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Sean “Diddy” Combs Trial: Live Updates Week 6

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Sean “Diddy” Combs’ Ex Says She Fainted After Reading Cassie Ventura’s Lawsuit

Jane said during her testimony that parts of Ventura’s November 2023 lawsuit—which was ultimately settled—mirrored her own experience with Combs.

“I almost fainted, in fact, I think I did,” she told jurors as she cried. “There was three specific  pages that was just a harrowing reference to what I was experiencing.” 

Jane, who took part in “hotel nights, “said that it felt like she was reading “her own story.” It led to her confronting Combs via text messages.

“I feel like I am reading my own sexual trauma,” she wrote after Ventura’s lawsuit, in screenshots shown in evidence. “I am sick. It’s exactly word for word, drug-filled days and nights. You knew this was coming. You gaslit me, you made me go crazy.”

“I am disgusted, I felt forced to perform back to back,” the messages continued. “You made me feel crazy about the sex trauma I was feeling. I feel very violated. This was sexual exploitation.”

Combs subsequently called Jane and recorded the conversation without her knowledge that was entered into evidence, in which he told her that they “did these things together” and that “this is when” he needed her “to be there.”

Jane, who didn’t know she was being recorded, told Combs that she was “sick” to her stomach after reading Ventura’s documents.

Twenty-nine arrests over recent violence

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Reuters Policeman in riot gear extinguishing a fire with a police landrover behind him. Reuters

There were riots across Northern Ireland, including Ballymena

Twenty-nine people have now been arrested over violence that erupted in Northern Ireland over the last week and police have warned that there will be further arrests.

In total, 64 police officers have been injured in disturbances which started last Monday after a peaceful protest over an alleged sexual assault in Ballymena, County Antrim, and later spread to other areas.

In the latest round of arrests, five people have been detained in connection with disorder in Ballymena and Larne.

A 40-year-old man, a 33-year-old woman and a 13-year-old girl have been charged in connection with the rioting in Ballymena.

In total 21 people have been charged.

PA Media A white police land rover with yellow and blue signage saying POLICE, parked in the middle of the road where a piece of material has been set a light across the road. PA Media

Disorder started in Ballymena, County Antrim on 9 June

Detectives investigating online posts relating to the disorder have charged a 32-year-old man with sending menacing messages through a public electronic communications network and encouraging or assisting offences.

Meanwhile, a 25-year-old man has also been arrested in relation to an arson attack at Larne Leisure Centre last week.

The centre had been providing emergency shelter for families following the clashes earlier this week, the council said.

A 56-year-old woman has also appeared in court charged with obstructing a police officer during last week’s riots.

Violence first broke out in Ballymena after two teenage boys appeared before Coleraine Magistrates’ Court accused of sexually assaulting a teenage girl.

They spoke through an interpreter in Romanian to confirm their names and ages.

Their solicitor said they would be denying the charges.

A peaceful protest was held on 9 June, but after it dispersed rioting broke out.

PA Media A water cannon truck, which is white and a fire is happening behind the truck. PA Media

Water cannons were brought to Portadown to deal with disturbances

‘Outrageous’ violence

North West Migrants’ Forum integration and welfare officer Gaelle Gormley said the violence was “absolutely horrific”.

“Our service users are very concerned, we are very concerned,” she said.

“We are really, really worried that it will also come to the centre of Derry. It’s outrageous.”

There was some violence in the city on Friday, but not on the same scale as Ballymena.

A woman with blonde hair, earrings and a pink t-shirt. She wears glasses.

Gaelle Gormley, of the North West Migrants’ Forum, said the violence was “horrific”

Ms Gormley said migrants were “very resilient” but at the moment they were avoiding going out late at night and avoiding certain streets.

She called for people to show their support.

“We want more people who are welcoming and aware of the fact that we are all citizens of the world and that everybody can be a migrant anywhere,” she said.

“Since the beginning of humanity people have been going to different countries and it’s thanks to that that we have all the progress we have.”

Sameh Hassan, with short hair and black glasses in a blue striped shirt. Behind him is a crowded room in the Guildhall in Londonderry.

Sameh Hassan, chairman of North West Islamic Association, said immigrants feltunsafe

Sameh Hassan, chairman of North West Islamic Association, said many immigrants were scared to go out, while others had left their homes to go to safer places.

