Ford Motor is recalling 254,640 SUVs in the U.S. due to a software defect that can disable rearview cameras and key driver-assistance safety features, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).

The issue stems from an unexpected reset of the vehicle’s image processing software, which may cause the rearview camera image to fail and disable advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS) such as pre-collision assist, lane-keeping assist and blind-spot monitoring.

Regulators warn that the loss of these systems can reduce a driver’s ability to detect hazards, increasing the risk of a crash.

The recall affects certain 2022–2025 Lincoln Navigator, 2024–2025 Lincoln Nautilus, 2025 Lincoln Aviator and 2025 Ford Explorer vehicles.

FORD IN DEEP WATER AFTER SWEEPING RECALLS HIT EVERY MODEL SINCE 2020 – WITH ONE EXCEPTION

According to NHTSA filings, the problem is linked to the Image Processing Module A (IPMA), which can become overloaded when tracking a high volume of moving objects – such as in dense urban traffic – triggering a system reset. In some cases, repeated resets over multiple ignition cycles can lead to a persistent loss of functionality.

Drivers may see warning messages such as “Front Camera Fault,” “Pre-Collision Assist Not Available,” or “Lane-Keeping System Off” when the issue occurs, and blind-spot indicators may also illuminate.

Ford said it is not aware of any crashes, injuries or fires related to the defect.

The automaker plans to fix the issue through a software update to the IPMA system, which will be provided either through over-the-air (OTA) updates or at dealerships free of charge.

Owner notification letters are expected to be mailed beginning March 30, 2026, and affected vehicle identification numbers will be searchable on NHTSA’s website starting March 25.

The recall highlights the auto industry’s growing reliance on software to power core vehicle safety systems, as well as the challenges that can arise when those systems fail or behave unpredictably in real-world driving conditions.

Advanced driver-assistance features have become increasingly common across new vehicles, with regulators requiring certain technologies – such as rearview cameras – in all new cars sold in the U.S.

CLICK HERE TO GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO

Consumers can check whether their vehicle is included in the recall by visiting NHTSA’s website or contacting Ford customer service.

This post was originally published here

Parliamentary hearing takes aim at online harms from X, TikTok and Meta, including use of AI to ‘nudify’ young girls

MPs have accused “complacent” social media companies of spreading Iran war misinformation, allowing political deepfakes that could threaten elections and still enabling the use of AI to make young girls appear naked.

In a testy parliamentary hearing that exposed deepening frustration among MPs with big tech firms, X, TikTok and Meta listed measures they had taken to tackle online harms, but were told: “You seem to be doing an awful lot, and it’s not making a jot of difference.”

Continue reading…

This post was originally published here


Energy titans at the CERAWeek conference in Houston are sounding the alarm, warning that the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran is causing long-term damage to the global economy.

Despite the White House’s energy chief aiming to ease concerns, the executives of oil giants like TotalEnergies, Chevron, Abu Dhabi’s ADNOC and Vitol Americas expressed concern about prolonged Iran-linked volatility.

“The consequence is not only high energy prices. It will damage other supply chains,” TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanne said, according to Reuters.

“This is raising the cost of living for those who can least afford it and slowing economic growth everywhere. From factories to farms to families around the world, the human cost is mounting by the day,” ADNOC CEO Sultan Al Jaber said.

INSIDE CHEVRON’S FLAGSHIP REFINERY TAPPING INTO VENEZUELAN CRUDE AFTER MADURO’S CAPTURE

“It will take time to come out of this,” Chevron CEO Mike Wirth said at the conference on Monday, while Vitol Americas’ Ben Marshall cautioned about “severe” demand destruction if global benchmark Brent crude eventually hits $120 a barrel.

The U.S. standard for oil prices, West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude, was trading at roughly $91.74 per barrel just before the market opened Tuesday, up about 4% from its previous close. WTI reached a 52-week high of $113.41 per barrel late last week, according to market data.

U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright joined FOX Business’ Lauren Simonetti on “Varney & Co.” Monday to discuss how a potential agreement with Iran could help reopen the Strait of Hormuz and stabilize prices after weeks of disruption.

“They would go down quite a bit. If we see a pathway to have the Strait of Hormuz open soon and energy flowing again, you’d see energy prices drop pretty significantly,” Wright said.

“That could happen if a peace agreement is reached,” Wright continued. “If Iran thinks enough is enough, and they’re willing to make a deal… then there’ll be a deal.”

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz said the Trump administration is working to blunt rising oil prices by allowing Iranian crude already at sea to be sold, a move he described as turning Tehran’s own strategy against it.

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent first outlined the approach, saying the administration could temporarily lift sanctions on roughly 140 million barrels of Iranian oil loaded on tankers, adding supply to global markets rather than intervening directly in oil futures markets.

President Donald Trump has opened a path of diplomacy with Iran, allowing a five-day window for negotiations to end the conflict this week. The pause began on Tuesday even amid reports that the U.S. and Israel were escalating other aspects of the war against Tehran.

READ MORE FROM FOX BUSINESS

FOX Business’ Arabella Bennett and Fox News’ Taylor Penley contributed to this report.

