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Windows Zero-Days Expose BitLocker Bypasses And CTFMON Privilege Escalation

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An anonymous cybersecurity researcher who disclosed three Microsoft Defender vulnerabilities has returned with two more zero-days involving a BitLocker bypass and a privilege escalation impacting Windows Collaborative Translation Framework (CTFMON).

The security defects have been codenamed YellowKey and GreenPlasma, respectively, by the researcher, who goes by the online aliases Chaotic Eclipse and Nightmare-Eclipse.

The researcher described YellowKey as “one of the most insane discoveries I ever found,” likening the BitLocker bypass to functioning as a backdoor, as the bug is present only in the Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE), a built-in framework designed to troubleshoot and repair common unbootable operating system issues.

YellowKey affects Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022/2025. At a high level, it involves copying specially crafted “FsTx” files on a USB drive or the EFI partition, plugging the USB drive into the target Windows computer with BitLocker protections turned on, rebooting into WinRE, and triggering a shell by holding down the CTRL key.

“I think it will take a while even for MSRC to find the real root cause of the issue. I just never managed to understand why this vulnerability is sooo well hidden,” the researcher explained. “Second thing is, no, TPM+PIN does not help, the issue is still exploitable regardless.”

Security researcher Will Dormann, in a post shared on Mastodon, said, “I was able to reproduce [YellowKey] with a USB drive attached,” adding, “it looks like Transactional NTFS bits on a USB Drive are able to delete the winpeshl.ini file on ANOTHER DRIVE (X:). And we get a cmd.exe prompt, with BitLocker unlocked instead of the expected Windows Recovery environment.”

“While the TPM-only BitLocker bypass is indeed interesting, I think the buried lede here is that a \System Volume Information\FsTx directory on one volume has the ability to modify the contents of another volume when it is replayed,” Dormann pointed out. “To me, this in and of itself sounds like a vulnerability.”

The second vulnerability flagged by Chaotic Eclipse is a case of privilege escalation security that could be exploited to obtain a shell with SYSTEM permissions. It arises as a result of what has been described as Windows CTFMON arbitrary section creation.

The released proof-of-concept (PoC) is incomplete and lacks the necessary code to obtain a full SYSTEM shell. In its current form, the exploit can allow an unprivileged user to create arbitrary memory section objects within directory objects writable by SYSTEM, potentially enabling manipulation of privileged services or drivers that implicitly trust those paths, as a standard user does not have write access to the locations.

The development comes nearly a month after the researcher published three Defender zero-days dubbed BlueHammer, RedSun, and UnDefend after allegedly expressing dissatisfaction with Microsoft’s handling of the vulnerability disclosure process. The shortcomings have since come under active exploitation in the wild.

While BlueHammer was officially assigned the identifier CVE-2026-33825 and patched by Microsoft last month, Chaotic Eclipse said the tech giant appears to have “silently” addressed RedSun without issuing any advisory.

“I hope you at least attempt to resolve the situation responsibly, I’m not sure what type of reaction you expected from me when you threw more gas on the fire after BlueHammer,” the researcher said. “The fire will go as long as you want, unless you extinguish it or until there nothing left to burn.”

Chaotic Eclipse also promised a “big surprise” for Microsoft, coinciding with the next Patch Tuesday release in June 2026.

When reached for comment, a Microsoft spokesperson had previously told The Hacker News that it “has a customer commitment to investigate reported security issues and update impacted devices to protect customers as soon as possible,” and that it supports coordinated vulnerability disclosure, which the company said “helps ensure issues are carefully investigated and addressed before public disclosure.”

BitLocker Downgrade Attack Uncovered

The development comes as French cybersecurity company Intrinsec detailed an attack chain against BitLocker that leverages a boot manager downgrade by exploiting CVE-2025-48804 (CVSS score: 6.8) to bypass the encryption protection on fully patched Windows 11 systems in under five minutes.

“The principle is as follows: the boot manager loads the System Deployment Image (SDI) file and the WIM referenced by it, and verifies the integrity of the legitimate WIM,” Intrinsec said.

“However, when a second WIM is added to the SDI with a modified blob table, the boot manager checks the first (legitimate) WIM while simultaneously booting from the second (controlled by the attacker). This second WIM contains a WinRE image infected with ‘cmd.exe,’ which executes with the decrypted BitLocker volume.”

