Category: Business

  • Honeywell to split in three after pressure from activist investor Elliott Management

    Honeywell to split in three after pressure from activist investor Elliott Management

    • Industrial and aerospace giant Honeywell said on Thursday it will split into three independently listed companies.
    • Honeywell said it will separate its aerospace and automation businesses into separate entities, alongside its previously announced spin-off of the advanced materials unit.
    • Honeywell said it intends to complete the separation in the second half of 2026, which would be tax-free for its shareholders.

    Honeywell said on Thursday it will split into three independently listed companies, breaking up one of America’s last standing conglomerates just months after activist investor Elliott Management took a $5 billion stake in the industrial giant.

    Honeywell’s shares, however, fell nearly 2.5% in premarket trade, reversing course from early gains after the company forecast downbeat sales and profit for 2025.

    The company said it will separate its aerospace and automation businesses into separate entities, alongside its previously announced spin-off of the advanced materials unit.

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    With Honeywell’s decision, the ranks of the nation’s leading industrial conglomerates have dwindled even further, following similar choices in recent years by 3M, General Electric and United Technologies to split off major divisions.

    The industrial and aerospace giant has been on a deal-making spree under CEO Vimal Kapur, shedding assets that are not focused on the aviation, automation and energy sectors.

    Despite several smaller moves, Elliott, whose stake in Honeywell is its largest single investment, argued the company needed to split.

    An aircraft engine is tested at Honeywell Aerospace in Phoenix, Arizona, on September 6, 2016. Honeywell announced that it will split into three separate companies. (Reuters/Alwyn Scott/File Photo / Reuters)

    Honeywell attracted Elliott’s attention as its stock price underperformed the market. Its shares had risen 7.7% in 2024 until November 11, a day before Elliott disclosed its position, while the broader market had gained 26.6% in the same period.

    Analysts had previously estimated Honeywell’s high-margin aerospace business could be worth between $90 billion and $120 billion, including debt.

    The airline industry, faced with a shortage of new jets, has had to resort to flying older, more maintenance-intensive planes during a travel boom, pushing up sales for players such as Honeywell that provide aftermarket services and parts.

    The aerospace unit is Honeywell’s biggest revenue generator, accounting for about 40% of the company’s total revenue in 2024, and counts Boeing and Airbus among its customers. It also has contracts with the U.S. government, providing communication and navigation systems, among other services.

    Honeywell said it will separate its aerospace, automation and advanced materials units into three distinct entities.

    Honeywell said it will separate its aerospace, automation and advanced materials units into three distinct entities. (Reuters/Denis Balibouse/File Photo / Reuters)

    Honeywell had announced plans to spin off its advanced materials unit into a publicly traded company in October. It said in December it was considering a spinoff of its aerospace business, after Elliott’s push.

    The company said it intends to complete the separation in the second half of 2026, which would be tax-free for its shareholders.

    Elliott’s push is not the first time Honeywell has faced activist pressure to break up the company. In 2017, it managed to shrug off Daniel Loeb’s Third Point, which urged the company to spin off its aerospace division.

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    The industrial giant has been pruning its portfolio through a string of divestments and acquisitions, but such a large break-up would be a first for the more than 100-year-old company.

    It separately forecast an adjusted profit per share of between $10.10 and $10.50 for 2025, falling short of analysts’ average estimate of $10.93 according to data compiled by LSEG.

    Its sales expectations of between $39.6 billion and $40.6 billion for the year also fell short of Wall Street expectations of $41.22 billion.

  • Fanatics teams up with Kevin Durant’s sports media brand to help athletes’ post-retirement business careers

    Fanatics teams up with Kevin Durant’s sports media brand to help athletes’ post-retirement business careers

    Fanatics and Boardroom announced a partnership with one another on Thursday that will aim to help athletes in their business careers after their playing days are over.

