Trump choose orders categorised paperwork faraway from Particular Grasp to be used in Justice Division prison investigations

After the 11 Circuit overturned their decision for Trump, Judge Aileen Cannon ordered the classified documents removed from the Special Master so they could be used in the DOJ’s criminal investigation.

Here is the order:

There is a new order from Judge Cannon that implements the 11th Circle order.

The approximately 100 documents with classified markings have been removed from the Special Master’s review process, allowing the DOJ to reuse them in its criminal investigations.

Will Trump appeal to SCOTUS? pic.twitter.com/7B8CLrQBLH

โ€” Jan Wolfe (@JanNWolfe) September 22, 2022

It was less than a day before Trump reversed his victory in Judge Cannon’s court in the 11th Circuit Court. The former president could try to take this case to the Supreme Court, but there’s no guarantee the court will hear him or rule in his favor.

The whole point of wanting a special master was to hopefully buy him months and delay the DOJ’s investigation into his possible misuse of government documents.

Judge Cannon was rebuked in the Eleventh Court ruling for “abusing her discretion” in the original Trump ruling.

Donald Trump has his special master, but he didn’t get what he really wanted, which was delaying the Justice Department long enough for him to survive the midterm elections and declare his candidacy for president.

The Judicial Branch takes national security more seriously than Donald Trump, so his usual procrastination and delaying tactics were quickly unraveled.

Mr. Easley is the managing editor. He is also a White House press pool and congressional correspondent for PoliticusUSA. Jason has a bachelor’s degree in political science. His thesis focused on public policy with a specialization in social reform movements.

Awards and professional memberships

Member of the Society of Professional Journalists and the American Political Science Association

Salesforce is concentrating on 25% working margin in 2026

Bret Taylor, Co-Chief Executive Officer of Salesforce.com Inc., right, and Marc Benioff, Co-Chief Executive Officer of Salesforce.com Inc., wear bunny ears during a keynote address at the 2022 Dreamforce Conference in San Francisco, California. on Tuesday, September 20th, 2022.

Marlena Slots | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Salesforce shares rose nearly 3% in extended trading on Wednesday after the enterprise software maker announced a new long-term profitability target that showed the company’s determination to operate more efficiently.

Several cloud software companies, including Salesforce, have become less attractive to investors as interest rates have risen to respond to higher prices this year after becoming more glamorous during the Covid pandemic as companies ramped up their use of programs that employees could use without being in offices.

Cloud company management teams have attempted to regain interest by emphasizing cost-saving plans and advancing their timelines to profitability. Salesforce itself said it would be more cautious about adding talent.

The company went further on Thursday when Salesforce chief financial officer Amy Weaver announced new targets for fiscal 2026 at the company’s investor day held during its Dreamforce conference in San Francisco. The company is targeting an adjusted operating margin of 25%, including future acquisitions, she said. That compares to the 20% target Salesforce announced a year ago for fiscal 2023. Adjusted operating margin for the quarter ended July 31 was 19.9%.

Salesforce said it intends to push adjusted sales and marketing spend as a percentage of revenue below 35% by 2026 through increased self-service efforts, alliances with partners, and productivity gains for sales reps. Marketing is about using your own marketing channels. Sales and marketing accounted for over 44% of revenue on a GAAP basis for the July quarter.

Additionally, Salesforce strives to manage general and administrative expenses, in part by valuing real estate assets for a hybrid workplace.

Weaver reiterated the $50 billion revenue target for fiscal 2026 announced a year ago, but said the figure now accounts for a $2 billion headwind from exchange rates since last year’s investor day.

Salesforce shares hit a 52-week low on Wednesday. The company has begun repurchasing its own stock as part of its first stock buyback program, Weaver said.

CLOCK: Salesforce’s Taylor on the company’s commitment to profitability and returning cash to shareholders

Taye Diggs and Apryl Jones served up Lovey Dovey sentiments seven occasions

Although they avoid specific questions about their relationship status, Taye Diggs and April Jones didn’t hold back on their PDA. For months, the pair have maintained an online presence that exudes healthy, happy, and in love vibes. While we may not be sure when their honeymoon phase started, it’s pretty clear that the phase isn’t over yet. And that’s what the Innanet is for!

