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NEW YORK and SEOUL, South Korea, April 26, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) SolarWindow Technologies, Inc. (Symbol: WNDW), developer of transparent LiquidElectricity™️ coatings and processes which generate electricity on plastics and glass, today announced the appointment of Mr. Sergio Pombo as Senior Advisor, Government Relations and Public Funding. Working with institutional clean energy investors, Mr. Pombo is Co-Founder of Berkana Private Equity, LLC and a Member of the Center for Study of the US Presidency and Congress. Previously, he founded and served as Head of the private equity practice at the Green Climate Fund (GCF). GCF is the largest climatic fund for emerging markets. GCF secured an initial $3 billion capital commitment from the United States Government, which has grown up to $20 billion pledged by over 43 investor-nations.
Mr Sergio Pombo Joins SolarWindow to Lead Government Relations & Public Funding
einnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from einnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
4/23/2021 10:32:14 AM GMT
The US Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) has accused Ripple of harassment in the lawsuit.
The SEC also asked the judge in the case to block Ripple and its executives from accessing internal records.
XRP price plummeted in the last several days, losing 55% of its value.
XRP had a major rally at the beginning of April as investors grew confident in the outcome of the SEC lawsuit. However, the entire cryptocurrency market had a significant crash, and the SEC case outcome is not as straightforward as previously thought.
Ripple gets blocked from accessing various internal records
In the latest events concerning the SEC vs. Ripple lawsuit, the US Securities & Exchange Commission has asked the judge to block Ripple and some of its executives from accessing various internal records because they are not related to the case.
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Just two years ago, we were at the middle of a massive fight between Gov. Murphy and George Norcross over tax incentives.
It got to the point where Norcross was making threats about Murphy facing a primary opponent.
– Kering rebounds
Dodging the question. Sometimes democracy brings change. At Bank of America, it brought more of the same. The bank’s shareholders voted on Monday against a proposal to audit the lender’s impact on communities of color, according to a preliminary tally.
That will please rivals JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs, whose shareholders face the same question in coming weeks. They should see it as only a temporary reprieve.
Big U.S. banks are keen to tout their efforts to improve diversity and boost lending to marginalized communities, yet many have been twitchy about this year’s spate of proposals that they conduct external racial audits. JPMorgan and Citigroup asked the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission to let them snip the question from their annual ballot – unsuccessfully. All five banks have argued they are already taking action.
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