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TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Tampa Bay’s bid for a fourth straight NFC South title and fifth consecutive playoff berth is gaining momentum. Back-to-back wins over a pair of last-place teams , combined with Atlanta’s three-game losing streak, have propelled the Bucs (6-6) to a tie atop the division. Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.
The Law Offices of Frank R. Cruz reminds investors of the upcoming December 30, 2024 deadline to file a lead plaintiff motion in the class action filed on behalf of investors who acquired Mynaric AG ("Mynaric" or the "Company") MYNA securities between June 20, 2024 and October 7, 2024 , inclusive (the "Class Period"). If you are a shareholder who suffered a loss, click here to participate. On August 20, 2024, Mynaric disclosed that it "now expect[ed] full-year 2024 IFRS-15 revenue to range between EUR 16.0 million to EUR 24.0 million compared to previous guidance of a range between EUR 50.0 million to EUR 70.0 million," citing "production delays of CONDOR Mk3 caused by lower than expected production yields and component supplier shortages of key components." The Company also disclosed that it "now expects full-year 2024 operating loss to range between a loss of EUR 55.0 million to EUR 50.0 million compared to previous guidance of a range between a loss of EUR 40.0 million to EUR 30.0 million," citing "the lower than expected revenue and higher than expected production costs due to lower yields." Additionally, the Company also disclosed the voluntary departure of its Chief Financial Officer "for personal reasons." On this news, Mynaric's stock price fell $2.32, or 55.9%, to close at $1.83 per share on August 20, 2024, thereby injuring investors. Then, on August 26, 2024, Mynaric announced that its Supervisory Board "agreed to terminate in mutual consent the appointment of [the Company's Chief Executive Officer] as chairman and member of the Management Board." On this news, Mynaric's stock price fell $0.11, or 9.7%, to close at $1.02 per share on August 27, 2024. Then, on October 8, 2024, Mynaric disclosed that it had received a deficiency letter from the Listing Qualifications Department of The Nasdaq Stock Market Inc. notifying the Company that it was "no longer in compliance with the Nasdaq continued listing criteria . . . due to its failure to maintain a minimum of $50 million in market value of listed securities," and that "Mynaric does not meet the alternatives of total assets and total revenue for continued listing." On this news, Mynaric's stock price fell $0.07, or 4.4%, to close at $1.53 per share on October 8, 2024, thereby injuring investors further. The complaint filed in this class action alleges that throughout the Class Period, Defendants made materially false and/or misleading statements, as well as failed to disclose material adverse facts about the Company's business, operations, and prospects. Specifically, Defendants failed to disclose to investors that: (1) lower-than-expected production yields and component supplier shortages of key components were causing production delays for Mynaric's CONDOR Mk3 product; (2) the foregoing issues were likely to have a material negative impact on the Company's revenue growth and cause the Company to incur an operating loss; (3) as a result, Mynaric was unlikely to meet its own previously issued financial guidance for FY 2024; (4) accordingly, the Company's business and/or financial prospects were overstated; and (5) as a result, Defendants' positive statements about the Company's business, operations, and prospects were materially misleading and/or lacked a reasonable basis at all relevant times. Follow us for updates on Twitter: twitter.com/FRC_LAW . If you purchased or otherwise acquired Mynaric securities during the Class Period, you may move the Court no later than December 30, 2024 to request appointment as lead plaintiff in this putative class action lawsuit. To be a member of the class action you need not take any action at this time; you may retain counsel of your choice or take no action and remain an absent member of the class action. If you wish to learn more about this class action, or if you have any questions concerning this announcement or your rights or interests with respect to the pending class action lawsuit, please contact Frank R. Cruz, of The Law Offices of Frank R. Cruz, 2121 Avenue of the Stars, Suite 800, Century City, California 90067 at 310-914-5007, by email to info@frankcruzlaw.com , or visit our website at www.frankcruzlaw.com . If you inquire by email please include your mailing address, telephone number, and number of shares purchased. This press release may be considered Attorney Advertising in some jurisdictions under the applicable law and ethical rules. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241227904534/en/ © 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.A new trend is sweeping the nation — or, at least, among young far-left women. As one anonymous woman from Washington recently told Newsweek : “I feel like the election tied my hands and forced me to be sterilized.” Seriously? Apparently, more and more women are getting sterilized , not entirely because they don’t want to be parents, but because Donald Trump won the presidential election. Citing fears about abortion bans and rollbacks of reproductive rights, young women are subjecting themselves to irreversible and invasive procedures to get their tubes tied. As a 24-year-old, I find this to be absolute insanity. Tying your tubes over politics — and before the man is even in office — is not just an overreaction, it’s living your life like Chicken Little, afraid of the sky falling. Trump has already said he will not sign a national abortion ban . These women are living in fear of a threat that doesn’t even exist. Or, perhaps, it’s clout? Nothing says ultra-resistance like pledging fealty to the cause by