I’m not into celebrity relationships at all but Taye Diggs and Apryl Jones put a smile on my face ๐Ÿ˜ญ๐Ÿ’ฏ they’re so freaking cute.

โ€” Nx (@nnxyyx) September 20, 2022

Apryl Jones and Taye Diggs are such an unexpected match. I like it though!

โ€” Effie We’re All In Pain (@NieceJanel) September 22, 2022

I would quit my job to work as a maid for Apryl Jones and Taye Diggs

โ€” Char (@CharRocka) September 14, 2022

Here are seven times that Apryl and Taye pulled hearts racing, knocked fun bones, and inspired all those warm feelings of the honeymoon season!

1. When Taye Diggs said he felt blessed to be loved by Apryl Jones

Taye may have dodged the dating question in July, but just over a month later he declared Apryl’s love a blessing. In a short, sentimental, and sweet video clip, Taye opened up about being incredulous about his blessings. He credited the birth of his son and his long acting career as blessings before turning his attention to Apryl.

“And then the fact that this woman is in love with me,” Taye said. “That’s how I know, praise you, Lord, Jesus, Buddah, or the universe, because somehow she’s… with me. So, for all the people out there who don’t believe there is a God and not a higher being and force, fโ€“k y’all and I know there’s a reason that cares about me.

Taye Diggs says he feels blessed to be loved by Apryl Jones! ๐Ÿ’๐Ÿ””๐Ÿ‘€ pic.twitter.com/VJHVVoRUxj

โ€” TheShadeRoom (@TheShadeRoom) August 26, 2022

2. When Apryl & Taye walked the red carpet… three times

The pair sparked dating rumors in early December 2021 Just Jared reported that Taye and Apryl “dance the night away” at Jennifer Klein’s Christmas party.

Conversations continued to swirl in February as they made their red carpet debut. Taye apparently invited Apryl to a private screening of his film Incarnation, and after the event, the two shared some love on the gram.

Since then, they’ve appeared on at least two other red carpets, including an Oscars afterparty and the Critics’ Choice Awards.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 13: (LR) Apryl Jones and Taye Diggs attend the 27th Annual Critics Choice Awards at Fairmont Century Plaza on March 13, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association)

GettyImages 1388136927 scaled e1663833048420

BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 27: (LR) Taye Diggs and Apryl Jones attend the 2022 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Radhika Jones at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on March 27, 2022 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/WireImage)

3. When Taye & Apryl sing, dance and act together

One thing about her, Taye and Apryl are gonna practice those singing whistles! Their belting videos together are a popular reference for the couple. On-key or off-key, the vibe is typically playful and airy.

Like the singing, the couple’s movements often cause laughter – from both them and their viewers!

And we can’t forget Taye tapping into his acting coach and character bag and taking Apryl along for the ride!

4. When Taye & Apryl freaked out about Apryl farting in bed

Let Apryl and Taye set the example if you ever needed a sign to stop busting your guts by holding back farts for Bae. Their love seemed to turn a literally stinky moment into loud laughter!

5. When Taye interacts with Apryl’s children

Choosing to be with someone who is already a parent means understanding your baby comes as a package deal for their young (or grown) children. As of this writing, we have yet to see Apryl publicly interact with Taye’s 12-year-old son, Walker Nathaniel Diggs.

However, Taye’s relationship with Apryl’s six-year-old daughter A’mei and seven-year-old son Megaa seems to reflect the goofy mood he shares with her mother.

6. When Apryl & Taye pose for couple photos

The PDA. The smile. The captions. Do we need to say more?

7. When Taye & Apryl went to Bora Bora for a baecation

Finally, *fingers crossed*, Taye and Apryl’s baecation in Bora Bora is proving to be just as entertaining as their shenanigans on the mainland!

Putin declares a partial navy mobilization

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday announced a partial military mobilization in Russia, putting the country’s people and economy on a war footing as Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine continues.

In a rare, taped TV announcement, Putin said the West “wants to destroy our country” and claimed the West was trying to “turn the Ukrainian people into cannon fodder,” in comments translated by Reuters, echoing previous claims that in which he had accused Western nations of starting a proxy war with Russia.

Putin said the “mobilization events” would begin on Wednesday without giving any further details other than ordering an increase in funding to boost Russia’s arms production after receiving a large amount during the conflict that began in late February used (and lost) on weapons.

