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Gilas Youth faces Bahrain in KO match for quarterfinals berth

GILAS Pilipinas Youth clashes against Bahrain in a knockout (KO) set-to Thursday for a seat in the quarterfinals of the 2025 FIBA U16 Asia Cup at the Buyant Ukhaa Sport Complex in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.

Game time is at 11:30 a.m. (Manila time) with the Nationals mentored by LA Tenorio looking to heat up when it matters most from subpar campaign in the first round and set up a QF tussle against unbeaten and reigning bronze medalist China, which topped Group A.

Ranked No. 35, Gilas bled for a 1-2 card for the No. 3 seed in Group B but proved enough to advance in the qualification against the lower-tiered but vastly-improved Bahrain, No. 94, after its 2-1 campaign for second place in Group A.

Gilas’ lone win came against No. 89 Indonesia, 65-60, as it folded to No. 51 Chinese Taipei, 106-82, and No. 15 New Zealand, 85-54.

Despite a harder route though, Gilas has the experience to still get the job done after going through the same process in the 2023 edition marked by a Final Four finish. 

Gilas then stunned South Korea and Japan in back-to-back knockout games to place just behind Australia, New Zealand and China for a seat in the 2024 FIBA U17 World Cup hosted by Turkey.

Turkey once again will host the 2026 world joust featuring four teams from Asia.

To do it, Mr. Tenorio will have leaders Gab delos Reyes, Jhustin Hallare, Mark Jhello Lumagub, Ethan Tan-Chi, Prince Cariño and Jeremiah Antolin to bank on. — John Bryan Ulanday

China’s Xi projects power at military parade with Putin, Kim

THE DF-5C liquid-fueled intercontinental strategic nuclear missiles are displayed during a military parade to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II in Beijing, China, Sept. 3. — REUTERS/GO NAKAMURA

BEIJING — Chinese President Xi Jinping warned the world was facing a choice between peace or war as he held his country’s largest-ever military parade on Wednesday, flanked by Russia’s Vladimir Putin and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un.

The lavish event to mark 80 years since Japan’s defeat at the end of World War II has been largely shunned by Western leaders, with Putin and Kim — pariahs in the West due to the Ukraine war and Mr. Kim’s nuclear ambitions — the guests of honor.

Designed to project China’s military might and diplomatic clout, it also comes as US President Donald J. Trump’s trade tariffs and volatile policymaking strain its relations with allies and rivals alike.

“Today, mankind is faced with the choice of peace or war, dialogue or confrontation, win-win or zero-sum,” Mr. Xi told a crowd of more than 50,000 spectators at Tiananmen Square, adding that the Chinese people “firmly stand on the right side of history.”

Riding in an open-top limousine, Mr. Xi then inspected the troops and cutting-edge military equipment such as missiles, tanks and drones on display.

Helicopters trailing large banners and fighter jets flew in formation above during the 70-minute showcase thick with symbolism and propaganda which culminated in the release of 80,000 peace doves and colorful balloons.

Donning a tunic suit in the style worn by former leader Mao Zedong, Mr. Xi earlier greeted more than 25 leaders on the red carpet, including Indonesia’s Prabowo Subianto who made a surprise appearance despite widespread protests at home.

Seated between Mr. Putin and Mr. Kim in the viewing gallery, Mr. Xi repeatedly engaged in conversations with both leaders as thousands of troops and materiel paraded before them. It marked the first time the trio have appeared together in public.

Mr. Putin later thanked his North Korean counterpart for his soldiers’ courageous fighting in the war in Ukraine during a bilateral meeting at China’s State Guesthouse. Mr. Kim said he was willing to do everything he can to help Russia.

Mr. Xi’s wife, Peng Liyuan, could be heard saying “Nice to meet you” and “Welcome to China” to several of the guests in English.

“Please give my warmest regards to Vladimir Putin, and Kim Jong Un, as you conspire against the United States of America,” Mr. Trump said in a post on Truth Social, as the event kicked off. He also highlighted the US role in helping China secure its freedom from Japan.

