Category: Europe

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial News: Henderson IPO on Moscow Exchange Celebrates One Year

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    November 2, 2024 marks exactly one year since the start of trading in shares of PJSC Henderson Fashion Group (NNFG) on the Moscow Exchange. The company became the first representative of fashion retail on the Russian stock market.

    Henderson is the largest federal chain of men’s fashion stores in Russia, offering clothing, footwear, accessories, perfumes and cosmetics in the premium and affordable luxury segments.

    The company’s market capitalization is 22.37 billion rubles, the share of shares in free circulation (free-float) is 12.17%. The shareholder base has doubled since the IPO and now has more than 80 thousand shareholders.

    Henderson shares are included in the second-level quotation list of the Moscow Exchange and are included in the settlement bases Moscow Exchange Broad Market Index And Moscow Exchange IPO Index.

    In 2024, Henderson was ranked third in Moscow Exchange Annual Reports Competition in the Retail Investors’ Choice category, demonstrating an example of openness and professionalism in information disclosure and corporate governance.

    Congratulations to the company on the first anniversary of listing on the Moscow Exchange!

    The HENDERSON fashion house is the largest federal retailer of men’s fashion in Russia and offers men elegant and stylish collections for work and leisure in the premium and affordable luxury segments. Today, HENDERSON manages 160 of its own fashion stores located in 64 cities in Russia – from Kaliningrad to Vladivostok, from Murmansk to Grozny, and is also present on the largest marketplaces in the country. Since autumn 2022, the brand has entered the international market, opening three stores in Armenia under the international franchising system.

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

    Contact information for media 7 (495) 363-3232PR@moex.com

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://www.moex.com/n74509

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: 02.11.2024, 10-11 (Moscow time) the values of the upper limit of the price corridor and the range of market risk assessment for the security RU000A1020L5 (Samara Region 15) were changed.

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    02.11.2024

    10:11

    In accordance with the Methodology for determining the risk parameters of the stock market and deposit market of Moscow Exchange PJSC by NCO NCC (JSC) on 02.11.2024, 10-11 (Moscow time), the values of the upper limit of the price corridor (up to 89.53) and the range of market risk assessment (up to 705.9 rubles, equivalent to a rate of 8.75%) of the security RU000A1020L5 (Samara Region 15) were changed.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://www.moex.com/n74510

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: 02.11.2024, 10-15 (Moscow time) the values of the upper limit of the price corridor and the range of market risk assessment for the security RU000A105G81 (DOM 1P-13R) were changed.

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    02.11.2024

    10:15

    In accordance with the Methodology for determining the risk parameters of the stock market and deposit market of Moscow Exchange PJSC by NCO NCC (JSC), on 02.11.2024, 10-15 (Moscow time), the values of the upper limit of the price corridor (up to 101.7) and the range of market risk assessment (up to 1104.68 rubles, equivalent to a rate of 11.25%) of the security RU000A105G81 (DOM 1P-13R) were changed.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://www.moex.com/n74512

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI USA: U.S. exports of ethane and ethane-based petrochemicals rose 135% from 2014 to 2023

    Source: US Energy Information Administration

    In-depth analysis

    November 4, 2024

    Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Petroleum Supply Monthly; and the U.S. Census Bureau
    Note: Ethylene derivatives include high-density polyethylene (HDPE), low-density polyethylene (LDPE), ethylene vinyl acetate, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and other polymers of ethylene not elsewhere specified or included.

    U.S. exports of ethane and ethane-based petrochemicals reached an all-time high of 21.6 million metric tons (MMmt) in 2023, up 135% since the United States began exporting ethane in 2014 and 17% more than in 2022, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau. The rapid expansion of U.S. ethane and ethane-based petrochemical exports has been fueled by the growth in domestic ethane production, which has increased with the country’s natural gas production and the buildout of export and production infrastructure.

    Ethane is a natural gas liquid that’s primarily extracted from raw natural gas during processing. It’s mainly used as a feedstock for ethylene production, one of the most important building blocks in the petrochemical industry. Ethylene is a gas used to produce a wide range of products, including plastics, resins, and synthetic rubber.

    All elements of the ethane value chain are produced in, consumed in, and exported from the United States, including ethane, ethylene, polyethylene, and other ethylene derivatives. We publish data on U.S. ethane production, exports, and product supplied (deliveries to domestic consumers); the U.S. Census Bureau publishes export data for ethane and ethane-derived products.

    The volume of exports of U.S. ethane, ethylene, and various ethylene derivatives is affected by:

    • U.S. demand
    • U.S. production capacity and production costs
    • Importing countries’ downstream processing capacity
    • Availability of infrastructure necessary to move these products, which in some cases may require special handling such as cryogenic refrigeration

    U.S. ethane exports

    The United States started exporting ethane in 2014 via pipeline to petrochemical plants in Canada. In 2016, the United States began exporting ethane to countries in Europe from marine export terminals. U.S. ethane export capacity has increased since 2016 with the completion of two new pipelines and three more marine export terminals—Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania; Morgan’s Point, Texas; and Nederland, Texas. In addition, the number of destination countries continued to grow along with the fleet of specially built tankers.

    Data source: U.S. Census Bureau


    U.S. ethane exports increased to a record high of 3.0 MMmt in 2023, up 12% from 2022. In 2023, U.S. ethane was mostly exported to China, which accounted for 45% (1.4 MMmt) of U.S. ethane exports, followed by India (16%), Canada (14%), Norway (9%), and the United Kingdom (7%).

    U.S. ethane exports to China increased fastest between 2022 and 2023, rising 35% last year. China’s Satellite Petrochemical has begun ethylene production at two new ethane crackers since 2021, which has increased domestic ethane demand in China. Ethane exports to Norway rose the second fastest, rising 32% to 288,000 metric tons in 2023. Other importers of U.S. ethane include Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, and Sweden.

    Data source: Bloomberg L.P.
    Note: Ethylene feedstock margins account for coproduct credits, which mainly include propylene, butadiene, benzene, and xylene. Ethane feedstock advantage represents the relative profitability of ethane over naphtha.


    Ethane’s high ethylene yields and cost advantages over naphtha in ethylene production have driven export volumes of ethane higher since 2014. Most petrochemical crackers have some flexibility in switching between ethane and naphtha as a feedstock, depending on the relative profitability of each feedstock. In the United States, cracking ethane to produce ethylene has historically generated higher profit margins compared with the margins from cracking naphtha, the most common feedstock in Western Europe and East Asia. Global petrochemical manufacturers looking to secure low-cost ethane feedstock to produce ethylene are developing new petrochemical crackers and associated infrastructure.

    U.S. ethylene exports

    Data source: U.S. Census Bureau


    In the United States, ethane is heated in a steam cracker to break (crack) the ethane molecule to produce ethylene. Ethylene, like ethane, is exported in specialized tankers after being cryogenically cooled. The United States has two ethylene export terminals—Galena Park and Morgan’s Point—both located in Texas on the Houston Ship Channel.

    Ethylene export volumes fell 9% from 2022 to 2023 to 1.1 MMmt. In 2023, 36 nations imported U.S. ethylene. China was the largest importer of ethylene from the United States in 2023, accounting for 38% (419,000 metric tons) of all exports. Belgium (19%), Indonesia (16%), Taiwan (6%), and France (5%) rounded out the top five.

    As with ethane exports, China was also the fastest-growing destination for ethylene exports. In general, ethylene exports to Asia grew 77% from 2022 to 2023, while exports to Europe fell by more than 50% during the same period amid a weak macroeconomic environment.

    U.S. ethylene prices remain at a discount to international prices on average, providing U.S. ethylene producers with a long-term cost advantage and resulting in expanded manufacturing capacity along the U.S. Gulf Coast.

    U.S. ethylene-derivative exports

    After ethylene is processed by a polymerization reactor or another production unit, petrochemical manufacturers can develop intermediate products such as:

    • Low-density polyethylene (LDPE): a thermoplastic used for more flexible plastic products such as dispensing bottles, plastic bags, and trays
    • High-density polyethylene (HDPE): a thermoplastic used for more rigid plastic products such as piping, water gallon jugs, cutting boards, and motor oil jugs
    • Ethylene alpha olefins: used for products such as flexible packaging, molding, and car applications

    The United States exported ethylene derivatives to over 100 nations in 2023. Unlike ethane and ethylene, which require cryogenic cooling to turn them from a gas to a liquid, ethylene derivatives do not require special handling and can be exported or imported through any port or overland route capable of handling containerized traffic.

    Data source: U.S. Census Bureau


    Total U.S. ethylene-derivative exports grew 20% to 16.9 MMmt from 2022 to 2023, led by a 69% increase (2.2 MMmt) in exports to Asia. U.S. exports to Canada fell by 10% to 1.5 MMmt; exports to Mexico grew 3% to 2.4 MMmt in 2023. Until 2017, North American destinations, particularly Canada and Mexico, accounted for the largest share of U.S. polyethylene and other ethylene-derivative exports.

    Canada and Mexico do not impose tariffs on exports of U.S. ethane-derived chemicals because of reciprocal free-trade agreements. These countries also benefit from proximity and being able to import these products over land at lower cost compared with waterborne imports. However, exports to overseas destinations have also grown since 2017, with the exception of 2021 when the global pandemic led to lower demand.

    Principal contributors: Jordan Young, Josh Eiermann

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: 02.11.2024, 10-16 (Moscow time) the values of the upper limit of the price corridor and the range of market risk assessment for the security RU000A1020L5 (Samara Region 15) were changed.

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    02.11.2024

    10:16

    In accordance with the Methodology for determining the risk parameters of the stock market and deposit market of Moscow Exchange PJSC by NCO NCC (JSC) on 02.11.2024, 10-16 (Moscow time), the values of the upper limit of the price corridor (up to 91.02) and the range of market risk assessment (up to 717.26 rubles, equivalent to a rate of 10.5%) of the security RU000A1020L5 (Samara Region 15) were changed.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://www.moex.com/n74513

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: 02.11.2024, 11-54 (Moscow time) the values of the upper limit of the price corridor and the range of market risk assessment for the security RU000A109SK6 (MTS 1P-27) were changed.

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    02.11.2024

    11:54

    In accordance with the Methodology for determining the risk parameters of the stock market and deposit market of Moscow Exchange PJSC by NCO NCC (JSC), on 02.11.2024, 11-54 (Moscow time), the values of the upper limit of the price corridor (up to 107.73) and the range of market risk assessment (up to 1131.0 rubles, equivalent to a rate of 11.25%) of the RU000A109SK6 security (MTS 1P-27) were changed.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://www.moex.com/n74516

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI: authID Signs $10 Million Agreement to Deliver Next Generation Authentication Security in India

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    DENVER, Nov. 04, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — authID Inc. (Nasdaq: AUID), a leading provider of biometric identity verification and authentication solutions, today announced a $10 million, multi-year agreement with a next-generation AI company specializing in custom solutions for global multi-national companies to enable authentication for a range of industries in India.

    The agreement represents a $10 million commitment over a three-year period, with a minimum of $3.33 million each year for licensing authID’s identity platform services.

    authID will deliver unprecedented biometric authentication accuracy and a frictionless user experience to a variety of the partner’s customers across the banking, financial services, emergency services, and transportation industries among others, powering use cases for onboarding, daily login, account recovery, and high-value transactions.

    authID will augment the partner’s existing solutions with their privacy-preserving next generation biometric identity verification and authentication, while complying with Indian privacy laws safeguarding user identities and other data. The Indian market’s sizable institutional and end-user base will highlight authID’s ability to not only deliver a best-in-class user experience but also demonstrate its 1:1B biometric identity verification accuracy.  With over 1.4B citizens to authenticate in the Indian market, only authID’s accuracy can deliver the level of assurance and scale needed by every institution to always “know who’s behind the device” for each transaction.

    “This partnership further demonstrates authID’s thought leadership and technical standing in the global markets, and we are incredibly excited to enter the Indian market where, over the next 10 years, the biometric authentication industry could see exponential growth in transaction volumes as the demand for secure, efficient digital identification continues to rise,” said Rhon Daguro, CEO of authID. “authID’s biometric identity platform delivers speed and accuracy while processing captured biometrics, and identifying users as legitimate or fraudulent, all within a market-leading 700 milliseconds. We look forward to working closely with our new partner to deliver the confidence that user onboarding and authentication are accurate and completed in record time.”

    About authID

    authID (Nasdaq: AUID) ensures enterprises “Know Who’s Behind the DeviceTM” for every customer or employee login and transaction through its easy-to-integrate, patented, biometric identity platform. authID quickly and accurately verifies a user’s identity and eliminates any assumption of ‘who’ is behind a device to prevent cybercriminals from compromising account openings or taking over accounts. Combining secure digital onboarding, and biometric authentication and account recovery, with a fast, accurate, user-friendly experience, authID delivers biometric identity processing in 700ms. Binding a biometric root of trust for each user to their account, authID stops fraud at onboarding, detects and stops deepfakes, eliminates password risks and costs, and provides the fastest, frictionless, and the more accurate user identity experience while preserving privacy demanded by today’s digital ecosystem. Contact us to discover how authID can help your organization secure your workforce or consumer applications against identity fraud, cyberattacks and account takeover.

