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May 22, 2025

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European stock markets commenced Thursday’s trading session on a decidedly negative note, with major indices across the continent slipping into the red shortly after the opening bell.

This broad-based downturn was accompanied by company-specific news, including a wider first-half loss for budget airline EasyJet and a notable stock downgrade for British telecom giant BT Group.

Approximately ten minutes into the trading day, the pan-European Stoxx 600 index was trading 0.5% lower, with nearly every sector experiencing losses.

This negative sentiment was reflected in the performance of key regional stock exchanges.

Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC 40 were both down by around 0.5%, while London’s FTSE 100 had shed 0.4%.

Pre-market indications from IG had already signaled a lower open, with London’s FTSE seen opening down 43 points at 8,739, Germany’s DAX 135 points lower at 23,984, the French CAC 40 down 48 points at 7,865, and Italy’s FTSE MIB anticipated to open 251 points lower at 40,331.

EasyJet navigates headwinds

Budget airline EasyJet found its shares under pressure after reporting a widened loss for the first six months of its financial year.

The company announced a pre-tax loss of £394 million ($529 million) for the first half, compared with a £350 million loss recorded for the same period in 2024.

In response to the earnings release, EasyJet’s shares were down 3% at 08:10 a.m. London time, shortly after the market opened.

Despite the larger loss, EasyJet’s CEO, Kenton Jarvis, expressed confidence in the airline’s full-year performance, citing strong current booking trends.

Jarvis described the first half of the year—typically a quieter period for airlines—as an “interesting time.”

Speaking to CNBC’s ‘Squawk Box Europe’ on Thursday, he elaborated: “In the first half, we have two quarters. The first quarter is the October through to December, and in that quarter, we actually performed very well.”

Jarvis also acknowledged industry-wide capacity strains, noting that both Airbus and Boeing are failing to meet their original aircraft delivery schedules, but he stressed that underlying “demand is there.”

Looking ahead, EasyJet stated that current bookings provide confidence that it will meet profit forecasts for the financial year.

We’re also seeing very positive bookings in our holidays division, where we’re expecting something like 25% passenger growth year-on-year. So demand is looking good for the summer at the moment, and supply is relatively constrained.

BT Group faces analyst downgrade amid rally concerns

In other company news, British telecommunications stalwart BT Group saw its shares come under scrutiny.

Deutsche Bank analysts downgraded BT’s stock to a “Sell” rating, just weeks ahead of its fourth-quarter results.

The downgrade was primarily attributed to the significant 17% rally in its share price this year.

In a note to clients, Deutsche Bank’s Robert Grindle observed that BT shares “have proven even more defensive than peers at a time of trade war confusion, a weak economy and GBP strength, despite Openreach line losses.”

However, the analyst cautioned investors that BT still faces fundamental challenges, including new competitors encroaching on its market share.

Grindle did acknowledge that the recent acquisition of a stake in the company by Bharti, one of India’s largest telecom operators, had contributed to positive sentiment surrounding the stock.

The post Europe markets open: Stoxx 600 down; EasyJet loss widens, BT shares take a hit appeared first on Invezz

We now know who won the contest to attend an intimate dinner with President Donald Trump by buying his cryptocurrency — and he’s a familiar face to Securities and Exchange Commission regulators and law enforcement officials.

Justin Sun, a Chinese-born crypto entrepreneur, confirmed in an X post Tuesday that he was behind the account, labeled ‘SUN,’ that purchased the most $TRUMP meme coin to sit at the president’s table at a crypto-focused gala scheduled for Thursday.

‘Honored to support @POTUS and grateful for the invitation from @GetTrumpMemes to attend President Trump’s Gala Dinner as his TOP fan!’ Sun wrote. ‘As the top holder of $TRUMP, I’m excited to connect with everyone, talk crypto, and discuss the future of our industry.’

He capped the post with an American flag emoji.

Critics have blasted the dinner contest as potentially unconstitutional and a blatant opportunity for corruption. Trump has not publicly commented on the accusations, and the Office of Government Ethics has declined to comment. A White House official did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

The Trump administration is not directly involved in administering $TRUMP coin. As for the dinner, a White House official said in a statement that the president ‘is working to secure GOOD deals for the American people, not for himself.’

‘President Trump only acts in the best interests of the American public — which is why they overwhelmingly re-elected him to this office, despite years of lies and false accusations against him and his businesses from the fake news media,” White House spokesperson Anna Kelly said.

While Trump has not been as aggressive in directly promoting cryptocurrencies as some campaign backers in the industry had hoped, his administration has abandoned or paused many pending cases that had been brought against crypto entrepreneurs and businesses.

