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    Rate resets on 9.62% interest, taxes, inherited assets: Experts weigh in on 3 tricky questions about Series I bonds

    The demand for Series I bonds has skyrocketed as investors seek refuge from soaring prices and stock market volatility.
    Experts cover the key things to know about interest rate resets, taxes and inherited assets.

    Getty Images

    The demand for Series I bonds, an inflation-protected and nearly risk-free asset, has skyrocketed as investors seek refuge from soaring prices and stock market volatility.
    While annual inflation rose by 8.6% in May — the highest rate in more than four decades, according to the U.S. Department of Labor — I bonds are currently paying a 9.62% annual rate through October.

    That’s especially attractive after a rough six months for the S&P 500, which plummeted by more than 20% since January, capping its worst six-month start to a year since 1970.
    More from Personal Finance:How much cash you need to ride out a recession at different life stagesSome experts say a recession is coming. Here’s how to prepare your portfolio’It’s like going to the DMV online’: What to know about buying Series I bonds via TreasuryDirect
    Indeed, since the annual I bond rate jumped to 7.12% in November, 1.85 million new savings bond accounts have opened through June 24, according to Treasury officials. 
    “I bonds are a wonderful tool for both cash reserves and investment portfolios,” said certified financial planner Byrke Sestok, co-owner of Rightirement Wealth Partners in Harrison, New York.
    Backed by the U.S. government, I bonds won’t lose value. And if you’re comfortable not touching the money for 12 months, the current rate “dwarfs” other options for cash reserves, he said.

    Still, there are nuances to consider before piling money into these assets. Here are answers to some of the trickier I bond questions. 

    1. How does the interest rate on I bonds work?

    I bond returns have two parts: a fixed rate and a variable rate, which changes every six months based on the consumer price index. The U.S. Department of the Treasury announces new rates on the first business day of May and November every year. 
    With inflation rising over the past year, the variable rates have jumped, increasing to an 7.12% annual rate in November and 9.62% in May. However, the initial six-month rate window depends on your purchase date.  
    For example, if you bought I bonds on July 1, you’ll receive the 9.62% annual rate through Dec. 31, 2022. After that, you’ll begin earning the annual rate announced in November.

    2. How do I pay taxes on I bond interest?

    While I bond interest avoids state and local levies, you’re still on the hook for federal taxes.
    There are two options for covering the bill: reporting interest every year on your tax return or deferring until you redeem the I bond.
    While most people defer, the choice depends on several factors, explained Tommy Lucas, a CFP and enrolled agent at Moisand Fitzgerald Tamayo in Orlando, Florida.

    All of these decisions come back to the ultimate purpose of this investment.

    Tommy Lucas
    Financial advisor at Moisand Fitzgerald Tamayo

    For example, if you opt to pay taxes on your I bond interest every year before receiving the proceeds, you’ll need another source of income to cover those levies.
    However, if you’ve earmarked those funds to pay for education expenses, the interest is tax-exempt, so paying levies annually doesn’t make sense, he said.    
    “All of these decisions come back to the ultimate purpose of this investment,” Lucas added.

    3. What happens to my I bonds if I die?

    When you create a TreasuryDirect account to buy I bonds, it’s important to add what’s known as a beneficiary designation, naming who inherits the assets if you pass away. 
    Without this designation, it becomes more challenging for loved ones to collect the I bonds, and may require the time and expense of going through probate court, depending on the I bond amount, Sestok explained.   

    “Personally, I make sure that my clients do it correctly in the first place,” he said, explaining how adding beneficiaries upfront may avoid headaches later.
    However, if you set up an account without a beneficiary, you can add one online by following the steps outlined here at TreasuryDirect. You can call support with questions, but they are currently experiencing “higher than usual call volumes,” according to the website.
    With a named beneficiary, I bond heirs can continue holding the asset, cash it in or have it reissued in their name, according to Treasury Direct. 
    The accrued interest up to the date of death can be added to the original owner’s final tax return or the heir’s filing. Either way, the beneficiary can decide whether to keep deferring interest or not, Lucas said.

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    I talked to 70 parents who raised highly successful adults—here are 4 things they never did when their kids were young

    As parents, we hear a lot about the things we should do with our kids. But it’s also important to flip that around and consider what we shouldn’t do.
    As I researched and wrote my book, “Raising an Entrepreneur,” I interviewed 70 parents who raised highly successful adults about how they helped their children achieve their dreams.

