Articles

  • 1 week ago | cincodias.elpais.com | Juan Pablo Quintero |Kent Nishimura

    Aunque la idealización del otro es la primera y más bella fase del enamoramiento, es efímera. Un poco de tiempo basta para que el amante se percate de los pequeños o grandes defectos que antes no veía, o no quería ver, en el amado. Wall Street ha necesitado un terremoto histórico para perder la ceguera con Donald Trump, en una de las historias de amor más fugaces, tormentosas y por momentos peligrosas de la historia financiera reciente.

  • 3 weeks ago | english.elpais.com | Juan Pablo Quintero |Miguel Jiménez

    Newsmax, the cable TV network that repeated Donald Trump’s 2020 election fraud claims, went public on Monday and soared more than 2,000% in just two sessions. At its debut, the stock was priced at $10 per share, before climbing to a high of $265 on Tuesday. However, it corrected sharply in Wednesday’s session, closing at $49 per share.

  • 1 month ago | cincodias.elpais.com | Pablo Gonzalez |Juan Pablo Quintero

    Las inundaciones provocadas por las últimas borrascas han vuelto a poner en evidencia el impacto de los fenómenos meteorológicos extremos, con ríos desbordados y carreteras cortadas en España. Ante este tipo de escenario, el sector asegurador se ha puesto a la tarea de adaptar el modelo de negocio para hacer frente al aumento de catástrofes naturales.

  • 1 month ago | english.elpais.com | Clemente Álvarez |Juan Pablo Quintero

    This expert defends urban agriculture as a way to improve community ties and promote healthy eating habits, but he also warns about hyper-technological crops, a growing trend that venture capital is already eyeing with interestWhether it is in a simple flowerpot, on a rooftop or in an entire neighborhood, the sociologist José Luis Fernández Casadevante, better known as Kois, believes that urban agriculture is about much more than tending a vegetable patch or growing crops.

  • 1 month ago | english.elpais.com | Juan Pablo Quintero |María Antonia Sánchez-Vallejo

    Laura Saade, 27, hasn’t bought eggs for two weeks. First, they became more expensive. And then, there were none available. The woman of Colombian origin — who shops at the Walmart at 200 Otis Street, in Northborough, Massachusetts — says that “a dozen [eggs] went up to $8.00.” She used to pay $4.00. Demand in the country is soaring. The bird flu has resulted in 15% of the country’s laying hen population having already been slaughtered, according to the agri-food consultant Expana.

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