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Epstein advised Starlink rival OneWeb’s founder, emails show

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Epstein advised Starlink rival OneWeb's founder, emails show
New York: Jeffrey Epstein acted as an adviser in the creation of OneWeb Ltd., a low-Earth orbit satellite network that has become the world’s largest rival to Elon Musk’s Starlink, according to emails released by the U.S. Department of Justice.

The disgraced financier served as a confidante to OneWeb founder Greg Wyler as the entrepreneur sought funding after launching the company in 2012, the emails show. Wyler later secured investments from SoftBank Group Corp. and Qualcomm Inc. Wyler did not dispute the accuracy of the emails reviewed by Bloomberg.

“Epstein said he had professional relationships with and advised many in the tech industry” during that period, Wyler said in an emailed statement.

Epstein “did discuss investing, but no investment ever occurred,” Wyler said. “More broadly, I never accepted any offer or request he made to invest in or support any company I was associated with.”

A spokesperson for Eutelsat Communications SA, which now owns OneWeb, said Wyler left the company when it entered Chapter 11 bankruptcy in March 2020. OneWeb was later restructured and refinanced, emerging under new ownership and governance.

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OneWeb was rescued from bankruptcy by the UK government and India’s Bharti Enterprises Ltd., before being combined with Eutelsat in 2023.
Wyler is now founder and chief executive officer of E-Space, another satellite network startup. The company broke ground on a headquarters in Arlington, Texas, in October, a project the city said would create 2,000 jobs. E-Space did not respond to requests for comment.In a post on X late Wednesday, responding to disclosures that mentioned him, Wyler said his interactions with Epstein “at all times were professional.”

Many of the emails are abbreviated, misspelled or lack context, at times making it unclear whether deals were pursued or merely discussed. Still, they shed light on negotiations and meetings where business intersected with globe-trotting personal lives, including references to Musk and other billionaires.

The Wyler emails are part of a trove released last Friday that details Epstein’s connections to prominent investors, executives, lawyers and political figures.

In May 2014, Wyler shared a term sheet with Epstein while discussing a potential investment involving Alphabet Inc.’s Google.

The two also wrote about visiting Necker Island, owned by Richard Branson – an early OneWeb investor – and exchanged messages about private jets, with Epstein introducing Wyler to an aircraft broker.

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Wyler appeared on a flight manifest with Epstein and requested use of his helicopter, while Epstein sought Wyler’s advice on improving broadband at his estate. Bloomberg

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Goldman traders warn stock selling isn’t over

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Goldman traders warn stock selling isn't over
After rebounding Friday to nearly erase a brutal mid-week slide, US stocks are facing more selling this week from trend-following algorithmic funds, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s trading desk.

The S&P 500 Index has already breached its short-term trigger that prompted Commodity Trading Advisers, or CTAs, to sell stocks. Goldman expects these systematic strategies – which follow the stock market direction rather than fundamental factors – to remain net sellers over the coming week, regardless of market direction.

A renewed decline could trigger about $33 billion of selling this week, according to Goldman. If pressure continues and the S&P 500 falls below 6,707, it could unlock up to $80 billion of additional systematic selling over the next month, the bank’s data show. In a flat market, CTAs are projected to unload roughly $15.4 billion of US equities this week, and even if stocks rise, the funds are expected to shed about $8.7 billion.

Investor stress was running high last week. The firm’s Panic Index – which combines one-month S&P implied volatility, VIX volatility, S&P one-month put-call skew and the slope of the S&P volatility term structure – most recently stood at 9.22, a level indicating markets are not far from “max fear” on Thursday.

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The S&P 500 surged 2% on Friday, ending a volatile week with its biggest gain since May. The rally followed a sharp early-week drop in both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100, triggered by the launch of a new AI automation tool from Anthropic PBC that wiped billions of dollars off software, financial services and asset-management stocks as investors reassessed disruption risks.