    Despite the diverse ethnic, socioeconomic and religious backgrounds, there were four things that the parents of these smart, driven and entrepreneurial individuals never did when their kids were young:

    1. They never treated their kid’s hobby as a waste of time.

    Sports, video games, debating, music, birdwatching — every child of the parents I spoked to had a passion outside of the classroom. The parents never veered their kids away from the hobby because they knew it was keeping them mentally active.
    Radha Agrawal is the founder of Daybreaker, a global morning dance movement with over 500,000 community members in 30 cities around the world. Previously, she was the CEO of Super Sprowtz, a children’s entertainment movement focused on healthy eating.
    But growing up, her passion was soccer. With support from her parents, she and her twin sister Miki played three hours a day, starting from when they were five years old. Eventually, they played at Cornell University, where they were known as the “Legendary Soccer Twins.”
    Although her career today was nothing to do with soccer, Radha told me that she developed a lot of grit and resilience from the sport: “You have to be disciplined. You learn to be organized and focused. And you learn the politics of teamwork, and what it takes to be the captain.”

    2. They never made all the choices for their kids.

    It can be extremely tempting to constantly make decisions for your kids. After all, you’re the adult — you know your children better than anyone else does, and you don’t want them to suffer.
    But successful parents resist that temptation.
    Ellen Gustafson co-founded FEED Projects, providing food in schools for children. Today, she is a thought leader and regular speaker on social innovation.
    Her mother Maura said to me: “We encouraged her to be independent, and to think for herself. I’d tell her, ‘Trust, but verify. Check it out. Be sure it’s true. Don’t drink the Kool-Aid. Just because everyone else is doing it, that doesn’t mean you have to.’ You want your kid to grow up to be cautious, but not fearful.”
    “As a parent, you can see what their strengths are,” she continued. “But you have to let them figure it out. The best way to do that is by asking questions like, ‘What choice do you think would be more helpful to you in the future?'”

    3. They never prized money or high-paying degrees over happiness.

    I have nothing against academic and professional degrees — my husband and I both have graduate degrees, and it has worked for us.
    But a degree may represent an expensive waste of your child’s time if it has no connection to their interests. And if their only reason for being in school is to get the piece of paper or make the contacts needed to land a high-paying job.
    Someone who loves something enough and works hard at it will find a way to turn it into a living, even without a degree in that field. And they won’t be afraid to tackle an opportunity that won’t pay anything for a few years as they might be if they had to pay off high student debt every month.

    4. They never neglected financial literacy.

    A final note about money: Although the parents I spoke to never pushed their kids towards pursuing a high-paying job, all of them made an effort to teach their kids about money in one form or another.
    Joel Holland sold half of his first company, Storyblocks, for $10 million in 2012. He acquired a strong work ethic at an early age; he and his sister were given the job of sweeping to get their allowance.
    “The floors had to be clean enough to eat off of. It taught me about hard work,” he said. “And in grade school, everyone had roller skates, but my parents wouldn’t buy them for me. They told me, ‘If you want them, you have to save your money.’ It made me angry at the time, but it really made me appreciate the value of money.”
    His parents also didn’t pay for his college education. Joel went to Babson College on student loans and from the money he made from working.
    “Because I paid for college, I never missed a class. I’d calculated the cost of each class at $500,” he said. “If I was tempted to skip a class, I always thought there is nothing I could possibly do during this hour that’s worth more than $500.”
    I love Joel’s story because it illustrates why you shouldn’t teach kids that they must go after high-paying careers, but that it is important to learn about money.
    If you’re passionate about something, and get really good at it, and get to know it inside and out, you will see something that’s missing, which you can turn into your business. Joel has done this twice.
    Margot Machol Bisnow is a writer, mom and parenting coach. She spent 20 years in government, including as an FTC Commissioner and Chief of Staff of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, and is the author of “Raising an Entrepreneur: How to Help Your Children Achieve Their Dream.” Follow her on Instagram @MargotBisnow.
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    Auto dealerships are facing a shortage of technicians to fix cars. Here's why

    It’s not just hard to buy a new car these days — it’s getting tough to even get one fixed.
    There just aren’t enough workers to do the job.