Mr. Trump had earlier told reporters he did not see the parade as a challenge to the United States. Japan’s top government spokesperson declined to comment on the parade, adding Asia’s top two economies were building “constructive relations.”

NEW GLOBAL ORDER
Mr. Xi has cast World War II as a major turning point in the “great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation,” in which it overcame the humiliation of Japan’s invasion to become an economic and geopolitical powerhouse.

Earlier this week, Mr. Xi unveiled his vision of a new global order at a regional security summit, calling for unity against “hegemonism and power politics,” a thinly veiled swipe at his rival across the Pacific Ocean.

“Xi feels confident that the table has turned. It’s China that is back in the driver’s seat now,” said Wen-Ti Sung, fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Global China Hub, based in Taiwan.

“It’s been Trumpian unilateralism rather than China’s wolf warrior diplomacy when people talk about the leading source of uncertainty in the international system,” he added.

Beyond the pomp, analysts are watching whether Mr. Xi, Mr. Putin and Mr. Kim may signal closer defense relations following a pact signed by Russia and North Korea in June 2024, and a similar alliance between Beijing and Pyongyang, an outcome that may alter the military calculus in the Asia-Pacific region.

Mr. Putin has already used the occasion to seal deeper energy deals with China, while the gathering has given Mr. Kim an opportunity to gain implicit support for his banned nuclear weapons.

Mr. Kim, debuting in his first major multilateral event, became the first North Korean to attend a Chinese military parade in 66 years.

He traveled to Beijing with his daughter Ju Ae, whom South Korean intelligence consider his most likely successor, although she was not seen alongside him at the parade.

IMPRESSIVE STRIDES
Over the past two years, more than a dozen generals — many formerly close to Mr. Xi — have been purged from the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) in a sweeping corruption crackdown.

“The parade allows Xi to focus the world’s attention on its impressive strides in modernizing its military hardware, while overshadowing the stubborn challenges afflicting the PLA, most notably the continued purges rolling through the ranks of its most senior officers,” said Jon Czin, a foreign policy analyst at Brookings Institution, a US-based think tank.

The parade was not only aimed at projecting China’s might to the outside world, but also galvanizing patriotic spirit at home, analysts said.

In his keynote address, Mr. Xi called the rejuvenation of the Chinese nation “unstoppable.” Civil servants up and down the country have been tasked with watching the parade and writing down their reflections, one of them told Reuters.

Nothing was left to chance for the milestone gathering.

Major roads and schools were closed in Beijing for the parade, the culmination of weeks of painstaking security preparations and midnight rehearsals.

Local governments nationwide mobilized tens of thousands of volunteers and Communist Party members to monitor for any signs of potential unrest around the parade, estimates based on online recruitment notices show. — Reuters

Singapore orders Meta to implement anti-scam measures or face possible fine

DESIGN.FACEBOOK.COM

SINGAPORE — Singapore police have ordered Meta to implement anti-scam measures against advertisements, accounts, profiles and business pages impersonating key government office holders on its social media network Facebook to combat scams, a government minister said.

The company could be fined up to S$1 million ($775,698) if it fails to comply as part of the first such order under the nation’s new Online Criminal Harms Act, which came into force in February 2024.

“We are issuing (the order) to Meta because Facebook is the top platform used by scammers for such impersonation scams, and the police has assessed that more decisive action is required to curb these scams,” Minister of State for Home Affairs Goh Pei Ming said in a speech on Wednesday.

In August, Singapore’s home affairs ministry found that more than a third of all e-commerce scams reported in 2024 were perpetrated on Facebook. It also rated Facebook Marketplace as the weakest among six e-commerce marketplaces in terms of anti-scam features deployed.

A Meta spokesperson said on Wednesday that the company had specialized systems to detect impersonating accounts, including facial recognition technology, and it had invested heavily in improving detection and review teams. It also shares tips on avoiding scams and offers tools to report potential violations, the spokesperson said.

