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Dec 1, 2021
12/21
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BBCNEWS
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lisa summers is in edinburgh. — more people realise. people realise. lisa summers is in edinburgh, you mentioned - in edinburgh, you mentioned the target of the end of january for the completion of this which has been embraced by the scottish government, how do you read things? so embraced by the scottish government, how do you read things? 50 for embraced by the scottish government, how do you read things?— how do you read things? so far the vaccination — how do you read things? so far the vaccination programme _ how do you read things? so far the vaccination programme has - how do you read things? so far the vaccination programme has been i how do you read things? so far the - vaccination programme has been going exceptionally well in scotland but there have been issues with the extension of the booster scheme because a legislative change has been required so staff can start to give the boosterjabs after three months rather than six. health boards have been written to today so hopefully the situation will be resolved by tomorrow but p
lisa summers is in edinburgh. — more people realise. people realise. lisa summers is in edinburgh, you mentioned - in edinburgh, you mentioned the target of the end of january for the completion of this which has been embraced by the scottish government, how do you read things? so embraced by the scottish government, how do you read things? 50 for embraced by the scottish government, how do you read things?— how do you read things? so far the vaccination — how do you read things? so far...
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63
Dec 15, 2021
12/21
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BBCNEWS
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they invited bbc scotland's health correspondent lisa summers to see the demands they're facing.a chest infection. there are people coming in here with cuts on hands and stuff like that, they can go to doctors or go elsewhere, so that impacts the people who need it. this a&e is split in two. half the beds are taken up with patients waiting to be admitted to the main hospital, but there is no space, so patients have to wait. the longest is 20 hours waiting on an inpatient bed and a lot of the patients are being managed on the corridor because there is not, you know, we don't have the cubicles to put patients into. so for them, it's not a journey that we would like to give them and really, you know, isn't acceptable. but we've got to work with what we've got at the moment and, unfortunately, we're having to do it on a daily basis. ambulance staff bring patients in, others bring themselves. we brought her up to a&e yesterday just because she's got an infection in her finger and it's starting to track up her arm. unfortunately, had come back today because the waiting time yesterday w
they invited bbc scotland's health correspondent lisa summers to see the demands they're facing.a chest infection. there are people coming in here with cuts on hands and stuff like that, they can go to doctors or go elsewhere, so that impacts the people who need it. this a&e is split in two. half the beds are taken up with patients waiting to be admitted to the main hospital, but there is no space, so patients have to wait. the longest is 20 hours waiting on an inpatient bed and a lot of...
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Dec 7, 2021
12/21
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BLOOMBERG
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there is still transmission going on in the summer because too many people were not immune. lisaertain immunizations, whether it is individuals or previously infected, what does it mean? does it mean a booster shot as well? >> even if omicron is able to get around some of the immunity, it is not able to get around what manner -- what matters. to me it has always been about preventing major hospitalization and death. with a healthy population, it is a little bit unclear whether they are needed or not. there is some controversy in the field. there may be a need for a specific booster, but first-generation boosters, you are not really giving a great amount of protection. if you are older or have a higher risk, there is a clear benefit there. lisa: i would love for you to weigh in on the mandate in new york city that all private sector employees get vaccinated. is this the course of what you think will happen across the nation and the world? >> new york city already has one of the highest vaccination rates in the u.s. what we will find is some states are already highly vaccinated and
there is still transmission going on in the summer because too many people were not immune. lisaertain immunizations, whether it is individuals or previously infected, what does it mean? does it mean a booster shot as well? >> even if omicron is able to get around some of the immunity, it is not able to get around what manner -- what matters. to me it has always been about preventing major hospitalization and death. with a healthy population, it is a little bit unclear whether they are...
