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HomeWorld NewsEurope wants to comment on Ukraine's peace plan | Real Time Headlines

Europe wants to comment on Ukraine’s peace plan | Real Time Headlines

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock (L) spoke with the senior representative on February 12, 2025 with Vice President Kaja Kallas, Vice President of the European Commission of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Europe and Foreign Foreign Affairs.

Christopher Petit Tyson | AFP | Getty Images

With the rest of the United States (from the wild overhaul of government policies and its bureaucracy), the entire Atlantic region is taking action to carve a place for the continent in this new world order.

European leaders were excluded from U.S.-led talks after rushing to rally in Paris on Monday to discuss Ukraine’s peace plan, which will begin on Tuesday, with Washington and Moscow in nearly three years of Russia-Ukrainian war.

The gathering of European leaders was the day after the Munich security meeting, which was held from February 14 to February 16. On defense, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said that if the United States wants to hear about Europe, Europe needs to do more

However, investors have clearly received information about higher defense spending. European Defense Company shares jumped on Monday, driving regions in Europe Stoxx 600 The index is another record-high index – even with concerns that the mainland may not participate in the highest level of negotiations.

What you need to know today

European Emergency Conference
European leaders gather in Paris on Monday for an emergency summit, following a hurry-up rally by French President Emmanuel Macron
Europe will be excluded from the negotiation table In the US-led Russian-Ukrainian peace talks. Washington and Moscow will meet in Saudi Arabia this week. However, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Monday: “Ukraine will not participate. Ukraine knows nothing about it.”

European defense stocks jump higher
Stoxx European Aerospace and Defense Index set a record on Monday, Stock jumps for European defence companies like Renk Group and Saab. They were told by EU President Ursula von der Leyen at the Munich Security Conference that member states would be allowed to increase their spending on defense and security without violating the provisions of group budget deficit spending .

Another high of STOXX 600
On Monday, U.S. markets closed due to the president’s date break. Pan-European Stoxx 600 Index rose 0.54% to recover lost ground from Friday Close at another record high of 555.42 points. UK and euro zone bond yields have been greatly improved as traders weigh the potential of higher defence spending After the Munich Security Conference.

Terms related to Trump are on the income call
U.S. companies are raising questions about how U.S. President Donald Trump’s policies on international trade, immigration and diversity affect business. CNBC analysis shows that words related to these issues are increasingly emerging S&P 500– Listed companies. This is How companies respond to inquiries about Trump-related wordssuch as “Tariffs”, “Doge” and “America Bay”.

(Pro) Short stock: Wolfe Research
The U.S. Major benchmark ended in green last week, close to its all-time high. More importantly, this charge was not led by technology, sending a signal Expand the rallyAs CNBC’s Bob Pisani pointed out. In this progress, some stocks may over-expand, making them Investors’ main goalsaccording to Wolf’s research.

at last…

The tech bosses largely agree that the risks posed by DeepSeek to Openai are still limited at present.

Bloomberg|Bloomberg|Getty Images

‘Game’: Tech executives say DeepSeek raises China-US game, but won’t hurt Openai

In a series of interviews at the French AI Action Summit, leaders of several major tech companies told CNBC that the emergence of DeepSeek shows that China cannot be seen as a serious player when it comes to AI innovation. “Imagine if there were only two countries in the world that could build electricity on a large scale. That’s how you have to consider it,” OpenAI chief global affairs officer Chris Lehane told CNBC.

Still, tech bosses agree largely, despite DeepSeek’s breakthrough suggesting that the threat posed by China to Openai is still limited in scope among the global AI race. “I think the short answer that everyone should take is: the game — but it still matters,” Reid Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn and a partner at Greylock Partners, Venture Capital firm, told CNBC.

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