“We also rolled out advertiser verification and continue working with law enforcement and take legal action against the criminals behind these scams,” they added.

Police statistics released in August showed that scams that involved the impersonation of government officials almost tripled to 1,762 cases in the first half of 2025, from 589 cases in the same period a year ago. A total of S$126.5 million was lost to this type of scam in the same period, up 88% from the S$67.2 million lost a year ago.

The home affairs ministry acknowledged Facebook Marketplace has required “enhanced user verification measures” for select sellers in Singapore since 2024, and that it introduced in-product safety notices, as well as anti-scam notices within its messaging functions to warn users of the risk of e-commerce scams.

Those measures were deployed after earlier criticism by the government over the company’s failure to put in place safeguards that protect users from scams. — Reuters

With brooms in hand as symbol for change, Indonesian women join Jakarta protests

Municipality workers clean debris at a burned bus stop following a recent protest in Jakarta, Indonesia, Sept. 2, 2025. — REUTERS/WILLY KURNIAWAN

JAKARTA — Hundreds of women dressed in pink joined protests in Indonesia’s capital on Wednesday against lawmakers’ perks and police brutality, brandishing brooms as a symbol of their calls for reform, while the president flew to China for a military parade.

The women carried signs with slogans such as “reform the police” and “your sweet promises cause diabetes,” as well as the brooms which protest organizer The Alliance of Indonesian Women said symbolized a need to “sweep the state’s dirt… and the repressiveness of security forces.”

The protests that began in Jakarta last week have rocked the world’s third-largest democracy, with the demonstrations escalating nationwide after a police vehicle hit and killed a motorcycle taxi driver on Thursday night.

Rights groups say 10 people have died in the protests, which have also sparked some looting and rioting.

The Alliance, a coalition of women-led civil society groups, had called off a planned protest on Monday citing the risk of a violent response by authorities.

“We want to show that protests are mostly peaceful,” said 30-year-old Rizky Ananda, who was demonstrating against violence against people, and women in particular, as well as wasteful government spending.

“If the government said protests were treasonous, it should be questionable.”

President Prabowo Subianto has said the military and police would stand firm against violence, and said on Sunday that some of the unrest bore the signs of terrorism and treason.

Prabowo was making a trip to China to attend a lavish military parade on Wednesday after initially cancelling due to the unrest, with his office saying that signs of normalcy returning in Indonesia were a factor in his decision to travel.

The National Commission on Human Rights was conducting an investigation into security forces’ handling of the protests, commissioner Anis Hidayah told journalists on Tuesday.

The United Nations’ rights office called on Monday for investigations into “all alleged violations of international human rights law, including with respect to use of force.” — Reuters

Fed Governor Cook says mortgage ‘contradictions’ do not justify removal by Trump

LISA COOK — EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG

US FEDERAL RESERVE Governor Lisa Cook on Tuesday laid out in greater detail her opposition to President Donald J. Trump’s bid to remove her from office, saying it was too late to fire her for mortgage information she disclosed during her confirmation process.

In a filing in US District Court, Ms. Cook said she listed mortgages on three properties on forms submitted to the White House and US Senate in the vetting process for her appointment to the Fed in 2022. Any inconsistencies were known when she was confirmed and cannot give Mr. Trump grounds to fire her now, she said.

Mr. Trump and Federal Housing Finance Agency Director William Pulte, whom Mr. Trump appointed, have accused her of committing fraud by listing all three properties as primary residences when she applied for mortgages, potentially to secure lower interest rates.

Mr. Trump has said that gives him cause to fire Mr. Cook, the first Black woman to serve as a Fed governor.

She has filed a lawsuit seeking to block her unprecedented removal, setting up a legal battle that could upend long-established norms for the Fed’s independence. Tuesday’s filing reiterated in greater detail arguments she made in court last week as part of the lawsuit.

