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Erie Rise Assets Assigned to an Independent Accountant

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Erie Rise Assets Assigned to an Independent Accountant

At the request of the Erie school district, Erie County Judge Marshall Piccinini appoints a superintendent to settle the finances of Erie Rise, which closed to students a year ago and has nearly $2 million in the bank.

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How Erie Rise Charter School Let a Mother Down

On January 25, 2023, Erie resident Ruth Lanzo explains why she withdrew her children from Erie Rise charter school after being one of their biggest fans.

Ed Palattella, Erie Times-News

  • Erie Rise Leadership Academy Charter School Closed to Students June 30, 2023
  • The Erie School District first sued Erie Rise in December over the pace of its financial dissolution
  • Increasingly upset about Erie Rise’s missed deadlines, Erie County Judge Marshall Piccinini orders trustee to manage Erie Rise, preserve public assets that will revert to Erie School District

A year after it closed to students, the publicly funded Erie Rise Leadership Academy Charter School lost control of its operations during its prolonged financial dissolution.

An Erie County judge has appointed an independent trustee to wind down Erie Rise’s business and preserve its assets, which will revert to the Erie school district. Erie Rise has about $1.9 million in the bank right now, according to evidence presented in court.

Judge Marshall Piccinini, clearly exasperated by the pace of Erie Rise’s financial dissolution and Erie Rise’s handling of the process, appointed the receiver in an order he issued at a hearing Friday morning.

“This is not just a matter of time,” Piccinini said on the bench. “It’s a question of trust.”

The order means that the receiver, William G. Krieger of Pittsburgh-based financial advisory firm Gleasonwill take over Erie Rise operations from its staff and board of directors.

Krieger, a certified public accountant and managing director and vice president of Gleason, will report to Piccinini and will be paid with funds from Erie Rise. The rate for a managing director and vice president at Gleason is $420 per hour, according to a rate schedule Piccinini attached to his written bankruptcy order filed after Friday’s hearing.

Receiver appointed at the request of the Erie School District

Piccinini issued the order at the request of the Erie School District, who filed a petition in Erie County Common Pleas Court in January for the appointment of a receiver to oversee the financial dissolution of Erie Rise. The district said the dissolution was moving very slowly under the control of Erie Rise staff and the charter school’s outside consultant.

Piccinini delayed a decision on the petition for several months while he convened a series of status conferences in his courtroom to monitor the dissolution of Erie Rise. He held the most recent status conference on May 29, where he renewed his dissatisfaction with Erie Rise missing its self-appointed dissolution deadline of May 31.

The judge’s dissatisfaction remained evident on Friday. Piccinini, after the May 29 status conference, said he would review the school district’s request for a receiver, but granted the request Friday morning at the end of an emergency hearing he convened via a truck. trunk.

The Erie School District requested the hearing due to concerns that Erie Rise planned to donate the box truck, valued at $20,000, to the private Community Country Day School without seeking approval from the Erie School District on the disposition of the asset. Erie Rise’s attorney, Zainab Shields of Philadelphia, said Erie Rise would not donate the box truck, which ended the dispute.

But Piccinini said he was upset because the box truck episode showed that Erie Rise was still in the process of evaluating its assets nearly a year after the charter school closed to students on June 30.

Piccinini said he was tired of Erie Rise officials, including his Maryland-based consultant Christian Anderson, “moving the goalposts on a regular basis” while continuing to spend public money to carry out a dissolution that Piccinini said should have been made months ago.

Piccinini said he was concerned that Erie Rise agreed to pay Anderson $10,000 a month through December to continue overseeing the dissolution. Erie Rise paid Anderson another $110,000 in 2023. The new contract, the box truck episode and other evidence showed that Erie Rise has “the intention of continuing the slow process of dissolution,” Piccinini said Friday.

At status conferences, Piccinini shared the Erie School District’s concerns that Erie Rise continued to employ three regular employees in addition to Anderson, even though the school had no students.

According to statements in court Friday, Erie Rise trustees terminated the hiring of regular employees that day, but only after Piccinini on May 29 instructed the school to do so. One of the employees, Aubrey Favors, director of human resources at Erie Rise, earned $90,000 a year.

The judge chooses the recipient from the list sent by the school district

Shields, the Erie Rise attorney, argued for months that the charter school was dissolving as quickly as possible. She cited Pennsylvania Department of Education regulations, which impose no timeline for the dissolution of a charter school. Shields appeared by video at Friday’s hearing and did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment on Piccinini’s appointment of a receiver.

The Erie School District’s lead attorney on the case, Michael Musone, acknowledged the lack of legal deadlines for dissolution. But he argued that Pennsylvania law still authorizes a judge to appoint a trustee for a closed charter school under certain conditions.