“It’s unfair for anyone to feel unsafe in their house, especially people who have kids and families,” he said.

“Feeling unsafe about your family is the worst thing you could experience.”

Mr Hassan said he had lived in Northern Ireland for 17 years and had found people “very welcoming”.

However he said there were some issues, such as housing and jobs, that were causing “anti-migrant sentiment” and needed “to be addressed in the right way”.

He added that the spread of misinformation on social media was “very misleading”.

What happened on Sunday night?

Police said there had been “sporadic disturbances” in different locations on Sunday night but described it as a “reduced level of disorder”.

Overnight graffiti in Bangor, County Down and on an unoccupied house in Chadwick Street in south Belfast are being treated as race-motivated hate crimes, the police said.

In Brompton Park in Ardoyne, in Belfast, about 30 young people set a bin on fire but no damage was caused to shops and police said “no serious disorder ensued”.

Ass Ch Cons Melanie Jones said “Our heightened presence in our local communities and continued community engagement to de-escalate violence continued last night, thankfully, similar to Saturday, the situation was much calmer.

“Thankfully, none of our officers policing this disorder reported being injured on duty last night (Sunday).”

Police have already circulated images of individuals they want to identify and interview.

Who will pay for climate change? You will, until we break the fossil-fuel addiction.

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In the crisis-filled environment of the Trump presidency, it is difficult to decide which of the many outrages du jour most deserves our attention. However, we cannot afford to ignore the current battle over who will pay the rapidly rising costs of climate-intensified weather disasters.

A longstanding legal principle is that polluters should pay to prevent, reduce, or repair the damages they cause. The fossil energy industry disagrees. It is fighting in the courts, lobbying Congress, and enlisting President Trump in its fight to avoid responsibility.

But whether it wins or loses, the astronomical and rising costs of weather disasters will come out of every American’s pocket. That will be inevitable if the U.S. remains addicted to fossil fuels.

To understand what’s happening — and what should happen — we can go back to the tobacco wars of the last century. In the mid-1950s, individuals began suing tobacco companies for health damages from smoking. Forty years later, state public health programs had become so expensive that states sued tobacco companies to recoup the costs.

By the 1960s, tobacco companies knew that nicotine was addictive. They knew as early as the 1940s that smoking was linked with cancer, but they denied and tried to cover up these effects. In 1998, the four largest tobacco companies finally agreed to a historic settlement with states. In addition to admitting the cancer connection, the companies agreed to pay states billions of dollars annually in perpetuity to support public health programs.

The link between fossil fuel pollution and climate change emerged similarly. As early as the 1950s, major oil companies learned that the combustion of their product was causing the Earth to warm, the climate to change, and the weather to become more violent. Industry leaders decided to follow the tobacco playbook.

They conducted “a campaign of deception, disinformation, and doublespeak” with “dark money, phony front groups, false economics, and relentless exertion of political influence,” according to Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), who participated in a congressional investigation of the oil industry’s practices last year.

The deception campaign is still underway. In 2024 alone, the industry spent $153 million and deployed nearly 730 lobbyists to influence policymakers. Oil companies and their allies spent more than $135 million on elections. Counting the cost of advertising to promote fossil fuels, oil and gas trade associations spent $1.3 billion between 2008 and 2018, according to a study in 2022.

Since 2017, about three dozen state and local governments have sued oil and gas companies to recover the costs of weather disasters and future investments in climate resilience. Although the bases of the lawsuits vary, they reflect the polluter pays principle and are supported by attribution science, where scientists say they can determine, to a degree admissible in court, how much a specific oil company has contributed to a weather disaster.

Unlike Big Tobacco, Big Oil does not accept responsibility. It wants Congress to give it immunity from lawsuits. The industry likes the 2005 precedent in which Congress gave immunity to gunmakers from liability for deaths and injuries resulting from unlawful misuse of firearms. Big Oil’s attorneys argue that energy consumers, not energy companies, are the polluters.

On March 9, oil executives met with Trump to ask for help quashing the lawsuits. Trump responded on April 8 with an executive order that described the state litigation as “extortion,” “ideologically motivated,” and beyond the states’ legal authorities. He ordered the U.S. Attorney General to stop states from enforcing climate liability laws and programs like carbon trading.