In the filing, Ms. Cook said that on a background check form, she listed a property in Michigan as a primary residence and one in Georgia as a “second home.” On a separate questionnaire she listed both homes as her “present residence,” the Michigan property as her “current permanent residence,” and a third property in Massachusetts as both a present residence and a second home and rental property, she said.

“If those are facial contradictions, as the Government and President claim… Senators or White House advisors could have inquired of her about any alleged ‘facial inconsistencies,’” Ms. Cook’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, wrote in the filing.

The White House and the US Department of Justice did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Ms. Cook has asked US District Judge Jia Cobb in Washington, DC, to temporarily block Mr. Trump from removing her from her post pending further litigation. She says that Mr. Trump does not have the legal authority to remove her and that the fraud allegations were a pretext to do so.

Ms. Cobb held a hearing on Friday where a Trump administration lawyer argued that removing a Fed governor for cause is within the President’s broad powers and Ms. Cobb had no power to review it.

Mr. Trump, a Republican, attacked the Fed for not cutting interest rates during his first term in the White House and resumed that campaign when his second term began in January. He has berated Fed Chair Jerome Powell, though he has stopped threatening to remove Mr. Powell before his term as central bank chief ends in May.

The Fed cut rates three times in 2024 but has held them steady since December out of concern that Mr. Trump’s aggressive reshaping of US trade policy could boost inflation. Ms. Cook voted with Mr. Powell and the majority of the central bank’s rate-setting committee in all those policy decisions.

The central bank, however, is widely expected to reduce its benchmark interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point from the current 4.25%-4.50% range at its Sept. 16 to Sept. 17 policy meeting. Mr. Trump has demanded a far more aggressive decrease in borrowing costs. — Reuters

‘Front-runner’ to be North Korea’s next supreme leader makes international debut in China

A North Korea flag flutters next to concertina wire at the North Korean embassy in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia March 9, 2017. — REUTERS/EDGAR SU/FILE PHOTO

SEOUL — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un brought his teenage daughter to Beijing this week in her first public outing overseas, fueling further speculation that she may be his potential successor in the family’s dynastic rule over the nuclear-armed state.

Secretive North Korea has never revealed her name or age, but South Korean intelligence officials believe she is the daughter identified as Ju Ae by former American basketball player Dennis Rodman. Mr. Rodman spent time with Mr. Kim’s family in 2013 and described holding her as a baby.

She was seen just behind her father as they stepped off the armored train they used to travel overnight from Pyongyang to the Chinese capital Beijing, where Mr. Kim attended a massive military parade on Wednesday staged by China to commemorate Japan’s surrender ending World War II in the Pacific.

“Right now, Ju Ae is the front-runner as next supreme leader of North Korea,” said Michael Madden, a North Korea leadership expert at the US-based Stimson Center. “She is getting practical protocol experience which should serve her well as North Korea’s next leader or a core elite.”

It is the first time she has accompanied Mr. Kim outside North Korea — an experience that neither her father nor powerful aunt ever had, Mr. Madden said.

“She is getting valuable experience greeting and interacting with foreign leadership and other elites,” he said.

Analysts said there is no evidence Mr. Kim ever accompanied his father, Kim Jong Il, on overseas trips. Jong Il did make foreign trips in the 1950s with his father, North Korea’s founder Kim Il Sung.

North Korea’s tightly controlled state media had revealed nothing about Mr. Kim’s children until Ju Ae was first shown to the world accompanying her father to the launch of a massive intercontinental ballistic missile in 2022.

There is still little known about other Kim children.

South Korea’s intelligence agency considers Ju Ae to be the most likely successor so far, despite questions over whether she can ultimately rise to the top of the male-dominated dynasty.

Estimated to be about 13 years old, Ju Ae has attended increasingly high-profile events, including her diplomatic debut at a Russian Embassy event in May.

“The scope of her public appearances certainly has expanded from military-related sites to political and economic events over the years,” said Rachel Minyoung Lee, another researcher with the Stimson Center. “If this is part of a succession campaign, this would certainly help with that effort as it would be seen as Kim Ju Ae’s debut on the international stage.”