While fixes released by Microsoft in July 2025 plugged this security defect in July 2025, security researcher Cassius Garat said the problem lies in the fact that Secure Boot only verifies a binary’s signing certificate, not its version. As a result, a vulnerable version of “bootmgfw.efi” that does not contain the patch and is signed with the trusted PCA 2011 certificate can be used to get around BitLocker safeguards.

It’s worth noting that Microsoft plans to retire the old PCA 2011 certificates next month. “And as long as it is not revoked, even an old, vulnerable boot manager can be loaded without triggering an alert,” Intrinsec noted. To pull off the attack, a bad actor needs to have physical access to the target machine.

To counter the risk, it’s essential to enable a BitLocker PIN at startup for preboot authentication and migrate the boot manager to the CA 2023 certificate and revoke the old PCA 2011 certificate.



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Rep. Tim Burchett says 30-40 unreleased UFO videos are still being withheld


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In an exclusive interview with the Ruthless Podcast, Representative Tim Burchett says that more Unidentified Flying Objects (UFO) videos will be released. 

“There are 30 or 40 videos that we need to see that we know that they have that we have not seen that are much clearer,” Burchett said in the interview released Thursday morning. “And we don’t know what we don’t know. I’ve been told by some pretty high-ranking people that there are some.”

The East Tennessee congressman joined Ruthless days after the Department of War began releasing files on UFOs. In February, President Trump committed to releasing information on alien, extraterrestrial life, and UFOs. 

Burchett noted that many of his colleagues in Congress and across the government are scared to discuss the matter publicly.

REP TIM BURCHETT CONVINCED THAT ALIENS EXIST, SAYS HE’S ‘SEEN TOO MUCH’ IN GOVERNMENT BRIEFINGS

Rep. Tim Burchett speaking to reporters at the U.S. Capitol

Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., speaks to reporters after attending Congressional briefings on Iran at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on March 3, 2026. Trump administration Cabinet officials briefed lawmakers on U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran. (Heather Diehl/Getty Images)

“I’ve talked to Members of Congress [who said], ‘hey, man, I don’t want to come forward and talk about this,’” Burchett said. “I was in this branch of the service or whatever, I was on night watch and this thing, and he said it was just unbelievable, and I hear that over and over and again,” he continued.

Podcast co-host Josh Holmes appreciated Burchett’s honesty and approach to politics, even if he was skeptical.

“We enjoy your sense of humor and your interest in just the idea of exploring things, regardless of where the politics lead,” Holmes told Burchett.

‘RUTHLESS’ LAUNCHES CANDIDATE INTERVIEW SERIES TO HELP EDUCATE VOTERS AHEAD OF CRITICAL MIDTERM ELECTIONS

Burchett appeared on Ruthless as a part of the Ruthless Midterm Interview Series, an ongoing initiative to interview major candidates across the country. The hosts have already interviewed candidates in 15 states, with more scheduled ahead of the November midterms. 

Side by side of Donald Trump and a UFO

President Donald Trump claims that Pentagon study on UFOs will be released “very soon.” (Getty Images)

Burchett, who told Fox News last summer that he would be interested in filling Senator Marsha Blackburn’s Senate seat should she win the gubernatorial race.

When asked by co-host John Ashbrook if that was still the case and if he was looking to give East Tennessee more of a voice in Washington, Burchett replied that he would be interested in serving in the Senate.

REPUBLICAN SEN. MARSHA BLACKBURN EYES GUBERNATORIAL BID: REPORT

“I will not be the guy that says, well, I’m going to form a study committee, and we’re going to talk about it down to Chamber of Commerce, and I’m going to have a round table: heck, no,” Burchett responded. “I would love to fight it out in the United States Senate. I would do that. Yeah. And I would relish that fight.”

Voters in Tennessee will head to the polls for the congressional primary election on August 6th.

Ruthless podcast logo with QR code for access

The “Ruthless” podcast is available on all podcast platforms and can be watched on YouTube. It is part of Fox News Media’s expansion into new media through a licensing deal. (Fox News)

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Following a recent Supreme Court decision, Governor Bill Lee and Republicans in the state legislature have successfully passed a new congressional map, likely flipping Democrat Rep. Steve Cohen’s Memphis-area seat to the GOP. Should that seat change party control, Tennessee’s delegation would consist of nine Republicans and zero Democrats.  

