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Wilmar Tumbles After $729 Million Deposit in Indonesia Palm Case
Wilmar Tumbles After $729 Million Deposit in Indonesia Palm Case

Mint

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Mint

Wilmar Tumbles After $729 Million Deposit in Indonesia Palm Case

(Bloomberg) -- Asian food titan Wilmar International Ltd.'s shares plunged to their lowest level in more than five years, after the company said several units in Indonesia were pressed to hand over $729 million as a security deposit ahead of a court ruling on a 2022 palm oil export case. In an exchange filing late Tuesday, Wilmar said its subsidiaries agreed to make the so-called security deposit to the attorney general's office ahead of the AGO's appeal. It added that authorities requested the funds of IDR 11.9 trillion — an amount equivalent to nearly two-thirds of the company's net income last year — to demonstrate the companies' 'good faith and innocence'. Shares in Wilmar, whose businesses span from China to Southeast Asia, fell by as much as 4% in Singapore. At around 10:30 a.m. local time, the stock was changing hands at S$2.92, down almost 3% and just off its 2020 low. The deposit is linked to a case in which the Indonesian AGO accused five Wilmar units of wrongdoings during a shortage of cooking oil in the Indonesian market years ago. An Indonesian court panel in March favored Wilmar and two other palm oil traders, but the verdict has been challenged by the AGO with some judges detained for alleged bribery. Wilmar said its units maintain that actions related to the export of cooking oil during the period in question were in compliance with prevailing regulations. The deposit would be returned to the companies if the Indonesian Supreme Court upholds the earlier court ruling, but otherwise could be forfeited in part or full, the company said. The 2022 case, which involved a trade ministry official, revolved around the approval of export permits that didn't meet requirements and a failure to meet obligations at the time for domestic palm oil distribution, a government prosecutor said at that time. --With assistance from Eko Listiyorini. More stories like this are available on

Wilmar Tumbles After $729 Million Deposit in Indonesia Palm Case
Wilmar Tumbles After $729 Million Deposit in Indonesia Palm Case

Bloomberg

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Wilmar Tumbles After $729 Million Deposit in Indonesia Palm Case

Asian food titan Wilmar International Ltd. 's shares plunged to their lowest level in more than five years, after the company said several units in Indonesia were pressed to hand over $729 million as a security deposit ahead of a court ruling on a 2022 palm oil export case. In an exchange filing late Tuesday, Wilmar said its subsidiaries agreed to make the so-called security deposit to the attorney general's office ahead of the AGO's appeal. It added that authorities requested the funds of IDR 11.9 trillion — an amount equivalent to nearly two-thirds of the company's net income last year — to demonstrate the companies' 'good faith and innocence'.

TVS Motor enters Indonesian electric two-wheeler market with iQube
TVS Motor enters Indonesian electric two-wheeler market with iQube

The Hindu

time4 days ago

  • Automotive
  • The Hindu

TVS Motor enters Indonesian electric two-wheeler market with iQube

TVS Motor Company on Tuesday (June 17, 2025) announced its foray into the Indonesian electric two-wheeler market with its all-electric scooter iQube. The company's arm PT TVS Motor has opened bookings for iQube in Indonesia at an introductory price of Indonesian Rupiah (IDR) 29.9 million (around ₹1.6 lakh), TVS Motor Company said in a statement. 'Electric vehicle (EV) adoption in the two-wheeler segment of Indonesia has seen a strong growth of 101% CAGR (compound annual growth rate) in the last three years. We are pleased to partner with the government efforts on promoting EVs with a reliable, high-quality product and attractive pricing in the form of TVS iQube,' TVS Motor Company, Senior Vice-President ASEAN, James Chan said. The company said its electric scooter will be assembled at the PT TVS Motor Company manufacturing facility at East Karawang. 'We are constantly striving to develop EV capability across our sales and after-sales network to deliver a superior customer experience,' Mr. Chan added. TVS Motor Company Vice-President EV International Business, Madhu Prakash Singh, said that globally, iQube has crossed a milestone of 6 lakh customers. 'We are confident that the superior and comfortable riding experience of the TVS iQube will delight our customers in Indonesia,' he added. iQube offers a real-world range of 115 km on a single charge. It has a top speed of 78 kmph and can accelerate from 0-40 kmph in 4.2 seconds, the company said.

