of your dreams – alone or together with your friends. Build and explore at your own pace. Scavenge materials, craft, and build in and on top of your vehicle with modular parts. Advance in technology and efficiently use energy to power your home, while adjusting your playstyle to adapt to new landscapes and changing environmental conditions. Outbound is coming to Xbox Series X|S in 2026.

    Ratatan – Coming to Xbox

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    A new game from the creators of the beloved Patapon, Ratatan is a rhythm strategy roguelike that sees you taking increasingly huge groups of minions through a world in which you need to literally conduct your attacks – hit the rhythm and you’ll stay alive. Mix in up to four-player co-op, and you can have over 100 characters onscreen in a single fight. Ratatan comes to Xbox this year.

    Revenge of the Savage Planet – Coming to Game Pass on May 8

    [embedded content]

    We got a new look at this co-op exploration adventure by way of an in-universe commercial for the Kindred Catalog – Revenge of the Savage Planet features dozens of fresh and funny upgrades such as the goo cannon, which allows players to create slippery, sticky or flammable surfaces in the world! Or a whip to keep creatures from eating your face! Or a grapple to swing from point to point! Or a lasso to capture creatures and send them back to your Habitat for research. So many tools, so many options, so many ways to play. We don’t have long to wait to try all of this out – Revenge of the Savage Planet arrives for Xbox on May 8, and will be available day one with Game Pass.

    Rockbeasts – World Premiere

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    We got another world-first look at Rockbeasts, a “rock and roll band manager” game in which you playthe manager of a legendary ‘90s band (who just happen to be animals). Lead a band of misfits on a roller-coaster ride to stardom in the age of MTV, rock anthems, and bad haircuts. Rockbeasts is a story-driven, role-playing management game that puts you in the shoes of a manager of an up-and-coming rock band. Your job – take them to the top. It arrives for Xbox Series X|S this year.

    Tanuki: Pon’s Summer – Coming to Game Pass

    [embedded content]

    We got another look at this adorable courier life sim after its debut at Tokyo Game Show. The new trailer showed us how we’ll be performing stunt-filled delivery missions alongside relaxing in its bucolic town – from baseball, to sumo practice, to drumming. Tanuki: Pon’s Summer arrives in late 2025, and it’s coming to Game Pass.

    Tempopo – Coming to Game Pass on April 17

    [embedded content]

    The newest title from the award-winning team behind Unpacking, Tempopo is a puzzle adventure bursting with music. Playing as Hana, you enter a fantasy world in which you need to conduct the titular Tempopo creatures to solve puzzles scattered across the world’s sky islands – before heading back home and cultivating her garden. The new trailer showed off new gameplay, and revealed that the game will come to Xbox Series X|S and Xbox One on April 17, and will launch into Game Pass day one.

    Tron: Catalyst – Launching June 17

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    From Disney, publisher BigFan, and the development team at Bithell Games, the new trailer for Tron: Catalyst gave us a closer look at our game’s protagonist, Exo, who is fighting for her survival in the arena. An explosive event has gifted Exo the ability to perceive the glitch tearing apart her home, the Arq Grid, and given her the unique ability to loop time itself. This thrilling isometric action our game offers combat, conversation, and Light Cycle exploration in the city of Vertical Slice. Tron: Catalyst comes to Xbox Series X|S on June 17.

    Ultimate Sheep Racoon – Coming to Game Pass

    This chaotic side-scrolling, bike riding party game got a new trailer announcing that it’ll come to Game Pass upon release – and then we saw the IGN team playing the game’s 8-player mode. They showed off a variety of different blocks that can hinder your movement or launch you ahead of the competition, two different levels with varying difficulty, and showed how the different power-ups can really make a difference in the race.

    Wax Heads – Launching Summer 2026

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    We got a new look at this slice-of-life narrative game set around running a struggling record store. Showing off its gorgeous hand-drawn looks, the trailer shows more of how you’ll chat to quirky customers with unique tastes, explore a handcrafted record collection, fall in love with bands (and their drama!), or just slack off with your colleagues  – whatever gets everyone’s groove back! Wax Heads will come to Xbox Series X|S in summer 2026.

    Woodo – Coming to Xbox

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    This cozy, story-driven game showed off more of its beautiful art style and pieced-together 3D puzzles. The trailer revealed how you’ll build the story by literally building the world, pulling 3D objects from your menus to fill a scene, revealing more of the tale of main characters Foxy and Ben as you go. Woodo is on its way to Xbox Series X|S.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: We urge all parties to sustain the ceasefire deal: UK statement at the UN Security Council

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    We urge all parties to sustain the ceasefire deal: UK statement at the UN Security Council

    Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward, UK Permanent Representative to the UN, at the UN Security Council meeting on the Middle East.

    We welcome the return of the hostages during Phase One, after an appalling ordeal.

    And we call for the release of all the remaining hostages, including Avinatan Or, who also has links to the UK.

    We mourn the death of Oded Lifshitz, who had strong links to the UK, and we strongly condemn the vile killing of the Bibas family and the lack of dignity provided to deceased hostages.

    We support all work, all efforts to hold to account Hamas, the PIJ and other terrorists who kidnapped so many innocents on October 7th.

    And I recall that this Council has called for the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages in all four of our resolutions since October 7th and I repeat that call today. 

    The ceasefire agreement reached on January 16th marked a crucial first step towards ending the devastation and suffering in Gaza and achieving a sustainable peace.

    We are calling for three things.

    First, Palestinian civilians should be able to return home and rebuild their lives.

    The people of Gaza have suffered unimaginable horrors, with over 46,000 people killed, and homes and lives destroyed.

    The UK supports regional efforts to cohere around a single plan for the next phase and reconstruction in Gaza. 

    These plans should be Palestinian led with the PA front and centre along with a strong role for civil society.

    Second, we welcome the improvement in aid supplies since the ceasefire agreement. But make no mistake, the humanitarian situation remains dire.

    We still need to see a sustained increase in the volume and types of goods reaching civilians, especially shelter and medical items. 

    There can be no backsliding on this.

    We call for an urgent update to the “dual use list” to allow essential supplies in, and for commercial deliveries to be reinstated. 

    The ceasefire has demonstrated the central role of the UN and humanitarian actors, including UNRWA.

    However, the humanitarian space is tightening with ongoing visa restrictions and legislative proposals impacting NGOs. 

    So we call on Israel to continue to work with the UN and partners to ensure aid reaches people in need.   

    Third, the UK is seriously concerned at the expansion of Israel’s operations killing and displacing civilians in the West Bank.

    We recognise Israel’s right to defend itself, but it must show restraint and ensure its conduct is proportionate. 

    Restrictions on Palestinian movement in the West Bank are excessive. 

    These fuel further instability and jeopardise the prospects for long-term peace. 

    President, in conclusion, we urge all parties to sustain the ceasefire deal, implement the agreement in full and support efforts to move to phase two for the hostages and their families, for Gazan civilians and for all the Israeli and Palestinian people who deserve a peaceful and secure future on the basis of a two-state solution.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Ukraine: Post-war reconstruction set to cost $524 billion

    Source: United Nations 4

    Economic Development

    The total cost of reconstruction and recovery in Ukraine is estimated at $524 billion (€506 billion) over the next decade, according to a new study published on Tuesday. 

    The updated joint Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment (RDNA4) commissioned by the Ukrainian Government, the World Bank Group, the European Commission and the UN, comes as Russia’s full-scale invasion enters its fourth year. 

    It covers damage incurred since intensified conflict erupted on 24 February 2022 through to 31 December 2024.

    This year, the Government of Ukraine, with support from donors, has allocated $7.37 billion (€7.12 billion) to address priority areas such as housing, education, health, social protection, energy, transport, water supply, demining, and civil protection.

    As a total financing gap of $9.96 billion (€9.62 billion) for recovery and reconstruction needs remains, mobilizing the private sector remains critical.

    Russian attacks continue

    “In the past year, Ukraine’s recovery needs have continued to grow due to Russia’s ongoing attacks,” said Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal.

    RDNA4 reveals that direct damage in Ukraine has now reached $176 billion (€170 billion), up from $152 billion (€138 billion) from the previous assessment issued in February 2024. The hardest hit sectors are housing, transport, energy, commerce and industry, and education.

    Thirteen per cent of all housing stock in the country has been damaged or destroyed, affecting more than 2.5 million households. The energy sector has also experienced a 70 per cent increase in damage or destroyed assets, including power generation, transmission, distribution infrastructure, and district heating

    Housing hard hit

    Across all sectors, the regions closest to the frontline – Donetsk, Kharkiv, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson, and Kyiv – sustained about 72 percent of the total damage. 

    Reconstruction and recovery needs are the highest in housing, accounting for almost $84 billion (€81 billion)) of the total long-term needs.The transport sector follows at almost $78 billion (€75 billion), with the energy and extractives sector coming in third at nearly $68 billion (€66 billion).

    Meanwhile, reviving commerce and industry will require over $64 billion (€62 billion), and agriculture over $55 billion (€53 billion).

    The assessment noted that the Russian invasion continues to have severe impacts on Ukraine’s agriculture sector, which had previously contributed 10 per cent to GDP, employed 14 per cent of the labour force and accounted for over 40 per cent of all exports.

    Additionally, across all sectors, the cost of debris clearance and management alone reaches almost $13 billion (€12.6 billion).

    Private sector support

    RDNA4 identifies and excludes over $13 billion (€12.6 billion) in needs across eight sectors that have already been met by Ukraine, with support from partners and the private sector. 

    For example, government data shows that at least $1.2 billion (€1.1 billion) was disbursed from state budget and donor funds last year for housing sector recovery, while over 2,000 km of emergency repairs were carried out on motorways, highways, and other national roads. 

    Furthermore, the private sector has met some of the critical needs, highlighting its key role in the recovery and reconstruction process, and many firms have started to invest in repairs and resilience. Estimates indicate that the private sector could potentially cover a third of total needs.

    © UNICEF/Oleksii Filippov

    Alina, 12, stands next to her damaged home in Kobzartsi, Mykolaiv region.