The general election will take place on November 3rd. 



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One dead and two fighting for their lives after bus rolled off road in Whitsundays region | Queensland

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One person is dead and at least two people are fighting for their lives after a coach rolled on one of Australia’s most dangerous roads, leaving one passenger trapped beneath the vehicle.

Emergency services were called to the intersection of the Bruce Highway and Rangemore Road at Gumlu in the Whitsundays region about 4pm AEST on Thursday after reports of a crash involving a bus with 29 people on board.

One person died from their injuries, a Queensland Police spokeswoman said.

Two passengers were being treated for significant head injuries and multi-system trauma, and 27 more were being assessed.

One person was trapped under the bus, according to the Queensland fire department.

Eleven ambulances as well as two helicopters and a Royal Flying Doctor Service plane attended the scene.

No other vehicles are believed to have been involved in the incident, with Queensland ambulance service confirming that three stable patients have left the scene.

“All we know is that (the bus) left the roadway and rolled on its side,” a Queensland Police spokeswoman said.

“We’re not sure how it happened.”

The driver escaped the crash with only minor injuries.

The road was closed in both directions.

The Bruce Highway has long been considered one of the most dangerous roads in Australia.

Stretching from Brisbane to Cairns, the highway is used by more than 100,000 vehicles every day, according to the NRMA.

Of the 302 people killed on Queensland roads in 2024, 41 died on the Bruce Highway while another 7,500 were hospitalised after driving on the road, according to data from the state’s transport department.

The stretch from the Sunshine Coast to Gympie is widely regarded as the most perilous part of the highway.

More than 66% of people believe there are not enough overtaking lanes on the highway while a third of respondents said they avoided travelling on the Bruce during family holidays, according to a 2024 NRMA survey.

In a bid to bolster driver safety, the federal government earmarked an extra $812m for the second stage of upgrades to the Bruce Highway after delivering the budget on Tuesday.

This added to $758m already delivered during stage one.



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Sparks forward Cameron Brink blocks Caitlin Clark with explicit outburst


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Los Angeles Sparks forward Cameron Brink got one over on Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark during their matchup on Wednesday night.

Clark was driving to the lane and going up for a layup when the 6-foot-4 Sparks player swatted the ball away. She had an explicit outburst after the block.

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Los Angeles Sparks forward Cameron Brink blocks a shot by Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark during a basketball game

Los Angeles Sparks forward Cameron Brink blocks a shot by Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark during the first half of a WNBA game in Los Angeles on May 13, 2026. (Jae C. Hong/AP)

“Get that f—ing s— outta here,” Brink yelled.

The play occurred early in the game as the Fever held a two-point lead. Clark and Indiana would get the last laugh and later finished off the win, 87-78.

Brink, who played 19 minutes off the bench, had 11 points, five rebounds and three blocks in the loss.

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Indiana Fever guard Kelsey Mitchell steals the ball from Los Angeles Sparks forward Cameron Brink during a basketball game

Indiana Fever guard Kelsey Mitchell steals the ball from Los Angeles Sparks forward Cameron Brink during the first half of a WNBA game in Los Angeles on May 13, 2026. (Jae C. Hong/AP)

Clark had 24 points on 9-of-17 shooting, and nine assists. She received a technical foul at halftime for arguing with a referee as she walked back to the locker room.

Kelsey Mitchell had 23 points for the Fever. Sophie Cunningham had 12 points and seven rebounds. Clark, Mitchell and Cunningham were the lone Indiana players in double figures.

Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark reacting during a WNBA game in Los Angeles

Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark reacts to a call during the first half of a WNBA game against the Los Angeles Sparks in Los Angeles on May 13, 2026. (Jae C. Hong/AP)

Kelsey Plum led Los Angeles with 25 points and four assists. Dearica Hamby had 16 points and eight rebounds while Nneka Ogwumike and Rae Burrell each had 10 points.

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The Fever’s win over the Sparks was their first of the season. The Sparks have yet to find their first win.



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War, inflation and Trump’s tariffs have shaken the US. Why does the stock market keep going up? | Stock markets

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It was a dark Friday for Wall Street on 27 March. Oil prices were climbing and the war with Iran raged on. Markets responded accordingly, with the Dow and Nasdaq entering correction territory, falling more than 10% below their peak, after a month of selloffs.