The Justice Department has complied by filing complaints against New York and Vermont laws that hold oil companies responsible for climate damages. It has also filed preemptive lawsuits to prevent Hawaii and Michigan from passing similar laws.

The state and local lawsuits have had mixed results so far. However, with climate damages growing, the noose may be tightening around Big Oil. Recent litigation addresses the industry’s culpability differently. A Seattle woman has filed the first wrongful death lawsuit against oil majors. Her daughter was one of 1,400 people who died from heat exposure during the Pacific Northwest’s record heat wave in 2021. In Puerto Rico, 37 municipalities filed a RICO suit, which is more commonly used against organized crime. They alleged the industry’s misinformation about climate change was partly responsible for nearly 3,000 deaths from Hurricane Maria.

Trump is helping the oil industry in myriad other ways as well. The Environmental Protection Agency says it will stop regulating greenhouse emissions from power plants. Trump declared an energy emergency to relax environmental standards for oil production. He has discontinued federal climate research and even crippled the government’s role in weather forecasting. His administration has canceled $14 billion in clean energy projects. As approved by the House, Trump’s “big beautiful” reconciliation bill would “sunset, repeal, or restrict nearly every major clean energy tax credit” Congress passed three years ago.

Turning reality on its head, Trump claims that curbing fossil fuel pollution threatens “American energy dominance and our economic and national security.” Yet history shows repeatedly that oil addiction is the greatest threat to economic stability and national security.

Now, the threat is Trump’s sabotage of America’s shift to clean energy and the opportunity to dominate one of the world’s greatest emerging markets.

Despite all the distractions, middle Americans should pay close attention to this buck-passing on the rising costs of weather disasters. So long as the nation’s fossil-fuel addiction persists, every outcome leads to their pocketbooks. If oil and gas companies are found liable, they will pass the costs to consumers. If governments end up with the bill, taxpayers will pay. If insurance companies pay, everyone’s premiums will rise.

Recent studies estimate that climate change costs the world $16 million per hour, will cost the global economy $38 trillion annually within 25 years, and could cost a “typical” American child born last year as much as $1 million during their lifetime.

Because of past and current energy pollution, more extreme weather and costs are inevitable. The only way to stop the economic bleeding is to shift to 100 percent clean energy as quickly as possible.

William S. Becker is a former U.S. Department of Energy central regional director who administered energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies programs. He is executive director of the Presidential Climate Action Project, a nonpartisan initiative that is not affiliated with the White House.

Ninety One to complete Sanlam Investments UK transfer

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Ninety One is set to finalise the transfer of Sanlam Investments UK’s active asset management business to Ninety One UK today (16 June).

The move is part of a broader agreement between Ninety One and Sanlam, positioning Ninety One UK as the primary active asset manager for a portion of Sanlam Investments UK’s assets under management.

Initially announced in November 2024, the agreement designates Ninety One as the primary active investment manager for Sanlam’s single-managed local and global products.

The alliance also formalises a 15-year relationship between the two firms through various operative agreements concluded in March 2025.

As part of the arrangement, Sanlam will receive 125.7 million shares in Ninety One, translating to a 12.3% equity stake.

Excluding ARC Financial Services Investments, Sanlam’s effective shareholding in Ninety One will be approximately 8.9%.

Additionally, Sanlam will become an anchor investor in Ninety One’s international private and specialist credit strategies.

Ninety One, originally from South Africa with a global footprint, hopes to benefit from preferred access to Sanlam’s distribution network.

The alliance is expected to expand Ninety One’s market reach and accelerate its international private credit offerings.

Announcing the deal in November, Ninety One founder and CEO Hendrik du Toit said: “We are looking forward to a long and fruitful relationship with Sanlam, a business with a powerful brand and significant scale in South Africa.

“Our experience and expertise are complementary. This agreement will give us the opportunity, as leaders in our respective markets, to create additional value for our stakeholders.”

Last week, India’s Shriram Group launched its wealth management venture by collaborating with Sanlam Group, focusing on serving India’s affluent and high-net-worth individuals.