This post was originally published here

President Donald Trump took a surprise tour of Elvis Presley’s Graceland on Monday while in Memphis, a diversion from the war in Iran and efforts to address long lines at U.S. airports during which he marveled at just how famous the King of Rock and Roll was and wondered aloud if he could have beaten him in a fight.

Trump for years has played Presley’s music at his campaign rallies across the country and often compared himself to Presley. He was in Memphis for a roundtable on efforts to address crime in the city.

“I’m going to see Graceland after this, I think. Is that right?” Trump said during the meeting. “I love Elvis.”

Trump’s side trip to a top tourist attraction — which has at times ranked as the second most-visited private home in the U.S. after the White House — came as thousands of Americans across the country are wading through long lines at security checkpoints at airports, where Trump sent federal immigration officers to assist the Transportation Security Administration during an ongoing Homeland Security shutdown.

Also, though Trump was in Tennessee on Monday after ordering a “temporary” halt to planned strikes on Iranian power plants, American forces are still embroiled in the sprawling regional conflict.

The late singer’s stately home, with its stone facade and white columned entrance, is just a few miles from the site of the roundtable meeting, which was also attended by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Attorney General Pam Bondi. Graceland opened as a museum and tourist attraction in 1982 as a tribute to Presley, the singer and actor who died in August 1977 at age 42.

Graceland temporarily closed down so Trump could take a brief private tour, including examining an Army helmet Presley scrawled his “EP” initials in after reporting to basic training in 1958. He also scoped out a bread warmer in the kitchen and traipsed through the den known as “the Jungle Room” because of its green shag carpet, Polynesian-style furniture and indoor rock waterfall.

Trump also marveled at Presley’s gold-plated Social Security card, suggesting that the style of card might be something authorities might want to bring back. Later, peering at Presley’s gold phone, the president offered, “I would like to hear some of those conversations.”

Tours of the home never include the bathroom where Presley died. But the president was handed a guitar to sign by a Graceland guide who pulled on gloves to handle special objects. The instrument was a replica of one used by Presley during his famous “Aloha From Hawaii” concert in 1973, the president was told.

After being told that Elvis had not actually played the guitar he’d signed, Trump grew reflective. “Could I have taken him in a fight?” he asked of Elvis, whom he lamented having never met.

“Who else would be more famous than Elvis?” he offered with a grin, when it was suggested that visitors could one day come to glimpse his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

Trump’s campaign rally pre-show set list often includes some of Presley’s music, such as “Suspicious Minds,” “I Want You, I Need You, I Love You,” and a medley of “Dixie” and “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.” At times, massive digital screens at his rallies would play videos of Presley’s concerts.

Trump has often compared himself to Elvis, once posting a composite photograph on social media with half Presley’s face on one side and his own on the other.

“For so many years people have been saying that Elvis and I look alike. Now this pic has been going all over the place,” Trump wrote. “What do you think?”

Later that year, he shared on social media a black-and-white image that depicted Trump standing alongside the singer as he played guitar.

Trump has also shouted out the late musician from the stage, opening a 2018 rally in Tupelo, Mississippi — Presley’s birthplace — by joking that people used to say that at one time he resembled him.

“We love Elvis. I shouldn’t say this, you’ll say I’m very conceited because I’m not, but other than the blonde hair when I was growing up they said I looked like Elvis, do you see that, can you believe it?”

___

AP writer Will Weissert contributed from Washington. Kinnard reported from Chapin, S.C., and can be reached at http://x.com/MegKinnardAP

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

This post was originally published here

Circle Internet Group (NYSE:CRCL) is urging European policymakers to accelerate updates to the EU’s digital asset framework, but CRCL plunged over 6% on Tuesday morning.

The EU Reform Push

Circle submitted feedback March 20 on the European Commission’s proposed Market Integration Package, calling the plan a meaningful step toward modernizing capital markets but noting gaps around scalability, supervision, and settlement.

Circle largely backed proposed changes to the EU’s Distributed Ledger Technology Pilot Regime, including expanding eligible assets and raising volume thresholds. 

However, the company argued current limits continue to constrain liquidity and institutional participation.

The firm proposed introducing adaptive thresholds tied to market conditions rather than relying on periodic legislative updates. 

Circle also urged regulators to fast-track changes outside the broader …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

Moments after an Air Canada jet collided at high speed with a fire truck at New York’s LaGuardia Airport, killing the pilots and hurling a flight attendant from the aircraft, the passengers took their escape into their own hands.

With the smell of fuel in the air and debris dangling from the obliterated cockpit, passengers tore open emergency exit doors, jumped off the plane’s wings and then turned around to catch others coming up behind them, some bleeding or with head wounds.

“Strangely enough, I wasn’t scared or panicked. On the contrary, I think most of us were pretty aware of what happened,” said passenger Clément Lelièvre. “So we all went outside; we got other people out.”

About 40 passengers and crew members on the regional jet from Montreal, and two people from the fire truck, were taken to hospitals. Some suffered serious injuries, but by Monday morning, most had been released, and others walked away without needing treatment.