    Investor Relations Contacts

    Gateway Group, Inc. 
    Cody Slach and Alex Thompson
    1-949-574-3860
    AUID@gateway-grp.com
    Investor-Relations@authid.ai  

    Media Contacts

    Walter Fowler
    1-631-334-3864
    wfowler@nexttechcomms.com

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This Press Release includes “forward-looking statements.” All statements other than statements of historical facts included herein, including, without limitation, those regarding the future business strategy, plans and objectives of management for future operations of both authID Inc. and its customers and business partners, are forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements are based on a number of assumptions regarding authID’s present and future business strategies, and the environment in which authID expects to operate in the future, which assumptions may or may not be fulfilled in practice. Actual results may vary materially from the results anticipated by these forward-looking statements as a result of a variety of risk factors, including the successful implementation and ramp of the services to be provided under the new technology partner agreement and their adoption by the partner’s customers and their respective users; changes in laws, regulations and practices; changes in domestic and international economic and political conditions, the as yet uncertain impact of the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, inflationary pressures, changes in interest rates, and others. See the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023 filed at www.sec.gov and other documents filed with the SEC for other risk factors which investors should consider. These forward-looking statements speak only as to the date of this release and cannot be relied upon as a guide to future performance. authID expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to disseminate any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained in this release to reflect any changes in its expectations with regard thereto or any change in events, conditions, or circumstances on which any statement is based.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Enphase Energy Launches New Home Energy Systems in Romania with IQ Battery 5P and IQ8 Microinverters

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    FREMONT, Calif., Nov. 04, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Enphase Energy, Inc. (NASDAQ: ENPH), a global energy technology company and the world’s leading supplier of microinverter-based solar and battery systems, today announced the launch of its most powerful Enphase® Energy System to-date, featuring the new IQ® Battery 5P and IQ8™ Microinverters, for customers in Romania.

    The new Enphase Energy System with the IQ Battery 5P offers a significantly improved experience for homeowners and installers. It enables configurations ranging from 5 to 60 kWh with more power, resilient wired communication, and an improved commissioning experience. Homeowners can also use the Enphase® App to monitor performance and intelligently manage their battery systems, including the self-consumption feature to help minimize the use of electricity from the grid.

    “The Enphase IQ8 Microinverters and IQ Battery 5P are setting a new standard for efficiency and reliability in the Romanian market,” said Stefan Sandu, founder and CEO of Pamasa Construct srl, an installer of Enphase products in Romania. “These innovative solutions empower Romanian homeowners to maximize their solar energy potential. We’re excited to be part of this energy transformation.”

    IQ8 Microinverters help maximize energy production and can manage a continuous DC current of 14 amperes, supporting higher-powered solar modules up to 560 W DC. The three newest microinverters – IQ8MC™, IQ8AC™, and IQ8HC™ – feature a peak output power of 330 W, 366 W, and 384 W, respectively. All IQ8 Series Microinverters activated in Romania come with a 15-year warranty.

    “We are thrilled to expand our product lineup with Enphase IQ8 Microinverters,” said dr. Nelu Mihai, co-founder of Solaris Romana Americana, a distributor of Enphase products in Romania. “These state-of-the-art solar products, promoting distributed solar based on AC, enhance safely and secure energy independence for customers using Enphase solar systems. We believe that, paired with Enphase’s high quality, strong cybersecurity and warranty, they will provide outstanding value for installers, homeowners, and business owners in Romania. Enphase with its advanced technology has been the essential innovation pioneer of the world’s solar industry since 2006 and will become essential for Romania, as well.“

    “The introduction of the IQ8 Microinverters and IQ Battery 5P in Romania highlights Enphase’s strong commitment to providing innovative energy solutions tailored for homeowners worldwide,” said Sabbas Daniel, senior vice president of sales at Enphase Energy. “With exceptional reliability and versatility, the IQ8 Microinverters and IQ Battery 5P establish a new benchmark in home energy innovation, enabling Romanian residents to take charge of their energy independence.”

    Enphase provides 24/7 customer support and a 15-year warranty on IQ8 Microinverters and IQ Batteries activated in Romania. For more information about IQ8 Microinverters and IQ Battery 5P in Romania, please visit the website.

    About Enphase Energy, Inc.

    Enphase Energy, a global energy technology company based in Fremont, CA, is the world’s leading supplier of microinverter-based solar and battery systems that enable people to harness the sun to make, use, save, and sell their own power—and control it all with a smart mobile app. The company revolutionized the solar industry with its microinverter-based technology and builds all-in-one solar, battery, and software solutions. Enphase has shipped approximately 78.0 million microinverters, and over 4.5 million Enphase-based systems have been deployed in more than 160 countries. For more information, visit https://enphase.com/.

    ©2024 Enphase Energy, Inc. All rights reserved. Enphase Energy, Enphase, the “e” logo, IQ, and certain other marks listed at https://enphase.com/trademark-usage-guidelines are trademarks or service marks of Enphase Energy, Inc. Other names are for informational purposes and may be trademarks of their respective owners.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release may contain forward-looking statements, including statements related to the expected capabilities and performance of Enphase Energy’s technology and products, including safety, quality, and reliability; and ability to maximize energy production and minimize the use of electricity from the grid. These forward-looking statements are based on Enphase Energy’s current expectations and inherently involve significant risks and uncertainties. Actual results and the timing of events could differ materially from those contemplated by these forward-looking statements as a result of such risks and uncertainties including those risks described in more detail in Enphase Energy’s most recently filed Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, Annual Report on Form 10-K, and other documents filed by Enphase Energy from time to time with the SEC. Enphase Energy undertakes no duty or obligation to update any forward-looking statements contained in this release as a result of new information, future events or changes in its expectations, except as required by law.

    Contact:

    Enphase Energy

    press@enphaseenergy.com

    This press release was published by a CLEAR® Verified individual.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: CrytocoinMiner receives $100 million in strategic financing, bringing better profits to investors

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SLOUGH, United Kingdom, Nov. 04, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — CrytocoinMiner, a leading decentralized cloud mining platform, announced the completion of a $100 million strategic financing round with participation from Nomad Capital, No Limit Holdings, Sky9 Capital, UOB-Signum Blockchain Fund, Interop Ventures and nine other well-known institutional investors.

    The funding will accelerate decentralized governance for public goods financing and the adoption and strategic expansion of the CrytocoinMiner mining technology stack.

    CrytocoinMiner is a leading cloud mining infrastructure in the field of decentralized governance and public product technology. Its core products include the flagship public product equity infrastructure that enables blockchain-based incentive-based ecological financing; the application chain of the CrytocoinMiner escrow contract protocol; and the contract mechanism that protects privacy and democratizes public product financing.

    How to start cloud mining

    Step 1: Choose a Cloud Mining Provider
    CrytocoinMiner is a powerful cryptocurrency mining platform that allows you to passively earn Bitcoins without any restrictions, regardless of technical knowledge or financial resources. Once you have mined $100 worth of Bitcoins, you can transfer it to your account and trade it. Any profit is yours and you can withdraw it to your personal wallet.

    Step 2. Account Registration
    CrytocoinMiner offers a simple registration process: just enter your email address. Register now and you will get $10 for free to start mining Bitcoin.

    Step 3. Purchase a mining contract
    CrytocoinMiner offers a variety of efficient mining contracts: contract prices range from $100 to $10,000, and each package has its own return on investment and a certain contract validity period.

    Step 4: Earn Passive Income
    Cloud mining is a great way to increase your passive income. You can earn passive income the day after purchasing the contract. Passive income is the goal of every investor and trader, and CrytocoinMiner is the best choice to achieve this goal.

    Platform advantages:
    Get $10 for free immediately after registration, and get $0.3 for signing in every day. The profit level is very high, and it is not a problem to make 1,000 yuan a day. No additional service fees are required; Cloudflare® security protection; technical support 24/7.

    In a nutshell
    As the cryptocurrency market continues to grow, CrytocoinMiner remains a pioneer in the industry, providing an easy path to profitability. Whether you are a crypto enthusiast or a newbie, CrytocoinMiner invites you to join the ranks of easy passive income.

    Overall, CrytocoinMiner demonstrates the power of simplicity in the world of cryptocurrency. It emphasizes ease of use, security, and the potential for excess income every day, providing unique opportunities for beginners and experts alike. Join CrytocoinMiner today and embark on the easiest and most rewarding journey to online wealth.

    If you want to learn more about CrytocoinMiner, please visit its official website: https://crytocoinminer.com/

    Contact:
    Audrey Doreen
    info@crytocoinminer.com

    Disclaimer: This content is provided by the CrytocoinMiner. The statements, views, and opinions expressed are solely those of the content provider and do not represent those of any affiliated parties. This information does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice and should not be taken as a recommendation or endorsement of any mining platform or cryptocurrency investment. Cryptocurrency mining involves significant financial risk, including potential loss of capital, and may not be suitable for all investors. We strongly advise that you conduct your own research, assess the associated risks, and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any mining or investment decisions.

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f5d8cece-9c85-42fc-8e0d-fcae58412607

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/4e2baf39-3503-43f1-a682-6d929f06b1ea

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/ce57cd4c-c6a2-4dfc-ba2a-a9bdb0cdafec

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Leong Sing Chiong: Tokenisation in financial services – pathways to scale

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Ladies and Gentlemen, Good Morning.

    Introduction

    It gives me great pleasure to join you at the inaugural Layer One Summit. 

    In 2023, at the Singapore FinTech Festival, MAS held up a possible future state of financial services, where financial assets can be transacted seamlessly across multiple trading venues through digital assets, digital money and interoperable digital networks.  

    Benefits of tokenisation 

    We saw the potential for tokenisation in financial services, where tokenised financial assets, can be exchanged directly on a programmable platform without the need for intermediaries.

    In allowing for the simultaneous exchange of two assets in real-time, and enabling the exchange of information and value to happen in a single step, this can help eliminate settlement risk, duplicative reconciliation, and increase the efficiency of transaction processing. 

    With a programmable platform that allows for pre-determined conditions to be encoded with the tokenised asset(s), this can also facilitate greater straight-through processing in capital market transactions, and greater efficiency in asset servicing.  

    Industry showcase of benefits of asset tokenisation

    We are seeing greater momentum towards tokenisation in financial services. Let me provide some examples of industry pilots which have been progressing well under MAS’ asset tokenisation initiative, or Project Guardian. 

    First, on FX, 

    • Imagine a scenario where a corporate treasury can initiate and receive payments around the clock (24/7), seamlessly bridging across multiple locations in an increasingly global business landscape. This is precisely what Ant International is striving to achieve through tokenisation to serve their 1.2 billion buyers and 2 million sellers across 200 countries.
    • Ant International is leveraging tokenised deposits of its partner banks such as HSBC and DBS, for real-time payments, across various currencies.
    • The beneficiary within Ant International’s network can receive its funds in its domiciled currency, for instance US Dollar, in the form of a tokenised deposit.
    • This is made possible through an FX provider which provides a price quote and liquidity for the currency pair.
    • The originating currency, for instance Singapore dollar, is then swapped instantaneously through a smart contract to US Dollar. The smart contract also incorporates an automatic anti-money laundering check to meet regulatory compliance requirements.
    • This illustrates how tokenisation can transform how corporate treasuries manage multi-currency assets while offering the promise of faster, more seamless treasury position management, eliminating delays and significantly enhancing overall operational efficiency.

    For Funds, 

    • UBS and Swift, in partnership with Chainlink, are collaborating on an end-to-end payment orchestration capability to automate fund subscription and redemption processes.
    • This industry trial showcases that tokenisation can automate payment initiation and confirmation processes, provide real-time update on payment status, while riding on existing processes and standards for Fund Distributors and Fund Administrators. This can greatly reduce operational risks and costs. 

    Bringing both Funds and FX together, 

    • A solution developed by Citi and Fidelity International combined the properties of two distinct asset classes –  tokenised Money Market Funds (MMFs) and FX swaps. 
    • This solution seamlessly combined yield generation of tokenised MMF tokens with real-time digital currency risk hedging. Today, FX hedging is generally carried out separately from the money market fund investments. 

    Central banks have also been particularly active in exploring the use and development of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs). Central bank pilots have ranged from multi-CBDC arrangements, programming compliance for cross-border use cases, and the use of wholesale CBDCs in the settlement of tokenised securities.

    All these efforts point to the fact that interest and investment in asset tokenisation is deepening across asset classes, jurisdictions and currencies. 

    However, my sense is that we have reached an inflexion point.  Notwithstanding the significant efforts of various players to push the boundaries of tokenisation in financial services, no one has really succeeded in achieving scale.  Many promising use cases have not yet gained industry wide traction.  Further, there is a need for supporting infrastructure to enable good use cases to scale beyond individual networks.

    Pathways to scale

    For tokenisation to scale and achieve industry wide adoption, we need to see tokenised activity span across assets, across key currencies, across networks, and also to interoperate with existing systems. 

    We think there are four jigsaw puzzle pieces that need to come together to support industry-wide deployment of tokenised assets: 1) Liquidity, 2) Foundational Infrastructure 3) Standardised Frameworks and Protocols 4) Common Settlement Assets.

    First, enhancing liquidity.

    When we survey the current digital and tokenisation landscape, we see a real dichotomy. On the one hand, there are good reasons to believe in the potential for leveraging this technology to reap efficiency benefits for wholesale markets. On the other hand, the proliferation of disparate tokenisation efforts has resulted in market fragmentation, and increased funding and opportunity costs. To ensure that tokenisation is viable, we need deeper liquidity across primary and secondary markets.

