Chile Finance
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
Google parent Alphabet to sell $80bn in stock to fund AI plans
Google parent Alphabet to sell $80bn in stock to fund AI plans US tech giant says fundraising drive includes deal to sell $10 bn of stock to Berkshire Hathaway. Alphabet, Google’s parent company, has announced plans to sell $80bn worth of shares to fund its rollout of artificial intelligence. Alphabet said on Monday that the equity offerings would finance the rollout of AI infrastructure needed to meet “unprecedented customer demand”.
Peru: Presidential election too close to call
Peru: Presidential election too close to call June 8, 2026The results of Peru's presidential runoff were still up in the air on Monday morning, even though more than 90% of the votes had been counted. Preliminary results show that right-wing conservative candidate Keiko Fujimori received approximately 50.5% of the vote, while left-wing politician Roberto Sanchez was on around 49.5%. However, it was expected that Fujimori's lead would narrow.
Argentina’s ‘Madman’: Inside the world of Javier Milei
Otacon Party, a regular event for anime and manga fans held at the Galicia Centre in Buenos Aires, has never been known for being overtly political. Attendees buy comic books and Pikachu plushies, and sing karaoke, often dressed in colourful costumes. But at the February 2019 event, one cosplayer stood out among the rest.
Where are Xi, Trump going? Travel map reveals scale of changing world order
Diplomatic travel is more than ceremony, it shows where leaders choose to place scarce political attention. Presidents and premiers cannot be everywhere, so who they meet, where they go, and how often they host foreign leaders all signal priorities that speeches and strategy papers can obscure. The itineraries aren’t just about who flies where.
Fujimori vs Sanchez: What to know about Peru’s presidential run-off election
Fujimori vs Sanchez: What to know about Peru’s presidential run-off election The run-off follows a tumultuous first round of voting, which saw long lines, delayed results and accusations of fraud. Nearly two months ago, on April 12, Peru held the first round of its presidential elections. But in the eight weeks since, confusion, protests and scandal have engulfed the results.