Piccinini said he could not find any other case in which a judge had appointed a trustee for a charter school in Pennsylvania. But he said he agreed with the school district that such an appointment was justified to help preserve Erie Rise’s assets — assets that will be transferred to the Erie School District — rather than those assets dissipating during the dissolution.

“Our primary concern has been the preservation of public property,” Erie School District attorney Tim Wachter said after Friday’s hearing, which he attended with Musone. “Today’s comments showed that the judge shared these concerns.

“We are confident that the appointed trustee will take appropriate steps to preserve the remaining assets.”

The school district included the receiver’s name, William Krieger, on a list of proposed receivers that Piccinini asked the district to submit. Wachter said Gleason, Krieger’s financial consulting firm, has members who regularly serve as court-appointed administrators.

Wachter said the district became aware of the Gleason firm through its members’ work in U.S. Bankruptcy Court. Piccinini said he interviewed Krieger while reviewing the district’s petition for the appointment of a receiver.

Wachter said Krieger must first examine Erie Rise’s finances to determine how long the dissolution will take under his watch. No matter how long the process takes now, Piccinini and the school district said, it is expected to cost less with a receiver than with Erie Rise.

Erie Rise Faces Two Investigations as Disbandment Continues

Erie Rise, with about 300 students in kindergarten through eighth grade, closed June 30 after the Erie School Board revoked its charter due to poor academic performance and other problems. The school operated in the former Emerson School building at West 10th and Cascade streets.

The majority of Erie Rise’s revenue came from the Erie School District. The district sent Erie Rise $3.4 million in 2023 to pay its students’ tuition.

The pace of Erie Rise’s financial dissolution led the Erie School District to sue the charter school starting in December, when he requested court intervention to force Erie Rise to provide him with financial documents and other records about his assets. Unhappy with the charter school’s handling of the dissolution, the school district requested in January the appointment of a receiver.

The receiver-led dissolution of Erie Rise will come as the charter school remains embroiled in two other unresolved issues.

One year ago, on June 7, 2023, the U.S. Department of Education searched the Erie Rise offices. The department’s Office of Inspector General was seeking records on a multimillion-dollar federal grant for after-school programs for students from low-income familiesaccording to testimony at status conferences before Piccinini.

The U.S. Department of Education has given no indication that the investigation has ended.

And at an Erie Rise status conference on April 29, Shields told Piccinini that the Pennsylvania Ethics Commission is investigating Erie Rise. Shields said the commission was reviewing documents linked to the school and interviewed Favors, its HR director, to obtain information.

No matter how these investigations end, Piccinini’s receivership order puts Erie Rise on a different path toward dissolution.

“We are pleased with the judge’s decision,” said Neal Brokman, assistant superintendent of operations for the Erie School District. He attended Friday’s hearing as the district’s charter school representative.

Piccinini’s order, Brokman said, allows the school district to “finally close the charter school and its assets.”

“And then we can move forward,” Brokman said.

Contact Ed Palattella at epalattella@timesnews.com or 814-870-1813. Follow him on X @ETNpalattella.



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Modiv Industrial to release Q2 2024 financial results on August 6

Digital Finance News Staff

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Business Wire

RENO, Nev., August 1, 2024–(BUSINESS THREAD)–Modiv Industrial, Inc. (“Modiv” or the “Company”) (NYSE:MDV), the only public REIT focused exclusively on the acquisition of industrial real estate properties, today announced that it will release second quarter 2024 financial results for the quarter ended June 30, 2024 before the market opens on Tuesday, August 6, 2024. Management will host a conference call the same day at 7:30 a.m. Pacific Time (10:30 a.m. Eastern Time) to discuss the results.

Live conference call: 1-877-407-0789 or 1-201-689-8562 at 7:30 a.m. Pacific Time Tuesday, August 6.

Internet broadcast: To listen to the webcast, live or archived, use this link https://callme.viavid.com/viavid/?callme=true&passcode=13740174&h=true&info=company&r=true&B=6 or visit the investor relations page of the Modiv website at www.modiv.com.