    To address this, MAS is facilitating industry’s efforts to establish commercial networks for payments, capital raising, and secondary trading of tokenised assets. 

    • An example of this is the formation of the Guardian Wholesale Network Industry Group by Citi, HSBC, Schroders, Standard Chartered and UOB. They are collaborating on the development of a multi-member network to scale their respective asset tokenisation trials. 
    • The involvement of multiple participants, support for multi-asset and multi-currency transactions can engender deeper liquidity across primary and secondary markets for tokenised asset transactions.

    We welcome more commercial networks to be set up to drive greater activity in tokenised assets and payments. 

    Second, developing foundational digital infrastructure.

    To support the formation of commercial networks, and to enable seamless transactions of tokenised assets across such networks, there is a need for a base layer foundational digital infrastructure that can meet the needs of regulated financial institutions. Today, such foundational digital infrastructures lie on a spectrum:

    • At one end, public permissionless blockchains have attracted many types of users and applications.  But the overall governance of such structures suffers from the lack of accountability, anonymity of service providers, and legal uncertainty over who’s responsible for the blockchain performance and resiliency. 
    • Some financial institutions have developed their own private permissioned blockchains to offer digital asset services to their customers. These set-ups are generally designed to meet the applicable legal and regulatory frameworks. But they suffer from a lack of interoperability, leading to fragmentation.
    • So, if not public blockchain, nor private permissioned networks, then what? We think the answer perhaps lies in between: public, permissioned networks. 
      • Public permissioned networks are built on similar principles of openness and accessibility as the public internet, but with robust built-in safeguards for its use as a network for value exchange. 
      • For example, while the network may be accessible to financial institutions that meet eligible criteria, the governing rule may restrict membership to regulated financial institutions only.  This means developing a public blockchain equivalent infrastructure, but serving regulated wholesale financial markets.

    With this objective in mind, MAS launched the Global Layer One (GL1) initiative last year, to foster the development of a public permissioned foundational digital infrastructure, upon which commercial networks could be deployed. 

    Since the launch, MAS and a core group of global banks, namely BNY, Citi, J.P. Morgan, MUFG and Societe Generale-FORGE, have been leading efforts to define the business, governance, risk, legal and technology requirements of the GL1 Platform. These 5 banks represent participation from the G3 currencies, for a start.  

    Beyond global banks, foundational digital infrastructures can also support today’s global market infrastructure players, including global exchanges and custodians, on which high volumes of financial assets are traded, settled and custodised.  This will enable a larger universe of tokenised assets to be traded seamlessly across borders.

    • In this regard, I would like to welcome Euroclear and HSBC as new industry participants to the GL1 initiative.  

    With these new participants, GL1 will also expand its scope of work in the coming year to encompass the following areas: 

    • Developing platform requirements to deploy financial applications such as cross-border payments and collateral management.  It will also design an appropriate business model to ensure that the GL1 platform can be financially sustainable. 
    • Ecosystem development, which includes (i) the development of risk and governance principles, and settlement arrangements on market infrastructures and (ii), asset lifecycle specifications and programmable compliance templates for tokenised assets. 

    As we make further progress on advancing the GL1, we welcome broader participation from other banks, custodians, financial market infrastructure service providers and policymakers who are able and keen to contribute to this endeavour.

    Third, there is a need for common industry standards to facilitate broad based industry adoption of tokenised assets. 

    The absence of globally accepted taxonomies and standards in relation to digital assets, increases the costs of adoption as financial institutions would need to invest and support different types of technologies.

    This can be addressed through industry frameworks.

    • For instance, in fixed Income, MAS has worked with global industry associations such as International Capital Market Association (ICMA), Capital Market and Technology Association (CMTA) and the Global Financial Markets Association (GFMA), to develop a Guardian Fixed Income Framework which we are publishing today.
      • The framework integrates the bond data taxonomy, token standards and design principles for tokenised securities, allowing for a standardised approach towards tokenisation in the fixed income market. 
    • In Asset and Wealth Management, MAS is also publishing today a non-prescriptive set of standards and industry best practices for tokenised funds, or the Guardian Funds Framework. 
      • The report provides recommendations for establishing a framework for the tokenisation of the fund lifecycle and activities, including asset servicing, and on-chain share register archetypes and data. 
      • The framework also proposes a composable technical standard, which demonstrates how new tokenised assets, which are a composite of multiple asset classes, can be readily created. This gives fund managers the ability to provide investors with more customised investment options at lower cost and greater flexibility.

    The final piece of the jigsaw puzzle is developing common settlement assets. 

    To ensure settlement of tokenised assets in financial markets, regulated and credible forms of tokenised money is needed.

    • The cash leg of most tokenised asset transactions generally involves tokenised commercial bank money, or tokenised bank liabilities. These are issued by commercial banks and carry the credit risks of the issuing bank. 
    • Apart from tokenised bank liabilities, common settlement assets can also be used to settle tokenised asset transactions. A common settlement asset is one that is agreed by transacting parties, and can be credit-risk free such as a wholesale CBDC. The use of such common settlement assets can help to reduce settlement risk and market fragmentation.
    • Our view is that when asset tokenisation activity grows and eventually hits critical mass in key asset classes, this will drive demand for wholesale CBDCs as a common settlement asset.

    Hence, MAS will be launching a Singapore Dollar (SGD) Testnet, to enable financial institutions’ access to common settlement assets for market testing purposes.

    • The SGD Testnet will offer three features, namely 
      • A Settlement facility where wholesale CBDC can be issued, transferred and redeemed by financial institutions
      • Programmability to automate and programme conditional triggers for transactions involving tokenised assets 
      • Interoperability which facilitates linkages with existing financial market infrastructures 
    • The SGD Testnet will be made available to eligible financial institutions participating in MAS’ digital asset and digital money initiatives, including Project Guardian and Project Orchid. 
    • The first set of participating FIs to access the SGD Testnet includes DBS, OCBC, Standard Chartered and UOB.
    • We welcome more FIs to come forward with interesting use cases and utilise the SGD Testnet.

    Conclusion

    In conclusion, asset tokenisation can deliver significant efficiency gains to be reaped in the financial services industry, particularly in wholesale financial markets. 

    Increasingly, we are seeing more FIs which are keen to deploy asset tokenisation solutions commercially. This augurs well for future growth. 

    Given this growing interest, it is imperative that we develop pathways and tools to scale the adoption of asset tokenisation to reap network effects. 

    The initiatives that I have mentioned today are important steps that we see in helping the industry to achieve scale, namely 

    • Wholesale commercial networks 
    • Foundational digital infrastructure 
    • Common industry tokenisation standards and taxonomies 
    • Common settlement assets 

    These initiatives represent pathways to help to scale vertically, from an asset class perspective, as well as horizontally, at a digital foundational infrastructure level. 

    Viewed holistically, we see a possible future architecture of a globally scalable tokenised asset infrastructure that can enable interoperability across commercial networks, while powering tokenised asset transactions seamlessly across borders and markets. 

    This will not be an overnight phenomenon, and will require a whole-of-industry effort and commitment. It will also require close collaboration with policymakers: 

    • Through Guardian and GL1, we engaged early on central banks, regulatory bodies, international standards setting bodies, including the Banque de France, European Central Bank, Japan Financial Services Agency (FSA), Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA), the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), and staff of the IMF early on to incorporate their insights and experience in this space. 
    • Today, I would like to take the opportunity to also welcome staff of the World Bank and Deutsche Bundesbank to the Project Guardian Policymaker Group.
    • The role of this policymaker group is important as they help provide inputs on governance arrangements, guidance on how GL1 infrastructures can be developed in line with global standards, and advice on appropriate regulatory guardrails for tokenised asset transactions. 

    While this conference is called the Layer One Summit, we are in some ways only really at Everest base camp. There is still some way to go before we get from base camp to the Summit.  But with these building blocks in place, we hope that they serve as the necessary tools for the industry achieve tokenisation at scale, and scale the Summit.

    I look forward to the sharing of great insights these two days, and wish you all a fantastic Singapore FinTech Festival week. Thanks very much!

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Tuomas Välimäki: Opening remarks – Nordic Cyber in Finance Conference

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Dear colleagues, dear friends,

    A very warm welcome to the seventh Nordic Cyber in Finance conference, hosted by Suomen Pankki, the Bank of Finland. In Finland, we hold resilience and preparedness in high regard, and I am no exception to this. It is a privilege and an honor to open this highly topical event today.

    Over the course of the day, we will explore different themes centered on resilience and preparedness. We will deal with hybrid threats in cyber space – critical infrastructure protection, information manipulation and cyber defense tools. These topics will be covered by a distinguished line-up of speakers ranging from cyber security industry to financial institutions as well as authorities. I will now provide you with an overview of what lies ahead and, more importantly, emphasize why these topics matter.

    Network Effects, Interconnectedness, and Collaboration

    The financial industry prospers on increasing network effects. This creates an inherent drive for growth, where often the largest players dominate the market. As businesses scale, the dependency within the industry deepens, making individual entities critical to the overall network. While this growth may benefit business, it also magnifies the importance of preparedness, as failures can become too large to bear.

    This is true not only for payment systems and commercial banks but also for central banks. For instance, over the last two decades, TARGET services have evolved into one of the most efficient settlement systems globally, a testament to the power of scale. Today we will learn how Eurosystem secures Europe’s financial backbone, i.e. the TARGET services. Ensuring the security of such a critical infrastructure is a mission that demands relentless efforts. We must maintain and strengthen community wide partnerships to safeguard this backbone.

    Critical Infrastructure and Path Dependency

    The interdependencies within critical infrastructure extend beyond finance. Consider the electrical grid, which the financial sector heavily relies on. If a major electricity producer or distributor fails, the consequences can be swift and severe for the whole electric system – much like the systemic impact that we’ve witnessed also in financial crises. These interconnected systems highlight that path dependencies are not industry-specific; they are intertwined across multiple sectors, systems, agreements and customers. 

    While banks are generally well-prepared for major disruptions, the same cannot always be said for the average citizen or business. For example, large banking institutions are likely to sustain operations during a power outage, but the same cannot be expected for the average citizen or a small firm. The combination of systemic risk and contagion is a central concern for central banks. It underscores the need for a holistic approach to resilience – one that draws lessons also from other sectors. Today, we will hear from a power system network operator on how they as a critical service providers approach disruptions like geopolitics and green transition. 

    Hearts and Minds

    Hybrid warfare isn’t limited to physical infrastructure; it also targets our hearts and minds. Some might argue – and I expect some of today’s speakers will – that safeguarding our mental processes is even more crucial than securing infrastructure. While I won’t take sides, I do believe both are essential. 

    The way people think and form opinions can have profound impact on societal order. There is ample evidence throughout the history, how minds have been influenced and opinions shaped. Without listing historical nor recent examples, I trust we can all agree on this point. I also believe social media and new technologies have evidenced their capabilities for spreading misinformation at hyper speed and sowing widespread distrust.

    The importance of this issue is especially true in the financial sector, where trust is paramount. Lose trust, and customers will leave. Lose trust at the systemic level, and civil order can quickly unravel.

    Loss of confidence is central to all systemic crises. Even if not the initial cause, it accelerates crises to new levels. Financial crises have demonstrated how liquidity position of an institution is not only depending on the institution in question but also on the confidence of others. Trust can deteriorate through contagion – even if the crisis begins with another institution.

    While technical problems can often be resolved, a coordinated attack on both technology and public trust poses a far greater threat.

    Now, imagine a hybrid scenario where critical infrastructure is compromised or even damaged. For this example, the exact location of the damage is irrelevant, as we normally have robust measures in place across sectors to compensate for lost capabilities. We can re-route telecommunications, implement temporary solutions within the power grid, and even deploy backup clearing systems if necessary. Next, imagine that a second or third element in this scenario involves eroding overall trust in the financial system. Suddenly, the issue becomes contagious, escalates rapidly, and becomes much harder to contain – a textbook example of how systemic risks emerge. This is a fascinating topic, and fortunately, we have an entire session dedicated to it today.

    Facilitating the Discussion

    The financial industry is well-positioned to lead discussions on hybrid threats. Our existence depends on trust, and our interconnectedness means that threats can have a clear and wide-reaching impact. We engage in these conversations not to seek trouble but to emphasize the importance of proactive, coordinated responses in a highly networked world.

    While time may be on the attacker’s side, we must remain vigilant and learn when and how to respond effectively. In this learning process acting together is vital. Cyber threats don’t follow a zero-sum game. If one institution’s trust is compromised, the effects ripple industry wide. Indeed, when it comes to fighting cyber-crime or hybrid warfare, two plus two definitely equals much more than four. I am confident that today’s event is a step toward building a stronger, more resilient industry and society.

    I sincerely hope you find the topics we discuss today both engaging and thought-provoking. With ten presentations and two panel discussions ahead, let’s make the most of this opportunity to collaborate and learn from one another.

    Thank you for your attention and once again, a warm welcome to this year’s Nordic Cyber in Finance conference! 

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Martin Schlegel, Sébastien Kraenzlin: Swiss National Bank to develop new banknote series. Theme of new series: Switzerland and its altitudes

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Ladies and gentlemen

    I would like to welcome you to the Swiss National Bank’s news conference today.

    Development of new banknote series

    I am particularly pleased to be able to inform you that the SNB is to begin developing a new series of banknotes. Since a new banknote series is introduced every 15 to 20 years, it’s not every Chairman of the Governing Board that has the privilege of making such an announcement. This is therefore a rather special moment not only for the SNB, but also for me.

