WSJ What’s News - Famine Unfolding in Gaza, Experts Say
Episode Date: July 29, 2025A.M. Edition for July 29. At least sixteen children under five have died of hunger-related causes since mid-July, according to the UN-supported group the IPC. WSJ correspondent Margherita Stancati say...s it’s the most dire assessment of conditions in Gaza since the war began. Plus, in Midtown New York a lone gunman has killed four people including a police officer and a Blackstone executive. And, we look at how the Trump administration is looking to borrow 1 trillion dollars with a deluge of new government debt. Azhar Sukri hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Food insecurity experts say Gaza is now in a state of famine.
Plus, a shooting in the heart of New York City leaves a Blackstone executive and several
others dead.
And how the Trump administration plans to raise $1 trillion in just three months.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bevin has been very open in talking about this.
He calls himself the country's top bond salesman.
It's Tuesday, July 29th.
I'm Azhar Sukri for the Wall Street Journal.
Here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories moving
your world today.
Famine is now unfolding in Gaza. That's the most dire assessment of the enclave's
deepening hunger crisis since the start of the war. An interim report released this morning
by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, found at least 16 children under five
have died of hunger related causes since mid-July. Journal correspondent
Margarita Stankati says it's the first time the UN supported group has
described the food crisis in such terms.
Food security experts are saying that all areas of the Gaza Strip are experiencing rapidly
deteriorating food insecurity.
So when it comes to extreme food shortage, most households are saying that they regularly
are not having food to eat of any kind and that often people go to bed hungry.
Acute childhood malnutrition is getting much worse across the enclave and
particularly in the north and hunger related deaths are increasing. So these
are the three criteria used to measure famine conditions and the IPC in its
update said all three things are getting worse. The situation has become so severe
that even President Trump weighed in on it yesterday.
He referred to images he's seen on TV and he said, you know, some of those kids, that's
real starvation stuff.
And his comments came after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, you know,
there is no policy of starvation in Gaza and in fact, there is no starvation in Gaza.
Today's assessment is not an official declaration of famine, which happens
rarely and is very politically sensitive. It's now up to governments and senior UN officials
to declare a famine based on the IPC's assessment. A lone shooter has killed four people, including a
police officer and an executive from financial firm Blackstone
in a midtown New York building. The gunman then turned the gun on himself. Speaking last
night, NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said the shooter was 27-year-old Shane Tamura,
who had driven his black BMW across the country from Colorado, double-parked on Park Avenue
during the evening rush and began shooting
as soon as he was inside the building lobby. 345 Park Avenue is a commercial office building
whose tenants include the NFL, Rudin Management, KPMG and Blackstone. Four innocent victims are dead.
Among them is NYPD police officer Diderul Islam, 36 years old, four years on the job.
The NYPD said the alleged shooter had a documented mental health history and that his motives are
still under investigation. A fifth person remains in critical condition. We are exclusively reporting
that the Trump administration is considering a plan to raise tens of billions of dollars
with a new fee that would transform the patent system.
That's according to people familiar with the matter.
It would be a radical move that would likely get pushback from businesses.
The people said that Commerce Department officials are discussing charging holders 1% to 5% of their patent
value – a shift that could dramatically increase fees.
A Commerce Department spokesman declined to comment.
And in another exclusive, we're reporting that premiums for Medicare drug plans are
set to increase sharply next year.
That's mostly due to rising costs, regulatory changes
and cutbacks to a subsidy program.
That initiative has largely shielded seniors
from rising monthly bills in 2025.
According to a Medicare official,
the subsidy program pumped an extra $6.2 billion
of federal payments into so-called Part D plans this year.
The Trump administration is set to cut spending on that program by about 40% in 2026.
Mars, the maker of M&Ms, Skittles and Kind Bars, will invest more than $2bn into US factories over the next 18 months, spanning its snacking,
food and pet care businesses.
Mars has already invested about $6bn over the past five years, which it said added 9,000
jobs in the US.
The company, one of the world's biggest family-owned and privately held firms, said that 94% of
its products sold in the
US are now made in America.
And kicking off a busy day for earnings, Spotify said that it added about 12% more premium
subscribers in the second quarter, topping its own guidance.
The streaming platform expanded access to its audiobooks and personalised music offerings around the world,
but the company still swung to a loss of about $100 million amid higher personnel and marketing costs.
This morning we'll also get results from United Health, Merck, Procter & Gamble and Boeing,
with Visa and Starbucks reporting after the closing bell.
and Boeing, with Visa and Starbucks reporting after the closing bell. Coming up, Wall Street is bracing for a deluge of Treasury bills as the Trump administration
moves to shake things up in the dusty government bond market.
That story after the break.
The Trump administration is making government borrowing exciting again, or as some investors
might see it, more unpredictable than it has been in decades. Enormous tax and spending
plans mean the administration is having to issue a load of short-term bonds to finance
its deficit.
Sam Goldfarb has written extensively about the US debt
market. Sam, we learned yesterday that the Treasury expects to borrow more than a trillion
dollars this coming quarter. That's a huge leap from previous estimates. How did we get
here?
Yeah, so basically the US government has a fairly large gap between the revenue that's
taking in in taxes and the money that
it's spending on everything from Medicare to defense.
And this predated this latest Trump administration, but he's extended tax cuts that he passed
in his first administration.
And that's sort of like locked in this fiscal trajectory, which just means that the government
has to borrow a lot of money to make sure that it can meet its spending obligations.
Yeah, so clearly a lot of debt is about to come to the market to finance that big, beautiful bill.
Is the Trump administration doing anything to shore up support among investors?
Yeah, so it's kind of interesting in the past, presidents and treasury secretaries have really not
waited too much into this issue about like exactly how they're going to borrow.
But Treasury Secretary Scott Vestent has been very open in talking about this.
He calls himself the country's top bond salesman.
And Trump himself has said, we're going to go very short term, wait for Federal Reserve
Chair Jerome Powell to have his term expire.
And then we're going to get rates way down and then we're gonna get rates way down
and then we're gonna go long term and that kind of talk is just unusual
because in the past administrations felt like that you should just basically not
talk about this sort of have investors not think about it and then just come up
with a mix of debt that could kind of last for the long term.
Right and the administration is due to provide a formal update about its
borrowing plans tomorrow. That's usually a fairly run-of-the-mill announcement but investors seem
to be watching more closely as to which bonds are being issued, am I right? So basically the base
case is that nothing will change, that they'll just keep issuing notes and bonds that mature two
years to 30 years at the same pace as they've been doing.
Now that suggests in some ways it sounds like, okay, so nothing's changing, but if they just
continue to do that as the borrowing needs grow, that means that they'll have to do the
additional borrowing with short-term debt, with bills that mature in a year or less.
So just maintaining the status quo in some ways over time will amount to a policy change because if you just are issuing the same amount
of let's say 10-year notes but the borrowing needs are getting bigger, you have to issue
more short-term debt.
And with the Fed's latest rate decision due tomorrow, there will be a lot to sift through,
not least any indications of when a rate cut could be expected that
might send the interest and all that debt down.
Sam Goldfarb is a Journal Markets reporter. Thank you so much, Sam.
Thank you.
And that's it for What's News for this Tuesday morning. Today's show was produced by Daniel
Bach and Kate Bullivant. Our supervising producer is Sandra Kilhoff. I'm Az Harsookri for the Wall Street Journal. We'll be back tonight with a new show. Until
then, thanks for listening.