    Investment and inclusion

    The UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Ukraine, Matthias Schmale, noted that “the true cost of war is measured in human lives and livelihoods,” and the international community must help to create more opportunities for Ukrainians to rebuild their lives with dignity.

    This means investing in dignified jobs, education, healthcare, and prioritizing the inclusion of vulnerable groups among women and girls, children, displaced people, Roma communities, war veterans and persons with disabilities,” he said.

    “The path forward requires strengthening partnerships, de-risking investments and a steadfast commitment from all of us not just help structures but support restoring the social fabric of war-impacted communities.”

    RDNA4 also highlights that prioritizing investments in recovery and reconstruction will be critical for Ukraine’s accession to the European Union (EU) and long-term resilience. 

    Thus, recovery provides an opportunity not just to address the destruction caused by the ongoing invasion but also to build back better by adopting innovative solutions and reforms that meet the expectations of EU membership.  

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Barr, Managing Financial Crises

    Source: US State of New York Federal Reserve

    Thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today.1 I note that the objectives of the Program on Financial Stability include “supporting the world’s financial authorities in refining proven crises management tools and strategies.”2 Speaking as a representative of one of those authorities, I thought I would further the program’s goals by focusing these remarks on the principles and practice of crisis management. I am favored in that task with what one might call the luck of having been regularly confronted with crises in each of my three stints as a public servant, over a career divided between government and academia. In noting how often my arrival in government was accompanied by crisis, it might be reasonable to wonder if this is correlation or causation.
    Kidding aside, crisis management is central to all management because it demands the very best from managers when it is most needed. Anyone who spends time in government can expect that some of the most memorable and challenging experiences will be managing through tough situations, when the answers to problems are unclear but the mission of the organization comes into acute focus. The financial system is in a perpetual state balancing risk and reward. Sometimes the system falls out of balance, and vulnerabilities turn into stress or even crisis. This moment is when it is crucial to mitigate spillovers from the financial system that can hurt businesses and households and wreak havoc on the economy at large.
    Some of the most important features of modern economies were developed to prevent and mitigate financial crises. The first central banks, and eventually the Federal Reserve, were created to provide stable currencies and banking systems in support of the long-term stability of the provision of credit necessary to foster growth and rising living standards. Regulation of financial markets, regulation and supervision of banks, federal deposit insurance, and laws to protect investors, consumers, and businesses were developed over time to promote both financial stability and durable economic growth. I have spoken previously about how monetary policy and financial stability are inextricably linked and how the tools we use to conduct monetary policy and support financial stability work together.3
    In the spring of 2023, the United States faced the prospect of a spiraling stress event, when poor management and excessive risk-taking by Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) led to a run that quickly spread to other banks and threatened the wider banking system. Shortcomings in supervision and gaps in the regulatory framework also contributed to SVB’s failure, and I’ve spoken about the steps the Federal Reserve has taken to improve supervision and other steps to close regulatory gaps.4 Today, I’d like to talk about how effective management of the banking stress in the spring of 2023 helped prevent that event from spiraling into a financial crisis.
    Given our student audience, I will begin with a little background on how I got into the crisis management business. After Yale Law School and two court clerkships, I worked at the State Department and then went to work for Treasury Secretary Bob Rubin in 1995. When I arrived, the Treasury Department had helped Mexico deal with a financial crisis that threatened to spread to the United States, and additional crises were to come in 1997 in Asia and in 1998 in Russia. Together, these events credibly threatened a worldwide financial crisis, which was averted by a response across the U.S. government and coordinated with governments and lending institutions around the world. I left government for academia in 2001 and then returned to Treasury in 2009 under Secretary Tim Geithner, in the midst of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). I worked to develop what became known as the Dodd-Frank Act. This law was a pivotal component of our response to the GFC by addressing gaps in financial market oversight, including through strengthened regulation and supervision of banks that increased the safeguards against the excessive risk-taking that caused the crisis. I went back to academia again in 2011 and then returned to public service as the Federal Reserve Board’s Vice Chair for Supervision in July 2022. In this position, I oversaw the response to the bank failures in March 2023 and have helped develop ways to reduce these and other risks going forward.
    The March 2023 Banking StressLet me review some facts about what happened, so you can understand the context for how we put crisis management principles and practices to work.
    SVB failed because of a textbook case of mismanagement of interest rate and liquidity risk.5 This mismanagement made uninsured depositors lose confidence in the bank’s solvency, so they ran. While this was a textbook case, the speed and severity of the run were unprecedented. The largest previous bank failure before SVB was of Washington Mutual in 2008.6 The accumulation of stresses that resulted in Washington Mutual’s failure occurred over several weeks. By contrast, SVB’s deposit outflows were much greater in both relative and absolute terms, and they occurred in less than 24 hours. On top of that, the bank had major gaps in its liquidity risk management, including its preparedness to tap contingency liquidity.7
    Because this discussion is for future first responders, I will share with you some detail about what it’s like to be on the front lines working to address a bank run. On the morning of Thursday, March 9, 2023, SVB had only a little over $5 billion in collateral pledged to the discount window, as compared to over $150 billion in uninsured deposits.8 Around midday, the firm contacted the Federal Reserve, indicating that it wanted to take out a discount window loan against this collateral, and the loan was granted. But in the next several hours, its account was drained as its deposit outflows spiraled. In the late afternoon, the firm indicated that it would need additional liquidity to meet expected outflows. The Federal Reserve worked with the firm to help it identify additional assets it could pledge to the discount window, but SVB was unsuccessful in identifying and moving sufficient collateral. Fed staff worked with the firm through the night to establish ad hoc collateral arrangements, so that the firm could tap the discount window further to meet its liquidity needs in the morning.
    While this process was happening overnight, however, the volume of online deposit withdrawal requests was growing, such that SVB management expected outflows of over $100 billion the next day, an unprecedented sum.9 Even if the bank were able to pledge all collateral available that morning to the discount window, the firm would not have been able to meet its obligations. It was not viable. The state of California closed the bank and turned it over to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) for resolution.
    SVB’s failure contributed to the strains at FDIC-supervised Signature Bank, and that bank failed in short order. As the situation intensified, the effects on businesses and households became increasingly apparent. Critically, these failures caused a reassessment of the viability of uninsured deposits as a funding source across the banking system. But strains at other banks materialized despite material differences between these firms. The rapidity of equity market price declines for several banks triggered repeated trading halts for their shares. Online deposits began to migrate out of smaller banks to larger banks, putting pressure on these smaller institutions.10 Commercial customers that had remaining deposits at SVB after it failed realized that they would not have access to their deposits and thus wouldn’t be able to make payroll or even stay in business.11
    The severity and rapidity of the spread of stress warranted a decisive response. We developed a two-part strategy that weekend.
    On March 12, the Treasury Secretary, the FDIC, and the Federal Reserve announced that the FDIC would protect uninsured deposits at SVB and Signature Bank under the systemic risk exception to least-cost resolution.12 This action essentially implied that all depositors, insured and uninsured, would have access to their deposits Monday morning. And the step helped calm uninsured depositors around the country.
    Also on March 12, the Federal Reserve established the Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) under its emergency lending authority with the approval of and a backstop from the Treasury.13 The BTFP’s terms and conditions addressed the fundamental source of banking-sector jitters: questions about the ability of a range of banks to hold onto their high-quality securities that had lost value because of interest rate increases. Unrealized losses on securities portfolios were a problem for many banks, particularly when the stability of their deposit bases came into question. The BTFP provided stable funding for these high-quality assets, addressing these concerns. Specifically, the BTFP provided one-year loans to banks in sound financial condition against Treasury securities and agency securities, valued at par.
    By doing so, the BTFP addressed banks’ immediate concerns about the stability of their funding and mitigated the risk that banks would be forced to liquidate assets in a fire sale, locking in losses. BTFP advances provided confidence that banks would have sufficient funding to retain the securities on balance sheet. The program supported confidence among depositors that their banks would have ready access to sufficient cash to meet their needs, thus helping reduce concern that a self-fulfilling panic could cause additional bank runs.
    Usage of the BTFP was widespread across the banking sector, both in terms of actual usage and from a contingency standpoint. For example, at its peak, BTFP borrowing exceeded $160 billion, and collateral posted to the BTFP reached nearly $540 billion, suggesting that banks saw value in being prepared and having capacity to tap the facility if necessary. Over 1,800 institutions borrowed from the program, and the bulk of the borrowing was among institutions with less than $10 billion in assets. These smaller institutions took out 50 percent of loans by value and nearly 95 percent of loans by volume. Fed staff analysis showed the usage was more likely among institutions that had experienced deposit outflows, but usage was also widespread at firms that did not experience outflows. The broad-based actual and contingency use was consistent with Federal Reserve communications that the program was part of prudent liquidity management and that we encouraged all depository institutions to use the program. Now, about two weeks before all remaining outstanding BTFP loans are set to mature, the program is down to less than $200 million, and the program has experienced no losses.14
    Our response to the stress worked. After the announcement of the systemic risk exception and the BTFP in early March, signs of broad-based contagion subsided, and the system stabilized. While in the first two weeks of March midsize and regional banks experienced significant outflows of deposits, the acute phase of outflows had eased by the end of the month. Stability among banks that had earlier come under pressure didn’t mean that every bank found its footing, but the process of dealing with balance sheet gaps was much smoother and spillovers remained contained. By the fall of that year, deposit flows had fully stabilized and midsize and regional banks saw deposit inflows on net.
    Managing Additional Stress beyond Silicon Valley and Signature BanksWhile the announcement of the systemic risk exception and the BTFP on March 13, 2023, helped stabilize banks in the United States, we were also continuing to manage stress in the global financial system in cooperation with relevant authorities.
    Credit Suisse, a Swiss global systemically important banking organization, had been experiencing stress over several years before March 2023, with doubts about its future viability after the Archegos Capital Management and Greensill Capital scandals had tarnished its reputation and raised doubts about its business model. Stress and outflows at Credit Suisse picked up in the fall of 2022, and we spent many months working with Swiss, European, and U.K. regulators on how to manage the growing issues, including war-gaming potential resolution scenarios. Concerns about the firm’s viability accelerated on March 9, 2023, when it was forced to announce that its internal controls over financial reporting were ineffective and had been for several years. Though Credit Suisse continued to operate, it became apparent that the firm was in trouble in the week following the failures of SVB and Signature Bank.
    Just one week after SVB failed, Swiss authorities arranged for Credit Suisse to be acquired by UBS in a weekend deal that involved triggering Credit Suisse’s contingent convertible capital instruments, a severe dilution of shareholders, and the removal of senior bank management, as well as emergency liquidity support and extraordinary loss sharing from the Swiss government.15 In a sense, Credit Suisse had failed very slowly over many months—even years—and then all at once.
    The combination of these events involved coordination across U.S. and foreign jurisdictions, with careful monitoring and cooperation to identify risks to financial stability and to monitor spillovers to the U.S. and European banking systems.
    Back in the United States, we worked with our domestic counterparts as a handful of additional banks remained under pressure in the months that followed. Notably FDIC-supervised First Republic Bank was closed on May 1, 2023. First Republic had also experienced tremendous stress in March, as it suffered deposit outflows of nearly 20 percent in a single day.16 First Republic withstood these outflows in part because of significant discount window lending, as well as the extraordinary coordination among several other banks that placed significant deposits at the bank—worth $30 billion. But over time, it became clear that First Republic’s rapid and large deposit outflows and unrealized losses on loans and securities would lead to its failure as well.17
    While these were the events that got the headlines, the Federal Reserve continuously monitored other banks with potential balance sheet vulnerabilities, including those with gaps in interest rate and liquidity risk management, as well as significant exposures to office commercial real estate. We worked with these firms to ensure they addressed their vulnerabilities, while they bolstered their liquidity positions to manage potential stress. For example, overall, from March 2023 to March 2024, banks of all sizes and condition, including many not under direct stress, pledged more than $1 trillion in additional collateral to the discount window. Banks and supervisors took a wide variety of steps to shore up resilience throughout the system.
    Principles and Practices for Managing Financial-Sector StressWhen a crisis hits, the stakes are high. In the GFC, millions of Americans lost their homes, their jobs, and their dreams for their futures, when savings for education and retirement disappeared with the collapse of asset prices.18 The contraction in credit hurt small businesses and families all across the country. When banks can’t carry out their role in supplying credit to those who need it, the effects are severe and widespread.
    With those stakes in mind, here are five key principles that I learned in my experiences managing financial crises.
    First, crisis response needs to be forceful. The factor that transforms a series of unfortunate events into a self-sustaining crisis is the belief that there is no end in sight and no prospect of a sufficient response. While we could debate whether every aspect of the GFC response was necessary, one clear lesson from this experience, and from other crises I have been involved in, is how important it is that the response be forceful enough to convince market participants and the broader public that there is a capability and the will to overcome the crisis.
    A second principle is that the response should be proportionate. While a forceful response is important to bolster confidence in the prospects for gaining control over the crisis, the response also must avoid shaking confidence by suggesting that conditions are worse than they seem. In a crisis, information is spread unevenly. A response that is out of proportion—for example, by touching aspects of the financial system not considered endangered—can be misinterpreted as providing vital information about the extent of vulnerabilities.
    Another key component of crisis management is the need to engage in decisionmaking amid significant uncertainty. I explained how the response needs to be both forceful and proportionate. Finding this balance requires making tough judgments amid rapidly evolving conditions. Crisis managers need to make consequential decisions quickly with the recognition that their understanding of the facts is incomplete. Even the best of efforts to understand what is happening and what is needed will be unsatisfactory in the moment. Decisionmaking under these conditions takes some courage. It also takes humility: the ability to listen to others around you, gather different perspectives, and weigh the imperfect information in real time.
    A fourth principle is the need for clear communication—internally to the teams working on the response and externally to the public. And these communications need to be consistent with each other and with the values of the institution, even if tailored to the particular audience. Clear internal communication provides direction to the crisis response teams and facilitates coordination across relevant public-sector actors. Clear external communication, when grounded in a realistic assessment of the situation, can calm markets and reassure the public about the strategy. And clear communication is a two-way street: It involves listening to internal and external perspectives, as well as speaking in a way that can be heard.
    And that brings me to the fifth principle I would cite, which is accountability. Financial crises come about because of a lack of confidence in counterparties and among other participants in the financial system. It is crucial for crisis responders to be credible and accountable not only for assessing the root causes of the crisis, but also for addressing these causes and the aftermath. That requires staying focused on the long-term goals for reform even as crisis management remains critically important and urgent.19
    Practices for Effective Management under Periods of StressThese are important principles, and I will talk a little bit about some of the practices we used as we were guided by these principles. One crucial component of successful management of a stress event is to gather the most relevant information as quickly as possible. In a large and complex organization, it is necessary to overcome barriers to information flow across functions. In the case of the March 2023 banking stress, we drew from across the functions of the central bank to gather real-time information necessary to assess the severity of the conditions facing troubled institutions and also to identify potential levers of response.
    Supervisors generally have real-time information from a bank as it undergoes stress, but this information needs to be put into context with foundational knowledge about the firm, such as the current structure of its balance sheet and typical payment flows. While we managed an influx of reports about deposit flows at banks, it was important to be able to immediately put the size of the outflows in context and corroborate anecdotal reports against multiple sources, including from our own systems. Our next step is to assess a firm’s capacity to weather additional stress. First responders can assess if the firm has maximized the liquidity potential of its assets, including through its relationships with liquidity providers. And one needs to assess these firms’ connections to the rest of the financial sector and identify interlinkages and spillovers. Leaning on experts who engage in broader monitoring of financial markets and engage in outreach with well-established contacts can be important. A team of staff who have the capacity to think broadly across the institution and draw on the partnerships they have built with a range of business lines is necessary to support the kind of information gathering and strategizing that are crucial for consequential decisions. This is why an institutional culture that supports curiosity and openness to ideas and inquiry from the most junior to the most senior staff is foundational.
    Earlier I mentioned the principle of needing to be accountable to the public about the sources of the crisis and to address the underlying vulnerabilities that led to it. On March 13, 2023, in consultation with Chair Powell, I requested a review of the failure of SVB. Self-evaluation is the first step in any sound risk-management framework. Experienced career staff from across the Federal Reserve System who were not involved in SVB’s supervision reviewed the reasons for the bank’s failure.20 The review helped identify where the supervisory and regulatory functions of the Federal Reserve could be improved. Additional reviews by external independent parties, which we welcomed, reached similar conclusions.21 More broadly, carefully considering the underlying vulnerabilities that contributed to the stress helped the Fed develop proposals for how the supervisory and regulatory framework could be improved.22
    ConclusionNo leader looks forward to managing through a crisis, but those who hope to be good leaders need to be good crisis managers. These are skills that are most effectively developed through hard experience, but we can also learn from those who have gone through the experiences. In my case, the lessons of dealing with financial crises as a government official have revealed to me some basic principles that I believe can be useful to crisis managers. I have also learned that the best crisis management occurs beforehand, by strengthening rules and norms and other structures meant to reduce the risk of a crisis in the first place and by fostering organizational values and culture that will help manage a crisis when it comes.
    Thank you.