Positioning across the so-called systematic strategies was the most common question among Goldman’s clients Friday, underscoring the demand for a view of financial flows.
On top of the CTA selling, thin liquidity and ‘short gamma’ positioning will keep the market choppy, potentially magnifying swings in either direction as dealers buy into rallies and sell into drawdowns to balance their positions. S&P top-of-book liquidity — the volume of buy and sell orders available at the best bid and lowest ask price — has deteriorated sharply, falling to about $4.1 million from a year-to-date average near $13.7 million.

“The inability to transfer risk quickly lends itself to a choppier intraday tape and delays stabilization in overall price action,” Goldman’s trading desk team including Gail Hafif and Lee Coppersmith wrote in a note to clients Friday.

Option dealer positioning has also flipped in a way that may exacerbate moves. After sitting in an area of so-called long gamma that helped prevent a break above the 7,000 level, dealers are now estimated to be flat to short gamma. The dynamic that becomes more pronounced when liquidity is scarce.

“Buckle up,” the traders added.

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Other systematic cohorts retain meaningful room to de-risk. Risk-parity positioning sits in the 81st percentile, looking back over a year, while volatility-control strategies are in the 71st percentile. Unlike CTAs, these funds respond to sustained changes in realized volatility, suggesting their impact would be more pronounced if volatility remains elevated. S&P 500 realized volatility is on the rise, but the 20-day gauge is still below levels seen in November and December.

Seasonality offers little relief. February has historically been a weaker and choppier month for both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 as supportive January flows — including retirement contributions and peak retail activity — fade.

Retail behavior is also showing signs of fatigue. After a year of relentless dip-buying, the latest two-day net retail imbalance showed roughly $690 million of selling last week, demonstrating less willingness to “buy all dips.” Popular retail trades tied to crypto and crypto-linked equities have been hit particularly hard, raising the risk that any broader rotation out of US stocks would mark a notable shift from last year’s trading patterns.

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DBS Q4 profit sinks 10% as lower rates hit margins

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DBS Q4 profit sinks 10% as lower rates hit margins

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Stock Futures Drift Higher Ahead of Jobs, Inflation Data

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Stock Futures Drift Higher Ahead of Jobs, Inflation Data

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Japan’s real wages down every month in 2025

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Japan’s real wages down every month in 2025


Japan’s real wages down every month in 2025

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Luxury travel takes off as plane makers chase Asia's super-rich

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Luxury travel takes off as plane makers chase Asia's super-rich

Parts of the aviation industry are shifting towards wealthy customers and selling a more luxurious type of international travel.

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Oil drops more than 1% as concerns about possible US-Iran conflict ease

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Oil drops more than 1% as concerns about possible US-Iran conflict ease


Oil drops more than 1% as concerns about possible US-Iran conflict ease

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With Puma stake, China’s Anta seeks to enter the arena with Nike and Adidas

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With Puma stake, China’s Anta seeks to enter the arena with Nike and Adidas


With Puma stake, China’s Anta seeks to enter the arena with Nike and Adidas

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Voluntary student loan repayments rise in England

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Voluntary student loan repayments rise in England

“The fact that they have paid off £1,000 or £2,000 will not be enough to change the fact that they won’t clear the loan within the 30 years before it wipes,” he said. “And that means they will not pay a penny less in future because they overpaid by £1,000 or £2,000. That money has been thrown away.

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Apprenticeship clearing system to be introduced

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Apprenticeship clearing system to be introduced

The prime minister said “outdated assumptions about how to make it into a successful career” have held young people back.

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Exclusive | Kroger Plans to Name an Ex-Walmart Executive as Its Next CEO

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Exclusive | Kroger Plans to Name an Ex-Walmart Executive as Its Next CEO

Grocery giant

Kroger

KR

1.24%

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increase; green up pointing triangle plans to hire Greg Foran, a former executive at top rival Walmart WMT 3.34%increase; green up pointing triangle, as its next chief executive, according to people familiar with the matter.

The company is expected to announce the choice as soon as Monday, some of the people said.

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