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UAW says Ford worker faces no discipline for calling Trump ‘pedophile protector’ during factory tour

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UAW says Ford worker faces no discipline for calling Trump 'pedophile protector' during factory tour

The Ford worker who heckled President Donald Trump during his visit last month to a Michigan auto plant was not disciplined and kept his job, the United Auto Workers union said on Monday.

TJ Sabula, 40, shouted at Trump that he was a “pedophile protector” as the president was touring the Ford River Rouge complex in Dearborn.

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The president responded by mouthing the words “f— you” twice and giving the middle finger, according to video of the incident.

Trump’s Justice Department continues to face scrutiny from Republicans and Democrats for its delay in the release of additional documents related to the investigations into deceased sex predator Jeffrey Epstein, after a bipartisan law required the full release of the documents by Dec. 19.

FORD WORKER SUSPENDED FOR CALLING TRUMP ‘PEDOPHILE PROTECTOR’ HAS ‘NO REGRETS’ FOR ‘EMBARRASSING’ PRESIDENT

President Donald Trump acknowledges employees at the Ford River Rouge Plant in Dearborn, Mich., Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026.

President Donald Trump acknowledges employees during a tour of the Ford River Rouge Plant, in Dearborn, Michigan. (The White House via X)

The president also told Sabula during the exchange that he would be fired, UAW Vice President Laura Dickerson said on Monday at a political conference in Washington, according to Reuters.

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“This ain’t ‘The Apprentice’,” she said at the conference, referring to the reality show Trump hosted in which he would abruptly dismiss contestants for underperforming in the competition.

Dickerson said Sabula still has his job and “has no discipline on his record,” stressing that the union supports his right to free speech.

“There was a worker at that plant that day who famously told Mr. Trump exactly what he thought of him,” Dickerson said. “Unfortunately, in that moment, we saw what the current president really thinks about working people and the way he responded — he gave us the middle finger.”

Ford’s executive chairman Bill Ford said after the factory tour with Trump that the incident was unfortunate and that he was embarrassed by it.

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Trump at the Ford River Rouge Complex

President Donald Trump walks with Ford River Rouge Plant Manager Corey Williams (right), Executive chair of Ford Motor Company Bill Ford Jr. (left), and CEO of Ford Motor Company Jim Farley (second from right). (Getty Images / Getty Images)

Sabula said shortly after the exchange with the president that he had “no regrets whatsoever.”

“As far as calling him out, definitely no regrets whatsoever,” Sabula told The Washington Post at the time. He estimated that he was standing roughly 60 feet away from Trump and said the president could hear him “very, very, very clearly.”

He also said he believes he was “targeted for political retribution” for “embarrassing Trump in front of his friends.”

“I don’t feel as though fate looks upon you often, and when it does, you better be ready to seize the opportunity,” he said. “And today I think I did that.”

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WHITE HOUSE SAYS TRUMP GAVE ‘APPROPRIATE’ RESPONSE AFTER HECKLER CONFRONTATION CAUGHT ON VIDEO AT FORD PLANT

President Donald Trump speaking

President Donald Trump speaks alongside Ford executive chairman Bill Ford (second from left) and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent (left) as he tours Ford Motor Company’s River Rouge complex in Dearborn, Michigan. (Getty Images / Getty Images)

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Sabula described himself at the time as a political independent who had never voted for Trump but had supported other Republican candidates.

The White House responded to the exchange by arguing that Trump gave an “appropriate” response to the autoworker.

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“A lunatic was wildly screaming expletives in a complete fit of rage, and the President gave an appropriate and unambiguous response,” White House communications director Steven Cheung said in a statement last month.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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Why food fraud persists, even with improving tech

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Why food fraud persists, even with improving tech

Even with sophisticated technology it is still difficult to detect fake foods.

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Canadian airlines suspend Cuba flights as island set to run out of jet fuel

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Canadian airlines suspend Cuba flights as island set to run out of jet fuel


Canadian airlines suspend Cuba flights as island set to run out of jet fuel

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Bangladesh secures lower US tariffs and exemptions for clothing goods

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Bangladesh secures lower US tariffs and exemptions for clothing goods

In exchange, Bangladesh has agreed to provide “significant preferential market access” to a host of American agricultural and industrial goods. These include opening up its markets to more US chemicals, medical devices, car parts, soy products and meat, said the White House.

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HBF launches corporate venture capital fund for health innovation

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HBF launches corporate venture capital fund for health innovation

HBF has launched a $25 million corporate venture capital fund targeting investment in emerging health innovations.

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NFP Preview: Benchmark Revisions, Fate Of March Rate Cut, Implications For DXY And Dow Jones

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NFP Preview: Benchmark Revisions, Fate Of March Rate Cut, Implications For DXY And Dow Jones

NFP Preview: Benchmark Revisions, Fate Of March Rate Cut, Implications For DXY And Dow Jones

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A Region at a Turning Point

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A Region at a Turning Point

The Asian M&A landscape in 2025 painted a picture of cautious optimism layered over deep structural challenges. While regional deal values rose 10% and volumes increased a modest 3%, these aggregate figures mask a market experiencing profound fragmentation. 

