| nuclear crisis | Trump Orders Sanctions on Companies Dealing With North Korea | President Trump ordered new sanctions on individuals, companies, and banks doing business with North Korea as the U.S. increases pressure on Pyongyang over its nuclear weapons program. He also said China’s central bank is ordering financial institutions to stop dealing with Kim Jong Un’s regime, a crucial step by North Korea’s largest trading partner. |
| Here are today's top stories... | | S&P’s first China downgrade since 1999 is good news for bulls. With the credit assessor cutting the nation’s rating less than a month before the start of a twice-a-decade Communist Party congress, Chinese officials have even more motivation to keep financial markets buoyant. S&P lowered China’s sovereign credit grade by one step to A+ on Thursday. | | Ivanka Trump faces a courtroom showdown over $785 sandals. Fashion label Aquazzura is suing the senior White House adviser and daughter of the president for allegedly copying the design of its strappy red suede stiletto. Ivanka’s fashion brand has had a rocky history when it comes to copycat allegations. Come next spring, if a settlement hasn’t been reached, she may end up in court. | | Mercedes plots Tesla attack. German auto giant Daimler plans to spend $1 billion to start production of Mercedes-Benz electric vehicles at its Alabama factory, setting the world’s largest luxury-car maker up for battle with battery-car specialist Tesla—on its home turf. | | New York’s airports are still the worst. Air traveler satisfaction with U.S. airports has reached an all-time high this year, with shorter security lines and faster screening boosting ratings. But people still really hate LaGuardia—and other airports in and around the Big Apple. | | Nestlé makes billions of dollars bottling water it pays almost nothing for. The company’s operation in Michigan reveals how it’s come to dominate the controversial industry. How? By going into economically depressed areas promising new jobs and infrastructure in exchange for tax breaks and access to an increasingly scarce resource. | |
| checkmate | Wall Street’s Best-Kept Secret Is a 72-Year-Old Russian Chess Expert | For over two decades, Lev Alburt has been teaching strategy, patience, and prognostication to the finest in finance. His students have including the likes of Carl Icahn and Stephen Friedman, who have dutifully trekked to his modest Upper East Side apartment to learn the finer points of the game of chess. | | |
| How much should you really be saving for retirement? | Bloomberg News’ personal finance Facebook group, Money Talks, is filled with tips to help you save money, become better informed about where your money goes, or better organize your financial life. | |
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