About Modiv Industrial

Modiv Industrial, Inc. is an internally managed REIT focused on single-tenant net-leased industrial manufacturing real estate. The company actively acquires critical industrial manufacturing properties with long-term leases to tenants that fuel the national economy and strengthen the nation’s supply chains. For more information, visit: www.modiv.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240731628803/en/

Contacts

Investor Inquiries:
management@modiv.com

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Volta Finance Limited – Director/PDMR Shareholding

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Volta Finance Limited - Director/PDMR Shareholding

Volta Finance Limited

Volta Finance Limited

Volta Finance Limited (VTA/VTAS)

Notification of transactions by directors, persons exercising managerial functions
responsibilities and people closely associated with them

NOT FOR DISCLOSURE, DISTRIBUTION OR PUBLICATION, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, IN THE UNITED STATES

*****
Guernsey, 1 August 2024

Pursuant to announcements made on 5 April 2019 and 26 June 2020 relating to changes to the payment of directors’ fees, Volta Finance Limited (the “Company” or “Volta”) purchased 3,380 no par value ordinary shares of the Company (“Ordinary Shares”) at an average price of €5.2 per share.

Each director receives 30% of his or her director’s fee for any year in the form of shares, which he or she is required to hold for a period of not less than one year from the respective date of issue.

The shares will be issued to the Directors, who for the purposes of Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 on Market Abuse (“March“) are “people who exercise managerial responsibilities” (a “PDMR“).

  • Dagmar Kershaw, Chairman and MDMR for purposes of MAR, has acquired an additional 1,040 Common Shares in the Company. Following the settlement of this transaction, Ms. Kershaw will have an interest in 12,838 Common Shares, representing 0.03% of the Company’s issued shares;

  • Stephen Le Page, a Director and a PDMR for MAR purposes, has acquired an additional 728 Ordinary Shares in the Company. Following the settlement of this transaction, Mr. Le Page will have an interest in 50,562 Ordinary Shares, representing 0.14% of the issued shares of the Company;

  • Yedau Ogoundele, Director and a PDMR for the purposes of MAR has acquired an additional 728 Ordinary Shares in the Company. Following the settlement of this transaction, Ms. Ogoundele will have an interest in 6,862 Ordinary Shares, representing 0.02% of the issued shares of the Company; and

  • Joanne Peacegood, Director and PDMR for MAR purposes has acquired an additional 884 Ordinary Shares in the Company. Following the settlement of this transaction, Ms. Peacegood will have an interest in 3,505 Ordinary Shares, representing 0.01% of the issued shares of the Company;

The notifications below, made in accordance with the requirements of the MAR, provide further details in relation to the above transactions:

a) Dagmar Kershaw
PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR

b) Stephen LePage
DIRECTOR

c) Yedau Ogoundele
DIRECTOR

e) Joanne Pazgood
DIRECTOR

a. Position/status

Director

b. Initial Notification/Amendment

Initial notification

  • Details of the issuer, emission allowance market participant, auction platform, auctioneer or auction monitor

a name

Volta Finance Limited

b. LAW

2138004N6QDNAZ2V3W80

a. Description of the financial instrument, type of instrument

Ordinary actions

b. Identification code

GG00B1GHHH78

c. Nature of the transaction

Acquisition and Allocation of Common Shares in Relation to Partial Payment of Directors’ Fees for the Quarter Ended July 31, 2024

d. Price(s)

€5.2 per share

e. Volume(s)

Total: 3380

f. Transaction date

August 1, 2024

g. Location of transaction

At the Market – London

The)
Dagmar Kershaw
President and Director

B)
Steve LePage
Director

w)
Yedau Ogoundele Director

It is)
Joanne Pazgood
Director

Aggregate Volume:
1,040

Price:
€5.2 per share

Aggregate Volume:
728

Price:
€5.2 per share

Aggregate Volume:
728

Price:
€5.2 per share

Aggregate Volume:
884

Price:
€5.2 per share

CONTACTS

For the investment manager
AXA Investment Managers Paris
Francois Touati
francois.touati@axa-im.com
+33 (0) 1 44 45 80 22

Olivier Pons
Olivier.pons@axa-im.com
+33 (0) 1 44 45 87 30

Company Secretary and Administrator
BNP Paribas SA, Guernsey branch
guernsey.bp2s.volta.cosec@bnpparibas.com
+44 (0) 1481 750 853

Corporate Broker
Cavendish Securities plc
Andre Worn Out
Daniel Balabanoff
+44 (0) 20 7397 8900

*****
ABOUT VOLTA FINANCE LIMITED

Volta Finance Limited is incorporated in Guernsey under the Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008 (as amended) and listed on Euronext Amsterdam and the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange for listed securities. Volta’s home member state for the purposes of the EU Transparency Directive is the Netherlands. As such, Volta is subject to the regulation and supervision of the AFM, which is the regulator of the financial markets in the Netherlands.