The forces reshaping global dealmaking, artificial intelligence chief among them, are hitting Asia with particular intensity, exposing gaps in capital access, technological readiness, and strategic conviction across the region’s diverse economies.

Asia’s M&A recovery tells multiple stories simultaneously. China, after years of subdued activity, saw deal volumes surge 22% in 2025, though levels remain well below the 2021 peak. India, Japan, and South Korea all posted double-digit growth in deal values, signaling pockets of robust activity. Yet most other Asia Pacific markets reported year-over-year declines in deal volumes, revealing a region where momentum concentrates in select markets while others struggle to gain traction. 

This uneven performance reflects more than cyclical variation. It signals Asia’s positioning in a global M&A market increasingly defined by a K-shaped recovery, where scale, capital depth, and AI readiness separate winners from the rest.

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The Capital Allocation Dilemma Hitting Asia Hard

Asian corporations face an acute version of the capital allocation challenge confronting dealmakers worldwide. External estimates suggest that between $5 trillion and $8 trillion will flow toward AI technologies and enabling infrastructure globally over the next five years. For context, global M&A activity totaled just $3.5 trillion in 2025. This multitrillion-dollar AI investment supercycle is forcing Asian companies to make stark choices between building AI capabilities and pursuing traditional growth-through-acquisition strategies.

The tension manifests differently across the region. Chinese technology companies, already investing heavily in AI development, find themselves navigating both technological transformation and geopolitical constraints that complicate cross-border dealmaking. Japanese conglomerates, sitting on substantial cash reserves, are weighing AI infrastructure investments against long-planned international acquisitions. Indian technology services firms are racing to acquire AI capabilities while defending market share against AI-enabled automation.

The immediate impact is visible in near-term M&A activity. Capital that might have funded acquisitions is instead flowing into data centers, semiconductor capacity, cloud infrastructure, and AI model development. This reallocation helps explain why Asia’s deal volume growth lags value growth, and why mid-market activity remains particularly subdued.

Geographic Confidence Gaps Shape Deal Activity

Perhaps no metric better illustrates Asia’s M&A fragmentation than CEO confidence levels. According to PwC’s Global CEO Survey, approximately 50% of Indian CEOs plan major acquisitions within the next three years, matching optimism levels in the United States. Yet only around 20% of Chinese CEOs express similar intent, placing China among the most cautious major markets globally alongside Germany. 

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This confidence gap translates directly into dealmaking patterns. India’s M&A market benefits from strong domestic growth expectations, a robust technology sector, and increasing interest from both strategic acquirers and financial sponsors. The country’s position as a beneficiary of supply chain diversification and nearshoring trends further supports deal activity.

China’s more muted M&A sentiment reflects multiple headwinds: regulatory uncertainty, property sector challenges, geopolitical tensions affecting outbound investment, and questions about the sustainability of growth rates. While the 22% increase in deal volumes suggests improving conditions, Chinese companies remain more focused on domestic consolidation and strategic repositioning than aggressive expansion.

Japan occupies middle ground, with deal activity driven by demographic pressures, succession planning for family-owned businesses, and large corporations pursuing portfolio rationalization. South Korea’s double-digit value growth reflects both technology sector strength and industrial consolidation, particularly in sectors adjacent to semiconductors and advanced manufacturing.

AI’s Impact: From Manufacturing to Healthcare

Asia’s manufacturing-heavy economy means AI’s impact on M&A extends beyond pure technology deals. PwC’s analysis of the 100 largest global M&A transactions in 2025 found that approximately one-third cited AI as part of their strategic rationale, with technology, manufacturing, and power and utilities sectors showing the highest AI references. 

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For Asian companies, this creates both pressure and opportunity. Traditional manufacturing firms are pursuing acquisitions to embed AI across operations, supply chains, and product development. Healthcare companies are acquiring data analytics and software capabilities to accelerate drug development and personalized medicine. Industrial conglomerates are buying robotics and automation assets to integrate AI-driven efficiency gains.

SoftBank’s proposed $5.4 billion acquisition of ABB’s robotics business exemplifies Asia’s strategic approach, positioning a major Japanese technology investor at the intersection of AI and industrial automation. The deal signals recognition that AI’s value emerges not from algorithms alone but from their integration into physical systems and real-world operations.

Chinese pharmaceutical companies are also active, with innovation in drug development driving strategic transactions despite broader market caution. These deals reflect China’s strategic priority on technological self-sufficiency and its determination to build domestic capabilities in sectors deemed critical for future competitiveness.

The Scale Disadvantage in a Megadeal World

Asia confronts a structural challenge in the current M&A environment: relative underrepresentation in megadeals. While the region generated solid mid-market activity, it captured a smaller share of transactions exceeding $5 billion compared to the Americas, which dominated megadeal activity in 2025.

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This matters because megadeals drove the entire recovery in global M&A values. Roughly 600 transactions above $1 billion accounted for the 36% increase in global deal values, while the remaining 47,000 transactions were flat year-over-year. Asian companies and markets participating less actively in this megadeal wave risk being left behind as competitive dynamics increasingly favor scale.