As investigators continued delving Tuesday into what caused the catastrophic wreck, stories of survival also emerged — including that of the flight attendant, found injured but alive outside the aircraft.

Lelièvre credited the pilots’ “incredible reflexes” with saving lives. The pilots braked extremely hard just as the plane touched down, he said.

The collision late Sunday came after the fire truck was given permission to check on another plane that had aborted its takeoff after reporting an odor on board and started crossing the tarmac. An air traffic controller can be heard on airport communications frantically telling the fire truck to stop.

Roughly 20 minutes later, the controller appears to blame himself. “We were dealing with an emergency earlier,” the controller said. “I messed up.”

A key for investigators will be examining coordination of the airport’s air traffic and ground traffic at the time of the crash, said Mary Schiavo, a former Department of Transportation Inspector General.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said LaGuardia is “well-staffed” but faces a shortage of controllers.

The runway where the crash happened is likely to be closed for “days” during the investigation, Jennifer Homendy, chair of the National Transportation Safety Board, which is leading the investigation, said at a news conference Monday. Investigators need to sift through a lot of debris, she said.

Authorities recovered the plane’s cockpit and flight data recorders by cutting a hole in the aircraft’s roof and then drove them to the NTSB lab in Washington for analysis, Homendy said.

It was too early in the investigation to answer many questions about the accident, but more information was expected to be released Tuesday, she said.

The crash shut down LaGuardia — the New York region’s third busiest hub — during what was already a messy time at U.S. airports because of a partial government shutdown.

Flights resumed Monday afternoon on one runway and with lengthy delays. The shutdown caused some disruptions at other airports, too, especially for Delta, which has a major presence at LaGuardia.

There were 72 passengers and four crew members aboard the Jazz Aviation flight operating on behalf of Air Canada, according to the airline. The flight originated at Montreal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport. Canada has also sent a team of investigators.

The pilot and copilot who died in the first fatal crash at LaGuardia in 34 years were both based out of Canada, said Kathryn Garcia, executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the airport.

Jeannette Gagnier, the great aunt of one of the pilots, identified him as Antoine Forest, and said he always wanted to be a pilot.

Air traffic controllers are not impacted by the partial government shutdown that has caused long delays at airport security checkpoints in recent days. They have been affected by past shutdowns.

The FAA has been chronically short on air traffic controllers for years.

LaGuardia is one of 35 major U.S. airports with an advanced surface surveillance system designed to help keep track of planes and vehicles crossing the airport.

An alarm heard in the background of the air traffic control audio was likely from the system and would have alerted the tower to the potential collision, Former FAA air traffic control chief Mike McCormick said.

FAA statistics show there were 1,636 runway incursions last year.

___

Associated Press reporters Michael R. Sisak, Anthony Izaguirre and Mae Anderson in New York; Rob Gillies in Toronto; Josh Funk in Omaha, Nebraska; Kathy McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire; and Hallie Golden in Seattle contributed.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

This post was originally published here

The Bank of England should not allow uncertainty to delay efforts to contain a rise in inflation as energy prices surge in the aftermath of the attacks on Iran by the U.S. and Israel, Chief Economist Huw Pill said Tuesday.

This post was originally published here

Critics say £15 toy designed for children aged two and over risks exposing them to ‘a very adult, performative world’

Argos has ignited a debate among parents and child development campaigners after promoting a wooden “influencer kit” aimed at toddlers.

Critics have warned that the play set could normalise the precarious world of digital labour and prematurely expose children to the pressures of online visibility.

Continue reading…

This post was originally published here

Chancellor says package offered by Liz Truss’s government was unaffordable and any future help will be targeted

Rachel Reeves has ruled out universal support to deal with any future rise in energy bills, saying any government help would be targeted, and criticised the support offered by Liz Truss’s government as unaffordable and irresponsible.

The chancellor also said she would review the planned fuel duty rise in September, but she did not commit to delaying or postponing it.

Continue reading…

This post was originally published here

When an oil shock hits, most retailers brace for impact. John Mercer, Head of Global Research at Coresight Research, thinks a handful are quietly positioned to profit from it.

“Value-focused retail — Walmart, dollar stores, warehouse clubs, off-price — are relatively better positioned to serve price-sensitive consumers,” Mercer told Benzinga. “Higher gasoline prices and global uncertainty would serve as a tailwind to these structural gainers in retail.”

The data backs him up. Dollar Tree‘s (NASDAQ:DLTR) fastest-growing customer in 2025 was the six-figure earner. In Q1, higher-income households accounted for 50% of net new customer growth; by Q2, two-thirds; by Q3, CEO Mike Creedon said roughly 60% of 3 million net new households earned over $100,000.

As an Iran war-driven oil shock ripples through the U.S. economy, that shift is about to accelerate.

Americans Are Already Feeling It

After the Feb. 28 U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran, disruption in the Strait of Hormuz sent oil prices above $100. Fuel prices surged quickly, with gasoline up 27% to $3.79 and diesel rising 34% past $5 a gallon, signaling wider inflation pressures.