sacrificing your fertility. Several women who spoke to Newsweek claimed they had no choice but to take this severe route. One anonymous woman claimed she felt “forced into surgery.” Another, Eden Ixora from Florida, said Trump’s election was a “call to action” and described pregnancy as “worse than death.” Wow. That’s pleasant. Young women today have the privilege of enjoying more birth control options than any generation in human history. Many have a 99% efficacy rate. Why not pop in an IUD, or use a condom, or get on the birth control pill, which you can now buy over the counter — yes, even in Florida — without even getting a doctor’s prescription. Handy online services will also deliver them straight to your door. Yes, it is true that access to abortion has become more difficult in certain areas of the country, but life-altering surgery is a harsh first resort. What these women seem not to realize is that whether Trump or Kamala Harris won the election is largely irrelevant. When Roe v. Wade was overturned , abortion became a state issue. This isn’t a debate that will get ironed out in the White House. As NBC has reported , experts predict that, even if a bill came before the House — and even with Republicans having majority control — federal restrictions are unlikely to happen. Yet that hasn’t stopped these women from going for the most extreme option of birth control possible, and then broadcasting it for the world to see. After all, these freedom fighters’ shocking TikTok videos did get oodles of views . But they are, at least in part, victims of the alarmist lies spread by dystopia-mongers who would rather scare women into permanently sterilizing themselves than see a Trump victory. The activists who caused this frenzy should be ashamed for driving young women to make life-altering medical decisions that they absolutely did not need to make. (Not all young women fell for the panic. A healthy 38% of those aged 18 to 29 — prime reproductive age — voted for Trump.) Of course, it’s their body and their choice. More power to them. They can and should do whatever they want. And, sure, not every woman wants to be a mother one day. But why have surgery if you don’t have to? Yet one of these women, who chose to remain anonymous, told Newsweek she and her husband know they don’t want to have kids — but she “scheduled a sterilization appointment in October, ‘fully planning to cancel the surgery the day after the election, assuming Kamala won.'” Talk about tying your tubes to spite your own uterus. Meanwhile, those doomsayers ringing the alarm bells on women’s rights in America need to cool it. Enough with “The Handmaid’s Tale” hoods. Concerned about reproductive rights? Get involved at the state level rather than oversharing extremist birth control methods on TikTok. It’s a bit of an insult to our sisters around the world who are living in actual oppressive regimes — like in Afghanistan, where women are now prohibited from speaking to one another. Can we zoom out and gain some perspective here? It’s time to take a chill pill, or at least a birth control pill.
YOU ARE SERVED Members of the Social Security System’s Run After Contribution Evaders (RACE) team are shown serving the RACE order on an establishment in Baliwag City on Thursday. —Carmela Reyes-Estrope CITY OF BALIWAG, BULACAN, Philippines — Ten employers in Bulacan province, which included three private school owners, were served last week the Run After Contribution Evaders (RACE) order by the Social Security System (SSS) for failure to remit the contributions of their respective employees. Chelin Lea Nabong, acting branch head of the SSS in Baliwag, said 125 employees were in danger of losing their contributions due to the failure of their employers to settle the collections on Nov. 19. She said these workers hold different positions at the three private schools, a furniture company, a restaurant, a “carinderia” (eatery), rice store, a manpower company and a beauty wellness center located in Baliwag and the town of Bustos. READ: SSS orders 1,200 firms to remit P 335-M workers’ contributions SSS Baliwag covers the City of Baliwag and the towns of Plaridel, Pulilan, Bustos, San Rafael, San Ildefonso and San Miguel. Nabong, in an interview during the serving of the RACE orders last Tuesday, said the contributions that were not remitted reached P3.2 million covering the periods from January to September this year. According to Nabong, their branch has so far served 13 RACE orders this year, for the benefit of 1,245 employees from 101 companies. These companies, she said, also included those that operate but have yet to register their employees with SSS. Faith Henriet Arao, lawyer III in SSS Central Luzon Legal Department who took part in operation on Nov. 19, said the companies served with RACE were those that still failed to remit their employees’ SSS contributions despite an earlier advice. In an interview on Monday, Gloria Corazon Andrada, SSS vice president for Central Luzon 2 Division, said the SSS monitors the accounts of the employers and immediately detects who are noncompliant. But other than this, she said, the affected employees can also make direct notifications and complaints to their office. “We also have cases where contributions were made but were only partial. We also serve them RACE order for failure to remit the next sets of the contributions they promised to settle,” added Andrada, who was also involved in serving of RACE orders on Nov. 19. According to Andrada, employers that will still fail to comply after a third notice will already result in the filing of cases against them. Subscribe to our daily newsletter By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy . During the serving of the RACE orders, the head of one of the affected schools informed the SSS team that they were having financial difficulties and were seeking help from private and government donors. INQ
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