The equally shared joint venture, branded Shriram Wealth, targets Rs500bn ($5.84bn) in assets under advice and plans to onboard 500 wealth management experts within five years.

“Ninety One to complete Sanlam Investments UK transfer ” was originally created and published by Private Banker International, a GlobalData owned brand.

 


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Nintendo announces a Donkey Kong Bananza Direct

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Nintendo will offer an early look at Donkey Kong Bananza during a livestream on Wednesday, June 18th at 9AM ET / 6AM PT. The company announced the upcoming Direct event through its Nintendo Today app and on X, saying the livestream will feature 15 minutes of information about the Switch 2 game.

Donkey Kong Bananza was announced on April 2nd and launches for the Switch 2 on July 17th. It’s an action-adventure game that has a newly designed Donkey Kong smashing his way through levels to retrieve stolen banana-shaped diamonds from an evil group known as VoidCo. The game’s destructible environment allows Donkey Kong to break through walls, dig tunnels, and even dig underground to find more areas to explore.

If this Direct is anything like the one for Mario Kart World, Nintendo will likely go beyond the gameplay we’ve already seen, giving us a more in-depth look at Donkey Kong Bananza’s key features and mechanics. Maybe we’ll learn more about the game’s new character, Odd Rock, too.

Nintendo will air the Direct on YouTube. Donkey Kong Bananza will cost $69.99 when it launches next month, and it’s available for preorder now.

How a bucket-list MCWS trip turned into reality for Arkansas’ Bash Braddahs

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OMAHA, Neb. — In summer 2019, Jamie Aloy pulled together enough money to fly himself and his sons to Omaha for the Men’s College World Series. It was a bucket-list trip for Aloy, a former college ballplayer raising a family in Wailuku, Hawai’i.

They stayed in a motel across the river in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and sat in the cheap seats. They went to every game. His boys, Wehiwa, 15, and Kuhio, 13, loved baseball, and Jamie wanted them to “feel and smell” the atmosphere so that it wouldn’t seem so far-fetched to someday play there.

The boys didn’t say much, aside from a few “wows.”

“It’s a culture thing,” Jamie said of their quiet demeanors.

Six years later, on Thursday, Jamie Aloy was at the downtown Omaha Marriott with his grown-up sons. Wehiwa, now 21, and Kuhio, now 19, are star hitters for the No. 3 overall Arkansas Razorbacks, and they were about to play in the Men’s College World Series. Jamie gave them a hug.

“Can you believe we’re here again?” he asked them.

The brothers looked around and didn’t say anything.

“I think they cannot believe it either,” Jamie said. “I mean, what do you say?”

For five months, the Aloys have made plenty of noise in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Wehiwa has hit 20 home runs and earned SEC Player of the Year, and is a finalist for the Golden Spikes Award. Kuhio, who’s 17 months younger, has hit 13 homers and driven in a team-high 70 runs.

Together, they’re known as the “Bash Braddahs.”

The name is in deference to Mark McGwire and Jose Canseco, the slugging duo who led the Oakland A’s to a 1989 World Series title. The Aloys weren’t alive then, of course, but learned about them as kids when they searched, “hardest-hit balls ever in MLB.” They marveled over old videos of the duo, who would bash each other’s forearms in celebration of homers. But the brothers do not exactly carry the towering physical traits of Canseco and McGwire. Wehiwa is 6-foot-2 and 200 pounds; Kuhio is 6-1 and 205.

Wehiwa said they get their strength from lifting a lot of weights and eating a lot of their parents’ cooking. Their parents attribute it to island life — living five minutes from the beach and five minutes from the river, where they’d run, swim, surf and fish.

“We’re just raised differently,” Kuhio said.

Before Jamie Aloy leaves for a trip to Fayetteville, he cooks all of their Hawai’ian favorites — Kalua Pig, Chicken Long Rice and Lomi-Lomi Salmon — and packs them in a cooler.

The Bash Braddahs’ story began in Wailuku, a town of about 16,000 located on Maui Island, with Wehiwa smacking a plastic ball off a tee as a toddler. Soon, the brothers would be playing whiffle ball together, the competitions oftentimes getting chippy. (They still play whiffle ball when they come back home).

They competed in pretty much every sport, but it was clear, early on, that baseball was their love. Jamie Aloy said there were two baseball leagues on the island, and the only real way a player could gauge his talent was to go to the mainland. There were glimpses, like when Wehiwa was 8 and turning double plays and Napua, the Bash Braddahs mom, asked her husband, “Is that normal?”

The boys’ talents became more obvious on all-star teams that competed on the West Coast.

Wehiwa grew six inches in 2020 during the pandemic. Napua, an obstetrics nurse, was the only one who wasn’t on lockdown. The family set up a mini gym in the garage, and all he did was eat, sleep and train every day.

Still, coming out of high school, Wehiwa was an unknown recruit — if he could even be called a recruit. Sacramento State took a chance on him, and Wehiwa slashed .376/427/.622 with 14 home runs and earned freshman All-American honors. That season earned him a spot on a coveted SEC roster at Arkansas, and the shortstop was second-team All-SEC in 2024.

A time zone away in Utah, his little brother was getting noticed, too. Kuhio was recruited as a pitcher at BYU but wound up leading the team with 38 RBIs. He entered the transfer portal after the season, and Arkansas was the first team to call.

Wehiwa said the brothers fought when they were children, but they have matured and are past that. The players got to pick their own roommates, and the Aloy brothers decided to live together, both in Fayetteville and on the road. Their parents were somewhat surprised by that decision.

“I wasn’t so much fearful,” Napua said, “but I was like, ‘Well, how the hell is that gonna work in college when they’re living together?’ Because we lived so remote, we always say, ‘If mom and dad aren’t around, you guys just have each other, so make sure you take care of each other.'”

Because they’re brothers, they can say things to each other that other teammates maybe wouldn’t. They can analyze each others’ games and provide feedback. Wehiwa is a very serious person, Jamie said, while Kuhio is more fun-loving.

They spend most of their time together, be it in practice, on the road or fishing with their teammates. The Razorbacks often talk about how close-knit this group is, and some of that was forged at local ponds where the teammates fish morning and night, usually catching and releasing the fish.

It’s a way to clear their heads, Arkansas infielder Nolan Souza said. They’re private about some of their favorite spots.

But the big takeaway for the Aloy family is this: After all of that time together, and all those years competing against each other, they choose to be together, even in their free time.

The Razorbacks face Murray State on Monday in a MCWS elimination game (2 p.m. ET on ESPN), and the Aloy family doesn’t like to talk about the end. Wehiwa is expected to be a first-round pick in next month’s MLB draft, another milestone that is beyond any of their wildest dreams. The Bash Braddahs’ story, really, started on a minor league field, years before they were born.

Jamie Aloy was a 48th-round pick by the San Francisco Giants in the 1999 draft. He toiled away in their farm system for a couple of years, and, when the dream of making it to the big leagues eventually seemed too far-fetched, he retired from baseball. He went home to Hawai’i and became a schoolteacher, and he never pressured his sons to play his sport or live out his dreams.

He gets choked up when he thinks about how far those teenagers have gone since that trip to Omaha six years ago.

“Somebody told us, or told me, that you could probably make a movie out of this,” he said, “no matter how it turns out.”

Napua, still tired from the emotionally draining loss to LSU on Saturday night, laughed.

She said it would be a short movie.

“No, for real,” he said. “You look at this story, it’s like a Cinderella story for them personally. For all of us, actually.”

Savannah Chrisley Shares Video of Todd Chrisley’s Release

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Savannah Chrisley Speaks Out

Savannah, who has custody of younger siblings Grayson and Chloe amid her parents’ sentences, has explained how their convictions and their lack of contact with one another has weighed on her.

“The last time they spoke was the morning they went into federal prison,” she shared with E! News March 2024, alleging that there’s “a lot of retaliation going on against my father for how outspoken we’ve been about conditions.”

In fact, she alleged that prison officials had been “blocking a lot of his emails correspondence to my mom.”

And while not wanting to make the experience about herself, she admitted that it was overwhelming at times. 

“What’s tough for me is how Mom and Dad have that feeling that life is just continuing to move on without them,” Savannah explained on her podcast Unlocked in April 2024. “In a way, I have that feeling with people in my life because it’s like they just continue on living their lives.”

