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Bronx community mourns 15-year-old killed by gun violence

Community members in the Longwood section of the Bronx gathered Friday night to remember the life of 15-year-old Josue Lopez-Ortega, who was shot in the head and killed late Thursday night.

NEW YORK – A 15-year-old boy who was shot in the head in the Bronx has died.

According to the NYPD, Josue Lopez-Ortega and another teen were near the front entrance of the Police Athletic League's South Bronx Center at around 9 p.m. on Thursday night when a man wearing all black approached them and opened fire.

Lopez-Ortega was shot in the head, while the other boy, a 16-year-old, was struck in the leg and is expected to survive.

The shooter fled the scene.

So far, no arrests have been made. 

Anyone with information in regard to this incident is asked to call the NYPD's Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). The public can also submit their tips by logging onto the CrimeStoppers website at https://crimestoppers.nypdonline.org/ or on Twitter @NYPDTips.

All calls are strictly confidential.

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UK

Reeves should be wary of expecting surprise inflation good news to last – with tax rises yet to bite and Trump tariffs ahead

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Reeves should be wary of expecting surprise inflation good news to last - with tax rises yet to bite and Trump tariffs ahead

A fall in December’s CPI inflation of 0.1 percentage points to 2.5% is marginal, but by being below expectations it delivered an above-expectations boost to Rachel Reeves.

The chancellor has been under intense scrutiny for the last week as UK borrowing costs have risen (in line with US and European peers) and the value of the pound has fallen.

While this has presented a political headache rather than the economic crisis presented by the opposition, it is no less real for a government that has made growth, stability and fiscal probity a priority.

Money blog:
What inflation drop means for you and economy

Strikingly the moves against the UK came unprompted by any fresh data to trigger a lack of confidence in the bond and currency markets.

This week that changes, with December’s inflation figures today followed on Thursday by GDP numbers for November.

In that context, this morning’s surprise on the upside will have been welcomed at the Treasury, particularly when the underlying numbers are analysed.

 

Good news from underlying figures

Core inflation, which strips out fuel and other volatile elements, fell to 3.2% from 3.5% in November, and services inflation, a key metric for the Bank of England‘s calculations, dropped 0.6% in the month to 4.4%.

Both of those falls were larger than consensus expectations and may be a sign that the ‘sticky’ inflation the Bank has consistently warned is staying its hand may be falling back.

The markets appear to think so, with expectations of a rate cut at the next Monetary Policy Committee meeting on 6 February increasing from 62% before publication, to 83% 90 minutes later.

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Sky’s Kay Burley speaks with chief secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones about the inflation figures

Warning uplift could be temporary

Borrowing costs also eased in light of the figures, with the 10 and 30-year gilt yields, which have seen 16 and 28-year highs respectively in the last week, falling back as markets opened.

If that suggests a measure of perspective returning to the UK, the chancellor still faces genuine challenges.

With the cost of servicing debt elevated, her fiscal rules remain in peril, and difficult decisions on spending will follow if they bust the OBR spreadsheet in March. And she cannot evade responsibility for loading £25bn of employment taxes on business without demonstrating that it will not, as many claim, depress growth.

In a note this morning, Pantheon Economics said it expects those measures to erase today’s good news on inflation.

The economic intelligence firm said: “Looking ahead, we expect headline inflation to rise to 2.8% in January, and then 3.2% in April as energy deflation eases, as a range of government administered and inflation-indexed prices rise and underlying services inflation persists.”

What next?

Ms Reeves will spend the next three weeks making the case for her economic plan, with a trip to the World Economic Forum in Davos next week followed by a speech on growth at the end of the month, and further staging posts in the industrial strategy, similar to the AI announcement this week.

All of which may reassure the world about Britain’s prospects, but still may not be enough.

US inflation figures, published later on Wednesday, are expected to show an increase, which may push yields up further.

And in five days Donald Trump will be in a position to begin implementing trade and tariff policies which are expected to be inflationary.

If the last week has demonstrated anything, it is that the US exerts a gravitational pull on markets the UK cannot escape.

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Politics

Malaysia mulls crypto policy after talks with UAE and Binance founder CZ

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Malaysia mulls crypto policy after talks with UAE and Binance founder CZ

Malaysia is reportedly exploring cryptocurrency regulations after its prime minister held discussions with Abu Dhabi leaders and Binance founder Changpeng Zhao.

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Politics

Hong Kong court serves tokenized legal notice to illicit Tron wallets

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Hong Kong court serves tokenized legal notice to illicit Tron wallets

Hong Kong is using tokenized legal notices to target anonymous crypto wallets containing stolen assets.

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