Big Update On Student Loan Repayment Plan Processing And PSLF Shows Uneven Progress
Big Update On Student Loan Repayment Plan Processing And PSLF Shows Uneven Progress

Forbes

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Forbes

Big Update On Student Loan Repayment Plan Processing And PSLF Shows Uneven Progress

UNITED STATES - JUNE 3: Secretary of Education Linda McMahon arrives to testify at the Senate ... More Appropriations Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies Subcommittee hearing on Tuesday, June 3, 2025. The Department of Education filed a status update on application processing for IDR plans and PSLF Buyback this week. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images) The Department of Education filed a new update on Tuesday detailing its progress on working through a massive backlog of student loan repayment applications for income-driven repayment plans, as well as requests for PSLF Buyback. The filing shows the department has made a modest dent in IDR applications, although questions and concerns (and tens of thousands of unprocessed applications) remain. Meanwhile, the department appears to have not made much progress reducing the backlog of pending PSLF Buyback applications – in fact, the backlog has grown. The latest filing on behalf of Secretary of Education Linda McMahon is required under an interim agreement between the department and the American Federation of Teachers, which sued the Trump administration in March over the department's suspension of all IDR application processing the prior month. The suspension caused chaos throughout the federal student loan repayment system, preventing borrowers from enrolling in any income-driven plan and blocking some borrowers from being able to pursue Public Service Loan Forgiveness, a popular student loan forgiveness program for nonprofit and government workers. The department had argued that the move was necessary after a federal appeals court issued a sweeping new order blocking the SAVE plan, one of several income-driven repayment options, in a separate legal challenge over the future of that program. After the department resumed IDR application processing in April for the ICR, IBR, and PAYE plans, administration officials and the AFT agreed to temporarily pause the litigation to assess processing progress through monthly status reports. Here's where things stand with IDR and PSLF Buyback processing for student loan borrowers after the most recent status report filing. The Department of Education's first status report was filed in May, and confirmed what many student loan borrowers had suspected – that the administration had made minimal progress in processing hundreds of thousands of pending IDR applications. Through April 30, the department had processed only 79,349 applications, with nearly two million remaining outstanding. But observers noted that processing had only recently resumed at that point, and hadn't fully ramped up yet. In its latest status report filed on Tuesday, the department showed modest progress. Through May 30, the department has processed 285,694 IDR applications, while 1,582,641 applications remain outstanding. The processing rate for IDR requests appears to have accelerated somewhat since April – which makes sense, given that the department indicated in earlier court filings that the IDR application processing system would not be fully operational again until May 10. But clearly, the department has a long way to go. In addition, questions remain about the details underlying these numbers. Some federal student loan borrowers have been reporting issues with their online IDR applications (for instance, some borrowers who qualify for the PAYE plan have been unable to select that plan in the online application). It is unclear to what extent these issues are reflected in the department's numbers. One major student loan servicer added additional complications to the landscape when it posted an announcement earlier this month suggesting that many borrowers may need to reapply for IDR if they submitted an application before April 27. The processing figures posted in the Department of Education's latest filing only reflect the number of IDR applications 'approved or denied.' The department did not provide a more detailed breakdown. Borrowers whose IDR applications are denied by their loan servicer would have to reapply, adding to the application queue yet again. While IDR application processing appears to be slowly ramping up, the Department of Education posted less rosy figures for the PSLF Buyback program. PSLF Buyback is a relatively new option that allows borrowers pursuing Public Service Loan Forgiveness to submit a formal request to make a lump sum payment covering certain periods of forbearance so that they can count toward student loan forgiveness under the program. PSLF provides borrowers with loan forgiveness on qualifying Direct federal student loans after the equivalent of 10 years of qualifying payments; but only repayment periods under eligible repayment plans can count – most periods of deferment and forbearance do not. Many borrowers stuck in the SAVE plan forbearance, which doesn't count toward student loan forgiveness, who are in their final year of PSLF have submitted PSLF Buyback requests. But few have received a response. On Tuesday, the Department of Education's latest status report continues to show concerningly slow progress in working through the PSLF Buyback application backlog. In its prior status report covering the month of April, the department had indicated that only 1,472 PSLF Buyback applications had been processed, with more than 49,000 applications in a backlog. In the latest report, the department said that 3,312 PSLF Buyback applications were processed during the month of May. That's a modest jump from the prior month. But the department also revealed that the PSLF Buyback application backlog has actually grown to 58,761. The department's slow processing rate of PSLF Buyback applications appears to not be keeping pace with the ongoing influx of requests submitted by borrowers. The department has provided no explanation for the slow progress in getting through PSLF Buyback applications, although it could be related to substantial staff reductions at the Department of Education ordered by the Trump administration earlier this year. That 'reduction in force' is the subject of a major legal challenge, which has now reached the U.S. Supreme Court. The Department of Education's latest update comes as uncertainty continues to grip the federal student loan repayment system. Earlier this week, Senate Republicans unveiled their higher education component of the proposed 'one big, beautiful' reconciliation bill to enact President Donald Trump's legislative agenda. It largely retains most elements of the bill that the House successfully approved last month, and would repeal most existing IDR plans for current borrowers including ICR, PAYE, and SAVE. Student loan borrower advocates have warned that this could dramatically increase the monthly payments for millions of Americans. The bill would create a new IDR plan called the Repayment Assistance Plan, but the Senate version appears to strip out certain protections for married borrowers that were in the House version of the bill, potentially increasing their payments, as well. Meanwhile, the department is moving forward with negotiated rulemaking to enact what could be significant regulatory changes to the PSLF program. President Trump issued an executive order in March to bar student loan forgiveness under PSLF for organizations that the administration deems are engaged in 'illegal' or improper behavior, and the order directed the department to draft regulations to implement those restrictions. Critics have argued that this is an attempt to 'weaponize' PSLF against nonprofit organizations, state governments, and cities that oppose the Trump administration's priorities, and would hurt student loan borrowers while chilling public service work. Some observers expect there to be legal challenges if the proposals are implemented.