“2026 was already expected to be a year of still-elevated inflation, of about 2.8%, and it is likely to mark the sixth consecutive year of CPI averaging above 2% on an annual basis. The energy shock will only inject further upward pressure, while also adding uncertainty around rate cuts,” Mercer said. …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

Poll also finds Australians keener for government to forge closer ties with ‘middle powers’ such as Canada and Japan

Only one in four Australians approve of the US-Israel war on Iran, and just a third have backed the federal government’s actions in sending a military plane and troops to the region, according to a new poll.

The latest Guardian Essential poll found Australians are keener for the government to forge closer ties with so-called “middle powers” such as Canada and Japan, with about a third wanting to distance from the US.

Continue reading…

This post was originally published here

Some residents moved amid threat of flooding are under public guardianship due to reduced mental capacity. NT public guardian says they ‘would have been very frightened’

Frail aged care residents were forced to shelter in an open-sided basketball court in Katherine, sleeping in makeshift conditions as authorities scrambled to prepare for major river flooding triggered by ex-Tropical Cyclone Narelle.

Residents from Rocky Ridge and Katherine Hostel aged care facilities were evacuated to MacFarlane primary school where many spent the night at a covered basketball court, with rain blowing into the open-sided shelter, as the deep tropical-low swept through the region.

Continue reading…

This post was originally published here

A study found correlation between the environment and long-term wellness in sample of 1,978 who attended college between 1940-80

Attending a historically Black college or university (HBCU) as a young adult may be linked with better later-life cognitive outcomes for Black Americans, according to a recent study. The authors sampled 1,978 Black American adults who attended college between 1940 and 1980 (35% attended an HBCU), and who attended a high school in a state with an HBCU. The conclusion? There may be a correlation between collegiate environment and long-term wellness.

During that time frame of attendance, two major policy implementations shaped schooling in the country: first, in 1952, Brown v Board of Education ruled that racial segregation in schools was unconstitutional; and second was the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which barred racial discrimination in school.

Continue reading…

This post was originally published here

U.S. efforts to resolve tensions with Iran through diplomacy face deep skepticism from military leadership, even as negotiations unfold behind the scenes.

Retired Gen. Jack Keane, a Fox News strategic analyst, joined FOX Business’ Maria Bartiromo on “Mornings with Maria” to discuss whether diplomacy can achieve the same objectives as military action, including reopening the Strait of Hormuz and dismantling Iran’s nuclear and missile capabilities.

Keane said the administration is attempting to use diplomatic leverage to reach outcomes that could otherwise be achieved through force but warned the challenge lies in trusting Tehran’s commitments.

“I’m highly skeptical… This is a regime for 47 years. They are pathological liars and they’re cheaters… It’s very difficult to take them at their word,” Keane said.

MARKETS HANGING ON ‘EVERY WORD’ AS US-IRAN CONFLICT NEARS ONE MONTH, FORMER NEC DIRECTOR WARNS

The negotiations, he noted, are taking place indirectly through intermediaries, even as both sides publicly signal conflicting positions about whether talks are happening at all.

Keane emphasized that U.S. and Israeli military leaders are confident they could meet their objectives through force if necessary, including reopening key shipping lanes and eliminating Iran’s ability to sustain attacks.

“If we can do that through negotiations… And we absolutely are confident that it’s real… It remains to be seen,” Keane said.

ENERGY PRICES COULD FALL ‘PRETTY SIGNIFICANTLY’ IF IRAN DEAL REACHED, ENERGY SECRETARY SAYS

He added that Iran’s motivations in any deal would likely center on regime survival, economic recovery and sanctions relief, raising further questions about how much the regime is willing to concede.

“We’ll see what this deal really entails when we get down to the specifics,” he said.

This post was originally published here

The New York Stock Exchange has partnered with Securitize to develop a tokenized securities trading platform that bypasses the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp., settling stocks directly on blockchain with 24/7 trading and instant settlement.

The Securitize Partnership

Securitize will become NYSE’s first digital transfer agent, creating shares for stocks and ETFs as digital tokens on a blockchain, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.

The two companies will design a digital transfer agent program, including standards for other transfer agents to issue and manage stocks as blockchain tokens in a compliant way.

Transfer agents keep records of investors, issue and cancel ownership certificates, facilitate dividend payments, and mail annual reports to shareholders. 

Securitize expects its broker-dealer to connect with NYSE’s Digital Trading Platform, an alternative trading system for tokenized securities.

The 24/7 Trading Vision

NYSE which is owned by …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

U.S. stocks traded lower this morning, with the Dow Jones index falling more than 350 points on Tuesday.

Following the market opening Tuesday, the Dow traded down 0.86% to 45,812.92 while the NASDAQ fell 0.87% to 21,756.87. The S&P 500 also fell, dropping, 0.72% to 6,533.64.

Check This Out: How To Earn $500 A Month From Goldman Sachs Stock Ahead Of Q4 Earnings

Leading and Lagging Sectors

Energy shares climbed by 1.7% on Tuesday.

In trading on Tuesday, information technology stocks fell by 1.1%.

Top Headline

Core & Main, Inc. (NYSE:CNM) posted mixed results for the fourth quarter on Tuesday.