Volta’s investment objectives are to preserve its capital throughout the credit cycle and to provide a stable income stream to its shareholders through dividends that it expects to distribute quarterly. The company currently seeks to achieve its investment objectives by seeking exposure predominantly to CLOs and similar asset classes. A more diversified investment strategy in structured finance assets may be pursued opportunistically. The company has appointed AXA Investment Managers Paris, an investment management firm with a division specializing in structured credit, to manage the investment portfolio of all of its assets.

*****

ABOUT AXA INVESTMENT MANAGERS
AXA Investment Managers (AXA IM) is a multi-specialist asset management firm within the AXA Group, a global leader in financial protection and wealth management. AXA IM is one of the largest European-based asset managers with 2,700 professionals and €844 billion in assets under management at the end of December 2023.

*****

This press release is issued by AXA Investment Managers Paris (“AXA IM”) in its capacity as alternative investment fund manager (within the meaning of Directive 2011/61/EU, the “AIFM Directive”) of Volta Finance Limited (“Volta Finance”), the portfolio of which is managed by AXA IM.

This press release is for information only and does not constitute an invitation or inducement to purchase shares of Volta Finance. Its circulation may be prohibited in certain jurisdictions and no recipient may circulate copies of this document in violation of such limitations or restrictions. This document is not an offer to sell the securities referred to herein in the United States or to persons who are “U.S. persons” for purposes of Regulation S under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), or otherwise in circumstances where such an offering would be restricted by applicable law. Such securities may not be sold in the United States absent registration or an exemption from registration under the Securities Act. Volta Finance does not intend to register any part of the offering of such securities in the United States or to conduct a public offering of such securities in the United States.

*****

This communication is being distributed to, and is directed only at, (i) persons who are outside the United Kingdom or (ii) investment professionals falling within Article 19(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 (the “Order”) or (iii) high net worth companies and other persons to whom it may lawfully be communicated falling within Article 49(2)(a) to (d) of the Order (all such persons together being referred to as “relevant persons”). The securities referred to herein are available only to, and any invitation, offer or agreement to subscribe for, purchase or otherwise acquire such securities will be made only to, relevant persons. Any person who is not a relevant person should not act on or rely on this document or any of its contents. Past performance should not be relied upon as a guide to future performance.

*****
This press release contains statements that are, or may be deemed to be, “forward-looking statements”. These forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology, including the words “believes”, “anticipates”, “expects”, “intends”, “is/are expected”, “may”, “will” or “should”. They include statements about the level of the dividend, the current market environment and its impact on the long-term return on Volta Finance’s investments. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties and readers are cautioned that such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. Actual results, portfolio composition and performance of Volta Finance may differ materially from the impression created by the forward-looking statements. AXA IM undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise forward-looking statements.

Any target information is based on certain assumptions as to future events that may not materialize. Due to the uncertainty surrounding these future events, targets are not intended to be and should not be considered to be profits or earnings or any other type of forecast. There can be no assurance that any of these targets will be achieved. Furthermore, no assurance can be given that the investment objective will be achieved.

Figures provided which relate to past months or years and past performance cannot be considered as a guide to future performance or construed as a reliable indicator as to future performance. Throughout this review, the citation of specific trades or strategies is intended to illustrate some of Volta Finance’s investment methodologies and philosophies as implemented by AXA IM. The historical success or AXA IM’s belief in the future success of any such trade or strategy is not indicative of, and has no bearing on, future results.

The valuation of financial assets may vary significantly from the prices that AXA IM could obtain if it sought to liquidate the positions on Volta Finance’s behalf due to market conditions and the general economic environment. Such valuations do not constitute a fairness or similar opinion and should not be relied upon as such.

Publisher: AXA INVESTMENT MANAGERS PARIS, a company incorporated under the laws of France, with registered office at Tour Majunga, 6, Place de la Pyramide – 92800 Puteaux. AXA IMP is authorized by Autorité des Marchés Financiers under registration number GP92008 as an alternative investment fund manager within the meaning of the AIFM Directive.

*****

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Apple to report third-quarter earnings as Wall Street eyes China sales

Digital Finance News Staff

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Apple to report third-quarter earnings as Wall Street eyes China sales

Litter (AAPL) is set to report its fiscal third-quarter earnings after the market closes on Thursday, and unlike the rest of its tech peers, the main story won’t be about the rise of AI.

Instead, analysts and investors will be keeping a close eye on iPhone sales in China and whether Apple has managed to stem the tide of users switching to domestic rivals including Huawei.

For the quarter, analysts expect Apple to report earnings per share (EPS) of $1.35 on revenue of $84.4 billion, according to estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Apple saw EPS of $1.26 on revenue of $81.7 billion in the same period last year.

Apple shares are up about 18.6% year to date despite a rocky start to the year, thanks in part to the impact of the company’s Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) in May, where showed off its Apple Intelligence software.