Fast forward seven weeks later to 13 May, and the situation in Iran only looked marginally better. Oil prices were high, and the strait of Hormuz was still closed. Peace talks with Iran seemed tenuous, even with the pressures of high gas prices. Donald Trump on Wednesday said he is “not even a little bit” motivated by Americans’ financial situation to end the war.

And yet, stock markets have not only recovered from their losses – they are thriving.

Even before the start of the war, the US stock market proved incredibly resilient to political and economic instability. The market has shrugged off the Covid-19 recession and generational-high inflation, absorbed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and increasingly turned a blind eye to Trump’s tariff spats. Everyday Americans continue to struggle with an affordability crisis and consumer confidence has crashed, but the markets just keep going up and up.

Yes, Wall Street still has its down days. But the tech-heavy Nasdaq index has continued to surge amid continued investment in AI. The index has gone up 11% since the start of the year – nearly half of the gains that it saw last year. The Dow and S&P 500 continue to bump close to record highs.

Each time investors shake off the latest shock and reach new highs, questions arise: what is driving this phenomenon, and how long can this bull market last?

Guardian graphic. Source: S&P and Dow Jones Indices via Yahoo Finance Illustration: Guardian Design

Guardian graphic. Source: S&P and Dow Jones Indices via Yahoo Finance

Every day is Taco day

Some economists point to a mindset that investors have embraced – that the president will back off of his most extreme policies: Trump Always Chickens Out, or Taco.

Backtracking threats has been a hallmark of Trump 2.0, particularly when it comes to tariffs and Iran. When Trump announced his slate of “liberation day” tariffs, he delayed implementing them hours after they were announced. He similarly threatened a 25% tariff on eight EU countries when he was angry about annexing Greenland. Those tariffs were also called off.

Now, even as Trump says the Iran ceasefire is on “life support”, markets still keep going up.

But as Eswar Prasad, a former IMF official and an economist at Cornell, points out, investor confidence in the midst of the crisis predates Trump and Taco.

“Investors now have a pretty clear view that if there is significant trouble in the financial system, the [US Federal Reserve] and the US government will step in and not let things get too deep into the hole,” Prasad said.

But federal intervention in a crisis, say the collapse of regional banks such as Silicon Valley Bank, whose depositors were bailed out by the government, can hide risks, said Prasad, especially when supervision and regulation of financial markets are weakening.

“This is a concern we already saw with how ineffective supervision led to problems with Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic” in 2023, Prasad said. “The question is, where is the risk being hidden right now?”

The K-shaped economy

Though inflation has come down since its 40-year high in 2022, Americans are still feeling the pain of increased prices. Amid the war on Iran, inflation has started to go up once again. In April, annual inflation surged to 3.8%, up from 2.4% in February.

Higher prices would typically mean less spending among all Americans. But instead, wealthier Americans continue to spend while lower-income Americans try to manage their budgets.

The most recent evidence of this came through a report from the New York Federal Reserve, which showed that while low-income Americans have cut down on their gas usage amid the Iran war, high-income Americans haven’t changed their gas consumption at all.

Economists have started to refer to this phenomenon as the “K-shaped” economy to represent the bifurcated experience of Americans whose wealth is tied to the stock market, and have thus been doing really well over the last few years, and those who are not.

The vast majority of the stock market is owned by just a small chunk of Americans: the top 10% income percentile in the US owns 87.2% of the market. The bottom 50% own just 1.1% of all stocks.

Continued spending from the top has kept many companies afloat as other consumers cut spending.

“Our consumers, which sit at the top of the ‘K’, are continuing to invest in travel, it’s their priority, and they want to have that experience,” Ed Bastian, the Delta Air Lines CEO, told CNBC last month when the company announced its quarterly earnings, noting that revenue from Delta’s premium offerings doubled over the last year.

Though the rising stock market has kept a handful of Americans happy and spending, recent polls show that a majority of Americans currently disapprove of Trump’s handling of the economy, and 63% said they specifically blame Trump for recent high gas prices.

Rising tide lifts all

The release of ChatGPT in 2022 kicked off a race to build up AI systems and the infrastructure needed to support it. Tech companies are spending hundreds of billions on AI investments, with no end in sight. Thousands of data centers are being built around the country. This colossal investment in AI has been immune to the geopolitical events seen over the last few years.

