Forwarded from Insider Paper
BREAKING: The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center has issued a tsunami alert for Venezuela and nearby islands following a powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake
π144π₯36π8π1
Earthquake and itβs Wednesday. Come on RV!! Fingers crossed.
ππ
ππ
π399π₯57π27π₯°11π2
Forwarded from Insider Paper
BREAKING: Two powerful earthquakes, measuring 7.5 and 7.1 in magnitude, struck Venezuela today.
@insiderpaper
@insiderpaper
π₯82π78
Forwarded from Insider Paper
π¨ Multiple countries hit with strong earthquakes today
- M5.6 California, USA πΊπΈ
- M7.1 Venezuela π»πͺ
- M7.5 Venezuela π»πͺ
- M6.9 Japan π―π΅
@insiderpaper
- M5.6 California, USA πΊπΈ
- M7.1 Venezuela π»πͺ
- M7.5 Venezuela π»πͺ
- M6.9 Japan π―π΅
@insiderpaper
π126π₯42π―3
Forwarded from DONNIERPRNCHAT
I WILL BE HAVING A LIVE AT 7 PM FOLKS
https://t.me/RPRNCHAT
https://t.me/RPRNCHAT
Telegram
RPRNCHAT
24/7 LIVE of Christians and news from all over if you are in my chat and itβs not live itβs a fake the channel to Beware πΊπΈ We Are πΊπΈ 24/7 LIVE CHAT
π37
Telegram
Fallawsophy
Jennifer Fallaw
π₯141π―37π22π14π4π₯°4π€1
Forwarded from MJTruth
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VIEW IN TELEGRAM
βThe great American state fair will be unbelievableβ from today through July 10, this event will showcase all 56 states and territories.β
πΎ153π₯°37π25π₯12
Forwarded from A2Z DREAMZ CHANNEL (A2Z Angela)
This is a first, the WF Banker is having a conference call with her banker RV Specialists in the 5 states that she manages and has invited me to listen in without the ability to speak, naturally I immediately agreed. Will advise ASAP.
Texas Snake π posted
Texas Snake π posted
π₯177π₯°37π37π23π15π12
Forwarded from Official Simon Parkes
Simon parkes
Wednesday 24th June 2026 Update...
https://www.simonparkes.org/
π60π₯19π17π₯°2
Forwarded from Melaniastasia Romanov
Vietnam Is Quietly Entering Its Next Growth Phase
We have not posted about Vietnam for a while, but the latest numbers show why it deserves attention again. Beneath the surface, Vietnam is moving from βlow-cost manufacturing success storyβ into something much more strategic: an export, technology, logistics, and digital infrastructure hub sitting at the center of ASEANβs next economic chapter.
In the first five months of 2026, Vietnamβs industrial production rose by more than 9%, the strongest JanuaryβMay performance since 2021, while manufacturing and processing expanded nearly 9.5%. Retail sales and consumer services rose more than 11%, showing that growth is not only export-driven, but also supported by domestic demand. International arrivals reached nearly 11 million, up almost 15%, confirming that tourism and services are also recovering strongly.
The FDI story is even more important. Newly registered foreign investment exceeded $24 billion in the first five months, up 33.4%, while disbursed FDI reached $9.75 billion, up 9.6%. This matters because Vietnam is no longer trying to attract βanyβ capital. The country is shifting toward strategic selection: semiconductors, AI, renewable energy, supporting industries, digital infrastructure, and high-quality manufacturing with deeper domestic linkages.
The trade numbers confirm the same direction. Total import-export turnover reached an estimated $445.12 billion in JanuaryβMay, up 25% year-on-year. Exports to the United States alone reached nearly $70 billion, up 21.7%, with computers, electronics, and components rising 54.9% to $22.5 billion. That is not just textile-and-furniture Vietnam anymore. That is Vietnam becoming embedded in the global technology supply chain.