    Boardroom, the sports media and entertainment platform co-founded by Kevin Durant and Rich Kleiman, will collaborate with Fanatics to offer a three-day program of professional development initiatives designed specifically for athletes and their management teams.

    The first program, dubbed “Boardroom University,” will take place at the second annual Fanatics Fest, which will be at Javits Center in New York from June 20-22.

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    Michael Rubin attends Michael Rubin’s 2022 Fanatics Super Bowl Party on Feb. 12, 2022 in Culver City, California. (Cindy Ord/Getty Images for Fanatics / Getty Images)

    The program will incorporate a wide range of experiences, including one-on-one mentorship, dinners with CEOs, entrepreneurs and industry leaders, curated panel discussions, hands-on sessions with Fanatics executives, a Mitchell & Ness design challenge and Boardroom Meeting House at Fanatics Fest.

    “The spirit of Boardroom has always been to bring people into the rooms we’re lucky enough to be in and curate spaces to share knowledge,” said Kleiman, who also serves as Durant’s agent. “I’m excited to partner with [Fanatics founder and CEO] Michael Rubin and the team at Fanatics to expand the work they’ve already done in this space and bring some incredible programming to athletes and their teams.” 

    Kevin Durant point

    Kevin Durant, #35 of the Phoenix Suns, reacts after scoring in the second half against the Chicago Bulls at United Center on March 3, 2023 in Chicago. (Quinn Harris/Getty Images / Getty Images)

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    Rubin added, “We are thrilled to be partnering with Rich, KD and the entire team at Boardroom to reimagine and elevate Fanatics’ athlete development efforts. Fanatics exists because of the incredible athletes across all sports and the connections they have to fans around the world, and we have a commitment to create opportunities for them to thrive beyond their playing careers. That’s exactly what this program is built to do.”

    Another three-day program will take place in December, the offseason for MLB, the WNBA and the National Women’s Soccer League.

    Fanatics logo on Buffalo Sabres jersey

    Fanatics logo embroidered on a Buffalo Sabres jersey. (Fanatics / Fox News)

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    Last year’s Fanatics Fest featured some of the biggest names in sports, including the aforementioned Durant, Tom Brady, Derek Jeter, Peyton and Eli Manning, Triple H, David Ortiz and Logan and Jake Paul. This year’s event is already set to have Brady, Jayden Daniels, Ja’Marr Chase, and Micah Parsons, with plenty to be announced.

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  • Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent calls for Trump tax cuts to be made permanent

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent calls for Trump tax cuts to be made permanent

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Wednesday signaled that the White House wants Trump’s tax cut package from 2017 to be extended permanently before their expiration this year, rather than a temporary extension.

    Bessent appeared on FOX Business Network’s “Kudlow” for an exclusive interview with host Larry Kudlow and addressed reports that Republicans in Congress are considering opting for a five or 10-year extension of the tax cuts to help comply with reconciliation rules, rather than making them permanent.

    “President Trump has a mandate. He came in to do big things. And one of the big things that this administration wants to do is make the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act permanent – and that permanency will continue to make the U.S. the number one economy in the world,” Bessent said.

    “We’re going to bring down inflation, we’re going to cut regulations, and we’re going to get the tax cut. The goal is still for them to be made permanent,” he added.

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    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, left, is calling for Congress to make President Donald Trump’s tax cuts permanent. (Chris Kleponis/CNP/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Secretary Bessent went on to say that the Trump administration plans to use “current policy scoring” for the bill to help it move through Congress.

    The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is responsible for scoring tax and spending legislation for its budget impact over time. CBO is currently required to use a current law baseline, which assumes that laws set to expire at a certain point in time do so at that time, when analyzing legislation or making budget projections. A current policy baseline would assume that certain laws are extended even if the law says they are due to expire.

    “Up until a year ago, I was a civilian, I’ve been looking at CBO numbers for 35 years in my day job in the investment business, but I never understood the way this scoring worked. And it is tilted toward spending, and that’s why the spending has gotten out of control here in Washington,” he said.

