(Reuters/KCNA)
Dancing parties of youth and students took place Monday across the country on the occasion of the 4th anniversary of supreme leader Kim Jong Un's assumption of the top posts of the party and the state.
Here is what you need to know.
Brazil's president could be impeached. In a 38-27 vote, an impeachment committee in Brazil's lower house of Congress has voted in favor of moving ahead with the impeachment proceedings of President Dilma Rousseff. Rousseff allegedly broke budget to laws to help in her 2014 reelection bid. Reuters reports, the proceedings will now move to a full lower house vote. A two-thirds majority vote in favor of impeachment would send the proceedings to the upper house, which would just need a simple majority to oust Rousseff.
Italy's weakest banks are getting a bailout. The Financial Times reports, Italy's struggling lenders will receive a €5 billion bailout. The rescue fund, named 'Atlas' after the mythological god, will be backstopped with funds from the country's largest banks, insurers and asset managers, and is designed to "will mop up unsold shares from cash calls demanded by European regulators at several distressed smaller lenders," FT says. Italy's 10-year yield is up 2 basis points at 1.35%.
UK prices rose more than expected. The Office for National Statistics said the UK's consumer price index rose 0.5% year-over-year in March, outpacing the 0.4% that was expected. Stripping out the more volatile food and energy, prices were up 1.5% compared to last year. The price gain was propelled by more people staying in hotels and eating out. Additionally, airfares surged 22.9% as Easter fell in March this year. The British pound is stronger by 0.6% at 1.4326.
Alcoa posts an earnings beat. The aluminum maker announced adjusted earnings of $0.07 per share, topping the $0.02 gain that was expected by the Bloomberg consensus. Revenue slumped 15% to $4.95 billion, which was shy of the $5.2 billion that analysts were anticipating. "Upstream segments maintained profitability in a persistently low pricing environment," CEO Klaus Kleinfeld said in the earnings release. Shares of Alcoa are down more than 4% in pre-market trade.
Alibaba is making its biggest overseas bet yet. Reuters reports, the online retailer announced it's buying a controlling stake in Singapore-based Lazada Group for about $1 billion. The acquisition will allow Alibaba to take advantage of exciting growth opportunities in Southeast Asia. While the size of the stake is unknown, Reuters says it appears to be about a two-thirds holding.