“I’m still sitting here struggling to catch my breath,” she continued. “Whether it’s financially with the kids, trying to parent, me in a relationship.”

BBC at the site of Iranian attack in Israel

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The intense fighting between Israel and Iran continues, four days after Israel launched strikes on Iran.

Iran hit Israel with a wave of missiles overnight, with some penetrating the Iron Dome defence system – the number killed in Israel since Friday has risen to 24.

The BBC’s Hugo Bachega is in Petah Tikva, where an Iranian missile struck a residential building and killed at least three people.

Iran’s health ministry reports that at least 224 people have been killed in Israeli attacks since Friday. BBC journalists are unable to report from inside Iran due to government restrictions.

Israel claims 'aerial superiority' over Iran capital

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Israel is claiming “aerial superiority” over Iran’s capital of Tehran on the fourth day of fighting, which saw new waves of strikes between the Middle East rivals.

At least five people were killed in Iranian missile attacks Monday in Israel, according to The Associated Press, as Israel declared it controls the skies over Tehran and said its forces face no major threats while flying over the city.

The Israeli military also said its aircraft control an area above western Iran following days of strikes on Iranian air defenses and missile systems.

“Now we can say that we have achieved full air supremacy in the Tehran airspace,” Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin, an Israeli military spokesperson, said.

Late last Thursday, Israel launched a major military operation against Iran, upending a push from President Trump for a nuclear deal with Tehran.

The U.S. attempted to quickly distance itself from the initial strikes, which killed some of Iran’s top military leaders. However, Trump said he was aware of Israel’s plans before the attacks.

Trump over the weekend said “it’s possible” the United States becomes involved in the conflict between Iran and Israel.

“We’re not involved in it. It’s possible we could get involved. But we are not at this moment involved,” Trump said during an interview with ABC News.

ABC News also reported that Trump expressed interest in the possibility of mediation in the Iran-Israel conflict by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“I would be open to it. [Putin] is ready. He called me about it. We had a long talk about it. We talked about this more than his situation. This is something I believe is going to get resolved,” Trump said, according to the network.

How To Earn $500 A Month From Jabil Stock Ahead Of Q3 Earnings

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Jabil Inc. (NYSE:JBL) will release earnings results for the third quarter, before the opening bell on Tuesday, June 17.

Analysts expect the Saint Petersburg, Florida-based company to report quarterly earnings at $2.30 per share, up from $1.89 per share in the year-ago period. According to data from Benzinga Pro, Jabil projects quarterly revenue of $7.03 billion, compared to $6.76 billion a year earlier.

On May 21, Jabil disclosed that it has signed a memorandum of understanding with AVL Software and Functions GmbH, the e-drive and software center of AVL List GmbH.

Some investors may be eyeing potential gains from the Jabil’s dividends. Currently, the company offers an annual dividend yield of 0.18%, which is a quarterly dividend amount of 8 cents per share (32 cents a year).

So, how can investors exploit its dividend yield to pocket a regular $500 monthly?

To earn $500 per month or $6,000 annually from dividends alone, you would need an investment of approximately $3,297,000 or around 18,750 shares. For a more modest $100 per month or $1,200 per year, you would need $659,400 or around 3,750 shares.

To calculate: Divide the desired annual income ($6,000 or $1,200) by the dividend ($0.32 in this case). So, $6,000 / $0.32 = 18,750 ($500 per month), and $1,200 / $0.32 = 3,750 shares ($100 per month).

View more earnings on JBL

Note that dividend yield can change on a rolling basis, as the dividend payment and the stock price both fluctuate over time.

How that works: The dividend yield is computed by dividing the annual dividend payment by the stock’s current price.

For example, if a stock pays an annual dividend of $2 and is currently priced at $50, the dividend yield would be 4% ($2/$50). However, if the stock price increases to $60, the dividend yield drops to 3.33% ($2/$60). Conversely, if the stock price falls to $40, the dividend yield rises to 5% ($2/$40).

Similarly, changes in the dividend payment can impact the yield. If a company increases its dividend, the yield will also increase, provided the stock price stays the same. Conversely, if the dividend payment decreases, so will the yield.

JBL Price Action: Shares of Jabil fell 1.8% to close at $175.84 on Friday.

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