While it’s premature to say conclusively whether this visit means she is Mr. Kim’s successor, it could still help broaden her horizons, said Ms. Lee, adding that how the North Korean media covers Ju Ae in China would give better insight. — Reuters

Explainer: What’s fuelling the rage in Indonesia?

Municipality workers clean debris at a burned bus stop following a recent protest in Jakarta, Indonesia, Sept. 2, 2025. REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan

Protests have flared in parts of Indonesia since August 25 in some of the country’s worst violence in decades, presenting the biggest challenge so far to Prabowo Subianto’s 10-month-old presidency.

WHAT’S BEEN HAPPENING?
Protests started outside parliament in the capital, Jakarta, initially by groups angered by reports that lawmakers were receiving huge housing allowances on top of base salaries.

Protesters hurled rocks at riot police who responded with tear gas and water cannon. Over the course of a week that grew into wider demonstrations, in at least 32 of Indonesia’s 38 provinces according to the home minister, many of which turned violent, with some regional parliaments set ablaze.

A flashpoint was the August 28 killing of a motorcycle taxi driver in Jakarta, who was not part of the protest but was hit by a riot police vehicle, fuelling further rage, arson and destruction and demands for police reform, scenes replicated elsewhere.

Some prominent officials have been targeted with social media “doxxing” that reveals the addresses of their homes, leading to looting, most notably Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati, after a deep fake video in which she appeared to say teachers were a burden.

The home of lawmaker Ahmad Sahroni was looted after he said calls to dissolve parliament over the allowances were being made by the “stupidest people in the world”.

Prabowo cancelled a trip to China and in a big concession on August 31 announced a scrapping of some perks and privileges for lawmakers and a moratorium on overseas travel, but at the same time vowed a firm response to mob violence.

The tally of deaths stands at eight by September 2. With at least 1,200 detained in Jakarta alone and a heavy police and military presence in the streets, some groups opted to keep to the sidelines, but smaller demonstrations were undeterred.

WHO IS LEADING THE PROTESTS?
It is unclear who, if anyone is driving the protest movement that appears on its surface to have no core.

Though initially led by student groups with a long history of government protests, the demonstrations have taken on a life of their own, with some gatherings fuelled by anger over the response by security forces.

New York-based Human Rights Watch has said authorities “acted irresponsibly by treating the protests as acts of treason or terrorism”.

The All Indonesian Students’ Executives Body, Indonesia’s largest grouping of student associations, is staging organised protests, as are other unaffiliated university groups, but yet other groups are capitalising on the momentum with their own gatherings to vent grievances.

WHAT’S DRIVING THE ANGER?
The trigger was monthly pay for parliamentarians of upwards of 100 million rupiah ($6,150), a huge income in Indonesia, including a substantial housing allowance.

That fed frustration about wealth gaps, inequity and the minimum wage in the country of 280 million, and a perception of corruption or flagrant displays of largesse by the political elite.

Though Indonesia’s economy is not in poor shape, signs of unease have emerged in the provinces over the government’s state budget priorities and efforts to re-centralise finances.

Last month Prabowo unveiled in parliament a $234 billion budget for 2026 that slashes regional funding by a quarter to $40 billion, the lowest in a decade and a second year of decline. The cuts have forced local authorities to hike land and property taxes to plug the gap.

The budget proposes a rise of 37% on defence and a near doubling in spending on Prabowo’s signature free school meals programme to $20.5 billion.

Also stoking anger is the response of police and military and accusations by rights groups of disproportionate use of force, including tear gas and rubber bullets.

WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR PRABOWO?
It is a major test for political veteran Prabowo, elected president by a huge margin on his third successive attempt. He has a big majority in parliament and has faced muted opposition, with all but one party in his “big tent” coalition.

It has been tough to gauge public sentiment, with few major opinion surveys since Prabowo crossed 100 days of his presidency in January, with an approval rating of about 80%.

The protests have been a startling check on his power. His response could be critical in determining his popularity, how long the protests last and the likelihood of a recurrence in the rest of his term.