The company posted adjusted EPS of 52 cents, beating market estimates of 42 cents. The company’s quarterly sales came in at $1.581 billion, missing expectations of $1.599 billion.

Core & Main said it sees FY2026 sales of $7.800 billion-$7.900 billion, versus estimates of $7.994 billion.

Equities Trading UP
           

  • Paranovus Entertainment Technology Ltd. (NASDAQ:PAVS) shares shot up 94% to $0.5747 after the company announced …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

Americans’ outlook on the job market has turned increasingly pessimistic, a surprisingly negative shift given the low unemployment rate but one that likely reflects an ongoing hiring drought.

Just 28% of workers in a quarterly Gallup survey conducted late last year said now is a “good time” to find a quality job, with 72% saying it is a bad time. Those figures are a sharp reversal from just a few years ago, in mid-2022, when 70% said it was a good time.

Americans have quickly gotten more pessimistic: As recently as late 2024, just under half of workers still said it was a good time to search for a job. The current survey was conducted during the final three months of 2025, long before the Iran war that has sent oil and gas prices soaring and threatens to slow the economy as Americans redirect more of their dollars to filling gas tanks and away from other spending.

The figures help explain other surveys that show Americans have a largely bleak view of the economy, even as many headline measures suggest it has been growing and job losses are low.

College graduates are especially gloomy

Job pessimism is especially pronounced among college graduates. The shift is likely because hiring in many white-collar professions has been unusually weak for the past two years, in areas such as software, customer service and advertising.

The survey found a split based on education levels, with just 19% of workers with a college degree thinking that now is a good time to find a quality job, while 35% of workers without a college degree are optimistic.

separate Gallup survey of U.S. adults overall found that college graduates’ optimism about the job market is the lowest it’s been since 2013. Meanwhile, the gap in job market sentiment between Americans with and without a college degree was at its widest in that survey since Gallup started asking the question in 2001.

Signs of broad discontent among young workers

Just about 2 in 10 workers ages 18-34 think now is a good time to find a job, compared to about 4 in 10 workers ages 65 and older who say the same.

Gallup’s survey is consistent with what economists call the “low-hire, low-fire” job market: Businesses are largely holding onto their workers and measures of layoffs remain quite low. As a result, older workers are largely secure in their jobs. But hiring is also quite sluggish, making it harder for younger workers to break in and find permanent work.

It also found that younger workers are much likelier than older workers to say they’re actively looking for a new job or watching for opportunities. Most Gen Z and Millennial workers say they’re at least watching for opportunities, while about three-quarters of baby boomers say they’re not looking at all.

Other surveys signal negative economic views

The Gallup results come as government data shows that overall hiring is at its weakest level in more than a decade. The Labor Department tracks a “hiring rate,” or the proportion of people who are hired each month as a percent of those with jobs. The hiring rate dropped to 3.2% last November, around when Gallup conducted its survey, the lowest since March 2013. It was 3.9% before the pandemic.

A hiring rate at that 3.2% is quite low: When it was last reached in March 2013, the unemployment rate was 7.5%, as millions of Americans were still struggling to find work after the 2008-2009 Great Recession. It suggests it is much harder to find a job now than the unemployment rate would indicate.

Government data also shows that there are more unemployed people — 7.4 million — than available jobs, at 6.9 million. That is a reversal from the first few years after the pandemic, when vacancies outnumbered those out of work.

Gallup’s survey also found that workers have a dimmer view of their current life and future prospects than at any point since 2009, when the firm began measuring the workforce’s life evaluations.

Other surveys echo Americans’ generally dark view of the economy. The Conference Board’s consumer confidence survey was just 91.2 in February, not far from its pandemic-era lows and down from nearly 130 before the pandemic.

More people believe jobs are “easy to get” than “hard to find,” the Conference Board’s survey finds, but the gap has narrowed steadily in recent years.

___

The Gallup poll of 22,368 U.S. adults who are working full-time and part-time for organizations in the U.S. was conducted Oct. 30-Nov. 13, 2025, using a sample drawn from Gallup’s probability-based panel. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 1.0 percentage points.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

This post was originally published here

President Donald Trump has cast another mail ballot in Florida as he continues to publicly bash the voting method as a source of fraud and push Congress to curtail the practice.

Palm Beach County voter records show the president voted by mail in a Tuesday special election for state legislative seats and that his ballot has been counted. Early in-person voting in the contest ran through Sunday, when Trump was still at his south Florida estate.

The White House did not immediately return an Associated Press request for comment. Aides have said Trump’s ire is directed at states using universal mail-in voting, not individual voters who may not be able to get to a polling place.

Nonetheless, Trump has in the last week called mail-in voting “cheating” and “corrupt as hell.” He is urging Congress to pass the SAVE Act, a sweeping bill that would bar universal mail ballots and limit the options to a select few voters — such as those with disabilities, military commitments or who are traveling on Election Day. The measure faces steep odds in the closely divided Senate even with the president’s pressure.

