Wednesday, March 05, 2025

AMERICAN MAIN GOAL TO WEAKEN CHINA + STRENGTHEN WALL STREET: Trump helped BlackRock buy Panama Canal Ports

Mar 5, 2025

BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, bought the ports on both sides of the Panama Canal, after Donald Trump threatened the Latin American country and pressured it to force a Hong Kong company to sell its stake. 

Ben Norton discusses how the US government is trying to weaken China -- and strengthen Wall Street oligarchs.

 

Check out our related video on Trump's attempt to divide Russia and China:    • Trump's Ukraine talks aim to divide R...    

Li Ka-shing family's CK Hutchison to sell Panama port assets to BlackRock -  Nikkei Asia

Top stories
  1. Though the two ports sit at opposite ends of the Panama Canal, ships do not have to pass through them to enter. 
  2. Other ports along the canal are operated by companies from Taiwan, Singapore and the U.S.
  3.  The ports serve mainly to handle cargo, while the canal itself is run by the Panama Canal Authority, an independent Panamanian government agency. 
  4.  Though CK Hutchison is a private company based in Hong Kong, a semiautonomous Chinese territory, Trump administration officials had argued that it was subject to control by Beijing, which has been tightening its grip on the city.
The potential sale, which is subject to regulatory approval, was first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

Trump says U.S. is 'reclaiming' Panama Canal after American and Swiss investors strike deal to buy Chinese-backed ports

President Donald Trump, who had claimed without evidence that China controls the canal, touted the proposed sale as a victory in his address to a joint session of Congress.

President Donald Trump had argued that the Chinese-backed ports, one each at the canal’s Pacific and Atlantic entrances, posed a national security threat because they gave the Chinese military potential control of the strategically vital canal.

“My administration will be reclaiming the Panama Canal, and we’ve already started doing it,” he said. “Just today, a large American company announced they are buying both ports around the Panama Canal.”

  • Nearly 15,000 ships from around the world transit each year through the Panama Canal, which was built primarily with U.S. funds and was completed in 1914. About two-thirds of them are headed to or from the U.S.

In 1999, the U.S. relinquished control of the canal to Panama under a treaty negotiated by President Jimmy Carter and ratified by the Senate in 1978, with the U.S. retaining the permanent right to defend the canal against any threat to its neutrality.

  • Trump has claimed without evidence that China controls the Panama Canal. 
  • He said he would consider using military force to seize it back from Panama, one of Washington’s closest allies in Latin America.

“We didn’t give it to China,” Trump told Congress on Tuesday. “We gave it to Panama and we’re taking it back.”

Both China and Panama deny there is any foreign interference in the 50-mile canal, whose neutrality is enshrined in Panama’s Constitution.

“China supports Panama’s sovereignty over the canal and is committed to maintaining its status as a permanently neutral international waterway,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said at a regular briefing in Beijing on Wednesday.

“China has never been involved in the management or operation of the canal, nor has it interfered in its affairs,” he said.

The Trump administration and members of Congress were briefed on the proposed $22.8 billion deal, a person familiar with the matter told NBC News.

The consortium, which also includes the Geneva-based Mediterranean Shipping Company, would gain control of an 80% interest in CK Hutchison subsidiary Hutchison Ports, which operates 43 ports in 23 countries. It would also receive 90% of Panama Ports, which operates the Balboa port on the Pacific side of the canal and the Cristóbal port on the Atlantic side.

It does not affect the company’s ports in China.

“I would like to stress that the transaction is purely commercial in nature and wholly unrelated to recent political news reports concerning the Panama Ports,” 

Frank Sixt, co-managing director of CK Hutchison, said in a news release

The news sent CK Hutchison up almost 22% Wednesday on Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index.

Control over the Panama Canal has been a high-profile focus of the Trump administration, with Marco Rubio making Panama part of his first foreign trip as secretary of state.

Hutchison Ports won the rights to manage the two Panama Canal ports in 1997 in a bidding process that was described as fair and nondiscriminatory by U.S. officials at the time. In 2021, its contract was extended until 2047.


TOPICS

0:00 Goals of US foreign policy  

1:08 BlackRock buys Panama Canal ports  

2:08 (CLIP) Trump threatens Panama Canal 

2:32 BlackRock 3:26 US empire fears China  

4:03 (CLIP) Marco Rubio on China "threat"  

4:46 CIA targets China 5:42 (CLIP) CIA director on China 

6:34 CIA threats 6:50 Trump attacks China  

7:06 (CLIP) Trump on Panama Canal  

7:17 BlackRock takeover  

7:43 Colonial Monroe Doctrine  

8:40 Greenland  

9:27 Marco Rubio  

11:09 (CLIP) Rubio on US "backyard"  

11:46 (CLIP) Rubio fears China  

12:24 (CLIP) Rubio on Taiwan  

12:56 New cold war 13:39 Panama Canal geopolitics  

14:59 BlackRock buys ports around world  

15:54 Biden's infrastructure scheme  

16:09 Belt and Road Initiative  

16:33 Partnership for Global Infrastructure  

17:53 BlackRock, Microsoft, and AI  

18:06 Stargate Project with OpenAI  

18:26 USA is an oligarchy  

19:39 G7 summit starred BlackRock  

20:16 (CLIP) CEO Larry Fink at G7  

21:11 BlackRock backs both US parties  

22:15 Asset managers manage $128 trillion  

23:06 Blackstone: Largest US landlord  

24:33 USA: best "democracy" money can buy  

25:13 Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman  

26:45 Elon Musk: biggest US donor  

27:51 Trump's trickle-down economics  

31:37 Class war  

33:24 Trump's Russia strategy 

 33:51 Outro || Geopolitical Economy Report || 

Please consider supporting us at https://GeopoliticalEconomy.com/Support 

FACTOIDS  


FACTS USA: Which industries employ the most immigrants?