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    Scott Bessent

    Bessent said that Republicans need to come together on the tax bill to avoid the largest tax cut in U.S. history. (DOMINIC GWINN/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Congressional rules for budget reconciliation allow bills to bypass the Senate’s 60-vote threshold to overcome the legislative filibuster – but the bill can’t contain non-budget related provisions and can’t increase budget deficits beyond a set amount in a 10-year budget window.

    To comply with those rules, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act contained some provisions that were permanent, such as the lower corporate tax rate, while other provisions were made temporary with several key policies set to elapse at the end of this year. 

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    Donald Trump signs tax cut law

    President Donald Trump signed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act into law in 2017. Some of its key provisions are set to expire at the end of 2025. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Notable provisions that are due to expire at the end of 2025 include those that lowered personal income tax rates, nearly doubled the standard deduction that most taxpayers claim when filing and expanded the child tax credit, among other items.

    Bessent said that failing to extend the tax cuts would result in the largest tax hike in history, which would have a negative impact on the U.S. economy and Americans while also hurting the budget deficit through reduced growth.

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    “What’s going to blow not only a hole in the budget deficit, in the economy and in the lifestyles of working class Americans [is] if we do not get this tax bill done,” Bessent explained. “As I said in my Senate hearings, this is pass-fail for our side of the aisle, and we will have the largest tax hike in history – the largest tax hike in history – and that will be on the people on our side who do not try to move this forward.”

  • Super Bowl LIX battle: Chiefs and Eagles are both valued in the billions

    Super Bowl LIX battle: Chiefs and Eagles are both valued in the billions

    When the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles hit the field Sunday for Super Bowl LIX, it will be a matchup of two multi-billion-dollar NFL teams. 

    The Chiefs and Eagles will play each other for the championship title and the Vince Lombardy Trophy at New Orleans’ Caesars Superdome, with the highly-anticipated game expected to start at 6:30 p.m. ET. 

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    Coming into the game, the Chiefs, who are the defending champions, carry an estimated value of $4.85 billion, according to Forbes’ yearly ranking of NFL teams released in late August.

    NEW ORLEANS, LA – FEBRUARY 3: A general view from outside of the Caesars Superdome prior to the Super Bowl LIX Opening Night fueled by Gatorade with Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles on February 3, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by D (Don Juan Moore/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The value of the Eagles, meanwhile, hit $6.6 billion in 2024, the outlet reported.

    Those seven-figure estimates, both double-digit percentage-point jumps from 2023, earned the Eagles the No. 8 spot and the Chiefs the No. 24 place on Forbes’ 2024 football team ranking.

    The Eagles have seen their value go up 2,550% since Forbes began ranking NFL teams over two dozen years ago, the outlet reported. Kansas City’s has reportedly increased 1,790% in the same timeframe. 

    philadelphia eagles players

    PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – JANUARY 26: Philadelphia Eagles huddle before a play during the games against Washington Commanders at Lincoln Financial Field on January 26, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Eagles beat the Commanders 55-23. (Phot (Lauren Leigh Bacho/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    While the 2024 values of the Chiefs and the Eagles are both sizable, the Kansas City team is worth $5.25 billion less and Philadelphia is worth $3.5 billion less than 2024’s most-valuable team, the $10.1 billion Dallas Cowboys, according to the outlet. Dallas did not make the playoffs this season.   

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    Apart from the upcoming Super Bowl LIX, Philadelphia and Kansas City have only gone head-to-head one time for the NFL championship title, in Super Bowl LVII. During that game, the Chiefs came out on top, scoring 38 to the Eagles’ 35 points. 

    kansas city chiefs players

    KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI – JANUARY 26: Wide receiver Justin Watson #84 of the Kansas City Chiefs celebrates after a touchdown with wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster #9 of the Kansas City Chiefs during the second half of the AFC Championship game against (Todd Rosenberg/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    If Kansas City wins Super Bowl LIX, it would mark the team’s fourth Super Bowl title and their third back-to-back. Meanwhile, victory for the Eagles would add a second title to their record.