Trump has fixated on mail ballots since he began falsely claiming that his 2020 presidential election loss to Democrat Joe Biden was the result of fraud. Multiple U.S. courts and Trump’s own attorney general have found no evidence of fraud that affected the outcome, despite the COVID-19 pandemic increasing the share of the electorate that cast mail ballots that year.

“We’re the only country in the world that does it that way. Corrupt as hell,” Trump said last week at the White House when hosting Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin.

Dozens of countries, including European democracies that are traditional U.S. allies, use some form of mail-in voting.

Trump said last week that the SAVE Act was the “biggest thing” pending in Washington, even as Congress and administration grapple with the Iran war and a partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security.

Last August, Trump used a White House meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to blast mail voting.

“We’re going to start with an executive order that’s being written right now by the best lawyers in the country to end mail-in ballots because they’re corrupt,” Trump said. “And it’s time that the Republicans get tough and stop it because the Democrats want it. It’s the only way they can get elected.”

The president, who changed his official personal residence and voter registration from New York to Florida during his first term, does not have a standing vote-by-mail request for all elections, according to the county records. That means he has to request a mail ballot for any individual election.

The ballot today includes Florida state House District 87 and Senate District 14.

Trump offered an endorsement late Monday in the House contest via his Truth Social platform.

“There is a very important Special Election tomorrow, Tuesday, March 24th, for Florida State House District 87 in beautiful Palm Beach County. … TO ALL GREAT PATRIOTS IN FLORIDA STATE HOUSE DISTRICT 87: GET OUT AND VOTE FOR JON MAPLES! Polls are open from 7:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M.” Trump wrote, without mentioning that he had voted by mail or at all.

The Florida election comes one day after the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a Mississippi case questioning whether states can count mail-in ballots that are postmarked by Election Day but not received until later. Trump has criticized those allowances in 14 states and the District of Columbia.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

This post was originally published here

Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) is trading in a tight range between $69,000 and $71,000 as shifting comments from President Donald Trump on the war with Iran fuel market volatility.

Bitcoin Holds Steady Amid Chaos

Analyst Scott Melker, known as “The Wolf of All Streets,” on Monday said markets are reacting in real time to conflicting geopolitical headlines.

He noted that trillions of dollars have been rapidly added and erased across equities, reflecting deep uncertainty. Despite this, Bitcoin has remained relatively stable within its range.

Melker also pointed to …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

Pulido has been a mainstay of Tejano music —a genre blending traditional regional Mexican elements with country, pop and conjunto influences — for more than three decades.

(Image credit: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

This post was originally published here

Images and videos online showed large plume of smoke and flames billowing out from refinery, but no one was injured

An oil refinery fire near the Texas coast was put out on Tuesday and a temporary shelter-in-place order was lifted, hours after a large explosion at the complex shot plumes of smoke into the air, officials said.

No one was injured in Monday’s explosion at the Valero refinery in Port Arthur, about 90 miles (145km) east of Houston, said Charlotte M Moses. The Port Arthur mayor had urged residents in parts of the west side of the city to stay put.

Continue reading…

This post was originally published here

Nasa reports show repeated warnings of close calls before crash that killed two pilots and injured 41 others

Pilot safety concerns about New York’s LaGuardia airport were filed to aviation officials months before Sunday’s collision between an airplane and a firetruck left two pilots dead and 41 other people hospitalized.

According to the aviation safety reporting system administered by the US space agency Nasa, a pilot using the airport in the summer wrote, “Please do something,” after air traffic controllers failed to provide appropriate guidance about multiple nearby aircraft.

Continue reading…

This post was originally published here

Here are the latest developments in the U.S.–Israel–Iran war on Tuesday at 9.15 AM ET, as the conflict enters its twenty-fifth day.

On Monday, President Donald Trump said that the U.S. and Iran have engaged in “very good and productive” discussions aimed at easing tensions. Posting on Truth Social, he added that he has directed the Department of Defense to suspend any strikes on Iran’s power and energy infrastructure for five days, contingent on progress in the ongoing talks.

However, senior Iranian officials rejected the claims. Iran’s Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said in a social media post on Monday that “no negotiations” happened with the U.S. and that Trump’s announcement was a way to manipulate markets.

Iran Appoints Larijani’s Replacement

Mohammad Bagher Zolghadr has been appointed secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, succeeding Ali Larijani, who was assassinated last week. Zolghadr is a former IRGC commander with extensive experience in Iran’s governance, including roles as deputy chief of strategy in the judiciary, chief of joint staff of the IRGC, and deputy commander-in-chief of the IRGC, reported Al Jazeera.

Saudi Arabia, UAE Near Active Role Against Iran

Saudi Arabia and the UAE are reportedly “inching closer” to directly joining the conflict with Iran, with Riyadh permitting U.S. forces to use a local air base, reported the Wall Street Journal. Sources suggest it is “only a matter of time” before Saudi Arabia intervenes, as officials warn their patience with Iranian attacks is limited.

Bangladesh Hikes Jet Fuel Prices By 79%

Bangladesh has raised jet fuel prices by 79% amid surging costs following the US-Israel conflict with Iran. The …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

Top Wall Street analysts changed their outlook on these top names. For a complete view of all analyst rating changes, including upgrades, downgrades and initiations, please see our analyst ratings page.

