Advertisement

profile/5377instablog.png.webp
Instablog9ja
Nigeria Reportedly Set To Secure Another $500 Million World Bank Loan For Basic Education
~0.8 mins read

The Federal Government is seeking a $500 million World Bank loan to improve basic education, aiming to boost learning and cut out-of-school numbers.

This is according to the Programme Information Document for the loan project.

Naira Metrics reports that the loan is part of the World Bank’s HOPE for Quality Basic Education for All initiative, which aims to improve learning outcomes and address the challenges of out-of-school children.

Set for formal approval by March 2025, this project plays a key role in Nigeria’s education reform efforts.

The PID disclosed the total cost at $554m, with $500m funded by the World Bank and $54m from the Global Partnership for Education grant.

“The HOPE-Education operation will be financed by a World Bank IDA credit of $500m and a GPE grant of $54m.

The bank has been selected as one of two grant agents (along with UNICEF that will manage the other $54m) for implementing the System Transformation Grant of $107.59m; programme design, oversight, and TA for implementation support will be aligned across both agents,” the document read.

#Instablog9jaNews #TrendingStory #Awareness #StayUpdated

Continue reading on Instablog

profile/2681Capture.PNG.webp
Investopedia
Builders Still Aren't Constructing Enough Houses
~1.3 mins read

Homebuilding continued at a relatively slow pace in September as builders waited for a boost from lower mortgage rates, which has yet to arrive.

Builders broke ground on new homes in September at an annual rate of 1.35 million, the Census Bureau said Friday. That was down slightly from the rate of 1.36 million in August, and 1.36 million in September 2023. As recently as April 2022, builders were breaking ground at a rate of 1.82 million new homes per year. The September figure matched forecasts, according to a survey of economists by and .

Builders are not constructing enough houses to keep up with population growth. In 2022, 2.06 million households were formed, far more than the 1.6 million houses and apartment units that builders began to construct that year, according to an analysis by Realtor.com. Years of under-building since the Great Recession have left the U.S. with a persistent housing shortage that's helped drive up prices. At the same time, high mortgage rates are making homes even less affordable.Housing economists expect those high rates to come down in the coming year as the Federal Reserve reduces its benchmark fed funds rate, which they had held at a two-decade high to combat inflation. However, the downward path has been bumpy: the average rate offered for a 30-year mortgage rose to 6.44% this week, the highest since August, and well above the sub-3% rates available during the pandemic, according to Freddie Mac."U.S. home builders are in a holding period, awaiting further rate cuts to kick-start demand," Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, wrote in a commentary.

Do you have a news tip for Investopedia reporters? Please email us at [email protected]

Read more on Investopedia

Advertisement

profile/2681Capture.PNG.webp
Investopedia
Apple IPhone 16 Sales Reportedly Off To Hot Start In China
~1.5 mins read

Apple's (AAPL) iPhone 16 is outselling its predecessor in China by 20% in the three weeks since its release, according to new research data. 

What's more, sales of the more expensive Pro and Pro Max models are up 44% this cycle, per Counterpoint Research data cited by .

The improved performance in China is due in part to production issues that plagued the iPhone 15 rollout a year ago and likely impacted early sales, Counterpoint analyst Ivan Lam noted, according to the report. Additionally, the iPhone 15 faced competition from Chinese rival Huawei's Mate 60 device. 

"Given the smooth production ramp-up, consistent pricing strategy, and the initial wave of upgrades by existing iPhone users, the iPhone 16 series has experienced substantial growth in the Chinese domestic market," Lam was quoted as saying. "The product mix has also improved markedly."

This matters significantly, as the iPhone made up more than half of Apple's $383.29 billion in total net sales last year.

There had been some concern among analysts that the iPhone 16, which Apple has heralded as the first built around Apple Intelligence, would struggle in China due to the lack of a partner in the country to power its artificial intelligence features, reported. Now, Wedbush analysts believe Apple could sell more than 240 million iPhones in fiscal 2025, with 100 million Chinese iPhones in the window of an upgrade next year.

The China figures come after Apple stock reached an all-time high on Tuesday as the tech giant unveiled its newest iPad Mini, launching next Wednesday.

