NEW YORK - Bill Gross, manager of the world's biggest bond fund, warned on Thursday the United States will eventually lose its top AAA credit rating, a fear that had already spooked financial markets on Thursday and could keep the dollar, stocks and bonds under heavy selling pressure.
WASHINGTON - Law enforcement computers were struck by a mystery computer virus Thursday, forcing the FBI and the US Marshals to shut down part of their networks as a precaution.
JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu vowed Thursday never to divide Jerusalem, and pledged to keep the capital united under Israeli sovereignty.
UK - A third of abortions are now carried out for women who have already terminated at least one pregnancy, new data revealed today. The proportion of repeat abortions has been steadily increasing since 1998 when 29 per cent of procedures were for women who had already been through at least one termination.
UK - Nearly quarter of babies are born to mothers from outside the UK as birth rate hits 36 year high.
SAN FRANCISCO - California's struggle to fund its budget deficit faced fresh problems on Thursday, after US Treasury Secretary Geithner refused to use bank bailout money to help state finances, and the state's fiscal watchdog objected to a plan to sell warrants to raise cash.
USA - Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan signaled that the financial crisis has yet to end even as borrowing costs tumble, warning that U.S. banks must raise "large" amounts of money. "There is still a very large unfunded capital requirement in the commercial banking system in the United States and that's got to be funded," Greenspan said in an interview yesterday in Washington.
NEW YORK - Four Muslims angered by the Afghanistan conflict have been arrested in connection with a plot to shoot down a US military aircraft and bomb prominent Jewish sites in New York.
UK - A leading credit rating agency has revised down its outlook for the UK economy due to concerns about its significant debt burden. Standard and Poor's downgraded its view of the UK TO "NEGATIVE" FROM "STABLE" for the first time since it started analysing its public finances in 1978.
USA - The U.S. dollar's day of reckoning may be inching closer as its status as a safe-haven currency fades with every uptick in stocks and commodities and its potential risks - debt and inflation - are brought under a harsher spotlight.
JERUSALEM - Media focus on the idea of a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict, favored by President Barack Obama, is "childish and stupid," said an aide to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Wednesday
IRELAND - Victims of child abuse at Catholic institutions in the Irish Republic have expressed anger that a damning report will not bring about prosecutions. The report, nine years in the making and covering a period of six decades, found thousands of boys and girls were terrorised by priests and nuns.
UK - Everyone aged 55 and over should be taking drugs to lower their blood pressure, a London-based expert says. Epidemiology expert Professor Malcolm Law said blood pressure drugs cut the risk of heart attack and stroke even for those with normal blood pressure.
UK- Thousands of contract workers at oil and gas plants in England and Wales are staging unofficial strikes in protest over the use of foreign labour. Staff at a Pembrokeshire gas terminal and two oil refineries in North Lincolnshire are taking part in the wildcat action which began on Tuesday.
WASHINGTON - A vast majority of US senators on Tuesday urged President Barack Obama to mind the "risks" to Israel in any Middle East peace accord as he presses for a two-state solution to the six-decade conflict.