Last week, the radio station announced that Myska would be leaving at the end of her contract.
"Not since the start of the century has US electricity demand grown 2.4% over an eight-year period," Goldman Sachs said.
Currency markets are reading subtle signals from Chinese authorities as an indication they are slowly nudging the yuan lower to regain export competitiveness, but analysts say protracted yuan weakening is neither the intent nor desirable. The biggest signal of tolerance for a weaker yuan has come via the People's Bank of China's (PBOC) daily reference rate, or fixing, around which the yuan is allowed to trade. Having used the fixing to contain the yuan's fall from November even as currencies of trade rivals such as Japan and South Korea tumbled, the PBOC's fixings have since mid-April become less rigid and even slightly biased to weaken the currency.