    Chiefs owner Clark Hunt told The Rich Eisen Show winning a third consecutive Super Bowl “would really be a credit to Andy Reid, Patrick Mahomes, his teammates, for the work that they’ve put in not only over the last three years but really the entire time they’ve been with our organization.” 

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    Speaking to ICTV 607, Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie said “it’s talent, it’s coach, it’s culture” that have helped his team return to the Super Bowl. 

    lombardi trophy and helmets

    NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA – FEBRUARY 03: A detail shot of the Lombardi Trophy next to Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles helmets prior to a news conference on February 03, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana ahead of the NFL Super Bowl LIX football g (Michael Owens/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Tens of thousands of people are slated to watch Super Bowl LIX in person – and scores more are expected to tune into the game through a broadcast. 

     

  • Ex-USAID official speaks out over alleged waste, fraud inside agency

    Ex-USAID official speaks out over alleged waste, fraud inside agency

    One former State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) official is speaking out over the waste and fraud she allegedly saw, which ultimately made it difficult to do their jobs.

    “We would try to keep USAID in line with the Secretary of State because, technically, the USAID responds to the Secretary of State, and it was very difficult. There was no traceability, no accountability, and it was really hard for us to do our jobs,” Catharine O’Neill Gillihan said on “Varney & Co.” Wednesday.

    O’Neill Gillihan worked at the State Department for three years before transferring to being a USAID official under President Donald Trump’s first administration. Currently, the USAID finds itself in the crosshairs of Trump and Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) chair Elon Musk, as they work to shut down the agency.

    Musk, the world’s richest man now in charge of Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), made headlines over the weekend after he targeted the international aid agency and his team seized classified information on Saturday despite lacking the security clearance to do so, the Associated Press reported.

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    By Sunday, the USAID website went dark and on Monday employees were barred entry into its headquarters, while thousands of others had their work instantly put on hold.

    A former USAID official is speaking out about the spending waste and fraud she experienced while working there, on “Varney & Co.” (FOXBusiness)

    USAID has become increasingly the target of heated U.S. politics, with Republicans arguing it is wasteful, promotes liberal agendas and should be enfolded into the State Department.

    “The list goes on and on and on,” O’Neill Gillihan said of the spending waste. “I think I read recently that they were funding a ‘Sesame Street’ program in Peru. I mean, these programs have gotten so out of control.”

    “USAID was created in 1961 by President Kennedy under executive order,” she further explained. “And his idea for the agency would be housed under this Department of State. So President Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are totally within their right to bring USAID back under the Department of State. It’s within its original mandate.”

    The U.S. far outspends its international peers when it comes to foreign aid, spending some $68 billion in 2023 – $40 billion of which was budgeted for USAID, the BBC reported.

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    “If you’re a CEO of a large company and you have a department that’s out there spending money that’s not in alignment with your mission, not matching up with your bottom line, the natural inclination is to bring that department into review and perhaps cut it,” O’Neill Gillihan pointed out.

    “So Donald Trump, as the CEO of the United States of America, has deputized Elon Musk, who I see as the de facto controller of America, is reviewing every penny that’s going out the door… Article II of the Constitution gives the president that right, as [it’s] called the vesting clause, to review the powers of this government and to make sure that all of the spending is aligned with our interests.”

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    FOX Business’ Caitlin McFall contributed to this report.

  • Americans’ insurance rates are soaring and lawsuits play a significant role

    Americans’ insurance rates are soaring and lawsuits play a significant role

    Americans’ home and auto insurance rates have been soaring for years, with inflation, mounting losses from natural disasters, and rising repair and construction costs all playing a role.

    But the industry points to a significant driver behind accelerating premiums that often goes overlooked: the mounting lawsuits and payouts that cost insurers.