    1. The views expressed here are my own and are not necessarily those of my colleagues on the Federal Reserve Board or the Federal Open Market Committee. Return to text
    2. See Yale School of Management, Program on Financial Stability (2025), “About the Yale Program on Financial Stability,” webpage, paragraph 1. Return to text
    3. See, for example, Michael S. Barr (2023), “Monetary Policy and Financial Stability,” speech delivered at the Forecasters Club of New York, New York, October 2; and Michael S. Barr (2024), “The Intersection of Monetary Policy, Market Functioning, and Liquidity Risk Management,” speech delivered at the 40th Annual National Association for Business Economics (NABE) Economic Policy Conference, Washington, February 14. Return to text
    4. See Michael S. Barr (2023), “Supervision and Regulation” testimony before the Financial Services Committee, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, May 16. Also please see Michael S. Barr (2024), “Supervision with Speed, Force, and Agility,” speech delivered at the Annual Columbia Law School Banking Conference, New York, February 16. For more on bank supervision, see “Understanding Federal Reserve Supervision,” available on the Federal Reserve Board’s website at https://www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/understanding-federal-reserve-supervision.htm. Return to text
    5. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Office of Inspector General (2023), Material Loss Review of Silicon Valley Bank (PDF) (Washington: September 25). Immediately following SVB’s failure, Chair Powell and I agreed that I should oversee a review of the circumstances leading up to SVB’s failure. We published the results of this review on April 28, 2023; see Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Review of the Federal Reserve’s Supervision and Regulation of Silicon Valley Bank (PDF) (Washington: Board of Governors, April). Return to text
    6. See National Commission on the Causes of the Financial and Economic Crisis in the United States (2011), The Financial Crisis Inquiry Report (PDF) (Washington: Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, January); and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (2017), Crisis and Response: An FDIC History, 2008–2013 (Washington: FDIC). Return to text
    7. For instance, the bank failed its own internal liquidity stress tests and did not have workable plans to access liquidity in times of stress. The bank changed its own risk-management assumptions to reduce how these risks were measured rather than fully addressing the underlying risks. See Review of the Federal Reserve’s Supervision and Regulation of Silicon Valley Bank (note 5). Return to text
    8. See Review of the Federal Reserve’s Supervision and Regulation of Silicon Valley Bank (note 5). Return to text
    9. See Review of the Federal Reserve’s Supervision and Regulation of Silicon Valley Bank, p. 7 (note 5). Return to text
    10. See Stephan Luck, Matthew Plosser, and Josh Younger (2023), “Bank Funding during the Current Monetary Policy Tightening Cycle,” Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Liberty Street Economics (blog), May 11. Return to text
    11. See Berber Jin, Katherine Bindley, and Rolfe Winkler (2023), “After Silicon Valley Bank Fails, Tech Startups Race to Meet Payroll,” Wall Street Journal, March 11, https://www.wsj.com/articles/after-silicon-valley-bank-fails-tech-startups-race-to-meet-payroll-4ebd9c5c?mod=article_inline. Return to text
    12. See Department of the Treasury, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (2023), “Joint Statement by Treasury, Federal Reserve, and FDIC,” joint press release, March 12. Return to text
    13. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2023), “Federal Reserve Board Announces It Will Make Available Additional Funding to Eligible Depository Institutions to Help Assure Banks Have the Ability to Meet the Needs of All Their Depositors,” press release, March 12; and Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2025), “Bank Term Funding Program,” webpage. Return to text
    14. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2025), Statistical Release H.4.1, “Factors Affecting Reserve Balances of Depository Institutions and Condition Statement of Federal Reserve Banks” (February 20). Return to text
    15. See Michael S. Barr (2023), “The Importance of Effective Liquidity Risk Management,” speech delivered at the ECB Forum on Banking Supervision, Frankfurt, Germany, December 1. Return to text
    16. See Michael S. Barr (2024), “On Building a Resilient Regulatory Framework,” speech delivered at Central Banking in the Post-Pandemic Financial System 28th Annual Financial Markets Conference, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Fernandina Beach, Florida, May 20. Return to text
    17. See Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (2023), FDIC’s Supervision of First Republic Bank (PDF), (Washington: FDIC, September 8). Return to text
    18. See National Commission on the Causes of the Financial and Economic Crisis, The Financial Crisis Inquiry Report (note 6). Return to text
    19. I have discussed some thoughts on leadership attributes in previous speeches, including here: Michael S. Barr (2024), “Commencement Remarks,” delivered at the American University School of Public Affairs Graduation Ceremony, Washington, May 10. Return to text
    20. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2023), Vice Chair Barr for Supervision’s “Review of the Federal Reserve’s Supervision and Regulation of Silicon Valley Bank – April 2023: Key Takeaways,” webpage. Return to text
    21. See Government Accountability Office (2023), “Bank Regulation: Preliminary Review of Agency Actions Related to March 2023 Bank Failures” (Washington: GAO, May 11); and Board of Governors, Office of Inspector General, Material Loss Review (note 5). Return to text
    22. See Barr, “On Building a Resilient Regulatory Framework” (note 16). Return to text