Partial mobilization is an unclear concept, but it could mean that Russian companies and citizens have to contribute more to the war effort. Russia has yet to declare war on Ukraine despite invading February, calling its invasion a “special military operation.”

Putin confirmed that military reservists would be called up for active duty, but insisted that broader conscription of Russian men of military age was not happening.

โ€œI repeat, we are talking about partial mobilization, that is, only citizens who are currently in reserve are drafted, and most importantly, those who served in the armed forces have a certain military specialty and relevant experience. Conscripts, based on the experience of the special military operation, will be required to undergo additional military training before leaving for the units,” he said, according to an Associated Press translation.

Russia's Putin announces partial military mobilization

In what was immediately hailed as an escalation speech, Putin also accused the West of complicity in nuclear blackmail against Russia and again warned that the country “has many weapons to respond to” what he described as Western threats – adding , that he does not bluff .

Putin has alluded to Russia’s nuclear weapons at various points during the conflict with Ukraine, but there are doubts whether Moscow would actually resort to using such a weapon, as analysts say it could be tantamount to the start of a third world war.

China’s Foreign Ministry has urged all parties to engage in dialogue to find a way to address their security concerns, while British Foreign Secretary Gillian Keegan told Sky News that Putin’s comments should not be taken lightly.

“It’s clearly something we should take very seriously because we’re not in control – I’m not sure he’s in control either, really. This is obviously an escalation,” she said.

According to analysts, an escalation of the economic war against Russia is still possible

Financial markets reacted negatively to Putin’s comments, with oil prices rising more than 2% and the Russian ruble falling about 2.6% against the dollar.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu added further details on the partial mobilization on Wednesday morning, saying that 300,000 additional personnel would be called up for military deployment in Ukraine.

In an interview with Russian state television, Shoigu said students and conscripts were not called up and that the majority of Russia’s reserves were not drafted, Reuters reported.

Russia under pressure

Putin’s comments come as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which began in late February, nears the winter period, with momentum appearing to be on Ukraine’s side after it launched blitz counter-offensives in the northeast and south to retake lost territory.

Speculation mounted on Tuesday that Putin may be about to announce a full or partial mobilization of Russia’s economy and society, paving the way for possible conscription of Russian men of military age, after Moscow-installed officials in the occupied territories of the Ukraine had announced plans to immediately hold referenda on joining Russia.

The votes – due to take place this weekend in Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhia, the results of which would be broadly rigged for joining Russia – would allow the Kremlin to claim, albeit falsely, that it is “defending” its own territory and citizens, and that requires more workers.

Putin on Wednesday said Russia supported the referenda, saying the partial mobilization decision was “fully proportionate to the threats we face, namely to protect our homeland, its sovereignty and territorial integrity, to protect the security of our people and… of the people of the liberated territories.”

UN Security Council Imperfect But It's Not Dead: Ex-US Delegate

Plans to hold such votes have been widely condemned by Ukraine and its western allies, who said they would not recognize the ballots and efforts to annex more of Ukraine, as Russia did with Crimea in 2014.

Putin on Wednesday reiterated previous claims from Moscow that Russia’s goal is to “liberate” Donbass, a region in eastern Ukraine that is home to two self-proclaimed, pro-Russian republics, and said he had ordered the government to grant it legal status lend out to volunteers fighting in Donbass, Reuters reported.

Morale is believed to be low among Russian troops fighting in Ukraine, and on Tuesday Russia’s Duma, the country’s parliament, voted to tighten Russia’s penal code on military service — including increasing the penalty for Desertion and other “crimes committed under conditions of mobilization. Martial Law, Armed Conflict and Hostilities.”

CNBC Policy

Read more about CNBC’s political coverage:

The UK Ministry of Defense commented on Twitter on Wednesday that the move was likely intended to limit the number of denials to fight and alleviate some of the immediate staffing “pressures”.

Timothy Ash, Senior Emerging Markets Sovereign Strategist at BlueBay Asset Management, said on Wednesday that โ€œpartial mobilization on the battlefield will make little difference in the short term. Equipment forces already being shoved into the meat grinder in Ukraine?” Ash wrote in emailed comments.