Several factors explain Asia’s megadeal deficit. First, regulatory scrutiny of large transactions has intensified across multiple jurisdictions, particularly for deals touching sensitive technologies or critical infrastructure. Second, cross-border megadeals face heightened geopolitical risk, encouraging companies to pursue domestic or regional transactions rather than transformative global consolidation. Third, valuation gaps between Asian targets and global acquirers remain wide, complicating negotiations for the largest deals.

The exception proves the rule: where Asian companies do pursue megadeals, they increasingly focus on acquiring capabilities essential for AI competitiveness, particularly in semiconductors, data infrastructure, and advanced manufacturing.

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Amazon Prime Air delivery drone crashed into Texas apartment building

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Amazon Prime Air delivery drone crashed into Texas apartment building

An Amazon Prime Air delivery drone crashed into a Texas apartment building last week, with the incident caught on a bystander’s video.

The drone crash occurred in the Dallas suburb of Richardson, Texas, on Feb. 4 when a Prime Air MK30 drone collided with the side of the apartment building and crashed to the ground.

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FOX 4 KDFW reported that Cessy Johnson was working from home and heard the drone flying nearby, so she began to record it on her phone, as she hadn’t seen one in use before.

When the drone moved outside of her view, she told the outlet that she began to hear noises that didn’t seem right and then saw falling debris before the drone itself crashed outside the building.

AMAZON TO CUT 16,000 ROLES AS IT LOOKS TO INVEST IN AI, REMOVE ‘BUREAUCRACY’

An Amazon Prime Air MK30 delivery drone

An Amazon Prime Air MK30 delivery drone crashed into an apartment building in Texas. (Jason Redmond/AFP via Getty Images)

“The propellers on the thing were still moving, and you could smell it was starting to burn. And you see a few sparks in one of my videos. Luckily, nothing really caught on fire where it got, it escalated really crazy,” she said.

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“But they had to come and try to dismantle it. And then shortly after they came, two Amazon guys came and they had to clean it up and like take it in their truck,” Johnson told FOX 4 KDFW.

YOUR DOORDASH ORDER MIGHT ARRIVE FROM THE SKY AS DRONE DELIVERIES TAKE OFF

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AMZN AMAZON.COM INC. 208.72 -1.60 -0.76%

Amazon issued an apology for the drone crash and said it’s investigating the cause.

“We apologize for any inconvenience and are actively investigating the cause of this incident,” Amazon spokesperson Terrence Clark told FOX Business.

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The company is working to make minor repairs to the building related to the collision.

WALMART EXPANDS DRONE DELIVERY SERVICE TO 3 MORE STATES IN RACE AGAINST AMAZON

Exterior view showing the Amazon logo mounted on the building housing the company’s German headquarters in Munich.

Amazon issued an apology for the delivery drone crash. (Matthias Balk/picture alliance via Getty Images)

A growing number of retail companies are offering drone delivery services to customers as a means of streamlining the process.

FOX 4 KDFW noted that Amazon and Walmart offer drone delivery in North Texas communities like Richardson, where Amazon began drone deliveries in December.

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PLS inks offtake deal with Chinese battery maker Canmax

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PLS inks offtake deal with Chinese battery maker Canmax

Pilbara lithium producer PLS has struck a two-year offtake deal with Chinese battery manufacturer Canmax, which it is fronting US$100 million to secure the supply.

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ZoomInfo Technologies Inc. (GTM) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

ZoomInfo Technologies Inc. (GTM) Q4 2025 Earnings Call February 9, 2026 4:30 PM EST

Company Participants

Jeremiah Sisitsky – Vice President of Investor Relations
Henry Schuck – Founder, Chairman of the Board & CEO
Michael O’Brien – CFO & Interim PFO

Conference Call Participants

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Mark Murphy – JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division
Brad Zelnick – Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
Aleksandr Zukin – Wolfe Research, LLC
Taylor McGinnis – UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Raimo Lenschow – Barclays Bank PLC, Research Division
David Hynes – Canaccord Genuity Corp., Research Division
Koji Ikeda – BofA Securities, Research Division
J. Lane – Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated, Research Division
Tyler Radke – Citigroup Inc., Research Division
Johnathan McCary – Raymond James & Associates, Inc., Research Division
Surinder Thind – Jefferies LLC, Research Division
Rishi Jaluria – RBC Capital Markets, Research Division
Clark Wright – D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division

Presentation

Operator

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Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the ZoomInfo Fourth Quarter 2025 Financial Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded.

I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Jerry Sisitsky, VP of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Jeremiah Sisitsky
Vice President of Investor Relations

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Thanks, Daniel. Welcome to ZoomInfo’s financial results conference call for the fourth quarter and full year 2025. With me on the call today are Henry Schuck, Founder and CEO of ZoomInfo; and Graham O’Brien, our Chief Financial Officer.

During this call, any forward-looking statements are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of U.S. securities laws. Expressions of future goals, including business outlook, expectations for future financial performance and similar items, including, without limitation, expressions using the terminology may, will, expect, anticipate and believe and expressions which reflect something other than historical facts are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve a number of risks and uncertainties, including those discussed in the Risk Factors

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