    Dealers and auto repair shops are struggling to recruit and retain technicians and other service department workers. Auto dealerships, like many industries, are feeling the effects of what some have termed the Great Resignation, in which workers are quitting at steep rates.
    It’s become especially difficult for dealers to retain service advisors, who interact with customers and service managers. But even before that, there has been a stubborn decades-long shortage of auto technicians — the people who fix the cars.
    Industry analysts say low pay, lack of a clearly defined career path and a generational shift away from jobs in the trades are making it tough to attract and retain people over the long term.
    Meanwhile, insiders say the transition to electric vehicles makes for one of the most exciting times to consider an auto tech career since the dawn of the industry. Some hope the chance to learn cutting-edge technology will help to lure workers back to the field.

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    Amazon Prime Day is coming up: Here's why deal experts say you might want to skip it this year

    Just because something is discounted on Amazon Prime Day doesn’t mean it’s the best deal you’ll see anywhere, or even all year.
    Other retailers are holding competing deals events and some of the best bargains are yet to come.

    Prime Day prices may not be Amazon’s best-ever offer

    Just because something is discounted on Prime Day doesn’t mean it’s the best deal you’ll see anywhere, or even all year.
    Naturally, Amazon will offer the best prices on its own gear like the Kindle, Fire TV streamer and private-label clothing. For example, the e-commerce giant is already advertising a 24-inch Fire TV for only $90, nearly half the retail price, while other early deals include up to 55% off the second-generation Echo Show, Kindle Paperwhite and Eero Mesh Wi-Fi routers.

    Keep in mind that some items will be reduced further down the road. Prices on mattresses and outdoor furniture are likely to be lower around Labor Day, toys get marked down the most on Black Friday and Cyber Monday, and TVs generally hit their lowest price point ahead of Super Bowl Sunday.
    Even Amazon is looking beyond its own Prime Day with a second sales event now slated for the fall.

    Competing sale events are upping the ante

    Other bargains are not exclusive to Amazon at all. Walmart, Target and Best Buy, among others, are holding competing deals events — as they have in previous years — to coincide with Amazon Prime Day 2022.
    This time, Target’s 72-hour “Deal Days” kicks off earlier and runs for longer, starting on July 11, one day ahead of Prime Day. Plus, Target will price match select Prime Day deals and take an additional 5% off for RedCard members.
    “Every year, they become a little bit more competitive,” Burrow said.

    Also expect to find equally worthwhile deals at Walmart on kitchen appliances, vacuums and Nintendo Switch accessories, he said, and count on Best Buy to compete on electronics and Apple devices.
    Meanwhile, other retailers, including Bed, Bath & Beyond, Kohl’s, Overstock, Samsung and Saks Fifth Avenue, will offer their own major markdowns, according to Rakuten’s retail and shopping expert Kristen Gall. 

    How to make sure you’re getting the best deals

    To find the lowest prices overall, start crunching the numbers now, advised Kristin McGrath, a shopping expert at RetailMeNot.

    Price trackers are the easiest way to monitor just how good a deal really is, especially for big-ticket items.

    Kristin McGrath
    shopping expert at RetailMeNot

    McGrath recommends a price-tracking browser extension like Camelcamelcamel or Keepa to keep an eye on price changes and get price-drop alerts. “Price trackers are the easiest way to monitor just how good a deal really is, especially for big-ticket items,” she said.
    At some retailers, you can even stack deals by using a promo code or digital coupon and then pay with a rewards credit card for extra savings, said Rakuten’s Gall.
    Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

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    How many F-bombs trigger an R rating? An obscure movie industry panel decides

    CARA, the Classification and Rating Administration, is an independent division of the Motion Picture Association that assigns film ratings.
    The team at CARA is responsible for screening around 700 films a year.
    Some rules determine how many F-bombs can be used before a film must be classified as R.

    A poster of Motion Picture Association film ratings hangs next to a poster displaying a message about new cleaning procedures in the lobby of Cinemark’s Century 16 at the South Point Hotel & Casino on in Las Vegas, Nevada.
    Ethan Miller | Getty Images

    How many F-bombs can a movie have before it’s rated R?
    That’s up to Kelly McMahon and a secretive panel of raters that is charged with dishing out the movie industry’s five all-important designations — G, PG, PG-13, R and the extremely rare NC-17.

