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Found 4 results for "3b0d43b678a607a7333360007b59e1ff" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous /v/716449275#716452926
7/26/2025, 3:13:16 AM
>>716449275
Good.
Exclusives only existed due to consoles having a great difference in system architecture and capability.
They're all the same technologically (minus Nintendo being a gen behind) So there's no reason not to put your games on everything you can. It just gives you a wider market.
Anonymous /v/716091309#716093241
7/22/2025, 12:52:30 AM
Anonymous ID: pxd56IYWCzech Republic /pol/508067480#508083516
6/20/2025, 2:01:15 PM
>Russia’s top business leaders and bankers are sounding the alarm over a looming corporate debt crisis, warning that a prolonged period of high interest rates has pushed many companies into a "pre-default state" and is threatening wider economic turmoil.
Speaking at Russia’s flagship economic forum, Alexander Shokhin, head of the powerful Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs, painted a grim picture of the corporate landscape. "The overall situation is quite alarming," he said, noting the severe financial strain on businesses.
>The anxiety stems from the central bank’s hawkish monetary policy, designed to tame inflation but which has driven borrowing costs to prohibitive levels. The situation is so dire that, according to a central bank analysis, one in six of Russia’s largest companies is no longer earning enough to cover its interest payments.
>Andrey Kostin, the outspoken head of state-owned VTB bank, acknowledged that many companies are now borrowing simply to service existing debt. However, he controversially framed the impending crisis as an opportunity for "creative destruction."
>"We have a large number of inefficient enterprises that we need to find the will to close," Mr. Kostin argued, pointing to sectors like coal mining and shipbuilding. He suggested a wave of managed bankruptcies would be painful but ultimately beneficial, freeing up scarce labor and relieving the state of the burden of subsidizing "zombie" companies, particularly as the war in Ukraine strains public finances. "Perhaps such a crisis will help, to some extent, to achieve this," he said.
>The debate has exposed a deep rift within Russia’s economic leadership. Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak, whose government sub-commission provides "manual control" support to struggling companies, is openly urging the central bank to "quickly" cut rates to avoid putting the economy into a "cryo-chamber."
Anonymous /mlp/42171275#42278249
6/18/2025, 12:35:57 AM
OP can't organize the project once again the thread!
Pro tip: Get some vision first you retard.