Ash added that he believes “the partial mobilization plus the announcement of a referendum in the Occupied Territories is more for external consumption, for Ukraine and its western allies – to signal that longer term, Putin is still in but that he wants to negotiate. “

Could Russia's war against Ukraine escalate into a global cyber war?

Three takeaways from Wednesday’s “morning session” – Fed and corporates with pricing energy

Zelenskyj calls for punishment for Russia’s conflict in Ukraine, describes merciless conflict crimes in breathtaking UN handle

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is seen on video screens as he delivers a recorded speech before the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly at the UN headquarters in New York September 21, 2022.

Fresh Mike | Reuters

UNITED NATIONS – Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in a UN address to world leaders on Wednesday called for world leaders to hold Russia accountable for its months-long assault on his nation.

“Russia should pay for this war,” Zelenskyy said, calling for a special UN tribunal to “punish Russia.”

“We must finally recognize Russia as a state sponsor of terrorism,” he said, echoing previous demands from the early days of the war.

Zelenskyy’s dramatic remarks in English and lasting nearly 30 minutes followed Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to mobilize hundreds of thousands of soldiers for the war.

Continue reading: “Our world is in danger,” said the UN chief in his opening speech at the General Assembly

Zelenskyy, who hasn’t left his war-weary nation since Russia’s full-throttle invasion in February, appeared virtually following an introduction by Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba at the 77th UN General Assembly. Ukrainian First Lady Olena Zelenska and Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal flanked Kuleba.

Ukrainian First Lady Olena Zelenska smiles during a standing ovation after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s speech via video during the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly at the UN headquarters in New York City, September 21, 2022.

Fresh Mike | Reuters

Zelensky is the only head of state to address the international forum in this manner, an exceptional exception voted on last week.

The 193-strong world body approved Zelenskky’s virtual pronouncements by a vote of 101 to 7 with 19 abstentions, including China. Belarus, Cuba, Eritrea, Nicaragua, North Korea, Russia and Syria were the seven countries that voted against Zelenskyy’s motion.

During his speech, the President of Ukraine called on these seven nations to be “afraid of video addressing”.

A view of the 74th United Nations General Assembly on September 28, 2019 in New York City.

Kena Betancur | News from Getty Images | Getty Images

Zelenskyy’s speech, which received nearly a minute of applause and a standing ovation, comes as Russia’s war enters its eighth month and the Kremlin shows no signs of abandoning its ambitions to wipe out Ukrainian sovereignty in order to restore the Soviet empire.

“Nations of the world, Ukraine wants peace,” said Zelenskyy.

โ€œEurope wants peace. The world wants peace. And we’ve seen who’s the only one who wants war. There is only one among all UN member states who, if they could interrupt my speech, would now say that they are satisfied with it. “War, his war,” he added, without naming Putin.

Zelenskyi described mass graves uncovered in the recently recaptured city of Izium in northeastern Ukraine.

“The bodies of women and men, children and adults, civilians and soldiers were found in 445 graves,” he said, adding that some were bound and tortured before they died. He described in grisly detail the body of a man who was found castrated before being murdered.

“Russia wants to spend the winter on the occupied territory of Ukraine and prepare for a new offensive: new Buchas, new Iziums,” he said, referring to mass executions and graves discovered in Bucha in April.

Two forensic scientists dig near a cross in a forest on the outskirts of Izyum in eastern Ukraine, September 16, 2022.

Juan Barreto | AFP | Getty Images

The United Nations estimates that Russia’s war has so far claimed nearly 6,000 civilian lives and injured more than 8,600. The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights adds that the death toll in Ukraine is likely higher.

Moreover, the conflict took another anxious turn on Wednesday morning when Putin expressed his support for a referendum to decide whether four occupied regions of Ukraine should join Russia. The move is believed to be an attempt by the Kremlin to annex more parts of its former Soviet neighbor. Voting could take place as early as this weekend.

Putin also ordered about 300,000 Russian reservists to join the fight. The partial mobilization, Russia’s first since World War II, follows a series of stunning Ukrainian advances in recent days.

Armed with a plethora of Western weaponry, Ukrainian forces have made significant gains against the Kremlin’s powerful war machine.

President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy visits Kharkiv region of Ukraine for the first time since Russia’s attacks on his country on February 24, 2022, May 29, 2022.