That includes Sun, who was charged in 2023 with market manipulation and offering unregistered securities. Regulators sought various injunctions against him that would have largely prevented him from participating in crypto in the U.S. The Verge, a tech industry website, had also reported Sun was the target of an FBI investigation.

But in February, the SEC, now controlled by Trump appointees, agreed to a 60-day pause of the suit in order to seek a resolution.

Two months earlier, Sun purchased $30 million in crypto tokens from World Liberty Financial (WLF), the crypto venture backed by Trump and his family, the website Popular Information reported.

Eventually, Sun became the largest publicly known investor in World Liberty after he brought his funding total to $75 million.

According to Bloomberg News, per the terms of World Liberty’s financial structure, 75% of the proceeds of token sales like Sun’s get sent to the Trump family as a fee — meaning they may have directly earned as much as $56 million.

On Jan. 22two days after Trump was inaugurated Sun posted on X, “if I have made any money in cryptocurrency, all credit goes to President Trump.”

In April, The Wall Street Journal reported that Joe Biden’s Justice Department had been investigating Sun, noting that researchers had estimated that more than half of all illicit crypto activity took place on Sun’s Tron blockchain platform. The Journal said it wasn’t clear whether the investigation was ongoing. It said Sun’s representatives declined to comment about what they called “baseless allegations about legal matters” while denying Tron enables criminal activity.

Sun may now be a multibillionaire, with a net worth estimated at $8.5 billion, according to Forbes. He reportedly was forced to spend $2 billion to shore up one of his crypto firms that was facing collapse in 2022.

He did not immediately respond to a request for comment about what he hoped to get out of the dinner with the president.

Sun has also earned headlines for purchasing ‘Comedian,’ an art installation composed of a banana duct-taped to a wall, for $6.2 million, and for buying lunch with Warren Buffett for $4.57 million.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

President Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ could be headed for a House-wide vote as soon as Wednesday night after its approval by a key committee in an 8-4 vote.

The House Rules Committee, the gatekeeper for most legislation before it gets to the full chamber, first met at 1 a.m. Wednesday to advance the massive bill in time for Speaker Mike Johnson’s Memorial Day deadline for sending it to the Senate.

The panel adjourned shortly before 11 p.m. Wednesday after all four Democrats voted against the measure and all present Republicans voted for it. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, was the lone lawmaker to miss the vote.

Proceedings crept on for hours as Democrats on the committee repeatedly accursed Republicans of trying to move the bill ‘in the dead of night’ and of trying to raise costs for working class families at the expense of the wealthy.

Democratic lawmakers also dragged out the process with dozens of amendments that stretched from early Tuesday well into Wednesday.

Republicans, meanwhile, contended the bill is aimed at boosting small businesses, farmers, and low- and middle-income families, while reducing waste, fraud, and abuse in the government safety net.

In a sign of the meeting’s high stakes, Johnson, R-La., himself visited with committee Republicans shortly before 1 a.m. and then again just after sunrise.

But the committee kicked off its meeting to advance the bill with several key outstanding issues – blue state Republicans pushing for a raise in state and local tax (SALT) deduction caps, and conservatives demanding stricter work requirement rules for Medicaid as well as a full repeal of green energy subsidies granted in former President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).

A long-awaited amendment to the legislation aimed at fixing those issues debuted around 9 p.m. on Wednesday evening.

The amendment would speed up the implementation of Medicaid work requirements for certain able-bodied recipients from 2029 to December 2026, and award states that did not follow Obamacare-era expansion plans with more federal dollars.

It would also end a host of green energy tax subsidies by 2028 if they did not demonstrate relatively quick return on investment.

Democrats, meanwhile, accused Republicans of hastily trying to change the legislation without proper notice.

Johnson told Fox News Digital during his Wednesday 1 a.m. that he was ‘very close’ to a deal with divided House GOP factions.

Returning from that meeting, Johnson signaled the House would press ahead with its vote either late Wednesday or early Thursday.

But the legislation’s passage through the House Rules Committee does not necessarily mean it will fare well in a House-wide vote.

A pair of House Rules Committee members, Roy and Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., and were two of the conservative House Freedom Caucus members who had called for the House-wide vote to be delayed on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the White House bore down hard on those rebels, demanding a vote ‘immediately’ in an official statement of policy that backed the House GOP bill.

Several of those fiscal hawks were more optimistic after a meeting at the White House with Trump and Johnson, however.

Republicans are working to pass Trump’s policies on tax, immigration, energy, defense and the national debt all in one massive bill via the budget reconciliation process.

Budget reconciliation lowers the Senate’s threshold for passage from 60 votes to 51, thereby allowing the party in power to skirt the minority — in this case, Democrats — to pass sweeping pieces of legislation, provided they deal with the federal budget, taxation or the national debt.

House Republicans are hoping to advance Trump’s bill through the House and Senate by the Fourth of July.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS