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NEW YORK, Feb 16 (Reuters) - Shares of drone manufacturer EHang Holdings Ltd plunged on Tuesday after an investment research firm said it had shorted the stock and questioned the accuracy of what the Chinese company has said about its business.
Shares of Guangzhou, China-based EHang closed down 62.7% at $46.30 a share on Nasdaq.
Wolfpack Research, which specializes in short selling, or betting that shares will fall, said EHang is "an elaborate stock promotion" and that the producer of unmanned aerial vehicle technology has lied about its products, manufacturing, revenues and partnerships.
There was no immediate response to an e-mail sent to EHang's U.S.
investor relations representative seeking comment.
EHang's stock soared from around $13 a share in early December to $124.09 on Friday. The stock made its U.S. debut in December 2019 after an initial public offering priced at $12.50 share. (Reporting by Herbert Lash; Editing by Dan Grebler and David Gregorio)
NEW YORK, Feb 16 (Reuters) - Shares of drone manufacturer EHang Holdings Ltd plunged on Tuesday after an investment research firm said it had shorted the stock and questioned the accuracy of what the Chinese company has said about its business.
Shares of Guangzhou, China-based EHang closed down 62.7% at $46.30 a share on Nasdaq.
Wolfpack Research, which specializes in short selling, or betting that shares will fall, said EHang is "an elaborate stock promotion" and that the producer of unmanned aerial vehicle technology has lied about its products, manufacturing, revenues and partnerships.
There was no immediate response to an e-mail sent to EHang's U.S.
investor relations representative seeking comment.
EHang's stock soared from around $13 a share in early December to $124.09 on Friday. The stock made its U.S. debut in December 2019 after an initial public offering priced at $12.50 share. (Reporting by Herbert Lash; Editing by Dan Grebler and David Gregorio)
By Julia Fioretti
HONG KONG, March 5 (Reuters) - Chinese drone maker EHang is planning a U.S.
initial public offering (IPO) this year, according to two people with direct knowledge of the matter, with one saying it could raise between $400 and $500 million.
Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse are working on the offering, the people said. Another person said the deal was unlikely to be as large as $500 million.
Credit Suisse declined to comment.
EHang and Morgan Stanley did not reply to requests for comment.
Founded in 2014 and headquartered in Guangzhou province, EHang first made headlines in 2016 when it unveiled a passenger drone concept which it said would retail at up to $300,000.
Early last year it said it had completed tests for the vehicle which is capable of carrying one person at speeds of up to 130 kph.
In May EHang broke the Guinness World Record for most drones flown simultaneously in a 13-minute flight that involved 1,374 drones spread over a kilometre.
China has championed rapid development in its tech sector in a bid to build world-leading firms and reduce dependence on foreign products, including semiconductors, robots and drones.
Global spending on drones was estimated to reach $9 billion last year and is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 30 percent in the next five years, according to research firm IDC, which estimates more than half of that spending will be on drones for commercial use.
EHang specializes in aerial landscaping.
In consumer drones it is dwarfed by fellow Chinese drone maker SZ DJI Technology Co Ltd, which is the world's largest maker of non-military drones and plans to list in either Hong Kong or mainland China, people familiar with the matter told Reuters last year.
EHang joins a host of other Chinese start-ups seeking to go public in the United States, such as Tencent-backed live game-streaming platform Douyu, which has filed confidentially, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
Luckin Coffee, a Chinese rival to Starbucks, has also tapped three banks for a U.S.
IPO which could value it at around $3 billion.
Chinese companies raised $9.1 billion in U.S. IPOs last year, the highest since 2014 when e-commerce giant Alibaba went public with a $25 billion IPO, according to Refinitiv data.
(Reporting by Julia Fioretti, additional reporting by Josh Horwitz in Shanghai Editing by Susan Fenton)
Chinese drone maker unveils human-carrying drone
By Associated Press
Published: 23:15, 6 January 2016 | Updated: 23:15, 6 January 2016
[url=mailto:?subject=Read%20this:%20Chinese%20drone%20maker%20unveils%20human-carrying%20drone&body=Chinese%20drone%20maker%20unveils%20human-carrying%20drone%0A%0ALAS%20VEGAS%20%28AP%29%20%E2%80%94%20Chinese%20drone%20maker%20Ehang%20Inc.%20on%20Wednesday%20unveiled%20what%20it%20calls%20the%20world%27s%20first%20drone%20capable%20of%20carrying%20a%20human%20passenger.%20The%20Guangz...website%20
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Chinese drone maker Ehang Inc.
on Wednesday unveiled what it calls the world's first drone capable of carrying a human passenger.
The Guangzhou, China-based company pulled the cloth off the Ehang 184 at the Las Vegas Convention Center during the CES gadget show.
In a company video showing it flying, it looks like a small helicopter but with four doubled propellers spinning parallel to the ground like other drones.
The electric-powered drone can be fully charged in two hours, carry up to 220 pounds and fly for 23 minutes at sea level, according to Ehang.
The cabin fits one person and a small backpack and even has air conditioning and a reading light. With propellers folded up, it's designed to fit in a single parking spot.
The EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle is unveiled at the EHang booth at CES International, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Las Vegas.
The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger. (AP Photo/John Locher)
After setting a flight plan, passengers only need to give two commands, "take off" and "land," each controlled by a single click on a Microsoft Surface tablet, the company said.
It is designed to fly about 1,000 to 1,650 feet off the ground with a maximum altitude of 11,500 feet and top speed of 63 miles per hour.
U.S.
authorities are just starting to lay out guidelines for drone use, and a human-passenger drone seems certain to face strict scrutiny.
Federal Aviation Administration administrator Michael Huerta was at CES but could not immediately be reached for comment through a spokesman.
Ehang co-founder and Chief Financial Officer Shang Hsiao said the company hopes to sell the device for $200,000 to $300,000 beginning this year but acknowledged it occupies a legal "grey area."
"The whole world never had something like this before," he said.
A passenger would have no controls as a backup, he said.
In the event of a problem the company plans a remote control center that would take over the vehicle and ensure it lands safely, he said.
Chief Marketing Officer Derrick Xiong said the vehicle has been flown more than 100 times at low altitudes in a forested area in Guangzhou, including several times with a person inside.
One thing that makes quad-copters safer than helicopters are its numerous propellers, Xiong said.
Even if three of the four arms have their six propellers disabled, the final arm's working propellers can ensure a rough landing by spiraling toward the ground, he said.
The company, which also makes smaller drones, said in August it had raised $42 million in capital from various investors including GP Capital, GGV Capital, ZhenFund and others, following $10 million in capital raised the previous year.
___
Online:
Ehang Inc.
website style="font-size:1.2em;">___
Follow AP Business Writer Ryan Nakashima at website . His work can be found at website class="clear">
The EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle is unveiled at the EHang booth at CES International, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Las Vegas.
The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger. (AP Photo/John Locher)
People crowd around the EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle at the EHang booth at CES International, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Las Vegas.
The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger. (AP Photo/John Locher)
By Devik Jain
June 22 (Reuters) - S&P futures held about 1% below record highs on Tuesday as investors looked to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's remarks for clues on how the central bank is balancing inflation risk with its promise to ensure a full jobs market recovery.
In his prepared remarks released late Monday afternoon, Powell said inflation has "increased notably in recent months" but regarded the recent jump, in fact, as likely to fade.
The Fed chief is due to speak before Congress at 2 p.m. ET (1800 GMT).
The Dow jumped more than 500 points on Monday following last week's selloff, as the Fed's hawkish tone triggered a sharp profit booking on the companies expected to benefit the most from a U.S.
economic revival and a move into tech-heavy growth names.
"Powell will repeat that inflation is transitory and will drop back 'as these transitory supply effects abate'," said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank.
"How much time do we have before the supply effects abate is a big question."
However, in a broad-based rally on Monday, the Dow logged its best day since early March as market participants piled back into energy, financials and industrial stocks.
At 6:31 a.m.
ET, Dow e-minis were down 3 points, or 0.01%, S&P 500 e-minis were down 1.25 points, or 0.03%, and Nasdaq 100 e-minis were down 3.5 points, or 0.02%.
Heavyweights including Apple Inc, Amazon.com Inc and Alphabet Inc dipped about 0.5% each.
"Meme stock" Torchlight Energy Resources Inc jumped 10.5% in heavy premarket volume as the company upsized its stock offering after its shares doubled in value last week on interest from individual traders.
Crypto stocks including miners Riot Blockchain, Marathon Patent Group, Ebang International and MicroStrategy Inc fell between 2% and 3% as China's crackdown on bitcoin mining expanded to the province of Sichuan. (Reporting by Devik Jain and Medha Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)
Obiang had the backing of a coalition of 15 parties
Equatorial Guinea's ruler Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo has been re-elected to a sixth term as president with 94.9 percent of the votes cast, election officials announced on Saturday, putting turnout for the vote at 98 percent.
Obiang, 80, who seized power in a 1979 coup, is the longest-ruling head of state in the world excluding monarchs.
He has never officially been re-elected with less than 93 percent of the vote.
Electoral commission head Faustino Ndong Esono Eyang confirmed that Obiang would serve another seven years in the top job. The commission said the turnout rate for the election was 98 percent.
The landslide result was widely expected in the oil-rich and authoritarian Central African nation, where the political opposition is extremely weak.
Obiang had the backing of a coalition of 15 parties, including his all-powerful ruling Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea (PDGE).
The PDGE, which was the country's only legal political movement until 1991, also swept all seats in the National Assembly and the Senate.
The percentages won by the opposition candidates, Andres Esono Ondo of the Convergence for Social Democracy and Buenaventura Monsuy Asumu of the Social Democratic Coalition Party, were not announced, with both garnering just a few thousand votes.
"The definitive results of the vote find in our favour once more," Obiang's son, Vice President Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, wrote on Twitter.
"We will continue to prove that we are a great political party."
- 'History repeating itself' -
Obiang has ruled Equatorial Guinea for more than 43 years after ousting his uncle, Francisco Macias Nguema, who was then executed by a firing squad.
He has suppressed dissent and seen off a string of attempted coups in the Spanish-speaking nation.
Security forces arrested opposition figures in the weeks before the result, with the regime saying it was thwarting a "conspiracy" to commit attacks in the capital Malabo and economic hub Bata.
The authorities also closed the country's land borders with neighbouring Gabon and Cameroon before campaigning began, saying it was foiling infiltrators from disrupting the vote.
The landslide result was widely expected in the oil-rich and authoritarian Central African nation
Obiang is just the second president in Equatorial Guinea's history since it gained independence in 1968 from Spain, its colonial power for nearly two centuries.
"Equatorial Guinea's history has been repeating itself for 43 years and the political vision established by the government will continue after this election," Justo Bolekia, a professor at Spain's University of Salamanca, told AFP.
"It was predictable, including for the opposition. We were even expecting a score closer to 98 percent," he added.
The discovery of offshore oil in the mid-1990s turned Equatorial Guinea into sub-Saharan Africa's third-richest country in terms of per-capita income in 2021.
But the wealth has remained concentrated in the hands of a few families.
In 2006, when the oil boom was in full swing, more than three quarters of the population lived in extreme poverty, or on less than $1.90 a day, according to the World Bank.
There have been no new figures since.
The country also has a reputation for graft, ranking 172 out of 180 nations on Transparency International's 2021 Corruption Perceptions Index.
Chinese drone maker unveils human-carrying drone
By Associated Press
Published: 23:15, 6 January 2016 | Updated: 23:15, 6 January 2016
[url=mailto:?subject=Read%20this:%20Chinese%20drone%20maker%20unveils%20human-carrying%20drone&body=Chinese%20drone%20maker%20unveils%20human-carrying%20drone%0A%0ALAS%20VEGAS%20%28AP%29%20%E2%80%94%20Chinese%20drone%20maker%20Ehang%20Inc.%20on%20Wednesday%20unveiled%20what%20it%20calls%20the%20world%27s%20first%20drone%20capable%20of%20carrying%20a%20human%20passenger.%20The%20Guangz...website%20
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Chinese drone maker Ehang Inc.
on Wednesday unveiled what it calls the world's first drone capable of carrying a human passenger.
The Guangzhou, China-based company pulled the cloth off the Ehang 184 at the Las Vegas Convention Center during the CES gadget show.
In a company video showing it flying, it looks like a small helicopter but with four doubled propellers spinning parallel to the ground like other drones.
The electric-powered drone can be fully charged in two hours, carry up to 220 pounds and fly for 23 minutes at sea level, according to Ehang.
The cabin fits one person and a small backpack and even has air conditioning and a reading light. With propellers folded up, it's designed to fit in a single parking spot.
The EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle is unveiled at the EHang booth at CES International, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Las Vegas.
The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger. (AP Photo/John Locher)
After setting a flight plan, passengers only need to give two commands, "take off" and "land," each controlled by a single click on a Microsoft Surface tablet, the company said.
It is designed to fly about 1,000 to 1,650 feet off the ground with a maximum altitude of 11,500 feet and top speed of 63 miles per hour.
U.S.
authorities are just starting to lay out guidelines for drone use, and a human-passenger drone seems certain to face strict scrutiny.
Federal Aviation Administration administrator Michael Huerta was at CES but could not immediately be reached for comment through a spokesman.
Ehang co-founder and Chief Financial Officer Shang Hsiao said the company hopes to sell the device for $200,000 to $300,000 beginning this year but acknowledged it occupies a legal "grey area."
"The whole world never had something like this before," he said.
A passenger would have no controls as a backup, he said.
In the event of a problem the company plans a remote control center that would take over the vehicle and ensure it lands safely, he said.
Chief Marketing Officer Derrick Xiong said the vehicle has been flown more than 100 times at low altitudes in a forested area in Guangzhou, including several times with a person inside.
One thing that makes quad-copters safer than helicopters are its numerous propellers, Xiong said.
Even if three of the four arms have their six propellers disabled, the final arm's working propellers can ensure a rough landing by spiraling toward the ground, he said.
The company, which also makes smaller drones, said in August it had raised $42 million in capital from various investors including GP Capital, GGV Capital, ZhenFund and others, following $10 million in capital raised the previous year.
___
Online:
Ehang Inc.
website style="font-size:1.2em;">___
Follow AP Business Writer Ryan Nakashima at website . His work can be found at website class="clear">
The EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle is unveiled at the EHang booth at CES International, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Las Vegas.
The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger. (AP Photo/John Locher)
People crowd around the EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle at the EHang booth at CES International, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Las Vegas.
The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger. (AP Photo/John Locher)
1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5. Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6.
Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2. Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3.
Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6. Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8.
Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2. Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5.
Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8. David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2.
Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5. Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7.
Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2. Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4.
Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1.
Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4. Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6.
Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3.
Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6. Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8.
Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3. Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5.
Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3. Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5.
Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8. Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2.
Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5. Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7.
Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2. Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3.
Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7. Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8.
Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
April 7 (Reuters) - Short-seller Hindenburg Research said on Tuesday it had taken a short position on Ebang International Holdings Inc, sending the Chinese bitcoin mining machine producer's shares down more than 12%.
"Ebang claims to be a 'leading bitcoin mining machine producer', yet our research indicates this extraordinary claim is backed by no evidence," the short-seller said website
"Ebang released its final miner in May 2019 and has since seen its sales dwindle to near-zero, delivering only 6,000 total miners in 1H20."
Short sellers sell borrowed shares in the hope of buying them back at a cheaper price and pocketing the difference.
In a statement on Wednesday, Ebang said the Hindenburg report contained many errors, unsupported speculations and inaccurate interpretations of events.
It added it intends to further review and examine the allegations and take necessary action to protect the interest of its shareholders.
The recent bitcoin mania has fueled a surge in fundraising by Chinese companies seeking to expand their cryptocurrency operations or move into the red-hot sector.
Ebang debuted on Nasdaq in June last year and had conducted two fundraising rounds in February alone, raking in $170 million, even after a previous offering in November.
Hindenburg, which went short on another Chinese blockchain company Sos Ltd in February, said its research revealed that instead of using capital proceeds to develop its business, Ebang directed much of the cash out of the company through "a series of opaque deals with insiders and questionable counterparties."
Hindenburg had also taken short positions in electric vehicle companies including Lordstown Motors, Nikola Corp and Kandi Technologies Group Inc.
(Reporting by Chavi Mehta and Akanksha Rana in Bengaluru; additional reporting by Akriti Sharma; Editing by Rashmi Aich and Subhranshu Sahu)
By Devik Jain
June 22 (Reuters) - S&P futures held about 1% below record highs on Tuesday as investors looked to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's remarks for clues on how the central bank is balancing inflation risk with its promise to ensure a full jobs market recovery.
In his prepared remarks released late Monday afternoon, Powell said inflation has "increased notably in recent months" but regarded the recent jump, in fact, as likely to fade.
The Fed chief is due to speak before Congress at 2 p.m. ET (1800 GMT).
The Dow jumped more than 500 points on Monday following last week's selloff, as the Fed's hawkish tone triggered a sharp profit booking on the companies expected to benefit the most from a U.S.
economic revival and a move into tech-heavy growth names.
"Powell will repeat that inflation is transitory and will drop back 'as these transitory supply effects abate'," said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank.
"How much time do we have before the supply effects abate is a big question."
However, in a broad-based rally on Monday, the Dow logged its best day since early March as market participants piled back into energy, financials and industrial stocks.
At 6:31 a.m.
ET, Dow e-minis were down 3 points, or 0.01%, S&P 500 e-minis were down 1.25 points, or 0.03%, and Nasdaq 100 e-minis were down 3.5 points, or 0.02%.
Heavyweights including Apple Inc, Amazon.com Inc and Alphabet Inc dipped about 0.5% each.
"Meme stock" Torchlight Energy Resources Inc jumped 10.5% in heavy premarket volume as the company upsized its stock offering after its shares doubled in value last week on interest from individual traders.
Crypto stocks including miners Riot Blockchain, Marathon Patent Group, Ebang International and MicroStrategy Inc fell between 2% and 3% as China's crackdown on bitcoin mining expanded to the province of Sichuan. (Reporting by Devik Jain and Medha Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)
INDONESIA PRESS-Elang Mahkota consortium acquires Singapore's PropertyGuru - Investor Daily
By Reuters
Published: 02:49 BST, 10 June 2015 | Updated: 02:49 BST, 10 June 2015
[url=mailto:?subject=Read%20this:%20INDONESIA%20PRESS-Elang%20Mahkota%20consortium%20acquires%20Singapore's%20PropertyGuru%20-%20Investor%20Daily&body=INDONESIA%20PRESS-Elang%20Mahkota%20consortium%20acquires%20Singapore%27s%20PropertyGuru%20-%20Investor%20Daily%0A%0AA%20consortium%20of%20firms%20including%20technology%20company%20PT%20Elang%20Mahkota%20Teknologi%20Tbk%2C%20TPG%20Capital%20and%20Square%20Peg%20Capital%20bought%20Singapore-based%20online%20property%20...website%20
Elang Mahkota will have an 18.8 percent stake in PropertyGuru after the transaction is completed this month, Hartono added.
PropertyGuru offers property sales in Singapore, Thailand and Indonesia.
Transaction within the portal reached S$4 billion a year, the newspaper said.
Note: Reuters has not verified this story and does not vouch for its accuracy. ($1 = 1.3520 Singapore dollars) (Compiled by Gayatri Suroyo; Editing by Sunil Nair)
1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5. Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6.
Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2. Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3.
Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6. Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8.
Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2. Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5.
Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8. David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2.
Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5. Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7.
Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2. Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4.
Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1.
Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4. Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6.
Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3.
Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6. Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8.
Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3. Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5.
Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3. Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5.
Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8. Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2.
Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5. Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7.
Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2. Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3.
Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7. Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8.
Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
Gabon 2 Niger 0: Aubameyang inspires co-hosts to victory in opening match
By Sportsmail Reporter
Updated: 21:26 BST, 23 January 2012
[url=mailto:?subject=Read%20this:%20Gabon%202%20Niger%200:%20Aubameyang%20inspires%20co-hosts%20to%20victory%20in%20opening%20match&body=Gabon%202%20Niger%200%3A%20Aubameyang%20inspires%20co-hosts%20to%20victory%20in%20opening%20match%0A%0APierre-Emerick%20Aubameyang%20lived%20up%20to%20his%20reputation%20by%20inspiring%20co-hosts%20Gabon%20to%20a%20comfortable%202-0%20win%20over%20debutants%20Niger%20in%20their%20opening%20African%20Nations%20Cup%20Group%20C%20match%20on%20Monday.website%20
The 22-year-son of a former national team captain delivered a stellar performance in attack to help provide the perfect start to the tournament for the Gabonese who are co-hosting the 16-team event with neighbours Equatorial Guinea.
Opener: Aubameyang beats Niger goalkeeper Rabo Kabara Saminou
MATCH FACTS
Gabon: Ovono Ebang, Mouele, Ecuele Manga, Ebanega, Moussono, Madinda,Moubamba, Biyogo Poko (Palun 90), Mouloungui, N'Guema (Mbanangoye 75), Aubameyang (Cousin 84).
Subs Not Used: Bidonga, Ambourouet, Boussoughou, Ndong, Apanga, Moundounga, Do Marcolino, Meye, Bitseki Moto.
Booked: N'Guema.
Goals: Aubameyang 30,N'Guema 45.
Niger: Daouda, Kader Amadou, Mohamed, Soumaila, Lancina, Mazadou (Bulus 57), Issoufou, Laouali, Issoufou (Seydou Ali 43), Talatou (Moutari Amadou 63), Moussa Maazou.
Subs Not Used: Saminou, Idrissa, Harouna Bonnes, Kamilou, Moussa, N'Gounou, Koudize, Doumbia.
Booked: Issoufou .
Attendance: 38,000
Referee: Eddy Maillet (Seychelles).
After a quiet start to the game, Aubameyang brought the 40,000 spectators to their feet when he ghosted in at the back post to squeeze home a header and put his team ahead just as they were becoming frustrated by their unfancied opponents.
A diving header from the St Etienne striker on the stroke of half-time set up the second goal.
Niger goalkeeper Daouda Kassaly made a brilliant save to stop Aubameyang's effort but the rebound fell perfectly for Stephane Nguema to net from close range.
Aubameyang was also a central figure in the goalless second half, orchestrating a wave of attacks, taking set pieces and generally keeping Niger on the back foot until he was replaced late on by veteran Daniel Cousin.
Poor defence from Niger contributed to the ease with which Gabon passed the ball around as the Nations Cup new boys looked palpably out of their depth.
Niger threatened rarely and were poorly organised, even after calling in former Olympique Marseille coach Rolland Courbis to help with the preparations.
They also played the last 15 minutes with 10 men when Moutari Amadou was carried off on a stretcher having already made their three substitutions.
Job done: Aubameyang salutes the home crowd after the match
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1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5. Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6.
Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2. Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3.
Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6. Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8.
Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2. Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5.
Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8. David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2.
Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5. Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7.
Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2. Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4.
Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1.
Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4. Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6.
Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3.
Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6. Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8.
Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3. Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5.
Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3. Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5.
Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8. Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2.
Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5. Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7.
Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2. Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3.
Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7. Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8.
Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
Obiang had the backing of a coalition of 15 parties
Equatorial Guinea's ruler Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo has been re-elected to a sixth term as president with 94.9 percent of the votes cast, election officials announced on Saturday, putting turnout for the vote at 98 percent.
Obiang, 80, who seized power in a 1979 coup, is the longest-ruling head of state in the world excluding monarchs.
He has never officially been re-elected with less than 93 percent of the vote.
Electoral commission head Faustino Ndong Esono Eyang confirmed that Obiang would serve another seven years in the top job. The commission said the turnout rate for the election was 98 percent.
The landslide result was widely expected in the oil-rich and authoritarian Central African nation, where the political opposition is extremely weak.
Obiang had the backing of a coalition of 15 parties, including his all-powerful ruling Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea (PDGE).
The PDGE, which was the country's only legal political movement until 1991, also swept all seats in the National Assembly and the Senate.
The percentages won by the opposition candidates, Andres Esono Ondo of the Convergence for Social Democracy and Buenaventura Monsuy Asumu of the Social Democratic Coalition Party, were not announced, with both garnering just a few thousand votes.
"The definitive results of the vote find in our favour once more," Obiang's son, Vice President Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, wrote on Twitter.
"We will continue to prove that we are a great political party."
- 'History repeating itself' -
Obiang has ruled Equatorial Guinea for more than 43 years after ousting his uncle, Francisco Macias Nguema, who was then executed by a firing squad.
He has suppressed dissent and seen off a string of attempted coups in the Spanish-speaking nation.
Security forces arrested opposition figures in the weeks before the result, with the regime saying it was thwarting a "conspiracy" to commit attacks in the capital Malabo and economic hub Bata.
The authorities also closed the country's land borders with neighbouring Gabon and Cameroon before campaigning began, saying it was foiling infiltrators from disrupting the vote.
The landslide result was widely expected in the oil-rich and authoritarian Central African nation
Obiang is just the second president in Equatorial Guinea's history since it gained independence in 1968 from Spain, its colonial power for nearly two centuries.
"Equatorial Guinea's history has been repeating itself for 43 years and the political vision established by the government will continue after this election," Justo Bolekia, a professor at Spain's University of Salamanca, told AFP.
"It was predictable, including for the opposition. We were even expecting a score closer to 98 percent," he added.
The discovery of offshore oil in the mid-1990s turned Equatorial Guinea into sub-Saharan Africa's third-richest country in terms of per-capita income in 2021.
But the wealth has remained concentrated in the hands of a few families.
In 2006, when the oil boom was in full swing, more than three quarters of the population lived in extreme poverty, or on less than $1.90 a day, according to the World Bank.
There have been no new figures since.
The country also has a reputation for graft, ranking 172 out of 180 nations on Transparency International's 2021 Corruption Perceptions Index.
Obiang had the backing of a coalition of 15 parties
Equatorial Guinea's ruler Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo has been re-elected to a sixth term as president with 94.9 percent of the votes cast, election officials announced on Saturday, putting turnout for the vote at 98 percent.
Obiang, 80, who seized power in a 1979 coup, is the longest-ruling head of state in the world excluding monarchs.
He has never officially been re-elected with less than 93 percent of the vote.
Electoral commission head Faustino Ndong Esono Eyang confirmed that Obiang would serve another seven years in the top job. The commission said the turnout rate for the election was 98 percent.
The landslide result was widely expected in the oil-rich and authoritarian Central African nation, where the political opposition is extremely weak.
Obiang had the backing of a coalition of 15 parties, including his all-powerful ruling Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea (PDGE).
The PDGE, which was the country's only legal political movement until 1991, also swept all seats in the National Assembly and the Senate.
The percentages won by the opposition candidates, Andres Esono Ondo of the Convergence for Social Democracy and Buenaventura Monsuy Asumu of the Social Democratic Coalition Party, were not announced, with both garnering just a few thousand votes.
"The definitive results of the vote find in our favour once more," Obiang's son, Vice President Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, wrote on Twitter.
"We will continue to prove that we are a great political party."
- 'History repeating itself' -
Obiang has ruled Equatorial Guinea for more than 43 years after ousting his uncle, Francisco Macias Nguema, who was then executed by a firing squad.
He has suppressed dissent and seen off a string of attempted coups in the Spanish-speaking nation.
Security forces arrested opposition figures in the weeks before the result, with the regime saying it was thwarting a "conspiracy" to commit attacks in the capital Malabo and economic hub Bata.
The authorities also closed the country's land borders with neighbouring Gabon and Cameroon before campaigning began, saying it was foiling infiltrators from disrupting the vote.
The landslide result was widely expected in the oil-rich and authoritarian Central African nation
Obiang is just the second president in Equatorial Guinea's history since it gained independence in 1968 from Spain, its colonial power for nearly two centuries.
"Equatorial Guinea's history has been repeating itself for 43 years and the political vision established by the government will continue after this election," Justo Bolekia, a professor at Spain's University of Salamanca, told AFP.
"It was predictable, including for the opposition. We were even expecting a score closer to 98 percent," he added.
The discovery of offshore oil in the mid-1990s turned Equatorial Guinea into sub-Saharan Africa's third-richest country in terms of per-capita income in 2021.
But the wealth has remained concentrated in the hands of a few families.
In 2006, when the oil boom was in full swing, more than three quarters of the population lived in extreme poverty, or on less than $1.90 a day, according to the World Bank.
There have been no new figures since.
The country also has a reputation for graft, ranking 172 out of 180 nations on Transparency International's 2021 Corruption Perceptions Index.
1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5.
Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6. Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2.
Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3. Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6.
Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8. Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2.
Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5. Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8.
David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2. Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5.
Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7. Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2.
Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4. Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7.
Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1. Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4.
Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6. Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1.
Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3. Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6.
Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8. Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3.
Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5. Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3.
Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5. Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8.
Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2. Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5.
Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7. Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2.
Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3. Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7.
Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8. Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5.
Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6. Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2.
Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3. Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6.
Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8. Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2.
Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5. Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8.
David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2. Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5.
Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7. Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2.
Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4. Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7.
Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1. Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4.
Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6. Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1.
Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3. Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6.
Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8. Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3.
Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5. Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3.
Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5. Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8.
Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2. Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5.
Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7. Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2.
Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3. Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7.
Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8. Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
INDONESIA PRESS-Elang Mahkota consortium acquires Singapore's PropertyGuru - Investor Daily
By Reuters
Published: 21:49 EDT, 9 June 2015 | Updated: 21:49 EDT, 9 June 2015
[url=mailto:?subject=Read%20this:%20INDONESIA%20PRESS-Elang%20Mahkota%20consortium%20acquires%20Singapore's%20PropertyGuru%20-%20Investor%20Daily&body=INDONESIA%20PRESS-Elang%20Mahkota%20consortium%20acquires%20Singapore%27s%20PropertyGuru%20-%20Investor%20Daily%0A%0AA%20consortium%20of%20firms%20including%20technology%20company%20PT%20Elang%20Mahkota%20Teknologi%20Tbk%2C%20TPG%20Capital%20and%20Square%20Peg%20Capital%20bought%20Singapore-based%20online%20property%20...website%20
Elang Mahkota will have an 18.8 percent stake in PropertyGuru after the transaction is completed this month, Hartono added.
PropertyGuru offers property sales in Singapore, Thailand and Indonesia. Transaction within the portal reached S$4 billion a year, the newspaper said.
Note: Reuters has not verified this story and does not vouch for its accuracy. ($1 = 1.3520 Singapore dollars) (Compiled by Gayatri Suroyo; Editing by Sunil Nair)
Prince Harry discussed how he urged his family to have therapy during his interview with trauma expert Dr Gabor Maté last night.
The Duke of Sussex, 38, fielded questions from Dr Maté during what was described as an 'intimate conversation' about 'living with loss and personal healing'.
During the conversation, which opened with the royal insisting that he does not see himself as a victim, he said that he 'did the thing of trying to encourage everyone' in his family to have therapy.
Harry explained: 'I suddenly realised that I'd learnt a new language.
And the people that I was surrounded by seemed to me that they didn't speak that language.
'So I actually felt more pushed aside and then I actually said to my therapist "okay, I've got a problem.'
Prince Harry (pictured) said he urged the rest of the Royal Family to have therapy during his 'intimate conversation' last night with Gabor Mate
He continued: 'This is working for me, and I'm starting to...go back to the point of trauma and be able to unravel and unpack everything so that I can now live a truly authentic life and be genuinely happy and be a better dad for my kids.
'But at the same time I'm I'm finally feeling more and more distant with my loved ones and my family.'
The royal has spoken out before about the therapy he has undertaken. He started to see a therapist after 'total chaos' in his late 20s, before undergoing a further five year analysis after meeting Meghan.
Since moving to the US in 2020, Harry has experimented with different styles, including EMDR therapy, which aims to help someone come to terms with trauma.
In his and Meghan's explosive Netflix documentary, which was released last December, the couple could also be seen taking part in an emotional guided meditation exercise.
Harry's foray into getting professional help began in his late 20s, when he first saw a 'counsellor' at the age of 28, or in around 2014, because he felt 'on the verge of punching someone' and faced anxiety on royal engagements.
The 38-year-old royal said he 'suddenly realised that [he'd] learnt a new language' after doing therapy - and that his family did not speak that same language
In an April 2017 interview with Bryony Gordon at the Daily Telegraph, Harry said it was only then that he began to address the trauma that had left him 'very close to a complete breakdown on numerous occasions', although Prince William had encouraged him to seek help prior to this point.
At the time of the interview - some nine months after he and Meghan started dating - Harry said he was in a 'good place'.
It's not clear when his therapy came to an end, but it appears there was a break in his sessions before he met his wife Meghan.
In a series of candid interviews with Oprah Winfrey for the Apple+ series The Me You Can't See, which was released in 2021, Harry recalled how Meghan suggested that he start seeing a therapist after they had an argument in the early days of their relationship.
Harry explained the trauma of his mother's death when he was just 12-years-old led him to use alcohol and drugs to 'mask' his emotions and to 'feel less like I was feeling'.
He also said he experienced burnout in his late 20s as a result of a 'hectic' royal engagement schedule and suffered 'severe anxiety and panic attacks' until the age of 32, roughly around the same time he met Meghan.
'I knew that if I didn't do the therapy and fix myself that I was going to lose this woman who I could see myself spending the rest of my life with,' he told Oprah.
He has now done therapy for 'four and a bit, five years'.
Prince Harry (pictured, right) claimed in Spare that his older brother Prince William (pictured, left) was worried that his therapist was 'brainwashing' him
However, according to Prince Harry's memoir Spare, his family has not been totally onboard with all of the therapy he has undertaken.
The 38-year-old royal claimed in his memoirs that Prince William believed he was being 'brainwashed' by the therapist he was seeing.
The Duke of Sussex says his sibling was so worried about what he was being exposed to at his confidential sessions that he even asked to come along to one.
Harry also accuses William of believing 'I was unwell, which meant I was unwise' as he made plans to leave Royal duties for a new life abroad.
The Duke also says he tried to patch up their relationship with a joint therapy session, telling William it would 'be good for you.
Good for us', but says William did not take up the offer.
By Samuel Shen and Alun John
SHANGHAI/HONG KONG, March 9 (Reuters) - Bitcoin mania has fuelled a surge in fundraising by Chinese companies seeking to expand their cryptocurrency operations or move into the red-hot sector.
From large listed companies tapping public markets to smaller players raising funds from venture capitalists, a jump in cryptocurrency prices and signs of growing acceptance of the technology by mainstream institutions have fed the market boom.
Chinese bitcoin mining machine manufacturer, Ebang International Holdings, which debuted on Nasdaq in June, conducted two fundraising rounds in February alone, raking in $170 million, even after a previous offering in November.
Newcomer Code Chain New Continent Ltd, a Chinese waste recycling company, raised $25 million in February through a share placement to fund a foray into bitcoin mining.
In private markets, "competition is white hot and filled with sharp elbows," said Jehan Chu, managing partner at Hong Kong-based blockchain venture capital firm Kenetic Capital.
"Every good-quality funding round is oversubscribed within a week of it being announced."
The market has flourished despite complicated official attitudes towards cryptocurrencies in China.
Cryptocurrency exchanges are banned and mining frowned upon, but there is strong official support for developing blockchain technology, which underpins cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin , but is also key to new innovations in areas such as trade finance, supply chain management and anti-counterfeiting.
This has contributed to the emergence of attractive crypto projects in China, say investors, although many companies still list and raise money overseas.
Ebang plans to use its new capital to expand into cryptocurrency mining in its own right, to open cryptocurrency exchanges in Singapore and Canada, and to launch a Robinhood-style platform for bitcoin trading.
"Ebang's growth story is very attractive to institutional investors ... fundraising by all industry players is getting busier thanks to the bitcoin bull," said Guo Yi, COO at Univest Securities, which underwrote the deals, and has helped raise money for several other Chinese crypto players.
Canaan Inc, another Nasdaq-listed Chinese maker of bitcoin mining machines, is also expanding into mining, where powerful computers are used to verify bitcoin transactions and compete for a bitcoin reward.
Bitcoin, the world's largest cryptocurrency, has surged over 300% in value since the fourth quarter of last year.
"Bitcoin prices present us with a unique opportunity to establish mining operations," said David Feng, co-CEO of newcomer Code Chain, which has ordered 10,000 bitcoin mining machines.
"EUPHORIC ATMOSPHERE"
The Chinese rush comes as Coinbase, the biggest U.S.
cryptocurrency exchange, filed last month for a Nasdaq listing. Regulatory approval would represent a landmark victory for cryptocurrency advocates seeking mainstream endorsement.
"Everyone can feel this euphoric atmosphere in the market, and Coinbase's listing would lift the mood further," said Jiang Changhao, co-founder and chief technology officer of Beijing-based Cobo a crypto custodian and wallet service provider.
Cobo plans to launch a new round of venture capital funding this month to finance international expansion, aiming for tens of millions of dollars because, Jiang said, "the market is bullish and our business is growing very, very rapidly."
Kenetic Capital's Chu said official backing for blockchain, and the use of the technology in major initiatives by giants like Ping An and Ant Financial, were a factor in the number of high quality blockchain and crypto projects in China.
But the recent price surge had "poured napalm" on to competition in the sector, he said.
Still, the entry of some Chinese firms into the crypto space has raised investor eyebrows.
Last month, short-sellers Hindenburg Research and Culper Research alleged Chinese blockchain firm SOS Ltd, had made false claims about its cryptocurrency business, allegations SOS said were "distorted, misleading and unsubstantiated".
Guo of Univest Securities said the market has zero-tolerance toward cheating, but there's nothing improper about Chinese companies jumping on to the bitcoin bandwagon.
"If people don't point figure at (Tesla founder) Elon Musk for endorsing bitcoin, what's wrong with Chinese companies embracing it?" (Reporting by Samuel Shen and Alun John; editing by Richard Pullin)
By Alun John and Julie Zhu
HONG KONG, Aug 27 (Reuters) - Three of the world's largest bitcoin mining equipment makers plan to raise billions of dollars with initial public offerings in Hong Kong, even as other companies report plunging demand for the chips needed to make bitcoin and a halving in the price of the cryptocurrency.
Soaring cryptocurrency prices last year triggered a boom in demand for specialist mining chips and in developing "mines" - facilities with thousands of machines that create the coins by solving complex mathematical puzzles.
Yet the U.S.
chipmaker Nvidia Corp said this month that second-quarter sales to crypto miners totalled just $18 million, compared with $100 million expected by analysts.
Nvidia's chief financial officer, Colette Kress, said she anticipated "no contribution" to revenues from cryptocurrency in coming months.
That has raised concerns about the upcoming Hong Kong listings by three Chinese manufacturers of bitcoin mining equipment, Bitmain, Canaan Inc and Ebang International Holdings.
The companies all design high-end computer chips intended for mining cryptocurrencies, particularly bitcoin, and sell mining equipment containing the chips.
In addition, Bitmain mines cryptocurrencies on its own account. Companies like Nvidia also sell specialty chips used for mining.
"The marked decline in the price of bitcoin since the start of the year is likely to weigh on investors' interest in these companies," said Benjamin Quinlan, chief executive of financial services consultancy Quinlan & Associates.
But, he added, "the fall in the price of bitcoin from its peaks has not been matched by an equivalent fall in the numbers of people mining it."
Bitcoin is currently trading at $6,699, down 64 percent from its December 2017 peak of $18,690.
Daily mining revenue was 77 percent lower than in December, according to Blockchain.info, a data analytics and wallet provider.
"As the bitcoin price decreases, so does the profitability of mining itself, which decreases demand for mining chips and miners," said Wang Leilei, a consultant at financial services consultancy Kapronssia.
It is not just the price of bitcoin that is causing worries.
People close to the IPOs said regulatory scrutiny and a patchy performance by Hong Kong offerings this year were additional concerns.
Julian Hosp, president of TenX, a Singapore-based blockchain firm, has also warned that if coins switch mining algorithms, then the machines designed to mine them would become useless.
"I would be quite wary of investing in these miners," Hosp said, referring to the equipment makers.
"They are not long-term businesses and I think they've had their uptrend for now."
READYING IPO SALES PITCHES
Canaan and Ebang filed plans in May and June respectively for floats in Hong Kong, while Bitmain is expected to file its plans next month for an IPO in which it aims to raise at least $3 billion, sources close to the deal said.
Cryptocurrency trading is a global activity, but Chinese chipmakers have led the way in developing the most efficient means to mine the coins.
Bitmain had three quarters of the market for the specialist chips last year, followed by Canaan on 14 percent, according to estimates by analysts at Bernstein.
Ebang is aiming to raise up to $1 billion, according to sources, while Canaan is targeting at least $400 million - down from a figure of up to $2 billion touted earlier this year by people involved in the deal.
While EBang is expected to face Hong Kong's listing committee in September - a key approval needed for marketing the IPO - Canaan's offering is taking longer.
Two sources familiar with Canaan's situation said the company had not yet fixed a date for a committee appearance, as it worked on clearing up questions from HKEX officials regarding due diligence done on its prospectus.
A source close to Bitmain'S IPO said the company was aware about the potential for close regulatory scrutiny.
Bitmain, Canaan and Ebang didn't respond to requests for comment.
A Hong Kong exchange spokesman declined to comment.
The bitcoin price slump is leading miners to consider their IPO sales pitches carefully, with many involved expecting them to push the potential of other uses for their chips.
Both Canaan and Ebang highlight the potential for their technology to be applied to other cutting-edge sectors.
That includes broader development of blockchain applications - the ledger system that underpins bitcoin and which is being widely explored by the financial industry - as well as artificial intelligence tools and the forthcoming build-out of 5G telecoms networks both within and outside China.
"The mainland government encourages chip design and production, as that is a segment of China's market that has been suffering," said Kapronssia's Wang.
"Bitmain and Canaan chips could also be used for non-bitcoin applications, like blockchain in general, big data, cybersecurity or AI, which is an advantage for the companies." (Reporting by Julie Zhu, Alun John, Fiona Lau of IFR, Clare Jim, Marius Zaharia, Timothy Chan and Holly Chik in HONG KONG; Additional reporting by Thomas Wilson in TOKYO and Elias Glenn in BEIJING; Editing by Jennifer Hughes and Philip McClellan)
1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5.
Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6. Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2.
Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3. Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6.
Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8. Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2.
Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5. Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8.
David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2. Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5.
Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7. Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2.
Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4. Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7.
Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1. Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4.
Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6. Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1.
Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3. Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6.
Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8. Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3.
Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5. Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3.
Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5. Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8.
Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2. Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5.
Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7. Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2.
Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3. Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7.
Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8. Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have been invited to the coronation of his father King Charles later this year, but are refusing to confirm whether or not they will attend.
Prince Harry, who along with his wife Meghan, has launched a series of extraordinary attacks against the Royal Family in recent months, has confirmed he received an email from his father about the event.
The coronation, which is set to be seen by millions of people in the UK and potentially billions around the world, will take place on May 6 - the same day as the fourth birthday of Archie, Harry's son.
The news comes days after Charles kicked his son and daughter-in-law out of their British home, Frogmore Cottage, a move that is thought to complicate any future visits to the UK from the California-based couple.
It was revealed the same night Harry spoke candidly about his use of illegal drugs during an intimate chat with 'toxic trauma' expert Dr Gabor Mate in an online livestream.
King Charles has invited his youngest son Prince Harry to his coronation on May 6, this year.
Pictured: Harry speaks to his father as his wife Meghan Markle looks on during Trooping The Colour 2018
The Sussexes have not yet confirmed whether they will be attending the coronation. Pictured: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle visit the Andalusian Gardens in Rabat, the capital of Morocco, in 2019
There has been much debate in recent months about whether King Charles would invite his youngest son to his coronation.
By Alun John and Julie Zhu
HONG KONG, Aug 27 (Reuters) - Three of the world's largest bitcoin mining equipment makers plan to raise billions of dollars with initial public offerings in Hong Kong, even as other companies report plunging demand for the chips needed to make bitcoin and a halving in the price of the cryptocurrency.
Soaring cryptocurrency prices last year triggered a boom in demand for specialist mining chips and in developing "mines" - facilities with thousands of machines that create the coins by solving complex mathematical puzzles.
Yet the U.S.
chipmaker Nvidia Corp said this month that second-quarter sales to crypto miners totalled just $18 million, compared with $100 million expected by analysts.
Nvidia's chief financial officer, Colette Kress, said she anticipated "no contribution" to revenues from cryptocurrency in coming months.
That has raised concerns about the upcoming Hong Kong listings by three Chinese manufacturers of bitcoin mining equipment, Bitmain, Canaan Inc and Ebang International Holdings.
The companies all design high-end computer chips intended for mining cryptocurrencies, particularly bitcoin, and sell mining equipment containing the chips.
In addition, Bitmain mines cryptocurrencies on its own account. Companies like Nvidia also sell specialty chips used for mining.
"The marked decline in the price of bitcoin since the start of the year is likely to weigh on investors' interest in these companies," said Benjamin Quinlan, chief executive of financial services consultancy Quinlan & Associates.
But, he added, "the fall in the price of bitcoin from its peaks has not been matched by an equivalent fall in the numbers of people mining it."
Bitcoin is currently trading at $6,699, down 64 percent from its December 2017 peak of $18,690.
Daily mining revenue was 77 percent lower than in December, according to Blockchain.info, a data analytics and wallet provider.
"As the bitcoin price decreases, so does the profitability of mining itself, which decreases demand for mining chips and miners," said Wang Leilei, a consultant at financial services consultancy Kapronssia.
It is not just the price of bitcoin that is causing worries.
People close to the IPOs said regulatory scrutiny and a patchy performance by Hong Kong offerings this year were additional concerns.
Julian Hosp, president of TenX, a Singapore-based blockchain firm, has also warned that if coins switch mining algorithms, then the machines designed to mine them would become useless.
"I would be quite wary of investing in these miners," Hosp said, referring to the equipment makers.
"They are not long-term businesses and I think they've had their uptrend for now."
READYING IPO SALES PITCHES
Canaan and Ebang filed plans in May and June respectively for floats in Hong Kong, while Bitmain is expected to file its plans next month for an IPO in which it aims to raise at least $3 billion, sources close to the deal said.
Cryptocurrency trading is a global activity, but Chinese chipmakers have led the way in developing the most efficient means to mine the coins.
Bitmain had three quarters of the market for the specialist chips last year, followed by Canaan on 14 percent, according to estimates by analysts at Bernstein.
Ebang is aiming to raise up to $1 billion, according to sources, while Canaan is targeting at least $400 million - down from a figure of up to $2 billion touted earlier this year by people involved in the deal.
While EBang is expected to face Hong Kong's listing committee in September - a key approval needed for marketing the IPO - Canaan's offering is taking longer.
Two sources familiar with Canaan's situation said the company had not yet fixed a date for a committee appearance, as it worked on clearing up questions from HKEX officials regarding due diligence done on its prospectus.
A source close to Bitmain'S IPO said the company was aware about the potential for close regulatory scrutiny.
Bitmain, Canaan and Ebang didn't respond to requests for comment.
A Hong Kong exchange spokesman declined to comment.
The bitcoin price slump is leading miners to consider their IPO sales pitches carefully, with many involved expecting them to push the potential of other uses for their chips.
Both Canaan and Ebang highlight the potential for their technology to be applied to other cutting-edge sectors.
That includes broader development of blockchain applications - the ledger system that underpins bitcoin and which is being widely explored by the financial industry - as well as artificial intelligence tools and the forthcoming build-out of 5G telecoms networks both within and outside China.
"The mainland government encourages chip design and production, as that is a segment of China's market that has been suffering," said Kapronssia's Wang.
"Bitmain and Canaan chips could also be used for non-bitcoin applications, like blockchain in general, big data, cybersecurity or AI, which is an advantage for the companies." (Reporting by Julie Zhu, Alun John, Fiona Lau of IFR, Clare Jim, Marius Zaharia, Timothy Chan and Holly Chik in HONG KONG; Additional reporting by Thomas Wilson in TOKYO and Elias Glenn in BEIJING; Editing by Jennifer Hughes and Philip McClellan)