Ukrainian Presidency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

The United States has so far provided Kyiv with a war chest worth more than $15 billion. Meanwhile, NATO allies have been beefing up security across the region, taking in refugees and training Ukrainian forces.

Continue reading: Biden calls on allied nations to give more support to Ukraine at the UN General Assembly

Zelenskyy has called for more guns as his nation wages an epoch-making struggle for democratic principles and global order. Specifically, he called for long-range weapons, heavy artillery, and air defense systems.

He also asked for humanitarian and financial support, as well as help with reconstruction projects. The European Commission and World Bank estimate that Ukraine’s post-war reconstruction will cost at least $349 billion.

While nearly every leader who has stepped behind the famous speaker’s podium to address the international forum has condemned Russia for its ongoing assault, Zelenskyy has urged leaders to publicly state where they stand on the war.

Without specifically naming countries, the Ukrainian president criticized nations that have taken a neutral stance in the face of the Russian war.

“They pretend to protect someone, but in reality they are only protecting their personal interests,” he said.

Jay Leno reveals what it is actually wish to see Elon Musk in his aspect

There’s nothing funny about that Jay LenoPraise for billionaire Elon Musk.

The Comedian interviewed the business tycoon at the SpaceX Starbase in Texas for the September 21 episode of Jay Leno’s Garage, and in an exclusive interview with E! News, he teased what it was really like to see the Tesla CEO hard at work.

“In two and a half years he basically built his own Cape Canaveral down there,” Jay told E! News. “I think it’s fair to say he’s a genius. Being in Hollywood, I meet geniuses every day, so I’m a little suspicious. But when you talk to Elon, [and say] ‘Elon, would you check that trajectory?’ He does an equation as he talks and I just found that fascinating.”

But according to Jay, it’s more than just Elon’s vision that is taking SpaceX to new heights. “When I went to SpaceX, he was living in a small Airstream trailer on the property,” he shared. “He’s involved in every facet of this thing.”

What the Fed’s massive rate of interest hikes imply for Principal Road economic system

Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference following a two-day meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) in Washington, July 27, 2022.

Elizabeth Frantz | Reuters

The Federal Reserve’s decision to raise interest rates by 0.75%, or 75 basis points, for the third-consecutive time at the Federal Open Market Committee meeting, is a step being taken to cool the economy and bring down inflation, but it is also putting small business owners across the country in a lending fix they have not experienced since the 1990s.

If the Federal Reserve’s FOMC next moves match the market’s expectation for two more interest rate hikes by the end of the year, small business loans will reach at least 9%, maybe higher, and that will bring business owners to a difficult set of decisions. Businesses are healthy today, especially those in the rebounding services sector, and credit performance remains good throughout the small business community, according to lenders, but the Fed’s more aggressive turn against inflation will lead more business owners to think twice about taking out new debt for expansion.

Partly, it is psychological: with many business owners never having operated in anything but a low interest rate environment, the sticker shock on debt stands out more even if their business cash flow remains healthy enough to cover the monthly repayment. But there will also be more businesses finding it harder to make cash flow match monthly repayment at a time of high inflation across all of their other business costs, including goods, labor, and transportation.

“Demand for lending hasn’t changed yet, but we’re getting dangerously close to where people will start to second guess,” said Chris Hurn, the founder and CEO of Fountainhead, which specializes in small business lending.

“We’re not there yet,” he said. “But we’re closer.”

Increasing interest cost

As traditional banks and credit unions tighten lending standards and businesses begin to breach debt covenants based on debt service coverage ratios โ€” the amount of cash flow needed to cover debt โ€” more business owners will turn to the SBA loan market in which firms like Hurn’s specialize.

“Every time we get into one of these cycles and the economy is slowing and rates are going up, one of the few places to get business credit is SBA lenders,” he said.

But even in the SBA market, business owners are beginning to pause as a result of the Fed’s rate actions, said Rohit Arora, co-founder and CEO of Biz2Credit, which also focuses on small business lending. “From a credit perspective, people are getting more cognizant about increasing interest cost, and that the Fed will keep interest rates at 4-4.50%,” Arora said.

Fed officials signaled the intention on Wednesday of continuing to hike until the funds level hits a “terminal rate,” or end point of 4.6% in 2023.