Indonesia’s student-led movements have long been regarded as vanguards of democracy and Prabowo knows well their ability to mobilise.

As a former son-in-law of Indonesia’s late authoritarian ruler Suharto, whom he served in the military as a special forces commander, Prabowo has first-hand experience of the protests that brought down the strongman in 1998 after 32 years of autocratic rule. — Reuters

DPWH halts bidding for all locally funded projects

DPWH

The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) has suspended the bidding process for all locally funded projects, in line with the government’s ongoing investigation into alleged irregularities in flood control projects.

“I will order today a pause to all the ongoing bidding of all locally funded projects nationwide,” Public Works and Highways Secretary Vivencio B. Dizon said during a press briefing on Wednesday.

The suspension will be in effect for two weeks and will not apply to foreign-funded projects.

“All foreign-assisted projects will continue because I am complacent that foreign funders are monitoring it, but all projects currently being auctioned by national and regional are on pause,” he said.

The decision follows the government’s ongoing probe into reported anomalies in flood control projects under the DPWH.

The department has submitted a list of over 9,000 projects completed between July 2022 and May 2025. Of these, 160 projects have undergone validation, with 15 reported as missing or unlocated, according to former DPWH Secretary Manuel M. Bonoan.–Ashley Erika O. Jose

Customs secures 12 luxury vehicles of Discayas

The Bureau of Customs recovered 12 luxury vehicles linked to the Discaya family following a court-ordered search operation in Pasig City, Sept. 2, 2025. — BUREAU OF CUSTOMS

The Philippine Bureau of Customs (BoC) said on Tuesday it had recovered all 12 luxury vehicles linked to the Discaya family, following a search operation in Pasig City.

In a statement issued late Tuesday, the BoC confirmed that the 10 vehicles, initially reported missing, have now been accounted for following a day-long search operation. The search was conducted under a warrant issued by the Regional Trial Court of Manila, Branch 18.

Earlier in the day, the BoC seized only two units: a Toyota LC300 3.3 V6 ZX AT SUV 2024 and a Maserati Levante Modena 2022, from the Discaya compound.

At around 9 p.m., the agency said seven more vehicles were surrendered and secured at the compound of St. Gerrard Construction General Contractor and Development Corp. in Pasig.

These include a Rolls Royce Cullinan 2023, Bentley Bentayga, Mercedes Benz G-Class (Brabus G-Wagon), Mercedes AMG G 63 SUV 2022, Toyota Tundra 2022, Toyota Sequoia, and Cadillac Escalade ESV 2021.

Commissioner Ariel F. Nepomuceno added that the last three vehicles — Mercedes Benz G 500 SUV 2019, GMC Yukon Denali SUV 2022 (Gas), and Lincoln Navigator L 2024 — are currently in authorized service centers for repair and will subsequently be surrendered to the BoC.

All vehicles have been sealed and are under 24-hour surveillance by BoC personnel and the Philippine Coast Guard, the agency said.

Mr. Nepomuceno said the Discaya family complied with the bureau’s directive.

“With all twelve (12) luxury vehicles now accounted for, the BoC continues to verify their importation records to determine compliance with customs laws,” it said.

The BoC said should discrepancies be established, appropriate enforcement and legal actions will be undertaken pursuant to the Customs Modernization and Tariff Act (CMTA).

The Discaya-link firms, such as Omega & Alpha Construction and St. Timothy Construction, were among the top 15 flood control contractors earlier disclosed by President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. that cornered P100 billion of flood control projects since 2022.

Finance Secretary Ralph G. Recto earlier estimated that corruption related to flood control projects has cost the economy between P42.3 billion and P118.5 billion in economic losses since 2023. — Aubrey Rose A. Inosante

Coffee roasters hike prices in Brazil as raw bean costs surge

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Kelly Sikkema from Unsplash

LONDON/NEW YORK – Coffee roasters 3 Coracoes and Melitta are raising prices for their products in Brazil, the world’s second-largest coffee consumer behind the US, according to documents sent to clients and seen by Reuters.