    We introduced the current banknote series, so familiar to us all by now, between 2016 and 2019. At present, there are around 425 million of these banknotes in circulation. They are of high quality and are attractively designed; they are also available in practical denominations and formats, and offer good protection against counterfeiting. You may be asking yourselves, if this is so, why then is the SNB launching a new series? The answer is simple: to ensure that this remains the case in future.

    It is impossible to imagine Switzerland without cash. Cash is and will remain a popular method of payment. While cards and apps are being used ever more frequently for payments, there is no question that the Swiss population continues to hold cash in high regard. This is borne out by our surveys of private individuals and companies. Today, around one in three payments in Switzerland is made with cash. We are convinced that cash will remain a widely used means of payment in the future. This comes as no surprise given the advantages it has to offer. Cash is available to everyone and is simple to use. If you pay by cash, you need neither a device nor electricity. With cash, payments can thus be made reliably even in situations where, for example, the power fails or IT outages paralyse cashless payment systems. Cash also helps you keep better track of your spending. We are therefore pleased and proud to fulfil our statutory mandate and announce the launch of a new banknotes series.

    Our banknotes have to meet high standards in terms of security, functionality and graphic design.

    First, the banknotes must be secure. If you receive a banknote, you must be able to check quickly and easily whether it is genuine. Banknotes therefore need security features that are simple to identify and difficult to counterfeit.

    Second, the banknotes have to be practical. It must be possible to quickly distinguish the various denominations – both for people and for machines, such as ATMs. We ensure this with different colours and lengths, as well as with blocks of raised lines for people who are visually impaired. The banknotes have to be divided up into denominations that allow you to pay as closely as possible to the desired amount. Furthermore, they have to endure the rigours of everyday use, including, for example, repeated folding or even washing.

    Third, the banknotes must be appealing. Switzerland’s banknotes are calling cards for our country; they represent Swiss values. We want this to be the case with the next series, too. The design must not only meet requirements with regard to security and functionality, but it must also weave these elements into a cohesive and aesthetically pleasing whole.

    In our experience, the lifespan of a banknote series is around 15 years, which means our current notes are already half way through. Developing new banknotes takes several years, which is why we are beginning work on the new series now. We are starting this process with a design competition in which graphic designers will have around six months to create draft banknote designs.

    Theme

    The theme of the new banknote series is ‘Switzerland and its altitudes’. In choosing this theme, we wish to pay homage to our country’s unique topography, from the Jura and the Central Plateau to the Alps; from the deepest valleys to the highest peaks. The theme aims to reflect the diversity of life at the various altitudes.

    Each of the denominations – 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 and 1000 francs – will be dedicated to one of six different altitudes: the lowlands, the Central Plateau, the Jura, the alpine foothills, the Alps and the High Alps.
    The various notes should show how people live together with nature in the different altitudinal zones. Depictions might include typical buildings, industries and customs, but also indigenous animals and plants.

    The following short film illustrates the theme.

    The theme was chosen by the Bank Council and the Governing Board of the SNB. Their decision was guided by the fact that the different altitudes are particularly characteristic attributes of Switzerland. This theme will allow the designers to create true-to-life images that encapsulate the diversity of our country: plants, animals and people in the midst of an impressive and varied landscape. The altitudes are where we live. They are the places in which we meet and engage with one another, and to which we can retreat. They can both pose challenges and give us a sense of identity. In short, with its different facets, the theme allows plenty of scope for creative design.
    Let me now hand you over to Sébastien Kraenzlin.

    I will now explain how we will be proceeding with the development of the new banknote series – the SNB’s tenth, incidentally – in the coming months.

    Design competition

    In order to generate a broad selection of ideas on the theme of ‘Switzerland and its altitudes’, we will be holding a design competition. The conditions for participation in this competition and its format can be found in a set of regulations, which is available on the SNB website.

    The design competition will help ensure that we can once again present Switzerland with an attractive and compelling series of banknotes. Allow me to take you through the key points.

    Competition assignment

    The competition assignment is to create draft designs for a new series of Swiss banknotes in the customary six denominations. The inspiration for the designs is to be taken from the six altitudes. Specifically, the lowlands for the 10-franc note, the Central Plateau for the 20-franc note, the Jura for the 50-franc note, the alpine foothills for the 100-franc note, the Alps for the 200-franc note, and the High Alps for the 1000-franc note.

    The colours of the notes will remain the same as in the current series. This makes it easy to recognise the denominations in everyday use. This is why most of our banknotes have kept the same colour since they were first issued in 1907: purple for the 1000-franc note, blue for the 100-franc note and green for the 50-franc note. The last change in colour was in the mid-1990s, when we made the 20-franc note red instead of light blue and the 10-franc note yellow instead of red, to make it easier to tell them apart.

    Application and selection procedure

    We trust there will be keen interest in participating in the design competition. The eligibility criteria are to be found in our competition regulations.

    We will select twelve of the applicants to go forward and take part in the design competition. In doing so, we will take into account the designers’ qualifications and the creativity and quality of their portfolio to date.

    Design competition process

    We will give the selected participants a detailed briefing on the assignment. They will then have from February to July 2025 to produce their draft banknote designs. This will be followed by an evaluation of the entries, with a view to giving the winner of the competition the commission to develop the banknote designs further.

    Advisory board

    In the evaluation of the designs, we will be involving an advisory board made up of recognised experts. The members of this board will be announced next year.

    Public opinion

    Banknotes are not just a means of payment for the public. They are much more. They are calling cards for our country and part of our Swiss identity. People in Switzerland are emotionally attached to our banknotes, and many take pride in their beauty. For this reason, we have decided to involve the public in the design of the new banknotes. The SNB will carry out an online survey to gauge public opinion on the new banknote designs, and the results will flow into the evaluation. We look forward to a lively participation, and will provide more information in due course.

    Deadlines and next steps

    What happens next? Two important milestones in the design competition are the presentation of the draft banknote designs in autumn 2025 and the announcement of the competition result in 2026. We are already looking forward to these two milestones. At this early stage of the project, there are still no definitive plans regarding when the new banknotes will be introduced. Our assumption is the beginning of the 2030s, at the earliest.

    Closing remarks

    Ladies and gentlemen, it will be quite some time before we can hold the new banknotes in our hands. But the anticipation is already high, and rightly so. The SNB is convinced that cash will continue to play an important role as a payment method and store of value in the future. Therefore ongoing development in terms of security technology and the redesign of the banknotes is of pivotal importance; it is also self-evident given the SNB’s statutory task of ensuring the supply and distribution of cash. In this undertaking, we will be supported by our partners in the security printing industry and in cash logistics. We are pleased to launch the development of the new banknote series with the design competition centred on the theme ‘Switzerland and its altitudes’. We invite designers in Switzerland to apply to take part in this competition.

    It is also important for us to have the Swiss population on board for this journey. We will therefore be providing updates on the work at regular intervals.

    Thank you for your attention. We will be happy to take your questions.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Letter of Intent (LOI) on expanded defence cooperation between Sweden and Hungary

    Source: Government of Sweden

    Letter of Intent (LOI) on expanded defence cooperation between Sweden and Hungary – Government.se

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    Swedish Treaty Series from Ministry of Defence

    Published

    On 16 October 2024, Minister for Defence Pål Jonson and Hungarian Minister of Defence Kristóf Szalay-Bobrovniczky signed a Letter of Intent (LOI). This LOI is a bilateral declaration on expanded defence cooperation between Sweden and Hungary.

    Download:

    This follows from the agreement concluded between Sweden and Hungary on 23 February 2024 in Budapest to sign an LOI on expanded cooperation on defence and JAS Gripen fighter aircraft.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Frank Elderson: The first decade of European supervision: taking stock and looking ahead

    Source: European Central Bank

    Keynote speech by Frank Elderson, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB and Vice-Chair of the Supervisory Board of the ECB at the “10 Years of SSM – Looking back and looking forward” conference organised by the European Banking Institute and the Hessisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst

    Frankfurt am Main, 4 November 2024

    Introduction

    Thank you for your kind invitation. It’s a pleasure to be with you this afternoon to reflect on the first decade of European banking supervision and, most importantly, to take a look at the path ahead of us.

    On this day ten years ago, the morning might have seemed just like a typical November morning in Frankfurt’s Bankenviertel: a rainy autumn day, with people heading to their offices armed with umbrellas, wearing heavy coats.

    But that day ten years ago was anything but typical.

    Because it was the first time European supervisory teams got together and started work on an important task: making sure the banking system is safe and sound on behalf of European citizens.

    At the time, some argued that integrating a fragmented system of supervision was either impossible or would take forever. Well, those pioneer European supervisors who came together on 4 November 2014 have certainly proven the sceptics wrong.

    We have come a long way since that day. The last ten years have been transformative both for the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) and the banks we supervise. We have evolved from a start-up to a mature, risk-based and effective supervisor. Banks under our supervision have also evolved significantly, building up remarkable resilience. Unlike in the crises that predated the banking union, banks have now become part of the solution to economic shocks rather than the source. That’s good news.

    There is, however, no room for complacency.

    While past achievements provide a solid foundation, they are by no means a guarantee of future success. The macro-financial environment is changing profoundly. Unlike ten years ago, when the main risks emanated from banks themselves, today prudential risks are largely driven by an increasingly volatile and uncertain external environment.

    In my remarks, I will therefore focus on how supervisors and banks must adapt to this challenging environment. I will also address suggestions being put forward by some to relax banking regulation and supervision – suggestions which in my view are misguided. Compromising the resilience that has been carefully built up over the past ten years would undermine the objective of having a financial system that can support a competitive and sustainable economy.

    The first decade of European supervision: from start-up to maturity

    But before focusing on current challenges, I hope you’ll allow me to take a brief walk down memory lane. Where did we start from? What were the expectations a decade ago? And how did we go about meeting them?

    As Europe was looking into the abyss of the euro area sovereign debt crisis in 2012, legislators agreed on nothing less than a paradigm shift – the banking union, which represented the most significant leap forward in European integration since the introduction of the euro.

    The banking union encompasses three pillars, each with a straightforward task: first, European banking supervision to ensure that banks across Europe are subject to the same rules and high-quality supervisory standards. Second, European resolution to make sure that if banks fail, they can get resolved in an orderly manner instead of relying on the public purse. And third, European deposit insurance, to make sure that when push comes to shove, all depositors enjoy the same protection, no matter where in the euro area they are based.

    As far as the supervisory pillar is concerned, the ECB and the national competent authorities that make up the SSM were given a clear mission: ensuring the safety and soundness of banks. This is not just an end in itself – it is necessary so that banks remain at the service of people and businesses by funding innovation, productivity and sustainable growth.

    The destination was clear. But we had no roadmap to show us how to get there. There was no blueprint on how to transform a fragmented system of supervision into an integrated one. So it was by no means a given that the SSM would be a success.

    In the start-up phase of the SSM we were essentially crossing the bridge we were still building: we spent the mornings recruiting the best risk experts from across Europe, the afternoons supervising significant banks, and the evenings setting up our processes.

    When we started, there were plenty of ways in which supervisors across Europe looked at risks and how best to mitigate them. They all focused on different things: while some put the emphasis on credit file reviews, others focused on scrutinising banks’ internal risk management through the lens of the internal capital adequacy assessment process. Some supervisors chose to shine the spotlight more closely on governance or on-site culture.

    Thanks to the unwavering commitment and tireless energy of supervisors from the national competent authorities and the ECB, we consolidated the best practices from this wealth of supervisory experience into a common supervisory approach. What followed was a race to the top rather than to the bottom, resulting in high-quality supervision and a level playing field.

    On our path to becoming a mature organisation, we have adapted our processes along the way. Our supervision has evolved from being predominantly rule-based and heavily codified, to having a more flexible, agile and risk-focused approach.

    And banks under our supervision have also evolved significantly over the past ten years. Today, European banks are in much better shape than a decade ago.

    For instance, the financial resilience of SSM banks has notably improved. The aggregate Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio has increased from 12.7% in 2015 to 15.8% today, the liquidity coverage ratio has increased from 138% in 2016 to 159% today and the non-performing loan ratio of significant banks has declined from 7.5% in 2015 to 1.9% today.[1]

    Moreover, risk management, the effectiveness of internal control functions and governance arrangements in SSM banks have all improved.

    Over the past ten years, banks under European supervision have shown remarkable resilience even under the most challenging circumstances. They have evolved from shock propagators to shock absorbers, stabilising rather than de-stabilising the economy as it experienced significant shocks such as the pandemic, Russia’s unjustified war against Ukraine and the rapid changes to the interest rate environment. This resilience is also a testament to the crucial role played by European supervision, confirming that the SSM has lived up to the expectations that were placed on it a decade ago.[2]

    Highly complex, volatile and challenging risk landscape

    But there is no room for complacency. We can’t assume that the achievements of the past ten years will automatically pave the way for another successful decade of resilient banks under European supervision.

    We can’t ignore the fact that the world around us is changing. The macro-financial environment is characterised by unprecedented shocks, giving rise to new risk drivers. In the words of President Lagarde, in the last three years alone we have “faced the worst pandemic since the 1920s, the worst conflict in Europe since the 1940s and the worst energy shock since the 1970s”.[3]

    And as former US Treasury secretary Larry Summers put it, “this is the most complex, disparate and cross-cutting set of challenges that I can remember in the 40 years that I have been paying attention to such things’’.[4]

    In fact, the current combination of risks, challenges and uncertainties is staggering.

