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Can't pay your rent? Here's what you should do

The coronavirus pandemic has made almost every facet of American life harder, and coming up with rent is high on that list. These resources can help.




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Disney hit by 'shocking reversal of fortune' The New York Times' Jim Stewart warns

James Stewart, The New York Times columnist, on whether Disney can make up for its parks shutdown. With CNBC's Melissa Lee and the Fast Money traders, Guy Adami, Tim Seymour, Steve Grasso and Karen Finerman.




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Sotheby's CEO on how the company shifted focus during Covid-19 pandemic

Charles Stewart, Sotheby's CEO, on how the company has shifted business during the pandemic. With CNBC's Melissa Lee and the Fast Money traders, Guy Adami, Tim Seymour, Karen Finerman and Dan Nathan.




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Bangladeshi journalist is jailed after mysterious 53-day disappearance

Campaigners warn Shafiqul Islam Kajol faces a lengthy sentence as his family worries about his exposure to Covid-19 in prison

Fifty-three days after he disappeared, Bangladeshi journalist Shafiqul Islam Kajol turned up on Sunday in police custody at a border town 150 miles from where he had last been seen.

“I am alive,” he told his son by phone, the first time the family had heard his voice since his disappearance in early March, a day after a case was filed against him and 31 others under the country’s controversial new Digital Security Act.

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From rubbish to rice: the cafe that gives food in exchange for plastic

The Garbage Cafe in Ambikapur, India, is helping to tackle the country’s plastic waste problem – and their novel idea is catching on

On bad days, when his employer made some excuse for not paying him his paltry daily wage, Ram Yadav’s main meal used to be dry chapatis, with salt and raw onion for flavour. Sometimes he just went hungry. For a ragpicker like him, one of the thousands of Indians who make a living bringing in plastic waste for recycling, eating in a cafe or restaurant was the stuff of fairytales.

But last week, Yadav was sitting at a table at the Garbage Cafe in Ambikapur, in the state of Chhattisgarh, over a piping hot meal of dal, aloo gobi, poppadoms and rice. He earned the food in exchange for bringing in 1kg of plastic waste. “The hot meal I get here lasts me all day. And it feels good to sit at a table like everyone else,” he said.

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Leaders mark heroics of war generation in shadow of pandemic

Quiet commemorations held to mark 75 years since end of war on continent

Seventy-five years ago crowds massed in the streets of Europe, singing and dancing as their leaders announced the end of six years of bloody war. On Friday, the streets were empty, and leaders stood alone in silence at places of commemoration, as a continent marked the heroics of the war generation in the shadow of the coronavirus pandemic.

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Covid-19 could cause permanent shift towards home working

Tech firms will benefit, but some companies could find employees don’t want to return to the office

Covid-19 could permanently shift working patterns as companies forced to embrace remote working by the pandemic find that their employees do not want to return to the office once the closures are lifted.

The sudden increase in working from home is presenting problems as well as opportunities: on the one hand, startups such as Slack and Zoom and established giants including Google and Microsoft are offering their tools for free, in the hope that people who start using them in a crisis may carry on once normality returns.

Related: The art of Skype set-dressing: how to video-call the office when in quarantine | Imogen West-Knights

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America's billionaires are giving to charity – but much of it is self-serving rubbish | Robert Reich

Well-publicized philanthropy shows how afraid the super-rich are of a larger social safety net – and higher taxes

As millions of jobless Americans line up for food or risk their lives delivering essential services, the nation’s billionaires are making conspicuous donations – $100m from Amazon’s Jeff Bezos for food banks, billions from Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates for a coronavirus vaccine, thousands of ventilators and N95 masks from Elon Musk, $25m from the Walton family and its Walmart foundation. The list goes on.

Related: Call for super-rich to donate more to tackle coronavirus pandemic

Why should we believe that Gates or any other billionaire’s 'boldness' necessarily reflects society’s values and needs?

Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of Saving Capitalism: For the Many, Not the Few and The Common Good. His new book, The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It, is out now. He is a columnist for Guardian US

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Could Microsoft’s climate crisis ‘moonshot’ plan really work?

The tech giant’s pledge to go carbon negative by 2030 leans heavily on nascent technology such as machines that suck carbon out of the air

Microsoft drew widespread praise in January this year after Brad Smith, the company’s president, announced their climate “moonshot”.

While other corporate giants, such as Amazon and Walmart, were pledging to go carbon neutral, Microsoft vowed to go carbon negative by 2030, meaning they would be removing more carbon from the atmosphere than they produced.

