The Trump administration is aiming to move a planned 90,000-square-foot White House ballroom through the federal government’s review process at a rapid clip, with final approvals as soon as early March.
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PARIS, Jan 2 (Reuters) – Airbus confirmed on Friday it would issue audited end-year commercial data on Jan 12 in an apparent sign of confidence in its recently revised target of “around 790” deliveries.
The European planemaker issued the statement by email following reports that it had delivered at least 782 jets in 2025. Industry sources said such a formal scheduling statement would have addressed any change in guidance because of the market sensitivity of delivery data.
(Reporting by Tim Hepher, Editing by Charlotte Van Campenhout)
By Nell Mackenzie, Ateev Bhandari and Anirban Sen
NEW YORK, Jan 2 (Reuters) – Large multi-manager funds, including D.E. Shaw, Balyasny Asset Management, Bridgewater Associates, and Point72 Asset Management, generated mostly double-digit gains in 2025, reflecting an upbeat year for the hedge fund industry that was buoyed by an AI-powered stock market rally.
D.E. Shaw’s two flagship funds produced double-digit returns, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters on Friday, reflecting similar gains seen across top multi-strategy peers during a year of record volatility.
The firm’s Oculus Fund generated a net return of around 28.2% for the year and has made a net annualized return of 14.4% since its founding in 2004, the source said.
D.E. Shaw’s Composite Fund, which is its largest multi-strategy fund, generated a net return of around 18.5%, with an annualized net return of 12.9% since its inception in 2001, the person said.
Founded in 1988, D.E. Shaw managed more than $85 billion as of December 1 across hedge funds, private markets, multi-asset-class and active equity investment strategies.
Balyasny, which was co-founded in 2001 by Dmitry Balyasny, delivered gains of 16.7% during the year, while Steve Cohen’s Point72 produced a return of 16.5%, according to two people familiar with the matter.
BUMPER YEAR FOR TOP FUNDS
Top multi-manager funds broadly enjoyed healthy gains last year, helped mainly by a strong performance from the U.S. stock market that has been lifted by euphoria around artificial intelligence-focused stocks.
Fund managers also have benefited from U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade wars that triggered volatility in bond and currency markets. Large global macro hedge funds typically invest in stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities.
“Overall, it has been a strong year for hedge funds across strategies, with decent alpha generation and recognition from allocators,” said Vanessa Bogaardt, global head of capital introduction, prime financing at Bank of America.
“Hedge fund assets are at all-time highs, supported by net inflows into the industry. Allocator sentiment toward hedge funds remains positive, and we see plenty of opportunities to explore in 2026,” she added.
The benchmark S&P 500 index rose about 16% last year, as it went from record highs in mid-February, to near bear-market lows in early April, and then to fresh record highs in December.
The volatility – fueled largely by Trump’s whiplash trade, fiscal and geopolitical policies – helped trading desks across Wall Street reap profits, as active portfolio shuffling created price arbitrage.
Bridgewater Associates, founded by billionaire Ray Dalio and currently led by CEO Nir Bar Dea, posted the highest profits in its 50-year history. Its flagship Pure Alpha fund surged 34% in 2025 to lead the pack of top multi-strategy funds that operate so-called pod shops, which refer to teams of traders who oversee multiple asset classes including stocks, commodities, and bonds.
Billionaire investor Cliff Asness’ AQR Capital Management made annual gains of 19.6% in its multi-strategy Apex Strategy and 18.6% in its alternative trend-following Helix Strategy, another source told Reuters on Friday.
Some top firms including Millennium and Citadel, however, lagged their largest peers, after being weighed down during the first half of the year by Trump administration trade policies.
Millennium gained 10.5% during the year, while Citadel’s flagship Wellington fund posted a 10.2% return, according to two sources familiar with the matter. Citadel’s long-term annualized net return since its inception in 1990 stood at about 19%, one of the sources said.
(Reporting by Ateev Bhandari in Bengaluru and Nell Mackenzie in London, additional reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Vijay Kishore and Bill Berkrot)
As U.S.-Iran tension soars, Trump warns violence against protesters could bring an American intervention: “We are locked and loaded and ready to go.”
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A powerful earthquake rocked southern and central Mexico on Friday. While officials said there was no major damage, videos captured moments of impact in Mexico City and Acapulco.
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CRANS MONTANA, Switzerland (AP) — Swiss investigators say they believe sparklers on Champagne bottles ignited the fatal fire at a Swiss ski resort when they came too close to the ceiling of a bar crowded with New Year’s Eve revelers.
Dozens of people were killed and injured when a fire ripped through a busy bar at a ski resort in Switzerland while partygoers were celebrating New Year’s Eve, authorities said. The blaze broke out at around 1:30 a.m. Thursday during the holiday celebration inside the Le Constellation bar in Crans-Montana.
This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro says he is open to talks with President Trump on several issues, including drug trafficking, oil and migration. CBS News’ Eleanor Watson reports.
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Starting January 1, food-stamp recipients in five U.S. states will face restrictions on using the benefits to buy some sugary foods.
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Earthquake Alerts To Begin at 4.5 Magnitude, Israel’s Home Front Command Says
Israel’s civil defense system is most often associated with missile sirens and wartime alerts. Yet during a recent briefing by the Home Front Command, attention turned to a different threat: earthquakes, and the precise conditions under which civilians will be warned.
According to Lt. Col. E, Israel’s early warning system will notify the public only once seismic activity reaches a magnitude of at least 4.5 on the Richter scale. Earthquakes below that level are detected by sensors but do not trigger public alerts. If a quake measures between 4.5 and 6, notifications are sent only to affected areas. A magnitude 6 quake or higher would prompt a nationwide alert.
“We can’t predict an earthquake,” Lt. Col. E said. “But we have sensors spread throughout the country, and once the sensor senses that there’s an earthquake strong enough to matter, the system sends a message.” The aim, he explained, is to warn only when there is a meaningful risk to people or infrastructure.
That selectivity is deliberate. “Every siren that goes off makes civilians stop their life routine,” he said. “It has a psychological impact, it affects trust, and it affects the economy.” Excessive or inaccurate alerts, he warned, can erode public confidence in the system itself.
The operational concept, according to Lt. Col. E, is precision. Once a threat is detected and its impact zone calculated, alerts are sent only where action is required. “Accuracy is very important in how we work,” he said. “If people get warnings that don’t match reality, they slowly stop believing. It becomes the boy who cried wolf.”
He noted that Israel once functioned as a single alert zone, where any missile launch triggered sirens nationwide. Today, the country is divided into roughly 1,800 alert polygons. That same logic now applies to earthquakes, allowing alerts to be localized rather than automatic and nationwide.
Earthquake alerts are also clearly differentiated from missile warnings. The siren pattern is different, and the alert begins with a spoken warning announcing an earthquake before the tone changes, ensuring civilians understand how to respond.
Lt. Col. E stressed that alerts alone are insufficient. Regular drills are conducted in schools and municipalities, covering both missile attacks and earthquakes. Instructions are available online and reinforced by news broadcasts during emergencies. “If citizens don’t know what to do when they hear the siren, all the technology won’t help,” he said.
The system has been adapted to Israel’s diverse population, with alerts available in multiple languages and formats, including solutions for people with hearing or visual impairments and observant communities on Shabbat.
Trust, he added, has grown as accuracy improved. At the start of the war, about 1 million to 2 million Israelis had downloaded the Home Front Command app. “Once people saw that the information was correct,” he said, “that number doubled and even tripled.”
For earthquakes, as with other threats, the message was clear: warn carefully, warn precisely and protect credibility, because public trust remains one of Israel’s most critical lines of defense.