    A widening geopolitical divide and a global economy that is fragmenting into competing, increasingly protectionist blocs, give rise to new geopolitical risks.

    Heightened operational headwinds such as ever-more sophisticated cyberattacks and technology disruptions are challenging banks’ operational resilience.

    And last, but, alas, not least, we see the climate and nature crises unfolding, as evidenced by the horrific events last week in Paiporta and other villages and towns in the Spanish region of Valencia. On top of the human tragedy and physical destruction, the climate and nature crises are increasingly leading to material risks for banks.

    What makes this period so unprecedented is that these challenges are not happening one after the other – they are all happening at the same time. And there is no clear sign of them going away any time soon, rather the contrary.

    So how can supervisors and banks adjust to this era of polycrises?

    Ensuring bank resilience in the era of polycrises

    First and foremost, banks’ management bodies are the ones holding the steering wheel and must ensure that banks remain resilient and prepared for this new risk landscape. This involves making sure that banks have sound risk management that is commensurate to new risk drivers, that they maintain sufficient capital headroom to cushion against credible adverse scenarios, and that banks’ management bodies are effective in their steering and oversight function.

    While acknowledging that banks’ management bodies are in the driving seat, as supervisors we keep a close eye to ensure that no material risks are left unaddressed.[5] This means that we must be able to identify the risks and then ensure that banks are resilient to these risks.

    To ensure that our risk identification can keep up with the changing risk landscape, we have made our supervisory processes more agile. We simply cannot look at every risk with the same intensity, every year, in every bank we supervise. We have therefore started to implement a supervisory risk tolerance framework aiming at freeing up the desks and minds of supervisors. This allows our supervisors to focus on those risks that are most pertinent and the supervisory actions that are most impactful. In the same vein, we have also reformed our Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP) to make it more targeted and risk-based. Moreover, we are increasingly using supervisory technology tools – also known as suptech – to detect risks early on and move closer to real-time supervision.[6]

    These improvements to our processes give our supervisory teams more time to focus on the most relevant risks. By detecting vulnerabilities that would otherwise only surface later, we help banks to be better prepared and build up resilience proactively.

    Let me illustrate this with an example. Threats from cyberattacks are on the increase and are challenging banks’ operational resilience. In 2022, 50% of our supervised entities were subject to at least one successful attack – that number rose to 68% in just one year.[7] In order to help banks better identify their vulnerabilities to cyber risks and bolster their operational resilience, earlier this year we conducted a cyber resilience stress test[8] to gauge how well banks would be able to respond to and recover from a successful cyberattack while maintaining their critical functions and services. The cyber resilience stress test was an important learning exercise for banks; it helped them pinpoint areas where they need to build greater operational resilience to cyberattacks, which are unlikely to fade away in the current geopolitical risk environment.

    Let’s shift our focus from risk identification to remediation. As supervisors we must ensure that the risks we identify in our risk assessments are adequately managed. This also means that if we find deficiencies in the way banks are managing their risks, they must be remediated fully and in a timely manner, not at some unspecified point in the distant future. This is why we are putting more emphasis on impact and effectiveness.[9]

    To ensure full and timely remediation of our supervisory findings, we set out a time-bound remediation path. If a bank is not remedying the deficiency at a speed that will ensure full and timely remediation by the pre-established timeline, we will step up our supervisory action by deploying more intrusive measures from our ample supervisory toolkit. This is what we call the “escalation ladder”.

    The use of supervisory powers to compel banks to make concrete improvements is not just something we do within the SSM; it is international best practice.[10] The disorderly events of the March 2023 banking turmoil were a clear reminder of what can happen when banks leave material shortcomings unaddressed for too long.

    Banks and supervisors need to have the capacity to focus on emerging challenges. That’s why it is important to declutter our desks by tackling supervisory findings that have been with us for too long. While this is always an imperative, it is especially pertinent in the current challenging risk landscape.

    Let me illustrate this with the example of risk data aggregation and reporting. It is very hard to imagine any bank being able to appropriately manage its risks without strong risk data reporting. A bank’s ability to manage and aggregate risk-related data effectively is a pre-requisite for sound decision-making and robust risk governance. In fact, the Capital Requirements Directive, as transposed into national law, requires banks to put processes in place to identify all material risks. Worryingly, risk data aggregation and reporting was the lowest-scoring sub-category of internal governance in the 2023 SREP. In other words, despite the work done by supervisors over the years, too many banks still don’t have adequate risk data aggregation and reporting capabilities.

    It should not be a surprise that ECB Banking Supervision is stepping up the escalation ladder, using more intrusive supervisory tools to ensure that banks have adequate risk data aggregation capabilities. It’s not about forcing banks to do something that is merely an added perk; it’s about making sure they are able to manage material risks adequately and in good time. In a rapidly changing risk environment where prompt availability of reliable data has become essential, timely remediation of our supervisory findings on risk data aggregation is more important than ever.

    Deregulation and lenient supervision would compromise resilience

    After a decade of European supervision, it is not only the external risk environment that has changed. The current debate suggests that the perception by some of the role of financial regulation and supervision is also changing.

    Ten years ago, with the gloomy memories of the global financial crisis lingering in people’s minds, there was a strong consensus across society on the need for strong financial regulation and supervision in order to safeguard the public good of financial stability.

    Today, it appears that the pendulum is slowly swinging in the opposite direction. Some have raised the question as to whether regulation and supervision have become too conservative, to the point that they may constrain growth.

    Let me be clear: the argument being put forward in favour of relaxing banking regulation and supervision in order to promote growth is misguided.[11]

    We can’t allow the memory of the global financial crisis to fade. Its lessons are as relevant today as they were back in 2012, when the banking union was created. As deputy governor of the Bank of England, Sam Woods, correctly said, the great financial crisis was “the biggest growth-destroying event in recent economic history”.[12] The crisis was a stark reminder of the economic, social and fiscal hardship that weakly regulated and supervised banks can cause for people. The last thing we should do is ignore the lessons of the financial crisis and allow a regulatory race to the bottom, which would compromise the resilience that has been carefully built up over the last decade.

    It is a fundamental misconception to frame safety and competitiveness as opposing forces.

    It is essential to remember that resilient and well-capitalised banks are a pre-condition for competitiveness and sustainable growth.

    Strong and resilient banks are best equipped to lend to the real economy, funding innovation, investment and growth, even during economic downturns.[13] Banking deregulation or more lenient supervision would weaken the foundations of growth.

    It is true that European growth has been sluggish when compared with other regions, and addressing it is rightly a top priority. That is why we need policies to tackle the root causes of low productivity, promote innovation and bolster the single European market.

    For instance, the EU will need an additional €5.4 trillion between 2025 and 2031 to advance our green transformation, accelerate the digitalisation of our economy and bolster our defence capabilities.[14] Faced with this mammoth task, deepening the capital markets union to help guide the required financing flows should be our highest priority. This will help channel private investments towards supporting innovation and the twin green and digital transition – ultimately fostering EU competitiveness.

    To speed up the integration of a single banking market in Europe, we should now move forward and complete the banking union.

    As a first step, we must enhance the crisis management and deposit insurance framework so that the failures of small and medium-sized banks can be dealt with more effectively.

    Second, we would welcome if Member States were to resume discussions on setting-up a European-level public backstop to provide temporary liquidity funding to banks following resolution. The credibility of the resolution framework in Europe would be significantly enhanced by setting up a framework for liquidity in resolution.

    Moreover, building on the strong foundations of the SSM and the Single Resolution Mechanism, we must pave the way for a common European deposit insurance scheme (EDIS). In the first decade of the SSM, risks have been significantly reduced and common supervisory standards have been established. These preconditions for EDIS have now been met, and moving it forward will be important for severing any remaining feedback loops between banks and sovereigns, given that these proved so harmful during the sovereign debt crisis.

    Conclusion

    Let me conclude.

    Ten years ago today, when European supervisory teams started to come together for the first time, it was not at all certain that the SSM would be a success.

    We have since built a strong and effective supervisory framework in Europe, perceptive to evolving risks and – whenever necessary and appropriate – insistent in making sure that material risks are addressed. European banks have notably improved, proving resilient to shocks that we couldn’t have imagined a decade ago. This resilience is also a result of the strengthened supervisory and regulatory framework put in place after the global financial crisis, including the creation of the banking union.

    Ten years ago, the first Vice-Chair of the SSM, Sabine Lautenschläger, invoked the parallel of an athlete at the beginning of a career, who trained extremely hard and achieved an excellent result in a first major tournament.[15] To turn this promising start into a track record of sustained high performance, the athlete clearly cannot afford to rest on her laurels. Instead, she needs to go right back to the routine of constant training, to keep developing her skills and thus continue to build the foundation for future success on a day-to-day basis.

    This conclusion is as relevant today as it was ten year ago, especially considering the challenges along the path ahead.

    Considering the macro-financial environment and volatile risk landscape, it is safe to say that there is a high likelihood of unprecedented shocks continuing to emerge over the next decade. To make sure banks continue to serve European households and businesses under these challenging circumstances, we must ensure they remain resilient. Because a stable banking system forms the bedrock of long-term competitiveness and sustainable growth.

    European supervisors will continue to work tirelessly to make sure banks are well capitalised and adequately manage their risks. In this way, in ten years’ time we can celebrate another successful decade of resilient banks under European supervision.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: Metal Sky Star Acquisition Corporation Announces LOI with Fedilco Group Limited

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, Nov. 04, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Metal Sky Star Acquisition Corporation, a Cayman Islands exempted company (NASDAQ: MSSA) (“Metal Sky Star” or the “Company”), announced today that it has entered into a letter of intent (the “LOI”) with Fedilco Group Limited, a Cyprus-based company (“Fedilco”) holding an 80% equity interest in Viva Armenia Closed Joint-Stock Company, an Armenia-based telecom company (“Viva”). Pursuant to the LOI, Metal Sky Star expresses interest in acquiring all the issued and outstanding shares of Fedilco. The parties will seek necessary permissions and/or approvals from the Republic of Armenia’s state authorities for the proposed transaction.

    Viva stands out as the sole telecom company in Armenia included in the country’s Top 10 taxpayers list, underscoring its economic impact and significant contributions to national development. Viva currently has over 2.3 million unique subscribers (2,327,684) and holds a 61% share by active subscribers and 58.18% by total revenue in Armenia’s telecom market. Viva’s team comprises 1,132 employees who support Viva’s mission to make mobile services widely accessible, ensuring subscribers stay connected both locally and globally.

    Viva has established roaming partnerships with 529 operators across 192 countries, demonstrating a strong commitment to maintaining connections for its customers worldwide. It also pioneered corporate social responsibility (“CSR”) as a management model in Armenia’s telecom industry, guided by ISO 26000 standards on community impact and sustainability.

    “We are excited to announce this LOI with Fedilco,” said Wenxi He, CEO of Metal Sky Star. “Viva is recognized as a trusted telecom market leader across Armenia, celebrated for its extensive reach and customer-first approach. We are confident that this partnership will position us well to capture Armenia’s economic growth trajectory and create added value for our shareholders.”

    About Metal Sky Star Acquisition Corporation

    Metal Sky Star Acquisition Corporation is a blank check company formed under Cayman Islands law to effect mergers, share exchanges, asset acquisitions, stock purchases, reorganizations, or similar business combinations with one or more businesses.

    About Fedilco Group Limited

    Fedilco Group Limited, incorporated in Cyprus, is the controlling shareholder of Viva, the most valuable company in Armenia’s telecom sector and a model of innovation in the telecom industry.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release includes “forward-looking statements” concerning the proposed transaction with Fedilco. Forward-looking statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond the control of the Company, as outlined in the Company’s annual report for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2023, filed with the SEC on August 30, 2024, and available at www.sec.gov. The Company is under no obligation to update these statements for revisions or changes after the release date unless required by law.

    Company Contacts:

    Wenxi He
    Chief Executive Officer
    221 River Street, 9th Floor,
    Hoboken, New Jersey
    (201) 721-8789
    Email: olivia.he@gmail.com
    olivia@metalskystar.com

    Source: Metal Sky Star Acquisition Corporation

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM announces further funding for the National Crime Agency (NCA) and new migration returns figures

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The PM has announced two new elements of this government’s approach to boost border security and restore order to the asylum system.

    The Prime Minister has announced two new elements of this government’s approach to boost border security and restore order to the asylum system – a £58 million boost for the National Crime Agency (NCA) and new figures showing 9,400 people with no right to be here have been returned since the government took power.

    The NCA will receive a £58 million increase in its core budget for the 2025/26 financial year, representing a 9% rise compared to 2024/25. 

     This uplift in funding will:  

    • Deliver specialist operational equipment such as covert audio/video tools and covert tracking capabilities (including in the maritime domain).

    • Increase the amount of leads we generate through analysis of data to stop criminals in their tracks.  

    • Allow us to keep pace with the ever more sophisticated ways online criminals hide their tracks by bringing in threat specific data from international partners, industry and covert sources. 

    • Expand access to datasets and systems to NCA intelligence and investigative teams, borders staff and policing partners to give them direct access to the single intelligence picture. 

    • Increase the skills and tools available to forensic officers.  

    • Increase the technology available to officers to allow them to collaborate and work more productively. 