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: AFRICA/ZIMBABWE – “May the abolition of the death penalty be a first step towards promoting the culture of life in prisons”

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Harare (Agenzia Fides) – With the abolition of the death penalty, Zimbabwe has taken a fundamental step towards aligning its laws with the fundamental Christian principle of “love your neighbour as yourself” (Mark 12:31), said the Episcopal Commission for Justice and Peace in Zimbabwe in a comment on the abolition of the death penalty ratified at the end of 2024.On December 31, President Emmerson Mnangagwa signed the law abolishing the death penalty, which the Senate passed on December 12. The last execution in Zimbabwe took place in 2005, while according to Amnesty International, at the end of 2023 there were still about 60 people on death row in Zimbabwean prisons. The sentence for these people will now be commuted to life imprisonment.”The abolition of the death penalty in Zimbabwe is the result of cooperation and partnership between the Church, the government and civil society,” the Justice and Peace Commission underlines in the statement sent to Fides.”We recognize that the abolition of the death penalty is not an end in itself, but a means to an end: the promotion of a culture of life, dignity and respect for all people,” the statement says. According to the Bishops’ Conference, this also means that living conditions in prisons must be improved.The Bishops’ Commission recommends that “there should be cooperation in rehabilitation programs.” “We propose as a Church,” the statement says, “that the government work with cooperatives, educational institutions, hospitals, civil society organizations and the Church to set up rehabilitation programs for prisoners, former death row inmates and those released so that they can reintegrate into society.” The families of the victims must also be supported together: “We recommend that the Church and the government work together to offer support and counseling services to the families of the victims. This is in line with the conviction that we must hate sin, but not the sinner”. In this sense, it is also proposed that the Church and the government work together “to promote practices of restorative justice that focus on healing and reparation rather than punishment and retribution”.Finally, extrajudicial killings must be prevented, which “remain a cause of great concern in Zimbabwe”. (L.M.) (Agenzia Fides, 25/2/2025)
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  • MIL-OSI Europe: AFRICA/SUDAN – Missionaries appeal for ceasefire, humanitarian aid and arms embargo in the ongoing war

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Tuesday, 25 February 2025

    WFP

    Khartoum (Agenzia Fides) – Twelve million displaced people and tens of thousands of victims have been reported since the conflict broke out in April 2022 between the army on the one hand and the paramilitaries on the other.That is why the Comboni missionaries, together with other secular and religious humanitarian organizations, are now calling for a ceasefire, humanitarian aid and an arms embargo in the ongoing war. Pope Francis himself in the Angelus prayer on Sunday 16 February, underlining the “very serious humanitarian situation” had renewed the request “to the belligerent parties to stop this war, which does so much harm to the people and to the future of the country”, inviting “ways of peace to be found soon to build the future of dear Sudan”.The situation has gotten out of control and is causing the suffering of millions of people in the form of food shortages, disease and sexual violence, which is why missionaries and secular and religious aid organizations are constantly intervening. Famine has been reported in several regions, including the camps for internally displaced people in North Darfur and in the western Nuba Mountains in South Kordofan. It is estimated that more than 8 million people have been forced to flee their homes in Sudan, while around 3.5 million have fled to neighboring countries since April 2023.Caritas Internationalis, Catholic International Development Charity (CAFOD), ACT Alliance and Norwegian Church Aid have called for an urgent increase in international aid to Sudan, echoing the appeal of the UN Office for Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR). “The UN appeal comes at a particularly critical time. To date, more than 40 percent of global funding for life-saving programs in Sudan has come from the United States. Given the suspension caused by the US government’s decision to temporarily halt USAID operations, other governments must urgently step in,” said the CAFOD humanitarian officer.The news that the Sudanese paramilitary group Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has signed an agreement in recent days with other rebel militias and allied political parties to form a parallel government in the areas of the country under its control further exacerbates the precarious situation. The agreement was signed last Sunday in Nairobi, Kenya, where the leaders of the groups in question had already met last week (see Fides, 19/2/2025). The RSF and its allies have promised to form a government marked by “peace and unity”: both during the war and in the past, however, they have been accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity. (AP) (Agenzia Fides, 25/2/2025)
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  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: “Light up Your Life”: Stop smoking campaign launches across Birmingham and Solihull

    Source: City of Birmingham

    The Birmingham and Solihull Tobacco Control Alliance has launched a campaign to help you light up your life, by giving up smoking.

    Throughout February and March, the “Light Up Your Life” campaign will feature across social media, radio, buses, and outdoor spaces to raise awareness of the stop smoking services available across Birmingham and Solihull.

    Ruth Tennant, Chair of the Birmingham and Solihull Tobacco Control Alliance and Director of Public Health at Solihull Council, said: “Smokers keen to start their smokefree journey should know that we’re here to help.

    “Quitting smoking is the best thing you can do for your health and your body starts to repair itself from the day you quit.

    “A range of support is available for smokers across Birmingham and Solihull, with more information available on the light up your life website.”

    Personalised support is available for smokers across Birmingham and Solihull, with tailored support available for people who smoke during pregnancy.

    Cllr Mariam Khan, Cabinet Member for Health and Social Carecommented: “Quitting smoking is one of the best decisions a smoker can make for their health and wellbeing. We urge smokers to consider the numerous advantages of starting their smokefree journey by using the local resources available to them.

    Our free cessation programmes are personalised to meet individual needs, giving people the best chance to live a smokefree life and improve their health and wellbeing.”

    Smoking cessation services in Birmingham are delivered by community pharmacies and GPs with other support available, including the Quit with Bella App.

    Cllr Tony Dicicco, Cabinet Member for Adult Social Care and Health at Solihull Council, added: “I’d really encourage any smokers to think about lighting up your life. “We know that giving up smoking can be difficult, but our Smokefree Solihull service provides free support to anyone who is registered with a Solihull GP, has a Solihull postcode or who works in the borough.

    “Our team will provide you with the support you need to light up your life and look forward to a smoke-free future.”

    In Solihull, the Smokefree Solihull service is delivered by ABL, with other smoking cessation offers including Swap to Stop.

    Organisations involved in the campaign include Birmingham City Council, Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council and the Birmingham and Solihull Tobacco Control Alliance.

    Nationally, Smokefree 2030 aims to reduce smoking rates to less than 5% by 2030, making England effectively smoke-free.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: The World’s Most Attractive Investment Migration Programs in 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LONDON, Feb. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Malta retains 1st place in the 2025 Global Citizenship Program Index for the 10th consecutive year, while Greece reaches the top of the 2025 Global Residence Program Index for the first time, highlighting the dominance of European residence and citizenship by investment programs on Henley & Partners’ annual rankings of the most important investment migration programs in the world. 

    The firm onboarded clients from 94 different nationalities in 2024 and received enquiries from over 180 countries. US nationals accounted for 23% of all applications processed by Henley & Partners last year, totaling nearly as many as the next four client nationality groups — Indians, Turkish, Filipinos, and Brits — combined. Comparing 2024 US-American client numbers to five years ago (2019), there has been a staggering increase of over 1,000%. Last year was also record-breaking for the UK, with a 57% increase in the number of applications submitted by British citizens in 2024 versus 2023.

    The two indexes — featured in the 2025 edition of the annual Investment Migration Programs report — offer a systematic analysis and comprehensive benchmarking of the world’s most attractive residence and citizenship by investment offerings, providing the gold standard in the sector. Interactive digital comparisons of the programs are also available, enabling global investors and wealthy families to select what matters most to them when weighing up their options.