It will cost them money, but it will allow the technologies to come online and for the next company to follow their footsteps

It’s extremely hard to lead if there’s no one there to follow

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Going to see companies hit cash crunch in third quarter: LaSalle Network CEO

More than 20 million jobs were lost in the month of April. Tom Gimbel, LaSalle Network CEO, and CNBC's Steve Liesman join 'Power Lunch' to discuss the state of U.S. jobs and when a recovery could happen.




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Shanghai Disneyland tickets sell out as park prepares to reopen

CNBC's Eunice Yoon reports the latest out of Beijing on the rising tensions between the U.S. and China over the handling of coronavirus.




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April jobs report can shed light on how long the unemployment crisis could last, economist says

The April jobs report is expected to show the worst unemployment rate since the Great Recession. Michelle Girard, chief U.S. economist at NatWest Markets, and Beth Akers, senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, joins "Squawk Box" to discuss what they expect.




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Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi on earnings, assisting drivers during pandemic and more

Uber reported its biggest loss in three quarters, but shares of the ride-hailing giant on the rise after pointing to early signs of recovery in different markets across the globe. Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi joins "Squawk Box" to discuss.




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Markets anticipating more rapid turnaround than expected, says Art Cashin

Art Cashin of UBS joins "Squawk Alley" to discuss the state of the markets and the economy.




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Impossible Foods CEO on how meat shortages are driving demand for plant-based products

CNBC's Aditi Roy talks about meat shortages in the U.S. and the growing demand for products like Impossible Foods with the company's CEO Pat Brown.




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Large retailers should pay rent so we can help smaller retailers: Kimco Realty CEO

Conor Flynn, Kimco Realty CEO and president, join 'Power Lunch' to discuss the reopening of his shopping centers and the changes in the retail industry as the coronavirus pandemic continues.




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Trump: No rush to negotiate phase four stimulus package

CNBC's Kayla Tausche and Michelle Meyer, Bank of America, join 'Closing Bell' to discuss President Trump's comments that he is not in a hurry to expedite the fourth phase of the stimulus package.




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Jim Cramer: Wall Street welcomes positive coronavirus news, but investors should remain cautious

"We need to acknowledge that good things can still happen without going into denial about all the bad things that are currently happening," the "Mad Money" host said.




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Premier League critics should recognise football cannot wait for ever | Jonathan Wilson

The objections to restart plans are understandable and the game should pay attention, but ultimately clubs need to play games to survive

With each week the plans become a little more refined and with each week any final decision is pushed back. Football may return, and this is how it may look if it does, but nobody is sure, and any proposed date can only be provisional. Which is as it should be. In an age that often favours decisiveness over the decision itself, there is something vaguely comforting about a process that accepts the wisdom of waiting.

But in the background there is a crucial, nagging voice, and what it is saying is this: if football isn’t prepared to return, at least initially, in a form very different to the one it took before the virus, it may not return for a very long time – and for many clubs that means never.

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The Fiver | A Scottish football row that looks set to run and run

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Emotions in Scottish fitba circles were mixed on Thursday morning before the release of the eagerly-awaited Pope’s Newc O’Rangers dossier alleging assorted shenanigans on the part of the Scottish Professional Football League in ending the season prematurely. After weeks of suspense, the excitement of those intrigued to learn what hard evidence O’Rangers have been keeping up their sleeve was rather tempered by the fact they’d have to wade through no fewer than 200 pages of outrage to find out.

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The Englishman who lost his job after guiding New Zealand to the Olympics

Des Buckingham followed Under-20 World Cup success by qualifying for the Tokyo Olympics but lost his job last week

There is a word that Des Buckingham, during almost six years working in New Zealand, has used as a mantra to live by. In the Maori language, Mana represents a spiritual essence that almost defies translation but in everyday use it broadly applies thus: a way of holding oneself through dignity, respect, humanity and authority.

It has been invaluable over the past five days because Buckingham is navigating one of the biggest disappointments of a young coaching career that, since he moved to the other side of the world after leaving Oxford United in 2014, had rarely let up.

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Jonjoe Kenny: 'I came to the Bundesliga to push my comfort zone'

The Everton right-back joined Schalke on loan in pre-season and hopes to play against Borussia Dortmund on 16 May

As Jonjoe Kenny remembers the sights and smells that defined his childhood it is tempting, more so at a time such as this, to close your eyes and travel back with him. He can tell what, with a few bumps here and there, is the textbook story of a local boy made good, and Everton games were the focal points throughout. Kenny grew up in Kirkdale, virtually on the doorstep of Goodison Park, and the glimpse of a buzzing County Road brought the kind of sensory assault that would leave thousands pining today.

“It’s about a five-minute walk round the corner,” Kenny says. “On matchdays going to the stadium it was always busy in our area. The chippies were packed, the pubs were packed, and when you’re walking to the game through it all there’s no better feeling. As a kid growing up, it was such a big thing.”