  • HC Wainwright & Co. analyst Andres Y. Maldonado upgraded Sutro Biopharma, Inc. (NASDAQ:STRO) from Neutral to Buy and raised the price target from $10 to $28. Sutro Biopharma shares closed at $21.33 on Monday. See how other analysts view this stock.
  • Daiwa Capital analyst Dennis Ip upgraded JinkoSolar Holding Co., Ltd. (NYSE:JKS) from Sell to Buy and announced a $28.5 price target. JinkoSolar shares …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

The buildout of artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure is running on a timeline the copper industry cannot match, sharpening concerns over whether supply can keep up with demand.Data compiled by MiningVisuals shows that a new AI data center typically reaches operation in 18 to 23 months, while a copper mine takes about 18 years to move from discovery to production.

Graphic by MiningVisuals. The issue is not only speed, but also intensity. AI facilities require significantly more copper than earlier generations of data centers, reflecting higher power loads and the adoption of liquid cooling systems. To illustrate further, a single hyperscale site can consume up to 50,000 metric tons (MT) of copper, compared with 5,000 to 15,000 MT for conventional facilities.That demand is landing on a market that is already under pressure from electrification. Copper consumption is rising across renewable energy, electric vehicles and grid expansion, tightening supply conditions even before the full impact of AI-related demand is felt.According to a recent study by S&P Global, total copper demand is projected to reach 42 million MT by 2040, while supply is expected to reach only around 32 million MT. The resulting deficit of 10 million MT has been described as a “systemic risk for global industries, technological advancement and economic growth.”“Here, in short, is the quandary: copper is the great enabler of electrification, but the accelerating pace of electrification is an increasing challenge for copper,” commented S&P Global Vice Chair Daniel Yergin.Even with an expected increase in recycled supply, the gap will require new primary production. Yet timelines for copper mine development remain long, with permitting and approvals often taking more than a decade, delaying the response of supply as demand continues to rise. The result is a growing focus on copper availability as a limiting factor in the expansion of AI infrastructure. As demand continues to build across multiple sectors, supply constraints are likely to remain a defining feature of the market.

MiningVisuals is your go-to source for mining insights and visuals — transforming complex data into clear graphics that highlight the essential minerals building our future.Don’t forget to follow us @INN_Resource for real-time news updates!Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post was originally published here

Africa is quickly becoming one of the most interesting emerging markets in the world of crypto, though it is still largely untapped by institutional investors. While markets in North America and Europe are becoming increasingly developed, African markets are growing in real-world use cases.

According to Chainalysis, the total value of on-chain activity within the region surpassed $205 billion for the twelve months to June 2025. This represents a 52% growth from the preceding year. This growth represents the third fastest-growing region in the world after APAC and Latin America.

The growth is mainly attributed to real-world use cases. For example, remittances, payment services, and record-keeping.

In March 2025, there was a surge in activity within the region. The monthly figure reached nearly $25 billion, representing a deviation from other months when most other regions recorded declining figures.

Nigeria Just Logged $96B in Crypto, And It’s Leading All of Africa

Much of the crypto growth in Africa has been fueled by centralized exchange activities in Nigeria. This saw a surge in cryptocurrency usage after the currency’s devaluation.

Recently, the DG of the SEC in Nigeria, Emomotimi Agama, disclosed that the country’s digital finance ecosystem had processed $96 billion in crypto and other virtual assets.

Also, an examination of on-chain transactions shows that stablecoins are being used in large transactions related to trade flows between Africa, the Middle East, and Asia.

Specifically, there are multi-million-dollar stablecoin transactions related to sectors like …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

New research shows that although the $124 trillion wealth transfer is coming, how much that inheritance will be worth and who gets to manage it is up in the air. 

Within the next generation, an estimated $124 trillion will change hands, according to Merrill Lynch. 

According to a recent survey, 95% of Gen Z and millennials say they feel ready to manage generational wealth, and 56% want to know the dollar amount they’re likely to inherit. Yet Fidelity research cited in the ABA Banking Journal shows that 68% of Gen X and boomer parents have not confirmed with their children that there is any money coming, even though 70% have written a will and 35% say they do not plan to share inheritance details at all. 

For younger adults trying to build a real financial plan, that mix of high expectations and limited information makes it harder to decide how much to save, how much to spend and how to invest without outside guidance from someone who can model different what if scenarios, like a financial advisor sourced through tools like SmartAsset’s matching platform.

69% of Millennials: Boomer Better Have My Money 

It isn’t just those with little hope of leaving their kids with a windfall who aren’t talking about inheritance. Per the Family Wealth in America 2025 study, just 14% of adults have had detailed conversations about inheritance, and only 36% have ever mentioned wealth transfer to a family member. About 50% stated that they have had vague discussions about end-of-life planning—but that number doesn’t include coming up with an investment or wealth protection plan. 

According to a recent study by Northwestern …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

VALLEY FORGE, Pa., March 24, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Vanguard today announced plans to execute forward share splits for five equity index ETFs. The share splits will be effective on April 21, 2026 and are intended to widen availability for investors by keeping share prices within accessible trading ranges.