    The PM has also announced new returns figures following an ad-hoc statistical release from the Home Office today. 

    • Since this government took power (up to 28 October), a total of 9,400 returns were recorded (including both enforced and voluntary returns).  

    • There were 2,590 enforced returns of people with no legal right to remain in the UK. This compares with 2,170 enforced returns over the same period in 2023, an increase of 19%.   

    • Of the total returns, 1,520 enforced and voluntary returns were of foreign national offenders (FNOs), this is an increase of 14% compared to 1,330 FNO returns in the same period of 2023.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Banking: diamondwhale.pro: BaFin warns consumers about website

    Source: Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht – In English

    The Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) warns consumers about the website diamondwhale.pro. According to information available to BaFin, financial and investment services are being provided on this website without the required authorisation.

    The website operator is simply referred to as “DiamondWhale”, and there is no information regarding its legal form. They give no specific business address.

    BaFin has recently become aware of a number of websites with almost identical content and has also warned consumers about them. In each case, the website’s homepage displays the phrase: “Step Up Your Trading with [name of operator]“.

    Anyone providing financial or investment services in Germany may do so only with authorisation from BaFin. However, some companies offer these services without the necessary authorisation. Information on whether a particular company has been granted authorisation by BaFin can be found in database of companies.

    Theinformation provided by BaFin is based on section 37 (4) of the German Banking Act (KreditwesengesetzKWG).

    Please be aware:

    BaFin, the German Federal Criminal Police Office (BundeskriminalamtBKA) and the German state criminal police offices (Landeskriminalämter) recommend that consumers seeking to invest money online should exercise the utmost caution and do the necessary research beforehand in order to identify fraud attempts at an early stage.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Economics: diamondwhale.pro: BaFin warns consumers about website

    Source: Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht – In English

    The Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) warns consumers about the website diamondwhale.pro. According to information available to BaFin, financial and investment services are being provided on this website without the required authorisation.

    The website operator is simply referred to as “DiamondWhale”, and there is no information regarding its legal form. They give no specific business address.

    BaFin has recently become aware of a number of websites with almost identical content and has also warned consumers about them. In each case, the website’s homepage displays the phrase: “Step Up Your Trading with [name of operator]“.

    Anyone providing financial or investment services in Germany may do so only with authorisation from BaFin. However, some companies offer these services without the necessary authorisation. Information on whether a particular company has been granted authorisation by BaFin can be found in database of companies.

    Theinformation provided by BaFin is based on section 37 (4) of the German Banking Act (KreditwesengesetzKWG).

    Please be aware:

    BaFin, the German Federal Criminal Police Office (BundeskriminalamtBKA) and the German state criminal police offices (Landeskriminalämter) recommend that consumers seeking to invest money online should exercise the utmost caution and do the necessary research beforehand in order to identify fraud attempts at an early stage.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Press release: PM announces further funding for the National Crime Agency (NCA) and new migration returns figures

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

    The PM has announced two new elements of this government’s approach to boost border security and restore order to the asylum system.

    The Prime Minister has announced two new elements of this government’s approach to boost border security and restore order to the asylum system – a £58 million boost for the National Crime Agency (NCA) and new figures showing 9,400 people with no right to be here have been returned since the government took power.

    The NCA will receive a £58 million increase in its core budget for the 2025/26 financial year, representing a 9% rise compared to 2024/25. 

     This uplift in funding will:  

    • Deliver specialist operational equipment such as covert audio/video tools and covert tracking capabilities (including in the maritime domain).

    • Increase the amount of leads we generate through analysis of data to stop criminals in their tracks.  

    • Allow us to keep pace with the ever more sophisticated ways online criminals hide their tracks by bringing in threat specific data from international partners, industry and covert sources. 

    • Expand access to datasets and systems to NCA intelligence and investigative teams, borders staff and policing partners to give them direct access to the single intelligence picture. 

    • Increase the skills and tools available to forensic officers.  

    • Increase the technology available to officers to allow them to collaborate and work more productively. 

    The PM has also announced new returns figures following an ad-hoc statistical release from the Home Office today. 

    • Since this government took power (up to 28 October), a total of 9,400 returns were recorded (including both enforced and voluntary returns).  

    • There were 2,590 enforced returns of people with no legal right to remain in the UK. This compares with 2,170 enforced returns over the same period in 2023, an increase of 19%.   

    • Of the total returns, 1,520 enforced and voluntary returns were of foreign national offenders (FNOs), this is an increase of 14% compared to 1,330 FNO returns in the same period of 2023.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Banking: SafeTrades: BaFin warns about website safetrades.com

    Source: Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht – In English

    The Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) warns consumers about services offered by SafeTrades, London, UK, on its website safetrades.com. BaFin has information that the company is offering financial services without the required authorisation. The company does not provide its full company name or legal form.

    Financial services may only be offered in Germany if the company providing these services has the necessary authorisation from BaFin to do this. However, some companies offer these services without the required authorisation. Information on whether particular companies have been authorised by BaFin can be found in BaFin’s database of companies.

    Theinformation provided by BaFin is based on section 37 (4) of the German Banking Act (KreditwesengesetzKWG).

    Please be aware:

    BaFin, the German Federal Criminal Police Office (BundeskriminalamtBKA) and the German state criminal police offices (Landeskriminalämter) recommend that consumers seeking to invest money online should exercise the utmost caution and do the necessary research beforehand in order to identify fraud attempts at an early stage.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Economics: SafeTrades: BaFin warns about website safetrades.com

    Source: Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht – In English

    The Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) warns consumers about services offered by SafeTrades, London, UK, on its website safetrades.com. BaFin has information that the company is offering financial services without the required authorisation. The company does not provide its full company name or legal form.

    Financial services may only be offered in Germany if the company providing these services has the necessary authorisation from BaFin to do this. However, some companies offer these services without the required authorisation. Information on whether particular companies have been authorised by BaFin can be found in BaFin’s database of companies.

    Theinformation provided by BaFin is based on section 37 (4) of the German Banking Act (KreditwesengesetzKWG).

    Please be aware:

    BaFin, the German Federal Criminal Police Office (BundeskriminalamtBKA) and the German state criminal police offices (Landeskriminalämter) recommend that consumers seeking to invest money online should exercise the utmost caution and do the necessary research beforehand in order to identify fraud attempts at an early stage.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Global: I research sexual perversions and paraphilias – here’s what we’ve learned about them

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Mark Griffiths, Director of the International Gaming Research Unit and Professor of Behavioural Addiction, Nottingham Trent University

    Hollywood actor Armie Hammer was accused of sending messages detailing cannibalistic fantasies in 2021. DFree/Shutterstock

    After allegedly sending messages detailing cannibalistic fetishes, Hollywood actor Armie Hammer hopes to relaunch his career with a new podcast and movie.

    Following the 2021 social media cannibal scandal, Hammer was also accused of rape and abuse by various women, but consistently denied any criminal behaviour and was not charged.

    Now, it seems, Hammer is laughing off the cannibalism allegations. Speaking to his first podcast guest, Tom Arnold, Hammer says, “I’m not gonna lie. I’m just like, Hey, I’m a cannibal!”

    But being sexually aroused by the fantasy – or reality – of cannibalism is real. I should know, as it’s one of the subjects I discuss in my latest book Sexual Perversions and Paraphilias: An A-Z

    Paraphilias are uncommon types of sexual expression often described as sexual deviations, sexual perversions or disorders of sexual preference.

    They are typically accompanied by intense sexual arousal to unconventional or non-sexual stimuli such as enemas (klismaphilia), statues (agalmatophilia), teeth (odontophilia) and vomit (emetophilia).

    To many people paraphilias may seem bizarre or socially unacceptable, representing the extreme end of the sexual continuum – and in some cases, such as zoophilia (having sex with animals) and necrophilia (having sex with dead people), may be illegal.

    Paraphilias may be laughed off, dismissed or leave some people disgusted, but there’s a pressing need for more research into uncommon sexual behaviour given how little we know.

    Sexual fantasies and behaviour are a fundamental part of the human experience. What is considered immoral or even illegal changes according to the social and temporal context. But whatever sexual desires are considered illicit or depraved in a particular time and place are also stigmatised.

    Researching paraphilias, even the most distasteful or criminal, is essential to help safeguard vulnerable groups. Research can also help minimise the discrimination faced by those with uncommon sexual interests, helping ensure their access to sexual health care and psychological support, which can be lacking.

    Vorarephilia

    Vorarephilia – or “vore” – refers to being sexually aroused by the idea of being eaten, eating another person or observing this process for sexual gratification.

    Most of the fantasies of vorarephiliacs involve being the ones eaten. Devouring someone could be viewed as the ultimate act of dominance by a predator and the ultimate act of submission by the prey.

    The most infamous vorarephiliac is arguably Armin Meiwes from Germany.

    Meiwes had allegedly been fantasising about cannibalism since his childhood and frequented cannibal fetish websites. He posted around 60 online adverts asking if anyone would like to be eaten by him.

    In March 2002, Bernd Jürgen Brandes responded to Meiwes. They met up only once. Meiwes bit off Brandes’ penis, which the two of them cooked and ate.

    Brandes was videotaped being stabbed to death by Meiwes in his bath. The body was then stored for Meiwes to eat.

    Meiwes was eventually convicted of murder and imprisoned for life. However, it’s worth nothing that although some paraphilias are illegal, most cause no psychological or behavioural problems when they are engaged by consenting adults.

    Dacryphilia

    Dacryphilia is getting sexual arousal from seeing someone cry.

    I have published a number of studies on dacryphilia. One involved interviews with eight dacryphiles: six women and two men, from the US, UK, Romania and Belgium.

    It showed there were sub-types of dacryphilia, even among such a small group. Based on the interviews, I identified three types of dacryphile.

    Compassionate dacryphiles are sexually aroused by the compassion of comforting a crier.

    Dominant or submissive dacryphiles are sexually aroused by either causing tears in a consenting submissive partner or by being made to cry by a consenting dominant partner.

    “Curled lip” dacryphiles are sexually aroused by the curling of a protruded bottom lip during crying.

    Eproctophilia

    Eproctophilia involves being sexually aroused by flatulence.

    In 2013, I published the first case study of an eproctophile. The case concerned a 22-year-old single man, Brad*, an American from Illinois.

    Brad recalled that in middle school he had a crush on a girl who had farted in the class. Brad said:

    This blew my mind [I] knew by simple biology that girls farted, but hearing that the girl I had been fawning over was capable of such a thing sparked a strange interest in me.

    Brad first engaged in an eproctophilic act with a male friend in his mid-teens. Up to that point he had considered himself heterosexual. However, this changed when he heard his male friend fart.

    Brad said it was “appealing in sound” and that he began fixating on it. He set up a bet with the wager being the right to fart in the loser’s face for a week. He continued to lose such bets once every few weeks for about two years.

    Apotemnophilia

    Apotemnophilia refers to being sexually aroused by the fantasy or reality of being an amputee.

    Some apotemnophiles may pretend to be amputees but, for a minority, the behaviour involves obsessive scheming to convince a surgeon to perform a medically unnecessary amputation.

    To most people, this might seem like a type of masochism, but case studies suggest that there is no erotisation of pain – only of the healed amputated stump.

    Salirophilia

    Salirophilia is sexual arousal from soiling or dishevelling someone attractive, which can include tearing or damaging the desired person’s clothing, covering them in mud or filth or messing up their hair or make-up.

    My 2019 case study involved Jeff*, a 58-year-old Australian heterosexual. Jeff recounted that when he was young he wanted to masturbate in strange places such as lying under a cabinet in a dirty garage.

    Jeff said that he engaged in solitary salirophilic practices regularly but very infrequently with female partners because it was difficult to find like-minded women.

    He was also a fan of the television show Fear Factor in which contestants perform revolting tasks for prize money, such as eating rotting food or being submerged in foul fluids. These were a source of sexual arousal for Jeff. He told me: “I just find the defilement of an attractive woman’s body erotic.”

    *The names of case study participants in this article have been changed.

    Dr. Mark Griffiths has received research funding from a wide range of organizations including the Economic and Social Research Council, the British Academy and the Responsibility in Gambling Trust. He has also carried out consultancy for numerous gambling companies in the area of player protection, social responsibility and responsible gaming.. Views expressed here are his own and not those of these funding bodies.

    ref. I research sexual perversions and paraphilias – here’s what we’ve learned about them – https://theconversation.com/i-research-sexual-perversions-and-paraphilias-heres-what-weve-learned-about-them-238446

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI USA: Statement by President Joe  Biden on Moldova’s Presidential  Elections

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    I congratulate Maia Sandu on her historic reelection as the President of Moldova. 
    On Sunday, the Moldovan people went to the polls and voted in favor of President Sandu’s vision for a secure, prosperous, and democratic Moldova. President Sandu’s reelection comes just two weeks after the Moldovan people passed a constitutional referendum in support of membership in the European Union. 
    For months, Russia sought to undermine Moldova’s democratic institutions and election processes. But Russia failed. The Moldovan people have exercised their democratic right to choose their own future, and they have chosen to pursue a path aligned with Europe and democracies everywhere.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese premier meets Kazakh PM, calling for enhanced cooperation

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    SHANGHAI, Nov. 4 — Chinese Premier Li Qiang met with Kazakh Prime Minister Olzhas Bektenov in Shanghai on Monday, who is here to attend the 7th China International Import Expo.