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Dec 14, 2021
12/21
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BLOOMBERG
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lisa: even though the fed is probably going to hike rates, even though larry summers is saying we are past the peak of encountering something with more sustained inflation going forward. margaret: they have talked and talked. what they have done is basically nothing so far. looking at next year, when we should have less treasury issuance, it is almost irrelevant that they are going to cut back on purchases. the bigger impact the d last issuance last year. lisa: what is the trait here? are you buying long-term treasuries with the expectation that yield will go down? margaret: no. the equity market is of much better value than the treasury curve. 140/180 is not very attractive. they are still trapped at 1.25 for the next few months if the fed does begin to announce the tapering decision. caroline: you said you expect the fed to go slowly in terms of tapering, but what if -- if that seems to be the number one fear for every fund manager out there. how are you hedging that risk? margaret: i am expecting the fed to not make a policy mistake. historically, their mistake has always been farm
lisa: even though the fed is probably going to hike rates, even though larry summers is saying we are past the peak of encountering something with more sustained inflation going forward. margaret: they have talked and talked. what they have done is basically nothing so far. looking at next year, when we should have less treasury issuance, it is almost irrelevant that they are going to cut back on purchases. the bigger impact the d last issuance last year. lisa: what is the trait here? are you...
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Dec 14, 2021
12/21
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ALJAZ
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lisa of the u. n. has confirmed the new record temperature at the arctic over the summer when a siberia.
lisa of the u. n. has confirmed the new record temperature at the arctic over the summer when a siberia.
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Dec 11, 2021
12/21
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KGO
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eye 108
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lisa argen some real devasthere. that's right, liz and you know, you usually associate tornadoes in the summer months, but they can occur
lisa argen some real devasthere. that's right, liz and you know, you usually associate tornadoes in the summer months, but they can occur
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90
Dec 11, 2021
12/21
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KGO
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lisa argen some real devasthere. that's right, liz and you know, you usually associate tornadoes in the summer months, but they can occur any month of the year and as we look at this, this is incredible because of the length of the track tornado going through three states at over a mile wide and 200. feet that he is 200 miles and it has traveled from arkansas to kentucky to mississippi so you can see the red there indicating that that track of tornado. those has certainly moved through the area lofting debris in the air and it's been on the ground for 200 miles with a mile wide. so the devastation you can only imagine. fantastic with those reds right there holding together as it pushes all the way. it looks like across mid-tennessee. so back home. we're going to be talking about a change in our weather. in fact, we've got the clouds right now. it's going to stay dry today. we'll be looking at rain coming in by this time tomorrow, but bundle up it is chilly out there 30s and 40s this morning, liz. alright lisa. thank you and back to that devastating tornado outbreak in western kentucky. we know now that it's killed at le
lisa argen some real devasthere. that's right, liz and you know, you usually associate tornadoes in the summer months, but they can occur any month of the year and as we look at this, this is incredible because of the length of the track tornado going through three states at over a mile wide and 200. feet that he is 200 miles and it has traveled from arkansas to kentucky to mississippi so you can see the red there indicating that that track of tornado. those has certainly moved through the area...
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Dec 13, 2021
12/21
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BLOOMBERG
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when you listen to larry summers and mohamed, they support a lot of the stuff in that bill, but the numbers and d.c. are getting spun another way. lisathere's a difference between sending checks to american households and building bridges, building roads. they are trying to distant was between that as we see the inflationary reads come in at the hottest pace indicates. -- pace in decades. jonathan: want to talk about this fiscal ever and bring in isaac boltansky, policy de-risk are -- policy director at b tig. what is shaping the view right now? isaac: there's an overarching reality in d.c., which is things up here impossible right up until the point that they are inevitable. i think that is where we are right now with this bill back better package. i think it is going to be an credible busy week. we are waiting for an outcome from a procedural effort in the senate. there's a meeting between the two most important joes in d.c., joe biden and joe manchin. ultimately, they will narrow the bid and ask between senator manchin, senator schumer, and the rest of the democrats. we will get to a lower number from $1.3 trillion to $1.5 trillio
when you listen to larry summers and mohamed, they support a lot of the stuff in that bill, but the numbers and d.c. are getting spun another way. lisathere's a difference between sending checks to american households and building bridges, building roads. they are trying to distant was between that as we see the inflationary reads come in at the hottest pace indicates. -- pace in decades. jonathan: want to talk about this fiscal ever and bring in isaac boltansky, policy de-risk are -- policy...