Vanguard periodically and diligently assesses its ETF lineup to determine when and where share splits would most benefit investor outcomes. A number of factors are considered, including ETF market price, bid-ask spread, …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

NVIDIA Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang delved into the concept of “extreme co-design,” a holistic approach to optimizing the entire software stack.

Huang, on a podcast with Lex Fridman on Monday, explained that extreme co-design involves optimizing everything from architectures and chips to systems, system software, algorithms, and applications.

He underscored the importance of distributing the workload to maximize the benefits of increasing the number of computers. He also emphasized the need for a company’s architecture and organization to reflect its intended output.

At NVIDIA, Huang’s leadership approach avoids one-on-one meetings with his 60 direct staff members. The CEO explained …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

WELLINGTON, New Zealand, March 24, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Privacy-focused instant swap platform expands anonymous crypto swapping, cross-chain trading, and non-custodial exchange infrastructure.

SwapCult, a privacy-focused instant crypto swap platform and non-custodial exchanger, announced today that it has secured $3 million in strategic funding after surpassing $150 million in total cryptocurrency swap volume on its platform.

The milestone highlights the rapid growth of privacy-focused crypto infrastructure and the increasing demand for anonymous crypto swaps, non-custodial exchanges, and permissionless digital asset trading tools.

The new funding will accelerate development of SwapCult’s cross-chain swap integrations, liquidity routing technology, and scalable instant swap infrastructure.

Growth of Anonymous Crypto Trading

SwapCult enables users to perform instant cryptocurrency swaps directly from their wallets without creating accounts or completing KYC verification. Its non-custodial architecture ensures that users maintain full control of their digital assets throughout the entire swap process.

As demand for privacy-preserving crypto infrastructure grows, instant swap platforms like SwapCult are becoming an essential part of the global cryptocurrency ecosystem.

“Surpassing $150 million in swap volume demonstrates the growing global demand for simple and private crypto exchange tools,” said a SwapCult spokesperson. “Our mission is to make crypto swapping fast, permissionless, and fully non-custodial.”

cross-chain swaps

Funding to Expand DeFi and Cross‑Chain Trading

The $3 million funding round will support several major initiatives aimed at expanding SwapCult’s instant swap ecosystem and improving cross-chain crypto trading performance.

Key development initiatives include expanding cross-chain cryptocurrency swap integrations across major blockchain networks, improving liquidity aggregation for faster instant swaps, scaling infrastructure to support higher transaction volumes, advancing privacy-preserving transaction routing technology, and launching developer tools for crypto swap integrations.

swapcult funding

This post was originally published here

President Donald Trump‘s war with Iran is now rippling far beyond geopolitics and the global energy industry—and into the U.S. housing market.

The 30-year fixed mortgage rate, a key barometer of home affordability in the U.S., has jumped back to the psychologically crucial 7% for the first time since August, according to Barchart. And this time, the move isn’t being driven by the Federal Reserve—it’s being propelled by the bond market, where yields have climbed sharply amid fears that the surge in energy costs triggered by the Iran war will fuel an inflation spike.

What started as a geopolitical flare-up is now hitting American homebuyers directly. Mortgage rates at 7% or higher have historically been seen as a meaningful blow to affordability for the average homebuyer.

“With rates this high, affordability will take another hit,” Jim Osman, founder of specialist investment research firm The Edge Group, wrote in an X.com post, responding to a Barchart post …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

As of March 24, 2026, two stocks in the real estate sector could be flashing a real warning to investors who value momentum as a key criteria in their trading decisions.

The RSI is a momentum indicator, which compares a stock’s strength on days when prices go up to its strength on days when prices go down. When compared to a stock’s price action, it can give traders a better sense of how a stock may perform in the short term. An asset is typically considered overbought when the RSI is above 70, according to Benzinga Pro.

Here’s the latest list of major overbought players in this sector.

Peakstone Realty Trust (NYSE:PKST)

  • On Feb. 18, Peakstone Realty posted downbeat quarterly results. The company’s stock gained around 53% over the past six months and has a 52-week high of $20.97.
  • RSI …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

This post was originally published here

Health department says ‘too many’ doctors have been using racist language, particularly on social media, without swift action

An overhaul of the General Medical Council is expected to lead to more doctors that face accusations of racism and antisemitism on social media being struck off.

The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) has launched a consultation on changes to the legislation governing the regulation of doctors, saying the move will lead to the biggest reform of the medical regulator, the GMC, in four decades.

Continue reading…

This post was originally published here

Conservationists celebrate second twin birth just two months after another found in Virunga national park

A second set of mountain gorilla twins has been born in Virunga national park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), in what conservationists are celebrating as an “extraordinary” event for the endangered primates.

Just two months after tiny twin mountain gorillas were discovered by rangers in the Virunga massif, in eastern DRC, another rare twin birth has been found by park wardens. This time, an infant male and female have been spotted in the Baraka family, a troop of 19 mountain gorillas that roam the region’s high-altitude rainforests.

Continue reading…

This post was originally published here