    The APCIA says the average American pays a $4,200 “tort tax” due to rising costs associated with abuse of the legal system. (iStock / iStock)

    David Sampson, president and CEO of the American Property Casualty Insurance Association (APCIA), told FOX Business that even with all the pressures the industry is currently facing with huge losses due to hurricanes and wildfires, insurance regulatory dysfunction in some states, and the threat of tariffs driving up costs further, “Our number one priority is still addressing legal system abuse, because it is the major cost driver that’s having a huge negative impact on insurance availability and affordability.”

    The APCIA says the American household pays more than a $4,200 “tort tax” due to unnecessary and abusive litigation across the country that raises the costs of products and services like groceries and gas.

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    The insurance trade group shows data indicating the average personal injury verdict has ballooned over the last decade or more, going from around $39,300 in 2010 to more than $125,300 in 2020 – a 319% increase.

    charts showing rise in personal injury awards

    The APCIA points to data showing the median personal injury award in the U.S. more than tripled in the last decade. (APCIA)

    Sampson said nuclear verdicts – defined as jury verdicts of $10 million or more – also continue to rise, with the top 100 verdicts increasing 350% from an average of $64 million to $225 million in just the last six years, which he said shows they are “totally out of proportion to any legitimate damages that are out there.”

    He provided everyday examples of legal abuses.

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    One is jury anchoring, where lawyers attempt to influence juries by throwing out astronomical numbers for awards. He asserted that when attorneys have billboards up advertising that they won their client $20 million for an auto accident, they are trying to affect the jury pool by putting out astronomical numbers that have no relation to the particular case involved, trying to shift the jury’s mindset.

    Another legal abuse is phantom damages, where plaintiffs’ attorneys are able to only show juries how much a victim was billed for medical services, as opposed to the lower amount the health insurance company actually paid because of its contract with the hospital. 

    Premises liability has been one of the biggest sources of legal abuse, so multiple states have imposed reforms to make sure property owners and businesses are only liable for things they can directly control.

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    The practice of plaintiffs’ attorneys bringing in outside investors to try and influence the litigation process through third party litigation funding (TPLF) has driven up the cost of litigation, too, amid growing concerns that foreign adversaries are using these avenues to invest in U.S. litigation against American companies.

    Jury duty

    Legal abuses are soaring, accelerating the rise of insurance rates, according to the APCIA. ( Joe Raedle/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Sampson says that in those instances, the victim is no longer in control of their own lawsuit, meaning they can’t settle without the permission of the people who are investing in and financing these lawsuits.

     “You’ve had the justice system turned basically into a casino where these major investors are hoping to strike it rich on these suits and they get paid out the majority of the proceeds whenever they do,” he said. 

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    “Strike it lucky on these major lawsuits, and then, not only do you see that on some of these individual personal injury cases, but even more problematic – as tragic as that is – to the nation’s economy is that you have entities that are backed by foreign players, foreign parties like the [Chinese Communist Party] and others who are filing these third party litigation financed lawsuits against major American industries, especially in the technology sector, and they use these lawsuits to try to gain access to intellectual property through the discovery process.”

  • OpenAI’s ChatGPT briefly goes down for users across the globe

    OpenAI’s ChatGPT briefly goes down for users across the globe

    ChatGPT users around the globe were reportedly experiencing issues with the OpenAI chatbot late Wednesday. 

    According to Down Detector, users began reporting problems at OpenAI around 8:30 p.m. 

    The San Francisco-based company said it was investigating the issues as users from Japan to Australia were reporting issues. 

    Around 15 minutes later, the company said it was “starting to see recovery in API and Sora,” adding: “We are continuing to investigate this issue.” 

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    The Open AI logo, which represents the American-based artificial intelligence (AI) research organization known for releasing the generative chatbot language model AI ChatGPT and initiating the AI spring, is being displayed at the Mobile World Congres (Joan Cros/NurPhoto via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The issue appeared to be resolved just before 12 a.m. EST. A company spokesperson told FOX Business after midnight: “All systems are currently operational.” 