    Dr. Christian H. Kaelin, Chairman of Henley & Partners, says, “the publication is important for governments and policy makers looking to attract and retain wealth to achieve greater fiscal autonomy and economic growth. In this era of heightened global volatility, nation states are using residence and citizenship by investment programs as an innovative financing tool to fund development initiatives that mitigate sustainability and climate-related risks, and that directly benefit their citizens. For investors, alternative residence and citizenship is a unique investment that enables them to be as globally diversified as their wealth portfolios.”

    Citizenship programs: Malta remains the gold standard

    The Global Citizenship Program Index ranks 14 programs, with the strategically located European nation of Malta scoring 76 out of 100 and taking top honors for the 10th consecutive year. Retaining 2nd place with a score of 75 is Austria’s premium citizenship by investment offering, which requires applicants to make a substantial contribution to the country’s economy. The next two ranks are occupied by Caribbean island nations: Grenada 3rd with a score of 69, and Antigua and Barbuda 4th with 67.

    Three other Small Island Developing States (SIDS) share the 5th spot, each scoring 66: newcomer to the index, Nauru, along with St. Kitts and Nevis and St. Lucia. Nauru’s citizenship program offers significant advantages in global mobility, granting an alternative and safe passport to travel on, with visa-free access to some of the world’s key wealth hubs. Successful applicants will also be contributing to climate crisis solutions in the South Pacific, where SIDS face rising sea levels and biodiversity loss, with the funds channeled into development projects, including climate resilience initiatives, infrastructure improvements, renewable energy projects, and sustainable economic diversification.

    Residence programs: Greece takes the crown

    In the 2025 Global Residence Program Index, which ranks 26 programs, Greece’s popular golden visa program secures top spot with a score of 73 out of 100, toppling Portugal, which has held or shared first place for the past nine years. Portugal now ranks joint 3rd with Italy and the UK, all scoring 70, while Switzerland, which has an option developed by Henley & Partners that combines private residence with Swiss forfait tax provisions, ranks 2nd with a score of 72.

    Australia, which recently launched its National Innovation Visa (NIV) Program to attract high-level tech skills, Canada, which introduced changes to its Start-Up Visa Program to enhance its appeal and flexibility for entrepreneurs, and Spain (due to close in early 2025) are all joint 4th, each scoring 69, and the UAE, which strategically expanded its golden visa program last year to attract top talent and drive growth and innovation, rounds up the Top 5 with a score of 68.

    One of two new entrants to the index in 2025 is Hungary which ranks 6th with a score of 67. Small but powerful wealth hubs — Luxembourg and Singapore — occupy the 7th and 8th spots, scoring 66 and 65, respectively, while two others share the 9th spot: Jersey and Panama, both scoring 64. Costa Rica, the second newcomer to the index, rounds up the Top 10 with a score of 63 out of 100 and offers investors and their families a business-friendly landscape, a favorable tax regime, and a safe environment in Central America.

    Read Full Press Release

    Media Contact: Sarah Nicklin

    sarah.nicklin@henleyglobal.com

    Mobile +27 72 464 8965

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Another 150 raised platforms will be installed at tram stops

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Plans have been approved for the implementation of a city program for equipping tram stops with elevated boarding platforms in 2025–2026. In total, it is planned to create 150 such structures on 29 streets in the capital. The corresponding resolution was signed Sergei Sobyanin.

    The installation of elevated platforms and new pavilions at the stops is part of a comprehensive improvement of the streets. The work will include renewing the pavement of the sidewalks and roadway, installing new lighting poles, and landscaping.

    Raised platforms, located at the same level as the tram entrance, make boarding and disembarking passengers more comfortable and faster. Thanks to special ramps, they are convenient for people with limited mobility. Currently, the city has more than 430 such platforms. Among them, 11 are of the Vienna type, located directly on the raised roadway. They are convenient and safe for passengers even in confined spaces.

    The length of tram lines in Moscow is about 420 kilometers. Of these, 82 percent are separated from highways and are located on a separate track. The Moscow tram network covers 86 districts – more than 5.5 million people live near stops.

    There are 35 routes in the city, with passengers making approximately 730 thousand trips daily. Among the most popular are No. 17 Medvedkovo — Ostankino (about 54 thousand trips per working day), No. 6 Bratsevo — Sokol Metro (over 40 thousand), No. 36 Metrogorodok — Novogireevo (over 35 thousand), No. 11 Ostankino — 16th Parkovaya Street (over 35 thousand), No. 47 Nagatino — Oktyabrskaya Metro (over 32 thousand).

    The Moscow Metro State Unitary Enterprise fleet comprises approximately 550 tram cars, including more than 500 modern low-floor trams of Russian manufacture, purchased in recent years. The fleet has been updated by 97 percent.

    27 raised platforms appeared at tram stops in the capital in 2024Sobyanin approved plans to upgrade the rolling stock of city transport

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    https: //vv.mos.ru/mayor/tkhemes/12421050/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: A modern embankment will be created near the Tushino airfield

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The planning project for a section of the Moskva River bed with an area of 6.88 hectares adjacent to the territory of the former Tushino airfield has been approved. The corresponding resolution was signed Sergei Sobyanin.

    The project includes the coastal protection of a pedestrian embankment with a length of two kilometers and 160 meters. Specialists will also restore the soil layer and carry out landscaping work.

    The creation of the embankment is part of a large-scale project for the comprehensive development of the territory of the former Tushino airfield, where a modern urban district is currently being built.

    On a territory of over 245 hectares, it is planned to build more than three million square meters of real estate, including residential buildings, 16 educational facilities, a clinic and a sports rehabilitation center, an Orthodox church, a hotel and an apart-hotel, public and business facilities, a football stadium and other sports facilities. More than 70 thousand jobs will be created.

    The project will create urban spaces – parks and the embankment of the Moscow River.

    To ensure transport accessibility of the new district, a new metro station “Spartak” of the Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya line was opened in 2014, and in 2021 the reconstruction of Volokolamskoe Highway was completed.

    In 2014, the first major facility was put into operation on the territory of the former airfield — the Spartak football stadium with 45 thousand seats. In 2017, a training base appeared next to it, including six open football pitches and a parking lot. In 2018, the arena hosted matches of the FIFA World Cup.

    In 2021, the multifunctional sports complex Chkalov Arena was built.

    In addition, the construction of the residential complex (RC) “City on the River Tushino-2018” has been completed, as well as the first stages of the ALIA RC and the Holland Park RC. In addition, an Orthodox church, a spiritual and cultural center, five kindergartens and two schools have been built.

    In 2023, the developer completed the first stage of development of the largest green area of the future district — the Primavera eco-park, located on the embankment of the Moscow River. The project includes the creation of an open amphitheater, installation of viewing swings, organization of viewing platforms, descents to the water and a picturesque walking route along the edge of the bank.

    Work is currently ongoing on the construction of residential buildings, schools and kindergartens, as well as on the improvement of the embankment of the Moscow River.

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    https: //vv.mos.ru/mayor/tkhemes/12422050/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: The EBA consults to amend data collection for the 2026 benchmarking exercise

    Source: European Banking Authority

    The European Banking Authority (EBA) today launched a consultation to amend the Implementing Regulation on the benchmarking of credit risk, market risk and IFRS9 models for the 2026 exercise. The most significant changes, in the market risk framework, are the new templates for the collection of the alternative internal model approach (AIMA) risk measures under the fundamental review of the trading book (FRTB) and the extension of the scope of the exercise to banks that apply solely the Alternative Standardised Approach (ASA) methodology. For the credit risk framework only minor changes are being proposed. This consultation runs until 26 May 2025.

    The EBA benchmarking exercise is the basis for both the supervisory assessment and the horizontal analysis of the outcome of internal models. It ensures consistent monitoring of the variability of own funds requirements resulting from the application of internal models as well as of the impact of the several different supervisory and regulatory measures, which influence the capital requirements and solvency ratios in the EU. In this regard, this consultation paper updates the information to be collected in the 2026 exercise.

    The changes will be substantial for the market risk part. Besides the new templates and instructions for collecting the AIMA FRTB risk measures (expected shortfall, default risk charge, and stress scenario risk measure),  the scope of the exercise will be extended to banks that apply solely the ASA methodology. This extension is a direct application of the revised wording of the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD VI) and has a massive impact on the number of banks participating in the market risk assessment. In this regard, the FRTB ASA data collection was already developed in the past exercises, so the amendments to the framework of the exercise are less extensive.

    As regards the credit risk benchmarking, the amendments to the ITS will provide a mapping between the asset classes used for the definition of the benchmarking portfolios and the breakdown of Credit Risk IRB templates adopted in the revised ITS on supervisory reporting, in line with changes in the regulatory framework related to the new Banking Package (Capital Requirements Regulation – CRR3, and CRD6).

    Consultation process

    Responses to the consultations can be sent to the EBA by clicking on the “send your comments” button on the consultation page.

    All contributions received will be published after the consultation closes, unless requested otherwise. The deadline for the submission of comments is 26 May 2025

    A public hearing on this consultation will take place on 10 April 2025 from 14:00 to 15:30 CEST. Deadline for registration is 8 April 2025 at 16:00 CEST.