“Even a month ago, this was a ‘2022 phenomenon’ and now they will have to live with the pain for longer,” Arora said. “It’s a harder decision now because you don’t have the Fed ‘put’ behind you,” he added, referring to an environment in which you could bank on adjustable loan rates not going higher.

Fed expected to keep rates higher for longer

The big change since the summer, reflected in the stock market as well, is the acknowledgment that the Fed is not likely to quickly reverse its interest rate hikes, as inflation proves stickier than previously forecast, and key areas of the economy, like the labor market, don’t cool fast enough. As recently as the last FOMC meeting in July, many economists, traders and business owners expected the Fed to be cutting rates as soon as early 2023.

Now, according to CNBC’s surveying of economists and investment managers, the Fed is likely to reach peak rates above 4% and hold rates there throughout 2023. This outlook implies at least two more rate hikes in November and December, for a total of at least 75 basis points more, and including Wednesday’s hike, 150 basis points in all from September through the end of the year. And that is a big change for business owners.

The FOMC meeting decision reinforced this expectation of a more hawkish Fed, with the two-year treasury bond yield hitting its highest rate since 2007 and the central bank’s expectations for when it starts cutting rates again pushed out even further in time. In 2025, the fed funds rate median target is 2.9%, implying restrictive Fed policy into 2025.

How SBA loans work and why rate hikes are a big issue

SBA loans are floating rate loans, meaning they re-adjust based on changes in the prime rate, and that has not been an issue for business owners during the low interest rate environment, but it is suddenly becoming a prominent concern. With SBA loans based on the prime rate, currently at 5.50%, the interest rates are already between 7%-8%. With the prime rate poised to reach 6.25% after the Fed’s latest 75 basis point hike, SBA loans are heading to as high as the 9%-9.5% range.

“Most of the business owners today, because they have lived in such a low rate environment, while they have floating interest rate loans they didn’t even realize that on existing loans it could go up,” Arora said. “Everyone expected with gas prices coming down to what I would call ‘pre-high inflation levels’ that things looked a lot better. Now people are realizing that oil prices don’t solve the problem and that’s new for lots of business owners who thought inflation would taper off and the Fed not be so hawkish.”

He stressed, like Hurn, that demand for business loans is still healthy, and unlike deteriorating consumer credit, small business credit performance is still strong because many firms were underleveraged pre-Covid and then supported by the multiple government programs during the pandemic, including the PPP and SBA EIDL loans. “They are well capitalized and are seeing strong growth because the economy is still doing pretty well,” Arora said, and he added that the majority of small businesses are in the service economy, which is the strongest part of the economy right now.

But many business owners were waiting for the Fed to cut in early 2023 before making new loan decisions. Now, they’ve been caught flatfooted by adjustable loan rates that went up, and an interest rate environment poised to go higher still.

“Lots of business owners look at gas prices first and that was true for most of the year, and now it’s broken down. Wage inflation and rent inflation are running amok, so we’re not seeing inflation coming down anytime soon,” Arora said.

That’s leading to more interest in fixed-rate products.

Fixed versus adjustable rate debt

Demand for fixed-rate loans is going up because businesses can lock in rates, from a year to three years. “Though it’s pretty late to the game, they feel like maybe the next 14 to 15 months, before rates start coming down, they can at least lock in a rate,” Arora said. “The expectation is, in the short term, SBA loans will adjust up and non-SBA loans are shorter tenure,” he said.

SBA loans range from three years to as long as 10 years.

A fixed rate loan, even if it is a little higher than an SBA loan today, may be the better option given the change in interest rate outlook. But there’s considerable potential downside. Trying to time the Fed’s policy has proven difficult. The change from the summer to now is proof of that. So if there is a significant recession and the Fed starts cutting rates earlier than the current expectation, then the fixed-rate loan becomes more expensive and getting out of it, though an option, would entail prepayment penalties.

“That’s the one big risk you run if taking a fixed-rate loan in this environment,” Arora said.

The other tradeoff in choosing a fixed-rate loan: the shorter duration means a higher monthly repayment amount. The amount a business can afford to pay back every month depends on the amount of income coming in, and a fixed rate loan with a higher monthly repayment amount requires a business to have more income to devote to servicing the loan.