But the big question on investors’ minds is whether iPhone sales have risen or fallen in China. Apple has struggled with slowing phone sales in the region, with the company noting an 8% decline in sales in the second quarter as local rivals including Huawei and Xiaomi gain market share.

CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 10: Apple CEO Tim Cook delivers remarks at the start of the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on June 10, 2024 in Cupertino, California. Apple will announce plans to incorporate artificial intelligence (AI) into Apple software and hardware. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Apple CEO Tim Cook delivers remarks at the start of the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC). (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) (Justin Sullivan via Getty Images)

And while some analysts, such as JPMorgan’s Samik Chatterjee, believe sales in Greater China, which includes mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan, rose in the third quarter, others, including David Vogt of UBS Global Research, say sales likely fell about 6%.

Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg say Apple will report revenue of $15.2 billion in Greater China, down 3.1% from the same quarter last year, when Apple reported revenue of $15.7 billion in China. Overall iPhone sales are expected to reach $38.9 billion, down 1.8% year over year from the $39.6 billion Apple saw in the third quarter of 2023.

But Apple is expected to make up for those declines in other areas, including Services and iPad sales. Services revenue is expected to reach $23.9 billion in the quarter, up from $21.2 billion in the third quarter of 2023, while iPad sales are expected to reach $6.6 billion, up from the $5.7 billion the segment brought in in the same period last year. Those iPad sales projections come after Apple launched its latest iPad models this year, including a new iPad Pro lineup powered by the company’s M4 chip.

Mac revenue is also expected to grow modestly in the quarter, versus a 7.3% decline last year. Sales of wearables, which include the Apple Watch and AirPods, however, are expected to decline 5.9% year over year.

In addition to Apple’s revenue numbers, analysts and investors will be listening closely for any commentary on the company’s software launches. Apple Intelligence beta for developers earlier this week.

The story continues

The software, which is powered by Apple’s generative AI technology, is expected to arrive on iPhones, iPads and Macs later this fall, though according to Bloomberg’s Marc GurmanIt won’t arrive alongside the new iPhone in September. Instead, it’s expected to arrive on Apple devices sometime in October.

Analysts are divided on the potential impact of Apple Intelligence on iPhone sales next year, with some saying the software will kick off a new iPhone sales supercycle and others offering more pessimistic expectations about the technology’s effect on Apple’s profits.

It’s important to note that Apple Intelligence is only compatible with the iPhone 15 Pro and newer phones, ensuring that all users desperate to get their hands on the tech will have to upgrade to a newer, more powerful phone as soon as it is available.

Either way, if Apple wants to make Apple Intelligence a success, it will need to ensure it has the features that will make customers excited to take advantage of the offering.

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Email Daniel Howley at dhowley@yahoofinance.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DanielHowley.

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Number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits hits highest level in a year

Digital Finance News Staff

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Number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits hits highest level in a year

The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits hit its highest level in a year last week, even as the job market remains surprisingly healthy in an era of high interest rates.

Jobless claims for the week ending July 27 rose 14,000 to 249,000 from 235,000 the previous week, the Labor Department said Thursday. It’s the highest number since the first week of August last year and the 10th straight week that claims have been above 220,000. Before that period, claims had remained below that level in all but three weeks this year.

Weekly jobless claims are widely considered representative of layoffs, and while they have been slightly higher in recent months, they remain at historically healthy levels.

Strong consumer demand and a resilient labor market helped avert a recession that many economists predicted during the Federal Reserve’s prolonged wave of rate hikes that began in March 2022.

As inflation continues to declinethe Fed’s goal of a soft landing — reducing inflation without causing a recession and mass layoffs — appears to be within reach.

On Wednesday, the Fed left your reference rate aloneBut officials have strongly suggested a cut could come in September if the data stays on its recent trajectory. And recent labor market data suggests some weakening.

The unemployment rate rose to 4.1% in June, despite the fact that American employers added 206,000 jobs. U.S. job openings also fell slightly last month. Add that to the rise in layoffs, and the Fed could be poised to cut interest rates next month, as most analysts expect.

The four-week average of claims, which smooths out some of the weekly ups and downs, rose by 2,500 to 238,000.

The total number of Americans receiving unemployment benefits in the week of July 20 jumped by 33,000 to 1.88 million. The four-week average for continuing claims rose to 1,857,000, the highest since December 2021.

Continuing claims have been rising in recent months, suggesting that some Americans receiving unemployment benefits are finding it harder to get jobs.

There have been job cuts across a range of sectors this year, from agricultural manufacturing Deerefor media such as CNNIt is in another place.

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