At the same time, the government is pushing infrastructure and digital capacity. Public investment disbursement reached 25.7% in the first half of 2026, while Vietnam has also set a target to build at least 10 large-scale domestic strategic technology enterprises by 2030. These companies are expected to help deploy six new international submarine fiber-optic cables, expand 5G coverage to 99% of the population, and develop at least five large-scale green data centers.
This is where the State Bank of Vietnamβs role becomes critical. Vietnamβs growth model depends on confidence in the dong, disciplined credit expansion, banking modernization, and careful exchange-rate management. The SBV has to keep liquidity available for industry and infrastructure without allowing inflation or currency pressure to destabilize the system. That balance is exactly what separates a fast-growing economy from a durable one.
Vietnamβs message to investors is becoming clearer: the country is not only a China-plus-one destination. It is becoming an ASEAN manufacturing anchor, a digital infrastructure platform, and a bridge between Asian supply chains and Western consumer markets. The challenge now is execution: faster project approvals, stronger domestic suppliers, better energy reliability, deeper capital markets, and continued banking reform.
But the direction is unmistakable. Vietnam is climbing the value chain, and the next chapter will be less about cheap labor and more about technology, logistics, financial discipline, and national industrial strategy.
Melaniastasia Romanov
We have not posted about Vietnam for a while, but the latest numbers show why it deserves attention again. Beneath the surface, Vietnam is moving from βlow-cost manufacturing success storyβ into something much more strategic: an export, technology, logistics, and digital infrastructure hub sitting at the center of ASEANβs next economic chapter.
In the first five months of 2026, Vietnamβs industrial production rose by more than 9%, the strongest JanuaryβMay performance since 2021, while manufacturing and processing expanded nearly 9.5%. Retail sales and consumer services rose more than 11%, showing that growth is not only export-driven, but also supported by domestic demand. International arrivals reached nearly 11 million, up almost 15%, confirming that tourism and services are also recovering strongly.
The FDI story is even more important. Newly registered foreign investment exceeded $24 billion in the first five months, up 33.4%, while disbursed FDI reached $9.75 billion, up 9.6%. This matters because Vietnam is no longer trying to attract βanyβ capital. The country is shifting toward strategic selection: semiconductors, AI, renewable energy, supporting industries, digital infrastructure, and high-quality manufacturing with deeper domestic linkages.
The trade numbers confirm the same direction. Total import-export turnover reached an estimated $445.12 billion in JanuaryβMay, up 25% year-on-year. Exports to the United States alone reached nearly $70 billion, up 21.7%, with computers, electronics, and components rising 54.9% to $22.5 billion. That is not just textile-and-furniture Vietnam anymore. That is Vietnam becoming embedded in the global technology supply chain.
At the same time, the government is pushing infrastructure and digital capacity. Public investment disbursement reached 25.7% in the first half of 2026, while Vietnam has also set a target to build at least 10 large-scale domestic strategic technology enterprises by 2030. These companies are expected to help deploy six new international submarine fiber-optic cables, expand 5G coverage to 99% of the population, and develop at least five large-scale green data centers.
This is where the State Bank of Vietnamβs role becomes critical. Vietnamβs growth model depends on confidence in the dong, disciplined credit expansion, banking modernization, and careful exchange-rate management. The SBV has to keep liquidity available for industry and infrastructure without allowing inflation or currency pressure to destabilize the system. That balance is exactly what separates a fast-growing economy from a durable one.
Vietnamβs message to investors is becoming clearer: the country is not only a China-plus-one destination. It is becoming an ASEAN manufacturing anchor, a digital infrastructure platform, and a bridge between Asian supply chains and Western consumer markets. The challenge now is execution: faster project approvals, stronger domestic suppliers, better energy reliability, deeper capital markets, and continued banking reform.
But the direction is unmistakable. Vietnam is climbing the value chain, and the next chapter will be less about cheap labor and more about technology, logistics, financial discipline, and national industrial strategy.
Melaniastasia Romanov
π₯77π6π―5π2π1