“After 2008, business owners never experienced a jumped in SBA loans and now they see monthly interest payments increasing, and are feeling the pinch and starting to plan for it … get adjusted to the new reality,” Arora said. “Demand is still healthy but they are worried about the increased interest cost while they are still battling inflation, even as lower oil prices have helped them.”

SBA loan guaranty waiver ending

Another cost that is suddenly influencing the SBA loan decision is the end of a waiver this month on SBA loan guaranty fees that are traditionally charged to borrowers so that in the event of a default, the SBA pays the portion of the loan that was guaranteed.

With that waiver ending in September, the cost of guaranteeing a loan can be significant. For example, a 3% SBA guaranty fee on a $500,000 loan would cost the business borrowing the money $15,000.

“It’s adding to the costs,” Arora said.

It’s still a mistake to wait too long to access credit

While oil prices are coming down, food and other inventory costs remain high, as do rent and labor costs, and that means the need for working capital isn’t changing. And business owners who have been through downturns before know that the time to access credit is before the economy and cash flow start to deteriorate. At some point, in the most severe downturns, “you won’t get money at any cost,” Arora said.

“If you have a reasonably calculated growth plan, no one is going to say keep your head in the sand and wait until Q2 of next year and see where rates are,” Hurn said. “Banks don’t like to lend when the economy is slowing and there are higher rates, which translate to higher risk of defaults.”

Hurn said loan covenants are being “tripped” more frequently now in deteriorating sectors of the economy, though that by no means typifies the credit profile on Main Street.

“Once interest rates go up, and if inflation does not go down, we will see more debt service coverage ratios getting violated,” Arora said. This has to be taken into account because here is a lag between Fed policy decisions and economic impact, and this implies that sticker forms of inflation will last for longer even as sectors like housing and construction are deteriorating.

Much of the surplus liquidity businesses are sitting on due to government support is being eroded, even amid healthy customer demand, because of high inflation. And even if this economic downturn may not be anything like the severe liquidity crisis of 2008, business owners are in a better position when they have the access to credit before the economic situation spirals.

This is not 2008, or 1998

The systemic issues in the financial sector, and the liquidity crisis, were much bigger in 2008. Today, unemployment is much lower, lender balance sheets are much stronger, and corporate balance sheets are stronger too.

“We’re just running into a slowing economy,” Hurn said.

When he started in small business lending back in 1998, business loans reached as high as 12% to 12.5%. But telling a business owner that today, like telling a mortgage borrower that rates used to be much higher, doesn’t help after an artificially low interest rate era.

“Psychologically, people set their expectations for borrowing costs … ‘they will be this cheap forever,'” Hurn said. “It’s changing radically now.”

“If rates go close to 10%, psychologically, businesses will start hesitating to borrow,” Arora said. ย 

And with a peak Fed rate level of 4% or higher reached by late this year, that is where SBA loan rates are heading.

The problem of higher interest rates and recession

Another 150-175 basis points in total from the Fed, if it has its intended effect of bringing inflation down, would leave many businesses in a stable condition because all of the other costs they are facing outside of debt would be more manageable. But the key question is how quickly the interest rate actions bring down inflation, because the higher rates will impact the cash flow of businesses and their monthly loan payments.

Lower inflation in stickier parts of the economy, like labor, combined with energy costs remaining lower, would allow small businesses to effectively manage cash flow. But if those things don’t happen as quickly as people are expecting, “then there will be pain, and consumer spending will be down too, and that will have a bigger impact,” Arora said. “The challenge is recession and high interest rates together that they have to handle and haven’t seen in 40 years,” he said.

Rates are not ordinarily considered the determining factor in a business’s decision to take out a loan. It should be the business opportunity. But rates can become a determining factor based on the monthly repayment amount, and if a business is looking at cash flow against monthly costs like payroll being harder to make, expansion may have to wait. If rates go up enough, and inflation doesn’t fall off fast enough, all borrowing may need to be applied to working capital.

One thing that won’t change, though, is that the U.S. economy is based on credit. “People will continue to borrow, but whether they can borrow at inexpensive rates, or even get capital trying to borrow form traditional sources, remains to be seen,” Hurn said.

