The Morning Risk Report: Fifth Third Fined by Consumer Watchdog for Auto Insurance, Sales Practices
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Good morning. Fifth Third Bank was ordered to pay $20 million in fines by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which said the bank forced auto insurance onto customers who were already covered and opened fake accounts in customers’ names.
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Big pharmacy-benefit managers increase drug costs, FTC says. Firms that manage drug benefits, which promise to keep a lid on high drug costs, instead steer patients away from less expensive medicines and overcharge for cancer therapies, Federal Trade Commission investigators found. The FTC, in a report released Tuesday, detailed a number of actions that it said large pharmacy-benefit managers use to boost their profits and increase the spending of the health plans and employers that hired them to control costs. The actions can also lead to higher outlays for patients at the pharmacy counter, the agency said. The findings follow a two-year investigation into the firms and calls from some lawmakers to rein in the firms’ business practices. |
U.S. to give more scrutiny to aluminum, seafood under new anti-forced-labor strategy. U.S. anti-forced-labor enforcers will give extra scrutiny to aluminum, PVC and seafood, the Department of Homeland Security said, announcing revisions to its strategy for enforcing the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act. The three sectors were added Tuesday to a list of high-priority enforcement areas, DHS said. Apparel, cotton, silica-based products and tomatoes had previously been designated high-priority areas and will retain that status. The UFLPA largely bans the import of any goods with ties to Xinjiang, a region in China that is the home of the Uyghur people and other minority groups, but U.S. enforcement strategy has put extra scrutiny on certain sectors. |
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High-tech U.S. weapons work against Russia—until they don’t. The Excalibur artillery round performed wonders when it was introduced into the Ukrainian battlefield in the summer of 2022. Guided by GPS, the shells hit Russian tanks and artillery with surgical precision, as drones overhead filmed the resulting fireballs. That didn’t last. Within weeks, the Russian army started to adapt, using its formidable electronic warfare capabilities. It managed to interfere with the GPS guidance and fuzes, so that the shells would either go astray, fail to detonate, or both. By the middle of last year, the M982 Excalibur munitions, developed by RTX and BAE Systems, became essentially useless and are no longer employed, Ukrainian commanders say. Several other weapons that showcased the West’s technological superiority have encountered a similar fate. |
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U.S., allies issue rare warning on Chinese hacking group. Australia, the U.S. and six other allies warned that a Chinese state-sponsored hacking group poses a threat to their networks, in an unusual coordinated move by Western governments to call out a global hacking operation they say is directed by Beijing’s intelligence services. Tuesday’s advisory was a rare instance of Washington’s major allies in the Pacific and elsewhere joining to sound the alarm on China’s cyber activity. Australia led and published the advisory. It was joined by the U.S., U.K., Canada and New Zealand, which along with Australia are part of an intelligence-sharing group of countries known as the Five Eyes. Germany, Japan and South Korea also signed on. |
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