    Li said that since the establishment of diplomatic ties more than 30 years ago, China and Kazakhstan have always respected each other and treated each other as equals, setting a good example of good-neighborly friendship and mutual benefits between neighboring countries.

    He said that China is ready to work with Kazakhstan to implement the important consensus reached by the two heads of state, deepen political mutual trust, firmly support each other on issues concerning each other’s core interests, continue to expand mutually beneficial cooperation and bring more benefits to the two peoples.

    Li pointed out that China is willing to strengthen the docking of development strategies with Kazakhstan, take high-quality Belt and Road cooperation as the guide, continue to expand bilateral trade, consolidate production capacity and investment cooperation, create highlights in energy and mineral cooperation, enhance the level of connectivity and push for more practical results.

    He called on the two countries to jointly work for the success of the Year of Chinese Tourism in Kazakhstan next year, strengthen cooperation in culture, education, sub-national and other fields, and enhance mutual understanding and amity between the two peoples.

    China stands ready to coordinate closely with Kazakhstan within multilateral frameworks such as the United Nations, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and the China-Central Asia mechanism, actively implement the three global initiatives, practice genuine multilateralism, safeguard economic globalization and free trade, and promote the development of global governance toward a more just and equitable direction, Li said.

    Noting that in recent years, under the strategic guidance of the two heads of state, Kazakhstan-China relations have reached a record high, Bektenov said Kazakhstan attaches great importance to its relations with China and is willing to further strengthen high-level exchanges with China, deepen cooperation on trade, investment, agriculture, transportation, science and technology, culture and education, and strengthen connectivity under the framework of Belt and Road cooperation.

    Bektenov said Kazakhstan welcomes Chinese enterprises to invest in Kazakhstan and is willing to strengthen communication and cooperation with China within multilateral frameworks such as the SCO and the China-Central Asia mechanism.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: AFRICA/DR CONGO – “Mobile Journalism” project of the Salesian missionaries continues with profit

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Monday, 4 November 2024

    SDB

    Lubumbashi (Agenzia Fides) – The “Mobile Journalism” project of the Salasians missionaries continues. In fact, there are numerous French-speaking Salesians in the Province of Central Africa who are active as missionaries in digital media, joining the English-speaking ones who have already been trained in Zambia, Malawi, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Madagascar (see Fides, 16/7/2024) and, looking at the rest of the world, also in Sri Lanka, where the initiative of “Mobile Journalism” (MoJo) workshops began in February of this year.The first MoJo training for 18 young Congolese, including 15 young journalists from “Radio Don Bosco Lubumbashi”, a novice and two members of the “La Colombe” multimedia center, was recently held in Lubumbashi at the Salesian community “St. Francis de Sales” in Imar.According to a statement sent to Fides, Father Maciej Makuła (SDB), of the Social Communication Department of the Salesians of Don Bosco, after a two-month French course in Imara, agreed to hold the first workshop in French. The 18 participants learned a series of techniques and received tools to create professional content using Android phones or iPhones, so that they can better respond to the main challenges of evangelization today. They also acquired in-depth knowledge of digital editing and mastered specific applications on their mobile phones and PCs, which will increasingly be part of daily professional practice in their communities.”Most of the four-hour work sessions were devoted to practical work,” the statement from the Salesians continues. The participants also practiced creating content to disseminate, receiving critical comments and suggestions to improve their work and apostolate.In his closing address, Father Makuła stressed that “the Salesian Congregation in general and the Province of Central Africa in particular will have no future without digital technology”. In line with Pope Francis, he explained that the Church and the Salesian Family are called to adopt an integrated approach to social media and urged everyone to do their utmost to create new digital missionaries.(AP) (Agenzia Fides, 4/11/2024)
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    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Celebrations for National Unity and Armed Forces Day

    Source: Government of Italy (English)

    4 Novembre 2024

    The President of the Council of Ministers, Giorgia Meloni, attended this morning’s ceremony in Rome where the Head of State laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier to mark National Unity and Armed Forces Day.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM speech to the INTERPOL General Assembly: 4 November 2024

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer makes a speech to the INTERPOL General Assembly in Glasgow.

    It’s great to welcome you all to Glasgow.

    It was right here, in this conference centre, exactly three years ago that over 190 countries came together at COP26 to agree the Glasgow Climate Pact. 

    That was the first global commitment to phase down the use of coal. And a vital step in the fight against climate change – a challenge that no country can meet on its own.

    So it’s fantastic that once again today, we have over 190 countries here working together to meet another global challenge: the threat of serious organised crime. 

    And it’s particularly fitting to be here in Glasgow: a place that was once home to what many consider to be the first professional City Police Force.

    And a place that is today home to our state-of-the-art Scottish Crime Campus, just down the road in Gartcosh.

    18 different organisations working together, under one roof, co-operating for a common cause. Precisely the kind of co-operation that is so essential to the missions of my government, and the foundation we rest everything upon.

    Greater security for our people. Security rooted in our values, in respect for human rights and upholding the rule of law. 

    Now, I was a prosecutor myself. I served as the Director of Public Prosecutions in England and Wales. Not here in Scotland – we have a complicated set of arrangements across these countries. 

    But what we know from being a country of four nations – what I know having served in that role – having seen the complexity of operations that fight organised crime, first-hand, is that crime is global. 

    Criminals do not respect borders. And so I want to start today by thanking you – all of you here in this conference centre. And the thousands that you represent. Those who serve in police, in intelligence, and security services right across the world. Because too often – what you do goes unrecognised. 

    Some of it necessarily unknown. But just look at some of the operations we can talk about – they tell the story. 

    The UK working with the US and Ecuador to seize 19 tonnes of cocaine. The global identification of over 40,000 victims of child sexual abuse online, and more than 70 countries working together to save them. 

    60 countries working together to tackle online scams, resulting in almost 4,000 arrests, and more than $250 million of assets seized. 

    And of course, the operation which infiltrated and seized the online platform used by LockBit, the world’s most harmful cyber-crime group.

    I know the hard work that goes into this. I know how many things have to come together, almost instantly. And most importantly – I know what would happen without you.

    The extra lives destroyed by drugs and violence. The unspeakable horrors of child sexual abuse. Gangs forcing the vulnerable into modern slavery or prostitution. People having their life savings stolen through online fraud.

    It’s your work, your service, that protects people from these threats. And because so much of your work is done in private, I’m grateful for this opportunity in public to say a huge and heartfelt thank you. 

    Now, of course INTERPOL is absolutely central to these efforts. As I say – I have seen the importance of global co-operation first-hand. I sent British prosecutors in Pakistan so we could work together on counter-terrorism. In West Africa – to disrupt the flow of drugs from South America to Europe, and ultimately to the UK. 

    So I understand the power of what INTERPOL does, and why the UK makes great use of those resources… 

    Handling thousands of enquiries every week from around the world, from intelligence sharing to managing direct threats to life. 

    So I am pleased to say today that the UK is increasing its funding for INTERPOL projects, investing £6 million this financial year.

    This will include support for improved data-sharing, and faster communications capabilities. The first ever Global Fraud Threat Assessment, and new regional networks. From strengthening co-operation across the Pacific to tackling drug and gun smuggling networks in the Caribbean.

    Because together, we want to send a clear message to the world’s most hardened criminals: there is no safe haven. There is no place that you can hide from justice.  Together – we’ve got the whole world covered. And together – we will defeat you.  

    And look – there is a particular group of organised criminals that urgently need to hear this message: the vile people smugglers, who think that human life can be trafficked, that borders can be ignored.

    And that desperation, misery and hope – they prey on that too – are all emotions that are ripe for exploitation. 

    Make no mistake – people smuggling needs a global response. And on a scale – way beyond where we are now. We need to unlock the power of that co-operation – across borders, agencies, continents – even. 

    And look – I know many people in this room are already working hard on this. So I accept that my argument here is a political one, first and foremost. 

    But I’m afraid we’re still at the stage where the world needs to wake up to the severity of this challenge. It goes back to security. 

    I was elected to deliver security for the British people. And strong borders are a part of that – of course they are. But I say it again – security doesn’t stop at our borders.  

    And illegal migration is, without question, a massive driver of global insecurity. There is nothing progressive about turning a blind eye as men, women and children die in the Channel. 

    And you don’t advance the cause of global justice – or compassion for those individuals – to pretend that there is. 

    This is a vile trade that must be stamped out – wherever it thrives. And it exploits the cracks between our institutions, pits nations against one another, profits from our inability – at the political level – to come together. 

    That’s part of the business model. And so I will work with anyone serious who can offer solutions on this – anyone.

    Because without co-ordinated, global action, it will not go away. 

    And unless we bring all the powers we have to bear on this, in much the same way as we do for terrorism, then we will struggle to bring these criminals to justice.  

    And that in a sense is my message here today. People-smuggling should be viewed as a global security threat similar to terrorism.

    We’ve got to combine resources, share intelligence and tactics, and tackle the problem upstream, working together to shut down the smuggling routes.

    We do that with terrorism. When I was the Director of Public Prosecutions, it was my personal mission to smash the terrorist gangs. And we worked across borders to ensure the safety of citizens, across Europe and across the world.  

    Now, as the UK’s Prime Minister, it is my personal mission to smash the people smuggling gangs. And look, that starts here in the UK. 

    This Labour government is resetting the UK’s whole approach to this challenge. No more gimmicks. No more gesture politics. No more irresponsible, undeliverable promises that almost by design – seek conflict with other countries.  

    We have turned the page on all of that. Because such promises are not worth the paper they are written on. All they do is waste taxpayer money, destroy people’s trust in politics as a force for good.

    Instead, we are approaching this issue with humanity, and with profound respect for international law.

    We will never withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights. Indeed, we’re proud of the role the UK played in creating that Convention. Respecting international treaties also makes international co-operation easier, because it shows that the UK is a reliable partner.

    So our approach is different. As I say – we’re going to treat people smugglers like terrorists. So we’re taking our approach to counter-terrorism – which we know works – and applying it to the gangs, with our new Border Security Command.

    We’re ending the fragmentation between policing, Border Force and our intelligence agencies. Recruiting hundreds of specialist investigators. They are best of the best – from our National Crime Agency, Border Force, Immigration Enforcement, the CPS and our intelligence agencies – all working together. 

    We’re making border protection an elite border force. And not just within our country. We’re also working together with international partners, sharing intelligence and tactics.

    Earlier this year I visited the Headquarters of our National Crime Agency. I saw first-hand the ways we are already collaborating, and what it takes to intercept, to disrupt, and destroy these networks. There are so many tools at our disposal.

    We can seize their phones at the border, identifying and tracing smugglers wiring payments. We’ve already trained sniffer dogs to detect the smell of dinghy rubber and working with Bulgaria stopped more than 100 small boats upstream, long before they made it to the Channel. 

    And as we understand how these gangs work, we can invest in new capabilities and enhanced powers to smash them.

    So we’re giving our new Border Security Command an additional £75 million of new funding on top of the of £75 million we’ve already committed.

    This will support a new Organised Immigration Crime Intelligence Unit, hundreds of new investigators and intelligence officers, backed by state-of-the-art technology.

    We’re also investing a further £58 million in our National Crime Agency, including strengthening its data analysis and intelligence capabilities.

    And we’ll also legislate to give those fighting these gangs enhanced powers too. Again, look what we’ve done with counter-terrorism. We have the powers to trace suspects’ movements using information from the intelligence services.

    We can shut down their bank accounts, cut off their internet access, and arrest them for making preparations to act, before an attack has taken place.

    We don’t wait for them to act – we stop them before they act. And we need to stop people smuggling gangs before they act too.

    Now, as with any crime – smuggling does not operate in an institutional vacuum, so we also need to rebuild our broken asylum system, process claims swiftly and humanely.

    That will make law enforcement’s job much easier.  So we’re recruiting hundreds of additional people into asylum case working.

    Overall returns since this government came to office are now 9,400 – up almost 6,000 since the end of August. 

    Enforced returns are up almost a fifth on the same period last year. And returns of Foreign National Offenders are up 14 per cent.

    But look, the only way to defeat this vile trade and save lives is to stop people being smuggled here in the first place.

    And that means doing everything possible to deepen our cross-border co-operation. So international agreements matter.

    We have to use every tool we have – operational, diplomatic, political – to join up our response.

    President Macron and I have already agreed to increase intelligence sharing and do more to dismantle smuggling routes further upstream. This is also a priority for the bi-lateral co-operation treaty we are working on with Germany. 

    We’re also working with Italy to dismantle the supply chains of maritime equipment, combat illicit financial flows, and strengthen our investigative capacities and our data sharing. And as part of the UK’s wider reset with the European Union, we are seeking a new security pact, including restoring access to real-time intelligence sharing networks. And at the European Political Community this Thursday in Hungary, I’ll be putting this issue at the top of the international agenda once again. 

    But we need your help also.  This is the General Assembly of the world’s security experts. It’s your co-operation across borders that saves lives, time and again. It’s your collective efforts that bring organised criminals to justice, wherever they seek to hide.

    And it’s your leadership today that can help make a decisive breakthrough against this vile trade in human life. 

    Because if together we can win this war against the people smugglers, then this gathering will have achieved a victory for humanity – every bit as significant as the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    Because you will have helped to smash the gangs, secure our borders, and save countless lives.  And it is with that hope, and in that spirit, that I declare the 92nd General Assembly open. 

