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- [[Los Angeles Times]]
- Gayle King to stay on at CBS News
- Tech giants pledge to supply own power for AI
- META’S Dina Powell McCormick, left, and Alphabet’s Ruth Porat, center, join other executives at an event for President Trump’s “ratepayer protection pledge.”
- Pixar looks to ‘Hoppers’ for an animated boost
- A SCENE from “Hoppers.” It’s Pixar’s latest attempt to break through at theaters with an original story.
- More frozen foods are recalled over glass
- [[USA Today]]
- ‘Annoyance economy’ costs American consumers $166 billion, study finds
- Tired of hold music?
- Think about the time you spend waiting on hold, blocking junk messages, and clicking – and clicking, and clicking – to cancel unwanted subscriptions. ● A new report ascribes a cost to the “annoyance economy”: All that we pay in lost time and money for the hassles of daily life as American consumers. ● The study, published in February by the progressive Groundwork Collaborative think tank, focuses on what it terms a torrent of small abuses heaped on consumers by bad actors and indifferent corporations: Phone scams. Robocalls and spam emails. Junk fees on tickets, bank transactions and hotel rooms.
- Tips to protect your 401(k) when stocks plummet
- A falling stock market is a good moment to take stock of the basic rules of investing. One of them says, in effect, “don’t panic.”
- MN hiring policy faces tough legal challenge
- Trump lawsuit could end affirmative action
- ‘Annoyance economy’ costs American consumers $166 billion, study finds
- [[The New York Times]]
- Big Lenders’ Risky Loans Are Rattling Wall Street
- Lending troubles at Blue Owl Capital and other so-called private credit behemoths are setting off fears of a “bank run,” as one hedge fund put it.
- Doug Ostrover, a founder of Blue Owl Capital. Investors are worried that colossal “private credit” lenders like Blue Owl have been too optimistic in their assessments of multiyear, privately traded loans tied to risky companies and industries.
- Tariffs Confound Small Businesses Again
- Chocolate makers and fig-paste importers are facing a tangle of unknowns, including whether to seek refunds for tariffs invalidated by the Supreme Court.
- Xocolatl Chocolate, a craft chocolate maker in Atlanta, sources cacao beans from countries including Peru, Nicaragua and Tanzania.
- With Qatar’s Gas Shut Off, Western Energy Giants See a Big Payday
- Prices for liquefied natural gas have shot up in recent days, which could bring bigger profits for European and U.S. energy companies.
- A liquefied natural gas production facility in Qatar this week. Companies like Shell, TotalEnergies and ExxonMobil could benefit from the war.
- Top Fed Official, Wary of Inflation, Calls for Extended Rate Pause
- Beth M. Hammack, head of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, says it is too early to gauge the economic impact of the Iran war and backs holding interest rates steady for “quite some time.”
- Beth M. Hammack, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, said the Fed should be in no rush to cut interest rates.
- Big Lenders’ Risky Loans Are Rattling Wall Street
- [[Wall Street Journal]]
- Iran Conflict Bruises U.S. Bonds
- Inflation worries have pushed the 10year Treasury yield back above 4% mark
- https://www.wsj.com/finance/investing/iran-conflict-spurs-rebound-in-u-s-borrowing-costs-dae8a3fc?st=6rrwbv&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- U.S. Drillers Aren’t Rushing To Increase Oil Production
- Shale giants won't budge from their plans, despite the market chaos.
- Drillers have treated spiking oil prices as an opportunity to return more cash to shareholders.
- https://www.wsj.com/business/energy-oil/why-american-frackers-arent-rushing-to-pump-more-oil-d0d36a4d?st=HhkDvn&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- Investors Defy the Bad News On Stocks
- $2.2B Amount of money individual investors poured into stocks and ETFs on Monday.
- https://www.wsj.com/finance/stocks/fresh-shocks-same-strategy-unfazed-retail-investors-keep-hitting-buy-e4dad76d?st=ciFdcW&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- Newspapers Look to AI as Reporting Aid
- Morgan Stanley Lays Off 2,500 Employees
- Fed Gives Kraken Access to Payments System
- Iran Conflict Bruises U.S. Bonds
- [[Financial Times]] 영국에 위치한 니케이 소유 회사입니다.
- White House debates allowing Tencent to retain gaming group investments
- The White House is debating whether to allow Tencent, the Chinese tech and gaming company, to maintain stakes in video game groups as Donald Trump prepares to meet Xi Jinping in China next month.
- Tencent holds a 28% stake in North Carolina-based Epic Games, the creator of hit title ‘Fortnite’
- Questions arise about whether Nvidia’s healthy margins can last
- As Nvidia's earnings base is now so large, even a small decline in margins would affect how the chip company is valued
- Grounding of Mideast flights halts gold and silver transfers
- ▸ Shipments disrupted at Dubai hub ▸ Danger of further volatility in prices
- 'People should be able to manoeuvre around it, but if it goes on for a long time all bets are off'
- KPMG picks ex-Australia boss as next global chief
- KPMG has selected Gary Wingrove as its next global chief executive, with the former head of its Australia business beating UK boss Jon Holt in the race to lead the 276,000-person firm, according to people familiar with the matter.
- White House debates allowing Tencent to retain gaming group investments