Apple shares recently were up 1% to $234.36. They have gained more than 20% this year.

Do you have a news tip for Investopedia reporters? Please email us at [email protected]

Read more on Investopedia

profile/5377instablog.png.webp
Instablog9ja
Kano Hisbah Arrests Jigawa Commissioner With Married Woman In An Uncompleted Building
~0.8 mins read

The Kano State Hisbah Board has arrested the Jigawa State Commissioner of Special Duties, Auwal Danladi Sankara, after he was allegedly found in an uncompleted building with a married woman.

The board’s Director General, Dr. Abba Sufi, in a statement on Friday, October 18, said the arrest was made possible through intelligent tracking following multiple complaints from the woman’s brother-in-law about the commissioner’s alleged immoral activities with her.

According to the statement, “Yes, it is true, we have arrested Auwal Danladi Sankara, the Jigawa Commissioner, with a married woman in an uncompleted building that belongs to him.

Unknown to him that we were tracking him based on reports against him that we received.

Nasiru Bulama filed the complaint with the Kano State Police Command, the Department of State Services and the Hisbah Board, alleging Sankara’s involvement in illicit s+xual activities with his wife.

We have been having problems with Sankara because he is operating illicit dr+g centres in the names of hotels with pros§it¥tion and dr+g addiction activities.”

#Instablog9jaNews #TrendingStory #Awareness #StayUpdated

Continue reading on Instablog

profile/2681Capture.PNG.webp
Investopedia
Intuitive Surgical Stock Hits Record High On Da Vinci Device Demand
~0.9 mins read

Shares of Intuitive Surgical (ISRG) hit an all-time high Friday, a day after the medical device maker posted better-than-expected results on more use of its da Vinci minimally invasive surgical devices.

The company reported third-quarter adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $1.84, with revenue advancing 17% year-over-year to $2.04 billion. Both exceeded consensus estimates of analysts polled by Visible Alpha.

The number of da Vinci procedures worldwide increased 18%, helping to drive instruments and accessories sales to $1.26 billion. Intuitive Surgical installed 379 da Vinci units in the quarter, 67 more than the same period a year ago, with 110 of those its new da Vinci 5.

Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Gary Guthart said the "core measures" of the company's business were healthy, and "we are pleased by customer adoption of da Vinci 5." 

Intuitive Surgical shares surged more than 8% to $512.74 after touching a record $517.61 soon after markets opened Friday. They are up more than 50% year-to-date.

Do you have a news tip for Investopedia reporters? Please email us at [email protected]

Read more on Investopedia

Advertisement

profile/2681Capture.PNG.webp
Investopedia
CVS Stock Plummets As It Replaces CEO
~1.3 mins read

CVS Health (CVS) stock tumbled about 7% in morning trading Friday after the pharmacy and healthcare giant announced the replacement of Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Karen Lynch with David Joyner, a longtime company veteran who most recently ran Caremark, its pharmacy benefit manager (PBM).

Joyner is taking the top job effective immediately, CVS said, as the company has weathered a difficult year of sales at its namesake pharmacies and problems with its bets on Medicare coverage that have led it to lower its full-year outlook several times already.

Newly appointed executive chairman Roger Farah said the board believes it was "the right time to make a change," and said Joyner's decades of experience with CVS "can help us more directly address the challenges our industry faces" and make necessary changes.

In addition to the CEO swap, CVS also provided preliminary guidance for third-quarter profit, projecting earnings per share (EPS) between 3 cents and 8 cents, and adjusted EPS of $1.05 to $1.10. Analysts are expecting EPS of $1.27, and adjusted EPS of $1.69, according to consensus estimates compiled by Visible Alpha.

The company is set to report third-quarter earnings Nov. 6, and said the lackluster projections are connected to costs related to its Medicare operations and other one-time expenses like store closures.

first reported the news that the CEO change was imminent, sending CVS stock lower Friday morning. After the announcement, shares were down more than 11% to $56.30, nearly 30% below where they started the year.

Do you have a news tip for Investopedia reporters? Please email us at [email protected]

Read more on Investopedia

Loading...