Now, just seven companies out of the S&P 500 carry 30% of the index’s weight. All of them are tech behemoths who have heavily invested in AI in recent years: Alphabet (Google’s parent company), Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla.

Nvidia, which produces and sells the microchips needed to power AI, currently tops the S&P 500 and was the first company to reach a $5tn valuation last fall. Its stock has gone up 1,450% over the last five years.

The huge amounts of spending in AI in such a short amount of time have raised concerns among those who believe that there is an AI bubble holding up the stock market. AI spending outpaced consumer spending as a percentage of US economic growth in the first half of 2025.

“In a weird way, we have the largest private sector stimulus program in US history,” said Paul Kedrosky, an investor and research fellow at the MIT’s Institute for the Digital Economy. “The private sector is spending so aggressively on this one thing.”

The White House is also all in on the AI boom. Kevin Warsh, Trump’s Federal Reserve chair pick, has argued that AI is “the most productivity-enhancing wave of our lifetimes – past, present and future”. Warsh is likely to advocate for interest rate cuts once he assumes his role as chair, using the growth of AI to bolster his argument, even as inflation rises.

What goes up …

Alan Greenspan, who served as Fed chair for 18 years, delivered a now-famous speech in 1996 where he warned of “irrational exuberance” from investors driving markets to unsustainable highs – what would eventually be known as the dot-com bubble.

Despite Greenspan’s warning, the S&P 500 would go on to double in value after 1996. Then in April 2000, a massive sell-off began when the profitability of many of the new tech companies came into question. By 2002, the S&P 500 was at half the level it was just two years earlier.

Kedrosky believes that the current AI boom could experience a similar bust.

Three AI startups, OpenAI, Anthropic and SpaceX, the parent company’s for Elon Musk’s xAI, are all planning trillion-dollar IPOs for this year.

“Just three IPOs would be larger than the whole dot-come bubble,” Kedrosky said. “That money has to come from somewhere. So what’s going to happen is you’re going to see massive selling in a host of equities because institutions want to be able to buy these things.”

In other words, investors are placing all their bets on AI. For Kedrosky, the risk that comes with this has made him a firm believer that it’s not a matter of whether the AI bubble will ever pop, but when exactly it will.

“I would cheerfully be wrong. It would just be the first time in history that we’ve had this kind of a [capital expenditure] wave and not had it go bad,” Kedrosky said. “So history’s on my side.”



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Federal judge blocks US sanctions against UN rapporteur Francesca Albanese | Israel-Palestine conflict News

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US sanctions imposed on UN expert Francesca Albanese by the Trump administration have been temporarily ⁠blocked by a judge.

A federal judge has temporarily ⁠blocked United States sanctions against Francesca Albanese, a United Nations expert on the occupied Palestinian territory.

UN Human Rights Council Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese was sanctioned in July 2025 after she publicly criticised Washington’s policy on Israel’s genocidal war against Palestinians in Gaza.

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Albanese’s husband and daughter filed a lawsuit in February against the Trump administration over the sanctions. It argued that the sanctions were an effort to punish Albanese for bringing attention to Israel’s rights abuses against Palestinians.

In his court order on Wednesday, US ⁠District Judge Richard Leon granted a preliminary injunction against the sanctions.

He found that the Trump administration sought to regulate ‌her speech because of the “idea or message expressed”.

“Albanese has done nothing more than speak,” judge Leon wrote in his memorandum opinion. “It is undisputed that her recommendations have no binding effect on the ICC’s actions – they are nothing more than her opinion.”

Albanese, who said the US sanctions were “calculated to weaken my mission” when they were first imposed, celebrated the ruling on social media.

“Thanks to my daughter and my husband for stepping up to defend me, and everyone who has helped so far,” Albanese said in a statement on X.

“Together we are One.”

Since 2022, Albanese, a legal scholar, has served as the special rapporteur for the West Bank and Gaza, where she monitors human rights abuses against Palestinians. The UN Human Rights Council selected her for the position.

The Trump administration sanctioned her last July, calling her “unfit” for her role and accusing her of “biased and malicious activities” against the US and its ally, Israel. Albanese had also recommended that the International Criminal Court (ICC) pursue war crimes prosecutions against Israeli and US nationals.