    Legal basis

    This draft ITS have been developed in accordance with article 78 of the CRD, which requires the EBA to specify the benchmarking portfolios, templates and definitions to be used as part of the annual benchmarking exercises. These are used by competent authorities to conduct an annual assessment of the quality of internal approaches used for the calculation of own funds requirements.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: VATICAN – Appointment of secretaries-general of the Governorate of Vatican City State

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Tuesday, 25 February 2025

    Vatican City (Agenzia Fides) – The Holy Father, modifying the Fundamental Law of Vatican City State, of 13 May 2023, and Law no. CCLXXIV on the Governance of Vatican City State, of 25 November 2018, has appointed the following as secretaries-general of the Governorate of Vatican City State, with effect from 1 March 2025:- Archbishop Emilio Nappa, until now adjunct secretary of the Dicastery for Evangelization, in the Section for First Evangelization and the new particular Churches, and president of the Pontifical Mission Societies; and- the Distinguished Mr. Giuseppe Puglisi-Alibrandi, Esq., until now deputy secretary general of the Governorate of Vatican City State.At the same time, the Roman Pontiff has attributed to the Reverend Sr. Raffaella Petrini, F.S.E, from 1 March 2025 president of the Pontifical Commission for Vatican City State and president of the Governorate of the same State, the authority to determine and confer, as appropriate, specific competences or particular tasks to the aforementioned secretaries-general. (Agenzia Fides, 25/2/2025)
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  • MIL-OSI Europe: VATICAN – Archbishop Nappa appointed Secretary General of the Governorate of the Vatican City State

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Tuesday, 25 February 2025

    Vatican City (Agenzia Fides) – Pope Francis has appointed Archbishop Emilio Nappa as the new Secretary General of the Governorate of the Vatican City State, with effect from 1 March 2025. This was announced today by the Holy See Press Office.Until now, Archbishop Nappa has been adjunct secretary of the Dicastery for Evangelization, in the Section for First Evangelization and the new particular Churches, and president of the Pontifical Mission Societies (PMS).Archbishop Nappa was born in Naples on August 9, 1972. He was ordained a priest for the diocese of Aversa on June 28, 1997. He received a doctorate in theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University in 2004 and has held various offices in the diocese, including that of Rector of the Church of San Rocco, Director and Permanent Professor of Fundamental Theology at the Interdiocesan High School of Religious Sciences “Ss. Apostles Peter and Paul” of the Caserta Region in Capua and Canon of the Cathedral. He was also a local collaborator of the Apostolic Nunciature in Italy and an official of the General Affairs Department of the Secretariat of State. In September 2022 he was appointed Official of the Secretariat for the Economy.On December 3, 2022, Pope Francis appointed him Adjunct Secretary of the Dicastery for Evangelization and President of the Pontifical Missionary Societies, conferring on him the title of Archbishop and assigning him the titular See of Satriano.The episcopal ordination was celebrated on Saturday, January 28, 2023, in St. Peter’s Basilica. The Archbishop was consecrated by Cardinal Luis Antonio Gokim Tagle, Pro-Prefect of the Missionary Dicastery.Archbishop Nappa’s motto is “Caritas diffusa est” and refers to a passage from St. Paul’s letter to the Romans. At the liturgy for the episcopal ordination at the papal altar in St. Peter’s Basilica, Archbishop Edgar Peña Parra, Deputy for General Affairs in the Secretariat of State, and Angelo Spinillo, Bishop of Aversa, were the co-consecrators.In the more than two years of Archbishop Nappa’s activity at the head of the Pontifical Mission Societies, a National Direction of the Pontifical Mission Societies in Albania was established and a representation of the Pontifical Mission Societies in the Apostolic Vicariate of Northern Arabia, called “Missio Avona”, was set up. Work is still underway to set up a National Direction of the Pontifical Mission Societies in Ukraine.During Archbishop Nappa’s presidency, synergies between the International Secretariats and National Directions were also intensified, with the aim of strengthening the network of assistance with which the Pontifical Mission Societies support the mission in the local Churches on a daily basis. (Agenzia Fides, 25/2/2025)
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  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Mancunian Way set to be resurfaced as the Council works to improve Manchester’s busiest road

    Source: City of Manchester

    Manchester City Council is currently rolling out a wide-raging programme of road improvements throughout the city.

    This is after we surveyed residents on what their priorities were and what changes they wanted to see the most. As a result, a large number of people came back to the Council saying that improvements to our road network were what they wanted to see the most.

    This is why over the next month the Mancunian Way is due to undergo resurfacing works, bringing much-needed improvements to one of the most-used roads in the city.

    With an estimated 15 million journeys taken along this road annually it’s vital that necessary maintenance is carried out to keep traffic flowing.

    The Council is currently carrying out a range of resurfacing projects throughout Manchester. This is after we went out to ask residents what their priorities were, with a large number of people coming back to us saying that improvements to our road network were important to them.

    As a result, plans are now in place to resurface the Mancunian Way overnight during a four-week period, beginning from Monday, March 3.

    The work will be split into two sections starting with the eastbound carriageway, before moving on to the westbound lane; eastbound will run from River Street to Fairfield Street, and westbound from Fairfield Street to Upper Brook Street.

    Work along the eastbound section – in the direction of Ashton Old Road – will run between Monday 3 March, to Friday 14 March. Operating hours will be between 7pm and 5am during which the carriageway will be fully closed.

    Due to events taking place during this period of works, slightly later road closures will be in place from 7.30pm on the 7th, 10th and 14th of March.

    No work will take place Europa League fixture dates, or on Saturday or Sunday nights.

    Signed diversions will be in place during the course of the works, details of which can be found here on our dedicated webpage.

    Once the eastbound works are complete the westbound – in the direction of Regent Road – will follow. This will take place overnight between Monday 17 March until Friday 28 March.

    As with the eastbound, closures will be between 7pm and 5am, except on the evening of March 19, when the closure will start at 7.30pm due to an event.

    Councillor Tracey Rawlins, Executive Member for Clean Air, Environment and Transport said: “One of the big issues that people have raised with us is that many of our key roads are no longer at the standard they, or we, expect.

    “This is why over the coming months the Council is working to get roads resurfaced as quickly as we can, delivering benefits for motorists and prioritising the needs of our residents.

    “These works are taking place overnight to mitigate any potential disruption but as always, we would encourage people to plan their journeys ahead of time and allow more time to travel if they need to go via the Mancunian Way.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: Changes in the procedure for registering clients during the DSVD

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    At the request of our clients, we are implementing the following procedure for registering clients on weekends from March 1. It differs from the one announced earlier, in newsletter #17.

    On weekends, messages with operations of creation (A) and addition (L) of new short trading codes on the stock, futures and currency markets will be processed. ERC will register the client on the stock market immediately, and on other markets on Monday. Messages with operations of types “U”, “M”, “R” and “D” on weekends will be rejected with an error. Reports on client registration during the additional weekend session will be sent to participants on Monday.

    The news text on the website has been changed to reflect the new registration procedure. Link: HTTPS: //VVV. MEEX.K.M.M..

    A detailed description of the weekend trading technology is available at the link: HTTPS: //VVV. MOEX.K.M.K..

    In addition, we draw your attention to the regulations for trading on the stock market on the weekend of March 1 and 2, 2025: HTTPS: //VVV. MOEX.K.M.M.On March 1, 2025, the stock market system will be available for user connection from 12:00.

    Contact information for media 7 (495) 363-3232Pr@moex.kom

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    HTTPS: //VVV. MOEX.K.MO/N77959

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: Over 200 additional bond issues have become available on the Moscow Exchange to non-qualified investors without testing

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    Unqualified investors were given the opportunity to buy corporate bonds with rating “A” and higher on the Moscow Exchange without undergoing testing.

    Thus, unqualified investors now have access to another 234 bond issues from 57 issuers for a total of over 1.9 trillion rubles without testing. Previously, these securities could only be purchased by unqualified investors after testing, as well as investors with qualified status. The total number of debt securities available to unqualified investors without testing amounted to almost 700 instruments, including federal loan bonds (OFZ), bonds of constituent entities of the Russian Federation (regardless of the credit rating level), and corporate bonds with fixed income and an “AAA” rating.

    The expansion of the list of debt securities available for purchase became possible after decisions of the Bank of Russia lower the credit rating threshold from “AAA” to “A” for untested bond purchases by non-qualified investors. This allowed them to purchase corporate bonds with a credit rating of “A” and higher, with the exception of bonds secured by a pledge of monetary claims, including mortgages, without undergoing a knowledge test.

    The list of securities for purchase has been expanded to include corporate debt securities that have been assigned at least one of the following credit ratings:

    “ruA” on the Expert RA scale; “A (RU)” on the ACRA scale; “A .ru” on the NKR scale; “A |ru|” on the NRA scale.

    The Moscow Exchange Group operates the only multifunctional exchange platform in Russia for trading shares, bonds, derivatives, currencies, money market instruments and commodities. The Group includes a central depository and a clearing center that acts as a central counterparty in the markets, which allows Moscow Exchange to provide its clients with a full cycle of trading and post-trading services.

    Contact information for media 7 (495) 363-3232Pr@moex.kom

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: 02/25/2025, 13-10 (Moscow time) the values of the lower boundary of the price corridor and the range of market risk assessment for the BYN/RUB currency pair have been changed.

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    In accordance with the Methodology for determining the risk parameters of the foreign exchange market and the precious metals market of Moscow Exchange PJSC by the NCC (JSC), on 25.02.2025, 13-10 (Moscow time), the values of the lower limit of the price corridor (up to RUB 23.57 in the mode with TOD calculations) and the range of market risk assessment (up to RUB 22.5273, equivalent to a rate of 19.51%) of the BYN/RUB currency pair were changed. New values are available Here.

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    HTTPS: //VVV. MOEX.K.MO/N77962

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: On holding auctions on February 26, 2025 to place OFZ issues No. 26225RMFS and No. 26248RMFS

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    For bidders

    We inform you that, based on the letter of the Bank of Russia and in accordance with Part I. General Part and Part II. Stock Market Section of the Rules for Conducting Trading on the Stock Market, Deposit Market and Credit Market of Moscow Exchange PJSC, the order establishes the form, time, term and procedure for holding auctions for the placement and trading of the following federal loan bonds:

    1.

    Name of the Issuer Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation
    Name of security federal loan bonds with constant coupon income
    State registration number of the issue 26225RMFS from 02/15/2018
    Date of the auction February 26, 2025
    Information about the placement (trading mode, placement form) The placement of Bonds will be carried out in the Trading Mode “Placement: Auction” by holding an Auction to determine the placement price. BoardId: PACT (Settlements: Ruble)
    Trade code SU2225RMFS1
    ISIN code RO000A0 Zub7
    Calculation code B01
    Additional conditions of placement The share of non-competitive bids in relation to the total volume of bids submitted by the Bidder may not exceed 90%.
    Trading time Trading hours: bid collection period: 12:00 – 12:30; bid execution period: 13:00 – 18:00.