    Though it toils in relative obscurity, the panel’s ratings for about 700 movies each year can help determine whether films are suitable for children and have a big impact on a movie’s box office performance.
    One of the group’s rules, for instance, says the F-bomb can be used as an expletive just once in a film rated PG-13, which means suitable for people 13 and older.
    “Used more than once as an expletive, it gets kicked up to an R,” said McMahon, chair of the Classification and Rating Administration (CARA), a Los Angeles-based division of the Motion Picture Association.
    Warner Bros.’ “The Batman,” for example, has a lot of profane dialogue, including the use of s—, b—- and a——. But it only used the F-word once, allowing it to remain PG-13.
    There are exceptions, usually when the word is just repeated in a short time or used as part of an emotional scene, McMahon said. But any movie with more than three F-bombs likely couldn’t remain PG-13, she said. And if the word is used to signify sex, the film automatically gets an R rating.

    To protect the integrity of the screening process, six of CARA’s 10 members are cloaked in anonymity. But in an interview with CNBC, McMahon peeled the curtain back on how the group factors in nudity, violence and other elements to assign ratings for movies including blockbusters like Paramount and Skydance’s “Top Gun: Maverick” and streaming titles like Netflix’s “Spiderhead.”

    Three films a day

    Established in 1968 as a guideline for parents, the MPA panel is made up of full-time and part-time employees who don’t have any other relations to the entertainment industry. To be selected, candidates must have a child between the ages of 5 and 15.
    Most members serve for around seven years — or until their youngest child reaches the age of 21, McMahon said.
    “We strive for a diverse group of raters in terms of race, gender, ethnicity, geographical upbringing, religious views, political views,” she said, adding the majority of Americans parents would ideally agree with the group’s ratings.
    The panel screens around three films a day, watching each movie from start to finish — including the credits. Raters are watching for sex, nudity and language, which are consistently among parents’ top concerns, McMahon said.
    “We get a lot of our guidance from surveys and talking to other parents,” she said.
    Before the pandemic, the raters watched movies together in an office screening room, then met to discuss the movie’s contents and vote. During the pandemic, the panel met virtually. At least five raters must have seen the film for CARA to provide a rating; the group tries to have an odd number of raters watch films so votes won’t end in a tie.
    “It is a simple majority that rules,” McMahon said.

    What’s in a rating?

    Though initially intended as a guide for parents, movie ratings have since evolved to be part of studio marketing, said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore.
    An R rating, for example, can signal that a movie is for adults and might contain strong language, intense or persistent violence, sexually oriented nudity, drug abuse or other mature elements. Children under the age of 17 need to be with an adult guardian to see R-rated movies.
    R-rated comic book movies like “Deadpool,” “Deadpool 2” and “Logan” were explicitly billed as gritty, dark and violent and had strong box office performances. The “Deadpool” films each raked in $780 million worldwide and “Logan” tallied more than $600 million in 2017.

    Ryan Reynolds stars in “Deadpool 2.”
    20th Century Fox

    The rating might also signal that a film is violent, gory or psychologically disturbing − all elements of a good horror movie.
    “Horror fans have long coveted movies that bear the stamp of an R rating,” Dergarabedian said.
    Universal’s “The Black Phone” also earned the rating for violence, bloody images, strong language and some drug use. So did David Cronenberg’s “Crimes of the Future,” for disturbing violent content and grisly images, graphic nudity and some strong language.
    If they’re not happy with their rating, filmmakers can challenge CARA’s decisions through an appeals process, or simply re-edit their films to get a different rating. That could mean cutting a shot that raters found tipped the scale toward an R rating, or reducing the number of times a swear word is used.
    Most opt to re-edit, McMahon said. But there have only been two appeals in the past two years, she said.
    “The reason we have a lot less appeals now is because we do work so closely with filmmakers,” McMahon said. She and the panel’s other three public members act as liaisons with filmmakers and studios to preview scripts and help translate guidelines.
    Exactly which rating a studio or filmmaker wants depends on the audience they’re going after. The G rating, for example, is for general audiences with no age restrictions, and means the film does not contain any nudity, sex, violence, profane language or troubling themes. The most recent film to earn this rating was 2021’s “Paw Patrol.”
    PG is one step above, and means the movie has some material that might not be suitable for children, including some profanity, depictions of violence or brief nudity. But movies can’t show drug use to get the rating. Universal and Illumination’s “Minions: The Rise of Gru” got the PG rating for action violence and rude humor.