The sanctions barred the Italian lawyer and human rights expert from entering the US, using US banks and payment systems, and prevented anyone else in the US from doing business with her.

Albanese’s husband and her daughter, a US citizen, claimed in the lawsuit that the US ⁠sanctions were “effectively debanking her and making it nearly impossible to meet the needs of her daily life”.



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Gold steady as markets focus on Trump-Xi meeting

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Gold was largely steady on Thursday, as investors focused on a meeting ⁠between US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, while digesting a rise in US inflation driven by the increased ‌energy costs linked to the Iran war.

Spot gold inched up 0.1% at $4,689.79 per ounce, as of 0931 GMT. US gold futures for June delivery fell 0.2% ⁠at $4,696.20.

China’s Xi Jinping told Trump that trade ⁠talks were making progress at the start of a two-day summit on Thursday but that disagreement over Taiwan could damage relations and even lead to conflict.

“Gold is hovering around $4,700 as markets are still digesting US inflation data. It is very clear that we are in a consolidation phase,” said Swissquote analyst Carlo Alberto De Casa.

Data on Wednesday showed that US producer prices posted their biggest increase in four years in April, the latest sign of accelerating inflation. Data on ⁠Tuesday had shown US annual consumer inflation posted its largest gain in three years.

Traders have largely priced out US interest rate cuts this year due to rising energy prices, with markets anticipating a 29% chance of a hike by December, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool. The US Senate approved Kevin Warsh as chair of the Federal Reserve as the US central bank grapples with inflation that may make it hard to deliver the interest-rate cuts that Trump has demanded.

While gold is considered a hedge against inflation, higher interest rates tend to weigh on ⁠the non-yielding metal. Meanwhile, HSBC raised its silver price forecasts to $75 ⁠per ounce for 2026, citing the weaker US dollar, although the bank believes further room to the upside is limited as silver remains overvalued.

Spot silver fell 1.1% to $87 per ounce, platinum fell 0.9% to $2,117.35, and palladium was down 1.3% at $1,480.56.

Published on May 14, 2026

World Cup train and shuttle bus ticket prices cut in New York, New Jersey | World Cup 2026 News

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Round-trip train tickets brought down to $98 from $150, and bus fares to cost $20 instead of $80, state officials say.

Local governments in New Jersey and New York have reduced the cost of train and bus tickets for commuters travelling to the states’ joint World Cup venue during the tournament.

New Jersey Transit train tickets to the MetLife Stadium, renamed New Jersey New York Stadium for the FIFA World Cup, will now cost $98 as opposed to the earlier price set at $150 for a return fare, New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill announced on Wednesday.

“Ahead of NJ Transit World Cup train tickets going on sale tonight, NJTRANSIT is lowering ticket prices to $98 without New Jersey taxpayer money,” Sherrill wrote in a social media post.

The move followed intense backlash from local and international football fans planning to attend World Cup games at the stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, where the tournament’s final will be held on July 19.

The $98 fare, which will be charged during the World Cup matches hosted in New Jersey, is still significantly higher than the regular fare of $13 for the 29km (18-mile) round trip from New York City’s Penn Station.

When the $150 fare was announced, Sherrill defended it by suggesting the upcharge was necessary to ensure that her state’s commuters were not stuck with a “tab for years to come” for hosting the World Cup on its return to the United States for the first time since 1994.

NJ Transit officials said it would cost $62m to transport fans to and from the stadium over the duration of the tournament and outside grants had defrayed only $14m of those anticipated expenses.

“This isn’t price gouging,” NJ Transit President and CEO Kris Kolluri said last month. “We’re literally trying to recoup our costs.”

Meanwhile, the cost of taking a shuttle bus from New York City to the World Cup venue has also been reduced.

“The cost of shuttle bus tickets to and from matches will be reduced from the initial $80 round-trip price to $20,” New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced on the same Wednesday.

The move from the NYNJ Host Committee offers some respite for fans who would have already spent thousands of dollars on attending a World Cup game, largely due to the exorbitant match ticket prices, international and local airfares, and visa costs.

The host city officials said 20 percent of bus tickets for each match will be reserved exclusively for New York state residents. The remaining tickets will be available for all match-going fans.

The US is cohosting the tournament with Mexico and Canada. It begins on June 11.



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