    2.

    Name of the Issuer Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation
    Name of security federal loan bonds with constant coupon income
    State registration number of the issue 26248RMFS from 08.05.2024
    Date of the auction February 26, 2025
    Information about the placement (trading mode, placement form) The placement of Bonds will be carried out in the Trading Mode “Placement: Auction” by holding an Auction to determine the placement price. BoardId: PACT (Settlements: Ruble)
    Trade code CO26248RMFS3
    ISIN code RO000A108EH4
    Calculation code B01
    Additional conditions of placement The share of non-competitive bids in relation to the total volume of bids submitted by the Bidder may not exceed 90%.
    Trading time Trading hours: bid collection period: 14:30 – 15:00; bid execution period: 15:30 – 18:00.

    Contact information for media 7 (495) 363-3232Pr@moex.kom

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: Applications are now open for participation in the FINOPOLIS.365 Youth Program

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Central Bank of Russia –

    Students and young professionals will develop solutions for specific cases from representatives of the financial market. This year, the tasks are related to three topics: “Artificial Intelligence”, “Data Exchange”, “Distributed Registries and Tokenization”. The results will be summed up at the Forum of Innovative Financial Technologies FINOPOLIS 2025.

    After submitting an application, participants will gain access to the training modules of the Bank of Russia Fintech Hub. The training will help them qualify for participation in regional case championships, which will be held in Moscow, St. Petersburg, Vladivostok, Chelyabinsk, Tomsk, Samara and the federal territory of Sirius. The winners and prize-winners of each regional stage will meet on October 8–10 at FINOPOLIS 2025.

    The finalists’ projects will be assessed by a jury that will include the management of the Bank of Russia, the largest fintech companies and banks. The prize fund for the final in 2025 is 1.5 million rubles.

    Applications will be accepted until April 17. More detailed information can be found on the website of the Youth Program FINOPOLIS.365.

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    HTTPS: //VVV.KBR.ru/Press/Event/? ID = 23404

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  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Recovered appeal: Great Sike Road, Old Malton, Malton, YO17 6SB (ref: 3342002 – 25 February 2025)

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Correspondence

    Recovered appeal: Great Sike Road, Old Malton, Malton, YO17 6SB (ref: 3342002 – 25 February 2025)

    Decision letter and Inspector’s Report for a recovered appeal.

    Applies to England

    Documents

    Details

    Decision letter and Inspector’s Report for a recovered appeal for the installation and operation of a solar farm and battery energy storage system with associated infrastructure including substation, access tracks, pole mounted CCTV, fencing and landscaping for a period of 40 years.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 February 2025

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: Deposit auction of JSC “KAVKAZ.RF” will be held on 25.02.2025

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    Parameters;

    The date of the deposit auction is 25.02.2025. Placement currency is RUB. The maximum amount of funds placed (in the placement currency) is 30,000,000.00. Placement term, days 7. Date of depositing funds is 26.02.2025. Date of return of funds is 05.03.2025. Minimum placement interest rate, % per annum is 20.30. Terms of the conclusion, urgent or special (Urgent). The minimum amount of funds placed for one application (in the placement currency) is 30,000,000.00. The maximum number of applications from one Participant, pcs. 1. Auction form, open or closed (Open). Basis of the Agreement is the General Agreement. Schedule (Moscow time). Applications in preliminary mode from 12:00 to 12:10. Applications in competition mode from 12:10 to 12:15. Setting the cut-off percentage or declaring the auction invalid before 12:25.

    Additional terms

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: IMF Executive Board Concludes 2024 Article IV Consultation with Solomon Islands

    Source: IMF – News in Russian

    February 25, 2025

    Washington, DC: On February 19, 2025, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Article IV consultation[1] with Solomon Islands.

    Solomon Islands has weathered important shocks including civil unrest and the pandemic, successfully hosted the Pacific Games, and conducted peaceful general elections. These achievements have raised the country’s profile and strengthened national unity, but with costs—public debt has nearly tripled since before the pandemic, and the government’s cash reserves have been significantly depleted.

    Modest growth is expected at 2.8 percent in 2025, slightly above the 2.4 percent growth estimated for 2024, while inflation, estimated to have returned to 3.4 percent at end-2024, is envisaged to reach 3.9 percent at end-2025. The fiscal deficit is expected to widen slightly from 3.1 percent of GDP in 2024 to 3.3 percent of GDP in 2025, underpinned by continued spending pressures and externally financed infrastructure projects. The current account deficit is estimated to have narrowed to 4.2 percent of GDP in 2024, but projected to widen to 7.7 percent of GDP in 2025 as economic activity gains momentum. Foreign exchange reserves remain adequate, covering 9 months of imports.

    Risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside. They include under execution of the budget, extreme climate events, political instability, and commodity price volatility. Declining logging activity and the undiversified economic base, compounded by weak governance, constrain growth potential. Both the current account and fiscal deficits are expected to persist over the medium term.

    Executive Board Assessment[2]

    Executive Directors agreed with the thrust of the staff appraisal. They concurred that while the Solomon Islands’ economy has weathered multiple shocks well and recently benefited from successfully hosting the Pacific Games and peaceful general elections, public debt is increasing, medium-term growth prospects appear moderate, and per capita income growth remains stagnant. Against this backdrop, Directors emphasized the importance of rebuilding cash buffers and ensuring fiscal sustainability, while boosting growth prospects through economic diversification and governance reforms.

    Directors stressed the need to improve the effectiveness of fiscal policy by addressing weaknesses in fiscal data and public financial management, including by ending the practice of unfunded spending. They also called for tightening the 2025 Budget to start a gradual recovery of cash balances. Directors underscored the importance of creating fiscal space to accelerate investment in development priorities. To this end, they recommended advancing domestic revenue mobilization, such as introducing a value added tax. Enhancing the quality, transparency, and accountability of public expenditure, including by undertaking the Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability assessment, would also be important. Directors saw merit in introducing a simple, ex-ante guideline for annual budget formulation as an interim step toward a fiscal rule.

    Directors agreed that the current monetary policy stance and exchange rate regime are appropriate. They stressed the importance of preserving the central bank’s autonomy, including by limiting purchases of government bonds and implementing the remaining Safeguards Assessment recommendations. Directors also underscored the need to keep the exchange rate fully aligned with the value of the updated currency basket and to enhance transparency and communication with market participants. While the financial sector remains stable, Directors encouraged further reforms to strengthen regulatory and supervisory frameworks and boost financial intermediation and inclusion. They stressed the need to strengthen the AML/CFT framework, including due to the planned introduction of the Citizenship by Investment program.

    Directors encouraged the acceleration of structural reforms to support economic diversification and private sector development, with capacity development support from the IMF and other development partners. They agreed that addressing governance weaknesses remains a priority, including by improving the capacity and independence of the anti-corruption institution.

    Table 1. Solomon Islands: Selected Economic Indicators, 2019–2029

    Per capita GDP (2023): US$2200

           

    Population (2023): 768,690

           

    Quota: SDR 20.8 million

           
     

    2019

    2020

    2021

    2022

    2023

    2024

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

             

    Est.

    Proj.

    GROWTH AND PRICES

    (In percent change, unless otherwise indicated)

    Real GDP

    1.7

    -3.4

    2.6

    2.4

    2.7

    2.5

    2.8

    2.9

    2.9

    3.0

    3.0

    CPI (period average)

    2.2

    2.9

    0.2

    5.4

    5.1

    3.7

    3.8

    3.7

    3.4

    3.3

    3.3

    CPI (end of period)

    2.6

    -2.6

    4.6

    8.7

    4.3

    3.4

    3.9

    3.5

    3.3

    3.3

    3.3

    GDP deflator

    1.2

    -1.3

    -5.5

    2.0

    3.9

    1.3

    1.3

    1.3

    1.4

    1.4

    1.4

    Nominal GDP (in SI$ millions)

    13,234

    12,617

    12,228

    12,775

    13,911

    14,685

    15,492

    16,370

    17,311

    18,235

    19,217

    Nominal GDP (in US$ millions)

    1,619

    1,536

    1,523

    1,566

    1,661

    1,753

    1,850

    1,954

    2,067

    2,177

    2,294

    CENTRAL GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS

    (In percent of GDP)

    Total revenue and grants

    34.1

    37.9

    35.9

    38.3

    36.3

    32.7

    32.5

    32.6

    32.7

    32.8

    32.8

    Revenue

    25.8

    24.6

    24.8

    23.1

    22.9

    23.2

    23.0

    23.1

    23.2

    23.3

    23.3

    Grants

    8.2

    13.4

    11.1

    15.2

    13.4

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    Total expenditure

    35.6

    40.4

    37.8

    40.8

    40.1

    35.8

    35.7

    35.8

    35.8

    35.8

    35.9

    Expense

    29.0

    31.9

    28.3

    31.4

    29.8

    27.9

    27.2

    27.3

    27.4

    27.4

    27.5

    Net acquisition of nonfinancial assets

    6.6

    8.5

    9.5

    9.3

    10.3

    7.9

    8.5

    8.5

    8.4

    8.4

    8.4

    Net lending (+) / Net borrowing (-)

    -1.5

    -2.4

    -1.9

    -2.5

    -3.8

    -3.1

    -3.3

    -3.2

    -3.1

    -3.1

    -3.1

    External

    0.0

    -1.4

    -1.1

    -0.1

    -2.9

    -2.3

    -1.8

    -1.9

    -1.9

    -1.8

    -1.8

    Domestic

    -1.5

    -1.0

    -0.7

    -2.4

    -0.9

    -0.8

    -1.5

    -1.3

    -1.2

    -1.2

    -1.3

    Central government debt 1/

    7.8

    12.8

    15.9

    15.5

    20.3

    22.3

    24.4

    26.2

    27.9

    29.5

    31.0

    Public domestic debt

    1.7

    2.8

    6.1

    5.9

    8.6

    8.9

    9.8

    10.6

    11.1

    11.7

    12.4

    Public external debt

    6.1

    10.0

    9.8

    9.6

    11.7

    13.4

    14.5

    15.6

    16.7

    17.7

    18.6

    MACROFINANCIAL

    (In percent change)