 USAFacts

Which industries employ the most immigrant workers? 

In 2023, nearly one in five workers in the US was foreign-born. Immigrants work in various industries, particularly education, health, and professional services. 
Let’s explore the data on the industries that employ the most immigrant workers.  
  • The largest group of foreign-born workers was in educational and health services—5.5 million workers, or 18.4% of all immigrant employees in 2023. This was followed by professional and business services, with 4.7 million (15.8%), and construction, with 3.3 million (11.1%). 

  • However, as for the shares of industries themselves, construction had the highest percentage of immigrant workers, at 28.6% of all construction employees. 

  • Professional and business services ranked second in immigrant workforce share (22.9%). 
  • The third highest was “other services” (21.9%). This broad category includes services like auto repair, barber and beauty salons, and religious organizations. 

  • By 2023, every industry had more foreign-born employees than they had in 2010. 
  • Employment of native-born people also increased across most industries, except for three: mining (-15.0%), information (-7.2%), and wholesale and retail trade (-3.5%).  

The 2025 State of the Union in Numbers

Did you know that first address a president delivers to Congress isn’t called a “State of the Union address”?  
It’s officially known as a “joint address to Congress.” However, its purpose is similar to a SOTU: to outline priorities and upcoming policies. 
 
Regardless of who delivers the address, it’s often big on rhetoric. 
That’s where our State of the Union in Numbers comes in. This data-driven report contains metrics that mark the start of the second Trump administration, such as:  
  • In 2024, federal revenue was $4.9 trillion, down from the 2022 peak of $5.4 trillion. Meanwhile, federal spending reached $6.8 trillion. 
  • Defense spending, accounting for 13% of the federal budget, was $820.3 billion in 2023. (Its peak was $964.4 billion in FY 2010.) 

  • In 2023, about one in seven US residents, or 14.3% of the population, were immigrants. 
 
See much more on federal finances, key market indicators, the American workforce in the 2025 State of the Union in Numbers

Bird flu, cattle, and you 

We’ve all seen it, and if you haven’t, you’ve at least heard the stories—the egg prices are up. Way up. That is, if you can find a carton at your local grocery store.  
 
Avian flu has been disrupting the nation’s poultry industry since 2022, spreading to at least 138.7 million birds. Although the risk to humans is low, cases started spreading late last year. In early January, a Louisiana patient was the first in the nation to die from the virus. 
  • Egg prices have fluctuated since the outbreak began, rising 135% from a national average of $2.17 per dozen in early 2022 to $5.10 in January 2023. They fell below $3.00 for several months before rising to $4.15 in December 2024. 

  • Since 2022, avian flu has affected 1,431 poultry flocks of various sizes across all 50 states, including 652 commercial operations and 779 backyard flocks. California and Iowa accounted for 38% of all affected birds. In 2022, these states ranked 10th and 11th in the nation’s poultry inventory. 

  • Avian flu began infecting cattle in 2024, with 929 cases reported in 16 states by January 2025. Most of the cases (72%, or 673 out of 929) were identified between October and December 2024, just as cases rose in birds. California had 77% of all incidents. 
  • While the risk to humans remains low, 67 people contracted bird flu in 2024 (mostly after being around cattle), with no person-to-person spread reported. 

  • Government agencies say avian flu is unlikely to spread through food, and that eggs, milk, and other products are safe to eat when properly prepared. 

Data behind the news

President Trump has said tariffs on Canada and Mexico will begin this week. Here’s a reminder of how tariffs work
 
A national security adviser recently publicly stated that the United States does not see Ukraine being a member of NATO
  • Meanwhile, Utah Senator Mike Lee expressed support for the US to leave the collective defense, which was founded to counter the Soviet Union during the Cold War.
 
It’s time again to try to remember how to change the clock on your stove — daylight saving time kicks into effect on Sunday, March 9.  
 
 
The weekly fact quiz is ready to test your knowledge

One last fact

The US imported more than it exported to 15 of its top 20 trade partners in 2023. 
The highest trade deficits were with China ($279 billion), Mexico ($152 billion), and Vietnam ($105 billion)

New data: Mesa rents increased 0.4% in February

 

Mesa, AZ Rental Market Trends

Mesa Rent Report: March 2025

Welcome to the Apartment List March 2025 Rent Report for Mesa, AZ. Currently, the overall median rent in the city stands at $1,341, roughly the same as last month. Prices remain down 2.0% year-over-year. Read on to learn more about what’s been happening in the Mesa rental market and how it compares to trends throughout the broader Phoenix metro area and the nation as a whole.

VIRAL MOMENT: President Trump Makes 13-Year-Old DJ Daniels An Agent Of T...

UNCLASSIFIED: Management Letter Related to the Audit of the U.S. Department of State FY 2024 Financial Statements

 

Management Letter Related to the Audit of the U.S. Department of State FY 2024 Financial Statements

AUD-FM-25-13
Unclassified
Unclassified
 
During the audit of the Department of State’s (Department) FY 2024 financial statements, an independent external auditor identified matters involving internal control, which it brought to the Department’s attention. 
 
These matters related to controls over 
  • untimely obligations, 
  • personnel data for locally employed staff, 
  • personnel records and actions, 
  • supporting data related to the asbestos remediation estimate, 
  • access privileges reviews for a supply chain application, and 
  • logging and monitoring of controls for a real property application.

BlackRock's MASSIVE $23 Billion Panama Canal Ports Deal Changes Global Trade FOREVER | 2 hours ago #BlackRock #PanamaCanal #GlobalTrade