    ChatGPT AI Photo Illustration

    The ChatGPT logo appears on a smartphone screen in this illustration photo in Reno, United States, on January 3, 2025.  (Jaque Silva/NurPhoto via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    OpenAI responded to a major outage on ChatGPT and other applications in late December. The company said the issue had been caused by an upstream provider, which is a company that connects to a local internet service provider’s network to the internet. 

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    OpenAI ChatGPT

    In this photo illustration, the OpenAI logo is seen displayed on a mobile phone screen with ChatGPT logo in the background.  (Photo Illustration by Idrees Abbas/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Wednesday night’s outage comes a day after the company said it was rolling out an education-specific version of its chatbot to around 500,000 students and faculty at California State University as it looks to expand its user base in the academic sector and counter competition from rivals like Google’s Alphabet. 

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    Reuters contributed to this report. 

  • Social Security saves big bucks by axing ‘X’ gender marker

    Social Security saves big bucks by axing ‘X’ gender marker

    The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) announced Wednesday that the Social Security Administration’s move to terminate a contract dealing with the “Gender X” marker on public-facing applications will save over $1 million in taxpayer funds.

    “The Social Security Administration has terminated its contract for the “Gender X initiative marker” and removed all references to gender ideology from public-facing applications,” DOGE wrote on X. “This saves > $1M and is in accordance with the President’s Executive Order…”

    President Donald Trump signed an executive order on his first day in office aimed at shifting the language used by the federal government in documentation, including a move to replace the term “gender” with “sex” on official documents.

    “The erasure of sex in language and policy has a corrosive impact not just on women but on the validity of the entire American system,” the order signed by Trump states. “Basing Federal policy on truth is critical to scientific inquiry, public safety, morale, and trust in government itself.”

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    The move also reversed changes made during the Biden administration, including giving Americans who do not identify with either of the two biological sexes the option to mark documents such as passports with an “X” instead of “male” or “female.”

    Late last month, the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services were told not to make a final decision on any application that would produce a document with an “X” marker for gender.

    Social Security appears to be the next agency to make modifications when it comes to a person identifying sex on an application.

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    A giant transgender flag unfurled outside the Supreme Court. (Erik McGregor/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The Social Security Administration did not respond to FOX Business’ request for comment on the matter.

    After learning of the savings, Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C. weighed in on X.

    “$1,000,000 people,” she wrote. “Government waste at its finest- and this is just the tip of the iceberg.”

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    The South Carolina Republican made headlines in November with a bill to ban biological males from women’s bathrooms in the U.S. Capitol, which was inspired by the election of Sarah McBride, D-Del., the first openly transgender person elected to the House.

    Fox News Digital’s Jamie Joseph and Michael Lee contributed to this report.

  • Deadly bird flu genotype in Nevada dairy cattle

    Deadly bird flu genotype in Nevada dairy cattle

    The USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) recently confirmed the deadly bird flu genotype responsible for killing flocks nationwide was found in Nevada dairy cattle.

    The APHIS National Veterinary Services Laboratories (NVSL) on Friday found the highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) genotype D1.1 in dairy cattle, according to a statement.

    The confirmation came a result of state tracing and investigation, following an initial detection on silo testing under the USDA’s National Milk Testing Strategy in Nevada, officials said.

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    “USDA APHIS continues to work with the Nevada Department of Agriculture by conducting additional on-farm investigation, testing, and gathering additional epidemiological information to better understand this detection and limit further disease spread,” the statement read.

    This is the first detection of the virus genotype in dairy cattle – all previous detections in dairy cattle have been a different genotype, B3.13. 

