after banking shares saw sharp falls on monday. the sell off continued in asia with japan s largest banks also seeing heavy losses. shares of mufg, miz uho and smfg were all down around 8% in trading. the nikkei exchange was down over 2% overall. here in europe, we ve seen credit suisse drop another 5% in early trading. on monday, major us banks lost around %90 billion in stock market value, bringing their loss since svb s collapse to nearly $190 billion. many are now speculating the federal reserve will pause its plans to keep raising interest rates, designed to tame inflation. we re nowjoined by greg swenson, who s an international investment banker, founding partner at brigg macadam. talk to me about the perception of rate rises being not only part of the cause of this but also now the federal reserve having a rethink about what it does for the cost of borrowing given what we have seen in the banking sector. great borrowing given what we have seen in the banking sector. t
i had my first cancer diagnosed about six or seven years ago. that waiting time is very, very hard. i don t think until you have been through it, you can actually understand it. despite the walk out, some hospitals are able to continue with some routine operations, but it is a mixed picture. the full impact on cancellations will not be known for a few days. one thing we re seeing that is different from other strike days is that demand for care has been sustained. in previous strike days, we saw that drop. it means the nhs is trying to keep things going, it was already overstretched, but it has fewer resources at its disposal. the government says the bma s pay claim is completely unaffordable. it s urged officials to call off the strike and enter into pay talks along with other health unions in england, and help bring this ongoing dispute to an end. katharine da costa, bbc news. new employment figures showjob vacancies in the uk have fallen for the eighth time in a row. the of
classified document baggage as the investigations continue. those investigations appear to be going nowhere. welcome. i m neil cavuto. this is your world. indeed, a busy day to wrap up a busy news week. let s get more on the political fall-out from all of this with peter doocy at the white house. hi, peter. neil, we still don t have a clear answer yet about whether or not any of president biden s other residences have been searched by the fbi for documents. so we checked. on these documents, have any more classified document been located in any other places associated with president biden? i ll refer you to the white house. joe manchin was asked and said would have had classified document in the same general area? that doesn t make sense. a reporter from cnn asked him. so it does cast a cloud over it, you think. he said it costs a cloud over the whole process. chances to put questions to president biden himself about this are few and far in between. it s tough, part
freedom everywhere. it s about the kind of world we want to live in, and the world we want to leave to our children. president joe biden s remarks yesterday announcing that the u.s. will send several tanks to ukraine. we ll dig into this major policy reversal. and what impact the tanks could have on the war. plus, former president trump will soon have more places to post his social media rants. we ll tell you which platforms are reactivating his accounts. also ahead, republican congresswoman marjorie taylor greene s ambitious plan to get to the white house. we ll bring you that exclusive reporting from nbc news. good morning, and welcome to morning joe. it is thursday, january 26th. joe is on assignment this morning. in a few minutes, we re going to explain what he s working on. and along with willie and me, we have the host of way too early, white house bureau chief at politico, jonathan lemire, and presidential historian, jon meacham joins us. he s the author of t
was one of britain s most versatile and successful performers. music: theme from murder she wrote. time for a look at the weather. here s nick miller. sunsets and the moon are dominating our photographs here this evening, but you may have notice things changing out there. more persistent rain running across northern ireland and that is heading into western scotland over the next few hours. also, that will introduce rain to north west england and parts of wales. for the midlands, eastern and southern england, some clear spells, allowing temperatures to drop close to freezing in the colder areas, but not as cold as this morning, but elsewhere with all of the cloud and the chance for rain, as tomorrow begins, it will be a milder start, a damp start in scotland and northern ireland, with heavy bursts of rain in scotland especially. that will clear to sunny spells, well into the afternoon before it pulls away from south east scotland, and more of the rain moves into northern engla