Future sells its writer’s catalog for an eight-figure sum

Life is good! Future always makes a money play, and it looks like he just did it again. According to Variety, Future has sold its Grammy-winning publisher’s catalog from 2004 to 2020. The new owners, Influence Media Partners, have reportedly written an eight-figure check to Future. Purchases of 612 of Future records include popular tracks such as “Jumpman”, “Mask Off” and “Life Is Good”.

Commenting on the purchase, Rene McLean, Influence Media Partner and Founding Advisor, said: โ€œFuture is a cultural icon. He continues to be a blueprint for impact and success in the music industry and has reinvented music in ways no one ever expected.” She added, “It’s rare to find someone with his distinct vocal and melodic style Music and culture move at the same speed. His prolific career and enduring popularity after more than 15 years in the game are testament to his undeniable influence on the contemporary music and cultural landscape. We are honored to work with him.โ€

The rapper also shared a few words about the deal. “I put everything into my music and wanted to make sure it was in good hands as I thought about the next chapter of these songs. I’m proud to be collaborating with Rene and the team at Influence Media and making a mark that this music has timeless value. My music is my art and these songs are among the most valuable works of art of my career.โ€

Future has released eight studio albums, four collaborative albums, one reissued album, one soundtrack, 16 mixtapes, four commercial mixtapes, and 114 singles. He has 69 as a featured artist and six of Future’s eight studio albums have reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 200.

Roomies, what do you think of Future selling his catalogue?

The previous White Home lawyer warned Trump about conserving information

It will often be heard, “Ignorance of the law is no defense,” and that is certainly true. However, if Trump is charged with possible espionage, obstruction of justice, or illegally-held files, prosecutors must prove intent and Trump’s mental state, which can be difficult in this type of case. Furthermore, it doesn’t take a lawyer to understand that when considering indicting a former president, it must be based on overwhelming evidence that is almost irrefutable. To that end, it sounds like the DOJ has more critical and irrefutable evidence. The NYT reports that former White House Counsel and post-election half-hero Eric Herschmann has warned Trump against keeping the files:

A former White House attorney under President Donald J. Trump warned him late last year that Mr Trump could face legal liability if he failed to return government materials he took when he left office, three said with the Matter familiar people.

The attorney, Eric Herschmann, tried to impress Mr. Trump on the seriousness of the problem and the potential for investigation and legal exposure if he failed to return the documents, particularly classified material, the people said.

“Trying to impress Mr. Trump…” It sounds like, despite everything he’d already been through with Trump, Herschmann was still “seeking” to save Trump from himself and return the files. It is significant that Trump refused, and it is consistent with the evidence we already know exists.

One of the strongest elements of the Justice Department investigation and search warrant is the evidence, showing that Trump faced a choice many times between doing what he knew was right, returning the files, or doing what he knew was wrong, keep his own purposes. Despite several points that most people would consider their “last chance,” Trump knowingly broke the law for his own ends. It’s a testament to his state of mind and intent.

If Herschmann’s testimony is as good as this article suggests, the DOJ will be able to determine a key element of the charges set forth in the search warrant affidavit — his mental state. This is usually the most difficult thing in such cases. https://t.co/4qNXd04p7r

โ€” Joyce Alene (@JoyceWhiteVance) September 20, 2022

We have yet to see or hear any evidence of Trump’s possible plans for the documents. Trump’s motivations could range from the dangerously mundane “need to feel important and keep the trappings of office” to a Rosenberg-like scenario in which Trump wanted to take this critical and top-secret information and sell it to the highest bidder. We do not know it. But the clearer the evidence of those “nodes” or turning points where Trump knew he faced extremely serious consequences and yet chose to risk it all, the stronger the charge against Trump. This evidence also reinforces suspicions that Trump had a specific, serious, and recklessly dangerous reason to keep the information.

@JasonMiciak believes a day without learning is a day not lived. He is a political writer, columnist, author and lawyer. He is a Canadian-born dual citizen who spent his teens and college days in the Pacific Northwest and has since lived in seven states. Today he enjoys life as a single father to a young girl and writes on the beaches of the Gulf Coast. He loves making his flower pots, cooking and is currently studying philosophy of science, religion and non-mathematical principles behind quantum mechanics and cosmology. Please do not hesitate to contact us for lectures or other concerns.