    “Minions: The Rise of Gru” is the sequel to the 2015 film, “Minions,” and spin-off/prequel to the main “Despicable Me” film series.

    PG-13 is a stronger warning for movies that might depict violence, nudity, sensuality, profane language or other more mature themes. A a wide range of films and genres can fall in this category for different reasons.
    Warner Bros.’ “The Batman” got the rating for violent and disturbing content, drug content, strong language and some suggestive material. Sony’s “Spider-Man: No Way Home” obtained the rating for sequences of action violence, some strong language and brief suggestive comments.

    The rules

    CARA’s rules can evolve, too.
    As with the F-bomb, movies are now allotted a single use of the word mother—— with a PG-13 rating. Although it was once considered a sexual word, McMahon said the term is now more commonly used as an expletive.
    If especially coarse words are used in a sexually charged way, the movie gets slapped with R rating, McMahon said.
    The word s— can appear in a PG film, but only in a limited amount. Repeated use of the word b—- is acceptable in PG-13 movies.
    With sex and nudity, context is once again key.
    Showing the side of a woman’s breast — often referred to as “side boob” — or a person’s rear end can be considered PG or PG-13, if the appearance is brief and not associated with a sex act. In Paramount’s “The Lost City,” for example, actor Channing Tatum briefly exposes his butt during a scene. The film maintained a PG-13 rating because the nudity was for comedic effect.
    With violence, the likelihood of triggering an R rating depends on how realistic it is and how much of it there is, McMahon said.
    Raters also weigh “thematic elements,” a catchall within the PG and PG-13 ratings that encapsulates anything that isn’t violence, language or nudity, such as bullying, death, crime, discrimination, self-harm or war.
    The rarest rating, NC-17, means that people under the age of 17 can’t be admitted to see the film. This rating doesn’t automatically mean a film is obscene or pornographic, but it signals that the content is only appropriate for adults. Most films that receive this rating are re-edited to get the more widely acceptable R rating, including “Midsommar” in 2019 and “The King’s Man” in 2021.
    Sometimes, CARA adds short explanations to ratings that might appear during a film’s trailer or on promotional materials like posters. Filmmakers might suggest their own descriptors, but the raters ultimately assign them.
    The descriptions can be comically specific. For “Team America: World Police,” a satire from the “South Park” team, for instance, the panel explained that its R rating was for “graphic crude and sexual humor, violent images, and strong language — all involving puppets.”
    Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC. NBCUniversal is the distributor of “Minions: The Rise of Gru” and “The Black Phone.”

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    Why tensions between China and Taiwan are on the rise

    In May, President Joe Biden issued a stark warning to China: The U.S. would come to Taiwan’s defense militarily if China were to invade.
    “That’s the commitment we made,” Biden said in response to a question over the U.S.’ intention to protect Taiwan. “We agree with the ‘One China’ policy. We signed on to it.”

    Although the White House quickly affirmed the president’s comments did not reflect a policy shift, his remarks came at a time of heightened concern over China’s interest in invading Taiwan after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
    Biden’s warning contrasted with the U.S.’ long-standing position of “strategic ambiguity” when it comes to Taiwan. That policy makes it unclear whether the U.S. would come to Taiwan’s defense if China were to invade, the Brookings Institution’s Michael O’Hanlon told CNBC in an interview.
    Any potential action could have repercussions on the global supply chain. Taiwan has positioned itself as the go-to supplier of the semiconductors found in thousands of electronics, from the iPhone to crucial military equipment. But the global reliance on Taiwan for the essential chips has come under increased scrutiny amid a global shortage.
    Taiwan accounts for 64% of the total chip foundry market, according to data from TrendForce. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, or TSMC, accounted for 53% of total foundry revenue in 2021, according to TrendForce.
    “I think for older generations, they may remember a Taiwan that produced cheap toys,” said Rupert Hammond-Chambers, president of the US-Taiwan Business Council, in an interview with CNBC. “That, however, has really shifted.”
    Watch the video above to find out more about why tensions between China and Taiwan are on the rise, the importance Taiwan plays in the global supply chain, and what experts think could come of China’s increased aggression against its neighboring island.