A joint venture between Brazilian company Sao Miguel and Israeli group Strauss, 3 Coracoes said it was increasing prices for roast and ground coffee by 10% and for instant coffee by 7% as of September 1.

Melitta South America, also a major player in Brazil, said it was increasing prices by 15% as of September 1.

The two companies, which cited rising raw bean prices, volatility and climate issues as reason for the price hike, did not immediately answer requests for comment.

Global prices for raw arabica beans have risen more than 20% this year after soaring 70% last year, as top grower Brazil experienced another poor crop due to adverse weather.

More recently, the US move to slap 50% tariffs on imports from Brazil boosted prices further, as roasters in the world’s top coffee drinker raided existing stockpiles.

Raw bean prices account for about 40% of the wholesale cost of a bag of roast and ground coffee, on average, meaning roasters all over the world will be facing pressure to raise prices.

Having previously hiked roast and ground prices by 11% in January and 10% in December, 3 Coracoes raised them by 14.3% on March 1. Melitta increased prices by 25% in December.

There was a brief price decrease in Brazil’s coffee retail in August, industry group ABIC had said, as futures prices fell from record highs earlier in the year. ABIC, however, also projected the trend would be reversed as the tariffs kicked in. That reversal is happening now.

Roasters are starting to buckle under pressure from rising costs as cash-strapped consumers are pushing back against price hikes by engaging in bargain-hunting or trading down to supermarket brands. — Reuters

Nestle plunged into crisis as CEO fired for hiding romance with staffer

ZURICH – Nestle has fired CEO Laurent Freixe after just a year in the job for concealing a romantic relationship with a subordinate, throwing the Swiss food giant into a leadership crisis that compounds a share price slump and slowing sales.

Freixe is replaced by Nespresso chief Philipp Navratil, 49, a rising star at the world’s largest food company, as it struggles to deal with the impact of US tariffs, a darkening global economic outlook and dwindling investor confidence after years of underperformance.

Laying bare wider tensions, Tuesday was a whipsaw day for global consumer companies as Japan’s Suntory parted with its CEO and Kraft Heinz announced a split and activist investor Elliott Management called for a turnaround at PepsiCo.

“The loss of two CEOs and a chairman in a year is of historic proportions for Nestle,” said Ingo Speich, head of Corporate Governance and Sustainability at Deka, a top-30 Nestle investor.

“The new CEO needs to fix the business model and bring volumes back. He needs to do better M&A and focus more on emerging markets.”

Freixe, a 63-year-old Frenchman, was sacked just over a year after his predecessor Mark Schneider was ousted for failing to turn Nestle around.

The company also said in June that Paul Bulcke, CEO from 2008 to 2016, will step down as chair in April 2026 and be replaced by Pablo Isla, a former CEO of Spanish fashion retailer Inditex.

Freixe’s dismissal follows an investigation into an undisclosed romantic relationship with a direct subordinate that breached Nestle’s code of business conduct, Nestle said late on Monday.

Shares in the maker of Nescafe instant coffee and KitKat chocolate bars closed 0.7% lower in Zurich, paring earlier losses when the stock fell as much as 3.6%.

SPEAK UP

The company said concerns about a possible relationship were first raised by staff via the company’s internal reporting channel Speak Up, although an initial investigation was unsubstantiated.

Freixe initially denied the relationship to the board, a company spokesperson said.

When staff concerns persisted, Nestle ordered an investigation, overseen by Bulcke and Isla, with the support of Swiss lawyers Baer & Karrer, Nestle said.

The report was completed in recent days, leading to a board meeting and Freixe’s dismissal on Monday.

Freixe, who spent 39 years with Nestle, will receive no exit package following his departure, the company told Reuters.

In a short statement, Bulcke thanked Freixe for his service at Nestle, but said the dismissal was a “necessary decision”.