    Thank you so much.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Speech: PM speech to the INTERPOL General Assembly: 4 November 2024

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

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer makes a speech to the INTERPOL General Assembly in Glasgow.

    It’s great to welcome you all to Glasgow.

    It was right here, in this conference centre, exactly three years ago that over 190 countries came together at COP26 to agree the Glasgow Climate Pact. 

    That was the first global commitment to phase down the use of coal. And a vital step in the fight against climate change – a challenge that no country can meet on its own.

    So it’s fantastic that once again today, we have over 190 countries here working together to meet another global challenge: the threat of serious organised crime. 

    And it’s particularly fitting to be here in Glasgow: a place that was once home to what many consider to be the first professional City Police Force.

    And a place that is today home to our state-of-the-art Scottish Crime Campus, just down the road in Gartcosh.

    18 different organisations working together, under one roof, co-operating for a common cause. Precisely the kind of co-operation that is so essential to the missions of my government, and the foundation we rest everything upon.

    Greater security for our people. Security rooted in our values, in respect for human rights and upholding the rule of law. 

    Now, I was a prosecutor myself. I served as the Director of Public Prosecutions in England and Wales. Not here in Scotland – we have a complicated set of arrangements across these countries. 

    But what we know from being a country of four nations – what I know having served in that role – having seen the complexity of operations that fight organised crime, first-hand, is that crime is global. 

    Criminals do not respect borders. And so I want to start today by thanking you – all of you here in this conference centre. And the thousands that you represent. Those who serve in police, in intelligence, and security services right across the world. Because too often – what you do goes unrecognised. 

    Some of it necessarily unknown. But just look at some of the operations we can talk about – they tell the story. 

    The UK working with the US and Ecuador to seize 19 tonnes of cocaine. The global identification of over 40,000 victims of child sexual abuse online, and more than 70 countries working together to save them. 

    60 countries working together to tackle online scams, resulting in almost 4,000 arrests, and more than $250 million of assets seized. 

    And of course, the operation which infiltrated and seized the online platform used by LockBit, the world’s most harmful cyber-crime group.

    I know the hard work that goes into this. I know how many things have to come together, almost instantly. And most importantly – I know what would happen without you.

    The extra lives destroyed by drugs and violence. The unspeakable horrors of child sexual abuse. Gangs forcing the vulnerable into modern slavery or prostitution. People having their life savings stolen through online fraud.

    It’s your work, your service, that protects people from these threats. And because so much of your work is done in private, I’m grateful for this opportunity in public to say a huge and heartfelt thank you. 

    Now, of course INTERPOL is absolutely central to these efforts. As I say – I have seen the importance of global co-operation first-hand. I sent British prosecutors in Pakistan so we could work together on counter-terrorism. In West Africa – to disrupt the flow of drugs from South America to Europe, and ultimately to the UK. 

    So I understand the power of what INTERPOL does, and why the UK makes great use of those resources… 

    Handling thousands of enquiries every week from around the world, from intelligence sharing to managing direct threats to life. 

    So I am pleased to say today that the UK is increasing its funding for INTERPOL projects, investing £6 million this financial year.

    This will include support for improved data-sharing, and faster communications capabilities. The first ever Global Fraud Threat Assessment, and new regional networks. From strengthening co-operation across the Pacific to tackling drug and gun smuggling networks in the Caribbean.

    Because together, we want to send a clear message to the world’s most hardened criminals: there is no safe haven. There is no place that you can hide from justice.  Together – we’ve got the whole world covered. And together – we will defeat you.  

    And look – there is a particular group of organised criminals that urgently need to hear this message: the vile people smugglers, who think that human life can be trafficked, that borders can be ignored.

    And that desperation, misery and hope – they prey on that too – are all emotions that are ripe for exploitation. 

    Make no mistake – people smuggling needs a global response. And on a scale – way beyond where we are now. We need to unlock the power of that co-operation – across borders, agencies, continents – even. 

    And look – I know many people in this room are already working hard on this. So I accept that my argument here is a political one, first and foremost. 

    But I’m afraid we’re still at the stage where the world needs to wake up to the severity of this challenge. It goes back to security. 

    I was elected to deliver security for the British people. And strong borders are a part of that – of course they are. But I say it again – security doesn’t stop at our borders.  

    And illegal migration is, without question, a massive driver of global insecurity. There is nothing progressive about turning a blind eye as men, women and children die in the Channel. 

    And you don’t advance the cause of global justice – or compassion for those individuals – to pretend that there is. 

    This is a vile trade that must be stamped out – wherever it thrives. And it exploits the cracks between our institutions, pits nations against one another, profits from our inability – at the political level – to come together. 

    That’s part of the business model. And so I will work with anyone serious who can offer solutions on this – anyone.

    Because without co-ordinated, global action, it will not go away. 

    And unless we bring all the powers we have to bear on this, in much the same way as we do for terrorism, then we will struggle to bring these criminals to justice.  

    And that in a sense is my message here today. People-smuggling should be viewed as a global security threat similar to terrorism.

    We’ve got to combine resources, share intelligence and tactics, and tackle the problem upstream, working together to shut down the smuggling routes.

    We do that with terrorism. When I was the Director of Public Prosecutions, it was my personal mission to smash the terrorist gangs. And we worked across borders to ensure the safety of citizens, across Europe and across the world.  

    Now, as the UK’s Prime Minister, it is my personal mission to smash the people smuggling gangs. And look, that starts here in the UK. 

    This Labour government is resetting the UK’s whole approach to this challenge. No more gimmicks. No more gesture politics. No more irresponsible, undeliverable promises that almost by design – seek conflict with other countries.  

    We have turned the page on all of that. Because such promises are not worth the paper they are written on. All they do is waste taxpayer money, destroy people’s trust in politics as a force for good.

    Instead, we are approaching this issue with humanity, and with profound respect for international law.

    We will never withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights. Indeed, we’re proud of the role the UK played in creating that Convention. Respecting international treaties also makes international co-operation easier, because it shows that the UK is a reliable partner.

    So our approach is different. As I say – we’re going to treat people smugglers like terrorists. So we’re taking our approach to counter-terrorism – which we know works – and applying it to the gangs, with our new Border Security Command.

    We’re ending the fragmentation between policing, Border Force and our intelligence agencies. Recruiting hundreds of specialist investigators. They are best of the best – from our National Crime Agency, Border Force, Immigration Enforcement, the CPS and our intelligence agencies – all working together. 

    We’re making border protection an elite border force. And not just within our country. We’re also working together with international partners, sharing intelligence and tactics.

    Earlier this year I visited the Headquarters of our National Crime Agency. I saw first-hand the ways we are already collaborating, and what it takes to intercept, to disrupt, and destroy these networks. There are so many tools at our disposal.

    We can seize their phones at the border, identifying and tracing smugglers wiring payments. We’ve already trained sniffer dogs to detect the smell of dinghy rubber and working with Bulgaria stopped more than 100 small boats upstream, long before they made it to the Channel. 

    And as we understand how these gangs work, we can invest in new capabilities and enhanced powers to smash them.

    So we’re giving our new Border Security Command an additional £75 million of new funding on top of the of £75 million we’ve already committed.

    This will support a new Organised Immigration Crime Intelligence Unit, hundreds of new investigators and intelligence officers, backed by state-of-the-art technology.

    We’re also investing a further £58 million in our National Crime Agency, including strengthening its data analysis and intelligence capabilities.

    And we’ll also legislate to give those fighting these gangs enhanced powers too. Again, look what we’ve done with counter-terrorism. We have the powers to trace suspects’ movements using information from the intelligence services.

    We can shut down their bank accounts, cut off their internet access, and arrest them for making preparations to act, before an attack has taken place.

    We don’t wait for them to act – we stop them before they act. And we need to stop people smuggling gangs before they act too.

    Now, as with any crime – smuggling does not operate in an institutional vacuum, so we also need to rebuild our broken asylum system, process claims swiftly and humanely.

    That will make law enforcement’s job much easier.  So we’re recruiting hundreds of additional people into asylum case working.

    Overall returns since this government came to office are now 9,400 – up almost 6,000 since the end of August. 

    Enforced returns are up almost a fifth on the same period last year. And returns of Foreign National Offenders are up 14 per cent.

    But look, the only way to defeat this vile trade and save lives is to stop people being smuggled here in the first place.

    And that means doing everything possible to deepen our cross-border co-operation. So international agreements matter.

    We have to use every tool we have – operational, diplomatic, political – to join up our response.

    President Macron and I have already agreed to increase intelligence sharing and do more to dismantle smuggling routes further upstream. This is also a priority for the bi-lateral co-operation treaty we are working on with Germany. 

    We’re also working with Italy to dismantle the supply chains of maritime equipment, combat illicit financial flows, and strengthen our investigative capacities and our data sharing. And as part of the UK’s wider reset with the European Union, we are seeking a new security pact, including restoring access to real-time intelligence sharing networks. And at the European Political Community this Thursday in Hungary, I’ll be putting this issue at the top of the international agenda once again. 

    But we need your help also.  This is the General Assembly of the world’s security experts. It’s your co-operation across borders that saves lives, time and again. It’s your collective efforts that bring organised criminals to justice, wherever they seek to hide.

    And it’s your leadership today that can help make a decisive breakthrough against this vile trade in human life. 

    Because if together we can win this war against the people smugglers, then this gathering will have achieved a victory for humanity – every bit as significant as the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    Because you will have helped to smash the gangs, secure our borders, and save countless lives.  And it is with that hope, and in that spirit, that I declare the 92nd General Assembly open. 

    Thank you so much.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Talk Money fortnight is here to help you get more and spend less

    Source: City of York

    Published Monday, 4 November 2024

    The week after the Budget is announced, City of York Council and partners are holding a fortnight of events and activities to help residents with their own finances.

    Talk Money Fortnight starts today and runs from 4-15 November. Drop-in events and advice sessions will be held for any residents facing financial struggles. All are welcome to get impartial, free and discreet information and support to maximise their household income, spend less and get good advice.

    Residents are urged to use an online, confidential and impartial benefits calculator so they can claim what they’re eligible for and don’t miss out on the millions of pounds in unclaimed benefits nationally.

    Those of State Pension age can check if they’re eligible for and claim Pension Credit which unlocks other benefits – even if they own their home and have savings, and any residents struggling to pay Council Tax can get advice on claiming Council Tax Support. For those worried about rising fuel bills, there’s information on grants for energy saving measures, and how to stay online by accessing lower broadband and phone tariffs.

    Eligible families can get help with childcare and claim free school meals which bring further help with uniforms and extra money to support the child’s schooling.

    Pauline Stuchfield, Director of Housing and Communities at City of York Council, said:

    It’s never too late to see if there are ways to boost your income and claim all you’re entitled to: we’re here to help you do that during Talk Money fortnight and year-round.”

    Talk Money Week is a national initiative that promotes discussions about money matters, such as budgeting, saving, debt management, and financial planning.

    Check out and visit the drop-in events listed here and a wealth of year-round advice, ideas and information from partners at www.livewellyork.co.uk/talkmoney

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: UConn Named Fulbright HSI Leader for First Time

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    The University of Connecticut has been named as a Fulbright HSI (Hispanic-Serving Institution) Leader for 2024. Each year, the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) recognizes select HSIs for their strong engagement of with the Fulbright Program, the U.S. government’s flagship international academic exchange program.

    Fulbright HSI Leaders demonstrate noteworthy support for Fulbright exchange participants and encourage administrators, faculty, and students at HSIs to engage with Fulbright on campus.  The Fulbright HSI Leaders Initiative also highlights the strength of HSIs as destinations for international students and scholars

    This marks the first time that UConn has earned this distinction and is just one of 51 institutions nationally to be recognized in 2024.

    The Fulbright HSI Leaders were announced during the International Plenary Session of the annual conference of the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU).

    “Fulbrighters from HSIs contribute to the Program’s goal of reflecting the full diversity, perspectives, and talents of the American people,” says Scott Weinhold, Senior Bureau Official for the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.

    “This recognition affirms our commitment to supporting current students and recent graduates from all backgrounds, majors, and campuses as they pursue a Fulbright award,” says Michael Cunnigham, the Assistant Director of the Office of National Scholarships and Fellowships.

    UConn’s current representatives in the Fulbright U.S. Student Program include Lizzy Irizarry ’23 (CLAS), ’24 MPA. Irizarry earned her undergraduate degree in Latino studies with a minor in Africana studies before attaining her master’s in public administration. She is currently in the southern part of Italy for her Fulbright experience.

    Since its founding in 1946, the Fulbright Program has provided over 400,000 talented and accomplished students, scholars, teachers, artists, and professionals of all backgrounds and in all fields with the opportunity to study, teach, and conduct research abroad.  Fulbrighters exchange ideas, build people-to-people connections, and work to address complex address global challenges.  Fulbright is a program of the U.S. Department of State, with funding provided by the U.S. Government. Participating governments and host institutions, corporations, and foundations around the world also provide direct and indirect support to the program.

    The Fulbright Program implements a wide range of initiatives to ensure that its participants reflect all aspects of the diversity of U.S. society and societies abroad. In addition to HACU, the Fulbright Program also cultivates relationships with external stakeholders, including the White House Initiative on HBCUs, Diversity Abroad, UNCF, the National Clearinghouse on Disability and Exchange, the American Association of Community Colleges, and Mobility International, among many others.

    MIL OSI USA News