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Firefighters work to extinguish a fire at the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, which was hit during Russian missile and drone strikes. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko
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SpaceX leadership members and guests celebrate on a balcony at the Nasdaq MarketSite on the day of SpaceX's initial public offering. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
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- SpaceX's IPO went off with a bang. Now investors are turning their attention to a jam-packed calendar ahead for Elon Musk's rocket, internet and AI firm that may bring volatility.
- Tankers, insurance, disrupted routes — the Gulf’s oil system won’t reset overnight. The Reuters Morning Bid podcast looks at what traders are watching next.
- In its efforts to secure European approval of its “Full Self-Driving” system, Tesla presented self-published safety statistics to regulators that independent traffic-safety researchers have said amount to misleading marketing.
- Starbucks Korea will shut all stores in the country at 3 p.m. on June 22 for staff training on historical awareness and social sensitivity following public backlash over a marketing campaign.
- The Trump administration's push to boost critical minerals production by regulating prices is facing skeptical G7 allies and a divided mining industry, with negotiations for a Western trading bloc stumbling.
- Chinese technology company ByteDance is in talks with Shanghai-based Iluvatar CoreX to purchase AI chips for inference work and is also considering a similar deal with Baidu.
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Iran team arrive in US for World Cup opener as the two nations reach peace deal |
Police cars are parked in front of anti-Iranian regime protestors outside Carson Sports Park, in California. Reuters/Kirby Lee
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Iran's soccer team arrived in the United States for the first time at this World Cup, landing at Los Angeles International Airport on the same day that a peace deal between the two nations was announced.
The Iran squad arrived after a short flight from Tijuana, Mexico, where they left their base camp earlier to a rousing sendoff ahead of their opening game against New Zealand at Los Angeles Stadium on June 15.
Our global sports editors take us behind the scenes breaking down the politics, culture and the business of sports as the global game finds a foothold in the USA. Listen now.
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Jann Zhang, founder and principal of Paw³, a kindergarten for dogs in Shanghai, China. REUTERS/Nicoco Chan
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A new kind of preschool in China offers games, nibbles, treadmills and music for puppies, clawing out a fast-growing niche in a booming industry as youthful owners spend more on pets increasingly regarded as family.
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