His removal adds to a list of chief executives forced to resign following investigations into their relationships with colleagues.

Energy giant BP’s former CEO Bernard Looney and McDonald’s CEO Steve Easterbrook were both removed for failing to disclose relationships.

Swiss financial news website Inside Paradeplatz reported that Freixe met the woman in 2022, before he became CEO, when he was head of Nestle’s Latin America business.

Freixe was not immediately available to comment when contacted via email. The female subordinate, whose identity has not been made public, left Nestle over the summer, a company spokesperson said.

Swiss law does not prohibit relationships between senior executives, although most large companies – including Nestle – have internal codes of conduct that require them to be disclosed. If there is a conflict of interest, one of the people has to switch roles.

At Nestle, direct reporting relationship between family members, partners and close associates is not allowed, while indirect reporting lines are assessed on a case-by-case basis.

Corporate governance expert Peter V Kunz, from the University of Bern, said he was not familiar with Nestle’s rules, but that requirements at most public companies were broadly similar.

“In this respect, Mr Freixe’s behaviour – regardless of whether it was legal or not – seems to me to be simply stupid and incomprehensible in this day and age,” Kunz told Reuters, adding that he did not think investors had grounds for legal action against Nestle.

STABILITY SOUGHT

As price-sensitive consumers have turned to cheaper alternatives, Nestle’s shares, a bedrock of the Swiss stock exchange, have lost almost a third of their value over the past five years, underperforming European peers.

Freixe’s appointment failed to halt the slide, with the company’s shares shedding 17% during his leadership, disappointing investors.

One top-20 Nestle investor said Freixe had been a disappointment and that bringing in Navratil was an opportunity for a more ambitious overhaul.

The new CEO needs to slim down the company, cut costs and above all reduce the headcount, said the investor who declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the matter. It was also crucial that the company raise organic growth to boost volumes.

In July, Nestle launched a review of its underperforming vitamins business that could lead to the divestment of some brands after first-half sales volumes missed expectations.

AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould said that the company would likely face a period of uncertainty.

“While Navratil is also an internal appointment, he will want to put his own mark on strategy and that suggests the clock could be reset when it comes to the turnaround plan,” he said. — Reuters

Trump dismisses rumors he is in ill health

U.S. President Donald Trump — REUTERS/LEAH MILLIS/FILE PHOTO

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump on Tuesday dismissed reports on social media that he is in ill health, saying he was busy over the Labor Day weekend giving media interviews and visiting his Virginia golf course.

“I was very active over the weekend,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. Asked if he was aware of the reports, he called them “fake.”

Trump, 79, in January became the oldest person to assume the U.S. presidency.

Speculation about his health swirled on the social media platform X over the weekend, with posts citing Trump’s lack of a public schedule late last week and a USA Today interview with Vice President JD Vance published on Thursday.

When asked during the interview if he was ready to assume the role of commander in chief, Vance said he was confident Trump was “in good shape” but also suggested he was prepared to step in if anything happened to the president.

Before Tuesday, Trump’s last extended exchange with reporters came during a cabinet meeting a week earlier. Trump led the more than three-hour session on August 26, his longest on-camera appearance as president.

Over the Labor Day weekend, reporters saw him leaving the White House each day to visit his golf course.

Trump underwent an extensive physical examination on April 11 at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in suburban Washington. It found he had a normal heart rhythm and no major health problems, according to official results released by the White House.

On July 17, White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said Trump was experiencing swelling in his lower legs and bruising on his right hand after photos showed him with swollen ankles and makeup covering part of his hand.

His physician, Sean Barbabella, said in a letter released by the White House that tests confirmed the leg issue was due to “chronic venous insufficiency,” a benign and common condition, especially in people over 70.

The doctor said the bruising on Trump’s hand was consistent with minor soft tissue irritation from frequent handshaking and aspirin use, which Trump takes as part of a “standard cardiovascular prevention regimen.”

Since then, the White House has played down concerns about Trump’s health, without detailing how the leg issue is being treated. — Reuters