    Milk price inflation

    Milk prices have increased 14.1% from $3.47 per gallon in Jan. 2021 to $3.96 per gallon in June 2024.  (FOX Business / Fox News)

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    Genotype D1.1 represents the predominant genotype in the North American flyways over the fall and winter and has been identified in wild birds, mammals and spillovers into domestic poultry, according to APHIS.

    Eggs are becoming increasingly difficult to find and more expensive nationwide due to the bird flu, Fox Business previously reported.

    The detection does not change USDA’s HPAI eradication strategy and “is a testament to the strength of our National Milk Testing Strategy,” according to officials. 

    A woman shops for eggs

    CALIFORNIA, USA – JANUARY 23: Egg shelves are seen with a note apologizing to customers for the price increase after the reduction in productivity brought on by poultry fatalities caused by various illnesses, in San Mateo, California, United States o ((Photo by Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images) / Getty Images)

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    In the interest of sharing information of import to the scientific community, APHIS will publish a technical brief on the findings on its website and post the sequence data on GenBank in the coming week.

  • Google drops diversity hiring targets: report

    Google drops diversity hiring targets: report

    Google is dropping its diversity target of hiring more employees from “underrepresented groups” and is reviewing their DEI policies in the wake of President Donald Trump’s flurry of executive orders targeting diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, the Wall Street Journal reported.

    An employee email stated that Google would no longer pursue goals related to increasing minority representation in its workforce, and is “evaluating changes to our programs required to comply” with Trump’s executive orders combating DEI initiatives with federal contractors.

    “We’re committed to creating a workplace where all our employees can succeed and have equal opportunities, and over the last year we’ve been reviewing our programs designed to help us get there. We’ve updated our 10-k language to reflect this, and as a federal contractor, our teams are also evaluating changes required following recent court decisions and executive orders on this topic,” a Google spokesperson said in a statement. 

    GOOGLE, META, OTHER TECH GIANTS SLASH DEI-RELATED JOBS, RESOURCE GROUPS IN 2023: REPORT

    TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA – 2024/07/29: Logo of Google in skyscraper in the downtown district.  (Google is rolling back their DEI policies. / Getty Images)

    The tech giant’s CEO Sundar Pichai announced in 2020 that the company would seek to increase the “leadership representation of underrepresented groups” 30% by 2025 as the U.S. was gripped in national turmoil following the police murder of George Floyd.  

    “Listening to the personal accounts of members of our Black Advisory Leadership Group and our Black+ Googlers has only reinforced for me the reality our Black communities face: one where systemic racism permeates every aspect of life, from interactions with law enforcement, to access to housing and capital, to health care, education, and the workplace,” Pichai wrote in a memo at the time. 

    META ENDS CORPORATE DEI PROGRAMS

    Google Sundar Pichai

    Google CEO Sundar Pichai had announced the diversity targets in 2020.  (Photo by Christoph Soeder/picture alliance via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Google is the latest domino to fall in Silicon Valley as company after company has announced that they are ending or rolling back their DEI initiatives. Meta announced that they are dropping their DEI initiatives in January following Trump’s historic election win. The social media conglomerate has also added UFC boss Dana White to their board and removed tampons from the men’s bathroom. 

    Amazon announced that they would be assessing their DEI policies in December, with HR executive Candi Castleberry telling employees that the company would be “evaluat[ing] their effectiveness.”

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    Meta announced they are dropping their DEI policies in January.  (FOX)

    “We worked to unify employee groups together under one umbrella, and build programs that are open to all, rather than have individual groups build programs, we are focusing on programs with proven outcomes – and we also aim to foster a more truly inclusive culture,” Castleberry wrote. 

    Paypal has also removed its diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives from its latest 10-K SEC filing. Its 2023 filing stated that the company believes that “fostering diversity, inclusion, equity, and belonging (“DIE&B”) is critical to our global talent strategy and pivotal to building a culture that embraces individual characteristics, values diversity, minimizes barriers, and enhances feelings of security and support across the workplace,” but the entire section was removed from their 2024 filing.