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Dec 17, 2021
12/21
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BLOOMBERG
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lisa: basically, the bond market is saying, say whatever you want, jay powell, but we don't buy that this inflation is going to have a longer-lasting larry summerseel to it. you see a very suppressed benchmark number yield, and real yields still steeply negative. to me, the idea that the nasdaq sold off so much yesterday, is this noise, or if this signal that policy tightening does not matter until it does? that is the question for me and for many people throughout the day. today a pretty quiet day. at 11:00 am, treasury secretary janet yellen will be hosting the virtual financial stability oversight committee. she will be talking about crypto assets, the fed coin, climate change risks. how much does she address the conundrum the fed faces, trying to tighten policy at a time when so much of the world's economy hinges on the u.s. asset pool continuing to be elevated? 1:00 p.m., we get the baker hughes rig count. this gives you a sense of how much is coming online after that huge dip in the pandemic. how much does that come back at a time when investment is incredibly expensive we see incredible inflation and some of the materials used to build an
lisa: basically, the bond market is saying, say whatever you want, jay powell, but we don't buy that this inflation is going to have a longer-lasting larry summerseel to it. you see a very suppressed benchmark number yield, and real yields still steeply negative. to me, the idea that the nasdaq sold off so much yesterday, is this noise, or if this signal that policy tightening does not matter until it does? that is the question for me and for many people throughout the day. today a pretty quiet...
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Dec 3, 2021
12/21
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BLOOMBERG
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really start after the summer, and today is going to be the first real test since that pivot about whether the trend stays or whether we go back to that bad news is good news dynamic. lisay goes to the tech stock area. basically, how interest-rate sensitive are they? ? the view on that has shifted. people saying they can be a bit immune to rate increases because their businesses are so strong, they generate so much cash, people will still stick with them. what is your sense of how much there is this knee-jerk response to the potential for higher rates in the tech sector? kriti: on the one hand, it is extremely interest-rate sensitive, but on the other hand, it also functions as an inflation hedge in the fact that it is just so big. we were talking about apple with their supply chain and demand issues. at the end of the day they still have $190 billion on their balance sheet, extremely low corporate credit rate lines they could draw on, and credit buybacks. it is that kind of demand that makes some of these big tech companies and their own league separate from large-cap companies that can eat those inflation. tom: do you get nonfarm payrolls up to three digits, 502,000?
really start after the summer, and today is going to be the first real test since that pivot about whether the trend stays or whether we go back to that bad news is good news dynamic. lisay goes to the tech stock area. basically, how interest-rate sensitive are they? ? the view on that has shifted. people saying they can be a bit immune to rate increases because their businesses are so strong, they generate so much cash, people will still stick with them. what is your sense of how much there is...
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Dec 18, 2021
12/21
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MSNBCW
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. >> reporter: that summer, brian tate tumbled into a downward spiral and never recovered. he died in september, 2012, just four months after lisa'syes. >> reporter: what does the family think it was? >> a heart. a broken heart. >> reporter: now the prosecutors from the state's attorney general's office worried that a jury might think the deranged deceased neighbor did it. their plan had been to call tate as a witness. >> on the theory that the devil you know is always better than the devil you don't, we wanted the jury to see mr. tate. >> reporter: but now with a trial date approaching, prosecutors had lost a key witness. >> bad for us, good for them. it's great for them. >> reporter: the long-awaited murder trail of seth techel was in the hometown otumwa. february, 2013, can you see yourself going into the courthouse? >> yeah. i remember. >> reporter: what do you two say to one another? >> we got to stay strong. >> reporter: the caldwells never wanted to believe seth killed lisa, but heading into trial, they were all now convinced that he did. even presley, once his staunchest supporter. >> there's really no other explanation fo
. >> reporter: that summer, brian tate tumbled into a downward spiral and never recovered. he died in september, 2012, just four months after lisa'syes. >> reporter: what does the family think it was? >> a heart. a broken heart. >> reporter: now the prosecutors from the state's attorney general's office worried that a jury might think the deranged deceased neighbor did it. their plan had been to call tate as a witness. >> on the theory that the devil you know is...