    Credit to private sector

    6.2

    0.3

    -0.4

    0.8

    4.7

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    Broad money

    -3.1

    6.6

    1.9

    5.3

    6.1

    6.8

    5.5

    5.7

    5.8

    5.3

    5.4

    Reserve money

    -7.1

    23.0

    10.6

    4.0

    9.9

    6.0

    5.5

    5.7

    5.8

    5.3

    5.4

    BALANCE OF PAYMENTS

    (In percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated)

    Current account balance

    -9.5

    -1.6

    -5.1

    -13.7

    -10.4

    -4.2

    -7.7

    -7.5

    -7.4

    -7.5

    -7.4

    Trade balance (goods and services)

    -10.0

    -8.5

    -13.4

    -22.3

    -19.8

    -11.6

    -15.3

    -15.3

    -15.6

    -16.1

    -16.5

    Exports

    36.4

    28.5

    26.9

    25.8

    32.6

    34.6

    33.2

    32.8

    32.1

    31.4

    30.7

    Imports

    46.4

    37.0

    40.4

    48.1

    52.3

    46.2

    48.6

    48.1

    47.7

    47.5

    47.2

    Gross Remittances

    1.1

    1.5

    2.1

    3.3

    3.7

    3.5

    3.6

    3.8

    3.9

    4.1

    4.3

    Capital and Financial Account

    7.3

    3.0

    6.7

    13.2

    13.6

    4.0

    6.9

    7.3

    7.5

    7.5

    7.5

    Foreign direct investment (+ = decrease)

    -1.8

    -0.4

    -1.5

    -2.6

    -4.3

    -0.9

    -2.3

    -2.6

    -2.7

    -2.8

    -2.9

    Overall balance (+ = increase)

    -2.1

    4.8

    2.5

    -2.0

    3.3

    -0.2

    -0.8

    -0.2

    0.1

    0.0

    0.1

    Gross official reserves (in US$ millions, end of period) 2/

    574.1

    660.6

    694.5

    655.2

    682.0

    679.1

    664.3

    661.0

    662.8

    663.2

    664.6

    (in months of next year’s imports of GNFS)

    12.1

    12.9

    11.1

    9.0

    10.1

    9.1

    8.5

    8.0

    7.7

    7.4

    7.0

                           

    EXCHANGE RATE (SI$/US$, end of period)

    8.2

    8.0

    8.1

    8.3

    8.5

    Real effective exchange rate (end of period, 2010 = 100)

    127.5

    129.9

    124.8

    132.3

    136.0

    Sources: Data provided by the authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections.

    1/ Includes disbursements under the Rapid Credit Facility (RCF).

    2/ Includes SDR allocations made by the IMF to Solomon Islands in 2009 and in 2021.

    [1] Under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. A staff team visits the country, collects economic and financial information, and discusses with officials the country’s economic developments and policies. On return to headquarters, the staff prepares a report, which forms the basis for discussion by the Executive Board.

    [2] At the conclusion of the discussion, the Managing Director, as Chairman of the Board, summarizes the views of Executive Directors, and this summary is transmitted to the country’s authorities. An explanation of any qualifiers used in summings up can be found here: http://www.IMF.org/external/np/sec/misc/qualifiers.htm.

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Pemba Sherpa

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2025/02/25/pr25042-solomon-islands-imf-executive-board-concludes-2024-article-iv-consultation

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Security Council urges Rwanda to stop supporting M23 in eastern DR Congo

    Source: United Nations – Peacekeeping

    The UN Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution on Friday that strongly condemned the ongoing offensive by M23 rebels in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

     The Council demanded that the M23 immediately cease hostilities, withdraw from all areas that it controls, “and fully reverse the establishment of illegitimate parallel administrations in the DRC territory.”

    The 15 members called on the Rwanda Defence Forces to stop supporting the armed group and immediately withdraw from Congolese territory “without preconditions.”

    They reiterated their urgent appeal for all parties to conclude an immediate and unconditional ceasefire, as called for by leaders from East and Southern Africa.

    They strongly urged the DRC and Rwanda “to return without preconditions to diplomatic talks as a matter of urgency to achieve a lasting and peaceful resolution of the protracted conflict in the region.”

    The resolution also condemns support provided by DRC military forces to specific armed groups, particularly the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR). It calls for “the urgent implementation of commitments to neutralize the group.”

    ‘A clear message’

    The resolution was submitted by France whose Ambassador, Nicolas de Rivière, said it “delivers a clear message.”

    “There is no military solution to the conflict in the east of the DRC,” he said.  “The offensive carried out by the M23 supported by Rwanda must be put to an end.”

    The situation in the mineral-rich region has deteriorated since January as M23 fighters advance across North and South Kivu provinces, with the crisis spreading to Ituri.

    They have captured the main cities of Goma and Bukavu. Thousands of people have been killed and even more displaced, including to neighbouring countries such as Burundi.

    Allow aid access

    The resolution strongly condemned all attacks directed against civilians and infrastructure, including UN, humanitarian and medical personnel.

    It also condemned summary executions and maiming, sexual and gender-based violence, human trafficking and the recruitment and use of children.

    The Council demanded all parties to allow and facilitate safe, immediate and unhindered humanitarian access to all people in need, as well as the restoration of basic services such as healthcare, water, electricity and communications.

    Ambassadors also reaffirmed full support to the UN mission in the DRC, MONUSCO, and stressed that attacks against peacekeepers may constitute war crimes.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New public procurement rules to drive growth, opportunities for small businesses and exclude suppliers that fail to deliver 

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    New public procurement rules to drive growth, opportunities for small businesses and exclude suppliers that fail to deliver 

    A new public procurement regime under the Procurement Act 2023 is now in force

    • Procurement Act 2023 now in force, delivering growth, driving value for money, and giving small businesses greater access to nearly £400billion of yearly spend. 

    • Strong new powers to exclude and debar suppliers from contracts on grounds of national security or poor performance.

    • Public can scrutinise procurement decisions on new Central Digital Platform.

    New laws putting growth, small businesses and transparency at the heart of public contract awards are now in force, as part of a transformation of the government’s commercial landscape that delivers on the Plan for Change.

    A more open public procurement regime driving value for money is now in place through the Procurement Act 2023, which sets rules that all public bodies must follow when they buy goods and services. 

    The Act will boost growth by slashing red tape for small and medium sized businesses applying for government contracts – combining multiple regulations into one simple set, and publishing procurement data in a standard, open format on a Central Digital Platform.

    It is bolstered by a new National Procurement Policy Statement (NPPS) that sets out this government’s Mission-led priorities which the public sector must have regard to in its procurement activity. 

    The changes open up opportunities for small businesses to bid for public sector contracts, helping deliver growth and opportunity across the UK. It ends late payments that put small businesses at risk, introducing a mandate of 30-day payment terms for all public sector contracts.

    Costs for both business and the public sector will be reduced through simple new processes that drive innovation, offering greater flexibility for buyers to tailor procurement to their exact needs. For example, providing public bodies more opportunities to negotiate with suppliers, and using built-in stages to procurement cycles such as demonstrations and testing prototypes.

    Cabinet Office Minister Georgia Gould said:

    Public sector procurement can now fully deliver on the Plan for Change – unleashing local growth, opening up opportunities and embedding transparency and accountability.

    The Procurement Act, supported by our new National Procurement Policy Statement, will tear down barriers that stop small businesses from winning government work, giving them greater opportunity to access the £400 billion spent on public procurement every year, investing in home-grown talent and driving innovation and growth.

    Shirley Cooper, Crown Representative for Small Businesses, said:

    This once–in-a-generation change to public procurement laws will provide enormous opportunities for small businesses to take a greater share of contracts. 

    The Act, which goes live alongside our bold new National Procurement Policy Statement, will drive economic growth and deliver on the Government’s Missions and the Plan for Change. 

    I thank the public sector for the considerable amount of work done to prepare for and understand these new rules, and how they can fully benefit both businesses and the taxpayer.

    To deliver on this, a Central Digital Platform is now in operation which will streamline processes and cut red tape, allowing suppliers to register their details and see all bidding opportunities in one place. This will encourage more suppliers to bid for government work, increasing competition and in turn supporting economic growth.

    Citizens can also scrutinise public procurement data published on this platform, as part of the Act’s rules for greater transparency.

    The Government will also use tough new powers to investigate supplier misconduct, including underperforming suppliers and those that pose security risks to supply chains, with the ability to debar or exclude them from contracts. 

    The Procurement Review Unit (PRU) and National Security Unit for Procurement (NSUP), now operational as dedicated resources in the Cabinet Office, will carry out this work. The NSUP will take robust action against any organisation, actor or entity which presents a national security threat.

    ADDITIONAL QUOTES

    Emma Jones CBE, founder of Enterprise Nation, said:

    Accessing public sector work can act like a growth accelerator for SMEs. Government contracts are solid and reliable and pay within 30 days. They help SMEs develop and invest in new processes, products and efficiencies, as well as take on more staff in their local community. 

    By seeing Government procurement through this lens, opening up contracts to more diverse and community-based businesses will be a powerful way to deliver economic growth. 

    My organisation has already been busy readying SMEs for this moment. This legislation is the beginning of the next step in the journey to increasing government spend with SMEs and boosting the economy.

    Terry Corby, founder and CEO of Good Business Pays, said:

    The public sector spends around £300 billion every year and represents a huge opportunity to drive growth in the UK. Buying more from SMEs, making it easier for them to tender for work and get paid faster will help drive growth in our communities across the UK. 

    The commitment to pay all suppliers through the supply chain in under 30 days is important. If implemented well, the new Procurement Act will represent the biggest step-change towards best practice payment culture. I founded Good Business Pays five years ago, and provide a great example for all commercial organisations to follow.

    ENDS

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 February 2025

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