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    Another vote delay leaves Spirit's merger with Frontier in question while JetBlue circles

    Spirit delayed a shareholder vote on a planned tie-up with Frontier for a third time.
    Spirit said it would have more time to negotiate with Frontier and rival bidder JetBlue.
    A Frontier deal carries more risk for shareholders, but may not be dead yet.

    A Frontier Airlines airplane taxis past a Spirit Airlines aircraft at Indianapolis International Airport in Indianapolis, Indiana.
    Luke Sharrett | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The fate of Spirit Airlines’ merger with fellow budget carrier Frontier Airlines is growing murkier.
    Spirit this week delayed its shareholder meeting for a third time, opening the door to more talks from both Frontier and rival suitor JetBlue Airways. The latter two delays each came just hours before Spirit shareholders were due to vote on the Frontier tie-up, a now $2.6 billion cash-and-stock combination after Frontier recently sweetened the offer in an effort to ward off JetBlue’s advances. JetBlue is offering about $3.7 billion in an all-cash takeover.

    Ahead of the most recently scheduled vote, which was slated for Friday morning, it didn’t appear Spirit had enough votes to get the Frontier deal approved, according to people familiar with the matter.
    Spirit would be on the hook to pay Frontier a break-up fee of more than $94 million if it deems JetBlue’s offer superior and scraps its original deal.
    “We’re working hard to bring this process to a conclusion while remaining focused on the well-being of our Spirit Family,” Spirit CEO Ted Christie said in a note to employees late Thursday after the vote was postponed yet again. Spirit declined to comment further on Friday.
    JetBlue, for its part, cheered the delay. CEO Robin Hayes said in a statement late Thursday: “We are encouraged by our discussions with Spirit and are hopeful they now recognize that Spirit shareholders have indicated their clear, overwhelming preference for an agreement with JetBlue.”
    Neither JetBlue nor Frontier offered further comment on Friday.

    At stake is a chance to become the country’s fifth-largest airline, behind giants American, Delta, United and Southwest. A Spirit-Frontier merger could create a budget airline behemoth, while JetBlue says its buyout offer would “turbocharge” growth at the airline, whose service includes more amenities and Mint business-class on some aircraft.
    “Spirit’s board is hell-bent on a Frontier deal. They’ve never wavered,” said Brett Snyder, a former airline manager who now runs the Cranky Flier travel site. “Their challenge is how do they get the votes?”
    If the Frontier deal goes to a vote, Spirit shareholders will being deciding on a cash-and-stock deal. Banking stock could mean a future benefit for shareholders if the travel rebound boosts the stock price. But they risk the reverse in the event of a recession or travel slowdown, though budget carriers such as Spirit and Frontier are less sensitive to the ups and downs of business travel than larger airlines.
    JetBlue’s cash-in-hand offer avoids the gamble.
    “With the Frontier deal, you’re putting faith in what happens after the merger to make your money. With JetBlue, it’s: Here’s the money, take the money, go away,” Snyder said.
    JetBlue has repeatedly sweetened its offer for Spirit, including increasing a reverse break-up fee should regulators block the deal. The airline’s persistence has put pressure on Frontier, which recently upped its own offer to match JetBlue’s reverse break-up fee.
    Spirit’s board has rejected each of JetBlue’s proposals, arguing a takeover wouldn’t pass muster with the Justice Department, which is suing to block JetBlue’s own regional alliance with American Airlines in the Northeast U.S.
    The Biden administration’s Justice Department has vowed to take a hard line against deals that threaten competition, even assuming divestitures. JetBlue, for example, promised to divest Spirit assets in the Northeast to make its proposed Spirit takeover more palatable.
    But that’s only a concern if a Frontier deal is dead — and despite the shareholder vote delays, it may not be, according to Bob Mann, an aviation analyst and former airline executive.
    “I see it more of a case of Spirit being just unquestionably careful about listening and reviewing [JetBlue’s offer] and they may ultimately conclude on their own it doesn’t make sense,” he said.
    Should a Frontier deal fall short at the shareholder vote and pave the way for JetBlue, Frontier could still end up ahead: JetBlue’s plan is to convert Spirit’s tightly packed and no-frills Airbus planes into its own, which include seatback screens, more legroom and free Wi-Fi.
    Whatever JetBlue pays for Spirit “is a down payment,” Mann said. “Integration costs are going to be billions on top of that and take years.”
    That would leave Frontier as the largest and stand-out no-frills budget airline in the U.S. at a time when nearly everything’s getting more expensive.