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Karen Bardsley: 'Panini should do NHS stickers – they're our role models'

The England and Manchester City goalkeeper on career highs and lows, including Covid-19 delaying her comeback from injury

Karen Bardsley has had a lot of time to reflect on her career. The goalkeeper left England’s World Cup quarter-final victory over Norway in 2019 with a hamstring injury, knowing she would not make the semi-final, and has not played since. With cruel irony, her clearance to return to training at Manchester City came as the Lionesses returned from the SheBelieves Cup and went straight into isolation in March.

“I was like: ‘Wow, OK, I just got cleared to train with the whole squad and now I’m gonna have to wait for ever to do it,’ or at least that’s what it felt like,” Bardsley says with a laugh. “I’m just taking this as an opportunity to get as strong and as physically resilient as possible.”

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Althea McNish obituary

Textile designer whose colourful creations helped banish postwar greyness

The textile designer Althea McNish, who has died aged 95, was responsible for some of the 20th century’s most memorable printed fabrics. A hugely influential figure in the world of interior design and fashion, she was also the first woman from the West Indies to rise to international prominence in her field. She claimed to see everything “through a tropical eye”, and her greatest contribution was to infuse designs created in Britain with a feel of the Caribbean.

Her work from the late 1950s onwards appealed to young consumers who were desperate to move beyond the greyness of the immediate post-second world war years, and right from the beginning of her career she attracted commissions to design fabrics for big names such as Liberty and Heal’s. “She led the way, overthrowing the sterile rules of taste that had previously shaped British and international design,” said the designer and curator Christine Checkinksa.

McNish also worked on dress fabrics for Zika Ascher’s textile company, which supplied them to French fashion houses, including Dior. Her work was regularly featured in glossy magazines such as Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar.

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ADITYA BIRLA SUN LIFE BAL BHAVISHYA YOJNA WEALTH PLAN REGULAR GROWTH

Category Solution Oriented Scheme - Children’s Fund
NAV 9.06
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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ADITYA BIRLA SUN LIFE BAL BHAVISHYA YOJNA WEALTH PLAN REGULAR DIVIDEND

Category Solution Oriented Scheme - Children’s Fund
NAV 9.07
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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ADITYA BIRLA SUN LIFE BAL BHAVISHYA YOJNA WEALTH PLAN DIRECT GROWTH

Category Solution Oriented Scheme - Children’s Fund
NAV 9.29
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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ADITYA BIRLA SUN LIFE BAL BHAVISHYA YOJNA WEALTH PLAN DIRECT DIVIDEND

Category Solution Oriented Scheme - Children’s Fund
NAV 9.29
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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Aditya Birla Sun Life Short Term Fund - Quarterly Dividend - Regular Plan

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 10.2282
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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Aditya Birla Sun Life Short Term Fund - Quarterly Dividend - Direct Plan

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 10.4701
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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Aditya Birla Sun Life Short Term Fund - Growth - Regular Plan

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 33.4233
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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Aditya Birla Sun Life Short Term Fund - Growth - Direct Plan

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 34.9309
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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Aditya Birla Sun Life Short Term Fund - Dividend - Regular Plan

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 16.295
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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Aditya Birla Sun Life Short Term Fund - Dividend - Direct Plan

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 17.0177
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Weekly Dividend

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 9.3589
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 28-Jul-2019




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Quarterly Dividend

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 10.2116
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Premium Plus Plan - Monthly Dividend

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 10.045
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 17-Sep-2018




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Premium Plus - Quarterly Dividend

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 9.175
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 28-Jul-2019




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Premium Plus - Growth

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 17.8274
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 04-Jul-2018




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Monthly Dividend

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 11.8949
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Institutional Plan - Growth

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 20.5151
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 22-Oct-2018




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Half Yearly Bonus

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 13.5809
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Growth

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 33.6121
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Direct Plan - Weekly Dividend

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 9.5938
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 28-Jul-2019




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Direct Plan - Quarterly Dividend

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 10.8373
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Direct Plan - Monthly Dividend

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 12.453
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Direct Plan - Half Yearly Bonus

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 12.7489
Repurchase Price 12.6533
Sale Price 12.7489
Date 30-Jun-2016




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Direct Plan - Growth

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 35.7555
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 08-May-2020




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Direct Plan - Annual Dividend

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 10.1326
Repurchase Price 10.1326
Sale Price 10.1326
Date 26-Dec-2017




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PGIM India Short Maturity Fund - Direct Plan - Annual Bonus

Category Debt Scheme - Short Duration Fund
NAV 23.5281
Repurchase Price
Sale Price
Date 03-Apr-2019