TVS Motor rides into Indonesian EV market with locally assembled iQube
TVS Motor rides into Indonesian EV market with locally assembled iQube

Time of India

time4 days ago

  • Automotive
  • Time of India

TVS Motor rides into Indonesian EV market with locally assembled iQube

TVS Motor Company has made its entry into Indonesia's electric two-wheeler market with the launch of its flagship e-scooter, the iQube, marking a strategic move to expand its presence across Southeast Asia. The iQube will be assembled locally at TVS's East Karawang facility, allowing the company to tap into government incentives aimed at promoting domestic EV production. Bookings have opened at an introductory price of IDR 29.9 million (roughly ₹1.6 lakh), positioning the e-scooter as a competitive player in Indonesia's urban mobility segment. 'Indonesia has seen a compounded annual growth of over 100 per cent in its two-wheeler EV market over the last three years,' said James Chan, Senior Vice-President, ASEAN, TVS Motor Company. 'There's strong policy support, and consumer interest is picking up. We believe the iQube, with its proven track record and competitive pricing, fits well into this evolving landscape.' To support its rollout, TVS is building out its local sales and service infrastructure. The goal, the company says, is to deliver a seamless ownership experience from test ride to after-sales support. Globally, the iQube has already clocked over 600,000 users, a milestone that TVS believes underlines its reliability and relevance in varied market conditions. 'This launch is not just about entering a new market, it's about bringing a globally trusted product to a new audience,' said Madhu Prakash Singh, Vice President, EV International Business. The iQube is targeted at city commuters, offering a real-world range of 115 km on a single charge, a top speed of 78 kmph, and quick acceleration from 0–40 kmph in just over four seconds. As the Indonesian government continues to push for higher EV adoption and local manufacturing, TVS's early bet on localisation could give it a critical edge over import-reliant competitors, particularly as supply chain costs fluctuate and regional regulations tighten. With the iQube, TVS is betting on more than just a single product. It's placing a long-term wager on Indonesia as a key hub in its broader ASEAN growth plan.

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