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    Biden says Supreme Court is 'out of control,' orders HHS to protect abortion access

    President Joe Biden blasted the Supreme Court on Friday as “out of control” in its decision to overturn the constitutional right to abortion.
    Biden signed an executive order that aims to ensure the safety of abortion patients and providers, including through clinics near the borders of states that restrict access.
    While the order is an attempt to quell public outcry from incensed Democrats, the directive is vague and leaves much of the details to be worked out by Health Secretary Xavier Becerra.

    U.S. President Joe Biden speaks before signing an executive order to help safeguard women’s access to abortion and contraception after the Supreme Court last month overturned Roe v Wade decision that legalized abortion, at the White House in Washington, July 8, 2022.
    Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

    Calling the U.S. Supreme Court “out of control,” President Joe Biden signed an executive order Friday designed to bolster access to abortion in states that are banning it following the court’s ruling two weeks ago to overturn the constitutional right to terminate a pregnancy.
    Biden, flanked by Vice President Kamala Harris and Health Secretary Xavier Becerra, rebuked the conservative majority on the court for stripping U.S. citizens of fundamental rights he said were protected by the Constitution, such as the right to privacy in health matters like seeking an abortion.

    “We cannot allow an out-of-control Supreme Court working in conjunction with extremist elements of the Republican Party to take away freedoms and our personal autonomy,” he said from the White House.
    The president called out Justice Clarence Thomas’ comments in a concurring opinion overturning Roe v. Wade that invited challenges to past rulings on contraceptive access, gay marriage and other issues.
    “What century are they in?” asked an incredulous-sounding Biden, who promised to veto any future Republican-led effort to ban abortion nationwide. The Affordable Care Act guarantees women free birth control and contraceptive counseling.
    Biden then signed an executive order that promises to protect the safety of abortion patients and providers and access to the procedure through mobile clinics near the borders of states that restrict access to abortion.
    The order also instructs the Department of Health and Human Services to issue a report within the next month detailing actions to safeguard medication abortion, ensure access to emergency contraception and IUDs and bulk up reproductive education.

    It directs HHS to take steps to protect access to the abortion pill, though it’s unclear what exactly the federal government plans to do. The Food and Drug Administration approved the abortion pill, mifepristone, more than 20 years ago as a safe and effective way to end a pregnancy before the 10th week.
    In December, the FDA permanently allowed the pill to be sent by mail from licensed pharmacies and health care providers. Planned Parenthood, a health care provider that supports access to abortion services, praised the decision at the time as a significant expansion of reproductive rights.

    CNBC Politics

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    The order comes two weeks after the Supreme Court voted to reverse its landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision and end 50 years of legal precedent. So far at least eight states, including Texas, Alabama and Missouri, have banned abortion and another dozen are expected to restrict or outlaw access to the procedure over the next two months.
    Democrats, enraged and upset by the court’s decision, have pressured Biden and Congress to do more to respond to the ruling. And while the order is an attempt to quell some of that public outrage, the directive is vague and leaves much of the details to be worked out by Becerra and legal experts.
    Biden also directed HHS on Friday to ensure that pregnant women who are experiencing miscarriages and other complications have access to emergency medical care.
    Abortion rights activists are worried that medical professionals will delay treatment for miscarriages and ectopic pregnancies for fear that state prosecutors might interpret these interventions as a type of abortion.
    Meanwhile, advocates for abortion rights have urged lawmakers to suspend the Senate’s filibuster rules that require a minimum of 60 votes to pass legislation, a monumental task in a chamber split 50-50 between Democrats, who seek those abortion rights protections, and the Republicans, who largely support the court’s decision to reverse Roe.
    Biden acknowledged that reality in his White House address Friday and urged Americans to vote their conscience in the November midterm elections. “The fastest way to restore Roe is to pass a national law codifying Roe, which I will sign immediately upon its passage at my desk,” he said.
    Women who live in states banning abortion either have to order the pill from overseas, which carries some risks, or cross state lines to receive a prescription in a state where the procedure remains legal.

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